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+<TITLE>
+The Project Gutenberg E-text of The Lost Road, by Richard Harding Davis
+</TITLE>
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Road, by Richard Harding Davis
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Lost Road
+
+Author: Richard Harding Davis
+
+Posting Date: March 21, 2009 [EBook #2283]
+Release Date: August, 2000
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOST ROAD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marleen Hugo. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<BR><BR>
+
+
+<H1 ALIGN="center">
+THE LOST ROAD
+</H1>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE NOVELS AND STORIES OF
+<BR>
+RICHARD HARDING DAVIS
+</H2>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+TO
+<BR>
+MY WIFE
+</H3>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H4>
+Contains:
+<BR><BR>
+ <A HREF="#road">THE LOST ROAD</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#laspalmas">THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#evil">EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#zanzibar">THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#longarm">THE LONG ARM</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#coincidence">THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#treasure">THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#boyscout">THE BOY SCOUT</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#france">SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE</A><BR>
+ <A HREF="#deserter">THE DESERTER</A><BR>
+</H4>
+
+<BR><BR><BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+AN INTRODUCTION BY
+<BR>
+JOHN T. McCUTCHEON
+</H3>
+
+<BR>
+
+<H3 ALIGN="center">
+WITH DAVIS IN VERA CRUZ, BRUSSELS, AND SALONIKA
+</H3>
+
+<P>
+In common with many others who have been with Richard Harding Davis as
+correspondents, I find it difficult to realize that he has covered his
+last story and that he will not be seen again with the men who follow
+the war game, rushing to distant places upon which the spotlight of
+news interest suddenly centres.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It seems a sort of bitter irony that he who had covered so many big
+events of world importance in the past twenty years should be abruptly
+torn away in the midst of the greatest event of them all, while the
+story is still unfinished and its outcome undetermined. If there is a
+compensating thought, it lies in the reflection that he had a life of
+almost unparalleled fulness, crowded to the brim, up to the last
+moment, with those experiences and achievements which he particularly
+aspired to have. He left while the tide was at its flood, and while he
+still held supreme his place as the best reporter in his country. He
+escaped the bitterness of seeing the ebb set in, when the youth to
+which he clung had slipped away, and when he would have to sit
+impatient in the audience, while younger men were in the thick of
+great, world-stirring dramas on the stage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This would have been a real tragedy in "Dick" Davis's case, for, while
+his body would have aged, it is doubtful if his spirit ever would have
+lost its youthful freshness or boyish enthusiasm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was my privilege to see a good deal of Davis in the last two years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He arrived in Vera Cruz among the first of the sixty or seventy
+correspondents who flocked to that news centre when the situation was
+so full of sensational possibilities. It was a time when the American
+newspaper-reading public was eager for thrills, and the ingenuity and
+resourcefulness of the correspondents in Vera Cruz were tried to the
+uttermost to supply the demand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the face of the fiercest competition it fell to Davis's lot to land
+the biggest story of those days of marking time.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The story "broke" when it became known that Davis, Medill McCormick,
+and Frederick Palmer had gone through the Mexican lines in an effort to
+reach Mexico City. Davis and McCormick, with letters to the Brazilian
+and British ministers, got through and reached the capital on the
+strength of those letters, but Palmer, having only an American
+passport, was turned back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After an ominous silence which furnished American newspapers with a
+lively period of suspense, the two men returned safely with wonderful
+stories of their experiences while under arrest in the hands of the
+Mexican authorities. McCormick, in recently speaking of Davis at that
+time, said that, "as a correspondent in difficult and dangerous
+situations, he was incomparable&mdash;cheerful, ingenious, and
+undiscouraged. When the time came to choose between safety and leaving
+his companion he stuck by his fellow captive even though, as they both
+said, a firing-squad and a blank wall were by no means a remote
+possibility."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This Mexico City adventure was a spectacular achievement which gave
+Davis and McCormick a distinction which no other correspondents of all
+the ambitious and able corps had managed to attain.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Davis usually "hunted" alone. He depended entirely upon his own
+ingenuity and wonderful instinct for news situations. He had the
+energy and enthusiasm of a beginner, with the experience and training
+of a veteran. His interest in things remained as keen as though he had
+not been years at a game which often leaves a man jaded and blase. His
+acquaintanceship in the American army and navy was wide, and for this
+reason, as well as for the prestige which his fame and position as a
+national character gave him, he found it easy to establish valuable
+connections in the channels from which news emanates. And yet, in
+spite of the fact that he was "on his own" instead of having a working
+partnership with other men, he was generous in helping at times when he
+was able to do so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Davis was a conspicuous figure in Vera Cruz, as he inevitably had been
+in all such situations. Wherever he went, he was pointed out. His
+distinction of appearance, together with a distinction in dress, which,
+whether from habit or policy, was a valuable asset in his work, made
+him a marked man. He dressed and looked the "war correspondent," such
+a one as he would describe in one of his stories. He fulfilled the
+popular ideal of what a member of that fascinating profession should
+look like. His code of life and habits was as fixed as that of the
+Briton who takes his habits and customs and games and tea wherever he
+goes, no matter how benighted or remote the spot may be.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was just as loyal to his code as is the Briton. He carried his
+bath-tub, his immaculate linen, his evening clothes, his war
+equipment&mdash;in which he had the pride of a connoisseur&mdash;wherever he
+went, and, what is more, he had the courage to use the evening clothes
+at times when their use was conspicuous. He was the only man who wore
+a dinner coat in Vera Cruz, and each night, at his particular table in
+the crowded "Portales," at the Hotel Diligencia, he was to be seen, as
+fresh and clean as though he were in a New York or London restaurant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Each day he was up early to take the train out to the "gap," across
+which came arrivals from Mexico City. Sometimes a good "story" would
+come down, as when the long-heralded and long-expected arrival of
+Consul Silliman gave a first-page "feature" to all the American papers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the afternoon he would play water polo over at the navy aviation
+camp, and always at a certain time of the day his "striker" would bring
+him his horse and for an hour or more he would ride out along the beach
+roads within the American lines. After the first few days it was
+difficult to extract real thrills from the Vera Cruz situation, but we
+used to ride out to El Tejar with the cavalry patrol and imagine that
+we might be fired on at some point in the long ride through unoccupied
+territory; or else go out to the "front," at Legarto, where a little
+American force occupied a sun-baked row of freight-cars, surrounded by
+malarial swamps. From the top of the railroad water-tank, we could
+look across to the Mexican outposts a mile or so away. It was not very
+exciting, and what thrills we got lay chiefly in our imagination.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before my acquaintanceship with Davis at Vera Cruz I had not known him
+well. Our trails didn't cross while I was in Japan in the
+Japanese-Russian War, and in the Transvaal I missed him by a few days,
+but in Vera Cruz I had many enjoyable opportunities of becoming well
+acquainted with him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The privilege was a pleasant one, for it served to dispel a
+preconceived and not an entirely favorable impression of his character.
+For years I had heard stories about Richard Harding Davis&mdash;stories
+which emphasized an egotism and self-assertiveness which, if they ever
+existed, had happily ceased to be obtrusive by the time I got to know
+him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was a different Davis from the Davis whom I had expected to find;
+and I can imagine no more charming and delightful companion than he was
+in Vera Cruz. There was no evidence of those qualities which I feared
+to find, and his attitude was one of unfailing kindness,
+considerateness, and generosity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the many talks I had with him, I was always struck by his evident
+devotion to a fixed code of personal conduct. In his writings he was
+the interpreter of chivalrous, well-bred youth, and his heroes were
+young, clean-thinking college men, heroic big-game hunters, war
+correspondents, and idealized men about town, who always did the noble
+thing, disdaining the unworthy in act or motive. It seemed to me that
+he was modelling his own life, perhaps unconsciously, after the favored
+types which his imagination had created for his stories. In a certain
+sense he was living a life of make-believe, wherein he was the hero of
+the story, and in which he was bound by his ideals always to act as he
+would have the hero of his story act. It was a quality which only one
+could have who had preserved a fresh youthfulness of outlook in spite
+of the hardening processes of maturity.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His power of observation was extraordinarily keen, and he not only had
+the rare gift of sensing the vital elements of a situation, but also
+had, to an unrivalled degree, the ability to describe them vividly. I
+don't know how many of those men at Verz Cruz tried to describe the
+kaleidoscopic life of the city during the American occupation, but I
+know that Davis's story was far and away the most faithful and
+satisfying picture. The story was photographic, even to the sounds and
+smells.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The last I saw of him in Vera Cruz was when, on the Utah, he steamed
+past the flagship Wyoming, upon which I was quartered, and started for
+New York. The Battenberg cup race had just been rowed, and the Utah
+and Florida crews had tied. As the Utah was sailing immediately after
+the race, there was no time in which to row off the tie. So it was
+decided that the names of both ships should be engraved on the cup, and
+that the Florida crew should defend the title against a challenging
+crew from the British Admiral Craddock's flagship.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By the end of June, the public interest in Vera Cruz had waned, and the
+corps of correspondents dwindled until there were only a few left.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Frederick Palmer and I went up to join Carranza and Villa, and on the
+26th of July we were in Monterey waiting to start with the triumphal
+march of Carranza's army toward Mexico City. There was no sign of
+serious trouble abroad. That night ominous telegrams came, and at ten
+o'clock on the following morning we were on a train headed for the
+States.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Palmer and Davis caught the Lusitania, sailing August 4 from New York,
+and I followed on the Saint Paul, leaving three days later. On the 17th
+of August I reached Brussels, and it seemed the most natural thing in
+the world to find Davis already there. He was at the Palace Hotel,
+where a number of American and English correspondents were quartered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Things moved quickly. On the 19th Irvin Cobb, Will Irwin, Arno Dosch,
+and I were caught between the Belgian and German lines in Louvain; our
+retreat to Brussels was cut, and for three days, while the vast German
+army moved through the city, we were detained. Then, the army having
+passed, we were allowed to go back to the capital.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the meantime Davis was in Brussels. The Germans reached the
+outskirts of the city on the morning of the 20th, and the
+correspondents who had remained in Brussels were feverishly writing
+despatches describing the imminent fall of the city. One of them,
+Harry Hansen, of the Chicago Daily News, tells the following story,
+which I give in his words:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"While we were writing," says Hansen, "Richard Harding Davis walked
+into the writing-room of the Palace Hotel with a bunch of manuscript in
+his hand. With an amused expression he surveyed the three
+correspondents filling white paper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'I say, men,' said Davis, 'do you know when the next train leaves?'
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'There is one at three o'clock,' said a correspondent, looking up.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'That looks like our only chance to get a story out,' said Davis.
+'Well, we'll trust to that.'
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The story was the German invasion of Brussels, and the train mentioned
+was considered the forlorn hope of the correspondents to connect with
+the outside world&mdash;that is, every correspondent thought it to be the
+other man's hope. Secretly each had prepared to outwit the other, and
+secretly Davis had already sent his story to Ostend. He meant to
+emulate Archibald Forbes, who despatched a courier with his real
+manuscript, and next day publicly dropped a bulky package in the
+mail-bag.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Davis had sensed the news in the occupation of Brussels long before it
+happened. With dawn he went out to the Louvain road, where the German
+army stood, prepared to smash the capital if negotiations failed. His
+observant eye took in all the details. Before noon he had written a
+comprehensive sketch of the occupation, and when word was received that
+it was under way, he trusted his copy to an old Flemish woman, who
+spoke not a word of English, and saw her safely on board the train that
+pulled out under Belgian auspices for Ostend."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With passes which the German commandant in Brussels gave us the
+correspondents immediately started out to see how far those passes
+would carry us. A number of us left on the afternoon of August 23 for
+Waterloo, where it was expected that the great clash between the German
+and the Anglo-French forces would occur. We had planned to be back the
+same evening, and went prepared only for an afternoon's drive in a
+couple of hired street carriages. It was seven weeks before we again
+saw Brussels.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the following day (August 24) Davis started for Mons. He wore the
+khaki uniform which he had worn in many campaigns. Across his breast
+was a narrow bar of silk ribbon indicating the campaigns in which he
+had served as a correspondent. He so much resembled a British officer
+that he was arrested as a British derelict and was informed that he
+would be shot at once.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He escaped only by offering to walk to Brand Whitlock, in Brussels,
+reporting to each officer he met on the way. His plan was approved,
+and as a hostage on parole he appeared before the American minister,
+who quickly established his identity as an American of good standing,
+to the satisfaction of the Germans.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the following few months our trails were widely separated. I read
+of his arrest by German officers on the road to Mons; later I read the
+story of his departure from Brussels by train to Holland&mdash;a trip which
+carried him through Louvain while the town still was burning; and still
+later I read that he was with the few lucky men who were in Rheims
+during one of the early bombardments that damaged the cathedral. By
+amazing luck, combined with a natural news sense which drew him
+instinctively to critical places at the psychological moment, he had
+been a witness of the two most widely featured stories of the early
+weeks of the war.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Arrested by the Germans in Belgium, and later by the French in France,
+he was convinced that the restrictions on correspondents were too great
+to permit of good work.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So he left the European war zone with the widely quoted remark: "The
+day of the war correspondent is over."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And yet I was not surprised when, one evening, late in November of last
+year, he suddenly walked into the room in Salonika where William G.
+Shepherd, of the United Press, "Jimmy Hare," the veteran war
+photographer, and I had established ourselves several weeks before.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The hotel was jammed, and the city, with a normal capacity of about one
+hundred and seventy-five thousand, was struggling to accommodate at
+least a hundred thousand more. There was not a room to be had in any
+of the better hotels, and for several days we lodged Davis in our room,
+a vast chamber which formerly had been the main dining-room of the
+establishment, and which now was converted into a bedroom. There was
+room for a dozen men, if necessary, and whenever stranded Americans
+arrived and could find no hotel accommodations we simply rigged up
+emergency cots for their temporary use.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The weather in Salonika at this time, late November, was penetratingly
+cold. In the mornings the steam coils struggled feebly to dispel the
+chill in the room.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Early in the morning after Davis had arrived, we were aroused by the
+sound of violent splashing, accompanied by shuddering gasps, and we
+looked out from the snug warmth of our beds to see Davis standing in
+his portable bath-tub and drenching himself with ice-cold water. As an
+exhibition of courageous devotion to an established custom of life it
+was admirable, but I'm not sure that it was prudent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For some reason, perhaps a defective circulation or a weakened heart,
+his system failed to react from these cold-water baths. All through the
+days he complained of feeling chilled. He never seemed to get
+thoroughly warmed, and of us all he was the one who suffered most
+keenly from the cold. It was all the more surprising, for his
+appearance was always that of a man in the pink of athletic
+fitness&mdash;ruddy-faced, clear-eyed, and full of tireless energy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On one occasion we returned from the French front in Serbia to Salonika
+in a box car lighted only by candles, bitterly cold, and frightfully
+exhausting. We were seven hours in travelling fifty-five miles, and we
+arrived at our destination at three o'clock in the morning. Several of
+the men contracted desperate colds, which clung to them for weeks.
+Davis was chilled through, and said that of all the cold he had ever
+experienced that which swept across the Macedonian plain from the
+Balkan highlands was the most penetrating. Even his heavy clothing
+could not afford him adequate protection.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he was settled in his own room in our hotel he installed an
+oil-stove which burned beside him as he sat at his desk and wrote his
+stories. The room was like an oven, but even then he still complained
+of the cold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he left he gave us the stove, and when we left, some time later,
+it was presented to one of our doctor friends out in a British
+hospital, where I'm sure it is doing its best to thaw the Balkan chill
+out of sick and wounded soldiers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Davis was always up early, and his energy and interest were as keen as
+a boy's. We had our meals together, sometimes in the crowded and
+rather smart Bastasini's, but more often in the maelstrom of humanity
+that nightly packed the Olympos Palace restaurant. Davis, Shepherd,
+Hare, and I, with sometimes Mr. and Mrs. John Bass, made up these
+parties, which, for a period of about two weeks or so, were the most
+enjoyable daily events of our lives.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Under the glaring lights of the restaurant, and surrounded by British,
+French, Greek, and Serbian officers, German, Austrian, and Bulgarian
+civilians, with a sprinkling of American, English, and Scotch nurses
+and doctors, packed so solidly in the huge, high-ceilinged room that
+the waiters could barely pick their way among the tables, we hung for
+hours over our dinners, and left only when the landlord and his
+Austrian wife counted the day's receipts and paid the waiters at the
+end of the evening.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One could not imagine a more charming and delightful companion than
+Davis during these days. While he always asserted that he could not
+make a speech, and was terrified at the thought of standing up at a
+banquet-table, yet, sitting at a dinner-table with a few friends who
+were only too eager to listen rather than to talk, his stories,
+covering personal experiences in all parts of the world, were intensely
+vivid, with that remarkable "holding" quality of description which
+characterizes his writings.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He brought his own bread&mdash;a coarse, brown sort, which he preferred to
+the better white bread&mdash;and with it he ate great quantities of butter.
+As we sat down at the table his first demand was for "Mastika," a
+peculiar Greek drink distilled from mastic gum, and his second demand
+invariably was "Du beurre!" with the "r's" as silent as the stars; and
+if it failed to come at once the waiter was made to feel the enormity
+of his tardiness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The reminiscences ranged from his early newspaper days in Philadelphia,
+and skipping from Manchuria to Cuba and Central America, to his early
+Sun days under Arthur Brisbane; they ranged through an endless variety
+of personal experiences which very nearly covered the whole course of
+American history in the past twenty years.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Perhaps to him it was pleasant to go over his remarkable adventures,
+but it could not have been half as pleasant as it was to hear them,
+told as they were with a keenness of description and brilliancy of
+humorous comment that made them gems of narrative.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At times, in our work, we all tried our hands at describing the
+Salonika of those early days of the Allied occupation, for it was
+really what one widely travelled British officer called it&mdash;"the most
+amazingly interesting situation I've ever seen"&mdash;-but Davis's
+description was far and away the best, just as his description of Vera
+Cruz was the best, and his wonderful story of the entry of the German
+army into Brussels was matchless as one of the great pieces of
+reporting in the present war.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In thinking of Davis, I shall always remember him for the delightful
+qualities which he showed in Salonika. He was unfailingly considerate
+and thoughtful. Through his narratives one could see the pride which
+he took in the width and breadth of his personal relation to the great
+events of the past twenty years. His vast scope of experiences and
+equally wide acquaintanceship with the big figures of our time, were
+amazing, and it was equally amazing that one of such a rich and
+interesting history could tell his stories in such a simple way that
+the personal element was never obtrusive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he left Salonika he endeavored to obtain permission from the
+British staff to visit Moudros, but, failing in this, he booked his
+passage on a crowded little Greek steamer, where the only obtainable
+accommodation was a lounge in the dining saloon. We gave him a farewell
+dinner, at which the American consul and his family, with all the other
+Americans then in Salonika, were present, and after the dinner we rowed
+out to his ship and saw him very uncomfortably installed for his voyage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He came down the sea ladder and waved his hand as we rowed away. That
+was the last I saw of Richard Harding Davis.
+</P>
+
+<P CLASS="noindent">
+JOHN T. MCCUTCHEON.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="road"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE LOST ROAD
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+During the war with Spain, Colton Lee came into the service as a
+volunteer. For a young man, he always had taken life almost too
+seriously, and when, after the campaign in Cuba, he elected to make
+soldiering his profession, the seriousness with which he attacked his
+new work surprised no one. Finding they had lost him forever, his
+former intimates were bored, but his colonel was enthusiastic, and the
+men of his troop not only loved, but respected him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the start he determined in his new life women should have no
+part&mdash;a determination that puzzled no one so much as the women, for to
+Lee no woman, old or young, had found cause to be unfriendly. But he
+had read that the army is a jealous mistress who brooks no rival, that
+"red lips tarnish the scabbard steel," that "he travels the fastest who
+travels alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So, when white hands beckoned and pretty eyes signalled, he did not
+look. For five years, until just before he sailed for his three years
+of duty in the Philippines, he succeeded not only in not looking, but
+in building up for himself such a fine reputation as a woman-hater that
+all women were crazy about him. Had he not been ordered to Agawamsett
+that fact would not have affected him. But at the Officers' School he
+had indulged in hard study rather than in hard riding, had overworked,
+had brought back his Cuban fever, and was in poor shape to face the
+tropics. So, for two months before the transport was to sail, they
+ordered him to Cape Cod to fill his lungs with the bracing air of a New
+England autumn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He selected Agawamsett, because, when at Harvard, it was there he had
+spent his summer vacations, and he knew he would find sailboats and
+tennis and, through the pine woods back of the little whaling village,
+many miles of untravelled roads. He promised himself that over these
+he would gallop an imaginary troop in route marches, would manoeuvre it
+against possible ambush, and, in combat patrols, ground scouts, and
+cossack outposts, charge with it "as foragers." But he did none of
+these things. For at Agawamsett he met Frances Gardner, and his
+experience with her was so disastrous that, in his determination to
+avoid all women, he was convinced he was right.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When later he reached Manila he vowed no other woman would ever again
+find a place in his thoughts. No other woman did. Not because he had
+the strength to keep his vow, but because he so continually thought of
+Frances Gardner that no other woman had a chance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Gardner was a remarkable girl. Her charm appealed to all kinds of
+men, and, unfortunately for Lee, several kinds of men appealed to her.
+Her fortune and her relations were bound up in the person of a rich
+aunt with whom she lived, and who, it was understood, some day would
+leave her all the money in the world. But, in spite of her charm,
+certainly in spite of the rich aunt, Lee, true to his determination,
+might not have noticed the girl had not she ridden so extremely well.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was to the captain of cavalry she first appealed. But even a
+cavalry captain, whose duty in life is to instruct sixty men in the art
+of taking the life of as many other men as possible, may turn his head
+in the direction of a good-looking girl. And when for weeks a man
+rides at the side of one through pine forests as dim and mysterious as
+the aisles of a great cathedral, when he guides her across the wet
+marshes when the sun is setting crimson in the pools and the wind blows
+salt from the sea, when he loses them both by moonlight in wood-roads
+where the hoofs of the horses sink silently into dusty pine needles, he
+thinks more frequently of the girl at his side than of the faithful
+troopers waiting for him in San Francisco. The girl at his side
+thought frequently of him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the "surface indications" of a young man about to ask her to marry
+him she was painfully familiar; but this time the possibility was the
+reverse of painful. What she meant to do about it she did not know,
+but she did know that she was strangely happy. Between living on as
+the dependent of a somewhat exacting relative and becoming the full
+partner of this young stranger, who with men had proved himself so
+masterful, and who with her was so gentle, there seemed but little
+choice. But she did not as yet wish to make the choice. She preferred
+to believe she was not certain. She assured him that before his leave
+of absence was over she would tell him whether she would remain on duty
+with the querulous aunt, who had befriended her, or as his wife
+accompany him to the Philippines.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was not the answer he wanted; but in her happiness, which was
+evident to every one, he could not help but take hope. And in the
+questions she put to him of life in the tropics, of the life of the
+"officers' ladies," he saw that what was in her mind was a possible
+life with him, and he was content.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She became to him a wonderful, glorious person, and each day she grew
+in loveliness. It had been five years of soldiering in Cuba, China,
+and on the Mexican border since he had talked to a woman with interest,
+and now in all she said, in all her thoughts and words and delights, he
+found fresher and stronger reasons for discarding his determination to
+remain wedded only to the United States Army. He did not need reasons.
+He was far too much in love to see in any word or act of hers anything
+that was not fine and beautiful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In their rides they had one day stumbled upon a long-lost and
+long-forgotten road through the woods, which she had claimed as their
+own by right of discovery, and, no matter to what point they set forth
+each day, they always returned by it. Their way through the woods
+stretched for miles. It was concealed in a forest of stunted oaks and
+black pines, with no sign of human habitation, save here and there a
+clearing now long neglected and alive only with goldenrod. Trunks of
+trees, moss-grown and crumbling beneath the touch of the ponies' hoofs,
+lay in their path, and above it the branches of a younger generation
+had clasped hands. At their approach squirrels raced for shelter,
+woodcock and partridge shot deeper into the network of vines and
+saplings, and the click of the steel as the ponies tossed their bits,
+and their own whispers, alone disturbed the silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is an enchanted road," said the girl; "or maybe we are enchanted."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not I," cried the young man loyally. "I was never so sane, never so
+sure, never so happy in knowing just what I wanted! If only you could
+be as sure!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One day she came to him in high excitement with a book of verse. "He
+has written a poem," she cried, "about our own woods, about our lost
+road! Listen" she commanded, and she read to him:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'They shut the road through the woods Seventy years ago. Weather and
+rain have undone it again, And now you would never know There was once
+a road through the woods Before they planted the trees. It is
+underneath the coppice and heath, And the thin anemones. Only the
+keeper sees That, where the ringdove broods, And the badgers roll at
+ease, There was once a road through the woods.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'Yet, if you enter the woods Of a summer evening late, When the night
+air cools on the trout-ringed pools Where the otter whistles his mate
+(They fear not men in the woods Because they see so few), You will hear
+the beat of a horse's feet, And the swish of a skirt in the dew,
+Steadily cantering through The misty solitudes, As though they
+perfectly knew The old lost road through the woods.... But there is
+no road through the woods.'"
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+"I don't like that at all," cried the soldierman. "It's too&mdash;too
+sad&mdash;it doesn't give you any encouragement. The way it ends, I mean:
+'But there is no road through the woods.' Of course there's a road!
+For us there always will be. I'm going to make sure. I'm going to buy
+those woods, and keep the lost road where we can always find it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't think," said the girl, "that he means a real road."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know what he means," cried the lover, "and he's wrong! There is a
+road, and you and I have found it, and we are going to follow it for
+always."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl shook her head, but her eyes were smiling happily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The "season" at Agawamsett closed with the tennis tournament, and it
+was generally conceded fit and proper, from every point of view, that
+in mixed doubles Lee and Miss Gardner should be partners. Young
+Stedman, the Boston artist, was the only one who made objection. Up in
+the sail-loft that he had turned into a studio he was painting a
+portrait of the lovely Miss Gardner, and he protested that the three
+days' tournament would sadly interrupt his work. And Frances, who was
+very much interested in the portrait, was inclined to agree.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Lee beat down her objections. He was not at all interested in the
+portrait. He disapproved of it entirely. For the sittings robbed him
+of Frances during the better part of each morning, and he urged that
+when he must so soon leave her, between the man who wanted her portrait
+and the man who wanted her, it would be kind to give her time to the
+latter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I had no idea," protested Frances, "he would take so long. He told
+me he'd finish it in three sittings. But he's so critical of his own
+work that he goes over it again and again. He says that I am a most
+difficult subject, but that I inspire him. And he says, if I will only
+give him time, he believes this will be the best thing he has done."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's an awful thought," said the cavalry officer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't like him," reproved Miss Gardner. "He is always very polite
+to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's polite to everybody," said Lee; "that's why I don't like him.
+He's not a real artist. He's a courtier. God gave him a talent, and
+he makes a mean use of it. Uses it to flatter people. He's like these
+long-haired violinists who play anything you ask them to in the lobster
+palaces."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Gardner looked away from him. Her color was high and her eyes
+very bright.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think," she said steadily, "that Mr. Stedman is a great artist, and
+some day all the world will think so, too!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lee made no answer. Not because he disagreed with her estimate of Mr.
+Stedman's genius-he made no pretense of being an art critic&mdash;but
+because her vehement admiration had filled him with sudden panic. He
+was not jealous. For that he was far too humble. Indeed, he thought
+himself so utterly unworthy of Frances Gardner that the fact that to
+him she might prefer some one else was in no way a surprise. He only
+knew that if she should prefer some one else not all his troop horses
+nor all his men could put Humpty Dumpty back again.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But if, in regard to Mr. Stedman, Miss Gardner had for a moment been at
+odds with the man who loved her, she made up for it the day following
+on the tennis court. There she was in accord with him in heart, soul,
+and body, and her sharp "Well played, partner!" thrilled him like one
+of his own bugle calls. For two days against visiting and local teams
+they fought their way through the tournament, and the struggle with her
+at his side filled Lee with a great happiness. Not that the
+championship of Agawamsett counted greatly to one exiled for three
+years to live among the Moros. He wanted to win because she wanted to
+win. But his happiness came in doing something in common with her, in
+helping her and in having her help him, in being, if only in play, if
+only for three days, her "partner."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After they won they walked home together, each swinging a fat, heavy
+loving-cup. On each was engraved:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mixed doubles, Agawamsett, 1910."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lee held his up so that the setting sun flashed on the silver.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am going to keep that," he said, "as long as I live. It means you
+were once my 'partner.' It's a sign that once we two worked together
+for something and won." In the words the man showed such feeling that
+the girl said soberly:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mine means that to me, too. I will never part with mine, either."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lee turned to her and smiled, appealing wistfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seems a pity to separate them," he said. "They'd look well
+together over an open fireplace."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl frowned unhappily. "I don't know," she protested. "I don't
+know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day Lee received from the War Department a telegram directing
+him to "proceed without delay" to San Francisco, and there to embark
+for the Philippines.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night he put the question to her directly, but again she shook her
+head unhappily; again she said: "I don't know!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So he sailed without her, and each evening at sunset, as the great
+transport heaved her way across the swell of the Pacific, he stood at
+the rail and looked back. With the aid of the first officer he
+calculated the difference in time between a whaling village situated at
+forty-four degrees north and an army transport dropping rapidly toward
+the equator, and so, each day, kept in step with the girl he loved.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now," he would tell himself, "she is in her cart in front of the
+post-office, and while they sort the morning mail she gossips with the
+fisher folks, the summer folks, the grooms, and chauffeurs. Now she is
+sitting for her portrait to Stedman" (he did not dwell long on that
+part of her day), "and now she is at tennis, or, as she promised,
+riding alone at sunset down our lost road through the woods."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But that part of her day from which Lee hurried was that part over
+which the girl herself lingered. As he turned his eyes from his canvas
+to meet hers, Stedman, the charming, the deferential, the adroit, who
+never allowed his painting to interrupt his talk, told her of what he
+was pleased to call his dreams and ambitions, of the great and
+beautiful ladies who had sat before his easel, and of the only one of
+them who had given him inspiration. Especially of the only one who had
+given him inspiration. With her always to uplift him, he could become
+one of the world's most famous artists, and she would go down into
+history as the beautiful woman who had helped him, as the wife of
+Rembrandt had inspired Rembrandt, as "Mona Lisa" had made Leonardo.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Gilbert wrote: "It is not the lover who comes to woo, but the lover's
+way of wooing!" His successful lover was the one who threw the girl
+across his saddle and rode away with her. But one kind of woman does
+not like to have her lover approach shouting: "At the gallop! Charge!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She prefers a man not because he is masterful, but because he is not.
+She likes to believe the man needs her more than she needs him, that
+she, and only she, can steady him, cheer him, keep him true to the work
+he is in the world to perform. It is called the "mothering" instinct.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Frances felt this mothering instinct toward the sensitive, imaginative,
+charming Stedman. She believed he had but two thoughts, his art and
+herself. She was content to place his art first. She could not guess
+that to one so unworldly, to one so wrapped up in his art, the fortune
+of a rich aunt might prove alluring.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the transport finally picked up the landfalls of Cavite Harbor,
+Lee, with the instinct of a soldier, did not exclaim: "This is where
+Dewey ran the forts and sank the Spanish fleet!" On the contrary, he
+was saying: "When she comes to join me, it will be here I will first
+see her steamer. I will be waiting with a field-glass on the end of
+that wharf. No, I will be out here in a shore-boat waving my hat. And
+of all those along the rail, my heart will tell me which is she!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then a barefooted Filipino boy handed him an unsigned cablegram. It
+read: "If I wrote a thousand words I could not make it easier for
+either of us. I am to marry Arthur Stedman in December."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lee was grateful for the fact that he was not permitted to linger in
+Manila. Instead, he was at once ordered up-country, where at a
+one-troop post he administered the affairs of a somewhat hectic
+province, and under the guidance of the local constabulary chased
+will-o'-the-wisp brigands. On a shelf in his quarters he placed the
+silver loving-cup, and at night, when the village slept, he would sit
+facing it, filling one pipe after another, and through the smoke
+staring at the evidence to the fact that once Frances Gardner and he
+had been partners.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In these post-mortems he saw nothing morbid. With his present
+activities they in no way interfered, and in thinking of the days when
+they had been together, in thinking of what he had lost, he found deep
+content. Another man, having lost the woman he loved, would have tried
+to forget her and all she meant to him. But Lee was far too honest
+with himself to substitute other thoughts for those that were glorious,
+that still thrilled him. The girl could take herself from him, but she
+could not take his love for her from him. And for that he was
+grateful. He never had considered himself worthy, and so could not
+believe he had been ill used. In his thoughts of her there was no
+bitterness: for that also he was grateful. And, as he knew he would
+not care for any other woman in the way he cared for her, he preferred
+to care in that way, even for one who was lost, than in a lesser way
+for a possible she who some day might greatly care for him. So she
+still remained in his thoughts, and was so constantly with him that he
+led a dual existence, in which by day he directed the affairs of an
+alien and hostile people and by night again lived through the wonderful
+moments when she had thought she loved him, when he first had learned
+to love her. At times she seemed actually at his side, and he could
+not tell whether he was pretending that this were so or whether the
+force of his love had projected her image half around the world.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Often, when in single file he led the men through the forest, he seemed
+again to be back on Cape Cod picking his way over their own lost road
+through the wood, and he heard "the beat of a horse's feet and the
+swish of a skirt in the dew." And then a carbine would rattle, or a
+horse would stumble and a trooper swear, and he was again in the
+sweating jungle, where men, intent upon his life, crouched in ambush.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She spared him the mockery of wedding-cards; but the announcement of
+the wedding came to him in a three-months-old newspaper. Hoping they
+would speak of her in their letters, he kept up a somewhat one-sided
+correspondence with friends of Mrs. Stedman's in Boston, where she now
+lived. But for a year in none of their letters did her name appear.
+When a mutual friend did write of her Lee understood the silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the first, the mutual friend wrote, the life of Mrs. Stedman and
+her husband was thoroughly miserable. Stedman blamed her because she
+came to him penniless. The rich aunt, who had heartily disapproved of
+the artist, had spoken of him so frankly that Frances had quarrelled
+with her, and from her no longer would accept money. In his anger at
+this Stedman showed himself to Frances as he was. And only two months
+after their marriage she was further enlightened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+An irate husband made him the central figure in a scandal that filled
+the friends of Frances with disgust, and that for her was an awakening
+cruel and humiliating. Men no longer permitted their womenfolk to sit
+to Stedman for a portrait, and the need of money grew imperative. He
+the more blamed Frances for having quarrelled with her aunt, told her
+it was for her money he had married her, that she had ruined his
+career, and that she was to blame for his ostracism&mdash;a condition that
+his own misconduct had brought upon him. Finally, after twelve months
+of this, one morning he left a note saying he no longer would allow her
+to be a drag upon him, and sailed for Europe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They learned that, in Paris, he had returned to that life which before
+his marriage, even in that easy-going city, had made him notorious.
+"And Frances," continued Lee's correspondent, "has left Boston, and now
+lives in New York. She wouldn't let any of us help her, nor even know
+where she is. The last we heard of her she was in charge of the
+complaint department of a millinery shop, for which work she was
+receiving about the same wages I give my cook."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lee did not stop to wonder why the same woman, who to one man was a
+"drag," was to another, even though separated from her by half the
+world, a joy and a blessing. Instead, he promptly wrote his lawyers to
+find Mrs. Stedman, and, in such a way as to keep her ignorant of their
+good offices, see that she obtained a position more congenial than her
+present one, and one that would pay her as much as, without arousing
+her suspicions, they found it possible to give.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Three months had passed, and this letter had not been answered, when in
+Manila, where he had been ordered to make a report, he heard of her
+again. One evening, when the band played on the Luneta, he met a newly
+married couple who had known him in Agawamsett. They now were on a
+ninety-day cruise around the world. Close friends of Frances Gardner,
+they remembered him as one of her many devotees and at once spoke of
+her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That blackguard she married," the bridegroom told him, "was killed
+three months ago racing with another car from Versailles back to Paris
+after a dinner at which, it seems, all present drank 'burgundy out of
+the fingerbowls.' Coming down that steep hill into Saint Cloud, the
+cars collided, and Stedman and a woman, whose husband thought she was
+somewhere else, were killed. He couldn't even die without making a
+scandal of it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But the worst," added the bride, "is that, in spite of the way the
+little beast treated her, I believe Frances still cares for him, and
+always will. That's the worst of it, isn't it?" she demanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In words, Lee did not answer, but in his heart he agreed that was much
+the worst of it. The fact that Frances was free filled him with hope;
+but that she still cared for the man she had married, and would
+continue to think only of him, made him ill with despair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He cabled his lawyers for her address. He determined that, at once, on
+learning it, he would tell her that with him nothing was changed. He
+had forgotten nothing, and had learned much. He had learned that his
+love for her was a splendid and inspiring passion, that even without
+her it had lifted him up, helped and cheered him, made the whole world
+kind and beautiful. With her he could not picture a world so complete
+with happiness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Since entering the army he had never taken a leave of absence, and he
+was sure, if now he asked for one, it would not be refused. He
+determined, if the answer to his cable gave him the address, he would
+return at once, and again offer her his love, which he now knew was
+deeper, finer, and infinitely more tender than the love he first had
+felt for her. But the cable balked him. "Address unknown," it read;
+"believed to have gone abroad in capacity of governess. Have employed
+foreign agents. Will cable their report."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Whether to wait for and be guided by the report of the detectives, or
+to proceed to Europe and search for her himself, Lee did not know. He
+finally determined that to seek for her with no clew to her whereabouts
+would be but a waste of precious moments, while, if in their search the
+agents were successful, he would be able to go directly to her.
+Meanwhile, by cable, he asked for protracted leave of absence and,
+while waiting for his answer, returned to his post. There, within a
+week, he received his leave of absence, but in a fashion that
+threatened to remove him forever from the army.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The constabulary had located the will-o'-the-wisp brigands behind a
+stockade built about an extinct volcano, and Lee and his troop and a
+mountain battery attempted to dislodge them. In the fight that
+followed Lee covered his brows with laurel wreaths and received two
+bullet wounds in his body.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a month death stood at the side of his cot; and then, still weak
+and at times delirious with fever, by slow stages he was removed to the
+hospital in Manila. In one of his sane moments a cable was shown him.
+It read: "Whereabouts still unknown." Lee at once rebelled against his
+doctors. He must rise, he declared, and proceed to Europe. It was
+upon a matter of life and death. The surgeons assured him his
+remaining exactly where he was also was a matter of as great
+consequence. Lee's knowledge of his own lack of strength told him they
+were right.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then, from headquarters, he was informed that, as a reward for his
+services and in recognition of his approaching convalescence, he was
+ordered to return to his own climate and that an easy billet had been
+found for him as a recruiting officer in New York City. Believing the
+woman he loved to be in Europe, this plan for his comfort only
+succeeded in bringing on a relapse. But the day following there came
+another cablegram. It put an abrupt end to his mutiny, and brought him
+and the War Department into complete accord.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She is in New York," it read, "acting as agent for a charitable
+institution, which one not known, but hope in a few days to cable
+correct address."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In all the world there was no man so happy. The next morning a
+transport was sailing, and, probably because they had read the
+cablegram, the surgeons agreed with Lee that a sea voyage would do him
+no harm. He was carried on board, and when the propellers first
+churned the water and he knew he was moving toward her, the hero of the
+fight around the crater shed unmanly tears. He would see her again,
+hear her voice; the same great city would shelter them. It was worth a
+dozen bullets.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He reached New York in a snow-storm, a week before Christmas, and went
+straight to the office of his lawyers. They received him with
+embarrassment. Six weeks before, on the very day they had cabled him
+that Mrs. Stedman was in New York, she had left the charitable
+institution where she had been employed, and had again disappeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lee sent his trunks to the Army and Navy Club, which was immediately
+around the corner from the recruiting office in Sixth Avenue, and began
+discharging telegrams at every one who had ever known Frances Gardner.
+The net result was discouraging. In the year and a half in which he
+had been absent every friend of the girl he sought had temporarily
+changed his place of residence or was permanently dead.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meanwhile his arrival by the transport was announced in the afternoon
+papers. At the wharf an admiring trooper had told a fine tale of his
+conduct at the battle of the crater, and reporters called at the club
+to see him. He did not discourage them, as he hoped through them the
+fact of his return might be made known to Frances. She might send him
+a line of welcome, and he would discover her whereabouts. But, though
+many others sent him hearty greetings, from her there was no word.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the second day after his arrival one of the telegrams was answered
+in person by a friend of Mrs. Stedman. He knew only that she had been
+in New York, that she was very poor and in ill health, that she shunned
+all of her friends, and was earning her living as the matron of some
+sort of a club for working girls. He did not know the name of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the third day there still was no news. On the fourth Lee decided
+that the next morning he would advertise. He would say only: "Will
+Mrs. Arthur Stedman communicate with Messrs. Fuller & Fuller?" Fuller &
+Fuller were his lawyers. That afternoon he remained until six o'clock
+at the recruiting office, and when he left it the electric street
+lights were burning brightly. A heavy damp snow was falling, and the
+lights and the falling flakes and the shouts of drivers and the toots
+of taxicabs made for the man from the tropics a welcome homecoming.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Instead of returning at once to his club, he slackened his steps. The
+shop windows of Sixth Avenue hung with Christmas garlands, and colored
+lamps glowed like open fireplaces. Lee passed slowly before them, glad
+that he had been able to get back at such a season. For the moment he
+had forgotten the woman he sought, and was conscious only of his
+surroundings. He had paused in front of the window of a pawn-shop.
+Over the array of cheap jewelry, of banjos, shot-guns, and razors, his
+eyes moved idly. And then they became transfixed and staring. In the
+very front of the window, directly under his nose, was a tarnished
+silver loving-cup. On it was engraved, "Mixed Doubles. Agawamsett,
+1910." In all the world there were only two such cups, and as though
+he were dodging the slash of a bolo, Lee leaped into the shop. Many
+precious seconds were wasted in persuading Mrs. Cohen that he did not
+believe the cup had been stolen; that he was not from the Central
+Office; that he believed the lady who had pawned the cup had come by it
+honestly; that he meant no harm to the lady; that he meant no harm to
+Mrs. Cohen; that, much as the young lady may have needed the money Mrs.
+Cohen had loaned her on the cup, he needed the address of the young
+lady still more.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mrs. Cohen retired behind a screen, and Lee was conscious that from the
+other side of it the whole family of Cohens were taking his
+measurements. He approved of their efforts to protect the owner of the
+cup, but not from him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He offered, if one of the younger Cohens would take him to the young
+lady, to let him first ask her if she would receive Captain Lee, and
+for his service he would give the young Cohen untold gold. He exhibited
+the untold gold. The young Cohen choked at the sight and sprang into
+the seat beside the driver of a taxicab.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To the Working Girls' Home, on Tenth Street!" he commanded.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Through the falling snow and the flashing lights they slid, skidded,
+and leaped. Inside the cab Lee shivered with excitement, with cold,
+with fear that it might not be true. He could not realize she was
+near. It was easier to imagine himself still in the jungle, with
+months of time and sixteen thousand miles of land and water separating
+them; or in the hospital, on a white-enamel cot, watching the shadow
+creep across the whitewashed wall; or lying beneath an awning that did
+not move, staring at a burning, brazen sea that did not move, on a
+transport that, timed by the beating of his heart, stood still.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Those days were within the radius of his experience. Separation,
+absence, the immutable giants of time and space, he knew. With them he
+had fought and could withstand them. But to be near her, to hear her
+voice, to bring his love into her actual presence, that was an attack
+upon his feelings which found him without weapons. That for a very few
+dollars she had traded the cup from which she had sworn never to part
+did not concern him. Having parted from him, what she did with a
+silver mug was of little consequence. It was of significance only in
+that it meant she was poor. And that she was either an inmate or a
+matron of a lodging-house for working girls also showed she was poor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had been told that was her condition, and that she was in ill
+health, and that from all who loved her she had refused to accept help.
+At the thought his jaws locked pugnaciously. There was one who loved
+her, who, should she refuse his aid, was prepared to make her life
+intolerable. He planned in succession at lightning speed all he might
+do for her. Among other things he would make this Christmas the
+happiest she or he would ever know. Not for an instant did he question
+that she who had refused help from all who loved her could refuse
+anything he offered. For he knew it was offered with a love that
+demanded nothing in return, with a love that asked only to be allowed
+to love, and to serve. To refuse help inspired by such a feeling as
+his would be morbid, wicked, ridiculous, as though a flower refused to
+turn its face to the sun, and shut its lips to the dew.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cab stopped in front of a brick building adorned with many
+fire-escapes. Afterward he remembered a bare, brilliantly lit hall
+hung with photographs of the Acropolis, and a stout, capable woman in a
+cap, who looked him over and said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You will find Mrs. Stedman in the writing-room."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And he remembered entering a room filled with Mission furniture and
+reading-lamps under green shades. It was empty, except for a young
+girl in deep black, who was seated facing him, her head bent above a
+writing-desk. As he came into the circle of the lamps the girl raised
+her eyes and as though lifted to her feet by what she saw, and through
+no effort of her own, stood erect.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the young man who had persuaded himself his love demanded nothing,
+who asked only to worship at her gate, found his arms reaching out, and
+heard his voice as though it came from a great distance, cry, "Frances!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the girl who had refused the help of all who loved her, like a
+homing pigeon walked straight into the outstretched arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After five minutes, when he was almost able to believe it was true, he
+said in his commanding, masterful way: "And now I'm going to take you
+out of here. I'm going to buy you a ring, and a sable coat, and a
+house to live in, and a dinner. Which shall we buy first?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"First," said Frances, frowning happily, "I am afraid we must go to the
+Ritz, to tell Aunt Emily. She always loved you, and it will make her
+so happy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To the Ritz!" stammered the young man. "To Aunt Emily! I thought they
+told me your aunt and-you-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We quarrelled, yes," said Frances, "and she has forgiven me; but she
+has not forgiven herself, so she spoils me, and already I have a house
+to live in, and several sable coats, and, oh! everything, everything
+but the ring."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am so sorry!" cried Lee. "I thought you were poor. I hoped you
+were poor. But you are joking!" he exclaimed delightedly. "You are
+here in a working girls' home-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is one of Aunt Emily's charities. She built it," said Frances. "I
+come here to talk to the girls."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But," persisted Lee triumphantly, "if you are not poor, why did you
+pawn our silver loving-cup?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The face of the girl became a lovely crimson, and tears rose to her
+eyes. As though at a confessional, she lifted her hands penitently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Try to understand," she begged; "I wanted you to love me, not for my
+money-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you knew!" cried Lee.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I had to be sure," begged the girl; "and I wanted to believe you loved
+me even if I did not love you. When it was too late I knew you loved
+me as no woman ever deserved to be loved; and I wanted that love. I
+could not live without it. So when I read in the papers you had
+returned I wouldn't let myself write you; I wouldn't let myself beg you
+to come to see me. I set a test for you. I knew from the papers you
+were at the Army and Navy Club, and that around the corner was the
+recruiting office. I'd often seen the sergeant there, in uniform, at
+the door. I knew you must pass from your club to the office many times
+each day, so I thought of the loving-cup and the pawn-shop. I planted
+it there. It was a trick, a test. I thought if you saw it in a
+pawn-shop you would believe I no longer cared for you, and that I was
+very poor. If you passed it by, then I would know you yourself had
+stopped caring, but if you asked about it, if you inquired for me, then
+I would know you came to me of your own wish, because you-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lee shook his head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't have to tell me," he said gently, "why I came. I've a cab
+outside. You will get in it," he commanded, "and we will rescue our
+cup. I always told you they would look well together over an open
+fireplace."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="laspalmas"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+This is the story of a gallant officer who loved his profession, his
+regiment, his country, but above all, whiskey; of his miraculous
+conversion to total abstinence, and of the humble instrument that
+worked the miracle. At the time it was worked, a battalion of the
+Thirty-third Infantry had been left behind to guard the Zone, and was
+occupying impromptu barracks on the hill above Las Palmas. That was
+when Las Palmas was one of the four thousand stations along the forty
+miles of the Panama Railroad. When the railroad was "reconstructed" the
+name of Las Palmas did not appear on the new time-table, and when this
+story appears Las Palmas will be eighty feet under water. So if any
+one wishes to dispute the miracle he will have to conduct his
+investigation in a diving-bell.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On this particular evening young Major Aintree, in command of the
+battalion, had gone up the line to Panama to dine at the Hotel Tivoli,
+and had dined well. To prevent his doing this a paternal government
+had ordered that at the Tivoli no alcoholic liquors may be sold; but
+only two hundred yards from the hotel, outside the zone of temperance,
+lies Panama and Angelina's, and during the dinner, between the Tivoli
+and Angelina's, the Jamaican waiter-boys ran relay races.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After the dinner, the Jamaican waiter-boys proving too slow, the
+dinner-party in a body adjourned to Angelina's, and when later, Major
+Aintree moved across the street to the night train to Las Palmas, he
+moved unsteadily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Standish of the Canal Zone police, who, though but twenty-six,
+was a full corporal, was for that night on duty as "train guard," and
+was waiting at the rear steps of the last car. As Aintree approached
+the steps he saw indistinctly a boyish figure in khaki, and, mistaking
+it for one of his own men, he clasped the handrail for support, and
+halted frowning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Observing the condition of the officer the policeman also frowned, but
+in deference to the uniform, slowly and with reluctance raised his hand
+to his sombrero. The reluctance was more apparent than the salute. It
+was less of a salute than an impertinence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Partly out of regard for his rank, partly from temper, chiefly from
+whiskey, Aintree saw scarlet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When you s'lute your s'perior officer," he shouted, "you s'lute him
+quick. You unnerstan', you s'lute him quick! S'lute me again," he
+commanded, "and s'lute me damn quick."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish remained motionless. As is the habit of policemen over all
+the world, his thumbs were stuck in his belt. He answered without
+offense, in tones matter-of-fact and calm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are not my superior officer," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was the calmness that irritated Aintree. His eyes sought for the
+infantryman's cap and found a sombrero.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You damned leatherneck," he began, "I'll report&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm not a marine, either," interrupted Standish. "I'm a policeman.
+Move on," he ordered, "you're keeping these people waiting."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Others of the dinner-party formed a flying wedge around Aintree and
+crowded him up the steps and into a seat and sat upon him. Ten minutes
+later, when Standish made his rounds of the cars, Aintree saw him
+approaching. He had a vague recollection that he had been insulted,
+and by a policeman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You!" he called, and so loudly that all in the car turned, "I'm going
+to report you, going to report you for insolence. What's your name?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Looking neither at Aintree nor at the faces turned toward him, Standish
+replied as though Aintree had asked him what time it was.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Standish," he said, "corporal, shield number 226, on train guard." He
+continued down the aisle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll remember you," Aintree shouted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But in the hot, glaring dawn of the morning after, Aintree forgot. It
+was Standish who remembered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The men of the Zone police are hand-picked. They have been soldiers,
+marines, cowboys, sheriffs, "Black Hussars" of the Pennsylvania State
+constabulary, rough riders with Roosevelt, mounted police in Canada,
+irregular horse in South Africa; they form one of the best-organized,
+best-disciplined, most efficient, most picturesque semi-military bodies
+in the world. Standish joined them from the Philippine constabulary in
+which he had been a second lieutenant. There are several like him in
+the Zone police, and in England they would be called gentlemen rankers.
+On the Isthmus, because of his youth, his fellow policemen called
+Standish "Kid." And smart as each of them was, each of them admitted
+the Kid wore his uniform with a difference. With him it always looked
+as though it had come freshly ironed from the Colon laundry; his
+leather leggings shone like meerschaum pipes; the brim of his sombrero
+rested impudently on the bridge of his nose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's been an officer," they used to say in extenuation. "You can tell
+when he salutes. He shows the back of his hand." Secretly, they were
+proud of him. Standish came of a long chain of soldiers, and that the
+weakest link in the chain had proved to be himself was a sorrow no one
+else but himself could fathom. Since he was three years old he had
+been trained to be a soldier, as carefully, with the same singleness of
+purpose, as the crown prince is trained to be a king. And when, after
+three happy, glorious years at West Point, he was found not clever
+enough to pass the examinations and was dropped, he did not curse the
+gods and die, but began again to work his way up. He was determined he
+still would wear shoulder-straps. He owed it to his ancestors. It was
+the tradition of his family, the one thing he wanted; it was his
+religion. He would get into the army even if by the side door, if only
+after many years of rough and patient service. He knew that some day,
+through his record, through the opportunity of a war, he would come
+into his inheritance. Meanwhile he officered his soul, disciplined his
+body, and daily tried to learn the lesson that he who hopes to control
+others must first control himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He allowed himself but one dissipation, one excess. That was to hate
+Major Aintree, commanding the Thirty-third Infantry. Of all the world
+could give, Aintree possessed everything that Standish considered the
+most to be desired. He was a graduate of West Point, he had seen
+service in Cuba, in the Boxer business, and in the Philippines. For an
+act of conspicuous courage at Batangas, he had received the medal of
+honor. He had had the luck of the devil. Wherever he held command
+turned out to be the place where things broke loose. And Aintree
+always attacked and routed them, always was the man on the job. It was
+his name that appeared in the newspapers, it was his name that headed
+the list of the junior officers mentioned for distinguished conduct.
+Standish had followed his career with an admiration and a joy that was
+without taint of envy or detraction. He gloried in Aintree, he
+delighted to know the army held such a man. He was grateful to Aintree
+for upholding the traditions of a profession to which he himself gave
+all the devotion of a fanatic. He made a god of him. This was the
+attitude of mind toward Aintree before he came to the Isthmus. Up to
+that time he had never seen his idol. Aintree had been only a name
+signed to brilliant articles in the service magazines, a man of whom
+those who had served with him or under him, when asked concerning him,
+spoke with loyalty and awe, the man the newspapers called "the hero of
+Batangas." And when at last he saw his hero, he believed his worship
+was justified. For Aintree looked the part. He was built like a
+greyhound with the shoulders of a stevedore. His chin was as
+projecting, and as hard, as the pointed end of a flat-iron. His every
+movement showed physical fitness, and his every glance and tone a
+confidence in himself that approached insolence. He was thirty-eight,
+twelve years older than the youth who had failed to make his
+commission, and who, as Aintree strode past, looked after him with
+wistful, hero-worshipping eyes. The revulsion, when it came, was
+extreme. The hero-worship gave way to contempt, to indignant
+condemnation, in which there was no pity, no excuse. That one upon
+whom so much had been lavished, who for himself had accomplished such
+good things, should bring disgrace upon his profession, should by his
+example demoralize his men, should risk losing all he had attained, all
+that had been given, was intolerable. When Standish learned his hero
+was a drunkard, when day after day Aintree furnished visible evidences
+of that fact, Standish felt Aintree had betrayed him and the army and
+the government that had educated, trained, clothed, and fed him. He
+regarded Aintree as worse than Benedict Arnold, because Arnold had
+turned traitor for power and money; Aintree was a traitor through mere
+weakness, because he could not say "no" to a bottle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Only in secret Standish railed against Aintree. When his brother
+policemen gossiped and jested about him, out of loyalty to the army he
+remained silent. But in his heart he could not forgive. The man he had
+so generously envied, the man after whose career he had wished to model
+his own, had voluntarily stepped from his pedestal and made a swine of
+himself. And not only could he not forgive, but as day after day
+Aintree furnished fresh food for his indignation he felt a fierce
+desire to punish.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meanwhile, of the conduct of Aintree, men older and wiser, if less
+intolerant than Standish, were beginning to take notice. It was after
+a dinner on Ancon Hill, and the women had left the men to themselves.
+They were the men who were placing the Panama Canal on the map. They
+were officers of the army who for five years had not worn a uniform.
+But for five years they had been at war with an enemy that never slept.
+Daily they had engaged in battle with mountains, rivers, swamps, two
+oceans, and disease. Where Aintree commanded five hundred soldiers,
+they commanded a body of men better drilled, better disciplined, and in
+number half as many as those who formed the entire army of the United
+States. The mind of each was occupied with a world problem. They
+thought and talked in millions&mdash;of millions of cubic yards of dirt, of
+millions of barrels of cement, of millions of tons of steel, of
+hundreds of millions of dollars, of which latter each received enough
+to keep himself and his family just beyond the reach of necessity. To
+these men with the world waiting upon the outcome of their endeavor,
+with responsibilities that never relaxed, Aintree's behavior was an
+incident, an annoyance of less importance than an overturned dirt train
+that for five minutes dared to block the completion of their work. But
+they were human and loyal to the army, and in such an infrequent moment
+as this, over the coffee and cigars, they could afford to remember the
+junior officer, to feel sorry for him, for the sake of the army, to
+save him from himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He takes his orders direct from the War Department," said the chief.
+"I've no authority over him. If he'd been one of my workmen I'd have
+shipped him north three months ago."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's it," said the surgeon, "he's not a workman. He has nothing to
+do, and idleness is the curse of the army. And in this climate&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothing to do!" snorted the civil administrator. "Keeping his men in
+hand is what he has to do! They're running amuck all over Panama,
+getting into fights with the Spiggoty police, bringing the uniform into
+contempt. As for the climate, it's the same climate for all of us.
+Look at Butler's marines and Barber's Zone police. The climate hasn't
+hurt them. They're as smart men as ever wore khaki. It's not the
+climate or lack of work that ails the Thirty-third, it's their
+commanding officer. 'So the colonel, so the regiment.' That's as old
+as the hills. Until Aintree takes a brace, his men won't. Some one
+ought to talk to him. It's a shame to see a fine fellow like that
+going to the dogs because no one has the courage to tell him the truth."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The chief smiled mockingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then why don't you?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm a civilian," protested the administrator. "If I told him he was
+going to the dogs he'd tell me to go to the devil. No, one of you army
+men must do it. He'll listen to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Captain Haldane of the cavalry was at the table; he was visiting
+Panama on leave as a tourist. The chief turned to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Haldane's the man," he said. "You're his friend and you're his junior
+in rank, so what you say won't sound official. Tell him people are
+talking; tell him it won't be long before they'll be talking in
+Washington. Scare him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The captain of cavalry smiled dubiously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aintree's a hard man to scare," he said. "But if it's as bad as you
+all seem to think, I'll risk it. But, why is it," he complained, "that
+whenever a man has to be told anything particularly unpleasant they
+always pick on his best friend to tell him? It makes them both
+miserable. Why not let his bitterest enemy try it? The enemy at least
+would have a fine time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because," said the chief, "Aintree hasn't an enemy in the
+world&mdash;except Aintree."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next morning, as he had promised, Haldane called upon his friend.
+When he arrived at Las Palmas, although the morning was well advanced
+toward noon, he found Aintree still under his mosquito bars and awake
+only to command a drink. The situation furnished Haldane with his
+text. He expressed his opinion of any individual, friend or no friend,
+officer or civilian, who on the Zone, where all men begin work at
+sunrise, could be found at noon still in his pajamas and preparing to
+face the duties of the day on an absinth cocktail. He said further
+that since he had arrived on the isthmus he had heard only of Aintree's
+misconduct, that soon the War Department would hear of it, that Aintree
+would lose his commission, would break the backbone of a splendid
+career.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a friend talking," continued Haldane, "and you know it! It's
+because I am your friend that I've risked losing your friendship! And,
+whether you like it or not, it's the truth. You're going down-hill,
+going fast, going like a motor-bus running away, and unless you put on
+the brakes you'll smash!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree was not even annoyed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's good advice for the right man," he granted, "but why waste it
+on me? I can do things other men can't. I can stop drinking this
+minute, and it will mean so little to me that I won't know I've
+stopped."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then stop," said Haldane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why?" demanded Aintree. "I like it. Why should I stop anything I
+like? Because a lot of old women are gossiping? Because old men who
+can't drink green mint without dancing turkey-trots think I'm going to
+the devil because I can drink whiskey? I'm not afraid of whiskey," he
+laughed tolerantly. "It amuses me, that's all it does to me; it amuses
+me." He pulled back the coat of his pajamas and showed his giant chest
+and shoulder. With his fist he struck his bare flesh and it glowed
+instantly a healthy, splendid pink.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See that!" commanded Aintree. "If there's a man on the isthmus in any
+better physical shape than I am, I'll&mdash;" He interrupted himself to
+begin again eagerly. "I'll make you a sporting proposition," he
+announced "I'll fight any man on the isthmus ten rounds&mdash;no matter who
+he is, a wop laborer, shovel man, Barbadian nigger, marine,
+anybody&mdash;and if he can knock me out I'll stop drinking. You see," he
+explained patiently, "I'm no mollycoddle or jelly-fish. I can afford a
+headache. And besides, it's my own head. If I don't give anybody else
+a headache, I don't see that it's anybody else's damned business."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you do," retorted Haldane steadily. "You're giving your own men
+worse than a headache, you're setting them a rotten example, you're
+giving the Thirty-third a bad name-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree vaulted off his cot and shook his fist at his friend. "You
+can't say that to me," he cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I do say it," protested Haldane. "When you were in Manila your men
+were models; here they're unshaven, sloppy, undisciplined. They look
+like bell-hops. And it's your fault. And everybody thinks so."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Slowly and carefully Aintree snapped his fingers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you can tell everybody, from me," he cried, "that's all I care
+what they think! And now," he continued, smiling hospitably, "let me
+congratulate you on your success as a missionary, and, to show you
+there's not a trace of hard feeling, we will have a drink."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Informally Haldane reported back to the commission, and the wife of one
+of them must have talked, for it was soon known that a brother officer
+had appealed to Aintree to reform, and Aintree had refused to listen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When she heard this, Grace Carter, the wife of Major Carter, one of the
+surgeons at the Ancon Hospital, was greatly perturbed. Aintree was
+engaged to be married to Helen Scott, who was her best friend and who
+was arriving by the next steamer to spend the winter. When she had
+Helen safely under her roof, Mrs. Carter had planned to marry off the
+young couple out of hand on the isthmus. But she had begun to wonder if
+it would not be better they should delay, or best that they should
+never marry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The awakening is going to be a terrible blow to Helen," she said to
+her husband. "She is so proud of him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"On the contrary," he protested, "it will be the awakening of
+Aintree&mdash;if Helen will stand for the way he's acting, she is not the
+girl I know. And when he finds she won't, and that he may lose her,
+he'll pull up short. He's talked Helen to me night after night until
+he's bored me so I could strangle him. He cares more for her than he
+does for anything, for the army, or for himself, and that's saying a
+great deal. One word from her will be enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Helen spoke the word three weeks after she arrived. It had not been
+necessary to tell her of the manner in which her lover was
+misconducting himself. At various dinners given in their honor he had
+made a nuisance of himself; on another occasion, while in uniform, he
+had created a scene in the dining-room of the Tivoli under the prying
+eyes of three hundred seeing-the-Canal tourists; and one night he had
+so badly beaten up a cabman who had laughed at his condition that the
+man went to the hospital. Major Carter, largely with money, had healed
+the injuries of the cabman, but Helen, who had witnessed the assault,
+had suffered an injury that money could not heal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She sent for Aintree, and at the home of her friend delivered her
+ultimatum.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hit him because he was offensive to you," said Aintree. "That's why
+I hit him. If I'd not had a drink in a year, I'd have hit him just as
+quick and just as hard."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Can't you see," said the girl, "that in being not yourself when I was
+in your care you were much more insulting to me than any cabman could
+possibly be? When you are like that you have no respect for me, or for
+yourself. Part of my pride in you is that you are so strong, that you
+control yourself, that common pleasures never get a hold on you. If
+you couldn't control your temper I wouldn't blame you, because you've a
+villainous temper and you were born with it. But you weren't born with
+a taste for liquor. None of your people drank. You never drank until
+you went into the army. If I were a man," declared the girl, "I'd be
+ashamed to admit anything was stronger than I was. You never let pain
+beat you. I've seen you play polo with a broken arm, but in this you
+give pain to others, you shame and humiliate the one you pretend to
+love, just because you are weak, just because you can't say 'no.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree laughed angrily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Drink has no hold on me," he protested. "It affects me as much as the
+lights and the music affect a girl at her first dance, and no more.
+But, if you ask me to stop&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I do not!" said the girl. "If you stop, you'll stop not because I
+have any influence over you, but because you don't need my influence.
+If it's wrong, if it's hurting you, if it's taking away your usefulness
+and your power for good, that's why you'll stop. Not because a girl
+begs you. Or you're not the man I think you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree retorted warmly. "I'm enough of a man for this," he protested:
+"I'm enough of a man not to confess I can't drink without making a
+beast of myself. It's easy not to drink at all. But to stop altogether
+is a confession of weakness. I'd look on my doing that as cowardly. I
+give you my word&mdash;not that I'll swear off, that I'll never do&mdash;but I
+promise you you'll have no further reason to be what you call
+humiliated, or ashamed. You have my word for it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A week later Aintree rode his pony into a railway cutting and rolled
+with it to the tracks below, and, if at the time he had not been
+extremely drunk, would have been killed. The pony, being quite sober,
+broke a leg and was destroyed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When word of this came to Helen she was too sick at heart to see
+Aintree, and by others it was made known to him that on the first
+steamer Miss Scott would return North. Aintree knew why she was going,
+knew she had lost faith and patience, knew the woman he loved had
+broken with him and put him out of her life. Appalled at this
+calamity, he proceeded to get drunk in earnest.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The night was very hot and the humidity very heavy, and at Las Palmas
+inside the bungalow that served as a police-station the lamps on either
+side of the lieutenant's desk burned like tiny furnaces. Between them,
+panting in the moist heat and with the sweat from his forehead and hand
+dripping upon an otherwise immaculate report, sat Standish. Two weeks
+before, the chief had made him one of his six lieutenants. With the
+force the promotion had been most popular.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Since his promotion Standish had been in charge of the police-station
+at Las Palmas and daily had seen Aintree as, on his way down the hill
+from the barracks to the railroad, the hero of Batangas passed the door
+of the station-house. Also, on the morning Aintree had jumped his
+horse over the embankment, Standish had seen him carried up the hill on
+a stretcher. At the sight the lieutenant of police had taken from his
+pocket a notebook, and on a flyleaf made a cross. On the flyleaf were
+many other dates and opposite each a cross. It was Aintree's record
+and as the number of black crosses grew, the greater had grown the
+resentment of Standish, the more greatly it had increased his anger
+against the man who had put this affront upon the army, the greater
+became his desire to punish.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In police circles the night had been quiet, the cells in the yard were
+empty, the telephone at his elbow had remained silent, and Standish,
+alone in the station-house, had employed himself in cramming "Moss's
+Manual for Subalterns." He found it a fascinating exercise. The hope
+that soon he might himself be a subaltern always burned brightly, and
+to be prepared seemed to make the coming of that day more certain. It
+was ten o'clock and Las Palmas lay sunk in slumber, and after the down
+train which was now due had passed, there was nothing likely to disturb
+her slumber until at sunrise the great army of dirt-diggers with
+shrieks of whistles, with roars of dynamite, with the rumbling of
+dirt-trains and steam-shovels, again sprang to the attack. Down the
+hill, a hundred yards below Standish, the night train halted at the
+station, with creakings and groanings continued toward Colon, and again
+Las Palmas returned to sleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And, then, quickly and viciously, like the crack of a mule-whip, came
+the reports of a pistol; and once more the hot and dripping silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On post at the railroad-station, whence the shots came, was Meehan, one
+of the Zone police, an ex-sergeant of marines. On top of the hill,
+outside the infantry barracks, was another policeman, Bullard, once a
+cowboy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish ran to the veranda and heard the pebbles scattering as Bullard
+leaped down the hill, and when, in the light from the open door, he
+passed, the lieutenant shouted at him to find Meehan and report back.
+Then the desk telephone rang, and Standish returned to his chair.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is Meehan," said a voice. "Those shots just now were fired by
+Major Aintree. He came down on the night train and jumped off after
+the train was pulling out and stumbled into a negro, and fell. He's
+been drinking and he swore the nigger pushed him; and the man called
+Aintree a liar. Aintree pulled his gun and the nigger ran. Aintree
+fired twice; then I got to him and knocked the gun out of his hand with
+my nightstick."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a pause. Until he was sure his voice would be steady and
+official, the boy lieutenant did not speak.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did he hit the negro?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know," Meehan answered. "The man jumped for the darkest spot
+he could find." The voice of Meehan lost its professional calm and
+became personal and aggrieved.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aintree's on his way to see you now, lieutenant. He's going to report
+me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For what?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The voice over the telephone rose indignantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For knocking the gun out of his hand. He says it's an assault. He's
+going to break me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish made no comment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Report here," he ordered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He heard Bullard hurrying up the hill and met him at the foot of the
+steps.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's a nigger," began Bullard, "lying under some bushes&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hush!" commanded Standish.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the path below came the sound of footsteps approaching unsteadily,
+and the voice of a man swearing and muttering to himself. Standish
+pulled the ex-cowboy into the shadow of the darkness and spoke in eager
+whispers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You understand," he concluded, "you will not report until you see me
+pick up a cigar from the desk and light it. You will wait out here in
+the darkness. When you see me light the cigar, you will come in and
+report."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cowboy policeman nodded, but without enthusiasm. "I understand,
+lieutenant," he said, "but," he shook his head doubtfully, "it sizes up
+to me like what those police up in New York call a 'frame-up.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish exclaimed impatiently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not my frame-up!" he said. "The man's framed himself up. All I'm
+going to do is to nail him to the wall!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish had only time to return to his desk when Aintree stumbled up
+the path and into the station-house. He was "fighting drunk," ugly,
+offensive, all but incoherent with anger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You in charge?" he demanded. He did not wait for an answer. "I've
+been 'saulted!" he shouted. "'Saulted by one of your damned policemen.
+He struck me&mdash;struck me when I was protecting myself. He had a nigger
+with him. First the nigger tripped me; then, when I tried to protect
+myself, this thug of yours hits me, clubs me, you unnerstan', clubs me!
+I want him&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was interrupted by the entrance of Meehan, who moved into the light
+from the lamps and saluted his lieutenant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's the man!" roared Aintree. The sight of Meehan whipped him into
+greater fury.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I want that man broke. I want to see you strip his shield off
+him&mdash;now, you unnerstan', now&mdash;for 'saulting me, for 'saulting an
+officer in the United States army. And, if you don't," he threw
+himself into a position of the prize-ring, "I'll beat him up and you,
+too." Through want of breath, he stopped, and panted. Again his voice
+broke forth hysterically. "I'm not afraid of your damned
+night-sticks," he taunted. "I got five hundred men on top this hill,
+all I've got to do is to say the word, and they'll rough-house this
+place and throw it into the cut&mdash;and you with it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish rose to his feet, and across the desk looked steadily at
+Aintree. To Aintree the steadiness of his eyes and the quietness of
+his voice were an added aggravation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Suppose you did," said Standish, "that would not save you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"From what?" roared Aintree. "Think I'm afraid of your night-sticks?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"From arrest!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Arrest me!" yelled Aintree. "Do you know who's talking to you? Do you
+know who I am? I'm Major Aintree, damn you, commanding the infantry.
+An' I'm here to charge that thug&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are here because you are under arrest," said Standish. "You are
+arrested for threatening the police, drunkenness, and assaulting a
+citizen with intent to kill&mdash;" The voice of the young man turned
+shrill and rasping. "And if the man should die&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree burst into a bellow of mocking laughter.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish struck the desk with his open palm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Silence!" he commanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Silence to me!" roared Aintree, "you impertinent pup!" He flung
+himself forward, shaking his fist. "I'm Major Aintree. I'm your
+superior officer. I'm an officer an' a gentleman&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are not!" replied Standish. "You are a drunken loafer!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree could not break the silence. Amazement, rage, stupefaction
+held him in incredulous wonder. Even Meehan moved uneasily. Between
+the officer commanding the infantry and an officer of police, he feared
+the lieutenant would not survive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he heard the voice of his lieutenant continuing, evenly, coldly,
+like the voice of a judge delivering sentence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are a drunken loafer," repeated the boy. "And you know it. And I
+mean that to-morrow morning every one on the Zone shall know it. And I
+mean to-morrow night every one in the States shall know it. You've
+killed a man, or tried to, and I'm going to break you." With his arm he
+pointed to Meehan. "Break that man?" he demanded. "For doing his duty,
+for trying to stop a murder? Strip him of his shield?" The boy laughed
+savagely. "It's you I am going to strip, Aintree," he cried, "you
+'hero of Batangas'; I'm going to strip you naked. I'm going to 'cut
+the buttons off your coat, and tear the stripes away.' I'm going to
+degrade you and disgrace you, and drive you out of the army!" He threw
+his note-book on the table. "There's your dossier, Aintree," he said.
+"For three months you've been drunk, and there's your record. The
+police got it for me; it's written there with dates and the names of
+witnesses. I'll swear to it. I've been after you to get you, and I've
+got you. With that book, with what you did to-night, you'll leave the
+army. You may resign, you may be court-martialled, you may be hung. I
+don't give a damn what they do to you, but you will leave the army!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned to Meehan, and with a jerk of the hand signified Aintree.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Put him in a cell," he said. "If he resists&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree gave no sign of resisting. He stood motionless, his arms
+hanging limp, his eyes protruding. The liquor had died in him, and his
+anger had turned chill. He tried to moisten his lips to speak, but his
+throat was baked, and no sound issued. He tried to focus his eyes upon
+the menacing little figure behind the desk, but between the two lamps
+it swayed, and shrank and swelled. Of one thing only was he sure, that
+some grave disaster had overtaken him, something that when he came
+fully to his senses still would overwhelm him, something he could not
+conquer with his fists. His brain, even befuddled as it was, told him
+he had been caught by the heels, that he was in a trap, that smashing
+this boy who threatened him could not set him free. He recognized, and
+it was this knowledge that stirred him with alarm, that this was no
+ordinary officer of justice, but a personal enemy, an avenging spirit
+who, for some unknown reason, had spread a trap; who, for some private
+purpose of revenge, would drag him down.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Frowning painfully, he waved Meehan from him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wait," he commanded. "I don' unnerstan'. What good's it goin' to do
+you to lock me up an' disgrace me? What harm have I done you? Who
+asked you to run the army, anyway? Who are you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My name is Standish," said the lieutenant. "My father was colonel of
+the Thirty-third when you first joined it from the Academy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree exclaimed with surprise and enlightenment. He broke into
+hurried speech, but Standish cut him short.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And General Standish of the Mexican War," he continued, "was my
+grandfather. Since Washington all my people have been officers of the
+regular army, and I'd been one, too, if I'd been bright enough. That's
+why I respect the army. That's why I'm going to throw you out of it.
+You've done harm fifty men as good as you can't undo. You've made
+drunkards of a whole battalion. You've taught boys who looked up to
+you, as I looked up to you once, to laugh at discipline, to make swine
+of themselves. You've set them an example. I'm going to make an
+example of you. That's all there is to this. I've got no grudge
+against you. I'm not vindictive; I'm sorry for you. But," he paused
+and pointed his hand at Aintree as though it held a gun, "you are going
+to leave the army!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like a man coming out of an ugly dream, Aintree opened and shut his
+eyes, shivered, and stretched his great muscles. They watched him with
+an effort of the will force himself back to consciousness. When again
+he spoke, his tone was sane.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"See here, Standish," he began, "I'll not beg of you or any man. I only
+ask you to think what you're doing. This means my finish. If you force
+this through to-night it means court-martial, it means I lose my
+commission, I lose&mdash;lose things you know nothing about. And, if I've
+got a record for drinking, I've got a record for other things, too.
+Don't forget that!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish shook his head. "I didn't forget it," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, suppose I did," demanded Aintree. "Suppose I did go on the
+loose, just to pass the time, just because I'm sick of this damned
+ditch? Is it fair to wipe out all that went before, for that? I'm the
+youngest major in the army, I served in three campaigns, I'm a
+medal-of-honor man, I've got a career ahead of me, and&mdash;and I'm going
+to be married. If you give me a chance-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish struck the table with his fist.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I will give you a chance," he cried. "If you'll give your word to
+this man and to me, that, so help you God, you'll never drink
+again&mdash;I'll let you go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+If what Standish proposed had been something base, Aintree could not
+have accepted it with more contempt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll see you in hell first," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As though the interview was at an end, Standish dropped into his chair
+and leaning forward, from the table picked up a cigar. As he lit it,
+he motioned Meehan toward his prisoner, but before the policeman could
+advance the sound of footsteps halted him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Bullard, his eyes filled with concern, leaped up the steps, and ran to
+the desk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lieutenant!" he stammered, "that man&mdash;the nigger that officer
+shot&mdash;he's dead!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree gave a gasp that was partly a groan, partly a cry of protest,
+and Bullard, as though for the first time aware of his presence, sprang
+back to the open door and placed himself between it and Aintree.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's murder!" he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+None of the three men spoke; and when Meehan crossed to where Aintree
+stood, staring fearfully at nothing, he had only to touch his sleeve,
+and Aintree, still staring, fell into step beside him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the yard outside Standish heard the iron door of the cell swing
+shut, heard the key grate in the lock, and the footsteps of Meehan
+returning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Meehan laid the key upon the desk, and with Bullard stood at attention,
+waiting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Give him time," whispered Standish. "Let it sink in!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the end of half an hour Standish heard Aintree calling, and, with
+Meehan carrying a lantern, stepped into the yard and stopped at the
+cell door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aintree was quite sober. His face was set and white, his voice was
+dull with suffering. He stood erect, clasping the bars in his hands.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Standish," he said, "you gave me a chance a while ago, and I refused
+it. I was rough about it. I'm sorry. It made me hot because I
+thought you were forcing my hand, blackmailing me into doing something
+I ought to do as a free agent. Now, I am a free agent. You couldn't
+give me a chance now, you couldn't let me go now, not if I swore on a
+thousand Bibles. I don't know what they'll give me&mdash;Leavenworth for
+life, or hanging, or just dismissal. But, you've got what you
+wanted&mdash;I'm leaving the army!" Between the bars he stretched out his
+arms and held a hand toward Meehan and Standish. In the same dull,
+numbed voice he continued.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So, now," he went on, "that I've nothing to gain by it, I want to
+swear to you and to this man here, that whether I hang, or go to jail,
+or am turned loose, I will never, so help me God, take another drink."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Standish was holding the hand of the man who once had been his hero.
+He clutched it tight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aintree," he cried, "suppose I could work a miracle; suppose I've
+played a trick on you, to show you your danger, to show you what might
+come to you any day&mdash;does that oath still stand?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The hand that held his ground the bones together.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've given my word!" cried Aintree. "For the love of God, don't
+torture me. Is the man alive?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Standish swung open the cell door, the hero of Batangas, he who
+could thrash any man on the isthmus, crumpled up like a child upon his
+shoulder.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Meehan, as he ran for water, shouted joyfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That nigger," he called to Bullard, "can go home now. The lieutenant
+don't want him no more."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="evil"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+As a rule, the instant the season closed Aline Proctor sailed on the
+first steamer for London, where awaited her many friends, both English
+and American&mdash;and to Paris, where she selected those gowns that on and
+off the stage helped to make her famous. But this particular summer
+she had spent with the Endicotts at Bar Harbor, and it was at their
+house Herbert Nelson met her. After Herbert met her very few other men
+enjoyed that privilege. This was her wish as well as his.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They behaved disgracefully. Every morning after breakfast they
+disappeared and spent the day at opposite ends of a canoe. She,
+knowing nothing of a canoe, was happy in stabbing the waters with her
+paddle while he told her how he loved her and at the same time, with
+anxious eyes on his own paddle, skilfully frustrated her efforts to
+drown them both. While the affair lasted it was ideal and beautiful,
+but unfortunately it lasted only two months.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then Lord Albany, temporarily in America as honorary attache to the
+British embassy, his adoring glances, his accent, and the way he
+brushed his hair, proved too much for the susceptible heart of Aline,
+and she chucked Herbert and asked herself how a woman of her age could
+have seriously considered marrying a youth just out of Harvard! At that
+time she was a woman of nineteen; but, as she had been before the
+public ever since she was eleven, the women declared she was not a day
+under twenty-six; and the men knew she could not possibly be over
+sixteen!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Aline's own idea of herself was that without some one in love with her
+she could not exist&mdash;that, unless she knew some man cared for her and
+for her alone, she would wither and die. As a matter of fact, whether
+any one loved her or not did not in the least interest her. There were
+several dozen men who could testify to that. They knew! What she
+really wanted was to be head over ears in love&mdash;to adore some one, to
+worship him, to imagine herself starving for him and making sacrifice
+hits for him; but when the moment came to make the sacrifice hit and
+marry the man, she invariably found that a greater, truer love had
+arisen&mdash;for some one else.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This greater and truer love always made her behave abominably to the
+youth she had just jilted. She wasted no time on post-mortems. She was
+so eager to show her absolute loyalty to the new monarch that she
+grudged every thought she ever had given the one she had cast into
+exile. She resented him bitterly. She could not forgive him for
+having allowed her to be desperately in love with him. He should have
+known he was not worthy of such a love as hers. He should have known
+that the real prince was waiting only just round the corner.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As a rule the rejected ones behaved well. Each decided Aline was much
+too wonderful a creature for him, and continued to love her cautiously
+and from a distance. None of them ever spoke or thought ill of her and
+would gladly have punched any one who did. It was only the women whose
+young men Aline had temporarily confiscated, and then returned saddened
+and chastened, who were spiteful. And they dared say no more than that
+Aline would probably have known her mind better if she had had a mother
+to look after her. This, coming to the ears of Aline, caused her to
+reply that a girl who could not keep straight herself, but needed a
+mother to help her, would not keep straight had she a dozen mothers.
+As she put it cheerfully, a girl who goes wrong and then pleads "no
+mother to guide her" is like a jockey who pulls a race and then blames
+the horse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Each of the young men Aline rejected married some one else and, except
+when the name of Aline Proctor in the theatrical advertisements or in
+electric lights on Broadway gave him a start, forgot that for a month
+her name and his own had been linked together from Portland to San
+Francisco. But the girl he married did not forget. She never
+understood what the public saw in Aline Proctor. That Aline was the
+queen of musical comedy she attributed to the fact that Aline knew the
+right people and got herself written about in the right way. But that
+she could sing, dance, act; that she possessed compelling charm; that
+she "got across" not only to the tired business man, the wine agent,
+the college boy, but also to the children and the old ladies, was to
+her never apparent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Just as Aline could not forgive the rejected suitor for allowing her to
+love him, so the girl he married never forgave Aline for having loved
+her husband. Least of all could Sally Winthrop, who two years after
+the summer at Bar Harbor married Herbert Nelson, forgive her. And she
+let Herbert know it. Herbert was properly in love with Sally Winthrop,
+but he liked to think that his engagement to Aline, though brief and
+abruptly terminated, had proved him to be a man fatally attractive to
+all women. And though he was hypnotizing himself into believing that
+his feeling for Aline had been the grand passion, the truth was that
+all that kept her in his thoughts was his own vanity. He was not
+discontented with his lot&mdash;his lot being Sally Winthrop, her millions,
+and her estate of three hundred acres near Westbury. Nor was he still
+longing for Aline. It was only that his vanity was flattered by the
+recollection that one of the young women most beloved by the public had
+once loved him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I once was a king in Babylon," he used to misquote to himself, "and
+she was a Christian slave."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was as young as that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Had he been content in secret to assure himself that he once had been a
+reigning monarch, his vanity would have harmed no one; but,
+unfortunately, he possessed certain documentary evidence to that fact.
+And he was sufficiently foolish not to wish to destroy it. The
+evidence consisted of a dozen photographs he had snapped of Aline
+during the happy days at Bar Harbor, and on which she had written
+phrases somewhat exuberant and sentimental.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From these photographs Nelson was loath to part&mdash;especially with one
+that showed Aline seated on a rock that ran into the waters of the
+harbor, and on which she had written: "As long as this rock lasts!"
+Each time she was in love Aline believed it would last. That in the
+past it never had lasted did not discourage her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What to do with these photographs that so vividly recalled the most
+tumultuous period of his life Nelson could not decide. If he hid them
+away and Sally found them, he knew she would make his life miserable.
+If he died and Sally then found them, when he no longer was able to
+explain that they meant nothing to him, she would believe he always had
+loved the other woman, and it would make her miserable. He felt he
+could not safely keep them in his own house; his vanity did not permit
+him to burn them, and, accordingly, he decided to unload them on some
+one else.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man to whom he confided his collection was Charles Cochran.
+Cochran was a charming person from the West. He had studied in the
+Beaux Arts and on foot had travelled over England and Europe, preparing
+himself to try his fortune in New York as an architect. He was now in
+the office of the architects Post & Constant, and lived alone in a tiny
+farmhouse he had made over for himself near Herbert Nelson, at
+Westbury, Long Island.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Post & Constant were a fashionable firm and were responsible for many
+of the French chateaux and English country houses that were rising near
+Westbury, Hempstead, and Roslyn; and it was Cochran's duty to drive
+over that territory in his runabout, keep an eye on the contractors,
+and dissuade clients from grafting mansard roofs on Italian villas. He
+had built the summer home of the Herbert Nelsons, and Herbert and
+Charles were very warm friends. Charles was of the same lack of years
+as was Herbert, of an enthusiastic and sentimental nature; and, like
+many other young men, the story of his life also was the lovely and
+much-desired Aline Proctor. It was this coincidence that had made them
+friends and that had led Herbert to select Charles as the custodian of
+his treasure. As a custodian and confidant Charles especially appealed
+to his new friend, because, except upon the stage and in restaurants,
+Charles had never seen Aline Proctor, did not know her&mdash;and considered
+her so far above him, so unattainable, that he had no wish to seek her
+out. Unknown, he preferred to worship at a distance. In this
+determination Herbert strongly encouraged him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he turned over the pictures to Charles, Herbert could not resist
+showing them to him. They were in many ways charming. They presented
+the queen of musical comedy in several new roles. In one she was in a
+sailor suit, giving an imitation of a girl paddling a canoe. In
+another she was in a riding-habit mounted upon a pony of which she
+seemed very much afraid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In some she sat like a siren among the rocks with the waves and seaweed
+snatching at her feet, and in another she crouched beneath the wheel of
+Herbert's touring car. All of the photographs were unprofessional and
+intimate, and the legends scrawled across them were even more intimate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'As long as this rock lasts!'" read Herbert. At arm's length he held
+the picture for Cochran to see, and laughed bitterly and unmirthfully
+as he had heard leading men laugh in problem plays.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is what she wrote," he mocked&mdash;"but how long did it last? Until
+she saw that little red-headed Albany playing polo. That lasted until
+his mother heard of it. She thought her precious lamb was in the
+clutches of a designing actress, and made the Foreign Office cable him
+home. Then Aline took up one of those army aviators, and chucked him
+for that fellow who painted her portrait, and threw him over for the
+lawn-tennis champion. Now she's engaged to Chester Griswold, and
+Heaven pity her! Of course he's the greatest catch in America; but he's
+a prig and a snob, and he's so generous with his money that he'll give
+you five pennies for a nickel any time you ask him. He's got a heart
+like the metre of a taxicab, and he's jealous as a cat. Aline will
+have a fine time with Chester! I knew him at St. Paul's and at Harvard,
+and he's got as much red blood in him as an eel!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cochran sprang to the defense of the lady of his dreams.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There must be some good in the man," he protested, "or Miss Proctor-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, those solemn snobs," declared Herbert, "impress women by just
+keeping still. Griswold pretends the reason he doesn't speak to you is
+because he's too superior, but the real reason is that he knows
+whenever he opens his mouth he shows he is an ass."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Reluctantly Herbert turned over to Charles the precious pictures. "It
+would be a sin to destroy them, wouldn't it?" he prompted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cochran agreed heartily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You might even," suggested Herbert, "leave one or two of them about.
+You have so many of Aline already that one more wouldn't be noticed.
+Then when I drop in I could see it." He smiled ingratiatingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But those I have I bought," Cochran pointed out. "Anybody can buy
+them, but yours are personal. And they're signed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No one will notice that but me," protested Herbert. "Just one or
+two," he coaxed-"stuck round among the others. They'd give me a heap
+of melancholy pleasure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles shook his head doubtfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your wife often comes here with you," he said. "I don't believe
+they'd give her melancholy pleasure. The question is, are you married
+to Sally or to Aline Proctor?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, of course," exclaimed Herbert&mdash;"if you refuse!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With suspicious haste Charles surrendered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't refuse," he explained; "I only ask if it's wise. Sally knows
+you were once very fond of Miss Proctor&mdash;knows you were engaged to her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But," protested Herbert, "Sally sees your photographs of Aline. What
+difference can a few more make? After she's seen a dozen she gets used
+to them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+No sooner had Herbert left him than the custodian of the treasure
+himself selected the photographs he would display. In them the young
+woman he had&mdash;from the front row of the orchestra&mdash;so ardently admired
+appeared in a new light. To Cochran they seemed at once to render her
+more kindly, more approachable; to show her as she really was, the sort
+of girl any youth would find it extremely difficult not to love.
+Cochran found it extremely easy. The photographs gave his imagination
+all the room it wanted. He believed they also gave him an insight into
+her real character that was denied to anybody else. He had always
+credited her with all the virtues; he now endowed her with every charm
+of mind and body. In a week to the two photographs he had selected
+from the loan collection for purposes of display and to give Herbert
+melancholy pleasure he had added three more. In two weeks there were
+half a dozen. In a month, nobly framed in silver, in leather of red,
+green, and blue, the entire collection smiled upon him from every part
+of his bedroom. For he now kept them where no one but himself could
+see them. No longer was he of a mind to share his borrowed treasure
+with others&mdash;not even with the rightful owner.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Chester Griswold, spurred on by Aline Proctor, who wanted to build a
+summer home on Long Island, was motoring with Post, of Post & Constant,
+in the neighborhood of Westbury. Post had pointed out several houses
+designed by his firm, which he hoped might assist Griswold in making up
+his mind as to the kind of house he wanted; but none they had seen had
+satisfied his client.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What I want is a cheap house," explained the young millionaire. "I
+don't really want a house at all," he complained. "It's Miss Proctor's
+idea. When we are married I intend to move into my mother's town
+house, but Miss Proctor wants one for herself in the country. I've
+agreed to that; but it must be small and it must be cheap."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Cheap" was a word that the clients of Post & Constant never used; but
+Post knew the weaknesses of some of the truly rich, and he knew also
+that no house ever built cost only what the architect said it would
+cost.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know the very house you want!" he exclaimed. "One of our young men
+owns it. He made it over from an old farmhouse. It's very well
+arranged; we've used his ground-plan several times and it works out
+splendidly. If he's not at home, I'll show you over the place myself.
+And if you like the house he's the man to build you one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When they reached Cochran's home he was at Garden City playing golf,
+but the servant knew Mr. Post, and to him and his client threw open
+every room in the house.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, this," exclaimed the architect enthusiastically, "is the master's
+bedroom. In your case it would probably be your wife's room and you
+would occupy the one adjoining, which Cochran now uses as a guest-room.
+As you see, they are entirely cut off from-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Griswold did not see. Up to that moment he had given every
+appearance of being both bored and sulky. Now his attention was
+entirely engaged&mdash;but not upon the admirable simplicity of Mr.
+Cochran's ground-plan, as Mr. Post had hoped. Instead, the eyes of the
+greatest catch in America were intently regarding a display of
+photographs that smiled back at him from every corner of the room. Not
+only did he regard these photographs with a savage glare, but he
+approached them and carefully studied the inscriptions scrawled across
+the face of each.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Post himself cast a glance at the nearest photographs, and then hastily
+manoeuvred his client into the hall and closed the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We will now," he exclaimed, "visit the butler's pantry, which opens
+upon the dining-room and kitchen, thus saving&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Griswold did not hear him. Without giving another glance at the
+house he stamped out of it and, plumping himself down in the motor-car,
+banged the door. Not until Post had driven him well into New York did
+he make any comment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What did you say," he then demanded, "is the name of the man who owns
+that last house we saw?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Post told him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I never heard of him!" said Griswold as though he were delivering
+young Cochran's death sentence. "Who is he?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He's an architect in our office," said Post. "We think a lot of him.
+He'll leave us soon, of course. The best ones always do. His work is
+very popular. So is he."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I never heard of him," repeated Griswold. Then, with sudden heat, he
+added savagely: "But I mean to to-night."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Griswold had first persuaded Aline Proctor to engage herself to
+him he had suggested that, to avoid embarrassment, she should tell him
+the names of the other men to whom she had been engaged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What kind of embarrassment would that avoid?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I am talking to a man," said Griswold, "and he knows the woman I'm
+going to marry was engaged to him and I don't know that, he has me at a
+disadvantage."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't see that he has," said Aline. "If we suppose, for the sake of
+argument, that to marry me is desirable, I would say that the man who
+was going to marry me had the advantage over the one I had declined to
+marry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I want to know who those men are," explained Griswold, "because I want
+to avoid them. I don't want to talk to them. I don't want even to
+know them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't see how I can help you," said Aline. "I haven't the slightest
+objection to telling you the names of the men I have cared for, if I
+can remember them, but I certainly do not intend to tell you the name
+of any man who cared for me enough to ask me to marry him. That's his
+secret, not mine&mdash;certainly not yours."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Griswold thought he was very proud. He really was very vain; and as
+jealousy is only vanity in its nastiest development he was extremely
+jealous. So he persisted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will you do this?" he demanded. "If I ever ask you, 'Is that one of
+the men you cared for?' will you tell me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you wish it," said Aline; "but I can't see any health in it. It
+will only make you uncomfortable. So long as you know I have given you
+the greatest and truest love I am capable of, why should you concern
+yourself with my mistakes?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So that I can avoid meeting what you call your mistakes," said
+Griswold&mdash;"and being friendly with them."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I assure you," laughed Aline, "it wouldn't hurt you a bit to be as
+friendly with them as they'd let you. Maybe they weren't as proud of
+their families as you are, but they made up for that by being a darned
+sight prouder of me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Later, undismayed by this and unashamed, on two occasions Griswold
+actually did demand of Aline if a genial youth she had just greeted
+joyfully was one of those for whom she once had cared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And Aline had replied promptly and truthfully that he was. But in the
+case of Charles Cochran, Griswold did not ask Aline if he was one of
+those for whom she once had cared. He considered the affair with
+Cochran so serious that, in regard to that man, he adopted a different
+course.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In digging rivals out of the past his jealousy had made him
+indefatigable, but in all his researches he never had heard the name of
+Charles Cochran. That fact and the added circumstance that Aline
+herself never had mentioned the man was in his eyes so suspicious as to
+be almost a damning evidence of deception. And he argued that if in
+the past Aline had deceived him as to Charles Cochran she would
+continue to do so. Accordingly, instead of asking her frankly for the
+truth he proceeded to lay traps for it. And if there is one thing
+Truth cannot abide, it is being hunted by traps.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That evening Aline and he were invited to a supper in her honor, and as
+he drove her from the theatre to the home of their hostess he told her
+of his search earlier in the day.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The electric light in the limousine showed Aline's face as clearly as
+though it were held in a spotlight, and as he prepared his trap
+Griswold regarded her jealously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Post tells me," he said, "he has the very man you want for your
+architect. He's sure you'll find him most understanding
+and&mdash;and&mdash;sympathetic. He's a young man who is just coming to the
+front, and he's very popular, especially with women."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's his being popular with women," asked Aline, "got to do with his
+carrying out my ideas of a house?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's just it," said Griswold&mdash;"it's the woman who generally has the
+most to say as to how her house shall be built, and this man
+understands woman. I have reasons for believing he will certainly
+understand you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If he understands me well enough to give me all the linen-closets I
+want," said Aline, "he will be perfectly satisfactory."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before delivering his blow Griswold sank back into his corner of the
+car, drew his hat brim over his forehead, and fixed spying eyes upon
+the very lovely face of the girl he had asked to marry him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"His name," he said in fateful tones, "is Charles Cochran!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was supposed to be a body blow; but, to his distress, Aline neither
+started nor turned pale. Neither, for trying to trick her, did she
+turn upon him in reproof and anger. Instead, with alert eyes, she
+continued to peer out of the window at the electric-light
+advertisements and her beloved Broadway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well?" demanded Griswold; his tone was hoarse and heavy with meaning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well what?" asked Aline pleasantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How," demanded Griswold, "do you like Charles Cochran for an
+architect?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How should I know?" asked Aline. "I've not met him yet!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She had said it! And she had said it without the waver of one of her
+lovely eyelashes. No wonder the public already hailed her as a
+finished actress! Griswold felt that his worst fears were justified.
+She had lied to him. And, as he knew she had never before lied to him,
+that now she did so proved beyond hope of doubt that the reason for it
+was vital, imperative, and compelling. But of his suspicions Griswold
+gave no sign. He would not at once expose her. He had trapped her,
+but as yet she must not know that. He would wait until he had still
+further entangled her&mdash;until she could not escape; and then, with
+complete proof of her deceit, he would confront and overwhelm her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With this amiable purpose in mind he called early the next morning upon
+Post & Constant and asked to see Mr. Cochran. He wished, he said, to
+consult him about the new house. Post had not yet reached the office,
+and of Griswold's visit with Post to his house Cochran was still
+ignorant. He received Griswold most courteously. He felt that the man
+who was loved by the girl he also had long and hopelessly worshipped
+was deserving of the highest consideration. Griswold was less
+magnanimous. When he found his rival&mdash;for as such he beheld him&mdash;was
+of charming manners and gallant appearance he considered that fact an
+additional injury; but he concealed his resentment, for he was going to
+trap Cochran, too.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He found the architect at work leaning over a drawing-board, and as
+they talked Cochran continued to stand. He was in his shirt-sleeves,
+which were rolled to his shoulders; and the breadth of those shoulders
+and the muscles of his sunburned arms were much in evidence. Griswold
+considered it a vulgar exhibition.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For over ten minutes they talked solely of the proposed house, but not
+once did Griswold expose the fact that he had seen any more of it than
+any one might see from the public road. When he rose to take his leave
+he said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How would it do if I motored out Sunday and showed your house to Miss
+Proctor? Sunday is the only day she has off, and if it would not
+inconvenience you&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The tender heart of Cochran leaped in wild tumult; he could not conceal
+his delight, nor did he attempt to do so; and his expression made it
+entirely unnecessary for him to assure Griswold that such a visit would
+be entirely welcome and that they might count on finding him at home.
+As though it were an afterthought, Griswold halted at the door and said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I believe you are already acquainted with Miss Proctor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cochran, conscious of five years of devotion, found that he was
+blushing, and longed to strangle himself. Nor was the blush lost upon
+Griswold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm sorry," said Cochran, "but I've not had that honor. On the stage,
+of course&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He shrugged the broad shoulders deprecatingly, as though to suggest
+that not to know Miss Proctor as an artist argues oneself unknown.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Griswold pretended to be puzzled. As though endeavoring to recall a
+past conversation he frowned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But Aline," he said, "told me she had met you-met you at Bar Harbor."
+In the fatal photographs the familiar landfalls of Bar Harbor had been
+easily recognized.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young architect shook his head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It must be another Cochran," he suggested. "I have never been in Bar
+Harbor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With the evidence of the photographs before him this last statement was
+a verdict of guilty, and Griswold, not with the idea of giving Cochran
+a last chance to be honest, but to cause him to dig the pit still
+deeper, continued to lead him on. "Maybe she meant York Harbor?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again Cochran shook his head and laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Believe me," he said, "if I'd ever met Miss Proctor anywhere I
+wouldn't forget it!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Ten minutes later Griswold was talking to Aline over the telephone. He
+intended to force matters. He would show Aline she could neither
+trifle with nor deceive Chester Griswold; but the thought that he had
+been deceived was not what most hurt him. What hurt him was to think
+that Aline had preferred a man who looked like an advertisement for
+ready-made clothes and who worked in his shirt-sleeves.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Griswold took it for granted that any woman would be glad to marry him.
+So many had been willing to do so that he was convinced, when one of
+them was not, it was not because there was anything wrong with him, but
+because the girl herself lacked taste and perception.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That the others had been in any degree moved by his many millions had
+never suggested itself. He was convinced each had loved him for
+himself alone; and if Aline, after meeting him, would still consider
+any one else, it was evident something was very wrong with Aline. He
+was determined that she must be chastened&mdash;must be brought to a proper
+appreciation of her good fortune and of his condescension.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On being called to the telephone at ten in the morning, Aline demanded
+to know what could excuse Griswold for rousing her in the middle of the
+night!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Griswold replied that, though the day was young, it also was charming;
+that on Sunday there might be rain; and that if she desired to see the
+house he and Post thought would most suit her, he and his car would be
+delighted to convey her to it. They could make the run in an hour,
+lunch with friends at Westbury, and return in plenty of time for the
+theatre. Aline was delighted at the sudden interest Griswold was
+showing in the new house. Without a moment's hesitation she walked into
+the trap. She would go, she declared, with pleasure. In an hour he
+should call for her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Exactly an hour later Post arrived at his office. He went directly to
+Cochran.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Charles," he said, "I'm afraid I got you into trouble yesterday. I
+took a client to see your house. You have often let us do it before;
+but since I was there last you've made some changes. In your
+bedroom&mdash;" Post stopped.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cochran's naive habit of blushing told him it was not necessary to
+proceed. In tones of rage and mortification Cochran swore explosively;
+Post was relieved to find he was swearing at himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I ought to be horsewhipped!" roared Cochran. "I'll never forgive
+myself! Who," he demanded, "saw the pictures? Was it a man or a woman?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Post laughed unhappily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was Chester Griswold."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A remarkable change came over Cochran. Instead of sobering him, as
+Post supposed it would, the information made him even more angry&mdash;only
+now his anger was transferred from himself to Griswold.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The blankety-blank bounder!" yelled Cochran. "That was what he
+wanted! That's why he came here!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Here!" demanded Post.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not an hour ago," cried Cochran. "He asked me about Bar Harbor. He
+saw those pictures were taken at Bar Harbor!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I think," said Post soothingly, "he'd a right to ask questions. There
+were so many pictures, and they were very&mdash;well&mdash;very!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'd have answered his questions," roared Cochran, "if he'd asked them
+like a man, but he came snooping down here to spy on me. He tried to
+trick me. He insulted me! He insulted her!" He emitted a howl of
+dismay. "And I told him I'd never been to Bar Harbor&mdash;that I'd never
+met Aline Proctor!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Cochran seized his coat and hat. He shouted to one of the office boys
+to telephone the garage for his car.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What are you&mdash;where are you going?" demanded Post.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going home first," cried Cochran, "to put those pictures in a
+safe, as I should have done three months ago. And then I'm going to
+find Chester Griswold and tell him he's an ass and a puppy!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you do that," protested Post, "you're likely to lose us a very
+valuable client."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And your client," roared Charles, "is likely to lose some very
+valuable teeth!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Charles whirled into the country road in which stood his house he
+saw drawn up in front of it the long gray car in which, that morning,
+Chester Griswold had called at the office. Cochran emitted a howl of
+anger. Was his home again to be invaded? And again while he was
+absent? To what extreme would Griswold's jealousy next lead him? He
+fell out of his own car while it still moved, and leaped up the garden
+walk. The front rooms of the house were empty, but from his bedroom he
+heard, raised in excited tones, the voice of Griswold. The audacity of
+the man was so surprising, and his own delight at catching him
+red-handed so satisfying, that no longer was Cochran angry. The Lord
+had delivered his enemy into his hands! And, as he advanced toward his
+bedroom, not only was he calm, but, at the thought of his revenge,
+distinctly jubilant. In the passageway a frightened maid servant, who,
+at his unexpected arrival, was now even more frightened, endeavored to
+give him an explanation; but he waved her into silence, and, striding
+before her, entered his bedroom.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He found confronting him a tall and beautiful young woman. It was not
+the Aline Proctor he knew. It was not the well-poised, gracious, and
+distinguished beauty he had seen gliding among the tables at Sherry's
+or throwing smiles over the footlights. This Aline Proctor was a very
+indignant young person, with flashing eyes, tossing head, and a
+stamping foot. Extended from her at arm's length, she held a
+photograph of herself in a heavy silver frame; and, as though it were a
+weapon, she was brandishing it in the face of Chester Griswold. As
+Cochran, in amazement, halted in the doorway she was exclaiming:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I told you I didn't know Charles Cochran! I tell you so now! If you
+can't believe me-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Out of the corner of her flashing eyes the angry lady caught sight of
+Cochran in the doorway. She turned upon the intruder as though she
+meant forcibly to eject him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who are you?" she demanded. Her manner and tone seemed to add: "And
+what the deuce are you doing here?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles answered her tone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am Charles Cochran," he said. "I live here. This is my house!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These words had no other effect upon Miss Proctor than to switch her
+indignation down another track. She now turned upon Charles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then, if this is your house," cried that angry young person, "why have
+you filled it with photographs of me that belong to some one else?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles saw that his hour had come. His sin had found him out. He
+felt that to prevaricate would be only stupid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Griswold had tried devious methods&mdash;and look where his devious methods
+had dumped him! Griswold certainly was in wrong. Charles quickly
+determined to adopt a course directly opposite. Griswold had shown an
+utter lack of confidence in Aline. Charles decided that he would give
+her his entire confidence, would throw himself upon the mercy of the
+court.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have those photographs in my house, Miss Proctor," he said, "because
+I have admired you a long time. They were more like you than those I
+could buy. Having them here has helped me a lot, and it hasn't done
+you any harm. You know very well you have anonymous admirers all over
+this country. I'm only one of them. If I have offended, I have
+offended with many, many thousands."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Already it has been related that Cochran was very good to look upon.
+At the present moment, as he spoke in respectful, even soulful accents,
+meekly and penitently proclaiming his long-concealed admiration, Miss
+Proctor found her indignation melting like an icicle in the sun.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Still, she did not hold herself cheaply. She was accustomed to such
+open flattery. She would not at once capitulate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But these pictures," she protested, "I gave to a man I knew. You have
+no right to them. They are not at all the sort of picture I would give
+to an utter stranger!" With anxiety the lovely lady paused for a
+reply. She hoped that the reply the tall young man with appealing eyes
+would make would be such as to make it possible for her to forgive him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was not given time to reply. With a mocking snort Griswold
+interrupted. Aline and Charles had entirely forgotten him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An utter stranger!" mimicked Griswold. "Oh, yes; he's an utter
+stranger! You're pretty good actors, both of you; but you can't keep
+that up long, and you'd better stop it now."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Stop what?" asked Miss Proctor. Her tone was cold and calm, but in
+her eyes was a strange light. It should have warned Griswold that he
+would have been safer under the bed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Stop pretending!" cried Griswold. "I won't have it!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't understand," said Miss Proctor. She spoke in the same cold
+voice, only now it had dropped several degrees nearer freezing. "I
+don't think you understand yourself. You won't have what?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Griswold now was frightened, and that made him reckless. Instead of
+withdrawing he plunged deeper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I won't have you two pretending you don't know each other," he
+blustered. "I won't stand being fooled! If you're going to deceive me
+before we're married, what will you do after we're married?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles emitted a howl. It was made up of disgust, amazement, and
+rage. Fiercely he turned upon Miss Proctor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Let me have him!" he begged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" almost shouted Miss Proctor. Her tone was no longer cold&mdash;it was
+volcanic. Her eyes, flashing beautifully, were fixed upon Griswold.
+She made a gesture as though to sweep Charles out of the room. "Please
+go!" she demanded. "This does not concern you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her tone was one not lightly to be disregarded. Charles disregarded it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It does concern me," he said briskly. "Nobody can insult a woman in
+my house&mdash;you, least of all!" He turned upon the greatest catch in
+America. "Griswold," he said, "I never met this lady until I came into
+this room; but I know her, understand her, value her better than you'd
+understand her if you knew her a thousand years!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Griswold allowed him to go no farther.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know this much," he roared: "she was in love with the man who took
+those photographs, and that man was in love with her! And you're that
+man!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What if I am!" roared back Charles. "Men always have loved her; men
+always will&mdash;because she's a fine, big, wonderful woman! You can't see
+that, and you never will. You insulted her! Now I'll give you time to
+apologize for that, and then I'll order you out of this house! And if
+Miss Proctor is the sort of girl I think she is, she'll order you out
+of it, too!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Both men swung toward Miss Proctor. Her eyes were now smiling
+excitedly. She first turned them upon Charles, blushing most
+becomingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Miss Proctor," she said, "hopes she is the sort of girl Mr. Cochran
+thinks she is." She then turned upon the greatest catch in America.
+"You needn't wait, Chester," she said, "not even to apologize."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Chester Griswold, alone in his car, was driven back to New York. On the
+way he invented a story to explain why, at the eleventh hour, he had
+jilted Aline Proctor; but when his thoughts reverted to the young man
+he had seen working with his sleeves rolled up he decided it would be
+safer to let Miss Proctor tell of the broken engagement in her own way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Charles would not consent to drive his fair guest back to New York
+until she had first honored him with her presence at luncheon. It was
+served for two, on his veranda, under the climbing honeysuckles.
+During the luncheon he told her all.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Proctor, in the light of his five years of devotion, magnanimously
+forgave him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Such a pretty house!" she exclaimed as they drove away from it. "When
+Griswold selected it for our honeymoon he showed his first appreciation
+of what I really like."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is still at your service!" said Charles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Miss Proctor's eyes smiled with a strange light, but she did not speak.
+It was a happy ride; but when Charles left her at the door of her
+apartment-house he regarded sadly and with regret the bundle of
+retrieved photographs that she carried away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is it?" she asked kindly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm thinking of going back to those empty frames," said Charles, and
+blushed deeply. Miss Proctor blushed also. With delighted and guilty
+eyes she hastily scanned the photographs. Snatching one from the
+collection, she gave it to him and then ran up the steps.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the light of the spring sunset the eyes of Charles devoured the
+photograph of which, at last, he was the rightful owner. On it was
+written: "As long as this rock lasts!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Charles walked to his car his expression was distinctly thoughtful.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="zanzibar"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+When his hunting trip in Uganda was over, Hemingway shipped his
+specimens and weapons direct from Mombasa to New York, but he himself
+journeyed south over the few miles that stretched to Zanzibar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the outward trip the steamer had touched there, and the little he
+saw of the place had so charmed him that all the time he was on safari
+he promised himself he would not return home without revisiting it. On
+the morning he arrived he had called upon Harris, his consul, to
+inquire about the hotel; and that evening Harris had returned his call
+and introduced him at the club.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One of the men there asked Hemingway what brought him to Africa, and
+when he answered simply and truthfully that he had come to shoot big
+game, it was as though he had said something clever, and every one
+smiled. On the way back to the hotel, as they felt their way through
+the narrow slits in the wall that served as streets, he asked the
+consul why every one had smiled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The consul laughed evasively.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a local joke," he explained. "A lot of men come here for reasons
+best kept to themselves, and they all say what you said, that they've
+come to shoot big game. It's grown to be a polite way of telling a man
+it is none of his business."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I didn't mean it that way," protested Hemingway. "I really have
+been after big game for the last eight months."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the tone one uses to quiet a drunken man or a child, the consul
+answered soothingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," he assented&mdash;"of course you have." But to show he was not
+hopelessly credulous, and to keep Hemingway from involving himself
+deeper, he hinted tactfully: "Maybe they noticed you came ashore with
+only one steamer trunk and no gun-cases."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Oh, that's easily explained," laughed Hemingway. "My heavy luggage&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The consul had reached his house and his "boy" was pounding upon it
+with his heavy staff.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Please don't explain to me," he begged. "It's quite unnecessary. Down
+here we're so darned glad to see any white man that we don't ask
+anything of him except that he won't hurry away. We judge them as they
+behave themselves here; we don't care what they are at home or why they
+left it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway was highly amused. To find that he, a respectable,
+sport-loving Hemingway of Massachusetts, should be mistaken for a
+gun-runner, slave-dealer, or escaping cashier greatly delighted him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"All right!" he exclaimed. "I'll promise not to bore you with my past,
+and I agree to be judged by Zanzibar standards. I only hope I can live
+up to them, for I see I am going to like the place very much."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway kept his promise. He bored no one with confidences as to his
+ancestors. Of his past he made a point never to speak. He preferred
+that the little community into which he had dropped should remain
+unenlightened, should take him as they found him. Of the fact that a
+college was named after his grandfather and that on his father's
+railroad he could travel through many States, he was discreetly silent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The men of Zanzibar asked no questions. That Hemingway could play a
+stiff game of tennis, a stiffer game of poker, and, on the piano, songs
+from home was to them sufficient recommendation. In a week he had
+become one of the most popular members of Zanzibar society. It was as
+though he had lived there always. Hemingway found himself reaching out
+to grasp the warmth of the place as a flower turns to the sun. He
+discovered that for thirty years something in him had been cheated. For
+thirty years he had believed that completely to satisfy his soul all he
+needed was the gray stone walls and the gray-shingled cabins under the
+gray skies of New England, that what in nature he most loved was the
+pine forests and the fields of goldenrod on the rock-bound coast of the
+North Shore. But now, like a man escaped from prison, he leaped and
+danced in the glaring sunlight of the equator, he revelled in the
+reckless generosity of nature, in the glorious confusion of colors, in
+the "blooming blue" of the Indian Ocean, in the Arabian nights spent
+upon the housetops under the purple sky, and beneath silver stars so
+near that he could touch them with his hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He found it like being perpetually in a comic opera and playing a part
+in one. For only the scenic artist would dare to paint houses in such
+yellow, pink, and cobalt-blue; only a "producer" who had never ventured
+farther from Broadway than the Atlantic City boardwalk would have
+conceived costumes so mad and so magnificent. Instinctively he cast
+the people of Zanzibar in the conventional roles of musical comedy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His choruses were already in waiting. There was the Sultan's
+body-guard in gold-laced turbans, the merchants of the bazaars in red
+fezzes and gowns of flowing silk, the Malay sailors in blue, the black
+native police in scarlet, the ladies of the harems closely veiled and
+cloaked, the market women in a single garment of orange, or scarlet, or
+purple, or of all three, and the happy, hilarious Zanzibari boys in the
+color God gave them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For hours he would sit under the yellow-and-green awning of the Greek
+hotel and watch the procession pass, or he would lie under an umbrella
+on the beach and laugh as the boatmen lifted their passengers to their
+shoulders and with them splash through the breakers, or in the bazaars
+for hours he would bargain with the Indian merchants, or in the great
+mahogany hall of the Ivory House, to the whisper of a punka and the
+tinkle of ice in a tall glass, listen to tales of Arab raids, of
+elephant poachers, of the trade in white and black ivory, of the great
+explorers who had sat in that same room&mdash;of Emin Pasha, of Livingstone,
+of Stanley. His comic opera lacked only a heroine and the love
+interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he met Mrs. Adair he found both. Polly Adair, as every one who
+dared to do so preferred to call her, was, like himself, an American
+and, though absurdly young, a widow. In the States she would have been
+called an extremely pretty girl. In a community where the few dozen
+white women had wilted and faded in the fierce sun of the equator, and
+where the rest of the women were jet black except their teeth, which
+were dyed an alluring purple, Polly Adair was as beautiful as a June
+morning. At least, so Hemingway thought the first time he saw her, and
+each succeeding time he thought her more beautiful, more lovely, more
+to be loved.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He met her, three days after his arrival, at the residence of the
+British agent and consul-general, where Lady Firth was giving tea to
+the six nurses from the English hospital and to all the other
+respectable members of Zanzibar society.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My husband's typist," said her ladyship as she helped Hemingway to
+tea, "is a copatriot of yours. She's such a nice gell; not a bit like
+an American. I don't know what I'd do in this awful place without her.
+Promise me," she begged tragically, "you will not ask her to marry you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Unconscious of his fate, Hemingway promised.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because all the men do," sighed Lady Firth, "and I never know what
+morning one of the wretches won't carry her off to a home of her own.
+And then what would become of me? Men are so selfish! If you must fall
+in love," suggested her ladyship, "promise me you will fall in love
+with"&mdash;she paused innocently and raised baby-blue eyes, in a baby-like
+stare&mdash;"with some one else."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again Hemingway promised. He bowed gallantly. "That will be quite
+easy," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her ladyship smiled, but Hemingway did not see the smile. He was
+looking past her at a girl from home, who came across the terrace
+carrying in her hand a stenographer's note-book.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lady Firth followed the direction of his eyes and saw the look in them.
+She exclaimed with dismay:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Already! Already he deserts me, even before the ink is dry on the
+paper."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She drew the note-book from Mrs. Adair's fingers and dropped it under
+the tea-table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Letters must wait, my child," she declared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But Sir George&mdash;" protested the girl.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sir George must wait, too," continued his wife; "the Foreign Office
+must wait, the British Empire must wait until you have had your tea."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl laughed helplessly. As though assured her fellow countryman
+would comprehend, she turned to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They're so exactly like what you want them to be," she said&mdash;"I mean
+about their tea!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway smiled back with such intimate understanding that Lady Firth
+glanced up inquiringly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you met Mrs. Adair already?" she asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Hemingway, "but I have been trying to meet her for thirty
+years."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Perplexed, the Englishwoman frowned, and then, with delight at her own
+perspicuity, laughed aloud.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know," she cried, "in your country you are what they call a
+'hustler'! Is that right?" She waved them away. "Take Mrs. Adair over
+there," she commanded, "and tell her all the news from home. Tell her
+about the railroad accidents and 'washouts' and the latest thing in
+lynching."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young people stretched out in long wicker chairs in the shade of a
+tree covered with purple flowers. On a perch at one side of them an
+orang-outang in a steel belt was combing the whiskers of her infant
+daughter; at their feet what looked like two chow puppies, but which
+happened to be Lady Firth's pet lions, were chewing each other's
+toothless gums; and in the immediate foreground the hospital nurses
+were defying the sun at tennis while the Sultan's band played
+selections from a Gaiety success of many years in the past. With these
+surroundings it was difficult to talk of home. Nor on any later
+occasions, except through inadvertence, did they talk of home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the reasons already stated, it amused Hemingway to volunteer no
+confidences. On account of what that same evening Harris told him of
+Mrs. Adair, he asked none.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Harris himself was a young man in no way inclined to withhold
+confidences. He enjoyed giving out information. He enjoyed talking
+about himself, his duties, the other consuls, the Zanzibaris, and his
+native State of Iowa. So long as he was permitted to talk, the
+listener could select the subject. But, combined with his loquacity,
+Hemingway had found him kind-hearted, intelligent, observing, and the
+call of a common country had got them quickly together.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway was quite conscious that the girl he had seen but once had
+impressed him out of all proportion to what he knew of her. She seemed
+too good to be true. And he tried to persuade himself that after eight
+months in the hinterland among hippos and zebras any reasonably
+attractive girl would have proved equally disturbing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he was not convinced. He did not wish to be convinced. He assured
+himself that had he met Mrs. Adair at home among hundreds of others he
+would have recognized her as a woman of exceptional character, as one
+especially charming. He wanted to justify this idea of her; he wanted
+to talk of Mrs. Adair to Harris, not to learn more concerning her, but
+just for the pleasure of speaking her name.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was much upset at that, and the discovery that on meeting a woman
+for the first time he still could be so boyishly and ingenuously moved
+greatly pleased him. It was a most delightful secret. So he acted on
+the principle that when a man immensely admires a woman and wishes to
+conceal that fact from every one else he can best do so by declaring
+his admiration in the frankest and most open manner. After the
+tea-party, as Harris and himself sat in the consulate, he so expressed
+himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What an extraordinary nice girl," he exclaimed, "is that Mrs. Adair! I
+had a long talk with her. She is most charming. However did a woman
+like that come to be in a place like this?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Judging from his manner, it seemed to Hemingway that at the mention of
+Mrs. Adair's name he had found Harris mentally on guard, as though the
+consul had guessed the question would come and had prepared for it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She just dropped in here one day," said Harris, "from no place in
+particular. Personally, I always have thought from heaven."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's a good address," said Hemingway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It seems to suit her," the consul agreed. "Anyway, if she doesn't
+come from there, that's where she's going&mdash;just on account of the good
+she's done us while she's been here. She arrived four months ago with
+a typewriting-machine and letters to me from our consuls in Cape Town
+and Durban. She had done some typewriting for them. It seems that
+after her husband died, which was a few months after they were married,
+she learned to make her living by typewriting. She worked too hard and
+broke down, and the doctor said she must go to hot countries, the
+'hotter the better.' So she's worked her way half around the world
+typewriting. She worked chiefly for her own consuls or for the
+American commission houses. Sometimes she stayed a month, sometimes
+only over one steamer day. But when she got here Lady Firth took such
+a fancy to her that she made Sir George engage her as his private
+secretary, and she's been here ever since."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a community so small as was that of Zanzibar the white residents saw
+one another every day, and within a week Hemingway had met Mrs. Adair
+many times. He met her at dinner, at the British agency; he met her in
+the country club, where the white exiles gathered for tea and tennis.
+He hired a launch and in her honor gave a picnic on the north coast of
+the island, and on three glorious and memorable nights, after different
+dinner-parties had ascended to the roof, he sat at her side and across
+the white level of the housetops looked down into the moonlit harbor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What interest the two young people felt in each other was in no way
+discouraged by their surroundings. In the tropics the tender emotions
+are not winter killed. Had they met at home, the conventions, his own
+work, her social duties would have kept the progress of their interest
+within a certain speed limit. But they were in a place free of
+conventions, and the preceding eight months which Hemingway had spent
+in the jungle and on the plain had made the society of his fellow man,
+and of Mrs. Adair in particular, especially attractive.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway had no work to occupy his time, and he placed it unreservedly
+at the disposition of his countrywoman. In doing so it could not be
+said that Mrs. Adair encouraged him. Hemingway himself would have been
+the first to acknowledge this. From the day he met her he was
+conscious that always there was an intangible barrier between them.
+Even before she possibly could have guessed that his interest in her
+was more than even she, attractive as she was, had the right to expect,
+she had wrapped around herself an invisible mantle of defense.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There were certain speeches of his which she never heard, certain tones
+to which she never responded. At moments when he was complimenting
+himself that at last she was content to be in his company, she would
+suddenly rise and join the others, and he would be left wondering in
+what way he could possibly have offended.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He assured himself that a woman, young and attractive, in a strange
+land in her dependent position must of necessity be discreet, but in
+his conduct there certainly had been nothing that was not considerate,
+courteous, and straightforward.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he appreciated that he cared for her seriously, that he was
+gloriously happy in caring, and proud of the way in which he cared, the
+fact that she persistently held him at arm's length puzzled and hurt.
+At first when he had deliberately set to work to make her like him he
+was glad to think that, owing to his reticence about himself, if she
+did like him it would be for himself alone and not for his worldly
+goods. But when he knew her better he understood that if once Mrs.
+Adair made up her mind to take a second husband, the fact that he was a
+social and financial somebody, and not, as many in Zanzibar supposed
+Hemingway to be, a social outcast, would make but little difference.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Nor was her manner to be explained by the fact that the majority of
+women found him unattractive. As to that, the pleasant burden of his
+experience was to the contrary. He at last wondered if there was some
+one else, if he had come into her life too late. He set about looking
+for the man and so, he believed, he soon found him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of the little colony, Arthur Fearing was the man of whom Hemingway had
+seen the least. That was so because Fearing wished it. Like himself,
+Fearing was an American, young, and a bachelor, but, very much unlike
+Hemingway, a hermit and a recluse.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Two years before he had come to Zanzibar looking for an investment for
+his money. In Zanzibar there were gentlemen adventurers of every
+country, who were welcome to live in any country save their own.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To them Mr. Fearing seemed a heaven-sent victim. But to him their
+alluring tales of the fortunes that were to rise from buried treasures,
+lost mines, and pearl beds did not appeal. Instead he conferred with
+the consuls, the responsible merchants, the partners in the prosperous
+trading houses. After a month of "looking around" he had purchased
+outright the goodwill and stock of one of the oldest of the commission
+houses, and soon showed himself to be a most capable man of business.
+But, except as a man of business, no one knew him. From the dim
+recesses of his warehouse he passed each day to the seclusion of his
+bungalow in the country. And, although every one was friendly to him,
+he made no friends.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was only after the arrival of Mrs. Adair that he consented to show
+himself, and it was soon noted that it was only when she was invited
+that he would appear, and that on these occasions he devoted himself
+entirely to her. In the presence of others, he still was shy, gravely
+polite, and speaking but little, and never of himself; but with Mrs.
+Adair his shyness seemed to leave him, and when with her he was seen to
+talk easily and eagerly. And, on her part, to what he said, Polly
+Adair listened with serious interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lady Firth, who, at home, was a trained and successful match-maker, and
+who, in Zanzibar, had found but a limited field for her activities,
+decided that if her companion and protegee must marry, she should marry
+Fearing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Fearing was no gentleman adventurer, remittance-man, or humble clerk
+serving his apprenticeship to a steamship line or an ivory house. He
+was one of the pillars of Zanzibar society. The trading house he had
+purchased had had its beginnings in the slave-trade, and now under his
+alert direction was making a turnover equal to that of any of its
+ancient rivals. Personally, Fearing was a most desirable catch. He
+was well-mannered, well-read, of good appearance, steady, and, in a
+latitude only six degrees removed from the equator, of impeccable
+morals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It is said that it is the person who is in love who always is the first
+to discover his successful rival. It is either an instinct or because
+his concern is deeper than that of others.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And so, when Hemingway sought for the influence that separated him from
+Polly Adair, the trail led to Fearing. To find that the obstacle in
+the path of his true love was a man greatly relieved him. He had
+feared that what was in the thoughts of Mrs. Adair was the memory of
+her dead husband. He had no desire to cross swords with a ghost. But
+to a living rival he could afford to be generous.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For he was sure no one could care for Polly Adair as he cared, and,
+like every other man in love, he believed that he alone had discovered
+in her beauties of soul and character that to the rest of mankind were
+hidden. This knowledge, he assured himself, had aroused in him a depth
+of devotion no one else could hope to imitate, and this depth of
+devotion would in time so impress her, would become so necessary to her
+existence, that it would force her at last into the arms of the only
+man who could offer it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Having satisfied himself in this fashion, he continued cheerfully on
+his way, and the presence of a rival in no way discouraged him. It
+only was Polly Adair who discouraged him. And this, in spite of the
+fact that every hour of the day he tried to bring himself pleasantly to
+her notice. All that an idle young man in love, aided and abetted by
+imagination and an unlimited letter of credit, could do, Hemingway did.
+But to no end.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The treasures he dug out of the bazaars and presented to her, under
+false pretenses as trinkets he happened at that moment to find in his
+pockets, were admired by her at their own great value, and returned
+also under false pretenses, as having been offered her only to examine.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is for your sister at home, I suppose," she prompted. "It's quite
+lovely. Thank you for letting me see it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After having been several times severely snubbed in this fashion,
+Hemingway remarked grimly as he put a black pearl back into his pocket:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"At this rate sister will be mighty glad to see me when I get home. It
+seems almost a pity I haven't got a sister."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl answered this only with a grave smile.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On another occasion she admired a polo pony that had been imported for
+the stable of the boy Sultan. But next morning Hemingway, after much
+diplomacy, became the owner of it and proudly rode it to the agency.
+Lady Firth and Polly Adair walked out to meet him arm in arm, but at
+sight of the pony there came into the eyes of the secretary a look that
+caused Hemingway to wish himself and his mount many miles in the
+jungle. He saw that before it had been proffered, his gift-horse had
+been rejected. He acted promptly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Lady Firth," he said, "you've been so awfully kind to me, made this
+place so like a home to me, that I want you to put this mare in your
+stable. The Sultan wanted her, but when he learned I meant to turn her
+over to you, he let her go. We both hope you'll accept."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lady Firth had no scruples. In five minutes she had accepted, had
+clapped a side-saddle on her rich gift, and was cantering joyously down
+the Pearl Road.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Polly Adair looked after her with an expression that was distinctly
+wistful. Thus encouraged, Hemingway said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm glad you are sorry. I hope every time you see that pony you'll be
+sorry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why should I be sorry?" asked the girl.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because you have been unkind," said Hemingway, "and it is not your
+character to be unkind. And that you have shown lack of character
+ought to make you sorry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But you know perfectly well," said Mrs. Adair, "that if I were to take
+any one of these wonderful things you bring me, I wouldn't have any
+character left."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She smiled at him reassuringly. "And you know," she added, "that that
+is not why I do not take them. It isn't because I can't afford to, or
+because I don't want them, because I do; but it's because I don't
+deserve them, because I can give you nothing in return."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As the copy-book says," returned Hemingway, "'the pleasure is in the
+giving.' If the copy-book don't say that, I do. And to pretend that
+you give me nothing, that is ridiculous!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was so ridiculous that he rushed on vehemently. "Why, every minute
+you give me something," he exclaimed. "Just to see you, just to know
+you are alive, just to be certain when I turn in at night that when the
+world wakes up again you will still be a part of it; that is what you
+give me. And its name is&mdash;Happiness!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had begun quite innocently; he had had no idea that it would come.
+But he had said it. As clearly as though he had dropped upon one knee,
+laid his hand over his heart and exclaimed: "Most beautiful of your
+sex, I love you! Will you marry me?" His eyes and the tone of his
+voice had said it. And he knew that he had said it, and that she knew.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her eyes were filled with sudden tears, and so wonderful was the light
+in them that for one mad moment Hemingway thought they were tears of
+happiness. But the light died, and what had been tears became only wet
+drops of water, and he saw to his dismay that she was most miserable.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl moved ahead of him to the cliff on which the agency stood, and
+which overhung the harbor and the Indian Ocean. Her eyes were filled
+with trouble. As she raised them to his they begged of him to be kind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am glad you told me," she said. "I have been afraid it was coming.
+But until you told me I could not say anything. I tried to stop you.
+I was rude and unkind&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You certainly were," Hemingway agreed cheerfully. "And the more you
+would have nothing to do with me, the more I admired you. And then I
+learned to admire you more, and then to love you. It seems now as
+though I had always known and always loved you. And now this is what
+we are going to do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He wouldn't let her speak; he rushed on precipitately.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We are first going up to the house to get your typewriting-machine,
+and we will bring it back here and hurl it as far as we can off this
+cliff. I want to see the splash! I want to hear it smash when it hits
+that rock. It has been my worst enemy, because it helped you to be
+independent of me, because it kept you from me. Time after time, on
+the veranda, when I was pretending to listen to Lady Firth, I was
+listening to that damned machine banging and complaining and tiring
+your pretty fingers and your dear eyes. So first it has got to go.
+You have been its slave, now I am going to be your slave. You have
+only to rub the lamp and things will happen. And because I've told you
+nothing about myself, you mustn't think that the money that helps to
+make them happen is 'tainted.' It isn't. Nor am I, nor my father, nor
+my father's father. I am asking you to marry a perfectly respectable
+young man. And, when you do&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again he gave her no opportunity to interrupt, but rushed on
+impetuously: "We will sail away across that ocean to wherever you will
+take me. To Ceylon and Tokio and San Francisco, to Naples and New
+York, to Greece and Athens. They are all near. They are all yours.
+Will you accept them and me?" He smiled appealingly, but most
+miserably. For though he had spoken lightly and with confidence, it
+was to conceal the fact that he was not at all confident. As he had
+read in her eyes her refusal of his pony, he had read, even as he
+spoke, her refusal of himself. When he ceased speaking the girl
+answered:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I say that what you tell me makes me proud, I am saying too
+little." She shook her head firmly, with an air of finality that
+frightened Hemingway. "But what you ask&mdash;what you suggest is
+impossible."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't like me?" said Hemingway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I like you very much," returned the girl, "and, if I don't seem
+unhappy that it can't be, it is because I always have known it can't
+be&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why can't it be?" rebelled Hemingway. "I don't mean that I can't
+understand your not wanting to marry me, but if I knew your objection,
+maybe, I could beat it down."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again, with the same air of finality, the girl moved her head slowly,
+as though considering each word; she began cautiously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I cannot tell you the reason," she said, "because it does not concern
+only myself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you mean you care for some one else," pleaded Hemingway, "that does
+not frighten me at all." It did frighten him extremely, but, believing
+that a faint heart never won anything, he pretended to be brave.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For you," he boasted, "I would go down into the grave as deep as any
+man. He that hath more let him give. I know what I offer. I know I
+love you as no other man&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl backed away from him as though he had struck her. "You must
+not say that," she commanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time he saw that she was moved, that the fingers she
+laced and unlaced were trembling. "It is final!" exclaimed the girl.
+"I cannot marry&mdash;you, or any one. I&mdash;I have promised. I am not free."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Nothing in the world is final," returned Hemingway sharply, "except
+death." He raised his hat and, as though to leave her, moved away.
+Not because he admitted defeat, but because he felt that for the
+present to continue might lose him the chance to fight again. But, to
+deliver an ultimatum, he turned back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As long as you are alive, and I am alive," he told her, "all things
+are possible. I don't give up hope. I don't give up you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl exclaimed with a gesture of despair. "He won't understand!"
+she cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway advanced eagerly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Help me to understand," he begged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You won't understand," explained the girl, "that I am speaking the
+truth. You are right that things can change in the future, but nothing
+can change the past. Can't you understand that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do I care for the past?" cried the young man scornfully. "I know
+you as well as though I had known you for a thousand years and I love
+you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl flushed crimson.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not my past," she gasped. "I meant&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't care what you meant," said Hemingway. "I'm not prying into
+your little secrets. I know only one thing&mdash;two things, that I love
+you and that, until you love me, I am going to make your life hell!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He caught at her hands, and for an instant she let him clasp them in
+both of his, while she looked at him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Something in her face, other than distress and pity, caused his heart
+to leap. But he was too wise to speak, and, that she might not read
+the hope in his eyes, turned quickly and left her. He had not crossed
+the grounds of the agency before he had made up his mind as to the
+reason for her repelling him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She is engaged to Fearing!" he told himself. "She has promised to
+marry Fearing! She thinks that it is too late to consider another man!"
+The prospect of a fight for the woman he loved thrilled him greatly.
+His lower jaw set pugnaciously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll show her it's not too late," he promised himself. "I'll show her
+which of us is the man to make her happy. And, if I am not the man,
+I'll take the first outbound steamer and trouble them no more. But
+before that happens," he also promised himself, "Fearing must show he
+is the better man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In spite of his brave words, in spite of his determination, within the
+day Hemingway had withdrawn in favor of his rival, and, on the Crown
+Prince Eitel, bound for Genoa and New York, had booked his passage home.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On the afternoon of the same day he had spoken to Polly Adair,
+Hemingway at the sunset hour betook himself to the consulate. At that
+hour it had become his custom to visit his fellow countryman and with
+him share the gossip of the day and such a cocktail as only a fellow
+countryman could compose. Later he was to dine at the house of the
+Ivory Company and, as his heart never ceased telling him, Mrs. Adair
+also was to be present.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It will be a very pleasant party," said Harris. "They gave me a bid,
+too, but it's steamer day to-morrow, and I've got to get my mail ready
+for the Crown Prince Eitel. Mrs. Adair is to be there."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway nodded, and with pleasant anticipation waited. Of Mrs.
+Adair, Harris always spoke with reverent enthusiasm, and the man who
+loved her delighted to listen. But this time Harris disappointed him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And Fearing, too," he added.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again Hemingway nodded. The conjunction of the two names surprised
+him, but he made no sign. Loquacious as he knew Harris to be, he never
+before had heard his friend even suggest the subject that to Zanzibar
+had become of acute interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Harris filled the two glasses, and began to pace the room. When he
+spoke it was in the aggrieved tone of one who feels himself placed in a
+false position.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's no one," he complained suddenly, "so popularly unpopular as
+the man who butts in. I know that, but still I've always taken his
+side. I've always been for him." He halted, straddling with legs
+apart and hands deep in his trousers pockets, and frowned down upon his
+guest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Suppose," he began aggressively, "I see a man driving his car over a
+cliff. If I tell him that road will take him over a cliff, the worst
+that can happen to me is to be told to mind my own business, and I can
+always answer back: 'I was only trying to help you.' If I don't speak,
+the man breaks his neck. Between the two, it seems to me, sooner than
+have any one's life on my hands, I'd rather be told to mind my own
+business."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway stared into his glass. His expression was distinctly
+disapproving, but, undismayed, the consul continued.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Now, we all know that this morning you gave that polo pony to Lady
+Firth, and one of us guesses that you first offered it to some one
+else, who refused it. One of us thinks that very soon, to-morrow, or
+even to-night, at this party you may offer that same person something
+else, something worth more than a polo pony, and that if she refuses
+that, it is going to break you all up, is going to hurt you for the
+rest of your life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Lifting his eyes from his glass, Hemingway shot at his friend a glance
+of warning. In haste, Harris continued:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know," he protested, answering the look, "I know that this is where
+Mr. Buttinsky is told to mind his business. But I'm going right on.
+I'm going to state a hypothetical case with no names mentioned and no
+questions asked, or answered. I'm going to state a theory, and let you
+draw your own deductions."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He slid into a chair, and across the table fastened his eyes on those
+of his friend. Confidently and undisturbed, but with a wry smile of
+dislike, Hemingway stared fixedly back at him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What," demanded Harris, "is the first rule in detective work?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway started. He was prepared for something unpleasant, but not
+for that particular form of unpleasantness. But his faith was
+unshaken, and he smiled confidently. He let the consul answer his own
+question.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is to follow the woman," declared Harris. "And, accordingly, what
+should be the first precaution of a man making his get-away? To see
+that the woman does not follow. But suppose we are dealing with a
+fugitive of especial intelligence, with a criminal who has imagination
+and brains? He might fix it so that the woman could follow him without
+giving him away, he might plan it so that no one would suspect. She
+might arrive at his hiding-place only after many months, only after
+each had made separately a long circuit of the globe, only after a
+journey with a plausible and legitimate object. She would arrive
+disguised in every way, and they would meet as total strangers. And,
+as strangers under the eyes of others, they would become acquainted,
+would gradually grow more friendly, would be seen more frequently
+together, until at last people would say: 'Those two mean to make a
+match of it.' And then, one day, openly, in the sight of all men, with
+the aid of the law and the church, they would resume those relations
+that existed before the man ran away and the woman followed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+There was a short silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway broke it in a tone that would accept no denial.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can't talk like that to me," he cried. "What do you mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Without resentment, the consul regarded him with grave solicitude. His
+look was one of real affection, and, although his tone held the
+absolute finality of the family physician who delivers a sentence of
+death, he spoke with gentleness and regret.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I mean," he said, "that Mrs. Adair is not a widow, that the man she
+speaks of as her late husband is not dead; that that man is Fearing!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway felt afraid. A month before a rhinoceros had charged him and
+had dropped at his feet. At another time a wounded lioness had leaped
+into his path and crouched to spring. Then he had not been afraid.
+Then he had aimed as confidently as though he were firing at a straw
+target. But now he felt real fear: fear of something he did not
+comprehend, of a situation he could not master, of an adversary as
+strong as Fate. By a word something had been snatched from him that he
+now knew was as dear to him as life, that was life, that was what made
+it worth continuing. And he could do nothing to prevent it; he could
+not help himself. He was as impotent as the prisoner who hears the
+judge banish him into exile. He tried to adjust his mind to the
+calamity. But his mind refused. As easily as with his finger a man
+can block the swing of a pendulum and halt the progress of the clock,
+Harris with a word had brought the entire world to a full stop.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, above his head, Hemingway heard the lazy whisper of the
+punka, and from the harbor the raucous whistle of the Crown Prince
+Eitel, signalling her entrance. The world had not stopped; for the
+punka-boy, for the captain of the German steamer, for Harris seated
+with face averted, the world was still going gayly and busily forward.
+Only for him had it stopped.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In spite of the confident tone in which Harris had spoken, in spite of
+the fact that unless he knew it was the truth, he would not have
+spoken, Hemingway tried to urge himself to believe there had been some
+hideous, absurd error. But in answer came back to him snatches of talk
+or phrases the girl had last addressed to him: "You can command the
+future, but you cannot change the past. I cannot marry you, or any
+one! I am not free!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then to comfort himself, he called up the look he had surprised in
+her eyes when he stood holding her hands in his. He clung to it, as a
+drowning man will clutch even at a piece of floating seaweed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he tried to speak he found his voice choked and stifled, and that
+his distress was evident, he knew from the pity he read in the eyes of
+Harris.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a voice strange to him, he heard himself saying: "Why do you think
+that? You've got to tell me. I have a right to know. This morning I
+asked Mrs. Adair to marry me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The consul exclaimed with dismay and squirmed unhappily. "I didn't
+know," he protested. "I thought I was in time. I ought to have told
+you days ago, but&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell me now," commanded Hemingway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know it in a thousand ways," began Harris.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway raised his eyes hopefully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the consul shook his head. "But to convince you," he went on, "I
+need tell you only one. The thousand other proofs are looks they have
+exchanged, sentences I have chanced to overhear, and that each of them
+unknown to the other has told me of little happenings and incidents
+which I found were common to both. Each has described the house in
+which he or she lived, and it was the same house. They claim to come
+from different cities in New England, they came from the same city.
+They claim&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is no proof," cried Hemingway, "either that they are married, or
+that the man is a criminal."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment Harris regarded the other in silence. Then he said:
+"You're making it very hard for me. I see I've got to show you. It's
+kindest, after all, to cut quick." He leaned farther forward, and his
+voice dropped. Speaking quickly, he said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Last summer I lived outside the town in a bungalow on the Pearl Road.
+Fearing's house was next to mine. This was before Mrs. Adair went to
+live at the agency, and while she was alone in another bungalow farther
+down the road. I was ill that summer; my nerves went back on me. I
+couldn't sleep. I used to sit all night on my veranda and pray for the
+sun to rise. From where I sat it was dark and no one could see me, but
+I could see the veranda of Fearing's house and into his garden. And
+night after night I saw Mrs. Adair creep out of Fearing's house, saw
+him walk with her to the gate, saw him in the shadow of the bushes take
+her in his arms, and saw them kiss." The voice of the consul rose
+sharply. "No one knows that but you and I, and," he cried defiantly,
+"it is impossible for us to believe ill of Polly Adair. The easy
+explanation we refuse. It is intolerable. And so you must believe as I
+believe; that when she visited Fearing by night she went to him because
+she had the right to go to him, because already she was his wife. And
+now when every one here believes they met for the first time in
+Zanzibar, when no one will be surprised if they should marry, they will
+go through the ceremony again, and live as man and wife, as they are,
+as they were before he fled from America!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway was seated with his elbows on the table and his face in his
+hands. He was so long silent that Harris struck the table roughly with
+his palm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well," he demanded, "why don't you speak? Do you doubt her? Don't you
+believe she is his wife?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I refuse to believe anything else!" said Hemingway. He rose, and
+slowly and heavily moved toward the door. "And I will not trouble them
+any more," he added. "I'll leave at sunrise on the Eitel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Harris exclaimed in dismay, but Hemingway did not hear him. In the
+doorway he halted and turned back. From his voice all trace of emotion
+had departed. "Why," he asked dully, "do you think Fearing is a
+fugitive? Not that it matters to her, since she loves him, or that it
+matters to me. Only I would like to think you were wrong. I want her
+to have only the best."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the consul moved unhappily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I oughtn't to tell you," he protested, "and if I do I ought to tell
+the State Department, and a detective agency first. They have the
+call. They want him, or a man damned like him." His voice dropped to a
+whisper. "The man wanted is Henry Brownell, a cashier of a bank in
+Waltham, Mass., thirty-five years of age, smooth-shaven, college-bred,
+speaking with a marked New England accent, and&mdash;and with other marks
+that fit Fearing like the cover on a book. The department and the
+Pinkertons have been devilling the life out of me about it for nine
+months. They are positive he is on the coast of Africa. I put them
+off. I wasn't sure."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've been protecting them," said Hemingway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I wasn't sure," reiterated Harris. "And if I were, the Pinkertons can
+do their own sleuthing. The man's living honestly now, anyway, isn't
+he?" he demanded; "and she loves him. At least she's stuck by him.
+Why should I punish her?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His tone seemed to challenge and upbraid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good God!" cried the other, "I'm not blaming you! I'd be proud of the
+chance to do as much. I asked because I'd like to go away thinking
+she's content, thinking she's happy with him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Doesn't it look as though she were?" Harris protested. "She's
+followed him&mdash;followed him half around the globe. If she'd been
+happier away from him, she'd have stayed away from him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So intent had been the men upon their talk that neither had noted the
+passing of the minutes or, what at other times was an event of moment,
+that the mail steamer had distributed her mail and passengers; and when
+a servant entered bearing lamps, and from the office the consul's clerk
+appeared with a bundle of letters from the Eitel, both were taken by
+surprise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So late?" exclaimed Hemingway. "I must go. If I'm to sail with the
+Eitel at daybreak, I've little time!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he did not go.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he advanced toward Harris with his hand outstretched in adieu, the
+face of the consul halted him. With the letters, the clerk had placed
+upon the table a visiting-card, and as it lay in the circle of light
+from the lamp the consul, as though it were alive and menacing, stared
+at it in fascination. Moving stiffly, he turned it so that Hemingway
+could see. On it Hemingway read, "George S. Sheyer," and, on a lower
+line, "Representing William L. Pinkerton."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To the woman he loved the calamity they dreaded had come, and
+Hemingway, with a groan of dismay, exclaimed aloud:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is the end!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the darkness of the outer office a man stepped softly into the
+circle of the lamp. They could see his figure only from the waist
+down; the rest of him was blurred in shadows.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"'It is the end'?" he repeated inquiringly. He spoke the phrase with
+peculiar emphasis, as though to impress it upon the memory of the two
+others. His voice was cool, alert, authoritative. "The end of what?"
+he demanded sharply.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The question was most difficult. In the silence the detective moved
+into the light. He was tall and strongly built, his face was shrewd
+and intelligent. He might have been a prosperous man of business.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Which of you is the consul?" he asked. But he did not take his eyes
+from Hemingway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am the consul," said Harris. But still the detective did not turn
+from Hemingway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why," he asked, "did this gentleman, when he read my card, say, 'It is
+the end'? The end of what? Has anything been going on here that came to
+an end when he saw my card?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Disconcerted, in deep embarrassment, Harris struggled for a word. But
+his distress was not observed by the detective. His eyes, suspicious
+and accusing, still were fixed upon Hemingway, and under their scrutiny
+Harris saw his friend slowly retreat, slowly crumple up into a chair,
+slowly raise his hands to cover his face. As though in a nightmare, he
+heard him saying savagely:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is the end of two years of hell, it is the end of two years of fear
+and agony! Now I shall have peace. Now I shall sleep! I thank God
+you've come! I thank God I can go back!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Harris broke the spell by leaping to his feet. He sprang between the
+two men.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What does this mean?" he commanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hemingway raised his eyes and surveyed him steadily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It means," he said, "that I have deceived you, Harris&mdash;that I am the
+man you told me of, I am the man they want." He turned to the officer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I fooled him for four months," he said. "I couldn't fool you for five
+minutes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The eyes of the detective danced with sudden excitement, joy, and
+triumph. He shot an eager glance from Hemingway to the consul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This man," he demanded; "who is he?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With an impatient gesture Hemingway signified Harris.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He doesn't know who I am," he said. "He knows me as Hemingway. I am
+Henry Brownell, of Waltham, Mass." Again his face sank into the palms
+of his hands. "And I'm tired&mdash;tired," he moaned. "I am sick of not
+knowing, sick of running away. I give myself up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The detective breathed a sigh of relief that seemed to issue from his
+soul.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My God," he sighed, "you've given me a long chase! I've had eleven
+months of you, and I'm as sick of this as you are." He recovered
+himself sharply. As though reciting an incantation, he addressed
+Hemingway in crisp, emotionless notes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Henry Brownell," he chanted, "I arrest you in the name of the
+commonwealth of Massachusetts for the robbery, on October the eleventh,
+nineteen hundred and nine, of the Waltham Title and Trust Company. I
+understand," he added, "you waive extradition and return with me of
+your own free will?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With his face still in his hands, Hemingway murmured assent. The
+detective stepped briskly and uninvited to the table and seated
+himself. He was beaming with triumph, with pleasurable excitement.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I want to send a message home, Mr. Consul," he said. "May I use your
+cable blanks?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Harris was still standing in the centre of the room looking down upon
+the bowed head and shoulders of Hemingway. Since, in amazement, he had
+sprung toward him, he had not spoken. And he was still silent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Inside the skull of Wilbur Harris, of Iowa, U. S. A., American consul
+to Zanzibar, East Africa, there was going forward a mighty struggle
+that was not fit to put into words. For Harris and his conscience had
+met and were at odds. One way or the other the fight must be settled
+at once, and whatever he decided must be for all time. This he
+understood, and as his sympathies and conscience struggled for the
+mastery the pen of the detective, scratching at racing speed across the
+paper, warned him that only a few seconds were left him in which to
+protest or else to forever after hold his peace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So realistic had been the acting of Hemingway that for an instant
+Harris himself had been deceived. But only for an instant. With his
+knowledge of the circumstances he saw that Hemingway was not confessing
+to a crime of his own, but drawing across the trail of the real
+criminal the convenient and useful red herring. He knew that already
+Hemingway had determined to sail the next morning. In leaving Zanzibar
+he was making no sacrifice. He merely was carrying out his original
+plan, and by taking away with him the detective was giving Brownell and
+his wife at least a month in which to again lose themselves.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+What was his own duty he could not determine. That of Hemingway he
+knew nothing, he could truthfully testify. And if now Hemingway
+claimed to be Henry Brownell, he had no certain knowledge to the
+contrary. That through his adventure Hemingway would come to harm did
+not greatly disturb him. He foresaw that his friend need only send a
+wireless from Nantucket and at the wharf witnesses would swarm to
+establish his identity and make it evident the detective had blundered.
+And in the meanwhile Brownell and his wife, in some settlement still
+further removed from observation, would for the second time have
+fortified themselves against pursuit and capture. He saw the eyes of
+Hemingway fixed upon him in appeal and warning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The brisk voice of the detective broke the silence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You will testify, if need be, Mr. Consul," he said, "that you heard
+the prisoner admit he was Henry Brownell and that he surrendered
+himself of his own free will?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For an instant the consul hesitated, then he nodded stiffly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I heard him," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Three hours later, at ten o' clock of the same evening, the detective
+and Hemingway leaned together on the rail of the Crown Prince Eitel.
+Forward, in the glare of her cargo lights, to the puffing and creaking
+of derricks and donkey engines, bundles of beeswax, of rawhides, and
+precious tusks of ivory were being hurled into the hold; from the
+shore-boats clinging to the ship's sides came the shrieks of the
+Zanzibar boys, from the smoking-room the blare of the steward's band
+and the clink of glasses. Those of the youth of Zanzibar who were on
+board, the German and English clerks and agents, saw in the presence of
+Hemingway only a purpose similar to their own; the desire of a homesick
+exile to gaze upon the mirrored glories of the Eitel's saloon, at the
+faces of white men and women, to listen to home-made music, to drink
+home-brewed beer. As he passed the smoking-room they called to him,
+and to the stranger at his elbow, but he only nodded smiling and,
+avoiding them, ascended to the shadow of the deserted boat-deck.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are sure," he said, "you told no one?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No one," the detective answered. "Of course your hotel proprietor
+knows you're sailing, but he doesn't know why. And, by sunrise, we'll
+be well out at sea."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The words caught Hemingway by the throat. He turned his eyes to the
+town lying like a field of snow in the moonlight. Somewhere on one of
+its flat roofs a merry dinner-party was laughing, drinking, perhaps
+regretting his absence, wondering at his excuse of sudden illness. She
+was there, and he with the detective like a shadow at his elbow, was
+sailing out of her life forever. He had seen her for the last time:
+that morning for the last time had looked into her eyes, had held her
+hands in his. He saw the white beach, the white fortress-like walls,
+the hanging gardens, the courtesying palms, dimly. It was among those
+that he who had thought himself content, had found happiness, and had
+then seen it desert him and take out of his life pleasure in all other
+things. With a pain that seemed impossible to support, he turned his
+back upon Zanzibar and all it meant to him. And, as he turned, he
+faced, coming toward him, across the moonlit deck, Fearing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His instinct was to cry out to the man in warning, but his second
+thought showed him that through his very effort to protect the other,
+he might bring about his undoing. So, helpless to prevent, in
+agitation and alarm, he waited in silence. Of the two men, Fearing
+appeared the least disturbed. With a polite but authoritative gesture
+he turned to the detective. "I have something to say to this gentleman
+before he sails," he said; "would you kindly stand over there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He pointed across the empty deck at the other rail.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the alert, confident young man in the English mess-jacket,
+clean-shaven and bronzed by the suns of the equator, the detective saw
+no likeness to the pale, bearded bank clerk of the New England city.
+This, he guessed, must be some English official, some friend of
+Brownell's who generously had come to bid the unfortunate fugitive
+Godspeed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Assured of this, the detective also bowed politely, and, out of
+hearing, but with his prisoner in full view, took up a position against
+the rail opposite.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Turning his back upon the detective, and facing Hemingway with his eyes
+close to his, Fearing began abruptly. His voice was sunk to a whisper,
+but he spoke without the slightest sign of trepidation, without the
+hesitation of an instant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Two years ago, when I was indicted," he whispered, "and ran away,
+Polly paid back half of the sum I stole. That left her without a
+penny; that's why she took to this typewriting. Since then, I have
+paid back nearly all the rest. But Polly was not satisfied. She
+wanted me to take my punishment and start fresh. She knew they were
+watching her so she couldn't write this to me, but she came to me by a
+roundabout way, taking a year to get here. And all the time she's been
+here, she's been begging me to go back and give myself up. I couldn't
+see it. I knew in a few months I'd have paid back all I took, and I
+thought that was enough. I wanted to keep out of jail. But she said I
+must take my medicine in our own country, and start square with a clean
+slate. She's done a lot for me, and whether I'd have done that for her
+or not, I don't know. But now, I must! What you did to-night to save
+me, leaves me no choice. So, I'll sail&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With an exclamation of anger, Hemingway caught the other by the
+shoulder and dragged him closer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To save you!" he whispered. "No one's thinking of you. I didn't do
+it for you. I did it, that you both could escape together, to give you
+time&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I tell you," protested Fearing, "she doesn't want me to escape.
+And maybe she's right. Anyway, we're sailing with you at&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We?" echoed Hemingway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That again he was to see the woman he loved, that for six weeks through
+summer seas he would travel in her company, filled him with alarm, with
+distress, with a wonderful happiness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We?" he whispered, steadying his voice. "Then&mdash;then your wife is
+going with you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Fearing gazed at him as though the other had suddenly gone mad.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My wife!" he exclaimed. "I haven't got a wife! If you mean
+Polly&mdash;Mrs. Adair, she is my sister! And she wants to thank you. She's
+below&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was not allowed to finish. Hemingway had flung him to one side, and
+was racing down the deck.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The detective sprang in pursuit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"One moment, there!" he shouted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the man in the white mess-jacket barred his way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the moonlight the detective saw that the alert, bronzed young man
+was smiling.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's all right," said Fearing. "He'll be back in a minute.
+Besides, you don't want him. I'm the man you want."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="longarm"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE LONG ARM
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The safe was an old one that opened with a key. As adjutant, Captain
+Swanson had charge of certain funds of the regiment and kept in the
+safe about five thousand dollars. No one but himself and Rueff, his
+first sergeant, had access to it. And as Rueff proved an alibi, the
+money might have been removed by an outsider. The court-martial gave
+Swanson the benefit of the doubt, and a reprimand for not taking
+greater care of the keys, and Swanson made good the five thousand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swanson did not think it was a burglar who had robbed the safe. He
+thought Rueff had robbed it, but he could not possibly prove that. At
+the time of the robbery Rueff was outside the Presidio, in uniform, at
+a moving-picture show in San Francisco. A dozen people saw him there.
+Besides, Rueff held an excellent record. He was a silent, clerk-like
+young man, better at "paper work" than campaigning, but even as a
+soldier he had never come upon the books. And he had seen service in
+two campaigns, and was supposed to cherish ambitions toward a
+commission. But, as he kept much to himself, his fellow non-coms could
+only guess that.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On his captain's account he was loyally distressed over the
+court-martial, and in his testimony tried to shield Swanson, by
+agreeing heartily that through his own carelessness the keys might have
+fallen into the hands of some one outside the post. But his loyalty
+could not save his superior officer from what was a verdict virtually
+of "not proven."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a most distressing affair, and, on account of the social
+prominence of Swanson's people, his own popularity, and the name he had
+made at Batangas and in the Boxer business, was much commented upon,
+not only in the services, but by the newspapers all over the United
+States.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Every one who knew Swanson knew the court-martial was only a matter of
+form. Even his enemies ventured only to suggest that overnight he
+might have borrowed the money, meaning to replace it the next morning.
+And the only reason for considering this explanation was that Swanson
+was known to be in debt. For he was a persistent gambler. Just as at
+Pekin he had gambled with death for his number, in times of peace he
+gambled for money. It was always his own money.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the start Swanson's own attitude toward the affair was one of
+blind, unreasoning rage. In it he saw no necessary routine of
+discipline, only crass, ignorant stupidity. That any one should
+suspect him was so preposterous, so unintelligent, as to be nearly
+comic. And when, instantly, he demanded a court of inquiry, he could
+not believe it when he was summoned before a court-martial. It
+sickened, wounded, deeply affronted him; turned him quite savage.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On his stand his attitude and answers were so insolent that his old
+friend and classmate, Captain Copley, who was acting as his counsel,
+would gladly have kicked him. The findings of the court-martial, that
+neither cleared nor condemned, and the reprimand, were an intolerable
+insult to his feelings, and, in a fit of bitter disgust with the
+service and every one in it, Swanson resigned. Of course, the moment
+he had done so he was sorry. Swanson's thought was that he could no
+longer associate with any one who could believe him capable of theft.
+It was his idea of showing his own opinion of himself and the army.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But no one saw it in that light. On the contrary, people said:
+"Swanson has been allowed to resign." In the army, voluntarily
+resigning and being "allowed to resign" lest greater evils befall, are
+two vastly different things. And when it was too late no one than
+Swanson saw that more clearly. His anger gave way to extreme
+morbidness. He believed that in resigning he had assured every one of
+his guilt. In every friend and stranger he saw a man who doubted him.
+He imagined snubs, rebuffs, and coldnesses. His morbidness fastened
+upon his mind like a parasite upon a tree, and the brain sickened.
+When men and women glanced at his alert, well-set-up figure and
+shoulders, that even when he wore "cits" seemed to support epaulets,
+and smiled approvingly, Swanson thought they sneered. In a week he
+longed to be back in the army with a homesickness that made every one
+who belonged to it his enemy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He left San Francisco, where he was known to all, and travelled south
+through Texas, and then to New Orleans and Florida. He never could
+recall this period with clearness. He remembered changing from one
+train to another, from one hotel to the next. Nothing impressed itself
+upon him. For what he had lost nothing could give consolation.
+Without honor life held no charm. And he believed that in the eyes of
+all men he was a thief, a pariah, and an outcast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had been in Cuba with the Army of Occupation, and of that beautiful
+island had grown foolishly fond. He was familiar with every part of
+it, and he believed in one or another of its pretty ports he could so
+completely hide himself that no one could intrude upon his misery. In
+the States, in the newspapers he seemed to read only of those places
+where he had seen service, of those places and friends and associates
+he most loved. In the little Cuban village in which he would bury
+himself he would cut himself off from all newspapers, from all who knew
+him; from those who had been his friends, and those who knew his name
+only to connect it with a scandal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On his way from Port Tampa to Cuba the boat stopped at Key West, and
+for the hour in which she discharged cargo Swanson went ashore and
+wandered aimlessly. The little town, reared on a flat island of coral
+and limestone, did not long detain him. The main street of shops,
+eating-houses, and saloons, the pretty residences with overhanging
+balconies, set among gardens and magnolia-trees, were soon explored,
+and he was returning to the boat when the martial music of a band
+caused him to halt. A side street led to a great gateway surmounted by
+an anchor. Beyond it Swanson saw lawns of well-kept grass, regular
+paths, pretty cottages, the two-starred flag of an admiral, and, rising
+high above these, like four Eiffel towers, the gigantic masts of a
+wireless. He recognized that he was at the entrance to the Key West
+naval station, and turned quickly away.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He walked a few feet, the music of the band still in his ears. In an
+hour he would be steaming toward Cuba, and, should he hold to his
+present purpose, in many years this would be the last time he would
+stand on American soil, would see the uniform of his country, would
+hear a military band lull the sun to sleep. It would hurt, but he
+wondered if it were not worth the hurt. A smart sergeant of marines,
+in passing, cast one glance at the man who seemed always to wear
+epaulets, and brought his hand sharply to salute. The act determined
+Swanson. He had obtained the salute under false pretenses, but it had
+pleased, not hurt him. He turned back and passed into the gate of the
+naval station.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the gate a grass-lined carriage drive led to the waters of the
+harbor and the wharfs. At its extreme end was the band-stand, flanked
+on one side by the cottage of the admiral, on the other by a sail-loft
+with iron-barred windows and whitewashed walls. Upon the turf were
+pyramids of cannon-balls and, laid out in rows as though awaiting
+burial, old-time muzzle-loading guns. Across the harbor the sun was
+sinking into the coral reefs, and the spring air, still warm from its
+caresses, was stirred by the music of the band into gentle, rhythmic
+waves. The scene was one of peace, order, and content.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But as Swanson advanced, the measure of the music was instantly
+shattered by a fierce volley of explosions. They came so suddenly and
+sharply as to make him start. It was as though from his flank a
+quick-firing gun in ambush had opened upon him. Swanson smiled at
+having been taken unawares. For in San Francisco he often had heard
+the roar and rattle of the wireless. But never before had he listened
+to an attack like this.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From a tiny white-and-green cottage, squatting among the four giant
+masts, came the roar of a forest fire. One could hear the crackle of
+the flames, the crash of the falling tree-trunks. The air about the
+cottage was torn into threads; beneath the shocks of the electricity
+the lawn seemed to heave and tremble. It was like some giant monster,
+bound and fettered, struggling to be free. Now it growled sullenly,
+now in impotent rage it spat and spluttered, now it lashed about with
+crashing, stunning blows. It seemed as though the wooden walls of the
+station could not contain it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the road Swanson watched, through the open windows of the cottage,
+the electric bolts flash and flare and disappear. The thing appealed
+to his imagination. Its power, its capabilities fascinated him. In it
+he saw a hungry monster reaching out to every corner of the continent
+and devouring the news of the world; feeding upon tales of shipwreck
+and disaster, lingering over some dainty morsel of scandal, snatching
+from ships and cities two thousand miles away the thrice-told tale of a
+conflagration, the score of a baseball match, the fall of a cabinet,
+the assassination of a king.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In a sudden access of fierceness, as though in an ecstasy over some
+fresh horror just received, it shrieked and chortled. And then, as
+suddenly as it had broken forth, it sank to silence, and from the end
+of the carriage drive again rose, undisturbed, the music of the band.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The musicians were playing to a select audience. On benches around the
+band-stand sat a half dozen nurse-maids with knitting in their hands,
+the baby-carriages within arm's length. On the turf older children of
+the officers were at play, and up and down the paths bareheaded girls,
+and matrons, and officers in uniform strolled leisurely. From the
+vine-covered cottage of Admiral Preble, set in a garden of flowering
+plants and bending palmettos, came the tinkle of tea-cups and the
+ripple of laughter, and at a respectful distance, seated on the
+dismantled cannon, were marines in khaki and bluejackets in glistening
+white.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a family group, and had not Swanson recognized among the little
+audience others of the passengers from the steamer and natives of the
+town who, like himself, had been attracted by the music, he would have
+felt that he intruded. He now wished to remain. He wanted to carry
+with him into his exile a memory of the men in uniform, of the music,
+and pretty women, of the gorgeous crimson sunset. But, though he
+wished to remain, he did not wish to be recognized.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the glances already turned toward him, he saw that in this little
+family gathering the presence of a stranger was an event, and he was
+aware that during the trial the newspapers had made his face
+conspicuous. Also it might be that stationed at the post was some
+officer or enlisted man who had served with him in Cuba, China, or the
+Philippines, and who might point him out to others. Fearing this,
+Swanson made a detour and approached the band-stand from the wharf, and
+with his back to a hawser-post seated himself upon the string-piece.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was overcome with an intolerable melancholy. From where he sat he
+could see, softened into shadows by the wire screens of the veranda,
+Admiral Preble and his wife and their guests at tea. A month before,
+he would have reported to the admiral as the commandant of the station,
+and paid his respects. Now he could not do that; at least not without
+inviting a rebuff. A month before, he need only have shown his card to
+the admiral's orderly, and the orderly and the guard and the officers'
+mess and the admiral himself would have turned the post upside down to
+do him honor. But of what avail now was his record in three campaigns?
+Of what avail now was his medal of honor? They now knew him as Swanson,
+who had been court-martialled, who had been allowed to resign, who had
+left the army for the army's good; they knew him as a civilian without
+rank or authority, as an ex-officer who had robbed his brother
+officers, as an outcast.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His position, as his morbid mind thus distorted it, tempted Swanson no
+longer. For being in this plight he did not feel that in any way he
+was to blame. But with a flaming anger he still blamed his brother
+officers of the court-martial who had not cleared his name and with a
+clean bill of health restored him to duty. Those were the men he
+blamed; not Rueff, the sergeant, who he believed had robbed him, nor
+himself, who, in a passion of wounded pride, had resigned and so had
+given reason for gossip; but the men who had not in tones like a
+bugle-call proclaimed his innocence, who, when they had handed him back
+his sword, had given it grudgingly, not with congratulation.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+As he saw it, he stood in a perpetual pillory. When they had robbed
+him of his honor they had left him naked, and life without honor had
+lost its flavor. He could eat, he could drink, he could exist. He
+knew that in many corners of the world white arms would reach out to
+him and men would beckon him to a place at table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But he could not cross that little strip of turf between him and the
+chattering group on the veranda and hand his card to the admiral's
+orderly. Swanson loved life. He loved it so that without help, money,
+or affection he could each morning have greeted it with a smile. But
+life without honor! He felt a sudden hot nausea of disgust. Why was he
+still clinging to what had lost its purpose, to what lacked the one
+thing needful?
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+"If life be an ill thing," he thought, "I can lay it down!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The thought was not new to him, and during the two past weeks of
+aimless wandering he had carried with him his service automatic. To
+reassure himself he laid his fingers on its cold smooth surface. He
+would wait, he determined, until the musicians had finished their
+concert and the women and children had departed, and then&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Then the orderly would find him where he was now seated, sunken against
+the hawser-post with a hole through his heart. To his disordered brain
+his decision appeared quite sane. He was sure he never had been more
+calm. And as he prepared himself for death he assured himself that for
+one of his standard no other choice was possible. Thoughts of the
+active past, or of what distress in the future his act would bring to
+others, did not disturb him. The thing had to be, no one lost more
+heavily than himself, and regrets were cowardly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He counted the money he had on his person and was pleased to find there
+was enough to pay for what services others soon must render him. In
+his pockets were letters, cards, a cigarette-case, each of which would
+tell his identity. He had no wish to conceal it, for of what he was
+about to do he was not ashamed. It was not his act. He would not have
+died "by his own hand." To his unbalanced brain the officers of the
+court-martial were responsible. It was they who had killed him. As he
+saw it, they had made his death as inevitable as though they had
+sentenced him to be shot at sunrise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A line from "The Drums of the Fore and Aft" came back to him. Often he
+had quoted it, when some one in the service had suffered through the
+fault of others. It was the death-cry of the boy officer, Devlin. The
+knives of the Ghazi had cut him down, but it was his own people's
+abandoning him in terror that had killed him. And so, with a sob, he
+flung the line at the retreating backs of his comrades: "You've killed
+me, you cowards!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swanson, nursing his anger, repeated this savagely. He wished he could
+bring it home to those men of the court-martial. He wished he could
+make them know that his death lay at their door. He determined that
+they should know. On one of his visiting-cards he pencilled:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To the Officers of my Court-Martial: 'You've killed me, you cowards!'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He placed the card in the pocket of his waistcoat. They would find it
+just above the place where the bullet would burn the cloth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The band was playing "Auf Wiedersehen," and the waltz carried with it
+the sadness that had made people call the man who wrote it the waltz
+king. Swanson listened gratefully. He was glad that before he went
+out, his last mood had been of regret and gentleness. The sting of his
+anger had departed, the music soothed and sobered him. It had been a
+very good world. Until he had broken the spine of things it had
+treated him well, far better, he admitted, than he deserved. There
+were many in it who had been kind, to whom he was grateful. He wished
+there was some way by which he could let them know that. As though in
+answer to his wish, from across the parade-ground the wireless again
+began to crash and crackle; but now Swanson was at a greater distance
+from it, and the sighing rhythm of the waltz was not interrupted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swanson considered to whom he might send a farewell message, but as in
+his mind he passed from one friend to another, he saw that to each such
+a greeting could bring only distress. He decided it was the music that
+had led him astray. This was no moment for false sentiment. He let
+his hand close upon the pistol.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The audience now was dispersing. The nurse-maids had collected their
+charges, the musicians were taking apart their music-racks, and from
+the steps of the vine-covered veranda Admiral Preble was bidding the
+friends of his wife adieu. At his side his aide, young, alert,
+confident, with ill-concealed impatience awaited their departure.
+Swanson found that he resented the aide. He resented the manner in
+which he speeded the parting guests. Even if there were matters of
+importance he was anxious to communicate to his chief, he need not make
+it plain to the women folk that they were in the way.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When, a month before, he had been adjutant, in a like situation he
+would have shown more self-command. He disapproved of the aide
+entirely. He resented the fact that he was as young as himself, that
+he was in uniform, that he was an aide. Swanson certainly hoped that
+when he was in uniform he had not looked so much the conquering hero,
+so self-satisfied, so supercilious. With a smile he wondered why, at
+such a moment, a man he had never seen before, and never would see
+again, should so disturb him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his heart he knew. The aide was going forward just where he was
+leaving off. The ribbons on the tunic of the aide, the straps on his
+shoulders, told Swanson that they had served in the same campaigns,
+that they were of the same relative rank, and that when he himself, had
+he remained in the service, would have been a brigadier-general the
+aide would command a battle-ship. The possible future of the young
+sailor filled Swanson with honorable envy and bitter regret. With all
+his soul he envied him the right to look his fellow man in the eye, his
+right to die for his country, to give his life, should it be required
+of him, for ninety million people, for a flag. Swanson saw the two
+officers dimly, with eyes of bitter self-pity. He was dying, but he
+was not dying gloriously for a flag. He had lost the right to die for
+it, and he was dying because he had lost that right.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The sun had sunk and the evening had grown chill. At the wharf where
+the steamer lay on which he had arrived, but on which he was not to
+depart, the electric cargo lights were already burning. But for what
+Swanson had to do there still was light enough. From his breast-pocket
+he took the card on which he had written his message to his brother
+officers, read and reread it, and replaced it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Save for the admiral and his aide at the steps of the cottage, and a
+bareheaded bluejacket who was reporting to them, and the admiral's
+orderly, who was walking toward Swanson, no one was in sight. Still
+seated upon the stringpiece of the wharf, Swanson so moved that his
+back was toward the four men. The moment seemed propitious, almost as
+though it had been prearranged. For with such an audience, for his
+taking off no other person could be blamed. There would be no question
+but that death had been self-inflicted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Approaching from behind him Swanson heard the brisk steps of the
+orderly drawing rapidly nearer. He wondered if the wharf were
+government property, if he were trespassing, and if for that reason the
+man had been sent to order him away. He considered bitterly that the
+government grudged him a place even in which to die. Well, he would not
+for long be a trespasser. His hand slipped into his pocket, with his
+thumb he lowered the safety-catch of the pistol.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the hand with the pistol in it did not leave his pocket. The steps
+of the orderly had come to a sudden silence. Raising his head heavily,
+Swanson saw the man, with his eyes fixed upon him, standing at salute.
+They had first made his life unsupportable, Swanson thought, now they
+would not let him leave it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Captain Swanson, sir?" asked the orderly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swanson did not speak or move.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The admiral's compliments, sir," snapped the orderly, "and will the
+captain please speak with him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Still Swanson did not move.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+He felt that the breaking-point of his self-control had come. This
+impertinent interruption, this thrusting into the last few seconds of
+his life of a reminder of all that he had lost, this futile
+postponement of his end, was cruel, unhuman, unthinkable. The pistol
+was still in his hand. He had but to draw it and press it close, and
+before the marine could leap upon him he would have escaped.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From behind, approaching hurriedly, came the sound of impatient
+footsteps.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The orderly stiffened to attention. "The admiral!" he warned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Twelve years of discipline, twelve years of recognition of authority,
+twelve years of deference to superior officers, dragged Swanson's hand
+from his pistol and lifted him to his feet. As he turned, Admiral
+Preble, the aide, and the bareheaded bluejacket were close upon him.
+The admiral's face beamed, his eyes were young with pleasurable
+excitement; with the eagerness of a boy he waved aside formal greetings.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear Swanson," he cried, "I assure you it's a most astonishing,
+most curious coincidence! See this man?" He flung out his arm at the
+bluejacket. "He's my wireless chief. He was wireless operator on the
+transport that took you to Manila. When you came in here this
+afternoon he recognized you. Half an hour later he picks up a
+message&mdash;picks it up two thousand miles from here&mdash;from San
+Francisco&mdash;Associated Press news&mdash;it concerns you; that is, not really
+concerns you, but I thought, we thought"&mdash;as though signalling for
+help, the admiral glanced unhappily at his aide&mdash;"we thought you'd like
+to know. Of course, to us," he added hastily, "it's quite
+superfluous&mdash;quite superfluous, but&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The aide coughed apologetically. "You might read, sir," he suggested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What? Exactly! Quite so!" cried the admiral.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the fading light he held close to his eyes a piece of paper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"San Francisco, April 20," he read. "Rueff, first sergeant, shot
+himself here to-day, leaving written confession theft of regimental
+funds for which Swanson, captain, lately court-martialled. Money found
+intact in Rueff's mattress. Innocence of Swanson never questioned, but
+dissatisfied with findings of court-martial has left army. Brother
+officers making every effort to find him and persuade return."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The admiral sighed happily. "And my wife," he added, with an
+impressiveness that was intended to show he had at last arrived at the
+important part of his message, "says you are to stay to dinner."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Abruptly, rudely, Swanson swung upon his heel and turned his face from
+the admiral. His head was thrown back, his arms held rigid at his
+sides. In slow, deep breaths, like one who had been dragged from
+drowning, he drank in the salt, chill air. After one glance the four
+men also turned, and in the falling darkness stood staring at nothing,
+and no one spoke.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The aide was the first to break the silence. In a polite tone, as
+though he were continuing a conversation which had not been
+interrupted, he addressed the admiral. "Of course, Rueff's written
+confession was not needed," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"His shooting himself proved that he was guilty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Swanson started as though across his naked shoulders the aide had drawn
+a whip.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In penitence and gratitude he raised his eyes to the stars. High above
+his head the strands of the wireless, swinging from the towering masts
+like the strings of a giant Aeolian harp, were swept by the wind from
+the ocean. To Swanson the sighing and whispering wires sang in praise
+and thanksgiving.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="coincidence"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The God of Coincidence is fortunate in possessing innumerable press
+agents. They have made the length of his arm a proverb. How at
+exactly the right moment he extends it across continents and drags two
+and two together, thus causing four to result where but for him sixes
+and sevens would have obtained, they have made known to the readers of
+all of our best magazines. For instance, Holworthy is leaving for the
+Congo to find a cure for the sleeping sickness, and for himself any
+sickness from which one is warranted never to wake up. This is his
+condition because the beautiful million-heiress who is wintering at the
+Alexander Young Hotel in Honolulu has refused to answer his letters,
+cables, and appeals.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He is leaning upon the rail taking his last neck-breaking look at the
+Woolworth Building. The going-ashore bugle has sounded,
+pocket-handkerchiefs are waving; and Joe Hutton, the last visitor to
+leave the ship, is at the gangway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good-by, Holworthy!" he calls. "Where do you keep yourself? Haven't
+seen you at the club in a year!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Haven't been there in a year&mdash;nor mean to!" is the ungracious reply of
+our hero.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then, for Heaven's sake," exclaims Hutton, "send some one to take your
+mail out of the H box! Every time I look for letters I wade through
+yours."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tear them up!" calls Holworthy. "They're bills."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hutton now is half-way down the gangplank.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then your creditors," he shouts back, "must all live at the Alexander
+Young Hotel in Honolulu!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night an express train shrieking through the darkness carried with
+it toward San Francisco&mdash;
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In this how evident is the fine Italian hand of the God of Coincidence!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Had Hutton's name begun with an M; had the H in Hutton been silent; had
+he not carried to the Mauretania a steamer basket for his rich aunt;
+had he not resented the fact that since Holworthy's election to the Van
+Sturtevant Club he had ceased to visit the Grill Club&mdash;a cure for
+sleeping sickness might have been discovered; but two loving hearts
+never would have been reunited and that story would not have been
+written.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Or, Mrs. Montclair, with a suit-case, is leaving her home forever to
+join handsome Harry Bellairs, who is at the corner with a racing-car
+and all the money of the bank of which he has been cashier. As the
+guilty woman places the farewell letter against the pin-cushion where
+her husband will be sure to find it, her infant son turns in his sleep
+and jabs himself with a pin. His howl of anguish resembles that of a
+puppy on a moonlight night. The mother recognizes her master's voice.
+She believes her child dying, flies to the bedside, tears up the
+letter, unpacks the suit-case. The next morning at breakfast her
+husband, reading the newspaper, exclaims aloud:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Harry Bellairs," he cries, "has skipped with the bank's money! I
+always told you he was not a man you ought to know."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"His manner to me," she says severely, "always was that of a perfect
+gentleman."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again coincidence gets the credit. Had not the child tossed&mdash;had not
+at the critical moment the safety pin proved untrue to the man who
+invented it&mdash;that happy family reunion would have been impossible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Or, it might be told this way:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Old Man McCurdy, the Pig-Iron King, forbids his daughter Gwendolyn even
+to think of marrying poor but honest Beef Walters, the baseball
+pitcher, and denies him his house. The lovers plan an elopement. At
+midnight Beef is to stand at the tradesman's entrance and whistle
+"Waiting at the Church"; and down the silent stairs Gwendolyn is to
+steal into his arms. At the very same hour the butler has planned with
+the policeman on fixed post to steal Mother McCurdy's diamonds and pass
+them to a brother of the policeman, who is to wait at the tradesman's
+entrance and whistle "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This sounds improbable&mdash;especially that the policeman would allow even
+his brother to get the diamonds before he did; but, with the God of
+Coincidence on the job, you shall see that it will all come out right.
+Beef is first at the door. He whistles. The butler&mdash;an English
+butler&mdash;with no ear for music, shoves into his hands tiaras and
+sunbursts. Honest Beef hands over the butler to the policeman and the
+tiaras to Mother McCurdy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How can I reward you?" exclaims the grateful woman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your daughter's hand!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again the God of Coincidence scores and Beef Walters is credited with
+an assist. And for preventing the robbery McCurdy has the peg-post cop
+made a captain; thus enabling him to wear diamonds of his own and
+raising him above the need of taking them from others.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+These examples of what the god can do are mere fiction; the story that
+comes now really happened. It also is a story of coincidence. It shows
+how this time the long arm was stretched out to make two young people
+happy; it again illustrates that, in the instruments he chooses, the
+God of Coincidence works in a mysterious way his wonders to perform.
+This time the tool he used was a hat of green felt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The story really should be called "The Man in the Green Hat."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At St. James's Palace the plenipotentiaries of the Allies and of Turkey
+were trying to bring peace to Europe; in Russell Square, Bloomsbury,
+Sam Lowell was trying to arrange a peace with Mrs. Wroxton, his
+landlady. The ultimatum of the Allies was: "Adrianople or fight!" The
+last words of Mrs. Wroxton were: "Five pounds or move out!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam did not have five pounds. He was a stranger in London; he had lost
+his position in New York and that very morning had refused to marry the
+girl he loved&mdash;Polly Seward, the young woman the Sunday papers called
+"The Richest Girl in America."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For any man&mdash;for one day&mdash;that would seem to be trouble enough; but to
+the Sultan of Turkey that day brought troubles far more serious. And,
+as his losses were Sam's gain, we must follow the troubles of the
+Sultan. Until, with the aid of a green felt hat, the God of
+Coincidence turns the misfortunes of the Sultan into a fortune for Sam,
+Sam must wait.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the first days of the peace conference it was evident there was a
+leak. The negotiations had been opened under a most solemn oath of
+secrecy. As to the progress of the conference, only such information
+or misinformation&mdash;if the diplomats considered it better&mdash;as was
+mutually agreed upon by the plenipotentiaries was given to a waiting
+world. But each morning, in addition to the official report of the
+proceedings of the day previous, one newspaper, the Times, published an
+account which differed from that in every other paper, and which
+undoubtedly came from the inside. In details it was far more generous
+than the official report; it gave names, speeches, arguments; it
+described the wordy battles of the diplomats, the concessions, bluffs,
+bargains.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After three days the matter became public scandal. At first, the
+plenipotentiaries declared the events described in the Times were
+invented each evening in the office of the Times; but the proceedings
+of the day following showed the public this was not so.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Some one actually present at the conference was telling tales out of
+school. These tales were cabled to Belgrade, Sofia, Athens,
+Constantinople; and hourly from those capitals the plenipotentiaries
+were assailed by advice, abuse, and threats. The whole world began to
+take part in their negotiations; from every side they were attacked;
+from home by the Young Turks, or the On to Constantinople Party; and
+from abroad by peace societies, religious bodies, and chambers of
+commerce. Even the armies in the field, instead of waiting for the
+result of their deliberations, told them what to do, and that unless
+they did it they would better remain in exile. To make matters worse,
+in every stock exchange gambling on the news furnished by the Times
+threatened the financial peace of Europe. To work under such
+conditions of publicity was impossible. The delegates appealed to
+their hosts of the British Foreign Office.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Unless the chiel amang them takin' notes was discovered and the leak
+stopped, they declared the conference must end. Spurred on by
+questions in Parliament, by appeals from the great banking world, by
+criticisms not altogether unselfish from the other newspapers, the
+Foreign Office surrounded St. James's Palace and the office of the
+Times with an army of spies. Every secretary, stenographer, and
+attendant at the conference was under surveillance, his past record
+looked into, his present comings and goings noted. Even the
+plenipotentiaries themselves were watched; and employees of the Times
+were secretly urged to sell the government the man who was selling
+secrets to them. But those who were willing to be "urged" did not know
+the man; those who did know him refused to be bought.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By a process of elimination suspicion finally rested upon one Adolf
+Hertz, a young Hungarian scholar who spoke and wrote all the mongrel
+languages of the Balkans; who for years, as a copying clerk and
+translator, had been employed by the Foreign Office, and who now by it
+had been lent to the conference. For the reason that when he lived in
+Budapest he was a correspondent of the Times, the police, in seeking
+for the leak, centred their attention upon Hertz. But, though every
+moment he was watched, and though Hertz knew he was watched, no present
+link between him and the Times had been established&mdash;and this in spite
+of the fact that the hours during which it was necessary to keep him
+under closest observation were few. Those were the hours between the
+closing of the conference, and midnight, when the provincial edition of
+the Times went to press. For the remainder of the day, so far as the
+police cared, Hertz could go to the devil! But for those hours, except
+when on his return from the conference he locked himself in his
+lodgings in Jermyn Street, detectives were always at his elbow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was supposed that it was during this brief period when he was locked
+in his room that he wrote his report; but how, later, he conveyed it to
+the Times no one could discover. In his rooms there was no telephone;
+his doors and windows were openly watched; and after leaving his rooms
+his movements were&mdash;as they always had been&mdash;methodical, following a
+routine open to observation. His programme was invariably the same.
+Each night at seven from his front door he walked west. At Regent
+Street he stopped to buy an evening paper from the aged news-vender at
+the corner; he then crossed Piccadilly Circus into Coventry Street,
+skirted Leicester Square, and at the end of Green Street entered
+Pavoni's Italian restaurant. There he took his seat always at the same
+table, hung his hat always on the same brass peg, ordered the same
+Hungarian wine, and read the same evening paper. He spoke to no one;
+no one spoke to him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When he had finished his coffee and his cigarette he returned to his
+lodgings, and there he remained until he rang for breakfast. From the
+time at which he left his home until his return to it he spoke to only
+two persons&mdash;the news-vender to whom he handed a halfpenny; the waiter
+who served him the regular table d'hote dinner&mdash;between whom and Hertz
+nothing passed but three and six for the dinner and sixpence for the
+waiter himself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Each evening, the moment he moved into the street a plain-clothes man
+fell into step beside him; another followed at his heels; and from
+across the street more plain-clothes men kept their eyes on every one
+approaching him in front or from the rear. When he bought his evening
+paper six pairs of eyes watched him place a halfpenny in the hand of
+the news-vender, and during the entire time of his stay in Pavoni's
+every mouthful he ate was noted&mdash;every direction he gave the waiter was
+overheard.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of this surveillance Hertz was well aware. To have been ignorant of it
+would have argued him blind and imbecile. But he showed no resentment.
+With eyes grave and untroubled, he steadily regarded his escort; but
+not by the hastening of a footstep or the acceleration of a gesture did
+he admit that by his audience he was either distressed or embarrassed.
+That was the situation on the morning when the Treaty of London was to
+be signed and sealed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In spite of the publicity given to the conference by the Times,
+however, what the terms of the treaty might be no one knew. If
+Adrianople were surrendered; if Salonika were given to Greece; if
+Servia obtained a right-of-way to the Adriatic&mdash;peace was assured; but,
+should the Young Turks refuse&mdash;should Austria prove obstinate&mdash;not only
+would the war continue, but the Powers would be involved, and that
+greater, more awful war&mdash;the war dreaded by all the Christian
+world&mdash;might turn Europe into a slaughter-house.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Would Turkey and Austria consent and peace ensue? Would they refuse and
+war follow? That morning those were the questions on the lips of every
+man in London save one. He was Sam Lowell; and he was asking himself
+another and more personal question: "How can I find five pounds and
+pacify Mrs. Wroxton?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had friends in New York who would cable him money to pay his passage
+home; but he did not want to go home. He preferred to starve in London
+than be vulgarly rich anywhere else. That was not because he loved
+London, but because above everything in life he loved Polly Seward&mdash;and
+Polly Seward was in London. He had begun to love her on class day of
+his senior year; and, after his father died and left him with no one
+else to care for, every day he had loved her more.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Until a month before he had been in the office of Wetmore & Hastings, a
+smart brokers' firm in Wall Street. He had obtained the position not
+because he was of any use to Wetmore & Hastings, but because the firm
+was the one through which his father had gambled the money that would
+otherwise have gone to Sam. In giving Sam a job the firm thought it
+was making restitution. Sam thought it was making the punishment fit
+the crime; for he knew nothing of the ways of Wall Street, and having
+to learn them bored him extremely. He wanted to write stories for the
+magazines. He wanted to bind them in a book and dedicate them to
+Polly. And in this wish editors humored him&mdash;but not so many editors
+or with such enthusiasm as to warrant his turning his back on Wall
+Street.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That he did later when, after a tour of the world that had begun from
+the San Francisco side, Polly Seward and her mother and Senator Seward
+reached Naples. There Senator Seward bought old Italian furniture for
+his office on the twenty-fifth floor of the perfectly new Seward
+building. Mrs. Seward tried to buy for Polly a prince nearly as old as
+the furniture, and Polly bought picture post-cards which she sent to
+Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Polly had been absent six months, and Sam's endurance had been so timed
+as just to last out the half-year. It was not guaranteed to withstand
+any change of schedule, and the two months' delay in Italy broke his
+heart. It could not run overtime on a starvation diet of post-cards;
+so when he received a cable reading, "Address London, Claridge's," his
+heart told him it could no longer wait&mdash;and he resigned his position
+and sailed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On her trip round the world Polly had learned many things. She was
+observant, alert, intent on asking questions, hungering for facts. And
+a charming young woman who seeks facts rather than attention will never
+lack either. But of all the facts Polly collected, the one of
+surpassing interest, and which gave her the greatest happiness, was
+that she could not live without Sam Lowell. She had suspected this,
+and it was partly to make sure that she had consented to the trip round
+the world. Now that she had made sure, she could not too soon make up
+for the days lost. Sam had spent his money, and he either must return
+to New York and earn more or remain near Polly and starve. It was an
+embarrassing choice. Polly herself made the choice even more difficult.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One morning when they walked in St. James's Park to feed the ducks she
+said to him:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sam, when are we to be married?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When for three years a man has been begging a girl to marry him, and
+she consents at the exact moment when, without capitulation to all that
+he holds honorable, he cannot marry anybody, his position deserves
+sympathy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear one," exclaimed the unhappy youth, "you make me the most
+miserable of men! I can't marry! I'm in an awful place! If I married
+you now I'd be a crook! It isn't a question of love in a cottage, with
+bread and cheese. If cottages were renting for a dollar a year I
+couldn't rent one for ten minutes. I haven't cheese enough to bait a
+mouse-trap. It's terrible! But we have got to wait."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wait!" cried Polly. "I thought you had been waiting! Have I been away
+too long? Do you love some one else?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't be ridiculous!" said Sam crossly. "Look at me," he commanded,
+"and tell me whom I love!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Polly did not take time to look.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But I," she protested, "have so much money!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not your money," explained Sam. "It's your mother's money or
+your father's, and both of them dislike me. They even have told me so.
+Your mother wants you to marry that Italian; and your father, having
+half the money in America, naturally wants to marry you to the other
+half. If I were selfish and married you I'd be all the things they
+think I am."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are selfish!" cried Polly. "You're thinking of yourself and of
+what people will say, instead of how to make me happy. What's the use
+of money if you can't buy what you want?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Are you suggesting you can buy me?" demanded Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Surely," said Polly&mdash;"if I can't get you any other way. And you may
+name your own price, too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When I am making enough to support myself without sponging on you,"
+explained Sam, "you can have as many millions as you like; but I must
+first make enough to keep me alive. A man who can't do that isn't fit
+to marry."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How much," demanded Polly, "do you need to keep you alive? Maybe I
+could lend it to you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam was entirely serious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Three thousand a year," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Polly exclaimed indignantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I call that extremely extravagant!" she cried. "If we wait until you
+earn three thousand a year we may be dead. Do you expect to earn that
+writing stories?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can try," said Sam&mdash;"or I will rob a bank."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Polly smiled upon him appealingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You know how I love your stories," she said, "and I wouldn't hurt your
+feelings for the world; but, Sam dear, I think you had better rob a
+bank!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Addressing an imaginary audience, supposedly of men, Sam exclaimed:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Isn't that just like a woman? She wouldn't care," he protested, "how I
+got the money!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Polly smiled cheerfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not if I got you!" she said. In extenuation, also, she addressed an
+imaginary audience, presumably of women. "That's how I love him!" she
+exclaimed. "And he asks me to wait! Isn't that just like a man?
+Seriously," she went on, "if we just go ahead and get married father
+would have to help us. He'd make you a vice-president or something."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At this suggestion Sam expressed his extreme displeasure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The last time I talked to your father," he said, "I was in a position
+to marry, and I told him I wanted to marry you. What he said to that
+was: 'Don't be an ass!' Then I told him he was unintelligent&mdash;and I
+told him why. First, because he could not see that a man might want to
+marry his daughter in spite of her money; and second, because he
+couldn't see that her money wouldn't make up to a man for having him
+for a father-in-law."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did you have to tell him that?" asked Polly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Some one had to tell him," said Sam gloomily. "Anyway, as a source of
+revenue father is eliminated. I have still one chance in London. If
+that fails I must go home. I've been promised a job in New York
+reporting for a Wall Street paper&mdash;and I'll write stories on the side.
+I've cabled for money, and if the London job falls through I shall sail
+Wednesday."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Wednesday!" cried Polly. "When you say things like 'Wednesday' you
+make the world so dark! You must stay here! It has been such a long six
+months; and before you earn three thousand dollars I shall be an old,
+old maid. But if you get work here we could see each other every day."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They were in the Sewards' sitting-room at Claridge's. Sam took up the
+desk telephone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"In London," he said, "my one best and only bet is a man named
+Forsythe, who helps edit the Pall Mall. I'll telephone him now. If he
+can promise me even a shilling a day I'll stay on and starve&mdash;but I'll
+be near you. If Forsythe fails me I shall sail Wednesday."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The telephone call found Forsythe at the Pall Mall office. He would be
+charmed to advise Mr. Lowell on a matter of business. Would he that
+night dine with Mr. Lowell? He would. And might he suggest that they
+dine at Pavoni's? He had a special reason for going there, and the
+dinner would cost only three and six.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's reason enough!" Sam told him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And don't forget," said Polly when, for the fifth time, Sam rose to
+go, "that after your dinner you are to look for me at the Duchess of
+Deptford's dance. I asked her for a card and you will find it at your
+lodgings. Everybody will be there; but it is a big place-full of dark
+corners where we can hide."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't hide until I arrive," said Sam. "I shall be very late, as I
+shall have to walk. After I pay for Forsythe's dinner and for white
+gloves for your dance I shall not be in a position to hire a taxi. But
+maybe I shall bring good news. Maybe Forsythe will give me the job.
+If he does we will celebrate in champagne."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You will let me at least pay for the champagne?" begged Polly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Sam firmly&mdash;"the duchess will furnish that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When Sam reached his lodgings in Russell Square, which he approached
+with considerable trepidation, he found Mrs. Wroxton awaiting him. But
+her attitude no longer was hostile. On the contrary, as she handed him
+a large, square envelope, decorated with the strawberry leaves of a
+duke, her manner was humble.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam opened the envelope and, with apparent carelessness, stuck it over
+the fireplace.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"About that back rent," he said; "I have cabled for money, and as
+soon&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know," said Mrs. Wroxton. "I read the cable." She was reading the
+card of invitation also. "There's no hurry, sir," protested Mrs.
+Wroxton. "Any of my young gentlemen who is made welcome at Deptford
+House is made welcome here!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Credit, Mrs. Wroxton," observed Sam, "is better than cash. If you
+have only cash you spend it and nothing remains. But with credit you
+can continue indefinitely to-to-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So you can!" exclaimed Mrs. Wroxton enthusiastically. "Stay as long
+as you like, Mr. Lowell."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At Pavoni's Sam found Forsythe already seated and, with evident
+interest, observing the scene of gayety before him. The place was new
+to Sam, and after the darkness and snow of the streets it appeared both
+cheerful and resplendent. It was brilliantly lighted; a ceiling of gay
+panels picked out with gold, and red plush sofas, backed against walls
+hung with mirrors and faced by rows of marble-topped tables, gave it an
+air of the Continent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam surrendered his hat and coat to the waiter. The hat was a soft
+Alpine one of green felt. The waiter hung it where Sam could see it,
+on one of many hooks that encircled a gilded pillar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After two courses had been served Forsythe said:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope you don't object to this place. I had a special reason for
+wishing to be here on this particular night. I wanted to be in at the
+death!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Whose death?" asked Sam. "Is the dinner as bad as that?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Forsythe leaned back against the mirror behind them and, bringing his
+shoulder close to Sam's, spoke in a whisper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As you know," he said, "to-day the delegates sign the Treaty of
+London. It still must receive the signatures of the Sultan and the
+three kings; and they will sign it. But until they do, what the terms
+of the treaty are no one can find out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bet the Times finds out!" said Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's it!" returned Forsythe. "Hertz, the man who is supposed to be
+selling the secrets of the conference to the Times, dines here.
+To-night is his last chance. If to-night he can slip the Times a copy
+of the Treaty of London without being caught, and the Times has the
+courage to publish it, it will be the biggest newspaper sensation of
+modern times; and it will either cause a financial panic all over
+Europe&mdash;or prevent one. The man they suspect is facing us. Don't look
+now, but in a minute you will see him sitting alone at a table on the
+right of the middle pillar. The people at the tables nearest him&mdash;even
+the women&mdash;are detectives. His waiter is in the employ of Scotland
+Yard. The maitre d'hotel, whom you will see always hovering round his
+table, is a police agent lent by Bulgaria. For the Allies are even
+more anxious to stop the leak than we are. We are interested only as
+their hosts; with them it is a matter of national life or death. A
+week ago one of our own inspectors tipped me off to what is going on,
+and every night since then I've dined here, hoping to see something
+suspicious."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Have you?" asked Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Only this," whispered Forsythe&mdash;"on four different nights I've
+recognized men I know are on the staff of the Times, and on the other
+nights men I don't know may have been here. But after all that proves
+nothing, for this place is a resort of newspaper writers and
+editors&mdash;and the Times men's being here may have been only a
+coincidence."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And Hertz?" asked Sam&mdash;"what does he do?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Englishman exclaimed with irritation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Just what you see him doing now!" he protested. "He eats his dinner!
+Look at him!" he commanded. "Of all in the room he's the least
+concerned."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam looked and saw the suspected Adolf Hertz dangling a mass of
+macaroni on the end of his fork. Sam watched him until it disappeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Maybe that's a signal!" suggested Sam. "Maybe everything he does is
+part of a cipher code! He gives the signals and the Times men read them
+and write them down."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A man would have a fine chance to write anything down in this room!"
+said Forsythe.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But maybe," persisted Sam, "when he makes those strange movements with
+his lips he is talking to a confederate who can read the lip language.
+The confederate writes it down at the office and&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Fantastic and extremely improbable!" commented Forsythe. "But,
+nevertheless, the fact remains, the fellow does communicate with some
+one from the Times; and the police are positive he does it here and
+that he is doing it now!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The problem that so greatly disturbed his friend would have more deeply
+interested Sam had the solving of his own trouble been less imperative.
+That alone filled his mind. And when the coffee was served and the
+cigars lit, without beating about the bush Sam asked Forsythe bluntly
+if on his paper a rising and impecunious genius could find a place.
+With even less beating about the bush Forsythe assured him he could
+not. The answer was final, and the disappointment was so keen that Sam
+soon begged his friend to excuse him, paid his bill, and rose to depart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Better wait!" urged Forsythe. "You'll find nothing so good out at a
+music-hall. This is Houdini getting out of his handcuffs before an
+audience entirely composed of policemen."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam shook his head gloomily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have a few handcuffs of my own to get rid of," he said, "and it
+makes me poor company."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He bade his friend good night and, picking his way among the tables,
+moved toward the pillar on which the waiter had hung his hat. The
+pillar was the one beside which Hertz was sitting, and as Sam
+approached the man he satisfied his curiosity by a long look. Under
+the glance Hertz lowered his eyes and fixed them upon his newspaper.
+Sam retrieved his hat and left the restaurant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His mind immediately was overcast. He remembered his disappointment
+and that the parting between himself and Polly was now inevitable.
+Without considering his direction he turned toward Charing Cross Road.
+But he was not long allowed to meditate undisturbed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had only crossed the little street that runs beside the restaurant
+and passed into the shadow of the National Gallery when, at the base of
+the Irving Memorial, from each side he was fiercely attacked. A young
+man of eminently respectable appearance kicked his legs from under him,
+and another of equally impeccable exterior made an honest effort to
+knock off his head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam plunged heavily to the sidewalk. As he sprawled forward his hat
+fell under him and in his struggle to rise was hidden by the skirts of
+his greatcoat. That, also, he had fallen heavily upon his hat with
+both knees Sam did not know. The strange actions of his assailants
+enlightened him. To his surprise, instead of continuing their assault
+or attempting a raid upon his pockets, he found them engaged solely in
+tugging at the hat. And so preoccupied were they in this that, though
+still on his knees, Sam was able to land some lusty blows before a rush
+of feet caused the young men to leap to their own and, pursued by
+several burly forms, disappear in the heart of the traffic.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam rose and stood unsteadily. He found himself surrounded by all of
+those who but a moment before he had left contentedly dining at
+Pavoni's. In an excited circle waiters and patrons of the restaurant,
+both men and women, stood in the falling snow, bareheaded, coatless,
+and cloakless, staring at him. Forsythe pushed them aside and took Sam
+by the arm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What happened?" demanded Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You ought to know," protested Forsythe. "You started it! The moment
+you left the restaurant two men grabbed their hats and jumped after
+you; a dozen other men, without waiting for hats, jumped after them.
+The rest of us got out just as the two men and the detectives dived
+into the traffic."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A big man, with an air of authority, drew Sam to one side.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did they take anything from you, sir?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've nothing they could take," said Sam. "And they didn't try to find
+out. They just knocked me down."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Forsythe turned to the big man.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This gentleman is a friend of mine, inspector," he said. "He is a
+stranger in town and was at Pavoni's only by accident."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We might need his testimony," suggested the official.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam gave his card to the inspector and then sought refuge in a taxicab.
+For the second time he bade his friend good night.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And when next we dine," he called to him in parting, "choose a
+restaurant where the detective service is quicker!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Three hours later, brushed and repaired by Mrs. Wroxton, and again
+resplendent, Sam sat in a secluded corner of Deptford House and bade
+Polly a long farewell. It was especially long, owing to the unusual
+number of interruptions; for it was evident that Polly had many friends
+in London, and that not to know the Richest One in America and her
+absurd mother, and the pompous, self-satisfied father, argued oneself
+nobody. But finally the duchess carried Polly off to sup with her; and
+as the duchess did not include Sam in her invitation&mdash;at least not in
+such a way that any one could notice it&mdash; Sam said good-night&mdash;but not
+before he had arranged a meeting with Polly for eleven that same
+morning. If it was clear, the meeting was to be at the duck pond in
+St. James's Park; if it snowed, at the National Gallery in front of the
+"Age of Innocence."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+After robbing the duchess of three suppers, Sam descended to the hall
+and from an attendant received his coat and hat, which latter the
+attendant offered him with the inside of the hat showing. Sam saw in
+it the trademark of a foreign maker.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's not my hat," said Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The man expressed polite disbelief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I found it rolled up in the pocket of your greatcoat, sir," he
+protested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The words reminded Sam that on arriving at Deptford House he had
+twisted the hat into a roll and stuffed it into his overcoat pocket.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Quite right," said Sam. But it was not his hat; and with some hope of
+still recovering his property he made way for other departing guests
+and at one side waited.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For some clew to the person he believed was now wearing his hat, Sam
+examined the one in his hand. Just showing above the inside band was
+something white. Thinking it might be the card of the owner, Sam
+removed it. It was not a card, but a long sheet of thin paper, covered
+with typewriting, and many times folded. Sam read the opening
+paragraph. Then he backed suddenly toward a great chair of gold and
+velvet, and fell into it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He was conscious the attendants in pink stockings were regarding him
+askance; that, as they waited in the drafty hall for cars and taxis,
+the noble lords in stars and ribbons, the noble ladies in tiaras and
+showing much-fur-lined galoshes, were discussing his strange
+appearance. They might well believe the youth was ill; they might
+easily have considered him intoxicated. Outside rose the voices of
+servants and police calling the carriages. Inside other servants
+echoed them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Duchess of Sutherland's car!" they chanted. "Mrs. Trevor Hill's
+carriage! The French ambassador's carriage! Baron Haussmann's car!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like one emerging from a trance, Sam sprang upright. A little fat man,
+with mild blue eyes and curly red hair, was shyly and with murmured
+apologies pushing toward the exit. Before he gained it Sam had
+wriggled a way to his elbow.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Baron Haussmann!" he stammered. "I must speak to you. It's a matter
+of gravest importance. Send away your car," he begged, "and give me
+five minutes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The eyes of the little fat man opened wide in surprise, almost in
+alarm. He stared at Sam reprovingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Impossible!" he murmured. "I&mdash;I do not know you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is a letter of introduction," said Sam. Into the unwilling
+fingers of the banker he thrust the folded paper. Bending over him, he
+whispered in his ear. "That," said Sam, "is the Treaty of London!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The alarm of Baron Haussmann increased to a panic.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Impossible!" he gasped. And, with reproach, he repeated: "I do not
+know you, sir! I do not know you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At that moment, towering above the crush, appeared the tall figure of
+Senator Seward. The rich man of the New World and the rich man of
+Europe knew each other only by sight. But, upon seeing Sam in earnest
+converse with the great banker, the senator believed that without
+appearing to seek it he might through Sam effect a meeting. With a
+hearty slap on the shoulder he greeted his fellow countryman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Halloo, Sam!" he cried genially. "You walking home with me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam did not even turn his head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" he snapped. "I'm busy. Go 'way!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Crimson, the senator disappeared. Baron Haussmann regarded the young
+stranger with amazed interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You know him!" he protested. "He called you Sam!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Know him?" cried Sam impatiently. "I've got to know him! He's going
+to be my father-in-law."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fingers of the rich man clutched the folded paper as the claws of a
+parrot cling to the bars of his cage. He let his sable coat slip into
+the hands of a servant; he turned back toward the marble staircase.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come!" he commanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam led him to the secluded corner Polly and he had left vacant and
+told his story.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So, it is evident," concluded Sam, "that each night some one in the
+service of the Times dined at Pavoni's, and that his hat was the same
+sort of hat as the one worn by Hertz; and each night, inside the lining
+of his hat, Hertz hid the report of that day's proceedings. And when
+the Times man left the restaurant he exchanged hats with Hertz. But
+to-night&mdash;I got Hertz's hat and with it the treaty!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In perplexity the blue eyes of the little great man frowned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is a remarkable story," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You mean you don't believe me!" retorted Sam. "If I had financial
+standing&mdash;if I had credit&mdash;if I were not a stranger&mdash;you would not
+hesitate."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Baron Haussmann neither agreed nor contradicted. He made a polite and
+deprecatory gesture. Still in doubt, he stared at the piece of white
+paper. Still deep in thought, he twisted and creased between his
+fingers the Treaty of London!
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Returning with the duchess from supper, Polly caught sight of Sam and,
+with a happy laugh, ran toward him. Seeing he was not alone, she
+halted and waved her hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't forget!" she called. "At eleven!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She made a sweet and lovely picture. Sam rose and bowed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll be there at ten," he answered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With his mild blue eyes the baron followed Polly until she had
+disappeared. Then he turned and smiled at Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Permit me," he said, "to offer you my felicitations. Your young lady
+is very beautiful and very good." Sam bowed his head. "If she trusts
+you," murmured the baron, "I think I can trust you too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How wonderful is credit!" exclaimed Sam. "I was just saying so to my
+landlady. If you have only cash you spend it and nothing remains. But
+with credit you can&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How much," interrupted the banker, "do you want for this?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sam returned briskly to the business of the moment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To be your partner," he said&mdash;"to get half of what you make out of it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The astonished eyes of the baron were large with wonder. Again he
+reproved Sam.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What I shall make out of it?" he demanded incredulously. "Do you know
+how much I shall make out of it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I cannot even guess," said Sam; "but I want half."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The baron smiled tolerantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And how," he asked, "could you possibly know what I give you is really
+half?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his turn, Sam made a deprecatory gesture.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your credit," said Sam, "is good!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That morning, after the walk in St. James's Park, when Sam returned
+with Polly to Claridge's, they encountered her father in the hall.
+Mindful of the affront of the night before, he greeted Sam only with a
+scowl.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Senator," cried Sam happily, "you must be the first to hear the news!
+Polly and I are going into partnership. We are to be married."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This time Senator Seward did not trouble himself even to tell Sam he
+was an ass. He merely grinned cynically.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is that all your news?" he demanded with sarcasm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," said Sam&mdash;"I am going into partnership with Baron Haussmann too!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="treasure"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Young Everett at last was a minister plenipotentiary. In London as
+third secretary he had splashed around in the rain to find the
+ambassador's carriage. In Rome as a second secretary he had served as
+a clearing-house for the Embassy's visiting-cards; and in Madrid as
+first secretary he had acted as interpreter for a minister who, though
+valuable as a national chairman, had much to learn of even his own
+language. But although surrounded by all the wonders and delights of
+Europe, although he walked, talked, wined, and dined with statesmen and
+court beauties, Everett was not happy. He was never his own master.
+Always he answered the button pressed by the man higher up. Always
+over him loomed his chief; always, for his diligence and zeal, his
+chief received credit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As His Majesty's naval attache put it sympathetically, "Better be a
+top-side man on a sampan than First Luff on the Dreadnought. Don't be
+another man's right hand. Be your own right hand." Accordingly when
+the State Department offered to make him minister to the Republic of
+Amapala, Everett gladly deserted the flesh-pots of Europe, and, on
+mule-back over trails in the living rock, through mountain torrents
+that had never known the shadow of a bridge, through swamp and jungle,
+rode sunburnt and saddle-sore into his inheritance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When giving him his farewell instructions, the Secretary of State had
+not attempted to deceive him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of all the smaller republics of Central America," he frankly told him,
+"Amapala is the least desirable, least civilized, least acceptable. It
+offers an ambitious young diplomat no chance. But once a minister,
+always a minister. Having lifted you out of the secretary class we
+can't demote you. Your days of deciphering cablegrams are over, and if
+you don't die of fever, of boredom, or brandy, call us up in a year or
+two and we will see what we can do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett regarded the Secretary blankly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Has the department no interest in Amapala?" he begged. "Is there
+nothing you want there?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is one thing we very much want," returned the Secretary, "but we
+can't get it. We want a treaty to extradite criminals."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young minister laughed confidently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why!" he exclaimed, "that should be easy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Secretary smiled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You have our full permission to get it," he said. "This department,"
+he explained, "under three administrations has instructed four
+ministers to arrange such a treaty. The Bankers' Association wants it;
+the Merchants' Protective Alliance wants it. Amapala is the only place
+within striking distance of our country where a fugitive is safe. It is
+the only place where a dishonest cashier, swindler, or felon can find
+refuge. Sometimes it seems almost as though when a man planned a crime
+he timed it exactly so as to catch the boat for Amapala. And, once
+there, we can't lay our hands on him; and, what's more, we can't lay
+our hands on the money he takes with him. I have no right to make a
+promise," said the great man, "but the day that treaty is signed you
+can sail for a legation in Europe. Do I make myself clear?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So clear, sir," cried Everett, laughing, "that if I don't arrange that
+treaty I will remain in Amapala until I do."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Four of your predecessors," remarked the Secretary, "made exactly the
+same promise, but none of them got us the treaty."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Probably none of them remained in Amapala, either," retorted Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Two did," corrected the Secretary; "as you ride into Camaguay you see
+their tombstones."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett found the nine-day mule-ride from the coast to the capital
+arduous, but full of interest. After a week at his post he appreciated
+that until he left it and made the return journey nothing of equal
+interest was again likely to occur. For life in Camaguay, the capital
+of Amapala, proved to be one long, dreamless slumber. In the morning
+each of the inhabitants engaged in a struggle to get awake; after the
+second breakfast he ceased struggling, and for a siesta sank into his
+hammock. After dinner, at nine o'clock, he was prepared to sleep in
+earnest, and went to bed. The official life as explained to Everett by
+Garland, the American consul, was equally monotonous. When President
+Mendoza was not in the mountains deer-hunting, or suppressing a
+revolution, each Sunday he invited the American minister to dine at the
+palace. In return His Excellency expected once a week to be invited to
+breakfast with the minister. He preferred that the activities of that
+gentleman should go no further. Life in the diplomatic circle was even
+less strenuous. Everett was the doyen of the diplomatic corps because
+he was the only diplomat. All other countries were represented by
+consuls who were commission merchants and shopkeepers. They were
+delighted at having among them a minister plenipotentiary. When he
+took pity on them and invited them to tea, which invitations he
+delivered in person to each consul at the door of each shop, the entire
+diplomatic corps, as the consuls were pleased to describe themselves,
+put up the shutters, put on their official full-dress uniforms and
+arrived in a body.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The first week at his post Everett spent in reading the archives of the
+legation. They were most discouraging. He found that for the sixteen
+years prior to his arrival the only events reported to the department
+by his predecessors were revolutions and the refusals of successive
+presidents to consent to a treaty of extradition. On that point all
+Amapalans were in accord. Though overnight the government changed
+hands, though presidents gave way to dictators, and dictators to
+military governors, the national policy of Amapala continued to be "No
+extradition!" The ill success of those who had preceded him appalled
+Everett. He had promised himself by a brilliant assault to secure the
+treaty and claim the legation in Europe. But the record of sixteen
+years of failure caused him to alter his strategy. Instead of an
+attack he prepared for a siege. He unpacked his books, placed the
+portrait of his own President over the office desk, and proceeded to
+make friends with his fellow exiles.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of the foreign colony in Camaguay some fifty were Americans, and from
+the rest of the world they were as hopelessly separated as the crew of
+a light-ship. From the Pacific they were cut off by the Cordilleras,
+from the Caribbean by a nine-day mule-ride. To the north and south,
+jungle, forests, swamp-lands, and mountains hemmed them in.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of the fifty Americans, one-half were constantly on the trail; riding
+to the coast to visit their plantations, or into the mountains to
+inspect their mines. When Everett arrived, of those absent the two
+most important were Chester Ward and Colonel Goddard. Indeed, so
+important were these gentlemen that Everett was made to understand
+that, until they approved, his recognition as the American minister was
+in a manner temporary.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Chester Ward, or "Chet," as the exiles referred to him, was one of the
+richest men in Amapala, and was engaged in exploring the ruins of the
+lost city of Cobre, which was a one-hour ride from the capital. Ward
+possessed the exclusive right to excavate that buried city and had held
+it against all comers. The offers of American universities, of
+archaeological and geographical societies that also wished to dig up
+the ancient city and decipher the hieroglyphs on her walls, were met
+with a curt rebuff. That work, the government of Amapala would reply,
+was in the trained hands of Senor Chester Ward. In his chosen effort
+the government would not disturb him, nor would it permit others coming
+in at the eleventh hour to rob him of his glory. This Everett learned
+from the consul, Garland.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ward and Colonel Goddard," the consul explained, "are two of five
+countrymen of ours who run the American colony, and, some say, run the
+government. The others are Mellen, who has the asphalt monopoly;
+Jackson, who is building the railroads, and Major Feiberger, of the San
+Jose silver-mines. They hold monopolies and pay President Mendoza ten
+per cent of the earnings, and, on the side, help him run the country.
+Of the five, the Amapalans love Goddard best, because he's not trying
+to rob them. Instead, he wants to boost Amapala. His ideas are
+perfectly impracticable, but he doesn't know that, and neither do they.
+He's a kind of Colonel Mulberry Sellers and a Southerner. Not the
+professional sort, that fight elevator-boys because they're colored,
+and let off rebel yells in rathskellers when a Hungarian band plays
+'Dixie,' but the sort you read about and so seldom see. He was once
+State Treasurer of Alabama."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's he doing down here?" asked the minister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Never the same thing two months together," the consul told him;
+"railroads, mines, rubber. He says all Amapala needs is developing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As men who can see a joke even when it is against themselves, the two
+exiles smiled ruefully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's all it needs," said Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment the consul regarded him thoughtfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I might as well tell you," he said, "you'll learn it soon enough
+anyway, that the men who will keep you from getting your treaty are
+these five, especially old man Goddard and Ward."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett exclaimed indignantly:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why should they interfere?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because," explained the consul, "they are fugitives from justice, and
+they don't want to go home. Ward is wanted for forgery or some polite
+crime, I don't know which. And Colonel Goddard for appropriating the
+State funds of Alabama. Ward knew what he was doing and made a lot out
+of it. He's still rich. No one's weeping over him. Goddard's case is
+different. He was imposed on and made a catspaw. When he was State
+treasurer the men who appointed him came to him one night and said they
+must have some of the State's funds to show a bank examiner in the
+morning. They appealed to him on the ground of friendship, as the men
+who'd given him his job. They would return the money the next evening.
+Goddard believed they would. They didn't, and when some one called for
+a show-down the colonel was shy about fifty thousand dollars of the
+State's money. He lost his head, took the boat out of Mobile to Porto
+Cortez, and hid here. He's been here twenty years and all the
+Amapalans love him. He's the adopted father of their country. They're
+so afraid he'll be taken back and punished that they'll never consent
+to an extradition treaty even if the other Americans, Mellen, Jackson,
+and Feiberger, weren't paying them big money not to consent. President
+Mendoza himself told me that as long as Colonel Goddard honored his
+country by remaining in it, he was his guest, and he would never agree
+to extradition. 'I could as soon,' he said, 'sign his death-warrant.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett grinned dismally.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's rather nice of them," he said, "but it's hard on me. But," he
+demanded, "why Ward? What has he done for Amapala? Is it because of
+Cobre, because of his services as an archaeologist?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The consul glanced around the patio and dragged his chair nearer to
+Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is my own dope," he whispered; "it may be wrong. Anyway, it's
+only for your private information."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He waited until, with a smile, Everett agreed to secrecy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Chet Ward," protested the consul, "is no more an archaeologist than I
+am! He talks well about Cobre, and he ought to, because every word he
+speaks is cribbed straight from Hauptmann's monograph, published in
+1855. And he has dug up something at Cobre; something worth a darned
+sight more than stone monkeys and carved altars. But his explorations
+are a bluff. They're a blind to cover up what he's really after; what
+I think he's found!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As though wishing to be urged, the young man paused, and Everett nodded
+for him to continue. He was wondering whether life in Amapala might
+not turn out to be more interesting than at first it had appeared, or
+whether Garland was not a most charming liar.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ward visits the ruins every month," continued Garland. "But he takes
+with him only two mule-drivers to cook and look after the pack-train,
+and he doesn't let even the drivers inside the ruins. He remains at
+Cobre three or four days and, to make a show, fills his saddle-bags
+with broken tiles and copper ornaments. He turns them over to the
+government, and it dumps them in the back yard of the palace. You
+can't persuade me that he holds his concession with that junk. He's
+found something else at Cobre and he shares it with Mendoza, and I
+believe it's gold."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The minister smiled delightedly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What kind of gold?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Maybe in the rough," said the consul. "But I prefer to think it's
+treasure. The place is full of secret chambers, tombs, and
+passage-ways cut through the rock, deep under the surface. I believe
+Ward has stumbled on some vault where the priests used to hide their
+loot. I believe he's getting it out bit by bit and going shares with
+Mendoza."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If that were so," ventured Everett, "why wouldn't Mendoza take it all?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because Ward," explained the consul, "is the only one who knows where
+it is. The ruins cover two square miles. You might search for years.
+They tried to follow and spy on him, but Ward was too clever for them.
+He turned back at once. If they don't take what he gives, they get
+nothing. So they protect him from real explorers and from extradition.
+The whole thing is unfair. A real archaeologist turned up here a month
+ago. He had letters from the Smithsonian Institute and several big
+officials at Washington, but do you suppose they would let him so much
+as smell of Cobre? Not they! Not even when I spoke for him as consul.
+Then he appealed to Ward, and Ward turned him down hard. You were
+arriving, so he's hung on here hoping you may have more influence. His
+name is Peabody; he's a professor, but he's young and full of 'get
+there,' and he knows more about the ruins of Cobre now than Ward does
+after having them all to himself for two years. He's good people and I
+hope you'll help him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett shook his head doubtfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If the government has given the concession to him," he pointed out,
+"no matter who Ward may be, or what its motives were for giving it to
+him, I can't ask it to break its promise. As an American citizen Ward
+is as much entitled to my help&mdash;officially&mdash;as Professor Peabody,
+whatever his standing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ward's a forger," protested Garland, "a fugitive from justice; and
+Peabody is a scholar and a gentleman. I'm not keen about dead cities
+myself&mdash;this one we're in now is dead enough for me&mdash;but if
+civilization is demanding to know what Cobre was like eight hundred
+years ago, civilization is entitled to find out, and Peabody seems the
+man for the job. It's a shame to turn him down for a gang of grafters."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Tell him to come and talk to me," said the minister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He rode over to the ruins of Copan last week," explained Garland,
+"where the Harvard expedition is. But he's coming back to-morrow on
+purpose to see you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The consul had started toward the door when he suddenly returned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And there's some one else coming to see you," he said. "Some one," he
+added anxiously, "you want to treat right. That's Monica Ward. She's
+Chester Ward's sister, and you mustn't get her mixed up with anything I
+told you about her brother. She's coming to ask you to help start a
+Red Cross Society. She was a volunteer nurse in the hospital in the
+last two revolutions, and what she saw makes her want to be sure she
+won't see it again. She's taught the native ladies the 'first aid'
+drill, and they expect you to be honorary president of the society.
+You'd better accept."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Shaking his head, Garland smiled pityingly upon the new minister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You've got a swell chance to get your treaty," he declared. "Monica is
+another one who will prevent it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett sighed patiently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What," he demanded, "might her particular crime be; murder,
+shoplifting, treason&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If her brother had to leave this country," interrupted Garland, "she'd
+leave with him. And the people don't want that. Her pull is the same
+as old man Goddard's. Everybody loves him and everybody loves her. I
+love her," exclaimed the consul cheerfully; "the President loves her,
+the sisters in the hospital, the chain-gang in the street, the
+washerwomen in the river, the palace guard, everybody in this
+flea-bitten, God-forsaken country loves Monica Ward&mdash;and when you meet
+her you will, too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Garland had again reached the door to the outer hall before Everett
+called him back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If it is not a leading question," asked the minister, "what little
+indiscretion in your life brought you to Amapala?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Garland grinned appreciatively.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know they sound a queer lot," he assented, "but when you get to know
+'em, you like 'em. My own trouble," he added, "was a horse. I never
+could see why they made such a fuss about him. He was lame when I took
+him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Disregarding Garland's pleasantry, for some time His Excellency sat
+with his hands clasped behind his head, frowning up from the open patio
+into the hot, cloudless sky. On the ridge of his tiled roof a foul
+buzzard blinked at him from red-rimmed eyes, across the yellow wall a
+lizard ran for shelter, at his elbow a macaw compassing the circle of
+its tin prison muttered dreadful oaths. Outside, as the washerwomen
+beat their linen clubs upon the flat rocks of the river, the hot, stale
+air was spanked with sharp reports. In Camaguay theirs was the only
+industry, the only sign of cleanliness; and recognizing that another
+shirt had been thrashed into subjection and rags, Everett winced. No
+less visibly did his own thoughts cause him to wince. Garland he had
+forgotten, and he was sunk deep in self-pity. His thoughts were of
+London, with its world politics, its splendid traditions, its great and
+gracious ladies; of Paris in the spring sunshine, when he cantered
+through the Bois; of Madrid, with its pomp and royalty, and the gray
+walls of its galleries proclaiming Murillo and Velasquez. These things
+he had forsaken because he believed he was ambitious; and behold into
+what a cul-de-sac his ambition had led him! A comic-opera country that
+was not comic, but dead and buried from the world; a savage people,
+unread, unenlightened, unclean; and for society of his countrymen,
+pitiful derelicts in hiding from the law. In his soul he rebelled. In
+words he exploded bitterly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This is one hell of a hole, Garland," cried the diplomat. His jaws
+and his eyes hardened. "I'm going back to Europe. And the only way I
+can go is to get that treaty. I was sent here to get it. Those were
+my orders. And I'll get it if I have to bribe them out of my own
+pocket; if I have to outbid Mr. Ward, and send him and your good
+Colonel Goddard and all the rest of the crew to the jails where they
+belong!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Garland heard him without emotion. From long residence near the
+equator he diagnosed the outbreak as a case of tropic choler,
+aggravated by nostalgia and fleas.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bet you don't," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bet you your passage-money home," shouted Everett, "against my
+passage-money to Europe."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Done!" said Garland. "How much time do you want&mdash;two years?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The diplomat exclaimed mockingly:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Two months!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I win now," said the consul. "I'll go home and pack."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next morning his clerk told Everett that in the outer office Monica
+Ward awaited him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Overnight Everett had developed a prejudice against Miss Ward. What
+Garland had said in her favor had only driven him the wrong way. Her
+universal popularity he disliked. He argued that to gain popularity
+one must concede and capitulate. He felt that the sister of an
+acknowledged crook, no matter how innocent she might be, were she a
+sensitive woman, would wish to efface herself. And he had found that,
+as a rule, women who worked in hospitals and organized societies bored
+him. He did not admire the militant, executive sister. He pictured
+Miss Ward as probably pretty, but with the coquettish effrontery of the
+village belle and with the pushing, "good-fellow" manners of the new
+school. He was prepared either to have her slap him on the back or,
+from behind tilted eye-glasses, make eyes at him. He was sure she wore
+eye-glasses, and was large, plump, and Junoesque. With reluctance he
+entered the outer office. He saw, all in white, a girl so young that
+she was hardly more than a child, but with the tall, slim figure of a
+boy. Her face was lovely as the face of a violet, and her eyes were as
+shy. But shy not through lack of confidence in Everett, nor in any
+human being, but in herself. They seemed to say, "I am a very
+unworthy, somewhat frightened young person; but you, who are so big and
+generous, will overlook that, and you are going to be my friend.
+Indeed, I see you are my friend."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett stood quite still. He nodded gloomily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Garland was right," he exclaimed; "I do!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young lady was plainly distressed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do what?" she stammered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Some day I will tell you," said the young man. "Yes," he added,
+without shame, "I am afraid I will." He bowed her into the inner
+office.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am sorry," apologized Monica, "but I am come to ask a favor&mdash;two
+favors; one of you and one of the American minister."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett drew his armchair from his desk and waved Monica into it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was sent here," he said, "to do exactly what you want. The last
+words the President addressed to me were, 'On arriving at your post
+report to Miss Monica Ward."'
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Fearfully, Monica perched herself on the edge of the armchair; as
+though for protection she clasped the broad table before her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The favor I want," she hastily assured him, "is not for myself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am sorry," said Everett, "for it is already granted."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are very good," protested Monica.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," replied Everett, "I am only powerful. I represent ninety-five
+million Americans, and they are all entirely at your service. So is
+the army and navy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica smiled and shook her head. The awe she felt was due an American
+minister was rapidly disappearing, and in Mr. Everett himself her
+confidence was increasing. The other ministers plenipotentiary she had
+seen at Camaguay had been old, with beards like mountain-goats, and had
+worn linen dusters. They always were very red in the face and very
+damp. Monica decided Mr. Everett also was old; she was sure he must be
+at least thirty-five; but in his silk pongee and pipe-clayed
+tennis-shoes he was a refreshing spectacle. Just to look at him turned
+one quite cool.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We have a very fine line of battle-ships this morning at Guantanamo,"
+urged Everett; "if you want one I'll cable for it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica laughed softly. It was good to hear nonsense spoken. The
+Amapalans had never learned it, and her brother said just what he meant
+and no more.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Our sailors were here once," Monica volunteered. She wanted Mr.
+Everett to know he was not entirely cut off from the world. "During the
+revolution," she explained. "We were so glad to see them; they made us
+all feel nearer home. They set up our flag in the plaza, and the
+color-guard let me photograph it, with them guarding it. And when they
+marched away the archbishop stood on the cathedral steps and blessed
+them, and we rode out along the trail to where it comes to the jungle.
+And then we waved good-by, and they cheered us. We all cried."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment, quite unconsciously, Monica gave an imitation of how they
+all cried. It made the appeal of the violet eyes even more disturbing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't you love our sailors?" begged Monica.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Fearful of hurting the feelings of others, she added hastily, "And, of
+course, our marines, too."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett assured her if there was one thing that meant more to him than
+all else, it was an American bluejacket, and next to him an American
+leatherneck.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It took a long time to arrange the details of the Red Cross Society.
+In spite of his reputation for brilliancy, it seemed to Monica Mr.
+Everett had a mind that plodded. For his benefit it was necessary
+several times to repeat the most simple proposition. She was sure his
+inability to fasten his attention on her League of Mercy was because
+his brain was occupied with problems of state. It made her feel
+selfish and guilty. When his visitor decided that to explain further
+was but to waste his valuable time and had made her third effort to go,
+Everett went with her. He suggested that she take him to the hospital
+and introduce him to the sisters. He wanted to talk to them about the
+Red Cross League. It was a charming walk. Every one lifted his hat to
+Monica; the beggars, the cab-drivers, the barefooted policemen, and the
+social lights of Camaguay on the sidewalks in front of the cafes rose
+and bowed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is like walking with royalty!" exclaimed Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+While at the hospital he talked to the Mother Superior&mdash;his eyes
+followed Monica. As she moved from cot to cot he noted how the younger
+sisters fluttered happily around her, like bridesmaids around a bride,
+and how as she passed, the eyes of those in the cots followed her
+jealously, and after she had spoken with them smiled in content.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"She is good," the Mother Superior was saying, "and her brother, too,
+is very good."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett had forgotten the brother. With a start he lifted his eyes and
+found the Mother Superior regarding him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He is very good," she repeated. "For us, he built this wing of the
+hospital. It was his money. We should be very sorry if any harm came
+to Mr. Ward. Without his help we would starve." She smiled, and with
+a gesture signified the sick. "I mean they would starve; they would
+die of disease and fever." The woman fixed upon him grave, inscrutable
+eyes. "Will Your Excellency remember?" she said. It was less of a
+question than a command. "Where the church can forgive&mdash;" she paused.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like a real diplomat Everett sought refuge in mere words.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The church is all-powerful, Mother," he said. "Her power to forgive
+is her strongest weapon. I have no such power. It lies beyond my
+authority. I am just a messenger-boy carrying the wishes of the
+government of one country to the government of another."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The face of the Mother Superior remained grave, but undisturbed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then, as regards our Mr. Ward," she said, "the wishes of your
+government are&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again she paused; again it was less of a question than a command. With
+interest Everett gazed at the whitewashed ceiling.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have not yet," he said, "communicated them to any one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night, after dinner in the patio, he reported to Garland the words
+of the Mother Superior.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was my dream, O Prophet," concluded Everett; "you who can read
+this land of lotus-eaters, interpret! What does it mean?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It only means what I've been telling you," said the consul. "It means
+that if you're going after that treaty, you've only got to fight the
+Catholic Church. That's all it means!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Later in the evening Garland said: "I saw you this morning crossing the
+plaza with Monica. When I told you everybody in this town loved her,
+was I right?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Absolutely!" assented Everett. "But why didn't you tell me she was a
+flapper?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know what a flapper is," promptly retorted Garland. "And if I
+did, I wouldn't call Monica one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A flapper is a very charming person," protested Everett. "I used the
+term in its most complimentary sense. It means a girl between fourteen
+and eighteen. It's English slang, and in England at the present the
+flapper is very popular. She is driving her sophisticated elder
+sister, who has been out two or three seasons, and the predatory
+married woman to the wall. To men of my years the flapper is really at
+the dangerous age."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his bamboo chair Garland tossed violently and snorted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I sized you up," he cried, "as a man of the finest perceptions. I was
+wrong. You don't appreciate Monica! Dangerous! You might as well say
+God's sunshine is dangerous, or a beautiful flower is dangerous."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett shook his head at the other man reproachfully:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did you ever hear of a sunstroke?" he demanded. "Don't you know if
+you smell certain beautiful flowers you die? Can't you grasp any other
+kind of danger than being run down by a trolley-car? Is the danger of
+losing one's peace of mind nothing, of being unfaithful to duty,
+nothing! Is&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Garland raised his arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't shoot!" he begged. "I apologize. You do appreciate Monica. You
+have your consul's permission to walk with her again."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next day young Professor Peabody called and presented his letters.
+He was a forceful young man to whom the delays of diplomacy did not
+appeal, and one apparently accustomed to riding off whatever came in
+his way. He seemed to consider any one who opposed him, or who even
+disagreed with his conclusions, as offering a personal affront. With
+indignation he launched into his grievance.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"These people," he declared, "are dogs in the manger, and Ward is the
+worst of the lot. He knows no more of archaeology than a congressman.
+The man's a faker! He showed me a spear-head of obsidian and called it
+flint; and he said the Aztecs borrowed from the Mayas, and that the
+Toltecs were a myth. And he got the Aztec solar calendar mixed with
+the Ahau. He's as ignorant as that."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can't believe it!" exclaimed Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You may laugh," protested the professor, "but the ruins of Cobre hold
+secrets the students of two continents are trying to solve. They hide
+the history of a lost race, and I submit it's not proper one man should
+keep that knowledge from the world, certainly not for a few gold
+armlets!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett raised his eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What makes you say that?"' he demanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've been kicking my heels in this town for a month," Peabody told
+him, "and I've talked to the people here, and to the Harvard expedition
+at Copan, and everybody tells me this fellow has found treasure." The
+archaeologist exclaimed with indignation: "What's gold," he snorted,
+"compared to the discovery of a lost race?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I applaud your point of view," Everett assured him. "I am to see the
+President tomorrow, and I will lay the matter before him. I'll ask him
+to give you a look in."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To urge his treaty of extradition was the reason for the audience with
+the President, and with all the courtesy that a bad case demanded
+Mendoza protested against it. He pointed out that governments entered
+into treaties only when the ensuing benefits were mutual. For Amapala
+in a treaty of extradition he saw no benefit. Amapala was not so far
+"advanced" as to produce defaulting bank presidents, get-rich-quick
+promoters, counterfeiters, and thieving cashiers. Her fugitives were
+revolutionists who had fought and lost, and every one was glad to have
+them go, and no one wanted them back.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Or," suggested the President, "suppose I am turned out by a
+revolution, and I seek asylum in your country? My enemies desire my
+life. They would ask for my extradition&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If the offense were political," Everett corrected, "my government
+would surrender no one."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But my enemies would charge me with murder," explained the President.
+"Remember Castro. And by the terms of the treaty your government would
+be forced to surrender me. And I am shot against the wall." The
+President shrugged his shoulders. "That treaty would not be nice for
+me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Consider the matter as a patriot," said the diplomat. "Is it good
+that the criminals of my country should make their home in yours? When
+you are so fortunate as to have no dishonest men of your own, why
+import ours? We don't seek the individual. We want to punish him only
+as a warning to others. And we want the money he takes with him.
+Often it is the savings of the very poor."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The President frowned. It was apparent that both the subject and
+Everett bored him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I name no names," exclaimed Mendoza, "but to those who come here we
+owe the little railroads we possess. They develop our mines and our
+coffee plantations. In time they will make this country very modern,
+very rich. And some you call criminals we have learned to love. Their
+past does not concern us. We shut our ears. We do not spy. They have
+come to us as to a sanctuary, and so long as they claim the right of
+sanctuary, I will not violate it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As Everett emerged from the cool, dark halls of the palace into the
+glare of the plaza he was scowling; and he acknowledged the salute of
+the palace guard as though those gentlemen had offered him an insult.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Garland was waiting in front of a cafe and greeted him with a mocking
+grin.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Congratulations," he shouted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I have still twenty-two days," said Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The aristocracy of Camaguay invited the new minister to formal dinners
+of eighteen courses, and to picnics less formal. These latter Everett
+greatly enjoyed, because while Monica Ward was too young to attend the
+state dinners, she was exactly the proper age for the all-day
+excursions to the waterfalls, the coffee plantations, and the asphalt
+lakes. The native belles of Camaguay took no pleasure in riding
+farther afield than the military parade-ground. Climbing a trail so
+steep that you viewed the sky between the ears of your pony, or where
+with both hands you forced a way through hanging vines and creepers,
+did not appeal. But to Monica, with the seat and balance of a cowboy,
+riding astride, with her leg straight and the ball of her foot just
+feeling the stirrup, these expeditions were the happiest moments in her
+exile. So were they to Everett; and that on the trail one could ride
+only in single file was a most poignant regret. In the column the
+place of honor was next to whoever rode at the head, but Everett
+relinquished this position in favor of Monica. By this manoeuvre she
+always was in his sight, and he could call upon her to act as his guide
+and to explain what lay on either hand. His delight and wonder in her
+grew daily. He found that her mind leaped instantly and with gratitude
+to whatever was most fair. Just out of reach of her pony's hoofs he
+pressed his own pony forward, and she pointed out to him what in the
+tropic abundance about them she found most beautiful. Sometimes it was
+the tumbling waters of a cataract; sometimes, high in the topmost
+branches of a ceiba-tree, a gorgeous orchid; sometimes a shaft of
+sunshine as rigid as a search-light, piercing the shadow of the jungle.
+At first she would turn in the saddle and call to him, but as each day
+they grew to know each other better she need only point with her
+whip-hand and he would answer, "Yes," and each knew the other
+understood.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As a body, the exiles resented Everett. They knew his purpose in
+regard to the treaty, and for them he always must be the enemy. Even
+though as a man they might like him, they could not forget that his
+presence threatened their peace and safety. Chester Ward treated him
+with impeccable politeness; but, although his house was the show-place
+of Camaguay, he never invited the American minister to cross the
+threshold. On account of Monica, Everett regretted this and tried to
+keep the relations of her brother and himself outwardly pleasant. But
+Ward made it difficult. To no one was his manner effusive, and for
+Monica only he seemed to hold any real feeling. The two were alone in
+the world; he was her only relative, and to the orphan he had been
+father and mother. When she was a child he had bought her toys and
+dolls; now, had the sisters permitted, he would have dressed her in
+imported frocks, and with jewels killed her loveliness. He seemed to
+understand how to spend his money as little as did the gossips of
+Camaguay understand from whence it came.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That Monica knew why her brother lived in Camaguay Everett was
+uncertain. She did not complain of living there, but she was not at
+rest, and constantly she was asking Everett of foreign lands. As
+Everett was homesick for them, he was most eloquent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I should like to see them for myself," said Monica, "but until my
+brother's work here is finished we must wait. And I am young, and
+after a few years Europe will be just as old. When my brother leaves
+Amapala, he promises to take me wherever I ask to go: to London, to
+Paris, to Rome. So I read and read of them; books of history, books
+about painting, books about the cathedrals. But the more I read the
+more I want to go at once, and that is disloyal."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Disloyal?" asked Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To my brother," explained Monica. "He does so much for me. I should
+think only of his work. That is all that really counts. For the world
+is waiting to learn what he has discovered. It is like having a
+brother go in search of the North Pole. You are proud of what he is
+doing, but you want him back to keep him to yourself. Is that selfish?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett was a trained diplomat, but with his opinion of Chester Ward he
+could not think of the answer. Instead, he was thinking of Monica in
+Europe; of taking her through the churches and galleries which she had
+seen only in black and white. He imagined himself at her side facing
+the altar of some great cathedral, or some painting in the Louvre, and
+watching her face lighten and the tears come to her eyes, as they did
+now, when things that were beautiful hurt her. Or he imagined her rid
+of her half-mourning and accompanying him through a cyclonic diplomatic
+career that carried them to Japan, China, Persia; to Berlin, Paris, and
+London. In these imaginings Monica appeared in pongee and a sun-hat
+riding an elephant, in pearls and satin receiving royalty, in tweed
+knickerbockers and a woollen jersey coasting around the hairpin curve
+at Saint Moritz.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Of course he recognized that except as his wife Monica could not
+accompany him to all these strange lands and high diplomatic posts. And
+of course that was ridiculous. He had made up his mind for the success
+of what he called his career, that he was too young to marry; but he
+was sure, should he propose to marry Monica, every one would say he was
+too old. And there was another consideration. What of the brother?
+Would his government send him to a foreign post when his wife was the
+sister of a man they had just sent to the penitentiary?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He could hear them say in London, "We know your first secretary, but
+who is Mrs. Everett?" And the American visitor would explain: "She is
+the sister of 'Inky Dink,' the forger. He is bookkeeping in Sing Sing."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Certainly it would be a handicap. He tried to persuade himself that
+Monica so entirely filled his thoughts because in Camaguay there was no
+one else; it was a case of propinquity; her loneliness and the fact
+that she lay under a shadow for which she was not to blame appealed to
+his chivalry. So, he told himself, in thinking of Monica except as a
+charming companion, he was an ass. And then, arguing that in calling
+himself an ass he had shown his saneness and impartiality, he felt
+justified in seeing her daily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One morning Garland came to the legation to tell Everett that Peabody
+was in danger of bringing about international complications by having
+himself thrust into the cartel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If he qualifies for this local jail," said Garland, "you will have a
+lot of trouble setting him free. You'd better warn him it's easier to
+keep out than to get out."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What has he been doing?" asked the minister.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Poaching on Ward's ruins," said the consul. "He certainly is a
+hustler. He pretends to go to Copan, but really goes to Cobre. Ward
+had him followed and threatened to have him arrested. Peabody claims
+any tourist has a right to visit the ruins so long as he does no
+excavating. Ward accused him of exploring the place by night and
+taking photographs by flash-light of the hieroglyphs. He's put an armed
+guard at the ruins, and he told Peabody they are to shoot on sight. So
+Peabody went to Mendoza and said if anybody took a shot at him he'd
+bring warships down here and blow Amapala off the map."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A militant archaeologist," said Everett, "is something new. Peabody
+is too enthusiastic. He and his hieroglyphs are becoming a bore."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sent for Peabody and told him unless he curbed his spirit his
+minister could not promise to keep him out of a very damp and dirty
+dungeon.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am too enthusiastic," Peabody admitted, "but to me this fellow Ward
+is like a red flag to the bull. His private graft is holding up the
+whole scientific world. He won't let us learn the truth, and he's too
+ignorant to learn it himself. Why, he told me Cobre dated from 1578,
+when Palacio wrote of it to Philip the Second, not knowing that in that
+very letter Palacio states that he found Cobre in ruins. Is it right a
+man as ignorant&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett interrupted by levelling his finger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You," he commanded, "keep out of those ruins! My dear professor," he
+continued reproachfully, "you are a student, a man of peace. Don't try
+to wage war on these Amapalans. They're lawless, they're unscrupulous.
+So is Ward. Besides, you are in the wrong, and if they turn ugly, your
+minister cannot help you." He shook his head and smiled doubtfully.
+"I can't understand," he exclaimed, "why you're so keen. It's only a
+heap of broken pottery. Sometimes I wonder if your interest in Cobre
+is that only of the archaeologist."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What other interest&mdash;" demanded Peabody.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Doesn't Ward's buried treasure appeal at all?" asked the minister. "I
+mean, of course, to your imagination. It does to mine."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young professor laughed tolerantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Buried treasure!" he exclaimed. "If Ward has found treasure, and I
+think he has, he's welcome to it. What we want is what you call the
+broken pottery. It means nothing to you, but to men like myself, who
+live eight hundred years behind the times, it is much more precious
+than gold."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A few moments later Professor Peabody took his leave, and it was not
+until he had turned the corner of the Calle Morazan that he halted and,
+like a man emerging from water, drew a deep breath.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gee!" muttered the distinguished archeologist, "that was a close call!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One or two women had loved Everett, and after five weeks, in which
+almost daily he had seen Monica, he knew she cared for him. This
+discovery made him entirely happy and filled him with dismay. It was a
+complication he had not foreseen. It left him at the parting of two
+ways, one of which he must choose. For his career he was willing to
+renounce marriage, but now that Monica loved him, even though he had
+consciously not tried to make her love him, had he the right to
+renounce it for her also? He knew that the difference between Monica
+and his career lay in the fact that he loved Monica and was in love
+with his career. Which should he surrender? Of this he thought long
+and deeply, until one night, without thinking at all, he chose.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Colonel Goddard had given a dance, and, as all invited were Americans,
+the etiquette was less formal than at the gatherings of the Amapalans.
+For one thing, the minister and Monica were able to sit on the veranda
+overlooking the garden without his having to fight a duel in the
+morning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was not the moonlight, or the music, or the palms that made Everett
+speak. It was simply the knowledge that it was written, that it had to
+be. And he heard himself, without prelude or introduction, talking
+easily and assuredly of the life they would lead as man and wife. From
+this dream Monica woke him. The violet eyes were smiling at him
+through tears.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When you came," said the girl, "and I loved you, I thought that was
+the greatest happiness. Now that I know you love me I ask nothing
+more. And I can bear it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett felt as though an icy finger had moved swiftly down his spine.
+He pretended not to understand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Bear what?" he demanded roughly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That I cannot marry you," said the girl. "Even had you not asked me,
+in loving you I would have been happy. Now that I know you thought of
+me as your wife, I am proud. I am grateful. And the obstacle&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett laughed scornfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is no obstacle."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica shook her head. Unafraid, she looked into his eyes, her own
+filled with her love for him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Don't make it harder," she said. "My brother is hiding from the law.
+What he did I don't know. When it happened I was at the convent, and
+he did not send for me until he had reached Amapala. I never asked why
+we came, but were I to marry you, with your name and your position,
+every one else would ask. And the scandal would follow you; wherever
+you went it would follow; it would put an end to your career."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+His career, now that Monica urged it as her rival, seemed to Everett
+particularly trivial.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't know what your brother did either," he said. "His sins are on
+his own head. They're not on yours, nor on mine. I don't judge him;
+neither do I intend to let him spoil my happiness. Now that I have
+found you I will never let you go."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sadly Monica shook her head and smiled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When you leave here," she said, "for some new post, you won't forget
+me, but you'll be grateful that I let you go alone; that I was not a
+drag on you. When you go back to your great people and your proud and
+beautiful princesses, all this will seem a strange dream, and you will
+be glad you are awake&mdash;and free."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The idea of marrying you, Monica," said Everett, "is not new. It did
+not occur to me only since we moved out here into the moonlight. Since
+I first saw you I've thought of you, and only of you. I've thought of
+you with me in every corner of the globe, as my wife, my sweetheart, my
+partner, riding through jungles as we ride here, sitting opposite me at
+our own table, putting the proud and beautiful princesses at their
+ease. And in all places, at all moments, you make all other women
+tawdry and absurd. And I don't think you are the most wonderful person
+I ever met because I love you, but I love you because you are the most
+wonderful person I ever met."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am young," said Monica, "but since I began to love you I am very
+old. And I see clearly that it cannot be."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Dear heart," cried Everett, "that is quite morbid. What the devil do
+I care what your brother has done! I am not marrying your brother."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a long time, leaning forward with her elbows on her knees and her
+face buried in her hands, the girl sat silent. It was as though she
+were praying. Everett knew it was not of him, but of her brother, she
+was thinking, and his heart ached for her. For him to cut the brother
+out of his life was not difficult; what it meant to her he could guess.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When the girl raised her eyes they were eloquent with distress.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He has been so good to me," she said; "always so gentle. He has been
+mother and father to me. He is the first person I can remember. When I
+was a child he put me to bed, he dressed me, and comforted me. When we
+became rich there was nothing he did not wish to give me. I cannot
+leave him. He needs me more than ever I needed him. I am all he has.
+And there is this besides. Were I to marry, of all the men in the
+world it would be harder for him if I married you. For if you succeed
+in what you came here to do, the law will punish him, and he will know
+it was through you he was punished. And even between you and me there
+always would be that knowledge, that feeling."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is not fair," cried Everett. "I am not an individual fighting
+less fortunate individuals. I am an insignificant wheel in a great
+machine. You must not blame me because I-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With an exclamation the girl reproached him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because you do your duty!" she protested. "Is that fair to me? If for
+my sake or my brother you failed in your duty, if you were less
+vigilant, less eager, even though we suffer, I could not love you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett sighed happily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As long as you love me," he said, "neither your brother nor any one
+else can keep us apart."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My brother," said the girl, as though she were pronouncing a sentence,
+"always will keep us apart, and I will always love you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was a week before he again saw her, and then the feeling he had read
+in her eyes was gone&mdash;or rigorously concealed. Now her manner was that
+of a friend, of a young girl addressing a man older than herself, one
+to whom she looked up with respect and liking, but with no sign of any
+feeling deeper or more intimate.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It upset Everett completely. When he pleaded with her, she asked:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you think it is easy for me? But&mdash;" she protested, "I know I am
+doing right. I am doing it to make you happy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You are succeeding," Everett assured her, "in making us both damned
+miserable."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For Everett, in the second month of his stay in Amapala, events began
+to move quickly. Following the example of two of his predecessors, the
+Secretary of State of the United States was about to make a grand tour
+of Central America. He came on a mission of peace and brotherly love,
+to foster confidence and good-will, and it was secretly hoped that, in
+the wake of his escort of battle-ships, trade would follow fast. There
+would be salutes and visits of ceremony, speeches, banquets, reviews.
+But in these rejoicings Amapala would have no part.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For, so Everett was informed by cable, unless, previous to the visit of
+the Secretary, Amapala fell into line with her sister republics and
+signed a treaty of extradition, from the itinerary of the great man
+Amapala would find herself pointedly excluded. It would be a
+humiliation. In the eyes of her sister republics it would place her
+outside the pale. Everett saw that in his hands his friend the
+Secretary had placed a powerful weapon; and lost no time in using it.
+He caught the President alone, sitting late at his dinner, surrounded
+by bottles, and read to him the Secretary's ultimatum. General Mendoza
+did not at once surrender. Before he threw over the men who fed him
+the golden eggs that made him rich, and for whom he had sworn never to
+violate the right of sanctuary, he first, for fully half an hour, raged
+and swore. During that time, while Everett sat anxiously expectant,
+the President paced and repaced the length of the dining-hall. When to
+relight his cigar, or to gulp brandy from a tumbler, he halted at the
+table, his great bulk loomed large in the flickering candle-flames, and
+when he continued his march, he would disappear into the shadows, and
+only his scabbard clanking on the stone floor told of his presence. At
+last he halted and shrugged his shoulders so that the tassels of his
+epaulets tossed like wheat.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You drive a hard bargain, sir," he said. "And I have no choice.
+To-morrow bring the treaty and I will sign."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett at once produced it and a fountain pen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I should like to cable to-night," he urged, "that you have signed.
+They are holding back the public announcement of the Secretary's route
+until hearing from Your Excellency. This is only tentative," he
+pointed out; "the Senate must ratify. But our Senate will ratify it,
+and when you sign now, it is a thing accomplished."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Over the place at which Everett pointed, the pen scratched harshly; and
+then, throwing it from him, the President sat in silence. With eyes
+inflamed by anger and brandy he regarded the treaty venomously. As
+though loath to let it go, his hands played with it, as a cat plays
+with the mouse between her paws. Watching him breathlessly, Everett
+feared the end was not yet. He felt a depressing premonition that if
+ever the treaty were to reach Washington he best had snatch it and run.
+Even as he waited, the end came. An orderly, appearing suddenly in the
+light of the candles, announced the arrival, in the room adjoining, of
+"the Colonel Goddard and Senor Mellen." They desired an immediate
+audience. Their business with the President was most urgent. Whether
+from Washington their agents had warned them, whether in Camaguay they
+had deciphered the cablegram from the State Department, Everett could
+only guess, but he was certain the cause of their visit was the treaty.
+That Mendoza also believed this was most evident.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Into the darkness, from which the two exiles might emerge, he peered
+guiltily. With an oath he tore the treaty in half. Crushing the
+pieces of paper into a ball, he threw it at Everett's feet. His voice
+rose to a shriek. It was apparent he intended his words to carry to
+the men outside. Like an actor on a stage he waved his arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That is my answer!" he shouted. "Tell your Secretary the choice he
+offers is an insult! It is blackmail. We will not sign his treaty. We
+do not desire his visit to our country." Thrilled by his own bravado,
+his voice rose higher. "Nor," he shouted, "do we desire the presence
+of his representative. Your usefulness is at an end. You will receive
+your passports in the morning."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he might discharge a cook, he waved Everett away. His hand,
+trembling with excitement, closed around the neck of the brandy-bottle.
+Everett stooped and secured the treaty. On his return to Washington,
+torn and rumpled as it was, it would be his justification. It was his
+"Exhibit A."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As he approached the legation he saw drawn up in front of it three
+ponies ready saddled. For an instant he wondered if Mendoza intended
+further to insult him, if he planned that night to send him under guard
+to the coast. He determined hotly sooner than submit to such an
+indignity he would fortify the legation, and defend himself. But no
+such heroics were required of him. As he reached the door, Garland,
+with an exclamation of relief, hailed him, and Monica, stepping from
+the shadow, laid an appealing hand upon his sleeve.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My brother!" she exclaimed. "The guard at Cobre has just sent word
+that they found Peabody prowling in the ruins and fired on him. He
+fired back, and he is still there hiding. My brother and others have
+gone to take him. I don't know what may happen if he resists. Chester
+is armed, and he is furious; he is beside himself; he would not listen
+to me. But he must listen to you. Will you go," the girl begged, "and
+speak to him; speak to him, I mean," she added, "as the American
+minister?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett already had his foot in the stirrup. "I'm the American
+minister only until to-morrow," he said. "I've got my walking-papers.
+But I'll do all I can to stop this to-night. Garland," he asked, "will
+you take Miss Ward home, and then follow me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If I do not go with you," said Monica, "I will go alone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her tone was final. With a clatter of hoofs that woke alarmed echoes
+in the sleeping streets the three horses galloped abreast toward Cobre.
+In an hour they left the main trail and at a walk picked their way to
+where the blocks of stone, broken columns, and crumbling temples of the
+half-buried city checked the jungle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The moon made it possible to move in safety, and at different distances
+the lights of torches told them the man-hunt still was in progress.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thank God," breathed Monica, "we are in time."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett gave the ponies in care of one of the guards. He turned to
+Garland.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Catch up with those lights ahead of us," he said, "and we will join
+this party to the right. If you find Ward, tell him I forbid him
+taking the law into his own hands; tell him I will protect his
+interests. If you meet Peabody, make him give up his gun, and see that
+the others don't harm him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett and the girl did not overtake the lights they had seen flashing
+below them. Before they were within hailing distance, that searching
+party had disappeared, and still farther away other torches beckoned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Stumbling and falling, now in pursuit of one will-o'-the-wisp, now of
+another, they scrambled forward. But always the lights eluded them.
+From their exertions and the moist heat they were breathless, and their
+bodies dripped with water. Panting, they halted at the entrance of
+what once had been a tomb. From its black interior came a damp mist;
+above them, alarmed by their intrusion, the vampire bats whirled
+blindly in circles. Monica, who by day possessed some slight knowledge
+of the ruins, had, in the moonlight, lost all sense of direction.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We're lost," said Monica, in a low tone. Unconsciously both were
+speaking in whispers. "I thought we were following what used to be the
+main thoroughfare of the city; but I have never seen this place before.
+From what I have read I think we must be among the tombs of the kings."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was silenced by Everett placing one hand quickly on her arm, and
+with the other pointing. In the uncertain moonlight she saw moving
+cautiously away from them, and unconscious of their presence, a white,
+ghostlike figure.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Peabody," whispered Everett.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Call him," commanded Monica.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The others might hear," objected Everett. "We must overtake him. If
+we're with him when they meet, they wouldn't dare&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a gasp of astonishment, his words ceased.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like a ghost, the ghostlike figure had vanished.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He walked through that rock!" cried Monica.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Everett caught her by the wrist. "Come!" he commanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Over the face of the rock, into which Peabody had dived as into water,
+hung a curtain of vines. Everett tore it apart. Concealed by the
+vines was the narrow mouth to a tunnel; and from it they heard, rapidly
+lessening in the distance, the patter of footsteps.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Will you wait," demanded Everett, "or come with me?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a shudder of distaste, Monica answered by seizing his hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With his free arm Everett swept aside the vines, and, Monica following,
+they entered the tunnel. It was a passageway cleanly cut through the
+solid rock and sufficiently wide to permit of their moving freely. At
+the farther end, at a distance of a hundred yards, it opened into a
+great vault, also hollowed from the rock and, as they saw to their
+surprise, brilliantly lighted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For an instant, in black silhouette, the figure of Peabody blocked the
+entrance to this vault, and then, turning to the right, again vanished.
+Monica felt an untimely desire to laugh. Now that they were on the
+track of Peabody she no longer feared the outcome of the adventure. In
+the presence of the American minister and of herself there would be no
+violence; and as they trailed the archaeologist through the tunnel she
+was reminded of Alice and her pursuit of the white rabbit. This
+thought, and her sense of relief that the danger was over, caused her
+to laugh aloud.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They had gained the farther end of the tunnel and the entrance to the
+vault, when at once her amusement turned to wonder. For the vault
+showed every evidence of use and of recent occupation. In brackets,
+and burning brightly, were lamps of modern make; on the stone floor
+stood a canvas cot, saddle-bags, camp-chairs, and in the centre of the
+vault a collapsible table. On this were bottles filled with chemicals,
+trays, and presses such as are used in developing photographs, and
+apparently hung there to dry, swinging from strings, the proofs of many
+negatives.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Loyal to her brother, Monica exclaimed indignantly. At the proofs she
+pointed an accusing finger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Look!" she whispered. "This is Peabody's darkroom, where he develops
+the flash-lights he takes of the hieroglyphs! Chester has a right to be
+furious!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Impulsively she would have pushed past Everett; but with an exclamation
+he sprang in front of her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" he commanded, "come away!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He had fallen into a sudden panic. His tone spoke of some catastrophe,
+imminent and overwhelming. Monica followed the direction of his eyes.
+They were staring in fear at the proofs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The girl leaned forward; and now saw them clearly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Each was a United States Treasury note for five hundred dollars.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Around the turn of the tunnel, approaching the vault apparently from
+another passage, they heard hurrying footsteps; and then, close to them
+from the vault itself, the voice of Professor Peabody.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was harsh, sharp, peremptory.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Hands up!" it commanded. "Drop that gun!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As though halted by a precipice, the footsteps fell into instant
+silence. There was a pause, and then the ring of steel upon the stone
+floor. There was another pause, and Monica heard the voice of her
+brother. Broken, as though with running, it still retained its level
+accent, its note of insolence.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So," it said, "I have caught you?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica struggled toward the lighted vault, but around her Everett threw
+his arm.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Come away!" he begged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica fought against the terror of something unknown. She could not
+understand. They had come only to prevent a meeting between her
+brother and Peabody; and now that they had met, Everett was endeavoring
+to escape.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was incomprehensible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And the money in the vault, the yellow bills hanging from a cobweb of
+strings; why should they terrify her; what did they threaten? Dully,
+and from a distance, Monica heard the voice of Peabody.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," he answered; "I have caught you! And I've had a hell of a time
+doing it!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica tried to call out, to assure her brother of her presence. But,
+as though in a nightmare, she could make no sound. Fingers of fear
+gripped at her throat. To struggle was no longer possible.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The voice of Peabody continued:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Six months ago we traced these bills to New Orleans. So we guessed
+the plant was in Central America. We knew only one man who could make
+them. When I found you were in Amapala and they said you had struck
+'buried treasure'&mdash;the rest was easy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica heard the voice of her brother answer with a laugh.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Easy?" he mocked. "There's no extradition. You can't touch me.
+You're lucky if you get out of here alive. I've only to raise my
+voice&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And, I'll kill you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This was danger Monica could understand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Freed from the nightmare of doubt, with a cry she ran forward. She saw
+Peabody, his back against a wall, a levelled automatic in his hand; her
+brother at the entrance to a tunnel like the one from which she had
+just appeared. His arms were raised above his head. At his feet lay a
+revolver. For an instant, with disbelief, he stared at Monica, and
+then, as though assured that it was she, his eyes dilated. In them
+were fear and horror. So genuine was the agony in the face of the
+counterfeiter that Everett, who had followed, turned his own away. But
+the eyes of the brother and sister remained fixed upon each other,
+hers, appealingly; his, with despair. He tried to speak, but the words
+did not come. When he did break the silence his tone was singularly
+wistful, most tenderly kind.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did you hear?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica slowly bowed her head. With the same note of gentleness her
+brother persisted:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Did you understand?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Between them stretched the cobweb of strings hung with yellow
+certificates; each calling for five hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+Stirred by the night air from the open tunnels, they fluttered and
+flaunted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Against the sight of them, Monica closed her eyes. Heavily, as though
+with a great physical effort, again she bowed her head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The eyes of her brother searched about him wildly. They rested on the
+mouth of the tunnel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With his lowered arm he pointed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Who is that?" he cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Instinctively the others turned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was for an instant. The instant sufficed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica saw her brother throw himself upon the floor, felt herself flung
+aside as Everett and the detective leaped upon him; saw her brother
+press his hands against his heart, the two men dragging at his arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The cavelike room was shaken with a report, an acrid smoke assailed her
+nostrils. The men ceased struggling. Her brother lay still.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Monica sprang toward the body, but a black wave rose and submerged her.
+As she fainted, to save herself she threw out her arms, and as she fell
+she dragged down with her the buried treasure of Cobre.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Stretched upon the stone floor beside her brother, she lay motionless.
+Beneath her, and wrapped about and covering her, as the leaves covered
+the babes in the wood, was a vast cobweb of yellow bills, each for five
+hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+A month later the harbor of Porto Cortez in Honduras was shaken with
+the roar of cannon. In comparison, the roaring of all the cannon of
+all the revolutions that that distressful country ever had known, were
+like fire-crackers under a barrel.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Faithful to his itinerary, the Secretary of State of the United States
+was paying his formal visit to Honduras, and the President of that
+republic, waiting upon the Fruit Company's wharf to greet him, was
+receiving the salute of the American battle-ships. Back of him, on the
+wharf, his own barefooted artillerymen in their turn were saluting,
+excitedly and spasmodically, the distinguished visitor. As an honor he
+had at last learned to accept without putting a finger in each ear, the
+Secretary of State smiled with gracious calm. Less calm was the
+President of Honduras. He knew something the Secretary did not know.
+He knew that at any moment a gun of his saluting battery might turn
+turtle, or blow into the harbor himself, his cabinet, and the larger
+part of his standing army.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Made fast to the wharf on the side opposite to the one at which the
+Secretary had landed was one of the Fruit Company's steamers. She was
+on her way north, and Porto Cortez was a port of call. That her
+passengers might not intrude upon the ceremonies, her side of the wharf
+was roped off and guarded by the standing army. But from her decks and
+from behind the ropes the passengers, with a battery of cameras, were
+perpetuating the historic scene.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Among them, close to the ropes, viewing the ceremony with the cynical
+eye of one who in Europe had seen kings and emperors meet upon the
+Field of the Cloth of Gold, was Everett. He made no effort to bring
+himself to the attention of his former chief. But when the
+introductions were over, the Secretary of State turned his eyes to his
+fellow countrymen crowding the rails of the American steamer. They
+greeted him with cheers. The great man raised his hat, and his eyes
+fell upon Everett. The Secretary advanced quickly, his hand extended,
+brushing to one side the standing army.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What are you doing here?" he demanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"On my way home, sir," said Everett. "I couldn't leave sooner; there
+were&mdash;personal reasons. But I cabled the department my resignation the
+day Mendoza gave me my walking-papers. You may remember," Everett
+added dryly, "the department accepted by cable."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The great man showed embarrassment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was most unfortunate," he sympathized. "We wanted that treaty, and
+while, no doubt, you made every effort&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He became aware of the fact that Everett's attention was not
+exclusively his own. Following the direction of the young man's eyes
+the Secretary saw on the deck just above them, leaning upon the rail, a
+girl in deep mourning.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She was very beautiful. Her face was as lovely as a violet and as shy.
+To the Secretary a beautiful woman was always a beautiful woman. But he
+had read the papers. Who had not? He was sure there must be some
+mistake. This could not be the sister of a criminal; the woman for
+whom Everett had smashed his career.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Secretary masked his astonishment, but not his admiration.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Mrs. Everett?" he asked. His very tone conveyed congratulations.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes," said the ex-diplomat. "Some day I shall be glad to present you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The Secretary did not wait for an introduction. Raising his eyes to
+the ship's rail, he made a deep and courtly bow. With a gesture worthy
+of d'Artagnan, his high hat swept the wharf. The members of his staff,
+the officers from the war-ships, the President of Honduras and the
+members of his staff endeavored to imitate his act of homage, and in
+confusion Mrs. Everett blushed becomingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When I return to Washington," said the Secretary hastily, "come and
+see me. You are too valuable to lose. Your career&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again Everett was looking at his wife. Her distress at having been so
+suddenly drawn into the lime-light amused him, and he was smiling.
+Then, as though aware of the Secretary's meaning, he laughed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My dear sir!" he protested. His tone suggested he was about to add
+"mind your own business," or "go to the devil."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Instead he said: "I'm not worrying about my career. My career has just
+begun."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="boyscout"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE BOY SCOUT
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+A rule of the Boy Scouts is every day to do some one a good turn. Not
+because the copybooks tell you it deserves another, but in spite of
+that pleasing possibility. If you are a true scout, until you have
+performed your act of kindness your day is dark. You are as unhappy as
+is the grown-up who has begun his day without shaving or reading the
+New York Sun. But as soon as you have proved yourself you may, with a
+clear conscience, look the world in the face and untie the knot in your
+kerchief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie Reeder untied the accusing knot in his scarf at just ten minutes
+past eight on a hot August morning after he had given one dime to his
+sister Sadie. With that she could either witness the first-run films
+at the Palace, or by dividing her fortune patronize two of the nickel
+shows on Lenox Avenue. The choice Jimmie left to her. He was setting
+out for the annual encampment of the Boy Scouts at Hunter's Island, and
+in the excitement of that adventure even the movies ceased to thrill.
+But Sadie also could be unselfish. With a heroism of a camp-fire
+maiden she made a gesture which might have been interpreted to mean she
+was returning the money.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I can't, Jimmie!" she gasped. "I can't take it off you. You saved
+it, and you ought to get the fun of it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I haven't saved it yet," said Jimmie. "I'm going to cut it out of the
+railroad fare. I'm going to get off at City Island instead of at
+Pelham Manor and walk the difference. That's ten cents cheaper."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Sadie exclaimed with admiration:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An' you carryin' that heavy grip!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Aw, that's nothin'," said the man of the family.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good-by, mother. So long, Sadie."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To ward off further expressions of gratitude he hurriedly advised Sadie
+to take in "The Curse of Cain" rather than "The Mohawk's Last Stand,"
+and fled down the front steps.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He wore his khaki uniform. On his shoulders was his knapsack, from his
+hands swung his suit-case, and between his heavy stockings and his
+"shorts" his kneecaps, unkissed by the sun, as yet unscathed by
+blackberry vines, showed as white and fragile as the wrists of a girl.
+As he moved toward the "L" station at the corner, Sadie and his mother
+waved to him; in the street, boys too small to be scouts hailed him
+enviously; even the policeman glancing over the newspapers on the
+news-stand nodded approval.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You a scout, Jimmie?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," retorted Jimmie, for was not he also in uniform? "I'm Santa Claus
+out filling Christmas stockings."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The patrolman also possessed a ready wit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then get yourself a pair," he advised. "If a dog was to see your
+legs&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie escaped the insult by fleeing up the steps of the Elevated.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+An hour later, with his valise in one hand and staff in the other, he
+was tramping up the Boston Post Road and breathing heavily. The day was
+cruelly hot. Before his eyes, over an interminable stretch of asphalt,
+the heat waves danced and flickered. Already the knapsack on his
+shoulders pressed upon him like an Old Man of the Sea; the linen in the
+valise had turned to pig iron, his pipe-stem legs were wabbling, his
+eyes smarted with salt sweat, and the fingers supporting the valise
+belonged to some other boy, and were giving that boy much pain. But as
+the motor-cars flashed past with raucous warnings, or, that those who
+rode might better see the boy with bare knees, passed at "half speed,"
+Jimmie stiffened his shoulders and stepped jauntily forward. Even when
+the joy-riders mocked with "Oh, you scout!" he smiled at them. He was
+willing to admit to those who rode that the laugh was on the one who
+walked. And he regretted&mdash;oh, so bitterly&mdash;having left the train. He
+was indignant that for his "one good turn a day" he had not selected
+one less strenuous&mdash;that, for instance, he had not assisted a
+frightened old lady through the traffic. To refuse the dime she might
+have offered, as all true scouts refuse all tips, would have been
+easier than to earn it by walking five miles, with the sun at
+ninety-nine degrees, and carrying excess baggage. Twenty times James
+shifted the valise to the other hand, twenty times he let it drop and
+sat upon it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And then, as again he took up his burden, the good Samaritan drew near.
+He drew near in a low gray racing-car at the rate of forty miles an
+hour, and within a hundred feet of Jimmie suddenly stopped and backed
+toward him. The good Samaritan was a young man with white hair. He
+wore a suit of blue, a golf cap; the hands that held the wheel were
+disguised in large yellow gloves. He brought the car to a halt and
+surveyed the dripping figure in the road with tired and uncurious eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You a Boy Scout?" he asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With alacrity for the twenty-first time Jimmie dropped the valise,
+forced his cramped fingers into straight lines, and saluted.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man in the car nodded toward the seat beside him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Get in," he commanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When James sat panting happily at his elbow the old young man, to
+Jimmie's disappointment, did not continue to shatter the speed limit.
+Instead, he seemed inclined for conversation, and the car, growling
+indignantly, crawled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I never saw a Boy Scout before," announced the old young man. "Tell me
+about it. First, tell me what you do when you're not scouting."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie explained volubly. When not in uniform he was an office boy,
+and from peddlers and beggars guarded the gates of Carroll and
+Hastings, stock-brokers. He spoke the names of his employers with awe.
+It was a firm distinguished, conservative, and long established. The
+white-haired young man seemed to nod in assent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you know them?" demanded Jimmie suspiciously. "Are you a customer
+of ours?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know them," said the young man. "They are customers of mine."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie wondered in what way Carroll and Hastings were customers of the
+white-haired young man. Judging him by his outer garments, Jimmie
+guessed he was a Fifth Avenue tailor; he might be even a haberdasher.
+Jimmie continued. He lived, he explained, with his mother at One
+Hundred and Forty-sixth Street; Sadie, his sister, attended the public
+school; he helped support them both, and he now was about to enjoy a
+well-earned vacation camping out on Hunter's Island, where he would
+cook his own meals, and, if the mosquitoes permitted, sleep in a tent.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you like that?" demanded the young man. "You call that fun?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Sure!" protested Jimmie. "Don't you go camping out?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I go camping out," said the good Samaritan, "whenever I leave New
+York."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie had not for three years lived in Wall Street not to understand
+that the young man spoke in metaphor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You don't look," objected the young man critically, "as though you
+were built for the strenuous life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie glanced guiltily at his white knees.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You ought ter see me two weeks from now," he protested. "I get all
+sunburnt and hard&mdash;hard as anything!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man was incredulous.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You were near getting sunstruck when I picked you up," he laughed.
+"If you're going to Hunter's Island, why didn't you go to Pelham Manor?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That's right!" assented Jimmie eagerly. "But I wanted to save the ten
+cents so's to send Sadie to the movies. So I walked."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man looked his embarrassment.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I beg your pardon," he murmured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But Jimmie did not hear him. From the back of the car he was dragging
+excitedly at the hated suit-case.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Stop!" he commanded. "I got ter get out. I got ter walk."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man showed his surprise.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Walk!" he exclaimed. "What is it&mdash;a bet?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie dropped the valise and followed it into the roadway. It took
+some time to explain to the young man. First, he had to be told about
+the scout law and the one good turn a day, and that it must involve
+some personal sacrifice. And, as Jimmie pointed out, changing from a
+slow suburban train to a racing-car could not be listed as a sacrifice.
+He had not earned the money, Jimmie argued; he had only avoided paying
+it to the railroad. If he did not walk he would be obtaining the
+gratitude of Sadie by a falsehood. Therefore, he must walk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not at all," protested the young man. "You've got it wrong. What
+good will it do your sister to have you sunstruck? I think you are
+sunstruck. You're crazy with the heat. You get in here, and we'll
+talk it over as we go along."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hastily Jimmie backed away. "I'd rather walk," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man shifted his legs irritably.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then how'll this suit you?" he called. "We'll declare that first 'one
+good turn' a failure and start afresh. Do me a good turn."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie halted in his tracks and looked back suspiciously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm going to Hunter's Island Inn," called the young man, "and I've
+lost my way. You get in here and guide me. That'll be doing me a good
+turn."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+On either side of the road, blotting out the landscape, giant hands
+picked out in electric-light bulbs pointed the way to Hunter's Island
+Inn. Jimmie grinned and nodded toward them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Much obliged," he called. "I got ter walk." Turning his back upon
+temptation, he waddled forward into the flickering heat waves.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The young man did not attempt to pursue. At the side of the road,
+under the shade of a giant elm, he had brought the car to a halt and
+with his arms crossed upon the wheel sat motionless, following with
+frowning eyes the retreating figure of Jimmie. But the narrow-chested
+and knock-kneed boy staggering over the sun-baked asphalt no longer
+concerned him. It was not Jimmie, but the code preached by Jimmie, and
+not only preached but before his eyes put into practice, that
+interested him. The young man with white hair had been running away
+from temptation. At forty miles an hour he had been running away from
+the temptation to do a fellow mortal "a good turn." That morning, to
+the appeal of a drowning Caesar to "Help me, Cassius, or I sink," he
+had answered: "Sink!" That answer he had no wish to reconsider. That
+he might not reconsider he had sought to escape. It was his experience
+that a sixty-horse-power racing-machine is a jealous mistress. For
+retrospective, sentimental, or philanthropic thoughts she grants no
+leave of absence. But he had not escaped. Jimmie had halted him,
+tripped him by the heels, and set him again to thinking. Within the
+half-hour that followed those who rolled past saw at the side of the
+road a car with her engine running, and leaning upon the wheel, as
+unconscious of his surroundings as though he sat at his own fireplace,
+a young man who frowned and stared at nothing. The half-hour passed
+and the young man swung his car back toward the city. But at the first
+road-house that showed a blue-and-white telephone sign he left it, and
+into the iron box at the end of the bar dropped a nickel. He wished to
+communicate with Mr. Carroll, of Carroll and Hastings; and when he
+learned Mr. Carroll had just issued orders that he must not be
+disturbed, the young man gave his name.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The effect upon the barkeeper was instantaneous. With the aggrieved
+air of one who feels he is the victim of a jest he laughed scornfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What are you putting over?" he demanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man smiled reassuringly. He had begun to speak and, though
+apparently engaged with the beer-glass he was polishing, the barkeeper
+listened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Down in Wall Street the senior member of Carroll and Hastings also
+listened. He was alone in the most private of all his private offices,
+and when interrupted had been engaged in what, of all undertakings, is
+the most momentous. On the desk before him lay letters to his lawyer,
+to the coroner, to his wife; and hidden by a mass of papers, but within
+reach of his hand, was an automatic pistol. The promise it offered of
+swift release had made the writing of the letters simple, had given him
+a feeling of complete detachment, had released him, at least in
+thought, from all responsibilities. And when at his elbow the
+telephone coughed discreetly, it was as though some one had called him
+from a world from which already he had made his exit.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mechanically, through mere habit, he lifted the receiver.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The voice over the telephone came in brisk, staccato sentences.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That letter I sent this morning? Forget it. Tear it up. I've been
+thinking and I'm going to take a chance. I've decided to back you
+boys, and I know you'll make good. I'm speaking from a road-house in
+the Bronx; going straight from here to the bank. So you can begin to
+draw against us within an hour. And&mdash;hello!&mdash;will three millions see
+you through?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From Wall Street there came no answer, but from the hands of the
+barkeeper a glass crashed to the floor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man regarded the barkeeper with puzzled eyes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He doesn't answer," he exclaimed. "He must have hung up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He must have fainted!" said the barkeeper.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The white-haired one pushed a bill across the counter. "To pay for
+breakage," he said, and disappeared down Pelham Parkway.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Throughout the day, with the bill, for evidence, pasted against the
+mirror, the barkeeper told and retold the wondrous tale.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He stood just where you're standing now," he related, "blowing in
+million-dollar bills like you'd blow suds off a beer. If I'd knowed it
+was him, I'd have hit him once and hid him in the cellar for the
+reward. Who'd I think he was? I thought he was a wire-tapper, working
+a con game!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Carroll had not "hung up," but when in the Bronx the beer-glass
+crashed, in Wall Street the receiver had slipped from the hand of the
+man who held it, and the man himself had fallen forward. His desk hit
+him in the face and woke him&mdash;woke him to the wonderful fact that he
+still lived; that at forty he had been born again; that before him
+stretched many more years in which, as the young man with the white
+hair had pointed out, he still could make good.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The afternoon was far advanced when the staff of Carroll and Hastings
+were allowed to depart, and, even late as was the hour, two of them
+were asked to remain. Into the most private of the private offices
+Carroll invited Gaskell, the head clerk; in the main office Hastings
+had asked young Thorne, the bond clerk, to be seated.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Until the senior partner has finished with Gaskell young Thorne must
+remain seated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gaskell," said Mr. Carroll, "if we had listened to you, if we'd run
+this place as it was when father was alive, this never would have
+happened. It hasn't happened, but we've had our lesson. And after
+this we're going slow and going straight. And we don't need you to
+tell us how to do that. We want you to go away&mdash;on a month's vacation.
+When I thought we were going under I planned to send the children on a
+sea voyage with the governess&mdash;so they wouldn't see the newspapers.
+But now that I can look them in the eye again, I need them, I can't let
+them go. So, if you'd like to take your wife on an ocean trip to Nova
+Scotia and Quebec, here are the cabins I reserved for the kids. They
+call it the royal suite&mdash;whatever that is&mdash;and the trip lasts a month.
+The boat sails to-morrow morning. Don't sleep too late or you may miss
+her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The head clerk was secreting the tickets in the inside pocket of his
+waistcoat. His fingers trembled, and when he laughed his voice
+trembled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Miss the boat!" the head clerk exclaimed. "If she gets away from
+Millie and me she's got to start now. We'll go on board to-night!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A half-hour later Millie was on her knees packing a trunk, and her
+husband was telephoning to the drug-store for a sponge-bag and a cure
+for seasickness.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Owing to the joy in her heart and to the fact that she was on her
+knees, Millie was alternately weeping into the trunk-tray and offering
+up incoherent prayers of thanksgiving. Suddenly she sank back upon the
+floor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"John!" she cried, "doesn't it seem sinful to sail away in a 'royal
+suite' and leave this beautiful flat empty?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Over the telephone John was having trouble with the drug clerk.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No!" he explained, "I'm not seasick now. The medicine I want is to be
+taken later. I know I'm speaking from the Pavonia; but the Pavonia
+isn't a ship; it's an apartment-house."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He turned to Millie. "We can't be in two places at the same time," he
+suggested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, think," insisted Millie, "of all the poor people stifling
+to-night in this heat, trying to sleep on the roofs and fire-escapes;
+and our flat so cool and big and pretty&mdash;and no one in it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+John nodded his head proudly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know it's big," he said, "but it isn't big enough to hold all the
+people who are sleeping to-night on the roofs and in the parks."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was thinking of your brother&mdash;and Grace," said Millie. "They've
+been married only two weeks now, and they're in a stuffy hall bedroom
+and eating with all the other boarders. Think what our flat would mean
+to them; to be by themselves, with eight rooms and their own kitchen
+and bath, and our new refrigerator and the gramophone! It would be
+heaven! It would be a real honeymoon!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Abandoning the drug clerk, John lifted Millie in his arms and kissed
+her, for, next to his wife, nearest his heart was the younger brother.
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+The younger brother and Grace were sitting on the stoop of the
+boarding-house. On the upper steps, in their shirt-sleeves, were the
+other boarders; so the bride and bridegroom spoke in whispers. The air
+of the cross street was stale and stagnant; from it rose exhalations of
+rotting fruit, the gases of an open subway, the smoke of passing
+taxicabs. But between the street and the hall bedroom, with its odors
+of a gas-stove and a kitchen, the choice was difficult.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We've got to cool off somehow," the young husband was saying, "or you
+won't sleep. Shall we treat ourselves to ice-cream sodas or a trip on
+the Weehawken ferry-boat?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The ferry-boat!" begged the girl, "where we can get away from all
+these people."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A taxicab with a trunk in front whirled into the street, kicked itself
+to a stop, and the head clerk and Millie spilled out upon the pavement.
+They talked so fast, and the younger brother and Grace talked so fast,
+that the boarders, although they listened intently, could make nothing
+of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+They distinguished only the concluding sentences:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why don't you drive down to the wharf with us," they heard the elder
+brother ask, "and see our royal suite?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the younger brother laughed him to scorn.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What's your royal suite," he mocked, "to our royal palace?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+An hour later, had the boarders listened outside the flat of the head
+clerk, they would have heard issuing from his bathroom the cooling
+murmur of running water and from his gramophone the jubilant notes of
+"Alexander's Rag-time Band."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When in his private office Carroll was making a present of the royal
+suite to the head clerk, in the main office Hastings, the junior
+partner, was addressing "Champ" Thorne, the bond clerk. He addressed
+him familiarly and affectionately as "Champ." This was due partly to
+the fact that twenty-six years before Thorne had been christened
+Champneys and to the coincidence that he had captained the football
+eleven of one of the Big Three to the championship.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Champ," said Mr. Hastings, "last month, when you asked me to raise
+your salary, the reason I didn't do it was not because you didn't
+deserve it, but because I believed if we gave you a raise you'd
+immediately get married."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The shoulders of the ex-football captain rose aggressively; he snorted
+with indignation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And why should I not get married?" he demanded. "You're a fine one to
+talk! You're the most offensively happy married man I ever met."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Perhaps I know I am happy better than you do," reproved the junior
+partner; "but I know also that it takes money to support a wife."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You raise me to a hundred a week," urged Champ, "and I'll make it
+support a wife whether it supports me or not."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A month ago," continued Hastings, "we could have promised you a
+hundred, but we didn't know how long we could pay it. We didn't want
+you to rush off and marry some fine girl&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Some fine girl!" muttered Mr. Thorne. "The finest girl!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The finer the girl," Hastings pointed out, "the harder it would have
+been for you if we had failed and you had lost your job."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The eyes of the young man opened with sympathy and concern.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Is it as bad as that?" he murmured.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hastings sighed happily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It was," he said, "but this morning the Young Man of Wall Street did
+us a good turn&mdash;saved us&mdash;saved our creditors, saved our homes, saved
+our honor. We're going to start fresh and pay our debts, and we agreed
+the first debt we paid would be the small one we owe you. You've
+brought us more than we've given, and if you'll stay with us we're
+going to 'see' your fifty and raise it a hundred. What do you say?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Mr. Thorne leaped to his feet. What he said was: "Where'n hell's
+my hat?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But by the time he had found the hat and the door he mended his manners.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I say, 'Thank you a thousand times,"' he shouted over his shoulder.
+"Excuse me, but I've got to go. I've got to break the news to&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He did not explain to whom he was going to break the news; but Hastings
+must have guessed, for again he sighed happily and then, a little
+hysterically laughed aloud. Several months had passed since he had
+laughed aloud.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In his anxiety to break the news Champ Thorne almost broke his neck.
+In his excitement he could not remember whether the red flash meant the
+elevator was going down or coming up, and sooner than wait to find out
+he started to race down eighteen flights of stairs when fortunately the
+elevator-door swung open.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You get five dollars," he announced to the elevator man, "if you drop
+to the street without a stop. Beat the speed limit! Act like the
+building is on fire and you're trying to save me before the roof falls."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Senator Barnes and his entire family, which was his daughter Barbara,
+were at the Ritz-Carlton. They were in town in August because there
+was a meeting of the directors of the Brazil and Cuyaba Rubber Company,
+of which company Senator Barnes was president. It was a secret
+meeting. Those directors who were keeping cool at the edge of the
+ocean had been summoned by telegraph; those who were steaming across
+the ocean, by wireless.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Up from the equator had drifted the threat of a scandal, sickening,
+grim, terrible. As yet it burned beneath the surface, giving out only
+an odor, but an odor as rank as burning rubber itself. At any moment
+it might break into flame. For the directors, was it the better wisdom
+to let the scandal smoulder, and take a chance, or to be the first to
+give the alarm, the first to lead the way to the horror and stamp it
+out?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was to decide this that, in the heat of August, the directors and
+the president had foregathered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Champ Thorne knew nothing of this; he knew only that by a miracle
+Barbara Barnes was in town; that at last he was in a position to ask
+her to marry him; that she would certainly say she would. That was all
+he cared to know.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+A year before he had issued his declaration of independence. Before he
+could marry, he told her, he must be able to support a wife on what he
+earned, without her having to accept money from her father, and until
+he received "a minimum wage" of five thousand dollars they must wait.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What is the matter with my father's money?" Barbara had demanded.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thorne had evaded the direct question.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There is too much of it," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Do you object to the way he makes it?" insisted Barbara. "Because
+rubber is most useful. You put it in golf balls and auto tires and
+galoshes. There is nothing so perfectly respectable as galoshes. And
+what is there 'tainted' about a raincoat?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thorne shook his head unhappily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's not the finished product to which I refer," he stammered; "it's
+the way they get the raw material."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They get it out of trees," said Barbara. Then she exclaimed with
+enlightenment&mdash;"Oh!" she cried, "you are thinking of the Congo. There
+it is terrible! That is slavery. But there are no slaves on the
+Amazon. The natives are free and the work is easy. They just tap the
+trees the way the farmers gather sugar in Vermont. Father has told me
+about it often."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thorne had made no comment. He could abuse a friend, if the friend
+were among those present, but denouncing any one he disliked as
+heartily as he disliked Senator Barnes was a public service he
+preferred to leave to others. And he knew besides that if the father
+she loved and the man she loved distrusted each other, Barbara would
+not rest until she learned the reason why.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+One day, in a newspaper, Barbara read of the Puju Mayo atrocities, of
+the Indian slaves in the jungles and backwaters of the Amazon, who are
+offered up as sacrifices to "red rubber." She carried the paper to her
+father. What it said, her father told her, was untrue, and if it were
+true it was the first he had heard of it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Senator Barnes loved the good things of life, but the thing he loved
+most was his daughter; the thing he valued the highest was her good
+opinion. So when for the first time she looked at him in doubt, he
+assured her he at once would order an investigation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, of course," he added, "it will be many months before our agents
+can report. On the Amazon news travels very slowly."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the eyes of his daughter the doubt still lingered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am afraid," she said, "that that is true."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That was six months before the directors of the Brazil and Cuyaba
+Rubber Company were summoned to meet their president at his rooms in
+the Ritz-Carlton. They were due to arrive in half an hour, and while
+Senator Barnes awaited their coming Barbara came to him. In her eyes
+was a light that helped to tell the great news. It gave him a sharp,
+jealous pang. He wanted at once to play a part in her happiness, to
+make her grateful to him, not alone to this stranger who was taking her
+away. So fearful was he that she would shut him out of her life that
+had she asked for half his kingdom he would have parted with it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And besides giving my consent," said the rubber king, "for which no
+one seems to have asked, what can I give my little girl to make her
+remember her old father? Some diamonds to put on her head, or pearls to
+hang around her neck, or does she want a vacant lot on Fifth Avenue?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The lovely hands of Barbara rested upon his shoulders; her lovely face
+was raised to his; her lovely eyes were appealing, and a little
+frightened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What would one of those things cost?" asked Barbara.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The question was eminently practical. It came within the scope of the
+senator's understanding. After all, he was not to be cast into outer
+darkness. His smile was complacent. He answered airily:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Anything you like," he said; "a million dollars?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The fingers closed upon his shoulders. The eyes, still frightened,
+still searched his in appeal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then, for my wedding-present," said the girl, "I want you to take that
+million dollars and send an expedition to the Amazon. And I will
+choose the men. Men unafraid; men not afraid of fever or sudden death;
+not afraid to tell the truth&mdash;even to you. And all the world will
+know. And they&mdash;I mean you&mdash;will set those people free!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Senator Barnes received the directors with an embarrassment which he
+concealed under a manner of just indignation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My mind is made up," he told them. "Existing conditions cannot
+continue. And to that end, at my own expense, I am sending an
+expedition across South America. It will investigate, punish, and
+establish reforms. I suggest, on account of this damned heat, we do
+now adjourn."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+That night, over on Long Island, Carroll told his wife all, or nearly
+all. He did not tell her about the automatic pistol. And together on
+tiptoe they crept to the nursery and looked down at their sleeping
+children. When she rose from her knees the mother said: "But how can I
+thank him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+By "him" she meant the Young Man of Wall Street.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You never can thank him," said Carroll; "that's the worst of it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But after a long silence the mother said: "I will send him a photograph
+of the children. Do you think he will understand?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Down at Seabright, Hastings and his wife walked in the sunken garden.
+The moon was so bright that the roses still held their color.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I would like to thank him," said the young wife. She meant the Young
+Man of Wall Street. "But for him we would have lost this."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Her eyes caressed the garden, the fruit-trees, the house with wide,
+hospitable verandas. "To-morrow I will send him some of these roses,"
+said the young wife. "Will he understand that they mean our home?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At a scandalously late hour, in a scandalous spirit of independence,
+Champ Thorne and Barbara were driving around Central Park in a taxicab.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"How strangely the Lord moves, his wonders to perform," misquoted
+Barbara. "Had not the Young Man of Wall Street saved Mr. Hastings, Mr.
+Hastings could not have raised your salary; you would not have asked me
+to marry you, and had you not asked me to marry you, father would not
+have given me a wedding-present, and&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And," said Champ, taking up the tale, "thousands of slaves would still
+be buried in the jungles, hidden away from their wives and children and
+the light of the sun and their fellow men. They still would be dying
+of fever, starvation, tortures."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He took her hand in both of his and held her finger-tips against his
+lips.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And they will never know," he whispered, "when their freedom comes,
+that they owe it all to you."
+</P>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+On Hunter's Island, Jimmie Reeder and his bunkie, Sam Sturges, each on
+his canvas cot, tossed and twisted. The heat, the moonlight, and the
+mosquitoes would not let them even think of sleep.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"That was bully," said Jimmie, "what you did to-day about saving that
+dog. If it hadn't been for you he'd ha' drownded."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He would not!" said Sammy with punctilious regard for the truth; "it
+wasn't deep enough."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Well, the scout-master ought to know," argued Jimmie; "he said it was
+the best 'one good turn' of the day!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Modestly Sam shifted the lime-light so that it fell upon his bunkie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'll bet," he declared loyally, "your 'one good turn' was a better
+one!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Jimmie yawned, and then laughed scornfully.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Me!" he scoffed. "I didn't do nothing. I sent my sister to the
+movies."
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="france"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+"SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE"
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+Marie Gessler, known as Marie Chaumontel, Jeanne d'Avrechy, the
+Countess d'Aurillac, was German. Her father, who served through the
+Franco-Prussian War, was a German spy. It was from her mother she
+learned to speak French sufficiently well to satisfy even an
+Academician and, among Parisians, to pass as one. Both her parents
+were dead. Before they departed, knowing they could leave their
+daughter nothing save their debts, they had had her trained as a nurse.
+But when they were gone, Marie in the Berlin hospitals played politics,
+intrigued, indiscriminately misused the appealing, violet eyes. There
+was a scandal; several scandals. At the age of twenty-five she was
+dismissed from the Municipal Hospital, and as now-save for the violet
+eyes&mdash;she was without resources, as a compagnon de voyage with a German
+doctor she travelled to Monte Carlo. There she abandoned the doctor
+for Henri Ravignac, a captain in the French Aviation Corps, who, when
+his leave ended, escorted her to Paris.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The duties of Captain Ravignac kept him in barracks near the aviation
+field, but Marie he established in his apartments on the Boulevard
+Haussmann. One day he brought from the barracks a roll of blue-prints,
+and as he was locking them in a drawer, said: "The Germans would pay
+through the nose for those!" The remark was indiscreet, but then Marie
+had told him she was French, and any one would have believed her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The next morning the same spirit of adventure that had exiled her from
+the Berlin hospitals carried her with the blue-prints to the German
+embassy. There, greatly shocked, they first wrote down her name and
+address, and then, indignant at her proposition, ordered her out. But
+the day following a strange young German who was not at all indignant,
+but, on the contrary, quite charming, called upon Marie. For the
+blue-prints he offered her a very large sum, and that same hour with
+them and Marie departed for Berlin. Marie did not need the money. Nor
+did the argument that she was serving her country greatly impress her.
+It was rather that she loved intrigue. And so she became a spy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Henri Ravignac, the man she had robbed of the blue-prints, was tried by
+court-martial. The charge was treason, but Charles Ravignac, his
+younger brother, promised to prove that the guilty one was the girl,
+and to that end obtained leave of absence and spent much time and
+money. At the trial he was able to show the record of Marie in Berlin
+and Monte Carlo; that she was the daughter of a German secret agent;
+that on the afternoon the prints disappeared Marie, with an agent of
+the German embassy, had left Paris for Berlin. In consequence of this
+the charge of selling military secrets was altered to one of "gross
+neglect," and Henri Ravignac was sentenced to two years in the military
+prison at Tours. But he was of an ancient and noble family, and when
+they came to take him from his cell in the Cherche-Midi, he was dead.
+Charles, his brother, disappeared. It was said he also had killed
+himself; that he had been appointed a military attache in South
+America; that to revenge his brother he had entered the secret service;
+but whatever became of him no one knew. All that was certain was that,
+thanks to the act of Marie Gessler, on the rolls of the French army the
+ancient and noble name of Ravignac no longer appeared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In her chosen profession Marie Gessler found nothing discreditable. Of
+herself her opinion was not high, and her opinion of men was lower.
+For her smiles she had watched several sacrifice honor, duty, loyalty;
+and she held them and their kind in contempt. To lie, to cajole, to
+rob men of secrets they thought important, and of secrets the
+importance of which they did not even guess, was to her merely an
+intricate and exciting game.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She played it very well. So well that in the service her advance was
+rapid. On important missions she was sent to Russia, through the
+Balkans; even to the United States. There, with credentials as an army
+nurse, she inspected our military hospitals and unobtrusively asked
+many innocent questions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When she begged to be allowed to work in her beloved Paris, "they" told
+her when war came "they" intended to plant her inside that city, and
+that, until then, the less Paris knew of her the better.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But just before the great war broke, to report on which way Italy might
+jump, she was sent to Rome, and it was not until September she was
+recalled. The telegram informed her that her Aunt Elizabeth was ill,
+and that at once she must return to Berlin. This, she learned from the
+code book wrapped under the cover of her thermos bottle, meant that she
+was to report to the general commanding the German forces at Soissons.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From Italy she passed through Switzerland, and, after leaving Basle, on
+military trains was rushed north to Luxemburg, and then west to Laon.
+She was accompanied by her companion, Bertha, an elderly and
+respectable, even distinguished-looking female. In the secret service
+her number was 528. Their passes from the war office described them as
+nurses of the German Red Cross. Only the Intelligence Department knew
+their real mission. With her, also, as her chauffeur, was a young
+Italian soldier of fortune, Paul Anfossi. He had served in the Belgian
+Congo, in the French Foreign Legion in Algiers, and spoke all the
+European languages. In Rome, where as a wireless operator he was
+serving a commercial company, in selling Marie copies of messages he
+had memorized, Marie had found him useful, and when war came she
+obtained for him, from the Wilhelmstrasse, the number 292. From Laon,
+in one of the automobiles of the General Staff, the three spies were
+driven first to Soissons, and then along the road to Meaux and Paris,
+to the village of Neufchelles. They arrived at midnight, and in a
+chateau of one of the Champagne princes, found the colonel commanding
+the Intelligence Bureau. He accepted their credentials, destroyed
+them, and replaced them with a laissez-passer signed by the mayor of
+Laon. That dignitary, the colonel explained, to citizens of Laon
+fleeing to Paris and the coast had issued many passes. But as now
+between Laon and Paris there were three German armies, the refugees had
+been turned back and their passes confiscated.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"From among them," said the officer, "we have selected one for you. It
+is issued to the wife of Count d'Aurillac, a captain of reserves, and
+her aunt, Madame Benet. It asks for those ladies and their chauffeur,
+Briand, a safe-conduct through the French military lines. If it gets
+you into Paris you will destroy it and assume another name. The Count
+d'Aurillac is now with his regiment in that city. If he learned of the
+presence there of his wife, he would seek her, and that would not be
+good for you. So, if you reach Paris, you will become a Belgian
+refugee. You are high-born and rich. Your chateau has been destroyed.
+But you have money. You will give liberally to the Red Cross. You
+will volunteer to nurse in the hospitals. With your sad story of ill
+treatment by us, with your high birth, and your knowledge of nursing,
+which you acquired, of course, only as an amateur, you should not find
+it difficult to join the Ladies of France, or the American Ambulance.
+What you learn from the wounded English and French officers and the
+French doctors you will send us through the usual channels."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When do I start?" asked the woman.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"For a few days," explained the officer, "you remain in this chateau.
+You will keep us informed of what is going forward after we withdraw."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Withdraw?" It was more of an exclamation than a question. Marie was
+too well trained to ask questions.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We are taking up a new position," said the officer, "on the Aisne."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The woman, incredulous, stared.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And we do not enter Paris?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You do," returned the officer. "That is all that concerns you. We
+will join you later&mdash;in the spring. Meanwhile, for the winter we
+intrench ourselves along the Aisne. In a chimney of this chateau we
+have set up a wireless outfit. We are leaving it intact. The chauffeur
+Briand&mdash;who, you must explain to the French, you brought with you from
+Laon, and who has been long in your service&mdash;will transmit whatever you
+discover. We wish especially to know of any movement toward our left.
+If they attack in front from Soissons, we are prepared; but of any
+attempt to cross the Oise and take us in flank you must warn us."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The officer rose and hung upon himself his field-glasses, map-cases,
+and side-arms.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We leave you now," he said. "When the French arrive you will tell
+them your reason for halting at this chateau was that the owner,
+Monsieur Iverney, and his family are friends of your husband. You
+found us here, and we detained you. And so long as you can use the
+wireless, make excuses to remain. If they offer to send you on to
+Paris, tell them your aunt is too ill to travel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But they will find the wireless," said the woman. "They are sure to
+use the towers for observation, and they will find it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"In that case," said the officer, "you will suggest to them that we
+fled in such haste we had no time to dismantle it. Of course, you had
+no knowledge that it existed, or, as a loyal French woman, you would
+have at once told them." To emphasize his next words the officer
+pointed at her: "Under no circumstances," he continued, "must you be
+suspected. If they should take Briand in the act, should they have
+even the least doubt concerning him, you must repudiate him entirely.
+If necessary, to keep your own skirts clear, it would be your duty
+yourself to denounce him as a spy."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Your first orders," said the woman, "were to tell them Briand had been
+long in my service; that I brought him from my home in Laon."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He might be in your service for years," returned the colonel, "and you
+not know he was a German agent."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If to save myself I inform upon him," said Marie, "of course you know
+you will lose him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The officer shrugged his shoulders. "A wireless operator," he
+retorted, "we can replace. But for you, and for the service you are to
+render in Paris, we have no substitute. You must not be found out.
+You are invaluable."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The spy inclined her head. "I thank you," she said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The officer sputtered indignantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is not a compliment," he exclaimed; "it is an order. You must not
+be found out!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Withdrawn some two hundred yards from the Paris road, the chateau stood
+upon a wooded hill. Except directly in front, trees of great height
+surrounded it. The tips of their branches brushed the windows;
+interlacing, they continued until they overhung the wall of the estate.
+Where it ran with the road the wall gave way to a lofty gate and iron
+fence, through which those passing could see a stretch of noble turf,
+as wide as a polo-field, borders of flowers disappearing under the
+shadows of the trees; and the chateau itself, with its terrace, its
+many windows, its high-pitched, sloping roof, broken by towers and
+turrets.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Through the remainder of the night there came from the road to those in
+the chateau the roar and rumbling of the army in retreat. It moved
+without panic, disorder, or haste, but unceasingly. Not for an instant
+was there a breathing-spell. And when the sun rose, the three
+spies&mdash;the two women and the chauffeur&mdash;who in the great chateau were
+now alone, could see as well as hear the gray column of steel rolling
+past below them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The spies knew that the gray column had reached Claye, had stood within
+fifteen miles of Paris, and then upon Paris had turned its back. They
+knew also that the reverberations from the direction of Meaux, that
+each moment grew more loud and savage, were the French "seventy-fives"
+whipping the gray column forward. Of what they felt the Germans did
+not speak. In silence they looked at each other, and in the eyes of
+Marie was bitterness and resolve.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Toward noon Marie met Anfossi in the great drawing-room that stretched
+the length of the terrace and from the windows of which, through the
+park gates, they could see the Paris road.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"This, that is passing now," said Marie, "is the last of our
+rear-guard. Go to your tower," she ordered, "and send word that except
+for stragglers and the wounded our column has just passed through
+Neufchelles, and that any moment we expect the French." She raised her
+hand impressively. "From now," she warned, "we speak French, we think
+French, we are French!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Anfossi, or Briand, as now he called himself, addressed her in that
+language. His tone was bitter. "Pardon my lese-majesty," he said,
+"but this chief of your Intelligence Department is a dummer Mensch. He
+is throwing away a valuable life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie exclaimed in dismay. She placed her hand upon his arm, and the
+violet eyes filled with concern.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Not yours!" she protested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Absolutely!" returned the Italian. "I can send nothing by this
+knapsack wireless that they will not learn from others; from airmen,
+Uhlans, the peasants in the fields. And certainly I will be caught.
+Dead I am dead, but alive and in Paris the opportunities are unending.
+From the French Legion Etranger I have my honorable discharge. I am an
+expert wireless operator and in their Signal Corps I can easily find a
+place. Imagine me, then, on the Eiffel Tower. From the air I snatch
+news from all of France, from the Channel, the North Sea. You and I
+could work together, as in Rome. But here, between the lines, with a
+pass from a village sous-prefet, it is ridiculous. I am not afraid to
+die. But to die because some one else is stupid, that is hard."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie clasped his hand in both of hers.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You must not speak of death," she cried; "you know I must carry out my
+orders, that I must force you to take this risk. And you know that
+thought of harm to you tortures me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Quickly the young man disengaged his hand. The woman exclaimed with
+anger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why do you doubt me?" she cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Briand protested vehemently.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I do not doubt you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My affection, then?" In a whisper that carried with it the feeling of
+a caress Marie added softly: "My love?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man protested miserably. "You make it very hard,
+mademoiselle," he cried. "You are my superior officer, I am your
+servant. Who am I that I should share with others&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The woman interrupted eagerly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Ah, you are jealous!" she cried. "Is that why you are so cruel? But
+when I tell you I love you, and only you, can you not feel it is the
+truth?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man frowned unhappily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My duty, mademoiselle!" he stammered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With an exclamation of anger Marie left him. As the door slammed
+behind her, the young man drew a deep breath. On his face was the
+expression of ineffable relief.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the hall Marie met her elderly companion, Bertha, now her aunt,
+Madame Benet.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I heard you quarrelling," Bertha protested. "It is most indiscreet.
+It is not in the part of the Countess d'Aurillac that she makes love to
+her chauffeur."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie laughed noiselessly and drew her farther down the hall. "He is
+imbecile!" she exclaimed. "He will kill me with his solemn face and
+his conceit. I make love to him&mdash;yes&mdash;that he may work the more
+willingly. But he will have none of it. He is jealous of the others."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Madame Benet frowned.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He resents the others," she corrected. "I do not blame him. He is a
+gentleman!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And the others," demanded Marie; "were they not of the most noble
+families of Rome?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I am old and I am ugly," said Bertha, "but to me Anfossi is always as
+considerate as he is to you who are so beautiful."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"An Italian gentleman," returned Marie, "does not serve in Belgian
+Congo unless it is&mdash;the choice of that or the marble quarries."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I do not know what his past may be," sighed Madame Benet, "nor do I
+ask. He is only a number, as you and I are only numbers. And I beg you
+to let us work in harmony. At such a time your love-affairs threaten
+our safety. You must wait."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie laughed insolently. "With the Du Barry," she protested, "I can
+boast that I wait for no man."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No," replied the older woman; "you pursue him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie would have answered sharply, but on the instant her interest was
+diverted. For one week, by day and night, she had lived in a world
+peopled only by German soldiers. Beside her in the railroad carriage,
+on the station platforms, at the windows of the trains that passed the
+one in which she rode, at the grade crossings, on the bridges, in the
+roads that paralleled the tracks, choking the streets of the villages
+and spread over the fields of grain, she had seen only the gray-green
+uniforms. Even her professional eye no longer distinguished regiment
+from regiment, dragoon from grenadier, Uhlan from Hussar or Landsturm.
+Stripes, insignia, numerals, badges of rank, had lost their meaning.
+Those who wore them no longer were individuals. They were not even
+human. During the three last days the automobile, like a motor-boat
+fighting the tide, had crept through a gray-green river of men,
+stained, as though from the banks, by mud and yellow clay. And for
+hours, while the car was blocked, and in fury the engine raced and
+purred, the gray-green river had rolled past her, slowly but as
+inevitably as lava down the slope of a volcano, bearing on its surface
+faces with staring eyes, thousands and thousands of eyes, some fierce
+and bloodshot, others filled with weariness, homesickness, pain. At
+night she still saw them: the white faces under the sweat and dust, the
+eyes dumb, inarticulate, asking the answer. She had been suffocated by
+German soldiers, by the mass of them, engulfed and smothered; she had
+stifled in a land inhabited only by gray-green ghosts.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And suddenly, as though a miracle had been wrought, she saw upon the
+lawn, riding toward her, a man in scarlet, blue, and silver. One man
+riding alone.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Approaching with confidence, but alert; his reins fallen, his hands
+nursing his carbine, his eyes searched the shadows of the trees, the
+empty windows, even the sun-swept sky. His was the new face at the
+door, the new step on the floor. And the spy knew had she beheld an
+army corps it would have been no more significant, no more menacing,
+than the solitary chasseur a cheval scouting in advance of the enemy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"We are saved!" exclaimed Marie, with irony. "Go quickly," she
+commanded, "to the bedroom on the second floor that opens upon the
+staircase, so that you can see all who pass. You are too ill to
+travel. They must find you in bed."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And you?" said Bertha.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I," cried Marie rapturously, "hasten to welcome our preserver!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The preserver was a peasant lad. Under the white dust his cheeks were
+burned a brown-red, his eyes, honest and blue, through much staring at
+the skies and at horizon lines, were puckered and encircled with tiny
+wrinkles. Responsibility had made him older than his years, and in
+speech brief. With the beautiful lady who with tears of joy ran to
+greet him, and who in an ecstasy of happiness pressed her cheek against
+the nose of his horse, he was unimpressed. He returned to her her
+papers and gravely echoed her answers to his questions. "This
+chateau," he repeated, "was occupied by their General Staff; they have
+left no wounded here; you saw the last of them pass a half-hour since."
+He gathered up his reins.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie shrieked in alarm. "You will not leave us?" she cried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For the first time the young man permitted himself to smile. "Others
+arrive soon," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He touched his shako, wheeled his horse in the direction from which he
+had come, and a minute later Marie heard the hoofs echoing through the
+empty village.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+When they came, the others were more sympathetic. Even in times of war
+a beautiful woman is still a beautiful woman. And the staff officers
+who moved into the quarters so lately occupied by the enemy found in
+the presence of the Countess d'Aurillac nothing to distress them. In
+the absence of her dear friend, Madame Iverney, the chatelaine of the
+chateau, she acted as their hostess. Her chauffeur showed the company
+cooks the way to the kitchen, the larder, and the charcoal-box. She,
+herself, in the hands of General Andre placed the keys of the famous
+wine-cellar, and to the surgeon, that the wounded might be freshly
+bandaged, intrusted those of the linen-closet. After the indignities
+she had suffered while "detained" by les Boches, her delight and relief
+at again finding herself under the protection of her own people would
+have touched a heart of stone. And the hearts of the staff were not of
+stone. It was with regret they gave the countess permission to
+continue on her way. At this she exclaimed with gratitude. She
+assured them, were her aunt able to travel, she would immediately
+depart.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"In Paris she will be more comfortable than here," said the kind
+surgeon. He was a reservist, and in times of peace a fashionable
+physician and as much at his ease in a boudoir as in a field hospital.
+"Perhaps if I saw Madam Benet?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At the suggestion the countess was overjoyed. But they found Madame
+Benet in a state of complete collapse. The conduct of the Germans had
+brought about a nervous breakdown.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Though the bridges are destroyed at Meaux," urged the surgeon, "even
+with a detour, you can be in Paris in four hours. I think it is worth
+the effort."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the mere thought of the journey threw Madame Benet into hysterics.
+She asked only to rest, she begged for an opiate to make her sleep.
+She begged also that they would leave the door open, so that when she
+dreamed she was still in the hands of the Germans, and woke in terror,
+the sound of the dear French voices and the sight of the beloved French
+uniforms might reassure her. She played her part well. Concerning her
+Marie felt not the least anxiety. But toward Briand, the chauffeur,
+the new arrivals were less easily satisfied.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The general sent his adjutant for the countess. When the adjutant had
+closed the door General Andre began abruptly:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The chauffeur Briand," he asked, "you know him; you can vouch for him?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But, certainly!" protested Marie. "He is an Italian."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As though with sudden enlightenment, Marie laughed. It was as if now
+in the suspicion of the officer she saw a certain reasonableness.
+"Briand was so long in the Foreign Legion in Algiers," she explained,
+"where my husband found him, that we have come to think of him as
+French. As much French as ourselves, I assure you."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The general and his adjutant were regarding each other questioningly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Perhaps I should tell the countess," began the general, "that we have
+learned&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The signal from the adjutant was so slight, so swift, that Marie barely
+intercepted it.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The lips of the general shut together like the leaves of a book. To
+show the interview was at an end, he reached for a pen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thank you," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course," prompted the adjutant, "Madame d'Aurillac understands the
+man must not know we inquired concerning him."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+General Andre frowned at Marie.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Certainly not!" he commanded. "The honest fellow must not know that
+even for a moment he was doubted."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie raised the violet eyes reprovingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I trust," she said with reproach, "I too well understand the feelings
+of a French soldier to let him know his loyalty is questioned."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a murmur of appreciation the officers bowed and with a gesture of
+gracious pardon Marie left them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Outside in the hall, with none but orderlies to observe, like a cloak
+the graciousness fell from her. She was drawn two ways. In her work
+Anfossi was valuable. But Anfossi suspected was less than of no value;
+he became a menace, a death-warrant.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+General Andre had said, "We have learned&mdash;" and the adjutant had halted
+him. What had he learned? To know that, Marie would have given much.
+Still, one important fact comforted her. Anfossi alone was suspected.
+Had there been concerning herself the slightest doubt, they certainly
+would not have allowed her to guess her companion was under
+surveillance; they would not have asked one who was herself suspected
+to vouch for the innocence of a fellow conspirator. Marie found the
+course to follow difficult. With Anfossi under suspicion his usefulness
+was for the moment at an end; and to accept the chance offered her to
+continue on to Paris seemed most wise. On the other hand, if,
+concerning Anfossi, she had succeeded in allaying their doubts, the
+results most to be desired could be attained only by remaining where
+they were.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Their position inside the lines was of the greatest strategic value.
+The rooms of the servants were under the roof, and that Briand should
+sleep in one of them was natural. That to reach or leave his room he
+should constantly be ascending or descending the stairs also was
+natural. The field-wireless outfit, or, as he had disdainfully
+described it, the "knapsack" wireless, was situated not in the bedroom
+he had selected for himself, but in one adjoining. At other times this
+was occupied by the maid of Madame Iverney. To summon her maid Madame
+Iverney, from her apartment on the second floor, had but to press a
+button. And it was in the apartment of Madame Iverney, and on the bed
+of that lady, that Madame Benet now reclined. When through the open
+door she saw an officer or soldier mount the stairs, she pressed the
+button that rang a bell in the room of the maid. In this way, long
+before whoever was ascending the stairs could reach the top floor,
+warning of his approach came to Anfossi. It gave him time to replace
+the dustboard over the fireplace in which the wireless was concealed
+and to escape into his own bedroom. The arrangement was ideal. And
+already information picked up in the halls below by Marie had been
+conveyed to Anfossi to relay in a French cipher to the German General
+Staff at Rheims.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie made an alert and charming hostess. To all who saw her it was
+evident that her mind was intent only upon the comfort of her guests.
+Throughout the day many came and went, but each she made welcome; to
+each as he departed she called "bonne chance."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Efficient, tireless, tactful, she was everywhere: in the dining-room,
+in the kitchen, in the bedrooms, for the wounded finding mattresses to
+spread in the gorgeous salons of the Champagne prince; for the
+soldier-chauffeurs carrying wine into the courtyard, where the
+automobiles panted and growled, and the arriving and departing shrieked
+for right of way. At all times an alluring person, now the one woman in
+a tumult of men, her smart frock covered by an apron, her head and arms
+bare, undismayed by the sight of the wounded or by the distant rumble
+of the guns, the Countess d'Aurillac was an inspiring and beautiful
+picture. The eyes of the officers, young and old, informed her of that
+fact, one of which already she was well aware. By the morning of the
+next day she was accepted as the owner of the chateau.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And though continually she reminded the staff she was present only as
+the friend of her schoolmate, Madame Iverney, they deferred to her as
+to a hostess. Many of them she already saluted by name, and to those
+who with messages were constantly motoring to and from the front at
+Soissons she was particularly kind. Overnight the legend of her charm,
+of her devotion to the soldiers of all ranks, had spread from Soissons
+to Meaux, and from Meaux to Paris. It was noon of that day when from
+the window of the second story Marie saw an armored automobile sweep
+into the courtyard. It was driven by an officer, young and appallingly
+good-looking, and, as was obvious by the way he spun his car, one who
+held in contempt both the law of gravity and death. That he was some
+one of importance seemed evident. Before he could alight the adjutant
+had raced to meet him. With her eye for detail Marie observed that the
+young officer, instead of imparting information, received it. He must,
+she guessed, have just arrived from Paris, and his brother officer
+either was telling him the news or giving him his orders. Whichever it
+might be, in what was told him the new arrival was greatly interested.
+One instant in indignation his gauntleted fist beat upon the
+steering-wheel, the next he smiled with pleasure. To interpret this
+pantomime was difficult; and, the better to inform herself, Marie
+descended the stairs.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As she reached the lower hall the two officers entered. To the spy the
+man last to arrive was always the one of greatest importance; and Marie
+assured herself that through her friend, the adjutant, to meet with
+this one would prove easy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the chauffeur-commander of the armored car made it most difficult.
+At sight of Marie, much to her alarm, as though greeting a dear friend,
+he snatched his kepi from his head and sprang toward her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The major," he cried, "told me you were here, that you are Madame
+d'Aurillac." His eyes spoke his admiration. In delight he beamed upon
+her. "I might have known it!" he murmured. With the confidence of one
+who is sure he brings good news, he laughed happily. "And I," he
+cried, "am 'Pierrot'!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Who the devil "Pierrot" might be the spy could not guess. She knew
+only that she wished by a German shell "Pierrot" and his car had been
+blown to tiny fragments. Was it a trap, she asked herself, or was the
+handsome youth really some one the Countess d'Aurillac should know.
+But, as from his introducing himself it was evident he could not know
+that lady very well, Marie took courage and smiled.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Which 'Pierrot'?" she parried.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Pierre Thierry!" cried the youth.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To the relief of Marie he turned upon the adjutant and to him explained
+who Pierre Thierry might be.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Paul d'Aurillac," he said, "is my dearest friend. When he married
+this charming lady I was stationed in Algiers, and but for the war I
+might never have met her."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To Marie, with his hand on his heart in a most charming manner, he
+bowed. His admiration he made no effort to conceal.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And so," he said, "I know why there is war!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The adjutant smiled indulgently, and departed on his duties, leaving
+them alone. The handsome eyes of Captain Thierry were raised to the
+violet eyes of Marie. They appraised her boldly and as boldly
+expressed their approval.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In burlesque the young man exclaimed indignantly: "Paul deceived me!"
+he cried. "He told me he had married the most beautiful woman in Laon.
+He has married the most beautiful woman in France!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+To Marie this was not impertinence, but gallantry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+This was a language she understood, and this was the type of man,
+because he was the least difficult to manage, she held most in contempt.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But about you Paul did not deceive me," she retorted. In apparent
+confusion her eyes refused to meet his. "He told me 'Pierrot' was a
+most dangerous man!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+She continued hurriedly. With wifely solicitude she asked concerning
+Paul. She explained that for a week she had been a prisoner in the
+chateau, and, since the mobilization, of her husband save that he was
+with his regiment in Paris she had heard nothing. Captain Thierry was
+able to give her later news. Only the day previous, on the boulevards,
+he had met Count d'Aurillac. He was at the Grand Hotel, and as Thierry
+was at once motoring back to Paris he would give Paul news of their
+meeting. He hoped he might tell him that soon his wife also would be
+in Paris. Marie explained that only the illness of her aunt prevented
+her from that same day joining her husband. Her manner became serious.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what other news have you?" she asked. "Here on the firing-line we
+know less of what is going forward than you in Paris."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So Pierre Thierry told her all he knew. They were preparing despatches
+he was at once to carry back to the General Staff, and, for the moment,
+his time was his own. How could he better employ it than in talking of
+the war with a patriotic and charming French woman?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In consequence Marie acquired a mass of facts, gossip, and guesses.
+From these she mentally selected such information as, to her employers
+across the Aisne, would be of vital interest.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+And to rid herself of Thierry and on the fourth floor seek Anfossi was
+now her only wish. But, in attempting this, by the return of the
+adjutant she was delayed. To Thierry the adjutant gave a sealed
+envelope.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Thirty-one, Boulevard des Invalides," he said. With a smile he turned
+to Marie. "And you will accompany him!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I!" exclaimed Marie. She was sick with sudden terror.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But the tolerant smile of the adjutant reassured her.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The count, your husband," he explained, "has learned of your detention
+here by the enemy, and he has besieged the General Staff to have you
+convoyed safely to Paris." The adjutant glanced at a field telegram he
+held open in his hand. "He asks," he continued, "that you be permitted
+to return in the car of his friend, Captain Thierry, and that on
+arriving you join him at the Grand Hotel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Thierry exclaimed with delight.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But how charming!" he cried. "To-night you must both dine with me at
+La Rue's." He saluted his superior officer. "Some petrol, sir," he
+said. "And I am ready." To Marie he added: "The car will be at the
+steps in five minutes." He turned and left them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The thoughts of Marie, snatching at an excuse for delay, raced madly.
+The danger of meeting the Count d'Aurillac, her supposed husband, did
+not alarm her. The Grand Hotel has many exits, and, even before they
+reached it, for leaving the car she could invent an excuse that the
+gallant Thierry would not suspect. But what now concerned her was how,
+before she was whisked away to Paris, she could convey to Anfossi the
+information she had gathered from Thierry. First, of a woman overcome
+with delight at being reunited with her husband she gave an excellent
+imitation; then she exclaimed in distress: "But my aunt, Madame Benet!"
+she cried. "I cannot leave her!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"The Sisters of St. Francis," said the adjutant, "arrive within an hour
+to nurse the wounded. They will care also for your aunt."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie concealed her chagrin. "Then I will at once prepare to go," she
+said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The adjutant handed her a slip of paper. "Your laissez-passer to
+Paris," he said. "You leave in five minutes, madame!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As temporary hostess of the chateau Marie was free to visit any part of
+it, and as she passed her door a signal from Madame Benet told her that
+Anfossi was on the fourth floor, that he was at work, and that the
+coast was clear. Softly, in the felt slippers she always wore, as she
+explained, in order not to disturb the wounded, she mounted the
+staircase. In her hand she carried the housekeeper's keys, and as an
+excuse it was her plan to return with an armful of linen for the
+arriving Sisters. But Marie never reached the top of the stairs. When
+her eyes rose to the level of the fourth floor she came to a sudden
+halt. At what she saw terror gripped her, bound her hand and foot, and
+turned her blood to ice.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At her post for an instant Madame Benet had slept, and an officer of
+the staff, led by curiosity, chance, or suspicion, had, unobserved and
+unannounced, mounted to the fourth floor. When Marie saw him he was in
+front of the room that held the wireless. His back was toward her, but
+she saw that he was holding the door to the room ajar, that his eye was
+pressed to the opening, and that through it he had pushed the muzzle of
+his automatic. What would be the fate of Anfossi Marie knew. Nor did
+she for an instant consider it. Her thoughts were of her own safety;
+that she might live.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Not that she might still serve the Wilhelmstrasse, the Kaiser, or the
+Fatherland; but that she might live. In a moment Anfossi would be
+denounced, the chateau would ring with the alarm, and, though she knew
+Anfossi would not betray her, by others she might be accused. To avert
+suspicion from herself she saw only one way open. She must be the
+first to denounce Anfossi.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Like a deer, she leaped down the marble stairs and, in a panic she had
+no need to assume, burst into the presence of the staff.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gentlemen!" she gasped, "my servant&mdash;the chauffeur&mdash;Briand is a spy!
+There is a German wireless in the chateau. He is using it! I have seen
+him." With exclamations, the officers rose to their feet. General
+Andre alone remained seated. General Andre was a veteran of many
+Colonial wars: Cochin-China, Algiers, Morocco. The great war, when it
+came, found him on duty in the Intelligence Department. His aquiline
+nose, bristling white eyebrows, and flashing, restless eyes gave him
+his nickname of l'Aigle.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In amazement, the flashing eyes were now turned upon Marie. He glared
+at her as though he thought she suddenly had flown mad.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"A German wireless!" he protested. "It is impossible!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was on the fourth floor," panted Marie, "collecting linen for the
+Sisters. In the room next to the linen-closet I heard a strange
+buzzing sound. I opened the door softly. I saw Briand with his back
+to me seated by an instrument. There were receivers clamped to his
+ears! My God! The disgrace! The disgrace to my husband and to me, who
+vouched for him to you!" Apparently in an agony of remorse, the
+fingers of the woman laced and interlaced. "I cannot forgive myself!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The officers moved toward the door, but General Andre halted them.
+Still in a tone of incredulity, he demanded: "When did you see this?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Marie knew the question was coming, knew she must explain how she saw
+Briand, and yet did not see the staff officer who, with his prisoner,
+might now at any instant appear. She must make it plain she had
+discovered the spy and left the upper part of the house before the
+officer had visited it. When that was she could not know, but the
+chance was that he had preceded her by only a few minutes.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"When did you see this?" repeated the general.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"But just now," cried Marie; "not ten minutes since."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why did you not come to me at once?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was afraid," replied Marie. "If I moved I was afraid he might hear
+me, and he, knowing I would expose him, would kill me-and so escape
+you!" There was an eager whisper of approval. For silence, General
+Andre slapped his hand upon the table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Then," continued Marie, "I understood with the receivers on his ears
+he could not have heard me open the door, nor could he hear me leave,
+and I ran to my aunt. The thought that we had harbored such an animal
+sickened me, and I was weak enough to feel faint. But only for an
+instant. Then I came here." She moved swiftly to the door. "Let me
+show you the room," she begged; "you can take him in the act." Her
+eyes, wild with the excitement of the chase, swept the circle. "Will
+you come?" she begged.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Unconscious of the crisis he interrupted, the orderly on duty opened
+the door.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Captain Thierry's compliments," he recited mechanically, "and is he to
+delay longer for Madame d'Aurillac?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With a sharp gesture General Andre waved Marie toward the door. Without
+rising, he inclined his head. "Adieu, madame," he said. "We act at
+once upon your information. I thank you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As she crossed from the hall to the terrace, the ears of the spy were
+assaulted by a sudden tumult of voices. They were raised in threats
+and curses. Looking back, she saw Anfossi descending the stairs. His
+hands were held above his head; behind him, with his automatic, the
+staff officer she had surprised on the fourth floor was driving him
+forward. Above the clinched fists of the soldiers that ran to meet
+him, the eyes of Anfossi were turned toward her. His face was
+expressionless. His eyes neither accused nor reproached. And with the
+joy of one who has looked upon and then escaped the guillotine, Marie
+ran down the steps to the waiting automobile. With a pretty cry of
+pleasure she leaped into the seat beside Thierry. Gayly she threw out
+her arms. "To Paris!" she commanded. The handsome eyes of Thierry,
+eloquent with admiration, looked back into hers. He stooped, threw in
+the clutch, and the great gray car, with the machine gun and its crew
+of privates guarding the rear, plunged through the park.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To Paris!" echoed Thierry.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In the order in which Marie had last seen them, Anfossi and the staff
+officer entered the room of General Andre, and upon the soldiers in the
+hall the door was shut. The face of the staff officer was grave, but
+his voice could not conceal his elation.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"My general," he reported, "I found this man in the act of giving
+information to the enemy. There is a wireless-"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+General Andre rose slowly. He looked neither at the officer nor at his
+prisoner. With frowning eyes he stared down at the maps upon his table.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I know," he interrupted. "Some one has already told me." He paused,
+and then, as though recalling his manners, but still without raising
+his eyes, he added: "You have done well, sir."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In silence the officers of the staff stood motionless. With surprise
+they noted that, as yet, neither in anger nor curiosity had General
+Andre glanced at the prisoner. But of the presence of the general the
+spy was most acutely conscious. He stood erect, his arms still raised,
+but his body strained forward, and on the averted eyes of the general
+his own were fixed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+In an agony of supplication they asked a question.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At last, as though against his wish, toward the spy the general turned
+his head, and their eyes met. And still General Andre was silent.
+Then the arms of the spy, like those of a runner who has finished his
+race and breasts the tape exhausted, fell to his sides. In a voice low
+and vibrant he spoke his question.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It has been so long, sir," he pleaded. "May I not come home?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+General Andre turned to the astonished group surrounding him. His
+voice was hushed like that of one who speaks across an open grave.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Gentlemen," he began, "my children," he added. "A German spy, a
+woman, involved in a scandal your brother in arms, Henri Ravignac. His
+honor, he thought, was concerned, and without honor he refused to live.
+To prove him guiltless his younger brother Charles asked leave to seek
+out the woman who had betrayed Henri, and by us was detailed on secret
+service. He gave up home, family, friends. He lived in exile, in
+poverty, at all times in danger of a swift and ignoble death. In the
+War Office we know him as one who has given to his country services she
+cannot hope to reward. For she cannot return to him the years he has
+lost. She cannot return to him his brother. But she can and will
+clear the name of Henri Ravignac, and upon his brother Charles bestow
+promotion and honors."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The general turned and embraced the spy. "My children," he said,
+"welcome your brother. He has come home."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Before the car had reached the fortifications, Marie Gessler had
+arranged her plan of escape. She had departed from the chateau without
+even a hand-bag, and she would say that before the shops closed she
+must make purchases.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Le Printemps lay in their way, and she asked that, when they reached
+it, for a moment she might alight. Captain Thierry readily gave
+permission.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+From the department store it would be most easy to disappear, and in
+anticipation Marie smiled covertly. Nor was the picture of Captain
+Thierry impatiently waiting outside unamusing.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But before Le Printemps was approached, the car turned sharply down a
+narrow street. On one side, along its entire length, ran a high gray
+wall, grim and forbidding. In it was a green gate studded with iron
+bolts. Before this the automobile drew suddenly to a halt. The crew of
+the armored car tumbled off the rear seat, and one of them beat upon
+the green gate. Marie felt a hand of ice clutch at her throat. But
+she controlled herself.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"And what is this?" she cried gayly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+At her side Captain Thierry was smiling down at her, but his smile was
+hateful.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It is the prison of St. Lazare," he said. "It is not becoming," he
+added sternly, "that the name of the Countess d'Aurillac should be made
+common as the Paris road!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Fighting for her life, Marie thrust herself against him; her arm that
+throughout the journey had rested on the back of the driving-seat
+caressed his shoulders; her lips and the violet eyes were close to his.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Why should you care?" she whispered fiercely. "You have me! Let the
+Count d'Aurillac look after the honor of his wife himself."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The charming Thierry laughed at her mockingly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He means to," he said. "I am the Count d'Aurillac!"
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+<A NAME="deserter"></A>
+<H2 ALIGN="center">
+THE DESERTER
+</H2>
+
+<BR>
+
+<P>
+In Salonika, the American consul, the Standard Oil man, and the war
+correspondents formed the American colony. The correspondents were
+waiting to go to the front. Incidentally, as we waited, the front was
+coming rapidly toward us. There was "Uncle" Jim, the veteran of many
+wars, and of all the correspondents, in experience the oldest and in
+spirit the youngest, and there was the Kid, and the Artist. The Kid
+jeered at us, and proudly described himself as the only Boy Reporter
+who jumped from a City Hall assignment to cover a European War. "I
+don't know strategy," he would boast; "neither does the Man at Home.
+He wants 'human interest' stuff, and I give him what he wants. I write
+exclusively for the subway guard and the farmers in the wheat belt.
+When you fellows write about the 'Situation,' they don't understand it.
+Neither do you. Neither does Venizelos or the King. I don't
+understand it myself. So, I write my people heart-to-heart talks about
+refugees and wounded, and what kind of ploughs the Servian peasants
+use, and that St. Paul wrote his letters to the Thessalonians from the
+same hotel where I write mine; and I tell 'em to pronounce Salonika
+'eeka,' and not put the accent on the 'on.' This morning at the
+refugee camp I found all the little Servians of the Frothingham unit in
+American Boy Scout uniforms. That's my meat. That's 'home week'
+stuff. You fellows write for the editorial page; and nobody reads it.
+I write for the man that turns first to Mutt and Jeff, and then looks
+to see where they are running the new Charlie Chaplin release. When
+that man has to choose between 'our military correspondent' and the
+City Hall Reporter, he chooses me!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The third man was John, "Our Special Artist." John could write a news
+story, too, but it was the cartoons that had made him famous. They
+were not comic page, but front page cartoons, and before making up
+their minds what they thought, people waited to see what their Artist
+thought. So, it was fortunate his thoughts were as brave and clean as
+they were clever. He was the original Little Brother to the Poor. He
+was always giving away money. When we caught him, he would prevaricate.
+He would say the man was a college chum, that he had borrowed the money
+from him, and that this was the first chance he had had to pay it back.
+The Kid suggested it was strange that so many of his college chums
+should at the same moment turn up, dead broke, in Salonika, and that
+half of them should be women.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+John smiled disarmingly. "It was a large college," he explained, "and
+coeducational." There were other Americans; Red Cross doctors and
+nurses just escaped through the snow from the Bulgars, and hyphenated
+Americans who said they had taken out their first papers. They thought
+hyphenated citizens were so popular with us, that we would pay their
+passage to New York. In Salonika they were transients. They had no
+local standing. They had no local lying-down place, either, or place
+to eat, or to wash, although they did not look as though that worried
+them, or place to change their clothes. Or clothes to change. It was
+because we had clothes to change, and a hotel bedroom, instead of a
+bench in a cafe, that we were ranked as residents and from the Greek
+police held a "permission to sojourn." Our American colony was a very
+close corporation. We were only six Americans against 300,000 British,
+French, Greek, and Servian soldiers, and 120,000 civilian Turks,
+Spanish Jews, Armenians, Persians, Egyptians, Albanians, and Arabs, and
+some twenty more other races that are not listed. We had arrived in
+Salonika before the rush, and at the Hotel Hermes on the water-front
+had secured a vast room. The edge of the stone quay was not forty feet
+from us, the only landing steps directly opposite our balcony.
+Everybody who arrived on the Greek passenger boats from Naples or the
+Piraeus, or who had shore leave from a man-of-war, transport, or
+hospital ship, was raked by our cameras. There were four windows&mdash;one
+for each of us and his work table. It was not easy to work. What was
+the use? The pictures and stories outside the windows fascinated us,
+but when we sketched them or wrote about them, they only proved us
+inadequate. All day long the pinnaces, cutters, gigs, steam launches
+shoved and bumped against the stone steps, marines came ashore for the
+mail, stewards for fruit and fish, Red Cross nurses to shop, tiny
+midshipmen to visit the movies, and the sailors and officers of the
+Russian, French, British, Italian, and Greek war-ships to stretch their
+legs in the park of the Tour Blanche, or to cramp them under a cafe
+table. Sometimes the ambulances blocked the quay and the wounded and
+frost-bitten were lifted into the motor-boats, and sometimes a squad of
+marines lined the landing stage, and as a coffin under a French or
+English flag was borne up the stone steps stood at salute. So crowded
+was the harbor that the oars of the boatmen interlocked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Close to the stone quay, stretched along the three-mile circle, were
+the fishing smacks, beyond them, so near that the anchor chains fouled,
+were the passenger ships with gigantic Greek flags painted on their
+sides, and beyond them transports from Marseilles, Malta, and Suvla
+Bay, black colliers, white hospital ships, burning green electric
+lights, red-bellied tramps and freighters, and, hemming them in, the
+grim, mouse-colored destroyers, submarines, cruisers, dreadnaughts. At
+times, like a wall, the cold fog rose between us and the harbor, and
+again the curtain would suddenly be ripped asunder, and the sun would
+flash on the brass work of the fleet, on the white wings of the
+aeroplanes, on the snow-draped shoulders of Mount Olympus. We often
+speculated as to how in the early days the gods and goddesses, dressed
+as they were, or as they were not, survived the snows of Mount Olympus.
+Or was it only their resort for the summer?
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It got about that we had a vast room to ourselves, where one might
+obtain a drink, or a sofa for the night, or even money to cable for
+money. So, we had many strange visitors, some half starved, half
+frozen, with terrible tales of the Albanian trail, of the Austrian
+prisoners fallen by the wayside, of the mountain passes heaped with
+dead, of the doctors and nurses wading waist-high in snow-drifts and
+for food killing the ponies. Some of our visitors wanted to get their
+names in the American papers so that the folks at home would know they
+were still alive, others wanted us to keep their names out of the
+papers, hoping the police would think them dead; another, convinced it
+was of pressing news value, desired us to advertise the fact that he
+had invented a poisonous gas for use in the trenches. With difficulty
+we prevented him from casting it adrift in our room. Or, he had for
+sale a second-hand motor-cycle, or he would accept a position as
+barkeeper, or for five francs would sell a state secret that, once made
+public, in a month would end the war. It seemed cheap at the price.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Each of us had his "scouts" to bring him the bazaar rumor, the Turkish
+bath rumor, the cafe rumor. Some of our scouts journeyed as far afield
+as Monastir and Doiran, returning to drip snow on the floor, and to
+tell us tales, one-half of which we refused to believe, and the other
+half the censor refused to pass. With each other's visitors it was
+etiquette not to interfere. It would have been like tapping a private
+wire. When we found John sketching a giant stranger in a cap and coat
+of wolf skin we did not seek to know if he were an Albanian brigand, or
+a Servian prince incognito, and when a dark Levantine sat close to the
+Kid, whispering, and the Kid banged on his typewriter, we did not
+listen.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+So, when I came in one afternoon and found a strange American youth
+writing at John's table, and no one introduced us, I took it for
+granted he had sold the Artist an "exclusive" story, and asked no
+questions. But I could not help hearing what they said. Even though I
+tried to drown their voices by beating on the Kid's typewriter. I was
+taking my third lesson, and I had printed, "I Amm 5w writjng This,
+5wjth my own lilly w?ite handS," when I heard the Kid saying:
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can beat the game this way. Let John buy you a ticket to the
+Piraeus. If you go from one Greek port to another you don't need a
+vise. But, if you book from here to Italy, you must get a permit from
+the Italian consul, and our consul, and the police. The plot is to get
+out of the war zone, isn't it? Well, then, my dope is to get out quick,
+and map the rest of your trip when you're safe in Athens."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was no business of mine, but I had to look up. The stranger was now
+pacing the floor. I noticed that while his face was almost black with
+tan, his upper lip was quite white. I noticed also that he had his
+hands in the pockets of one of John's blue serge suits, and that the
+pink silk shirt he wore was one that once had belonged to the Kid.
+Except for the pink shirt, in the appearance of the young man there was
+nothing unusual. He was of a familiar type. He looked like a young
+business man from our Middle West, matter-of-fact and unimaginative,
+but capable and self-reliant. If he had had a fountain pen in his
+upper waistcoat pocket, I would have guessed he was an insurance agent,
+or the publicity man for a new automobile. John picked up his hat, and
+said, "That's good advice. Give me your steamer ticket, Fred, and I'll
+have them change it." He went out; but he did not ask Fred to go with
+him.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Uncle Jim rose, and murmured something about the Cafe Roma, and tea.
+But neither did he invite Fred to go with him. Instead, he told him to
+make himself at home, and if he wanted anything the waiter would bring
+it from the cafe downstairs. Then the Kid, as though he also was
+uncomfortable at being left alone with us, hurried to the door. "Going
+to get you a suit-case," he explained. "Back in five minutes."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The stranger made no answer. Probably he did not hear him. Not a
+hundred feet from our windows three Greek steamers were huddled
+together, and the eyes of the American were fixed on them. The one for
+which John had gone to buy him a new ticket lay nearest. She was to
+sail in two hours. Impatiently, in short quick steps, the stranger
+paced the length of the room, but when he turned and so could see the
+harbor, he walked slowly, devouring it with his eyes. For some time,
+in silence, he repeated this manoeuvre; and then the complaints of the
+typewriter disturbed him. He halted and observed my struggles. Under
+his scornful eye, in my embarrassment I frequently hit the right
+letter. "You a newspaper man, too?" he asked. I boasted I was, but
+begged not to be judged by my typewriting.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I got some great stories to write when I get back to God's country,"
+he announced. "I was a reporter for two years in Kansas City before
+the war, and now I'm going back to lecture and write. I got enough
+material to keep me at work for five years. All kinds of
+stuff&mdash;specials, fiction, stories, personal experiences, maybe a novel."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I regarded him with envy. For the correspondents in the greatest of
+all wars the pickings had been meagre. "You are to be congratulated,"
+I said. He brushed aside my congratulations. "For what?" he demanded.
+"I didn't go after the stories; they came to me. The things I saw I
+had to see. Couldn't get away from them. I've been with the British,
+serving in the R. A. M. C. Been hospital steward, stretcher bearer,
+ambulance driver. I've been sixteen months at the front, and all the
+time on the firing-line. I was in the retreat from Mons, with French
+on the Marne, at Ypres, all through the winter fighting along the
+Canal, on the Gallipoli Peninsula, and, just lately, in Servia. I've
+seen more of this war than any soldier. Because, sometimes, they give
+the soldier a rest; they never give the medical corps a rest. The only
+rest I got was when I was wounded."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He seemed no worse for his wounds, so again I tendered congratulations.
+This time he accepted them. The recollection of the things he had
+seen, things incredible, terrible, unique in human experience, had
+stirred him. He talked on, not boastfully, but in a tone, rather, of
+awe and disbelief, as though assuring himself that it was really he to
+whom such things had happened.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't believe there's any kind of fighting I haven't seen," he
+declared; "hand-to-hand fighting with bayonets, grenades, gun butts.
+I've seen 'em on their knees in the mud choking each other, beating
+each other with their bare fists. I've seen every kind of airship,
+bomb, shell, poison gas, every kind of wound. Seen whole villages
+turned into a brickyard in twenty minutes; in Servia seen bodies of
+women frozen to death, bodies of babies starved to death, seen men in
+Belgium swinging from trees; along the Yzer for three months I saw the
+bodies of men I'd known sticking out of the mud, or hung up on the barb
+wire, with the crows picking them.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I've seen some of the nerviest stunts that ever were pulled off in
+history. I've seen real heroes. Time and time again I've seen a man
+throw away his life for his officer, or for a chap he didn't know, just
+as though it was a cigarette butt. I've seen the women nurses of our
+corps steer a car into a village and yank out a wounded man while
+shells were breaking under the wheels and the houses were pitching into
+the streets." He stopped and laughed consciously.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Understand," he warned me, "I'm not talking about myself, only of
+things I've seen. The things I'm going to put in my book. It ought to
+be a pretty good book-what?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+My envy had been washed clean in admiration.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It will make a wonderful book," I agreed. "Are you going to syndicate
+it first?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Young Mr. Hamlin frowned importantly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I was thinking," he said, "of asking John for letters to the magazine
+editors. So, they'll know I'm not faking, that I've really been
+through it all. Letters from John would help a lot." Then he asked
+anxiously: "They would, wouldn't they?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I reassured him. Remembering the Kid's gibes at John and his numerous
+dependents, I said: "You another college chum of John's?" The young man
+answered my question quite seriously. "No," he said; "John graduated
+before I entered; but we belong to the same fraternity. It was the
+luckiest chance in the world my finding him here. There was a
+month-old copy of the Balkan News blowing around camp, and his name was
+in the list of arrivals. The moment I found he was in Salonika, I
+asked for twelve hours leave, and came down in an ambulance. I made
+straight for John; gave him the grip, and put it up to him to help me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I don't understand," I said. "I thought you were sailing on the
+Adriaticus?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man was again pacing the floor. He halted and faced the
+harbor.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You bet I'm sailing on the Adriaticus," he said. He looked out at
+that vessel, at the Blue Peter flying from her foremast, and grinned.
+"In just two hours!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+It was stupid of me, but I still was unenlightened. "But your twelve
+hours' leave?" I asked.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The young man laughed. "They can take my twelve hours' leave," he said
+deliberately, "and feed it to the chickens. I'm beating it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What d'you mean, you're beating it?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"What do you suppose I mean?" he demanded. "What do you suppose I'm
+doing out of uniform, what do you suppose I'm lying low in the room
+for? So's I won't catch cold?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If you're leaving the army without a discharge, and without
+permission," I said, "I suppose you know it's desertion."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hamlin laughed easily. "It's not my army," he said. "I'm an
+American."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's your desertion," I suggested.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+The door opened and closed noiselessly, and Billy, entering, placed a
+new travelling bag on the floor. He must have heard my last words, for
+he looked inquiringly at each of us. But he did not speak and, walking
+to the window, stood with his hands in his pockets, staring out at the
+harbor. His presence seemed to encourage the young man. "Who knows
+I'm deserting?" he demanded. "No one's ever seen me in Salonika
+before, and in these 'cits' I can get on board all right. And then
+they can't touch me. What do the folks at home care how I left the
+British army? They'll be so darned glad to get me back alive that they
+won't ask if I walked out or was kicked out. I should worry!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It's none of my business," I began, but I was interrupted. In his
+restless pacings the young man turned quickly.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"As you say," he remarked icily, "it is none of your business. It's
+none of your business whether I get shot as a deserter, or go home,
+or&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can go to the devil for all I care," I assured him. "I wasn't
+considering you at all. I was only sorry that I'll never be able to
+read your book."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+For a moment Mr. Hamlin remained silent, then he burst forth with a
+jeer.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"No British firing squad," he boasted, "will ever stand me up."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Maybe not," I agreed, "but you will never write that book."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Again there was silence, and this time it was broken by the Kid. He
+turned from the window and looked toward Hamlin. "That's right!" he
+said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He sat down on the edge of the table, and at the deserter pointed his
+forefinger.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Son," he said, "this war is some war. It's the biggest war in
+history, and folks will be talking about nothing else for the next
+ninety years; folks that never were nearer it than Bay City, Mich. But
+you won't talk about it. And you've been all through it. You've been
+to hell and back again. Compared with what you know about hell, Dante
+is in the same class with Dr. Cook. But you won't be able to talk
+about this war, or lecture, or write a book about it."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I won't?" demanded Hamlin. "And why won't I?"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Because of what you're doing now," said Billy. "Because you're
+queering yourself. Now, you've got everything." The Kid was very much
+in earnest. His tone was intimate, kind, and friendly. "You've seen
+everything, done everything. We'd give our eye-teeth to see what
+you've seen, and to write the things you can write. You've got a
+record now that'll last you until you're dead, and your grandchildren
+are dead-and then some. When you talk the table will have to sit up
+and listen. You can say 'I was there.' 'I was in it.' 'I saw.' 'I
+know.' When this war is over you'll have everything out of it that's
+worth getting-all the experiences, all the inside knowledge, all the
+'nosebag' news; you'll have wounds, honors, medals, money, reputation.
+And you're throwing all that away!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted savagely.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"To hell with their medals," he said. "They can take their medals and
+hang 'em on Christmas trees. I don't owe the British army anything.
+It owes me. I've done my bit. I've earned what I've got, and there's
+no one can take it away from me."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can," said the Kid. Before Hamlin could reply the door opened and
+John came in, followed by Uncle Jim. The older man was looking very
+grave, and John very unhappy. Hamlin turned quickly to John.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I thought these men were friends of yours," he began, "and Americans.
+They're fine Americans. They're as full of human kindness and red
+blood as a kippered herring!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+John looked inquiringly at the Kid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"He wants to hang himself," explained Billy, "and because we tried to
+cut him down, he's sore."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"They talked to me," protested Hamlin, "as though I was a yellow dog.
+As though I was a quitter. I'm no quitter! But, if I'm ready to quit,
+who's got a better right? I'm not an Englishman, but there are several
+million Englishmen haven't done as much for England in this was as I
+have. What do you fellows know about it? You write about it, about the
+'brave lads in the trenches'; but what do you know about the trenches?
+What you've seen from automobiles. That's all. That's where you get
+off! I've lived in the trenches for fifteen months, froze in 'em,
+starved in 'em, risked my life in 'em, and I've saved other lives, too,
+by hauling men out of the trenches. And that's no airy persiflage,
+either!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He ran to the wardrobe where John's clothes hung, and from the bottom
+of it dragged a khaki uniform. It was still so caked with mud and snow
+that when he flung it on the floor it splashed like a wet bathing suit.
+"How would you like to wear one of those?" he Demanded. "Stinking with
+lice and sweat and blood; the blood of other men, the men you've helped
+off the field, and your own blood."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As though committing hara-kiri, he slashed his hand across his stomach,
+and then drew it up from his waist to his chin. "I'm scraped with
+shrapnel from there to there," said Mr. Hamlin. "And another time I got
+a ball in the shoulder. That would have been a 'blighty' for a
+fighting man&mdash;they're always giving them leave&mdash;but all I got was six
+weeks at Havre in hospital. Then it was the Dardanelles, and sunstroke
+and sand; sleeping in sand, eating sand, sand in your boots, sand in
+your teeth; hiding in holes in the sand like a dirty prairie dog. And
+then, 'Off to Servia!' And the next act opens in the snow and the mud!
+Cold? God, how cold it was! And most of us in sun helmets."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+As though the cold still gnawed at his bones, he shivered.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"It isn't the danger," he protested. "It isn't that I'm getting away
+from. To hell with the danger! It's just the plain discomfort of it!
+It's the never being your own master, never being clean, never being
+warm." Again he shivered and rubbed one hand against the other.
+"There were no bridges over the streams," he went on, "and we had to
+break the ice and wade in, and then sleep in the open with the khaki
+frozen to us. There was no firewood; not enough to warm a pot of tea.
+There were no wounded; all our casualties were frost bite and
+Pneumonia. When we take them out of the blankets their toes fall off.
+We've been in camp for a month now near Doiran, and it's worse there
+than on the march. It's a frozen swamp. You can't sleep for the cold;
+can't eat; the only ration we get is bully beef, and our insides are
+frozen so damn tight we can't digest it. The cold gets into your
+blood, gets into your brains. It won't let you think; or else, you
+think crazy things. It makes you afraid." He shook himself like a man
+coming out of a bad dream.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"So, I'm through," he said. In turn he scowled at each of us, as
+though defying us to contradict him. "That's why I'm quitting," he
+added. "Because I've done my bit. Because I'm damn well fed up on
+it." He kicked viciously at the water-logged uniform on the floor.
+"Any one who wants my job can have it!" He walked to the window,
+turned his back on us, and fixed his eyes hungrily on the Adriaticus.
+There was a long pause. For guidance we looked at John, but he was
+staring down at the desk blotter, scratching on it marks that he did
+not see.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Finally, where angels feared to tread, the Kid rushed in. "That's
+certainly a hard luck story," he said; "but," he added cheerfully,
+"it's nothing to the hard luck you'll strike when you can't tell why
+you left the army." Hamlin turned with an exclamation, but Billy held
+up his hand. "Now wait," he begged, "we haven't time to get mussy. At
+six o'clock your leave is up, and the troop train starts back to camp,
+and&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted sharply. "And the Adriaticus starts at five."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Billy did not heed him. "You've got two hours to change your mind," he
+said. "That's better than being sorry you didn't the rest of your
+life."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hamlin threw back his head and laughed. It was a most unpleasant
+laugh. "You're a fine body of men," he jeered. "America must be proud
+of you!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"If we weren't Americans," explained Billy patiently, "we wouldn't give
+a damn whether you deserted or not. You're drowning and you don't know
+it, and we're throwing you a rope. Try to see it that way. We'll cut
+out the fact that you took an oath, and that you're breaking it.
+That's up to you. We'll get down to results. When you reach home, if
+you can't tell why you left the army, the folks will darned soon guess.
+And that will queer everything you've done. When you come to sell your
+stuff, it will queer you with the editors, queer you with the
+publishers. If they know you broke your word to the British army, how
+can they know you're keeping faith with them? How can they believe
+anything you tell them? Every 'story' you write, every statement of
+yours will make a noise like a fake. You won't come into court with
+clean hands. You'll be licked before you start.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Of course, you're for the Allies. Well, all the Germans at home will
+fear that; and when you want to lecture on your 'Fifteen Months at the
+British Front,' they'll look up your record; and what will they do to
+you? This is what they'll do to you. When you've shown 'em your moving
+pictures and say, 'Does any gentleman in the audience want to ask a
+question?' a German agent will get up and say, 'Yes, I want to ask a
+question. Is it true that you deserted from the British army, and that
+if you return to it, they will shoot you?'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+I was scared. I expected the lean and muscular Mr. Hamlin to fall on
+Billy, and fling him where he had flung the soggy uniform. But instead
+he remained motionless, his arms pressed across his chest. His eyes,
+filled with anger and distress, returned to the Adriaticus.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I'm sorry," muttered the Kid.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+John rose and motioned to the door, and guiltily and only too gladly we
+escaped. John followed us into the hall. "Let me talk to him," he
+whispered. "The boat sails in an hour. Please don't come back until
+she's gone."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We went to the moving picture palace next door, but I doubt if the
+thoughts of any of us were on the pictures. For after an hour, when
+from across the quay there came the long-drawn warning of a steamer's
+whistle, we nudged each other and rose and went out.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Not a hundred yards from us the propeller blades of the Adriaticus were
+slowly churning, and the rowboats were falling away from her sides.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good-bye, Mr. Hamlin," called Billy. "You had everything and you
+chucked it away. I can spell your finish. It's 'check' for yours."
+</P>
+
+<P>
+But when we entered our room, in the centre of it, under the bunch of
+electric lights, stood the deserter. He wore the water-logged uniform.
+The sun helmet was on his head.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Good man!" shouted Billy.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He advanced, eagerly holding out his hand.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Mr. Hamlin brushed past him. At the door he turned and glared at us,
+even at John. He was not a good loser. "I hope you're satisfied," he
+snarled. He pointed at the four beds in a row. I felt guiltily
+conscious of them. At the moment they appeared so unnecessarily clean
+and warm and soft. The silk coverlets at the foot of each struck me as
+being disgracefully effeminate. They made me ashamed.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"I hope," said Mr. Hamlin, speaking slowly and picking his words, "when
+you turn into those beds to-night you'll think of me in the mud. I
+hope when you're having your five-course dinner and your champagne
+you'll remember my bully beef. I hope when a shell or Mr. Pneumonia
+gets me, you'll write a nice little sob story about the 'brave lads in
+the trenches.'"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+He looked at us, standing like schoolboys, sheepish, embarrassed, and
+silent, and then threw open the door. "I hope," he added, "you all
+choke!"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+With an unconvincing imitation of the college chum manner, John cleared
+his throat and said: "Don't forget, Fred, if there's anything I can
+do&mdash;"
+</P>
+
+<P>
+Hamlin stood in the doorway smiling at us.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"There's something you can all do," he said.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"Yes?" asked John heartily.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+"You can all go to hell!" said Mr. Hamlin.
+</P>
+
+<P>
+We heard the door slam, and his hobnailed boots pounding down the
+stairs. No one spoke. Instead, in unhappy silence, we stood staring
+at the floor. Where the uniform had lain was a pool of mud and melted
+snow and the darker stains of stale blood.
+</P>
+
+<BR><BR><BR><BR>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Road, by Richard Harding Davis
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Road, by Richard Harding Davis
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Lost Road
+
+Author: Richard Harding Davis
+
+Posting Date: March 21, 2009 [EBook #2283]
+Release Date: August, 2000
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LOST ROAD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Marleen Hugo. HTML version by Al Haines.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+
+
+THE NOVELS AND STORIES OF
+
+RICHARD HARDING DAVIS
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+MY WIFE
+
+
+
+
+Contains:
+
+ THE LOST ROAD
+ THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+ EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+ THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+ THE LONG ARM
+ THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+ THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+ THE BOY SCOUT
+ SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE
+ THE DESERTER
+
+
+
+
+AN INTRODUCTION BY
+
+JOHN T. McCUTCHEON
+
+
+WITH DAVIS IN VERA CRUZ, BRUSSELS, AND SALONIKA
+
+In common with many others who have been with Richard Harding Davis as
+correspondents, I find it difficult to realize that he has covered his
+last story and that he will not be seen again with the men who follow
+the war game, rushing to distant places upon which the spotlight of
+news interest suddenly centres.
+
+It seems a sort of bitter irony that he who had covered so many big
+events of world importance in the past twenty years should be abruptly
+torn away in the midst of the greatest event of them all, while the
+story is still unfinished and its outcome undetermined. If there is a
+compensating thought, it lies in the reflection that he had a life of
+almost unparalleled fulness, crowded to the brim, up to the last
+moment, with those experiences and achievements which he particularly
+aspired to have. He left while the tide was at its flood, and while he
+still held supreme his place as the best reporter in his country. He
+escaped the bitterness of seeing the ebb set in, when the youth to
+which he clung had slipped away, and when he would have to sit
+impatient in the audience, while younger men were in the thick of
+great, world-stirring dramas on the stage.
+
+This would have been a real tragedy in "Dick" Davis's case, for, while
+his body would have aged, it is doubtful if his spirit ever would have
+lost its youthful freshness or boyish enthusiasm.
+
+It was my privilege to see a good deal of Davis in the last two years.
+
+He arrived in Vera Cruz among the first of the sixty or seventy
+correspondents who flocked to that news centre when the situation was
+so full of sensational possibilities. It was a time when the American
+newspaper-reading public was eager for thrills, and the ingenuity and
+resourcefulness of the correspondents in Vera Cruz were tried to the
+uttermost to supply the demand.
+
+In the face of the fiercest competition it fell to Davis's lot to land
+the biggest story of those days of marking time.
+
+The story "broke" when it became known that Davis, Medill McCormick,
+and Frederick Palmer had gone through the Mexican lines in an effort to
+reach Mexico City. Davis and McCormick, with letters to the Brazilian
+and British ministers, got through and reached the capital on the
+strength of those letters, but Palmer, having only an American
+passport, was turned back.
+
+After an ominous silence which furnished American newspapers with a
+lively period of suspense, the two men returned safely with wonderful
+stories of their experiences while under arrest in the hands of the
+Mexican authorities. McCormick, in recently speaking of Davis at that
+time, said that, "as a correspondent in difficult and dangerous
+situations, he was incomparable--cheerful, ingenious, and
+undiscouraged. When the time came to choose between safety and leaving
+his companion he stuck by his fellow captive even though, as they both
+said, a firing-squad and a blank wall were by no means a remote
+possibility."
+
+This Mexico City adventure was a spectacular achievement which gave
+Davis and McCormick a distinction which no other correspondents of all
+the ambitious and able corps had managed to attain.
+
+Davis usually "hunted" alone. He depended entirely upon his own
+ingenuity and wonderful instinct for news situations. He had the
+energy and enthusiasm of a beginner, with the experience and training
+of a veteran. His interest in things remained as keen as though he had
+not been years at a game which often leaves a man jaded and blase. His
+acquaintanceship in the American army and navy was wide, and for this
+reason, as well as for the prestige which his fame and position as a
+national character gave him, he found it easy to establish valuable
+connections in the channels from which news emanates. And yet, in
+spite of the fact that he was "on his own" instead of having a working
+partnership with other men, he was generous in helping at times when he
+was able to do so.
+
+Davis was a conspicuous figure in Vera Cruz, as he inevitably had been
+in all such situations. Wherever he went, he was pointed out. His
+distinction of appearance, together with a distinction in dress, which,
+whether from habit or policy, was a valuable asset in his work, made
+him a marked man. He dressed and looked the "war correspondent," such
+a one as he would describe in one of his stories. He fulfilled the
+popular ideal of what a member of that fascinating profession should
+look like. His code of life and habits was as fixed as that of the
+Briton who takes his habits and customs and games and tea wherever he
+goes, no matter how benighted or remote the spot may be.
+
+He was just as loyal to his code as is the Briton. He carried his
+bath-tub, his immaculate linen, his evening clothes, his war
+equipment--in which he had the pride of a connoisseur--wherever he
+went, and, what is more, he had the courage to use the evening clothes
+at times when their use was conspicuous. He was the only man who wore
+a dinner coat in Vera Cruz, and each night, at his particular table in
+the crowded "Portales," at the Hotel Diligencia, he was to be seen, as
+fresh and clean as though he were in a New York or London restaurant.
+
+Each day he was up early to take the train out to the "gap," across
+which came arrivals from Mexico City. Sometimes a good "story" would
+come down, as when the long-heralded and long-expected arrival of
+Consul Silliman gave a first-page "feature" to all the American papers.
+
+In the afternoon he would play water polo over at the navy aviation
+camp, and always at a certain time of the day his "striker" would bring
+him his horse and for an hour or more he would ride out along the beach
+roads within the American lines. After the first few days it was
+difficult to extract real thrills from the Vera Cruz situation, but we
+used to ride out to El Tejar with the cavalry patrol and imagine that
+we might be fired on at some point in the long ride through unoccupied
+territory; or else go out to the "front," at Legarto, where a little
+American force occupied a sun-baked row of freight-cars, surrounded by
+malarial swamps. From the top of the railroad water-tank, we could
+look across to the Mexican outposts a mile or so away. It was not very
+exciting, and what thrills we got lay chiefly in our imagination.
+
+Before my acquaintanceship with Davis at Vera Cruz I had not known him
+well. Our trails didn't cross while I was in Japan in the
+Japanese-Russian War, and in the Transvaal I missed him by a few days,
+but in Vera Cruz I had many enjoyable opportunities of becoming well
+acquainted with him.
+
+The privilege was a pleasant one, for it served to dispel a
+preconceived and not an entirely favorable impression of his character.
+For years I had heard stories about Richard Harding Davis--stories
+which emphasized an egotism and self-assertiveness which, if they ever
+existed, had happily ceased to be obtrusive by the time I got to know
+him.
+
+He was a different Davis from the Davis whom I had expected to find;
+and I can imagine no more charming and delightful companion than he was
+in Vera Cruz. There was no evidence of those qualities which I feared
+to find, and his attitude was one of unfailing kindness,
+considerateness, and generosity.
+
+In the many talks I had with him, I was always struck by his evident
+devotion to a fixed code of personal conduct. In his writings he was
+the interpreter of chivalrous, well-bred youth, and his heroes were
+young, clean-thinking college men, heroic big-game hunters, war
+correspondents, and idealized men about town, who always did the noble
+thing, disdaining the unworthy in act or motive. It seemed to me that
+he was modelling his own life, perhaps unconsciously, after the favored
+types which his imagination had created for his stories. In a certain
+sense he was living a life of make-believe, wherein he was the hero of
+the story, and in which he was bound by his ideals always to act as he
+would have the hero of his story act. It was a quality which only one
+could have who had preserved a fresh youthfulness of outlook in spite
+of the hardening processes of maturity.
+
+His power of observation was extraordinarily keen, and he not only had
+the rare gift of sensing the vital elements of a situation, but also
+had, to an unrivalled degree, the ability to describe them vividly. I
+don't know how many of those men at Verz Cruz tried to describe the
+kaleidoscopic life of the city during the American occupation, but I
+know that Davis's story was far and away the most faithful and
+satisfying picture. The story was photographic, even to the sounds and
+smells.
+
+The last I saw of him in Vera Cruz was when, on the Utah, he steamed
+past the flagship Wyoming, upon which I was quartered, and started for
+New York. The Battenberg cup race had just been rowed, and the Utah
+and Florida crews had tied. As the Utah was sailing immediately after
+the race, there was no time in which to row off the tie. So it was
+decided that the names of both ships should be engraved on the cup, and
+that the Florida crew should defend the title against a challenging
+crew from the British Admiral Craddock's flagship.
+
+By the end of June, the public interest in Vera Cruz had waned, and the
+corps of correspondents dwindled until there were only a few left.
+
+Frederick Palmer and I went up to join Carranza and Villa, and on the
+26th of July we were in Monterey waiting to start with the triumphal
+march of Carranza's army toward Mexico City. There was no sign of
+serious trouble abroad. That night ominous telegrams came, and at ten
+o'clock on the following morning we were on a train headed for the
+States.
+
+Palmer and Davis caught the Lusitania, sailing August 4 from New York,
+and I followed on the Saint Paul, leaving three days later. On the 17th
+of August I reached Brussels, and it seemed the most natural thing in
+the world to find Davis already there. He was at the Palace Hotel,
+where a number of American and English correspondents were quartered.
+
+Things moved quickly. On the 19th Irvin Cobb, Will Irwin, Arno Dosch,
+and I were caught between the Belgian and German lines in Louvain; our
+retreat to Brussels was cut, and for three days, while the vast German
+army moved through the city, we were detained. Then, the army having
+passed, we were allowed to go back to the capital.
+
+In the meantime Davis was in Brussels. The Germans reached the
+outskirts of the city on the morning of the 20th, and the
+correspondents who had remained in Brussels were feverishly writing
+despatches describing the imminent fall of the city. One of them,
+Harry Hansen, of the Chicago Daily News, tells the following story,
+which I give in his words:
+
+"While we were writing," says Hansen, "Richard Harding Davis walked
+into the writing-room of the Palace Hotel with a bunch of manuscript in
+his hand. With an amused expression he surveyed the three
+correspondents filling white paper.
+
+"'I say, men,' said Davis, 'do you know when the next train leaves?'
+
+"'There is one at three o'clock,' said a correspondent, looking up.
+
+"'That looks like our only chance to get a story out,' said Davis.
+'Well, we'll trust to that.'
+
+"The story was the German invasion of Brussels, and the train mentioned
+was considered the forlorn hope of the correspondents to connect with
+the outside world--that is, every correspondent thought it to be the
+other man's hope. Secretly each had prepared to outwit the other, and
+secretly Davis had already sent his story to Ostend. He meant to
+emulate Archibald Forbes, who despatched a courier with his real
+manuscript, and next day publicly dropped a bulky package in the
+mail-bag.
+
+"Davis had sensed the news in the occupation of Brussels long before it
+happened. With dawn he went out to the Louvain road, where the German
+army stood, prepared to smash the capital if negotiations failed. His
+observant eye took in all the details. Before noon he had written a
+comprehensive sketch of the occupation, and when word was received that
+it was under way, he trusted his copy to an old Flemish woman, who
+spoke not a word of English, and saw her safely on board the train that
+pulled out under Belgian auspices for Ostend."
+
+With passes which the German commandant in Brussels gave us the
+correspondents immediately started out to see how far those passes
+would carry us. A number of us left on the afternoon of August 23 for
+Waterloo, where it was expected that the great clash between the German
+and the Anglo-French forces would occur. We had planned to be back the
+same evening, and went prepared only for an afternoon's drive in a
+couple of hired street carriages. It was seven weeks before we again
+saw Brussels.
+
+On the following day (August 24) Davis started for Mons. He wore the
+khaki uniform which he had worn in many campaigns. Across his breast
+was a narrow bar of silk ribbon indicating the campaigns in which he
+had served as a correspondent. He so much resembled a British officer
+that he was arrested as a British derelict and was informed that he
+would be shot at once.
+
+He escaped only by offering to walk to Brand Whitlock, in Brussels,
+reporting to each officer he met on the way. His plan was approved,
+and as a hostage on parole he appeared before the American minister,
+who quickly established his identity as an American of good standing,
+to the satisfaction of the Germans.
+
+In the following few months our trails were widely separated. I read
+of his arrest by German officers on the road to Mons; later I read the
+story of his departure from Brussels by train to Holland--a trip which
+carried him through Louvain while the town still was burning; and still
+later I read that he was with the few lucky men who were in Rheims
+during one of the early bombardments that damaged the cathedral. By
+amazing luck, combined with a natural news sense which drew him
+instinctively to critical places at the psychological moment, he had
+been a witness of the two most widely featured stories of the early
+weeks of the war.
+
+Arrested by the Germans in Belgium, and later by the French in France,
+he was convinced that the restrictions on correspondents were too great
+to permit of good work.
+
+So he left the European war zone with the widely quoted remark: "The
+day of the war correspondent is over."
+
+And yet I was not surprised when, one evening, late in November of last
+year, he suddenly walked into the room in Salonika where William G.
+Shepherd, of the United Press, "Jimmy Hare," the veteran war
+photographer, and I had established ourselves several weeks before.
+
+The hotel was jammed, and the city, with a normal capacity of about one
+hundred and seventy-five thousand, was struggling to accommodate at
+least a hundred thousand more. There was not a room to be had in any
+of the better hotels, and for several days we lodged Davis in our room,
+a vast chamber which formerly had been the main dining-room of the
+establishment, and which now was converted into a bedroom. There was
+room for a dozen men, if necessary, and whenever stranded Americans
+arrived and could find no hotel accommodations we simply rigged up
+emergency cots for their temporary use.
+
+The weather in Salonika at this time, late November, was penetratingly
+cold. In the mornings the steam coils struggled feebly to dispel the
+chill in the room.
+
+Early in the morning after Davis had arrived, we were aroused by the
+sound of violent splashing, accompanied by shuddering gasps, and we
+looked out from the snug warmth of our beds to see Davis standing in
+his portable bath-tub and drenching himself with ice-cold water. As an
+exhibition of courageous devotion to an established custom of life it
+was admirable, but I'm not sure that it was prudent.
+
+For some reason, perhaps a defective circulation or a weakened heart,
+his system failed to react from these cold-water baths. All through the
+days he complained of feeling chilled. He never seemed to get
+thoroughly warmed, and of us all he was the one who suffered most
+keenly from the cold. It was all the more surprising, for his
+appearance was always that of a man in the pink of athletic
+fitness--ruddy-faced, clear-eyed, and full of tireless energy.
+
+On one occasion we returned from the French front in Serbia to Salonika
+in a box car lighted only by candles, bitterly cold, and frightfully
+exhausting. We were seven hours in travelling fifty-five miles, and we
+arrived at our destination at three o'clock in the morning. Several of
+the men contracted desperate colds, which clung to them for weeks.
+Davis was chilled through, and said that of all the cold he had ever
+experienced that which swept across the Macedonian plain from the
+Balkan highlands was the most penetrating. Even his heavy clothing
+could not afford him adequate protection.
+
+When he was settled in his own room in our hotel he installed an
+oil-stove which burned beside him as he sat at his desk and wrote his
+stories. The room was like an oven, but even then he still complained
+of the cold.
+
+When he left he gave us the stove, and when we left, some time later,
+it was presented to one of our doctor friends out in a British
+hospital, where I'm sure it is doing its best to thaw the Balkan chill
+out of sick and wounded soldiers.
+
+Davis was always up early, and his energy and interest were as keen as
+a boy's. We had our meals together, sometimes in the crowded and
+rather smart Bastasini's, but more often in the maelstrom of humanity
+that nightly packed the Olympos Palace restaurant. Davis, Shepherd,
+Hare, and I, with sometimes Mr. and Mrs. John Bass, made up these
+parties, which, for a period of about two weeks or so, were the most
+enjoyable daily events of our lives.
+
+Under the glaring lights of the restaurant, and surrounded by British,
+French, Greek, and Serbian officers, German, Austrian, and Bulgarian
+civilians, with a sprinkling of American, English, and Scotch nurses
+and doctors, packed so solidly in the huge, high-ceilinged room that
+the waiters could barely pick their way among the tables, we hung for
+hours over our dinners, and left only when the landlord and his
+Austrian wife counted the day's receipts and paid the waiters at the
+end of the evening.
+
+One could not imagine a more charming and delightful companion than
+Davis during these days. While he always asserted that he could not
+make a speech, and was terrified at the thought of standing up at a
+banquet-table, yet, sitting at a dinner-table with a few friends who
+were only too eager to listen rather than to talk, his stories,
+covering personal experiences in all parts of the world, were intensely
+vivid, with that remarkable "holding" quality of description which
+characterizes his writings.
+
+He brought his own bread--a coarse, brown sort, which he preferred to
+the better white bread--and with it he ate great quantities of butter.
+As we sat down at the table his first demand was for "Mastika," a
+peculiar Greek drink distilled from mastic gum, and his second demand
+invariably was "Du beurre!" with the "r's" as silent as the stars; and
+if it failed to come at once the waiter was made to feel the enormity
+of his tardiness.
+
+The reminiscences ranged from his early newspaper days in Philadelphia,
+and skipping from Manchuria to Cuba and Central America, to his early
+Sun days under Arthur Brisbane; they ranged through an endless variety
+of personal experiences which very nearly covered the whole course of
+American history in the past twenty years.
+
+Perhaps to him it was pleasant to go over his remarkable adventures,
+but it could not have been half as pleasant as it was to hear them,
+told as they were with a keenness of description and brilliancy of
+humorous comment that made them gems of narrative.
+
+At times, in our work, we all tried our hands at describing the
+Salonika of those early days of the Allied occupation, for it was
+really what one widely travelled British officer called it--"the most
+amazingly interesting situation I've ever seen"---but Davis's
+description was far and away the best, just as his description of Vera
+Cruz was the best, and his wonderful story of the entry of the German
+army into Brussels was matchless as one of the great pieces of
+reporting in the present war.
+
+In thinking of Davis, I shall always remember him for the delightful
+qualities which he showed in Salonika. He was unfailingly considerate
+and thoughtful. Through his narratives one could see the pride which
+he took in the width and breadth of his personal relation to the great
+events of the past twenty years. His vast scope of experiences and
+equally wide acquaintanceship with the big figures of our time, were
+amazing, and it was equally amazing that one of such a rich and
+interesting history could tell his stories in such a simple way that
+the personal element was never obtrusive.
+
+When he left Salonika he endeavored to obtain permission from the
+British staff to visit Moudros, but, failing in this, he booked his
+passage on a crowded little Greek steamer, where the only obtainable
+accommodation was a lounge in the dining saloon. We gave him a farewell
+dinner, at which the American consul and his family, with all the other
+Americans then in Salonika, were present, and after the dinner we rowed
+out to his ship and saw him very uncomfortably installed for his voyage.
+
+He came down the sea ladder and waved his hand as we rowed away. That
+was the last I saw of Richard Harding Davis.
+
+JOHN T. MCCUTCHEON.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+
+
+During the war with Spain, Colton Lee came into the service as a
+volunteer. For a young man, he always had taken life almost too
+seriously, and when, after the campaign in Cuba, he elected to make
+soldiering his profession, the seriousness with which he attacked his
+new work surprised no one. Finding they had lost him forever, his
+former intimates were bored, but his colonel was enthusiastic, and the
+men of his troop not only loved, but respected him.
+
+From the start he determined in his new life women should have no
+part--a determination that puzzled no one so much as the women, for to
+Lee no woman, old or young, had found cause to be unfriendly. But he
+had read that the army is a jealous mistress who brooks no rival, that
+"red lips tarnish the scabbard steel," that "he travels the fastest who
+travels alone."
+
+So, when white hands beckoned and pretty eyes signalled, he did not
+look. For five years, until just before he sailed for his three years
+of duty in the Philippines, he succeeded not only in not looking, but
+in building up for himself such a fine reputation as a woman-hater that
+all women were crazy about him. Had he not been ordered to Agawamsett
+that fact would not have affected him. But at the Officers' School he
+had indulged in hard study rather than in hard riding, had overworked,
+had brought back his Cuban fever, and was in poor shape to face the
+tropics. So, for two months before the transport was to sail, they
+ordered him to Cape Cod to fill his lungs with the bracing air of a New
+England autumn.
+
+He selected Agawamsett, because, when at Harvard, it was there he had
+spent his summer vacations, and he knew he would find sailboats and
+tennis and, through the pine woods back of the little whaling village,
+many miles of untravelled roads. He promised himself that over these
+he would gallop an imaginary troop in route marches, would manoeuvre it
+against possible ambush, and, in combat patrols, ground scouts, and
+cossack outposts, charge with it "as foragers." But he did none of
+these things. For at Agawamsett he met Frances Gardner, and his
+experience with her was so disastrous that, in his determination to
+avoid all women, he was convinced he was right.
+
+When later he reached Manila he vowed no other woman would ever again
+find a place in his thoughts. No other woman did. Not because he had
+the strength to keep his vow, but because he so continually thought of
+Frances Gardner that no other woman had a chance.
+
+Miss Gardner was a remarkable girl. Her charm appealed to all kinds of
+men, and, unfortunately for Lee, several kinds of men appealed to her.
+Her fortune and her relations were bound up in the person of a rich
+aunt with whom she lived, and who, it was understood, some day would
+leave her all the money in the world. But, in spite of her charm,
+certainly in spite of the rich aunt, Lee, true to his determination,
+might not have noticed the girl had not she ridden so extremely well.
+
+It was to the captain of cavalry she first appealed. But even a
+cavalry captain, whose duty in life is to instruct sixty men in the art
+of taking the life of as many other men as possible, may turn his head
+in the direction of a good-looking girl. And when for weeks a man
+rides at the side of one through pine forests as dim and mysterious as
+the aisles of a great cathedral, when he guides her across the wet
+marshes when the sun is setting crimson in the pools and the wind blows
+salt from the sea, when he loses them both by moonlight in wood-roads
+where the hoofs of the horses sink silently into dusty pine needles, he
+thinks more frequently of the girl at his side than of the faithful
+troopers waiting for him in San Francisco. The girl at his side
+thought frequently of him.
+
+With the "surface indications" of a young man about to ask her to marry
+him she was painfully familiar; but this time the possibility was the
+reverse of painful. What she meant to do about it she did not know,
+but she did know that she was strangely happy. Between living on as
+the dependent of a somewhat exacting relative and becoming the full
+partner of this young stranger, who with men had proved himself so
+masterful, and who with her was so gentle, there seemed but little
+choice. But she did not as yet wish to make the choice. She preferred
+to believe she was not certain. She assured him that before his leave
+of absence was over she would tell him whether she would remain on duty
+with the querulous aunt, who had befriended her, or as his wife
+accompany him to the Philippines.
+
+It was not the answer he wanted; but in her happiness, which was
+evident to every one, he could not help but take hope. And in the
+questions she put to him of life in the tropics, of the life of the
+"officers' ladies," he saw that what was in her mind was a possible
+life with him, and he was content.
+
+She became to him a wonderful, glorious person, and each day she grew
+in loveliness. It had been five years of soldiering in Cuba, China,
+and on the Mexican border since he had talked to a woman with interest,
+and now in all she said, in all her thoughts and words and delights, he
+found fresher and stronger reasons for discarding his determination to
+remain wedded only to the United States Army. He did not need reasons.
+He was far too much in love to see in any word or act of hers anything
+that was not fine and beautiful.
+
+In their rides they had one day stumbled upon a long-lost and
+long-forgotten road through the woods, which she had claimed as their
+own by right of discovery, and, no matter to what point they set forth
+each day, they always returned by it. Their way through the woods
+stretched for miles. It was concealed in a forest of stunted oaks and
+black pines, with no sign of human habitation, save here and there a
+clearing now long neglected and alive only with goldenrod. Trunks of
+trees, moss-grown and crumbling beneath the touch of the ponies' hoofs,
+lay in their path, and above it the branches of a younger generation
+had clasped hands. At their approach squirrels raced for shelter,
+woodcock and partridge shot deeper into the network of vines and
+saplings, and the click of the steel as the ponies tossed their bits,
+and their own whispers, alone disturbed the silence.
+
+"It is an enchanted road," said the girl; "or maybe we are enchanted."
+
+"Not I," cried the young man loyally. "I was never so sane, never so
+sure, never so happy in knowing just what I wanted! If only you could
+be as sure!"
+
+One day she came to him in high excitement with a book of verse. "He
+has written a poem," she cried, "about our own woods, about our lost
+road! Listen" she commanded, and she read to him:
+
+"'They shut the road through the woods Seventy years ago. Weather and
+rain have undone it again, And now you would never know There was once
+a road through the woods Before they planted the trees. It is
+underneath the coppice and heath, And the thin anemones. Only the
+keeper sees That, where the ringdove broods, And the badgers roll at
+ease, There was once a road through the woods.
+
+"'Yet, if you enter the woods Of a summer evening late, When the night
+air cools on the trout-ringed pools Where the otter whistles his mate
+(They fear not men in the woods Because they see so few), You will hear
+the beat of a horse's feet, And the swish of a skirt in the dew,
+Steadily cantering through The misty solitudes, As though they
+perfectly knew The old lost road through the woods.... But there is
+no road through the woods.'"
+
+
+"I don't like that at all," cried the soldierman. "It's too--too
+sad--it doesn't give you any encouragement. The way it ends, I mean:
+'But there is no road through the woods.' Of course there's a road!
+For us there always will be. I'm going to make sure. I'm going to buy
+those woods, and keep the lost road where we can always find it."
+
+"I don't think," said the girl, "that he means a real road."
+
+"I know what he means," cried the lover, "and he's wrong! There is a
+road, and you and I have found it, and we are going to follow it for
+always."
+
+The girl shook her head, but her eyes were smiling happily.
+
+The "season" at Agawamsett closed with the tennis tournament, and it
+was generally conceded fit and proper, from every point of view, that
+in mixed doubles Lee and Miss Gardner should be partners. Young
+Stedman, the Boston artist, was the only one who made objection. Up in
+the sail-loft that he had turned into a studio he was painting a
+portrait of the lovely Miss Gardner, and he protested that the three
+days' tournament would sadly interrupt his work. And Frances, who was
+very much interested in the portrait, was inclined to agree.
+
+But Lee beat down her objections. He was not at all interested in the
+portrait. He disapproved of it entirely. For the sittings robbed him
+of Frances during the better part of each morning, and he urged that
+when he must so soon leave her, between the man who wanted her portrait
+and the man who wanted her, it would be kind to give her time to the
+latter.
+
+"But I had no idea," protested Frances, "he would take so long. He told
+me he'd finish it in three sittings. But he's so critical of his own
+work that he goes over it again and again. He says that I am a most
+difficult subject, but that I inspire him. And he says, if I will only
+give him time, he believes this will be the best thing he has done."
+
+"That's an awful thought," said the cavalry officer.
+
+"You don't like him," reproved Miss Gardner. "He is always very polite
+to you."
+
+"He's polite to everybody," said Lee; "that's why I don't like him.
+He's not a real artist. He's a courtier. God gave him a talent, and
+he makes a mean use of it. Uses it to flatter people. He's like these
+long-haired violinists who play anything you ask them to in the lobster
+palaces."
+
+Miss Gardner looked away from him. Her color was high and her eyes
+very bright.
+
+"I think," she said steadily, "that Mr. Stedman is a great artist, and
+some day all the world will think so, too!"
+
+Lee made no answer. Not because he disagreed with her estimate of Mr.
+Stedman's genius-he made no pretense of being an art critic--but
+because her vehement admiration had filled him with sudden panic. He
+was not jealous. For that he was far too humble. Indeed, he thought
+himself so utterly unworthy of Frances Gardner that the fact that to
+him she might prefer some one else was in no way a surprise. He only
+knew that if she should prefer some one else not all his troop horses
+nor all his men could put Humpty Dumpty back again.
+
+But if, in regard to Mr. Stedman, Miss Gardner had for a moment been at
+odds with the man who loved her, she made up for it the day following
+on the tennis court. There she was in accord with him in heart, soul,
+and body, and her sharp "Well played, partner!" thrilled him like one
+of his own bugle calls. For two days against visiting and local teams
+they fought their way through the tournament, and the struggle with her
+at his side filled Lee with a great happiness. Not that the
+championship of Agawamsett counted greatly to one exiled for three
+years to live among the Moros. He wanted to win because she wanted to
+win. But his happiness came in doing something in common with her, in
+helping her and in having her help him, in being, if only in play, if
+only for three days, her "partner."
+
+After they won they walked home together, each swinging a fat, heavy
+loving-cup. On each was engraved:
+
+"Mixed doubles, Agawamsett, 1910."
+
+Lee held his up so that the setting sun flashed on the silver.
+
+"I am going to keep that," he said, "as long as I live. It means you
+were once my 'partner.' It's a sign that once we two worked together
+for something and won." In the words the man showed such feeling that
+the girl said soberly:
+
+"Mine means that to me, too. I will never part with mine, either."
+
+Lee turned to her and smiled, appealing wistfully.
+
+"It seems a pity to separate them," he said. "They'd look well
+together over an open fireplace."
+
+The girl frowned unhappily. "I don't know," she protested. "I don't
+know."
+
+The next day Lee received from the War Department a telegram directing
+him to "proceed without delay" to San Francisco, and there to embark
+for the Philippines.
+
+That night he put the question to her directly, but again she shook her
+head unhappily; again she said: "I don't know!"
+
+So he sailed without her, and each evening at sunset, as the great
+transport heaved her way across the swell of the Pacific, he stood at
+the rail and looked back. With the aid of the first officer he
+calculated the difference in time between a whaling village situated at
+forty-four degrees north and an army transport dropping rapidly toward
+the equator, and so, each day, kept in step with the girl he loved.
+
+"Now," he would tell himself, "she is in her cart in front of the
+post-office, and while they sort the morning mail she gossips with the
+fisher folks, the summer folks, the grooms, and chauffeurs. Now she is
+sitting for her portrait to Stedman" (he did not dwell long on that
+part of her day), "and now she is at tennis, or, as she promised,
+riding alone at sunset down our lost road through the woods."
+
+But that part of her day from which Lee hurried was that part over
+which the girl herself lingered. As he turned his eyes from his canvas
+to meet hers, Stedman, the charming, the deferential, the adroit, who
+never allowed his painting to interrupt his talk, told her of what he
+was pleased to call his dreams and ambitions, of the great and
+beautiful ladies who had sat before his easel, and of the only one of
+them who had given him inspiration. Especially of the only one who had
+given him inspiration. With her always to uplift him, he could become
+one of the world's most famous artists, and she would go down into
+history as the beautiful woman who had helped him, as the wife of
+Rembrandt had inspired Rembrandt, as "Mona Lisa" had made Leonardo.
+
+Gilbert wrote: "It is not the lover who comes to woo, but the lover's
+way of wooing!" His successful lover was the one who threw the girl
+across his saddle and rode away with her. But one kind of woman does
+not like to have her lover approach shouting: "At the gallop! Charge!"
+
+She prefers a man not because he is masterful, but because he is not.
+She likes to believe the man needs her more than she needs him, that
+she, and only she, can steady him, cheer him, keep him true to the work
+he is in the world to perform. It is called the "mothering" instinct.
+
+Frances felt this mothering instinct toward the sensitive, imaginative,
+charming Stedman. She believed he had but two thoughts, his art and
+herself. She was content to place his art first. She could not guess
+that to one so unworldly, to one so wrapped up in his art, the fortune
+of a rich aunt might prove alluring.
+
+When the transport finally picked up the landfalls of Cavite Harbor,
+Lee, with the instinct of a soldier, did not exclaim: "This is where
+Dewey ran the forts and sank the Spanish fleet!" On the contrary, he
+was saying: "When she comes to join me, it will be here I will first
+see her steamer. I will be waiting with a field-glass on the end of
+that wharf. No, I will be out here in a shore-boat waving my hat. And
+of all those along the rail, my heart will tell me which is she!"
+
+Then a barefooted Filipino boy handed him an unsigned cablegram. It
+read: "If I wrote a thousand words I could not make it easier for
+either of us. I am to marry Arthur Stedman in December."
+
+Lee was grateful for the fact that he was not permitted to linger in
+Manila. Instead, he was at once ordered up-country, where at a
+one-troop post he administered the affairs of a somewhat hectic
+province, and under the guidance of the local constabulary chased
+will-o'-the-wisp brigands. On a shelf in his quarters he placed the
+silver loving-cup, and at night, when the village slept, he would sit
+facing it, filling one pipe after another, and through the smoke
+staring at the evidence to the fact that once Frances Gardner and he
+had been partners.
+
+In these post-mortems he saw nothing morbid. With his present
+activities they in no way interfered, and in thinking of the days when
+they had been together, in thinking of what he had lost, he found deep
+content. Another man, having lost the woman he loved, would have tried
+to forget her and all she meant to him. But Lee was far too honest
+with himself to substitute other thoughts for those that were glorious,
+that still thrilled him. The girl could take herself from him, but she
+could not take his love for her from him. And for that he was
+grateful. He never had considered himself worthy, and so could not
+believe he had been ill used. In his thoughts of her there was no
+bitterness: for that also he was grateful. And, as he knew he would
+not care for any other woman in the way he cared for her, he preferred
+to care in that way, even for one who was lost, than in a lesser way
+for a possible she who some day might greatly care for him. So she
+still remained in his thoughts, and was so constantly with him that he
+led a dual existence, in which by day he directed the affairs of an
+alien and hostile people and by night again lived through the wonderful
+moments when she had thought she loved him, when he first had learned
+to love her. At times she seemed actually at his side, and he could
+not tell whether he was pretending that this were so or whether the
+force of his love had projected her image half around the world.
+
+Often, when in single file he led the men through the forest, he seemed
+again to be back on Cape Cod picking his way over their own lost road
+through the wood, and he heard "the beat of a horse's feet and the
+swish of a skirt in the dew." And then a carbine would rattle, or a
+horse would stumble and a trooper swear, and he was again in the
+sweating jungle, where men, intent upon his life, crouched in ambush.
+
+She spared him the mockery of wedding-cards; but the announcement of
+the wedding came to him in a three-months-old newspaper. Hoping they
+would speak of her in their letters, he kept up a somewhat one-sided
+correspondence with friends of Mrs. Stedman's in Boston, where she now
+lived. But for a year in none of their letters did her name appear.
+When a mutual friend did write of her Lee understood the silence.
+
+From the first, the mutual friend wrote, the life of Mrs. Stedman and
+her husband was thoroughly miserable. Stedman blamed her because she
+came to him penniless. The rich aunt, who had heartily disapproved of
+the artist, had spoken of him so frankly that Frances had quarrelled
+with her, and from her no longer would accept money. In his anger at
+this Stedman showed himself to Frances as he was. And only two months
+after their marriage she was further enlightened.
+
+An irate husband made him the central figure in a scandal that filled
+the friends of Frances with disgust, and that for her was an awakening
+cruel and humiliating. Men no longer permitted their womenfolk to sit
+to Stedman for a portrait, and the need of money grew imperative. He
+the more blamed Frances for having quarrelled with her aunt, told her
+it was for her money he had married her, that she had ruined his
+career, and that she was to blame for his ostracism--a condition that
+his own misconduct had brought upon him. Finally, after twelve months
+of this, one morning he left a note saying he no longer would allow her
+to be a drag upon him, and sailed for Europe.
+
+They learned that, in Paris, he had returned to that life which before
+his marriage, even in that easy-going city, had made him notorious.
+"And Frances," continued Lee's correspondent, "has left Boston, and now
+lives in New York. She wouldn't let any of us help her, nor even know
+where she is. The last we heard of her she was in charge of the
+complaint department of a millinery shop, for which work she was
+receiving about the same wages I give my cook."
+
+Lee did not stop to wonder why the same woman, who to one man was a
+"drag," was to another, even though separated from her by half the
+world, a joy and a blessing. Instead, he promptly wrote his lawyers to
+find Mrs. Stedman, and, in such a way as to keep her ignorant of their
+good offices, see that she obtained a position more congenial than her
+present one, and one that would pay her as much as, without arousing
+her suspicions, they found it possible to give.
+
+Three months had passed, and this letter had not been answered, when in
+Manila, where he had been ordered to make a report, he heard of her
+again. One evening, when the band played on the Luneta, he met a newly
+married couple who had known him in Agawamsett. They now were on a
+ninety-day cruise around the world. Close friends of Frances Gardner,
+they remembered him as one of her many devotees and at once spoke of
+her.
+
+"That blackguard she married," the bridegroom told him, "was killed
+three months ago racing with another car from Versailles back to Paris
+after a dinner at which, it seems, all present drank 'burgundy out of
+the fingerbowls.' Coming down that steep hill into Saint Cloud, the
+cars collided, and Stedman and a woman, whose husband thought she was
+somewhere else, were killed. He couldn't even die without making a
+scandal of it."
+
+"But the worst," added the bride, "is that, in spite of the way the
+little beast treated her, I believe Frances still cares for him, and
+always will. That's the worst of it, isn't it?" she demanded.
+
+In words, Lee did not answer, but in his heart he agreed that was much
+the worst of it. The fact that Frances was free filled him with hope;
+but that she still cared for the man she had married, and would
+continue to think only of him, made him ill with despair.
+
+He cabled his lawyers for her address. He determined that, at once, on
+learning it, he would tell her that with him nothing was changed. He
+had forgotten nothing, and had learned much. He had learned that his
+love for her was a splendid and inspiring passion, that even without
+her it had lifted him up, helped and cheered him, made the whole world
+kind and beautiful. With her he could not picture a world so complete
+with happiness.
+
+Since entering the army he had never taken a leave of absence, and he
+was sure, if now he asked for one, it would not be refused. He
+determined, if the answer to his cable gave him the address, he would
+return at once, and again offer her his love, which he now knew was
+deeper, finer, and infinitely more tender than the love he first had
+felt for her. But the cable balked him. "Address unknown," it read;
+"believed to have gone abroad in capacity of governess. Have employed
+foreign agents. Will cable their report."
+
+Whether to wait for and be guided by the report of the detectives, or
+to proceed to Europe and search for her himself, Lee did not know. He
+finally determined that to seek for her with no clew to her whereabouts
+would be but a waste of precious moments, while, if in their search the
+agents were successful, he would be able to go directly to her.
+Meanwhile, by cable, he asked for protracted leave of absence and,
+while waiting for his answer, returned to his post. There, within a
+week, he received his leave of absence, but in a fashion that
+threatened to remove him forever from the army.
+
+The constabulary had located the will-o'-the-wisp brigands behind a
+stockade built about an extinct volcano, and Lee and his troop and a
+mountain battery attempted to dislodge them. In the fight that
+followed Lee covered his brows with laurel wreaths and received two
+bullet wounds in his body.
+
+For a month death stood at the side of his cot; and then, still weak
+and at times delirious with fever, by slow stages he was removed to the
+hospital in Manila. In one of his sane moments a cable was shown him.
+It read: "Whereabouts still unknown." Lee at once rebelled against his
+doctors. He must rise, he declared, and proceed to Europe. It was
+upon a matter of life and death. The surgeons assured him his
+remaining exactly where he was also was a matter of as great
+consequence. Lee's knowledge of his own lack of strength told him they
+were right.
+
+Then, from headquarters, he was informed that, as a reward for his
+services and in recognition of his approaching convalescence, he was
+ordered to return to his own climate and that an easy billet had been
+found for him as a recruiting officer in New York City. Believing the
+woman he loved to be in Europe, this plan for his comfort only
+succeeded in bringing on a relapse. But the day following there came
+another cablegram. It put an abrupt end to his mutiny, and brought him
+and the War Department into complete accord.
+
+"She is in New York," it read, "acting as agent for a charitable
+institution, which one not known, but hope in a few days to cable
+correct address."
+
+In all the world there was no man so happy. The next morning a
+transport was sailing, and, probably because they had read the
+cablegram, the surgeons agreed with Lee that a sea voyage would do him
+no harm. He was carried on board, and when the propellers first
+churned the water and he knew he was moving toward her, the hero of the
+fight around the crater shed unmanly tears. He would see her again,
+hear her voice; the same great city would shelter them. It was worth a
+dozen bullets.
+
+He reached New York in a snow-storm, a week before Christmas, and went
+straight to the office of his lawyers. They received him with
+embarrassment. Six weeks before, on the very day they had cabled him
+that Mrs. Stedman was in New York, she had left the charitable
+institution where she had been employed, and had again disappeared.
+
+Lee sent his trunks to the Army and Navy Club, which was immediately
+around the corner from the recruiting office in Sixth Avenue, and began
+discharging telegrams at every one who had ever known Frances Gardner.
+The net result was discouraging. In the year and a half in which he
+had been absent every friend of the girl he sought had temporarily
+changed his place of residence or was permanently dead.
+
+Meanwhile his arrival by the transport was announced in the afternoon
+papers. At the wharf an admiring trooper had told a fine tale of his
+conduct at the battle of the crater, and reporters called at the club
+to see him. He did not discourage them, as he hoped through them the
+fact of his return might be made known to Frances. She might send him
+a line of welcome, and he would discover her whereabouts. But, though
+many others sent him hearty greetings, from her there was no word.
+
+On the second day after his arrival one of the telegrams was answered
+in person by a friend of Mrs. Stedman. He knew only that she had been
+in New York, that she was very poor and in ill health, that she shunned
+all of her friends, and was earning her living as the matron of some
+sort of a club for working girls. He did not know the name of it.
+
+On the third day there still was no news. On the fourth Lee decided
+that the next morning he would advertise. He would say only: "Will
+Mrs. Arthur Stedman communicate with Messrs. Fuller & Fuller?" Fuller &
+Fuller were his lawyers. That afternoon he remained until six o'clock
+at the recruiting office, and when he left it the electric street
+lights were burning brightly. A heavy damp snow was falling, and the
+lights and the falling flakes and the shouts of drivers and the toots
+of taxicabs made for the man from the tropics a welcome homecoming.
+
+Instead of returning at once to his club, he slackened his steps. The
+shop windows of Sixth Avenue hung with Christmas garlands, and colored
+lamps glowed like open fireplaces. Lee passed slowly before them, glad
+that he had been able to get back at such a season. For the moment he
+had forgotten the woman he sought, and was conscious only of his
+surroundings. He had paused in front of the window of a pawn-shop.
+Over the array of cheap jewelry, of banjos, shot-guns, and razors, his
+eyes moved idly. And then they became transfixed and staring. In the
+very front of the window, directly under his nose, was a tarnished
+silver loving-cup. On it was engraved, "Mixed Doubles. Agawamsett,
+1910." In all the world there were only two such cups, and as though
+he were dodging the slash of a bolo, Lee leaped into the shop. Many
+precious seconds were wasted in persuading Mrs. Cohen that he did not
+believe the cup had been stolen; that he was not from the Central
+Office; that he believed the lady who had pawned the cup had come by it
+honestly; that he meant no harm to the lady; that he meant no harm to
+Mrs. Cohen; that, much as the young lady may have needed the money Mrs.
+Cohen had loaned her on the cup, he needed the address of the young
+lady still more.
+
+Mrs. Cohen retired behind a screen, and Lee was conscious that from the
+other side of it the whole family of Cohens were taking his
+measurements. He approved of their efforts to protect the owner of the
+cup, but not from him.
+
+He offered, if one of the younger Cohens would take him to the young
+lady, to let him first ask her if she would receive Captain Lee, and
+for his service he would give the young Cohen untold gold. He exhibited
+the untold gold. The young Cohen choked at the sight and sprang into
+the seat beside the driver of a taxicab.
+
+"To the Working Girls' Home, on Tenth Street!" he commanded.
+
+
+Through the falling snow and the flashing lights they slid, skidded,
+and leaped. Inside the cab Lee shivered with excitement, with cold,
+with fear that it might not be true. He could not realize she was
+near. It was easier to imagine himself still in the jungle, with
+months of time and sixteen thousand miles of land and water separating
+them; or in the hospital, on a white-enamel cot, watching the shadow
+creep across the whitewashed wall; or lying beneath an awning that did
+not move, staring at a burning, brazen sea that did not move, on a
+transport that, timed by the beating of his heart, stood still.
+
+Those days were within the radius of his experience. Separation,
+absence, the immutable giants of time and space, he knew. With them he
+had fought and could withstand them. But to be near her, to hear her
+voice, to bring his love into her actual presence, that was an attack
+upon his feelings which found him without weapons. That for a very few
+dollars she had traded the cup from which she had sworn never to part
+did not concern him. Having parted from him, what she did with a
+silver mug was of little consequence. It was of significance only in
+that it meant she was poor. And that she was either an inmate or a
+matron of a lodging-house for working girls also showed she was poor.
+
+He had been told that was her condition, and that she was in ill
+health, and that from all who loved her she had refused to accept help.
+At the thought his jaws locked pugnaciously. There was one who loved
+her, who, should she refuse his aid, was prepared to make her life
+intolerable. He planned in succession at lightning speed all he might
+do for her. Among other things he would make this Christmas the
+happiest she or he would ever know. Not for an instant did he question
+that she who had refused help from all who loved her could refuse
+anything he offered. For he knew it was offered with a love that
+demanded nothing in return, with a love that asked only to be allowed
+to love, and to serve. To refuse help inspired by such a feeling as
+his would be morbid, wicked, ridiculous, as though a flower refused to
+turn its face to the sun, and shut its lips to the dew.
+
+The cab stopped in front of a brick building adorned with many
+fire-escapes. Afterward he remembered a bare, brilliantly lit hall
+hung with photographs of the Acropolis, and a stout, capable woman in a
+cap, who looked him over and said:
+
+"You will find Mrs. Stedman in the writing-room."
+
+And he remembered entering a room filled with Mission furniture and
+reading-lamps under green shades. It was empty, except for a young
+girl in deep black, who was seated facing him, her head bent above a
+writing-desk. As he came into the circle of the lamps the girl raised
+her eyes and as though lifted to her feet by what she saw, and through
+no effort of her own, stood erect.
+
+And the young man who had persuaded himself his love demanded nothing,
+who asked only to worship at her gate, found his arms reaching out, and
+heard his voice as though it came from a great distance, cry, "Frances!"
+
+And the girl who had refused the help of all who loved her, like a
+homing pigeon walked straight into the outstretched arms.
+
+After five minutes, when he was almost able to believe it was true, he
+said in his commanding, masterful way: "And now I'm going to take you
+out of here. I'm going to buy you a ring, and a sable coat, and a
+house to live in, and a dinner. Which shall we buy first?"
+
+"First," said Frances, frowning happily, "I am afraid we must go to the
+Ritz, to tell Aunt Emily. She always loved you, and it will make her
+so happy."
+
+"To the Ritz!" stammered the young man. "To Aunt Emily! I thought they
+told me your aunt and-you-"
+
+"We quarrelled, yes," said Frances, "and she has forgiven me; but she
+has not forgiven herself, so she spoils me, and already I have a house
+to live in, and several sable coats, and, oh! everything, everything
+but the ring."
+
+"I am so sorry!" cried Lee. "I thought you were poor. I hoped you
+were poor. But you are joking!" he exclaimed delightedly. "You are
+here in a working girls' home-"
+
+"It is one of Aunt Emily's charities. She built it," said Frances. "I
+come here to talk to the girls."
+
+"But," persisted Lee triumphantly, "if you are not poor, why did you
+pawn our silver loving-cup?"
+
+The face of the girl became a lovely crimson, and tears rose to her
+eyes. As though at a confessional, she lifted her hands penitently.
+
+"Try to understand," she begged; "I wanted you to love me, not for my
+money-"
+
+"But you knew!" cried Lee.
+
+"I had to be sure," begged the girl; "and I wanted to believe you loved
+me even if I did not love you. When it was too late I knew you loved
+me as no woman ever deserved to be loved; and I wanted that love. I
+could not live without it. So when I read in the papers you had
+returned I wouldn't let myself write you; I wouldn't let myself beg you
+to come to see me. I set a test for you. I knew from the papers you
+were at the Army and Navy Club, and that around the corner was the
+recruiting office. I'd often seen the sergeant there, in uniform, at
+the door. I knew you must pass from your club to the office many times
+each day, so I thought of the loving-cup and the pawn-shop. I planted
+it there. It was a trick, a test. I thought if you saw it in a
+pawn-shop you would believe I no longer cared for you, and that I was
+very poor. If you passed it by, then I would know you yourself had
+stopped caring, but if you asked about it, if you inquired for me, then
+I would know you came to me of your own wish, because you-"
+
+Lee shook his head.
+
+"You don't have to tell me," he said gently, "why I came. I've a cab
+outside. You will get in it," he commanded, "and we will rescue our
+cup. I always told you they would look well together over an open
+fireplace."
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+
+
+This is the story of a gallant officer who loved his profession, his
+regiment, his country, but above all, whiskey; of his miraculous
+conversion to total abstinence, and of the humble instrument that
+worked the miracle. At the time it was worked, a battalion of the
+Thirty-third Infantry had been left behind to guard the Zone, and was
+occupying impromptu barracks on the hill above Las Palmas. That was
+when Las Palmas was one of the four thousand stations along the forty
+miles of the Panama Railroad. When the railroad was "reconstructed" the
+name of Las Palmas did not appear on the new time-table, and when this
+story appears Las Palmas will be eighty feet under water. So if any
+one wishes to dispute the miracle he will have to conduct his
+investigation in a diving-bell.
+
+On this particular evening young Major Aintree, in command of the
+battalion, had gone up the line to Panama to dine at the Hotel Tivoli,
+and had dined well. To prevent his doing this a paternal government
+had ordered that at the Tivoli no alcoholic liquors may be sold; but
+only two hundred yards from the hotel, outside the zone of temperance,
+lies Panama and Angelina's, and during the dinner, between the Tivoli
+and Angelina's, the Jamaican waiter-boys ran relay races.
+
+After the dinner, the Jamaican waiter-boys proving too slow, the
+dinner-party in a body adjourned to Angelina's, and when later, Major
+Aintree moved across the street to the night train to Las Palmas, he
+moved unsteadily.
+
+Young Standish of the Canal Zone police, who, though but twenty-six,
+was a full corporal, was for that night on duty as "train guard," and
+was waiting at the rear steps of the last car. As Aintree approached
+the steps he saw indistinctly a boyish figure in khaki, and, mistaking
+it for one of his own men, he clasped the handrail for support, and
+halted frowning.
+
+Observing the condition of the officer the policeman also frowned, but
+in deference to the uniform, slowly and with reluctance raised his hand
+to his sombrero. The reluctance was more apparent than the salute. It
+was less of a salute than an impertinence.
+
+Partly out of regard for his rank, partly from temper, chiefly from
+whiskey, Aintree saw scarlet.
+
+"When you s'lute your s'perior officer," he shouted, "you s'lute him
+quick. You unnerstan', you s'lute him quick! S'lute me again," he
+commanded, "and s'lute me damn quick."
+
+Standish remained motionless. As is the habit of policemen over all
+the world, his thumbs were stuck in his belt. He answered without
+offense, in tones matter-of-fact and calm.
+
+"You are not my superior officer," he said.
+
+It was the calmness that irritated Aintree. His eyes sought for the
+infantryman's cap and found a sombrero.
+
+"You damned leatherneck," he began, "I'll report--"
+
+"I'm not a marine, either," interrupted Standish. "I'm a policeman.
+Move on," he ordered, "you're keeping these people waiting."
+
+Others of the dinner-party formed a flying wedge around Aintree and
+crowded him up the steps and into a seat and sat upon him. Ten minutes
+later, when Standish made his rounds of the cars, Aintree saw him
+approaching. He had a vague recollection that he had been insulted,
+and by a policeman.
+
+"You!" he called, and so loudly that all in the car turned, "I'm going
+to report you, going to report you for insolence. What's your name?"
+
+Looking neither at Aintree nor at the faces turned toward him, Standish
+replied as though Aintree had asked him what time it was.
+
+"Standish," he said, "corporal, shield number 226, on train guard." He
+continued down the aisle.
+
+"I'll remember you," Aintree shouted.
+
+But in the hot, glaring dawn of the morning after, Aintree forgot. It
+was Standish who remembered.
+
+The men of the Zone police are hand-picked. They have been soldiers,
+marines, cowboys, sheriffs, "Black Hussars" of the Pennsylvania State
+constabulary, rough riders with Roosevelt, mounted police in Canada,
+irregular horse in South Africa; they form one of the best-organized,
+best-disciplined, most efficient, most picturesque semi-military bodies
+in the world. Standish joined them from the Philippine constabulary in
+which he had been a second lieutenant. There are several like him in
+the Zone police, and in England they would be called gentlemen rankers.
+On the Isthmus, because of his youth, his fellow policemen called
+Standish "Kid." And smart as each of them was, each of them admitted
+the Kid wore his uniform with a difference. With him it always looked
+as though it had come freshly ironed from the Colon laundry; his
+leather leggings shone like meerschaum pipes; the brim of his sombrero
+rested impudently on the bridge of his nose.
+
+"He's been an officer," they used to say in extenuation. "You can tell
+when he salutes. He shows the back of his hand." Secretly, they were
+proud of him. Standish came of a long chain of soldiers, and that the
+weakest link in the chain had proved to be himself was a sorrow no one
+else but himself could fathom. Since he was three years old he had
+been trained to be a soldier, as carefully, with the same singleness of
+purpose, as the crown prince is trained to be a king. And when, after
+three happy, glorious years at West Point, he was found not clever
+enough to pass the examinations and was dropped, he did not curse the
+gods and die, but began again to work his way up. He was determined he
+still would wear shoulder-straps. He owed it to his ancestors. It was
+the tradition of his family, the one thing he wanted; it was his
+religion. He would get into the army even if by the side door, if only
+after many years of rough and patient service. He knew that some day,
+through his record, through the opportunity of a war, he would come
+into his inheritance. Meanwhile he officered his soul, disciplined his
+body, and daily tried to learn the lesson that he who hopes to control
+others must first control himself.
+
+He allowed himself but one dissipation, one excess. That was to hate
+Major Aintree, commanding the Thirty-third Infantry. Of all the world
+could give, Aintree possessed everything that Standish considered the
+most to be desired. He was a graduate of West Point, he had seen
+service in Cuba, in the Boxer business, and in the Philippines. For an
+act of conspicuous courage at Batangas, he had received the medal of
+honor. He had had the luck of the devil. Wherever he held command
+turned out to be the place where things broke loose. And Aintree
+always attacked and routed them, always was the man on the job. It was
+his name that appeared in the newspapers, it was his name that headed
+the list of the junior officers mentioned for distinguished conduct.
+Standish had followed his career with an admiration and a joy that was
+without taint of envy or detraction. He gloried in Aintree, he
+delighted to know the army held such a man. He was grateful to Aintree
+for upholding the traditions of a profession to which he himself gave
+all the devotion of a fanatic. He made a god of him. This was the
+attitude of mind toward Aintree before he came to the Isthmus. Up to
+that time he had never seen his idol. Aintree had been only a name
+signed to brilliant articles in the service magazines, a man of whom
+those who had served with him or under him, when asked concerning him,
+spoke with loyalty and awe, the man the newspapers called "the hero of
+Batangas." And when at last he saw his hero, he believed his worship
+was justified. For Aintree looked the part. He was built like a
+greyhound with the shoulders of a stevedore. His chin was as
+projecting, and as hard, as the pointed end of a flat-iron. His every
+movement showed physical fitness, and his every glance and tone a
+confidence in himself that approached insolence. He was thirty-eight,
+twelve years older than the youth who had failed to make his
+commission, and who, as Aintree strode past, looked after him with
+wistful, hero-worshipping eyes. The revulsion, when it came, was
+extreme. The hero-worship gave way to contempt, to indignant
+condemnation, in which there was no pity, no excuse. That one upon
+whom so much had been lavished, who for himself had accomplished such
+good things, should bring disgrace upon his profession, should by his
+example demoralize his men, should risk losing all he had attained, all
+that had been given, was intolerable. When Standish learned his hero
+was a drunkard, when day after day Aintree furnished visible evidences
+of that fact, Standish felt Aintree had betrayed him and the army and
+the government that had educated, trained, clothed, and fed him. He
+regarded Aintree as worse than Benedict Arnold, because Arnold had
+turned traitor for power and money; Aintree was a traitor through mere
+weakness, because he could not say "no" to a bottle.
+
+Only in secret Standish railed against Aintree. When his brother
+policemen gossiped and jested about him, out of loyalty to the army he
+remained silent. But in his heart he could not forgive. The man he had
+so generously envied, the man after whose career he had wished to model
+his own, had voluntarily stepped from his pedestal and made a swine of
+himself. And not only could he not forgive, but as day after day
+Aintree furnished fresh food for his indignation he felt a fierce
+desire to punish.
+
+Meanwhile, of the conduct of Aintree, men older and wiser, if less
+intolerant than Standish, were beginning to take notice. It was after
+a dinner on Ancon Hill, and the women had left the men to themselves.
+They were the men who were placing the Panama Canal on the map. They
+were officers of the army who for five years had not worn a uniform.
+But for five years they had been at war with an enemy that never slept.
+Daily they had engaged in battle with mountains, rivers, swamps, two
+oceans, and disease. Where Aintree commanded five hundred soldiers,
+they commanded a body of men better drilled, better disciplined, and in
+number half as many as those who formed the entire army of the United
+States. The mind of each was occupied with a world problem. They
+thought and talked in millions--of millions of cubic yards of dirt, of
+millions of barrels of cement, of millions of tons of steel, of
+hundreds of millions of dollars, of which latter each received enough
+to keep himself and his family just beyond the reach of necessity. To
+these men with the world waiting upon the outcome of their endeavor,
+with responsibilities that never relaxed, Aintree's behavior was an
+incident, an annoyance of less importance than an overturned dirt train
+that for five minutes dared to block the completion of their work. But
+they were human and loyal to the army, and in such an infrequent moment
+as this, over the coffee and cigars, they could afford to remember the
+junior officer, to feel sorry for him, for the sake of the army, to
+save him from himself.
+
+"He takes his orders direct from the War Department," said the chief.
+"I've no authority over him. If he'd been one of my workmen I'd have
+shipped him north three months ago."
+
+"That's it," said the surgeon, "he's not a workman. He has nothing to
+do, and idleness is the curse of the army. And in this climate--"
+
+"Nothing to do!" snorted the civil administrator. "Keeping his men in
+hand is what he has to do! They're running amuck all over Panama,
+getting into fights with the Spiggoty police, bringing the uniform into
+contempt. As for the climate, it's the same climate for all of us.
+Look at Butler's marines and Barber's Zone police. The climate hasn't
+hurt them. They're as smart men as ever wore khaki. It's not the
+climate or lack of work that ails the Thirty-third, it's their
+commanding officer. 'So the colonel, so the regiment.' That's as old
+as the hills. Until Aintree takes a brace, his men won't. Some one
+ought to talk to him. It's a shame to see a fine fellow like that
+going to the dogs because no one has the courage to tell him the truth."
+
+The chief smiled mockingly.
+
+"Then why don't you?" he asked.
+
+"I'm a civilian," protested the administrator. "If I told him he was
+going to the dogs he'd tell me to go to the devil. No, one of you army
+men must do it. He'll listen to you."
+
+Young Captain Haldane of the cavalry was at the table; he was visiting
+Panama on leave as a tourist. The chief turned to him.
+
+"Haldane's the man," he said. "You're his friend and you're his junior
+in rank, so what you say won't sound official. Tell him people are
+talking; tell him it won't be long before they'll be talking in
+Washington. Scare him!"
+
+The captain of cavalry smiled dubiously.
+
+"Aintree's a hard man to scare," he said. "But if it's as bad as you
+all seem to think, I'll risk it. But, why is it," he complained, "that
+whenever a man has to be told anything particularly unpleasant they
+always pick on his best friend to tell him? It makes them both
+miserable. Why not let his bitterest enemy try it? The enemy at least
+would have a fine time."
+
+"Because," said the chief, "Aintree hasn't an enemy in the
+world--except Aintree."
+
+The next morning, as he had promised, Haldane called upon his friend.
+When he arrived at Las Palmas, although the morning was well advanced
+toward noon, he found Aintree still under his mosquito bars and awake
+only to command a drink. The situation furnished Haldane with his
+text. He expressed his opinion of any individual, friend or no friend,
+officer or civilian, who on the Zone, where all men begin work at
+sunrise, could be found at noon still in his pajamas and preparing to
+face the duties of the day on an absinth cocktail. He said further
+that since he had arrived on the isthmus he had heard only of Aintree's
+misconduct, that soon the War Department would hear of it, that Aintree
+would lose his commission, would break the backbone of a splendid
+career.
+
+"It's a friend talking," continued Haldane, "and you know it! It's
+because I am your friend that I've risked losing your friendship! And,
+whether you like it or not, it's the truth. You're going down-hill,
+going fast, going like a motor-bus running away, and unless you put on
+the brakes you'll smash!"
+
+Aintree was not even annoyed.
+
+"That's good advice for the right man," he granted, "but why waste it
+on me? I can do things other men can't. I can stop drinking this
+minute, and it will mean so little to me that I won't know I've
+stopped."
+
+"Then stop," said Haldane.
+
+"Why?" demanded Aintree. "I like it. Why should I stop anything I
+like? Because a lot of old women are gossiping? Because old men who
+can't drink green mint without dancing turkey-trots think I'm going to
+the devil because I can drink whiskey? I'm not afraid of whiskey," he
+laughed tolerantly. "It amuses me, that's all it does to me; it amuses
+me." He pulled back the coat of his pajamas and showed his giant chest
+and shoulder. With his fist he struck his bare flesh and it glowed
+instantly a healthy, splendid pink.
+
+"See that!" commanded Aintree. "If there's a man on the isthmus in any
+better physical shape than I am, I'll--" He interrupted himself to
+begin again eagerly. "I'll make you a sporting proposition," he
+announced "I'll fight any man on the isthmus ten rounds--no matter who
+he is, a wop laborer, shovel man, Barbadian nigger, marine,
+anybody--and if he can knock me out I'll stop drinking. You see," he
+explained patiently, "I'm no mollycoddle or jelly-fish. I can afford a
+headache. And besides, it's my own head. If I don't give anybody else
+a headache, I don't see that it's anybody else's damned business."
+
+"But you do," retorted Haldane steadily. "You're giving your own men
+worse than a headache, you're setting them a rotten example, you're
+giving the Thirty-third a bad name-"
+
+Aintree vaulted off his cot and shook his fist at his friend. "You
+can't say that to me," he cried.
+
+"I do say it," protested Haldane. "When you were in Manila your men
+were models; here they're unshaven, sloppy, undisciplined. They look
+like bell-hops. And it's your fault. And everybody thinks so."
+
+Slowly and carefully Aintree snapped his fingers.
+
+"And you can tell everybody, from me," he cried, "that's all I care
+what they think! And now," he continued, smiling hospitably, "let me
+congratulate you on your success as a missionary, and, to show you
+there's not a trace of hard feeling, we will have a drink."
+
+Informally Haldane reported back to the commission, and the wife of one
+of them must have talked, for it was soon known that a brother officer
+had appealed to Aintree to reform, and Aintree had refused to listen.
+
+When she heard this, Grace Carter, the wife of Major Carter, one of the
+surgeons at the Ancon Hospital, was greatly perturbed. Aintree was
+engaged to be married to Helen Scott, who was her best friend and who
+was arriving by the next steamer to spend the winter. When she had
+Helen safely under her roof, Mrs. Carter had planned to marry off the
+young couple out of hand on the isthmus. But she had begun to wonder if
+it would not be better they should delay, or best that they should
+never marry.
+
+"The awakening is going to be a terrible blow to Helen," she said to
+her husband. "She is so proud of him."
+
+"On the contrary," he protested, "it will be the awakening of
+Aintree--if Helen will stand for the way he's acting, she is not the
+girl I know. And when he finds she won't, and that he may lose her,
+he'll pull up short. He's talked Helen to me night after night until
+he's bored me so I could strangle him. He cares more for her than he
+does for anything, for the army, or for himself, and that's saying a
+great deal. One word from her will be enough."
+
+Helen spoke the word three weeks after she arrived. It had not been
+necessary to tell her of the manner in which her lover was
+misconducting himself. At various dinners given in their honor he had
+made a nuisance of himself; on another occasion, while in uniform, he
+had created a scene in the dining-room of the Tivoli under the prying
+eyes of three hundred seeing-the-Canal tourists; and one night he had
+so badly beaten up a cabman who had laughed at his condition that the
+man went to the hospital. Major Carter, largely with money, had healed
+the injuries of the cabman, but Helen, who had witnessed the assault,
+had suffered an injury that money could not heal.
+
+She sent for Aintree, and at the home of her friend delivered her
+ultimatum.
+
+"I hit him because he was offensive to you," said Aintree. "That's why
+I hit him. If I'd not had a drink in a year, I'd have hit him just as
+quick and just as hard."
+
+"Can't you see," said the girl, "that in being not yourself when I was
+in your care you were much more insulting to me than any cabman could
+possibly be? When you are like that you have no respect for me, or for
+yourself. Part of my pride in you is that you are so strong, that you
+control yourself, that common pleasures never get a hold on you. If
+you couldn't control your temper I wouldn't blame you, because you've a
+villainous temper and you were born with it. But you weren't born with
+a taste for liquor. None of your people drank. You never drank until
+you went into the army. If I were a man," declared the girl, "I'd be
+ashamed to admit anything was stronger than I was. You never let pain
+beat you. I've seen you play polo with a broken arm, but in this you
+give pain to others, you shame and humiliate the one you pretend to
+love, just because you are weak, just because you can't say 'no.'"
+
+Aintree laughed angrily.
+
+"Drink has no hold on me," he protested. "It affects me as much as the
+lights and the music affect a girl at her first dance, and no more.
+But, if you ask me to stop--"
+
+"I do not!" said the girl. "If you stop, you'll stop not because I
+have any influence over you, but because you don't need my influence.
+If it's wrong, if it's hurting you, if it's taking away your usefulness
+and your power for good, that's why you'll stop. Not because a girl
+begs you. Or you're not the man I think you."
+
+Aintree retorted warmly. "I'm enough of a man for this," he protested:
+"I'm enough of a man not to confess I can't drink without making a
+beast of myself. It's easy not to drink at all. But to stop altogether
+is a confession of weakness. I'd look on my doing that as cowardly. I
+give you my word--not that I'll swear off, that I'll never do--but I
+promise you you'll have no further reason to be what you call
+humiliated, or ashamed. You have my word for it."
+
+A week later Aintree rode his pony into a railway cutting and rolled
+with it to the tracks below, and, if at the time he had not been
+extremely drunk, would have been killed. The pony, being quite sober,
+broke a leg and was destroyed.
+
+When word of this came to Helen she was too sick at heart to see
+Aintree, and by others it was made known to him that on the first
+steamer Miss Scott would return North. Aintree knew why she was going,
+knew she had lost faith and patience, knew the woman he loved had
+broken with him and put him out of her life. Appalled at this
+calamity, he proceeded to get drunk in earnest.
+
+
+The night was very hot and the humidity very heavy, and at Las Palmas
+inside the bungalow that served as a police-station the lamps on either
+side of the lieutenant's desk burned like tiny furnaces. Between them,
+panting in the moist heat and with the sweat from his forehead and hand
+dripping upon an otherwise immaculate report, sat Standish. Two weeks
+before, the chief had made him one of his six lieutenants. With the
+force the promotion had been most popular.
+
+Since his promotion Standish had been in charge of the police-station
+at Las Palmas and daily had seen Aintree as, on his way down the hill
+from the barracks to the railroad, the hero of Batangas passed the door
+of the station-house. Also, on the morning Aintree had jumped his
+horse over the embankment, Standish had seen him carried up the hill on
+a stretcher. At the sight the lieutenant of police had taken from his
+pocket a notebook, and on a flyleaf made a cross. On the flyleaf were
+many other dates and opposite each a cross. It was Aintree's record
+and as the number of black crosses grew, the greater had grown the
+resentment of Standish, the more greatly it had increased his anger
+against the man who had put this affront upon the army, the greater
+became his desire to punish.
+
+In police circles the night had been quiet, the cells in the yard were
+empty, the telephone at his elbow had remained silent, and Standish,
+alone in the station-house, had employed himself in cramming "Moss's
+Manual for Subalterns." He found it a fascinating exercise. The hope
+that soon he might himself be a subaltern always burned brightly, and
+to be prepared seemed to make the coming of that day more certain. It
+was ten o'clock and Las Palmas lay sunk in slumber, and after the down
+train which was now due had passed, there was nothing likely to disturb
+her slumber until at sunrise the great army of dirt-diggers with
+shrieks of whistles, with roars of dynamite, with the rumbling of
+dirt-trains and steam-shovels, again sprang to the attack. Down the
+hill, a hundred yards below Standish, the night train halted at the
+station, with creakings and groanings continued toward Colon, and again
+Las Palmas returned to sleep.
+
+And, then, quickly and viciously, like the crack of a mule-whip, came
+the reports of a pistol; and once more the hot and dripping silence.
+
+On post at the railroad-station, whence the shots came, was Meehan, one
+of the Zone police, an ex-sergeant of marines. On top of the hill,
+outside the infantry barracks, was another policeman, Bullard, once a
+cowboy.
+
+Standish ran to the veranda and heard the pebbles scattering as Bullard
+leaped down the hill, and when, in the light from the open door, he
+passed, the lieutenant shouted at him to find Meehan and report back.
+Then the desk telephone rang, and Standish returned to his chair.
+
+"This is Meehan," said a voice. "Those shots just now were fired by
+Major Aintree. He came down on the night train and jumped off after
+the train was pulling out and stumbled into a negro, and fell. He's
+been drinking and he swore the nigger pushed him; and the man called
+Aintree a liar. Aintree pulled his gun and the nigger ran. Aintree
+fired twice; then I got to him and knocked the gun out of his hand with
+my nightstick."
+
+There was a pause. Until he was sure his voice would be steady and
+official, the boy lieutenant did not speak.
+
+"Did he hit the negro?" he asked.
+
+"I don't know," Meehan answered. "The man jumped for the darkest spot
+he could find." The voice of Meehan lost its professional calm and
+became personal and aggrieved.
+
+"Aintree's on his way to see you now, lieutenant. He's going to report
+me."
+
+"For what?"
+
+The voice over the telephone rose indignantly.
+
+"For knocking the gun out of his hand. He says it's an assault. He's
+going to break me!"
+
+Standish made no comment.
+
+"Report here," he ordered.
+
+He heard Bullard hurrying up the hill and met him at the foot of the
+steps.
+
+"There's a nigger," began Bullard, "lying under some bushes--"
+
+"Hush!" commanded Standish.
+
+From the path below came the sound of footsteps approaching unsteadily,
+and the voice of a man swearing and muttering to himself. Standish
+pulled the ex-cowboy into the shadow of the darkness and spoke in eager
+whispers.
+
+"You understand," he concluded, "you will not report until you see me
+pick up a cigar from the desk and light it. You will wait out here in
+the darkness. When you see me light the cigar, you will come in and
+report."
+
+The cowboy policeman nodded, but without enthusiasm. "I understand,
+lieutenant," he said, "but," he shook his head doubtfully, "it sizes up
+to me like what those police up in New York call a 'frame-up.'"
+
+Standish exclaimed impatiently.
+
+"It's not my frame-up!" he said. "The man's framed himself up. All I'm
+going to do is to nail him to the wall!"
+
+Standish had only time to return to his desk when Aintree stumbled up
+the path and into the station-house. He was "fighting drunk," ugly,
+offensive, all but incoherent with anger.
+
+"You in charge?" he demanded. He did not wait for an answer. "I've
+been 'saulted!" he shouted. "'Saulted by one of your damned policemen.
+He struck me--struck me when I was protecting myself. He had a nigger
+with him. First the nigger tripped me; then, when I tried to protect
+myself, this thug of yours hits me, clubs me, you unnerstan', clubs me!
+I want him--"
+
+He was interrupted by the entrance of Meehan, who moved into the light
+from the lamps and saluted his lieutenant.
+
+"That's the man!" roared Aintree. The sight of Meehan whipped him into
+greater fury.
+
+"I want that man broke. I want to see you strip his shield off
+him--now, you unnerstan', now--for 'saulting me, for 'saulting an
+officer in the United States army. And, if you don't," he threw
+himself into a position of the prize-ring, "I'll beat him up and you,
+too." Through want of breath, he stopped, and panted. Again his voice
+broke forth hysterically. "I'm not afraid of your damned
+night-sticks," he taunted. "I got five hundred men on top this hill,
+all I've got to do is to say the word, and they'll rough-house this
+place and throw it into the cut--and you with it."
+
+Standish rose to his feet, and across the desk looked steadily at
+Aintree. To Aintree the steadiness of his eyes and the quietness of
+his voice were an added aggravation.
+
+"Suppose you did," said Standish, "that would not save you."
+
+"From what?" roared Aintree. "Think I'm afraid of your night-sticks?"
+
+"From arrest!"
+
+"Arrest me!" yelled Aintree. "Do you know who's talking to you? Do you
+know who I am? I'm Major Aintree, damn you, commanding the infantry.
+An' I'm here to charge that thug--"
+
+"You are here because you are under arrest," said Standish. "You are
+arrested for threatening the police, drunkenness, and assaulting a
+citizen with intent to kill--" The voice of the young man turned
+shrill and rasping. "And if the man should die--"
+
+Aintree burst into a bellow of mocking laughter.
+
+Standish struck the desk with his open palm.
+
+"Silence!" he commanded.
+
+"Silence to me!" roared Aintree, "you impertinent pup!" He flung
+himself forward, shaking his fist. "I'm Major Aintree. I'm your
+superior officer. I'm an officer an' a gentleman--"
+
+"You are not!" replied Standish. "You are a drunken loafer!"
+
+Aintree could not break the silence. Amazement, rage, stupefaction
+held him in incredulous wonder. Even Meehan moved uneasily. Between
+the officer commanding the infantry and an officer of police, he feared
+the lieutenant would not survive.
+
+But he heard the voice of his lieutenant continuing, evenly, coldly,
+like the voice of a judge delivering sentence.
+
+"You are a drunken loafer," repeated the boy. "And you know it. And I
+mean that to-morrow morning every one on the Zone shall know it. And I
+mean to-morrow night every one in the States shall know it. You've
+killed a man, or tried to, and I'm going to break you." With his arm he
+pointed to Meehan. "Break that man?" he demanded. "For doing his duty,
+for trying to stop a murder? Strip him of his shield?" The boy laughed
+savagely. "It's you I am going to strip, Aintree," he cried, "you
+'hero of Batangas'; I'm going to strip you naked. I'm going to 'cut
+the buttons off your coat, and tear the stripes away.' I'm going to
+degrade you and disgrace you, and drive you out of the army!" He threw
+his note-book on the table. "There's your dossier, Aintree," he said.
+"For three months you've been drunk, and there's your record. The
+police got it for me; it's written there with dates and the names of
+witnesses. I'll swear to it. I've been after you to get you, and I've
+got you. With that book, with what you did to-night, you'll leave the
+army. You may resign, you may be court-martialled, you may be hung. I
+don't give a damn what they do to you, but you will leave the army!"
+
+He turned to Meehan, and with a jerk of the hand signified Aintree.
+
+"Put him in a cell," he said. "If he resists--"
+
+Aintree gave no sign of resisting. He stood motionless, his arms
+hanging limp, his eyes protruding. The liquor had died in him, and his
+anger had turned chill. He tried to moisten his lips to speak, but his
+throat was baked, and no sound issued. He tried to focus his eyes upon
+the menacing little figure behind the desk, but between the two lamps
+it swayed, and shrank and swelled. Of one thing only was he sure, that
+some grave disaster had overtaken him, something that when he came
+fully to his senses still would overwhelm him, something he could not
+conquer with his fists. His brain, even befuddled as it was, told him
+he had been caught by the heels, that he was in a trap, that smashing
+this boy who threatened him could not set him free. He recognized, and
+it was this knowledge that stirred him with alarm, that this was no
+ordinary officer of justice, but a personal enemy, an avenging spirit
+who, for some unknown reason, had spread a trap; who, for some private
+purpose of revenge, would drag him down.
+
+Frowning painfully, he waved Meehan from him.
+
+"Wait," he commanded. "I don' unnerstan'. What good's it goin' to do
+you to lock me up an' disgrace me? What harm have I done you? Who
+asked you to run the army, anyway? Who are you?"
+
+"My name is Standish," said the lieutenant. "My father was colonel of
+the Thirty-third when you first joined it from the Academy."
+
+Aintree exclaimed with surprise and enlightenment. He broke into
+hurried speech, but Standish cut him short.
+
+"And General Standish of the Mexican War," he continued, "was my
+grandfather. Since Washington all my people have been officers of the
+regular army, and I'd been one, too, if I'd been bright enough. That's
+why I respect the army. That's why I'm going to throw you out of it.
+You've done harm fifty men as good as you can't undo. You've made
+drunkards of a whole battalion. You've taught boys who looked up to
+you, as I looked up to you once, to laugh at discipline, to make swine
+of themselves. You've set them an example. I'm going to make an
+example of you. That's all there is to this. I've got no grudge
+against you. I'm not vindictive; I'm sorry for you. But," he paused
+and pointed his hand at Aintree as though it held a gun, "you are going
+to leave the army!"
+
+Like a man coming out of an ugly dream, Aintree opened and shut his
+eyes, shivered, and stretched his great muscles. They watched him with
+an effort of the will force himself back to consciousness. When again
+he spoke, his tone was sane.
+
+"See here, Standish," he began, "I'll not beg of you or any man. I only
+ask you to think what you're doing. This means my finish. If you force
+this through to-night it means court-martial, it means I lose my
+commission, I lose--lose things you know nothing about. And, if I've
+got a record for drinking, I've got a record for other things, too.
+Don't forget that!"
+
+Standish shook his head. "I didn't forget it," he said.
+
+"Well, suppose I did," demanded Aintree. "Suppose I did go on the
+loose, just to pass the time, just because I'm sick of this damned
+ditch? Is it fair to wipe out all that went before, for that? I'm the
+youngest major in the army, I served in three campaigns, I'm a
+medal-of-honor man, I've got a career ahead of me, and--and I'm going
+to be married. If you give me a chance-"
+
+Standish struck the table with his fist.
+
+"I will give you a chance," he cried. "If you'll give your word to
+this man and to me, that, so help you God, you'll never drink
+again--I'll let you go."
+
+If what Standish proposed had been something base, Aintree could not
+have accepted it with more contempt.
+
+"I'll see you in hell first," he said.
+
+As though the interview was at an end, Standish dropped into his chair
+and leaning forward, from the table picked up a cigar. As he lit it,
+he motioned Meehan toward his prisoner, but before the policeman could
+advance the sound of footsteps halted him.
+
+Bullard, his eyes filled with concern, leaped up the steps, and ran to
+the desk.
+
+"Lieutenant!" he stammered, "that man--the nigger that officer
+shot--he's dead!"
+
+Aintree gave a gasp that was partly a groan, partly a cry of protest,
+and Bullard, as though for the first time aware of his presence, sprang
+back to the open door and placed himself between it and Aintree.
+
+"It's murder!" he said.
+
+None of the three men spoke; and when Meehan crossed to where Aintree
+stood, staring fearfully at nothing, he had only to touch his sleeve,
+and Aintree, still staring, fell into step beside him.
+
+From the yard outside Standish heard the iron door of the cell swing
+shut, heard the key grate in the lock, and the footsteps of Meehan
+returning.
+
+Meehan laid the key upon the desk, and with Bullard stood at attention,
+waiting.
+
+"Give him time," whispered Standish. "Let it sink in!"
+
+At the end of half an hour Standish heard Aintree calling, and, with
+Meehan carrying a lantern, stepped into the yard and stopped at the
+cell door.
+
+Aintree was quite sober. His face was set and white, his voice was
+dull with suffering. He stood erect, clasping the bars in his hands.
+
+"Standish," he said, "you gave me a chance a while ago, and I refused
+it. I was rough about it. I'm sorry. It made me hot because I
+thought you were forcing my hand, blackmailing me into doing something
+I ought to do as a free agent. Now, I am a free agent. You couldn't
+give me a chance now, you couldn't let me go now, not if I swore on a
+thousand Bibles. I don't know what they'll give me--Leavenworth for
+life, or hanging, or just dismissal. But, you've got what you
+wanted--I'm leaving the army!" Between the bars he stretched out his
+arms and held a hand toward Meehan and Standish. In the same dull,
+numbed voice he continued.
+
+"So, now," he went on, "that I've nothing to gain by it, I want to
+swear to you and to this man here, that whether I hang, or go to jail,
+or am turned loose, I will never, so help me God, take another drink."
+
+Standish was holding the hand of the man who once had been his hero.
+He clutched it tight.
+
+"Aintree," he cried, "suppose I could work a miracle; suppose I've
+played a trick on you, to show you your danger, to show you what might
+come to you any day--does that oath still stand?"
+
+The hand that held his ground the bones together.
+
+"I've given my word!" cried Aintree. "For the love of God, don't
+torture me. Is the man alive?"
+
+As Standish swung open the cell door, the hero of Batangas, he who
+could thrash any man on the isthmus, crumpled up like a child upon his
+shoulder.
+
+And Meehan, as he ran for water, shouted joyfully.
+
+"That nigger," he called to Bullard, "can go home now. The lieutenant
+don't want him no more."
+
+
+
+
+
+EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+
+
+As a rule, the instant the season closed Aline Proctor sailed on the
+first steamer for London, where awaited her many friends, both English
+and American--and to Paris, where she selected those gowns that on and
+off the stage helped to make her famous. But this particular summer
+she had spent with the Endicotts at Bar Harbor, and it was at their
+house Herbert Nelson met her. After Herbert met her very few other men
+enjoyed that privilege. This was her wish as well as his.
+
+They behaved disgracefully. Every morning after breakfast they
+disappeared and spent the day at opposite ends of a canoe. She,
+knowing nothing of a canoe, was happy in stabbing the waters with her
+paddle while he told her how he loved her and at the same time, with
+anxious eyes on his own paddle, skilfully frustrated her efforts to
+drown them both. While the affair lasted it was ideal and beautiful,
+but unfortunately it lasted only two months.
+
+Then Lord Albany, temporarily in America as honorary attache to the
+British embassy, his adoring glances, his accent, and the way he
+brushed his hair, proved too much for the susceptible heart of Aline,
+and she chucked Herbert and asked herself how a woman of her age could
+have seriously considered marrying a youth just out of Harvard! At that
+time she was a woman of nineteen; but, as she had been before the
+public ever since she was eleven, the women declared she was not a day
+under twenty-six; and the men knew she could not possibly be over
+sixteen!
+
+Aline's own idea of herself was that without some one in love with her
+she could not exist--that, unless she knew some man cared for her and
+for her alone, she would wither and die. As a matter of fact, whether
+any one loved her or not did not in the least interest her. There were
+several dozen men who could testify to that. They knew! What she
+really wanted was to be head over ears in love--to adore some one, to
+worship him, to imagine herself starving for him and making sacrifice
+hits for him; but when the moment came to make the sacrifice hit and
+marry the man, she invariably found that a greater, truer love had
+arisen--for some one else.
+
+This greater and truer love always made her behave abominably to the
+youth she had just jilted. She wasted no time on post-mortems. She was
+so eager to show her absolute loyalty to the new monarch that she
+grudged every thought she ever had given the one she had cast into
+exile. She resented him bitterly. She could not forgive him for
+having allowed her to be desperately in love with him. He should have
+known he was not worthy of such a love as hers. He should have known
+that the real prince was waiting only just round the corner.
+
+As a rule the rejected ones behaved well. Each decided Aline was much
+too wonderful a creature for him, and continued to love her cautiously
+and from a distance. None of them ever spoke or thought ill of her and
+would gladly have punched any one who did. It was only the women whose
+young men Aline had temporarily confiscated, and then returned saddened
+and chastened, who were spiteful. And they dared say no more than that
+Aline would probably have known her mind better if she had had a mother
+to look after her. This, coming to the ears of Aline, caused her to
+reply that a girl who could not keep straight herself, but needed a
+mother to help her, would not keep straight had she a dozen mothers.
+As she put it cheerfully, a girl who goes wrong and then pleads "no
+mother to guide her" is like a jockey who pulls a race and then blames
+the horse.
+
+Each of the young men Aline rejected married some one else and, except
+when the name of Aline Proctor in the theatrical advertisements or in
+electric lights on Broadway gave him a start, forgot that for a month
+her name and his own had been linked together from Portland to San
+Francisco. But the girl he married did not forget. She never
+understood what the public saw in Aline Proctor. That Aline was the
+queen of musical comedy she attributed to the fact that Aline knew the
+right people and got herself written about in the right way. But that
+she could sing, dance, act; that she possessed compelling charm; that
+she "got across" not only to the tired business man, the wine agent,
+the college boy, but also to the children and the old ladies, was to
+her never apparent.
+
+Just as Aline could not forgive the rejected suitor for allowing her to
+love him, so the girl he married never forgave Aline for having loved
+her husband. Least of all could Sally Winthrop, who two years after
+the summer at Bar Harbor married Herbert Nelson, forgive her. And she
+let Herbert know it. Herbert was properly in love with Sally Winthrop,
+but he liked to think that his engagement to Aline, though brief and
+abruptly terminated, had proved him to be a man fatally attractive to
+all women. And though he was hypnotizing himself into believing that
+his feeling for Aline had been the grand passion, the truth was that
+all that kept her in his thoughts was his own vanity. He was not
+discontented with his lot--his lot being Sally Winthrop, her millions,
+and her estate of three hundred acres near Westbury. Nor was he still
+longing for Aline. It was only that his vanity was flattered by the
+recollection that one of the young women most beloved by the public had
+once loved him.
+
+"I once was a king in Babylon," he used to misquote to himself, "and
+she was a Christian slave."
+
+He was as young as that.
+
+Had he been content in secret to assure himself that he once had been a
+reigning monarch, his vanity would have harmed no one; but,
+unfortunately, he possessed certain documentary evidence to that fact.
+And he was sufficiently foolish not to wish to destroy it. The
+evidence consisted of a dozen photographs he had snapped of Aline
+during the happy days at Bar Harbor, and on which she had written
+phrases somewhat exuberant and sentimental.
+
+From these photographs Nelson was loath to part--especially with one
+that showed Aline seated on a rock that ran into the waters of the
+harbor, and on which she had written: "As long as this rock lasts!"
+Each time she was in love Aline believed it would last. That in the
+past it never had lasted did not discourage her.
+
+What to do with these photographs that so vividly recalled the most
+tumultuous period of his life Nelson could not decide. If he hid them
+away and Sally found them, he knew she would make his life miserable.
+If he died and Sally then found them, when he no longer was able to
+explain that they meant nothing to him, she would believe he always had
+loved the other woman, and it would make her miserable. He felt he
+could not safely keep them in his own house; his vanity did not permit
+him to burn them, and, accordingly, he decided to unload them on some
+one else.
+
+The young man to whom he confided his collection was Charles Cochran.
+Cochran was a charming person from the West. He had studied in the
+Beaux Arts and on foot had travelled over England and Europe, preparing
+himself to try his fortune in New York as an architect. He was now in
+the office of the architects Post & Constant, and lived alone in a tiny
+farmhouse he had made over for himself near Herbert Nelson, at
+Westbury, Long Island.
+
+Post & Constant were a fashionable firm and were responsible for many
+of the French chateaux and English country houses that were rising near
+Westbury, Hempstead, and Roslyn; and it was Cochran's duty to drive
+over that territory in his runabout, keep an eye on the contractors,
+and dissuade clients from grafting mansard roofs on Italian villas. He
+had built the summer home of the Herbert Nelsons, and Herbert and
+Charles were very warm friends. Charles was of the same lack of years
+as was Herbert, of an enthusiastic and sentimental nature; and, like
+many other young men, the story of his life also was the lovely and
+much-desired Aline Proctor. It was this coincidence that had made them
+friends and that had led Herbert to select Charles as the custodian of
+his treasure. As a custodian and confidant Charles especially appealed
+to his new friend, because, except upon the stage and in restaurants,
+Charles had never seen Aline Proctor, did not know her--and considered
+her so far above him, so unattainable, that he had no wish to seek her
+out. Unknown, he preferred to worship at a distance. In this
+determination Herbert strongly encouraged him.
+
+When he turned over the pictures to Charles, Herbert could not resist
+showing them to him. They were in many ways charming. They presented
+the queen of musical comedy in several new roles. In one she was in a
+sailor suit, giving an imitation of a girl paddling a canoe. In
+another she was in a riding-habit mounted upon a pony of which she
+seemed very much afraid.
+
+In some she sat like a siren among the rocks with the waves and seaweed
+snatching at her feet, and in another she crouched beneath the wheel of
+Herbert's touring car. All of the photographs were unprofessional and
+intimate, and the legends scrawled across them were even more intimate.
+
+"'As long as this rock lasts!'" read Herbert. At arm's length he held
+the picture for Cochran to see, and laughed bitterly and unmirthfully
+as he had heard leading men laugh in problem plays.
+
+"That is what she wrote," he mocked--"but how long did it last? Until
+she saw that little red-headed Albany playing polo. That lasted until
+his mother heard of it. She thought her precious lamb was in the
+clutches of a designing actress, and made the Foreign Office cable him
+home. Then Aline took up one of those army aviators, and chucked him
+for that fellow who painted her portrait, and threw him over for the
+lawn-tennis champion. Now she's engaged to Chester Griswold, and
+Heaven pity her! Of course he's the greatest catch in America; but he's
+a prig and a snob, and he's so generous with his money that he'll give
+you five pennies for a nickel any time you ask him. He's got a heart
+like the metre of a taxicab, and he's jealous as a cat. Aline will
+have a fine time with Chester! I knew him at St. Paul's and at Harvard,
+and he's got as much red blood in him as an eel!"
+
+Cochran sprang to the defense of the lady of his dreams.
+
+"There must be some good in the man," he protested, "or Miss Proctor-"
+
+"Oh, those solemn snobs," declared Herbert, "impress women by just
+keeping still. Griswold pretends the reason he doesn't speak to you is
+because he's too superior, but the real reason is that he knows
+whenever he opens his mouth he shows he is an ass."
+
+Reluctantly Herbert turned over to Charles the precious pictures. "It
+would be a sin to destroy them, wouldn't it?" he prompted.
+
+Cochran agreed heartily.
+
+"You might even," suggested Herbert, "leave one or two of them about.
+You have so many of Aline already that one more wouldn't be noticed.
+Then when I drop in I could see it." He smiled ingratiatingly.
+
+"But those I have I bought," Cochran pointed out. "Anybody can buy
+them, but yours are personal. And they're signed."
+
+"No one will notice that but me," protested Herbert. "Just one or
+two," he coaxed-"stuck round among the others. They'd give me a heap
+of melancholy pleasure."
+
+Charles shook his head doubtfully.
+
+"Your wife often comes here with you," he said. "I don't believe
+they'd give her melancholy pleasure. The question is, are you married
+to Sally or to Aline Proctor?"
+
+"Oh, of course," exclaimed Herbert--"if you refuse!"
+
+With suspicious haste Charles surrendered.
+
+"I don't refuse," he explained; "I only ask if it's wise. Sally knows
+you were once very fond of Miss Proctor--knows you were engaged to her."
+
+"But," protested Herbert, "Sally sees your photographs of Aline. What
+difference can a few more make? After she's seen a dozen she gets used
+to them."
+
+No sooner had Herbert left him than the custodian of the treasure
+himself selected the photographs he would display. In them the young
+woman he had--from the front row of the orchestra--so ardently admired
+appeared in a new light. To Cochran they seemed at once to render her
+more kindly, more approachable; to show her as she really was, the sort
+of girl any youth would find it extremely difficult not to love.
+Cochran found it extremely easy. The photographs gave his imagination
+all the room it wanted. He believed they also gave him an insight into
+her real character that was denied to anybody else. He had always
+credited her with all the virtues; he now endowed her with every charm
+of mind and body. In a week to the two photographs he had selected
+from the loan collection for purposes of display and to give Herbert
+melancholy pleasure he had added three more. In two weeks there were
+half a dozen. In a month, nobly framed in silver, in leather of red,
+green, and blue, the entire collection smiled upon him from every part
+of his bedroom. For he now kept them where no one but himself could
+see them. No longer was he of a mind to share his borrowed treasure
+with others--not even with the rightful owner.
+
+Chester Griswold, spurred on by Aline Proctor, who wanted to build a
+summer home on Long Island, was motoring with Post, of Post & Constant,
+in the neighborhood of Westbury. Post had pointed out several houses
+designed by his firm, which he hoped might assist Griswold in making up
+his mind as to the kind of house he wanted; but none they had seen had
+satisfied his client.
+
+"What I want is a cheap house," explained the young millionaire. "I
+don't really want a house at all," he complained. "It's Miss Proctor's
+idea. When we are married I intend to move into my mother's town
+house, but Miss Proctor wants one for herself in the country. I've
+agreed to that; but it must be small and it must be cheap."
+
+"Cheap" was a word that the clients of Post & Constant never used; but
+Post knew the weaknesses of some of the truly rich, and he knew also
+that no house ever built cost only what the architect said it would
+cost.
+
+"I know the very house you want!" he exclaimed. "One of our young men
+owns it. He made it over from an old farmhouse. It's very well
+arranged; we've used his ground-plan several times and it works out
+splendidly. If he's not at home, I'll show you over the place myself.
+And if you like the house he's the man to build you one."
+
+When they reached Cochran's home he was at Garden City playing golf,
+but the servant knew Mr. Post, and to him and his client threw open
+every room in the house.
+
+"Now, this," exclaimed the architect enthusiastically, "is the master's
+bedroom. In your case it would probably be your wife's room and you
+would occupy the one adjoining, which Cochran now uses as a guest-room.
+As you see, they are entirely cut off from-"
+
+Mr. Griswold did not see. Up to that moment he had given every
+appearance of being both bored and sulky. Now his attention was
+entirely engaged--but not upon the admirable simplicity of Mr.
+Cochran's ground-plan, as Mr. Post had hoped. Instead, the eyes of the
+greatest catch in America were intently regarding a display of
+photographs that smiled back at him from every corner of the room. Not
+only did he regard these photographs with a savage glare, but he
+approached them and carefully studied the inscriptions scrawled across
+the face of each.
+
+Post himself cast a glance at the nearest photographs, and then hastily
+manoeuvred his client into the hall and closed the door.
+
+"We will now," he exclaimed, "visit the butler's pantry, which opens
+upon the dining-room and kitchen, thus saving--"
+
+But Griswold did not hear him. Without giving another glance at the
+house he stamped out of it and, plumping himself down in the motor-car,
+banged the door. Not until Post had driven him well into New York did
+he make any comment.
+
+"What did you say," he then demanded, "is the name of the man who owns
+that last house we saw?"
+
+Post told him.
+
+"I never heard of him!" said Griswold as though he were delivering
+young Cochran's death sentence. "Who is he?"
+
+"He's an architect in our office," said Post. "We think a lot of him.
+He'll leave us soon, of course. The best ones always do. His work is
+very popular. So is he."
+
+"I never heard of him," repeated Griswold. Then, with sudden heat, he
+added savagely: "But I mean to to-night."
+
+When Griswold had first persuaded Aline Proctor to engage herself to
+him he had suggested that, to avoid embarrassment, she should tell him
+the names of the other men to whom she had been engaged.
+
+"What kind of embarrassment would that avoid?"
+
+"If I am talking to a man," said Griswold, "and he knows the woman I'm
+going to marry was engaged to him and I don't know that, he has me at a
+disadvantage."
+
+"I don't see that he has," said Aline. "If we suppose, for the sake of
+argument, that to marry me is desirable, I would say that the man who
+was going to marry me had the advantage over the one I had declined to
+marry."
+
+"I want to know who those men are," explained Griswold, "because I want
+to avoid them. I don't want to talk to them. I don't want even to
+know them."
+
+"I don't see how I can help you," said Aline. "I haven't the slightest
+objection to telling you the names of the men I have cared for, if I
+can remember them, but I certainly do not intend to tell you the name
+of any man who cared for me enough to ask me to marry him. That's his
+secret, not mine--certainly not yours."
+
+Griswold thought he was very proud. He really was very vain; and as
+jealousy is only vanity in its nastiest development he was extremely
+jealous. So he persisted.
+
+"Will you do this?" he demanded. "If I ever ask you, 'Is that one of
+the men you cared for?' will you tell me?"
+
+"If you wish it," said Aline; "but I can't see any health in it. It
+will only make you uncomfortable. So long as you know I have given you
+the greatest and truest love I am capable of, why should you concern
+yourself with my mistakes?"
+
+"So that I can avoid meeting what you call your mistakes," said
+Griswold--"and being friendly with them."
+
+"I assure you," laughed Aline, "it wouldn't hurt you a bit to be as
+friendly with them as they'd let you. Maybe they weren't as proud of
+their families as you are, but they made up for that by being a darned
+sight prouder of me!"
+
+Later, undismayed by this and unashamed, on two occasions Griswold
+actually did demand of Aline if a genial youth she had just greeted
+joyfully was one of those for whom she once had cared.
+
+And Aline had replied promptly and truthfully that he was. But in the
+case of Charles Cochran, Griswold did not ask Aline if he was one of
+those for whom she once had cared. He considered the affair with
+Cochran so serious that, in regard to that man, he adopted a different
+course.
+
+In digging rivals out of the past his jealousy had made him
+indefatigable, but in all his researches he never had heard the name of
+Charles Cochran. That fact and the added circumstance that Aline
+herself never had mentioned the man was in his eyes so suspicious as to
+be almost a damning evidence of deception. And he argued that if in
+the past Aline had deceived him as to Charles Cochran she would
+continue to do so. Accordingly, instead of asking her frankly for the
+truth he proceeded to lay traps for it. And if there is one thing
+Truth cannot abide, it is being hunted by traps.
+
+That evening Aline and he were invited to a supper in her honor, and as
+he drove her from the theatre to the home of their hostess he told her
+of his search earlier in the day.
+
+The electric light in the limousine showed Aline's face as clearly as
+though it were held in a spotlight, and as he prepared his trap
+Griswold regarded her jealously.
+
+"Post tells me," he said, "he has the very man you want for your
+architect. He's sure you'll find him most understanding
+and--and--sympathetic. He's a young man who is just coming to the
+front, and he's very popular, especially with women."
+
+"What's his being popular with women," asked Aline, "got to do with his
+carrying out my ideas of a house?"
+
+"That's just it," said Griswold--"it's the woman who generally has the
+most to say as to how her house shall be built, and this man
+understands woman. I have reasons for believing he will certainly
+understand you!"
+
+"If he understands me well enough to give me all the linen-closets I
+want," said Aline, "he will be perfectly satisfactory."
+
+Before delivering his blow Griswold sank back into his corner of the
+car, drew his hat brim over his forehead, and fixed spying eyes upon
+the very lovely face of the girl he had asked to marry him.
+
+"His name," he said in fateful tones, "is Charles Cochran!"
+
+It was supposed to be a body blow; but, to his distress, Aline neither
+started nor turned pale. Neither, for trying to trick her, did she
+turn upon him in reproof and anger. Instead, with alert eyes, she
+continued to peer out of the window at the electric-light
+advertisements and her beloved Broadway.
+
+"Well?" demanded Griswold; his tone was hoarse and heavy with meaning.
+
+"Well what?" asked Aline pleasantly.
+
+"How," demanded Griswold, "do you like Charles Cochran for an
+architect?"
+
+"How should I know?" asked Aline. "I've not met him yet!"
+
+She had said it! And she had said it without the waver of one of her
+lovely eyelashes. No wonder the public already hailed her as a
+finished actress! Griswold felt that his worst fears were justified.
+She had lied to him. And, as he knew she had never before lied to him,
+that now she did so proved beyond hope of doubt that the reason for it
+was vital, imperative, and compelling. But of his suspicions Griswold
+gave no sign. He would not at once expose her. He had trapped her,
+but as yet she must not know that. He would wait until he had still
+further entangled her--until she could not escape; and then, with
+complete proof of her deceit, he would confront and overwhelm her.
+
+With this amiable purpose in mind he called early the next morning upon
+Post & Constant and asked to see Mr. Cochran. He wished, he said, to
+consult him about the new house. Post had not yet reached the office,
+and of Griswold's visit with Post to his house Cochran was still
+ignorant. He received Griswold most courteously. He felt that the man
+who was loved by the girl he also had long and hopelessly worshipped
+was deserving of the highest consideration. Griswold was less
+magnanimous. When he found his rival--for as such he beheld him--was
+of charming manners and gallant appearance he considered that fact an
+additional injury; but he concealed his resentment, for he was going to
+trap Cochran, too.
+
+He found the architect at work leaning over a drawing-board, and as
+they talked Cochran continued to stand. He was in his shirt-sleeves,
+which were rolled to his shoulders; and the breadth of those shoulders
+and the muscles of his sunburned arms were much in evidence. Griswold
+considered it a vulgar exhibition.
+
+For over ten minutes they talked solely of the proposed house, but not
+once did Griswold expose the fact that he had seen any more of it than
+any one might see from the public road. When he rose to take his leave
+he said:
+
+"How would it do if I motored out Sunday and showed your house to Miss
+Proctor? Sunday is the only day she has off, and if it would not
+inconvenience you--"
+
+The tender heart of Cochran leaped in wild tumult; he could not conceal
+his delight, nor did he attempt to do so; and his expression made it
+entirely unnecessary for him to assure Griswold that such a visit would
+be entirely welcome and that they might count on finding him at home.
+As though it were an afterthought, Griswold halted at the door and said:
+
+"I believe you are already acquainted with Miss Proctor."
+
+Cochran, conscious of five years of devotion, found that he was
+blushing, and longed to strangle himself. Nor was the blush lost upon
+Griswold.
+
+"I'm sorry," said Cochran, "but I've not had that honor. On the stage,
+of course--"
+
+He shrugged the broad shoulders deprecatingly, as though to suggest
+that not to know Miss Proctor as an artist argues oneself unknown.
+
+Griswold pretended to be puzzled. As though endeavoring to recall a
+past conversation he frowned.
+
+"But Aline," he said, "told me she had met you-met you at Bar Harbor."
+In the fatal photographs the familiar landfalls of Bar Harbor had been
+easily recognized.
+
+The young architect shook his head.
+
+"It must be another Cochran," he suggested. "I have never been in Bar
+Harbor."
+
+With the evidence of the photographs before him this last statement was
+a verdict of guilty, and Griswold, not with the idea of giving Cochran
+a last chance to be honest, but to cause him to dig the pit still
+deeper, continued to lead him on. "Maybe she meant York Harbor?"
+
+Again Cochran shook his head and laughed.
+
+"Believe me," he said, "if I'd ever met Miss Proctor anywhere I
+wouldn't forget it!"
+
+Ten minutes later Griswold was talking to Aline over the telephone. He
+intended to force matters. He would show Aline she could neither
+trifle with nor deceive Chester Griswold; but the thought that he had
+been deceived was not what most hurt him. What hurt him was to think
+that Aline had preferred a man who looked like an advertisement for
+ready-made clothes and who worked in his shirt-sleeves.
+
+Griswold took it for granted that any woman would be glad to marry him.
+So many had been willing to do so that he was convinced, when one of
+them was not, it was not because there was anything wrong with him, but
+because the girl herself lacked taste and perception.
+
+That the others had been in any degree moved by his many millions had
+never suggested itself. He was convinced each had loved him for
+himself alone; and if Aline, after meeting him, would still consider
+any one else, it was evident something was very wrong with Aline. He
+was determined that she must be chastened--must be brought to a proper
+appreciation of her good fortune and of his condescension.
+
+On being called to the telephone at ten in the morning, Aline demanded
+to know what could excuse Griswold for rousing her in the middle of the
+night!
+
+Griswold replied that, though the day was young, it also was charming;
+that on Sunday there might be rain; and that if she desired to see the
+house he and Post thought would most suit her, he and his car would be
+delighted to convey her to it. They could make the run in an hour,
+lunch with friends at Westbury, and return in plenty of time for the
+theatre. Aline was delighted at the sudden interest Griswold was
+showing in the new house. Without a moment's hesitation she walked into
+the trap. She would go, she declared, with pleasure. In an hour he
+should call for her.
+
+Exactly an hour later Post arrived at his office. He went directly to
+Cochran.
+
+"Charles," he said, "I'm afraid I got you into trouble yesterday. I
+took a client to see your house. You have often let us do it before;
+but since I was there last you've made some changes. In your
+bedroom--" Post stopped.
+
+Cochran's naive habit of blushing told him it was not necessary to
+proceed. In tones of rage and mortification Cochran swore explosively;
+Post was relieved to find he was swearing at himself.
+
+"I ought to be horsewhipped!" roared Cochran. "I'll never forgive
+myself! Who," he demanded, "saw the pictures? Was it a man or a woman?"
+
+Post laughed unhappily.
+
+"It was Chester Griswold."
+
+A remarkable change came over Cochran. Instead of sobering him, as
+Post supposed it would, the information made him even more angry--only
+now his anger was transferred from himself to Griswold.
+
+"The blankety-blank bounder!" yelled Cochran. "That was what he
+wanted! That's why he came here!"
+
+"Here!" demanded Post.
+
+"Not an hour ago," cried Cochran. "He asked me about Bar Harbor. He
+saw those pictures were taken at Bar Harbor!"
+
+"I think," said Post soothingly, "he'd a right to ask questions. There
+were so many pictures, and they were very--well--very!"
+
+"I'd have answered his questions," roared Cochran, "if he'd asked them
+like a man, but he came snooping down here to spy on me. He tried to
+trick me. He insulted me! He insulted her!" He emitted a howl of
+dismay. "And I told him I'd never been to Bar Harbor--that I'd never
+met Aline Proctor!"
+
+Cochran seized his coat and hat. He shouted to one of the office boys
+to telephone the garage for his car.
+
+"What are you--where are you going?" demanded Post.
+
+"I'm going home first," cried Cochran, "to put those pictures in a
+safe, as I should have done three months ago. And then I'm going to
+find Chester Griswold and tell him he's an ass and a puppy!"
+
+"If you do that," protested Post, "you're likely to lose us a very
+valuable client."
+
+"And your client," roared Charles, "is likely to lose some very
+valuable teeth!"
+
+As Charles whirled into the country road in which stood his house he
+saw drawn up in front of it the long gray car in which, that morning,
+Chester Griswold had called at the office. Cochran emitted a howl of
+anger. Was his home again to be invaded? And again while he was
+absent? To what extreme would Griswold's jealousy next lead him? He
+fell out of his own car while it still moved, and leaped up the garden
+walk. The front rooms of the house were empty, but from his bedroom he
+heard, raised in excited tones, the voice of Griswold. The audacity of
+the man was so surprising, and his own delight at catching him
+red-handed so satisfying, that no longer was Cochran angry. The Lord
+had delivered his enemy into his hands! And, as he advanced toward his
+bedroom, not only was he calm, but, at the thought of his revenge,
+distinctly jubilant. In the passageway a frightened maid servant, who,
+at his unexpected arrival, was now even more frightened, endeavored to
+give him an explanation; but he waved her into silence, and, striding
+before her, entered his bedroom.
+
+He found confronting him a tall and beautiful young woman. It was not
+the Aline Proctor he knew. It was not the well-poised, gracious, and
+distinguished beauty he had seen gliding among the tables at Sherry's
+or throwing smiles over the footlights. This Aline Proctor was a very
+indignant young person, with flashing eyes, tossing head, and a
+stamping foot. Extended from her at arm's length, she held a
+photograph of herself in a heavy silver frame; and, as though it were a
+weapon, she was brandishing it in the face of Chester Griswold. As
+Cochran, in amazement, halted in the doorway she was exclaiming:
+
+"I told you I didn't know Charles Cochran! I tell you so now! If you
+can't believe me-"
+
+Out of the corner of her flashing eyes the angry lady caught sight of
+Cochran in the doorway. She turned upon the intruder as though she
+meant forcibly to eject him.
+
+"Who are you?" she demanded. Her manner and tone seemed to add: "And
+what the deuce are you doing here?"
+
+Charles answered her tone.
+
+"I am Charles Cochran," he said. "I live here. This is my house!"
+
+These words had no other effect upon Miss Proctor than to switch her
+indignation down another track. She now turned upon Charles.
+
+"Then, if this is your house," cried that angry young person, "why have
+you filled it with photographs of me that belong to some one else?"
+
+Charles saw that his hour had come. His sin had found him out. He
+felt that to prevaricate would be only stupid.
+
+Griswold had tried devious methods--and look where his devious methods
+had dumped him! Griswold certainly was in wrong. Charles quickly
+determined to adopt a course directly opposite. Griswold had shown an
+utter lack of confidence in Aline. Charles decided that he would give
+her his entire confidence, would throw himself upon the mercy of the
+court.
+
+"I have those photographs in my house, Miss Proctor," he said, "because
+I have admired you a long time. They were more like you than those I
+could buy. Having them here has helped me a lot, and it hasn't done
+you any harm. You know very well you have anonymous admirers all over
+this country. I'm only one of them. If I have offended, I have
+offended with many, many thousands."
+
+Already it has been related that Cochran was very good to look upon.
+At the present moment, as he spoke in respectful, even soulful accents,
+meekly and penitently proclaiming his long-concealed admiration, Miss
+Proctor found her indignation melting like an icicle in the sun.
+
+Still, she did not hold herself cheaply. She was accustomed to such
+open flattery. She would not at once capitulate.
+
+"But these pictures," she protested, "I gave to a man I knew. You have
+no right to them. They are not at all the sort of picture I would give
+to an utter stranger!" With anxiety the lovely lady paused for a
+reply. She hoped that the reply the tall young man with appealing eyes
+would make would be such as to make it possible for her to forgive him.
+
+He was not given time to reply. With a mocking snort Griswold
+interrupted. Aline and Charles had entirely forgotten him.
+
+"An utter stranger!" mimicked Griswold. "Oh, yes; he's an utter
+stranger! You're pretty good actors, both of you; but you can't keep
+that up long, and you'd better stop it now."
+
+"Stop what?" asked Miss Proctor. Her tone was cold and calm, but in
+her eyes was a strange light. It should have warned Griswold that he
+would have been safer under the bed.
+
+"Stop pretending!" cried Griswold. "I won't have it!"
+
+"I don't understand," said Miss Proctor. She spoke in the same cold
+voice, only now it had dropped several degrees nearer freezing. "I
+don't think you understand yourself. You won't have what?"
+
+Griswold now was frightened, and that made him reckless. Instead of
+withdrawing he plunged deeper.
+
+"I won't have you two pretending you don't know each other," he
+blustered. "I won't stand being fooled! If you're going to deceive me
+before we're married, what will you do after we're married?"
+
+Charles emitted a howl. It was made up of disgust, amazement, and
+rage. Fiercely he turned upon Miss Proctor.
+
+"Let me have him!" he begged.
+
+"No!" almost shouted Miss Proctor. Her tone was no longer cold--it was
+volcanic. Her eyes, flashing beautifully, were fixed upon Griswold.
+She made a gesture as though to sweep Charles out of the room. "Please
+go!" she demanded. "This does not concern you."
+
+Her tone was one not lightly to be disregarded. Charles disregarded it.
+
+"It does concern me," he said briskly. "Nobody can insult a woman in
+my house--you, least of all!" He turned upon the greatest catch in
+America. "Griswold," he said, "I never met this lady until I came into
+this room; but I know her, understand her, value her better than you'd
+understand her if you knew her a thousand years!"
+
+Griswold allowed him to go no farther.
+
+"I know this much," he roared: "she was in love with the man who took
+those photographs, and that man was in love with her! And you're that
+man!"
+
+"What if I am!" roared back Charles. "Men always have loved her; men
+always will--because she's a fine, big, wonderful woman! You can't see
+that, and you never will. You insulted her! Now I'll give you time to
+apologize for that, and then I'll order you out of this house! And if
+Miss Proctor is the sort of girl I think she is, she'll order you out
+of it, too!"
+
+Both men swung toward Miss Proctor. Her eyes were now smiling
+excitedly. She first turned them upon Charles, blushing most
+becomingly.
+
+"Miss Proctor," she said, "hopes she is the sort of girl Mr. Cochran
+thinks she is." She then turned upon the greatest catch in America.
+"You needn't wait, Chester," she said, "not even to apologize."
+
+Chester Griswold, alone in his car, was driven back to New York. On the
+way he invented a story to explain why, at the eleventh hour, he had
+jilted Aline Proctor; but when his thoughts reverted to the young man
+he had seen working with his sleeves rolled up he decided it would be
+safer to let Miss Proctor tell of the broken engagement in her own way.
+
+Charles would not consent to drive his fair guest back to New York
+until she had first honored him with her presence at luncheon. It was
+served for two, on his veranda, under the climbing honeysuckles.
+During the luncheon he told her all.
+
+Miss Proctor, in the light of his five years of devotion, magnanimously
+forgave him.
+
+"Such a pretty house!" she exclaimed as they drove away from it. "When
+Griswold selected it for our honeymoon he showed his first appreciation
+of what I really like."
+
+"It is still at your service!" said Charles.
+
+Miss Proctor's eyes smiled with a strange light, but she did not speak.
+It was a happy ride; but when Charles left her at the door of her
+apartment-house he regarded sadly and with regret the bundle of
+retrieved photographs that she carried away.
+
+"What is it?" she asked kindly.
+
+"I'm thinking of going back to those empty frames," said Charles, and
+blushed deeply. Miss Proctor blushed also. With delighted and guilty
+eyes she hastily scanned the photographs. Snatching one from the
+collection, she gave it to him and then ran up the steps.
+
+In the light of the spring sunset the eyes of Charles devoured the
+photograph of which, at last, he was the rightful owner. On it was
+written: "As long as this rock lasts!"
+
+As Charles walked to his car his expression was distinctly thoughtful.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+
+
+When his hunting trip in Uganda was over, Hemingway shipped his
+specimens and weapons direct from Mombasa to New York, but he himself
+journeyed south over the few miles that stretched to Zanzibar.
+
+On the outward trip the steamer had touched there, and the little he
+saw of the place had so charmed him that all the time he was on safari
+he promised himself he would not return home without revisiting it. On
+the morning he arrived he had called upon Harris, his consul, to
+inquire about the hotel; and that evening Harris had returned his call
+and introduced him at the club.
+
+One of the men there asked Hemingway what brought him to Africa, and
+when he answered simply and truthfully that he had come to shoot big
+game, it was as though he had said something clever, and every one
+smiled. On the way back to the hotel, as they felt their way through
+the narrow slits in the wall that served as streets, he asked the
+consul why every one had smiled.
+
+The consul laughed evasively.
+
+"It's a local joke," he explained. "A lot of men come here for reasons
+best kept to themselves, and they all say what you said, that they've
+come to shoot big game. It's grown to be a polite way of telling a man
+it is none of his business."
+
+"But I didn't mean it that way," protested Hemingway. "I really have
+been after big game for the last eight months."
+
+In the tone one uses to quiet a drunken man or a child, the consul
+answered soothingly.
+
+"Of course," he assented--"of course you have." But to show he was not
+hopelessly credulous, and to keep Hemingway from involving himself
+deeper, he hinted tactfully: "Maybe they noticed you came ashore with
+only one steamer trunk and no gun-cases."
+
+"Oh, that's easily explained," laughed Hemingway. "My heavy luggage--"
+
+The consul had reached his house and his "boy" was pounding upon it
+with his heavy staff.
+
+"Please don't explain to me," he begged. "It's quite unnecessary. Down
+here we're so darned glad to see any white man that we don't ask
+anything of him except that he won't hurry away. We judge them as they
+behave themselves here; we don't care what they are at home or why they
+left it."
+
+Hemingway was highly amused. To find that he, a respectable,
+sport-loving Hemingway of Massachusetts, should be mistaken for a
+gun-runner, slave-dealer, or escaping cashier greatly delighted him.
+
+"All right!" he exclaimed. "I'll promise not to bore you with my past,
+and I agree to be judged by Zanzibar standards. I only hope I can live
+up to them, for I see I am going to like the place very much."
+
+Hemingway kept his promise. He bored no one with confidences as to his
+ancestors. Of his past he made a point never to speak. He preferred
+that the little community into which he had dropped should remain
+unenlightened, should take him as they found him. Of the fact that a
+college was named after his grandfather and that on his father's
+railroad he could travel through many States, he was discreetly silent.
+
+The men of Zanzibar asked no questions. That Hemingway could play a
+stiff game of tennis, a stiffer game of poker, and, on the piano, songs
+from home was to them sufficient recommendation. In a week he had
+become one of the most popular members of Zanzibar society. It was as
+though he had lived there always. Hemingway found himself reaching out
+to grasp the warmth of the place as a flower turns to the sun. He
+discovered that for thirty years something in him had been cheated. For
+thirty years he had believed that completely to satisfy his soul all he
+needed was the gray stone walls and the gray-shingled cabins under the
+gray skies of New England, that what in nature he most loved was the
+pine forests and the fields of goldenrod on the rock-bound coast of the
+North Shore. But now, like a man escaped from prison, he leaped and
+danced in the glaring sunlight of the equator, he revelled in the
+reckless generosity of nature, in the glorious confusion of colors, in
+the "blooming blue" of the Indian Ocean, in the Arabian nights spent
+upon the housetops under the purple sky, and beneath silver stars so
+near that he could touch them with his hand.
+
+He found it like being perpetually in a comic opera and playing a part
+in one. For only the scenic artist would dare to paint houses in such
+yellow, pink, and cobalt-blue; only a "producer" who had never ventured
+farther from Broadway than the Atlantic City boardwalk would have
+conceived costumes so mad and so magnificent. Instinctively he cast
+the people of Zanzibar in the conventional roles of musical comedy.
+
+His choruses were already in waiting. There was the Sultan's
+body-guard in gold-laced turbans, the merchants of the bazaars in red
+fezzes and gowns of flowing silk, the Malay sailors in blue, the black
+native police in scarlet, the ladies of the harems closely veiled and
+cloaked, the market women in a single garment of orange, or scarlet, or
+purple, or of all three, and the happy, hilarious Zanzibari boys in the
+color God gave them.
+
+For hours he would sit under the yellow-and-green awning of the Greek
+hotel and watch the procession pass, or he would lie under an umbrella
+on the beach and laugh as the boatmen lifted their passengers to their
+shoulders and with them splash through the breakers, or in the bazaars
+for hours he would bargain with the Indian merchants, or in the great
+mahogany hall of the Ivory House, to the whisper of a punka and the
+tinkle of ice in a tall glass, listen to tales of Arab raids, of
+elephant poachers, of the trade in white and black ivory, of the great
+explorers who had sat in that same room--of Emin Pasha, of Livingstone,
+of Stanley. His comic opera lacked only a heroine and the love
+interest.
+
+When he met Mrs. Adair he found both. Polly Adair, as every one who
+dared to do so preferred to call her, was, like himself, an American
+and, though absurdly young, a widow. In the States she would have been
+called an extremely pretty girl. In a community where the few dozen
+white women had wilted and faded in the fierce sun of the equator, and
+where the rest of the women were jet black except their teeth, which
+were dyed an alluring purple, Polly Adair was as beautiful as a June
+morning. At least, so Hemingway thought the first time he saw her, and
+each succeeding time he thought her more beautiful, more lovely, more
+to be loved.
+
+He met her, three days after his arrival, at the residence of the
+British agent and consul-general, where Lady Firth was giving tea to
+the six nurses from the English hospital and to all the other
+respectable members of Zanzibar society.
+
+"My husband's typist," said her ladyship as she helped Hemingway to
+tea, "is a copatriot of yours. She's such a nice gell; not a bit like
+an American. I don't know what I'd do in this awful place without her.
+Promise me," she begged tragically, "you will not ask her to marry you."
+
+Unconscious of his fate, Hemingway promised.
+
+"Because all the men do," sighed Lady Firth, "and I never know what
+morning one of the wretches won't carry her off to a home of her own.
+And then what would become of me? Men are so selfish! If you must fall
+in love," suggested her ladyship, "promise me you will fall in love
+with"--she paused innocently and raised baby-blue eyes, in a baby-like
+stare--"with some one else."
+
+Again Hemingway promised. He bowed gallantly. "That will be quite
+easy," he said.
+
+Her ladyship smiled, but Hemingway did not see the smile. He was
+looking past her at a girl from home, who came across the terrace
+carrying in her hand a stenographer's note-book.
+
+Lady Firth followed the direction of his eyes and saw the look in them.
+She exclaimed with dismay:
+
+"Already! Already he deserts me, even before the ink is dry on the
+paper."
+
+She drew the note-book from Mrs. Adair's fingers and dropped it under
+the tea-table.
+
+"Letters must wait, my child," she declared.
+
+"But Sir George--" protested the girl.
+
+"Sir George must wait, too," continued his wife; "the Foreign Office
+must wait, the British Empire must wait until you have had your tea."
+
+The girl laughed helplessly. As though assured her fellow countryman
+would comprehend, she turned to him.
+
+"They're so exactly like what you want them to be," she said--"I mean
+about their tea!"
+
+Hemingway smiled back with such intimate understanding that Lady Firth
+glanced up inquiringly.
+
+"Have you met Mrs. Adair already?" she asked.
+
+"No," said Hemingway, "but I have been trying to meet her for thirty
+years."
+
+Perplexed, the Englishwoman frowned, and then, with delight at her own
+perspicuity, laughed aloud.
+
+"I know," she cried, "in your country you are what they call a
+'hustler'! Is that right?" She waved them away. "Take Mrs. Adair over
+there," she commanded, "and tell her all the news from home. Tell her
+about the railroad accidents and 'washouts' and the latest thing in
+lynching."
+
+The young people stretched out in long wicker chairs in the shade of a
+tree covered with purple flowers. On a perch at one side of them an
+orang-outang in a steel belt was combing the whiskers of her infant
+daughter; at their feet what looked like two chow puppies, but which
+happened to be Lady Firth's pet lions, were chewing each other's
+toothless gums; and in the immediate foreground the hospital nurses
+were defying the sun at tennis while the Sultan's band played
+selections from a Gaiety success of many years in the past. With these
+surroundings it was difficult to talk of home. Nor on any later
+occasions, except through inadvertence, did they talk of home.
+
+For the reasons already stated, it amused Hemingway to volunteer no
+confidences. On account of what that same evening Harris told him of
+Mrs. Adair, he asked none.
+
+Harris himself was a young man in no way inclined to withhold
+confidences. He enjoyed giving out information. He enjoyed talking
+about himself, his duties, the other consuls, the Zanzibaris, and his
+native State of Iowa. So long as he was permitted to talk, the
+listener could select the subject. But, combined with his loquacity,
+Hemingway had found him kind-hearted, intelligent, observing, and the
+call of a common country had got them quickly together.
+
+Hemingway was quite conscious that the girl he had seen but once had
+impressed him out of all proportion to what he knew of her. She seemed
+too good to be true. And he tried to persuade himself that after eight
+months in the hinterland among hippos and zebras any reasonably
+attractive girl would have proved equally disturbing.
+
+But he was not convinced. He did not wish to be convinced. He assured
+himself that had he met Mrs. Adair at home among hundreds of others he
+would have recognized her as a woman of exceptional character, as one
+especially charming. He wanted to justify this idea of her; he wanted
+to talk of Mrs. Adair to Harris, not to learn more concerning her, but
+just for the pleasure of speaking her name.
+
+He was much upset at that, and the discovery that on meeting a woman
+for the first time he still could be so boyishly and ingenuously moved
+greatly pleased him. It was a most delightful secret. So he acted on
+the principle that when a man immensely admires a woman and wishes to
+conceal that fact from every one else he can best do so by declaring
+his admiration in the frankest and most open manner. After the
+tea-party, as Harris and himself sat in the consulate, he so expressed
+himself.
+
+"What an extraordinary nice girl," he exclaimed, "is that Mrs. Adair! I
+had a long talk with her. She is most charming. However did a woman
+like that come to be in a place like this?"
+
+Judging from his manner, it seemed to Hemingway that at the mention of
+Mrs. Adair's name he had found Harris mentally on guard, as though the
+consul had guessed the question would come and had prepared for it.
+
+"She just dropped in here one day," said Harris, "from no place in
+particular. Personally, I always have thought from heaven."
+
+"It's a good address," said Hemingway.
+
+"It seems to suit her," the consul agreed. "Anyway, if she doesn't
+come from there, that's where she's going--just on account of the good
+she's done us while she's been here. She arrived four months ago with
+a typewriting-machine and letters to me from our consuls in Cape Town
+and Durban. She had done some typewriting for them. It seems that
+after her husband died, which was a few months after they were married,
+she learned to make her living by typewriting. She worked too hard and
+broke down, and the doctor said she must go to hot countries, the
+'hotter the better.' So she's worked her way half around the world
+typewriting. She worked chiefly for her own consuls or for the
+American commission houses. Sometimes she stayed a month, sometimes
+only over one steamer day. But when she got here Lady Firth took such
+a fancy to her that she made Sir George engage her as his private
+secretary, and she's been here ever since."
+
+In a community so small as was that of Zanzibar the white residents saw
+one another every day, and within a week Hemingway had met Mrs. Adair
+many times. He met her at dinner, at the British agency; he met her in
+the country club, where the white exiles gathered for tea and tennis.
+He hired a launch and in her honor gave a picnic on the north coast of
+the island, and on three glorious and memorable nights, after different
+dinner-parties had ascended to the roof, he sat at her side and across
+the white level of the housetops looked down into the moonlit harbor.
+
+What interest the two young people felt in each other was in no way
+discouraged by their surroundings. In the tropics the tender emotions
+are not winter killed. Had they met at home, the conventions, his own
+work, her social duties would have kept the progress of their interest
+within a certain speed limit. But they were in a place free of
+conventions, and the preceding eight months which Hemingway had spent
+in the jungle and on the plain had made the society of his fellow man,
+and of Mrs. Adair in particular, especially attractive.
+
+Hemingway had no work to occupy his time, and he placed it unreservedly
+at the disposition of his countrywoman. In doing so it could not be
+said that Mrs. Adair encouraged him. Hemingway himself would have been
+the first to acknowledge this. From the day he met her he was
+conscious that always there was an intangible barrier between them.
+Even before she possibly could have guessed that his interest in her
+was more than even she, attractive as she was, had the right to expect,
+she had wrapped around herself an invisible mantle of defense.
+
+There were certain speeches of his which she never heard, certain tones
+to which she never responded. At moments when he was complimenting
+himself that at last she was content to be in his company, she would
+suddenly rise and join the others, and he would be left wondering in
+what way he could possibly have offended.
+
+He assured himself that a woman, young and attractive, in a strange
+land in her dependent position must of necessity be discreet, but in
+his conduct there certainly had been nothing that was not considerate,
+courteous, and straightforward.
+
+When he appreciated that he cared for her seriously, that he was
+gloriously happy in caring, and proud of the way in which he cared, the
+fact that she persistently held him at arm's length puzzled and hurt.
+At first when he had deliberately set to work to make her like him he
+was glad to think that, owing to his reticence about himself, if she
+did like him it would be for himself alone and not for his worldly
+goods. But when he knew her better he understood that if once Mrs.
+Adair made up her mind to take a second husband, the fact that he was a
+social and financial somebody, and not, as many in Zanzibar supposed
+Hemingway to be, a social outcast, would make but little difference.
+
+Nor was her manner to be explained by the fact that the majority of
+women found him unattractive. As to that, the pleasant burden of his
+experience was to the contrary. He at last wondered if there was some
+one else, if he had come into her life too late. He set about looking
+for the man and so, he believed, he soon found him.
+
+Of the little colony, Arthur Fearing was the man of whom Hemingway had
+seen the least. That was so because Fearing wished it. Like himself,
+Fearing was an American, young, and a bachelor, but, very much unlike
+Hemingway, a hermit and a recluse.
+
+Two years before he had come to Zanzibar looking for an investment for
+his money. In Zanzibar there were gentlemen adventurers of every
+country, who were welcome to live in any country save their own.
+
+To them Mr. Fearing seemed a heaven-sent victim. But to him their
+alluring tales of the fortunes that were to rise from buried treasures,
+lost mines, and pearl beds did not appeal. Instead he conferred with
+the consuls, the responsible merchants, the partners in the prosperous
+trading houses. After a month of "looking around" he had purchased
+outright the goodwill and stock of one of the oldest of the commission
+houses, and soon showed himself to be a most capable man of business.
+But, except as a man of business, no one knew him. From the dim
+recesses of his warehouse he passed each day to the seclusion of his
+bungalow in the country. And, although every one was friendly to him,
+he made no friends.
+
+It was only after the arrival of Mrs. Adair that he consented to show
+himself, and it was soon noted that it was only when she was invited
+that he would appear, and that on these occasions he devoted himself
+entirely to her. In the presence of others, he still was shy, gravely
+polite, and speaking but little, and never of himself; but with Mrs.
+Adair his shyness seemed to leave him, and when with her he was seen to
+talk easily and eagerly. And, on her part, to what he said, Polly
+Adair listened with serious interest.
+
+Lady Firth, who, at home, was a trained and successful match-maker, and
+who, in Zanzibar, had found but a limited field for her activities,
+decided that if her companion and protegee must marry, she should marry
+Fearing.
+
+Fearing was no gentleman adventurer, remittance-man, or humble clerk
+serving his apprenticeship to a steamship line or an ivory house. He
+was one of the pillars of Zanzibar society. The trading house he had
+purchased had had its beginnings in the slave-trade, and now under his
+alert direction was making a turnover equal to that of any of its
+ancient rivals. Personally, Fearing was a most desirable catch. He
+was well-mannered, well-read, of good appearance, steady, and, in a
+latitude only six degrees removed from the equator, of impeccable
+morals.
+
+It is said that it is the person who is in love who always is the first
+to discover his successful rival. It is either an instinct or because
+his concern is deeper than that of others.
+
+And so, when Hemingway sought for the influence that separated him from
+Polly Adair, the trail led to Fearing. To find that the obstacle in
+the path of his true love was a man greatly relieved him. He had
+feared that what was in the thoughts of Mrs. Adair was the memory of
+her dead husband. He had no desire to cross swords with a ghost. But
+to a living rival he could afford to be generous.
+
+For he was sure no one could care for Polly Adair as he cared, and,
+like every other man in love, he believed that he alone had discovered
+in her beauties of soul and character that to the rest of mankind were
+hidden. This knowledge, he assured himself, had aroused in him a depth
+of devotion no one else could hope to imitate, and this depth of
+devotion would in time so impress her, would become so necessary to her
+existence, that it would force her at last into the arms of the only
+man who could offer it.
+
+Having satisfied himself in this fashion, he continued cheerfully on
+his way, and the presence of a rival in no way discouraged him. It
+only was Polly Adair who discouraged him. And this, in spite of the
+fact that every hour of the day he tried to bring himself pleasantly to
+her notice. All that an idle young man in love, aided and abetted by
+imagination and an unlimited letter of credit, could do, Hemingway did.
+But to no end.
+
+The treasures he dug out of the bazaars and presented to her, under
+false pretenses as trinkets he happened at that moment to find in his
+pockets, were admired by her at their own great value, and returned
+also under false pretenses, as having been offered her only to examine.
+
+"It is for your sister at home, I suppose," she prompted. "It's quite
+lovely. Thank you for letting me see it."
+
+After having been several times severely snubbed in this fashion,
+Hemingway remarked grimly as he put a black pearl back into his pocket:
+
+"At this rate sister will be mighty glad to see me when I get home. It
+seems almost a pity I haven't got a sister."
+
+The girl answered this only with a grave smile.
+
+On another occasion she admired a polo pony that had been imported for
+the stable of the boy Sultan. But next morning Hemingway, after much
+diplomacy, became the owner of it and proudly rode it to the agency.
+Lady Firth and Polly Adair walked out to meet him arm in arm, but at
+sight of the pony there came into the eyes of the secretary a look that
+caused Hemingway to wish himself and his mount many miles in the
+jungle. He saw that before it had been proffered, his gift-horse had
+been rejected. He acted promptly.
+
+"Lady Firth," he said, "you've been so awfully kind to me, made this
+place so like a home to me, that I want you to put this mare in your
+stable. The Sultan wanted her, but when he learned I meant to turn her
+over to you, he let her go. We both hope you'll accept."
+
+Lady Firth had no scruples. In five minutes she had accepted, had
+clapped a side-saddle on her rich gift, and was cantering joyously down
+the Pearl Road.
+
+Polly Adair looked after her with an expression that was distinctly
+wistful. Thus encouraged, Hemingway said:
+
+"I'm glad you are sorry. I hope every time you see that pony you'll be
+sorry."
+
+"Why should I be sorry?" asked the girl.
+
+"Because you have been unkind," said Hemingway, "and it is not your
+character to be unkind. And that you have shown lack of character
+ought to make you sorry."
+
+"But you know perfectly well," said Mrs. Adair, "that if I were to take
+any one of these wonderful things you bring me, I wouldn't have any
+character left."
+
+She smiled at him reassuringly. "And you know," she added, "that that
+is not why I do not take them. It isn't because I can't afford to, or
+because I don't want them, because I do; but it's because I don't
+deserve them, because I can give you nothing in return."
+
+"As the copy-book says," returned Hemingway, "'the pleasure is in the
+giving.' If the copy-book don't say that, I do. And to pretend that
+you give me nothing, that is ridiculous!"
+
+It was so ridiculous that he rushed on vehemently. "Why, every minute
+you give me something," he exclaimed. "Just to see you, just to know
+you are alive, just to be certain when I turn in at night that when the
+world wakes up again you will still be a part of it; that is what you
+give me. And its name is--Happiness!"
+
+He had begun quite innocently; he had had no idea that it would come.
+But he had said it. As clearly as though he had dropped upon one knee,
+laid his hand over his heart and exclaimed: "Most beautiful of your
+sex, I love you! Will you marry me?" His eyes and the tone of his
+voice had said it. And he knew that he had said it, and that she knew.
+
+Her eyes were filled with sudden tears, and so wonderful was the light
+in them that for one mad moment Hemingway thought they were tears of
+happiness. But the light died, and what had been tears became only wet
+drops of water, and he saw to his dismay that she was most miserable.
+
+The girl moved ahead of him to the cliff on which the agency stood, and
+which overhung the harbor and the Indian Ocean. Her eyes were filled
+with trouble. As she raised them to his they begged of him to be kind.
+
+"I am glad you told me," she said. "I have been afraid it was coming.
+But until you told me I could not say anything. I tried to stop you.
+I was rude and unkind--"
+
+"You certainly were," Hemingway agreed cheerfully. "And the more you
+would have nothing to do with me, the more I admired you. And then I
+learned to admire you more, and then to love you. It seems now as
+though I had always known and always loved you. And now this is what
+we are going to do."
+
+He wouldn't let her speak; he rushed on precipitately.
+
+"We are first going up to the house to get your typewriting-machine,
+and we will bring it back here and hurl it as far as we can off this
+cliff. I want to see the splash! I want to hear it smash when it hits
+that rock. It has been my worst enemy, because it helped you to be
+independent of me, because it kept you from me. Time after time, on
+the veranda, when I was pretending to listen to Lady Firth, I was
+listening to that damned machine banging and complaining and tiring
+your pretty fingers and your dear eyes. So first it has got to go.
+You have been its slave, now I am going to be your slave. You have
+only to rub the lamp and things will happen. And because I've told you
+nothing about myself, you mustn't think that the money that helps to
+make them happen is 'tainted.' It isn't. Nor am I, nor my father, nor
+my father's father. I am asking you to marry a perfectly respectable
+young man. And, when you do--"
+
+Again he gave her no opportunity to interrupt, but rushed on
+impetuously: "We will sail away across that ocean to wherever you will
+take me. To Ceylon and Tokio and San Francisco, to Naples and New
+York, to Greece and Athens. They are all near. They are all yours.
+Will you accept them and me?" He smiled appealingly, but most
+miserably. For though he had spoken lightly and with confidence, it
+was to conceal the fact that he was not at all confident. As he had
+read in her eyes her refusal of his pony, he had read, even as he
+spoke, her refusal of himself. When he ceased speaking the girl
+answered:
+
+"If I say that what you tell me makes me proud, I am saying too
+little." She shook her head firmly, with an air of finality that
+frightened Hemingway. "But what you ask--what you suggest is
+impossible."
+
+"You don't like me?" said Hemingway.
+
+"I like you very much," returned the girl, "and, if I don't seem
+unhappy that it can't be, it is because I always have known it can't
+be--"
+
+"Why can't it be?" rebelled Hemingway. "I don't mean that I can't
+understand your not wanting to marry me, but if I knew your objection,
+maybe, I could beat it down."
+
+Again, with the same air of finality, the girl moved her head slowly,
+as though considering each word; she began cautiously.
+
+"I cannot tell you the reason," she said, "because it does not concern
+only myself."
+
+"If you mean you care for some one else," pleaded Hemingway, "that does
+not frighten me at all." It did frighten him extremely, but, believing
+that a faint heart never won anything, he pretended to be brave.
+
+"For you," he boasted, "I would go down into the grave as deep as any
+man. He that hath more let him give. I know what I offer. I know I
+love you as no other man--"
+
+The girl backed away from him as though he had struck her. "You must
+not say that," she commanded.
+
+For the first time he saw that she was moved, that the fingers she
+laced and unlaced were trembling. "It is final!" exclaimed the girl.
+"I cannot marry--you, or any one. I--I have promised. I am not free."
+
+"Nothing in the world is final," returned Hemingway sharply, "except
+death." He raised his hat and, as though to leave her, moved away.
+Not because he admitted defeat, but because he felt that for the
+present to continue might lose him the chance to fight again. But, to
+deliver an ultimatum, he turned back.
+
+"As long as you are alive, and I am alive," he told her, "all things
+are possible. I don't give up hope. I don't give up you."
+
+The girl exclaimed with a gesture of despair. "He won't understand!"
+she cried.
+
+Hemingway advanced eagerly.
+
+"Help me to understand," he begged.
+
+"You won't understand," explained the girl, "that I am speaking the
+truth. You are right that things can change in the future, but nothing
+can change the past. Can't you understand that?"
+
+"What do I care for the past?" cried the young man scornfully. "I know
+you as well as though I had known you for a thousand years and I love
+you."
+
+The girl flushed crimson.
+
+"Not my past," she gasped. "I meant--"
+
+"I don't care what you meant," said Hemingway. "I'm not prying into
+your little secrets. I know only one thing--two things, that I love
+you and that, until you love me, I am going to make your life hell!"
+
+He caught at her hands, and for an instant she let him clasp them in
+both of his, while she looked at him.
+
+Something in her face, other than distress and pity, caused his heart
+to leap. But he was too wise to speak, and, that she might not read
+the hope in his eyes, turned quickly and left her. He had not crossed
+the grounds of the agency before he had made up his mind as to the
+reason for her repelling him.
+
+"She is engaged to Fearing!" he told himself. "She has promised to
+marry Fearing! She thinks that it is too late to consider another man!"
+The prospect of a fight for the woman he loved thrilled him greatly.
+His lower jaw set pugnaciously.
+
+"I'll show her it's not too late," he promised himself. "I'll show her
+which of us is the man to make her happy. And, if I am not the man,
+I'll take the first outbound steamer and trouble them no more. But
+before that happens," he also promised himself, "Fearing must show he
+is the better man."
+
+In spite of his brave words, in spite of his determination, within the
+day Hemingway had withdrawn in favor of his rival, and, on the Crown
+Prince Eitel, bound for Genoa and New York, had booked his passage home.
+
+On the afternoon of the same day he had spoken to Polly Adair,
+Hemingway at the sunset hour betook himself to the consulate. At that
+hour it had become his custom to visit his fellow countryman and with
+him share the gossip of the day and such a cocktail as only a fellow
+countryman could compose. Later he was to dine at the house of the
+Ivory Company and, as his heart never ceased telling him, Mrs. Adair
+also was to be present.
+
+"It will be a very pleasant party," said Harris. "They gave me a bid,
+too, but it's steamer day to-morrow, and I've got to get my mail ready
+for the Crown Prince Eitel. Mrs. Adair is to be there."
+
+Hemingway nodded, and with pleasant anticipation waited. Of Mrs.
+Adair, Harris always spoke with reverent enthusiasm, and the man who
+loved her delighted to listen. But this time Harris disappointed him.
+
+"And Fearing, too," he added.
+
+Again Hemingway nodded. The conjunction of the two names surprised
+him, but he made no sign. Loquacious as he knew Harris to be, he never
+before had heard his friend even suggest the subject that to Zanzibar
+had become of acute interest.
+
+Harris filled the two glasses, and began to pace the room. When he
+spoke it was in the aggrieved tone of one who feels himself placed in a
+false position.
+
+"There's no one," he complained suddenly, "so popularly unpopular as
+the man who butts in. I know that, but still I've always taken his
+side. I've always been for him." He halted, straddling with legs
+apart and hands deep in his trousers pockets, and frowned down upon his
+guest.
+
+"Suppose," he began aggressively, "I see a man driving his car over a
+cliff. If I tell him that road will take him over a cliff, the worst
+that can happen to me is to be told to mind my own business, and I can
+always answer back: 'I was only trying to help you.' If I don't speak,
+the man breaks his neck. Between the two, it seems to me, sooner than
+have any one's life on my hands, I'd rather be told to mind my own
+business."
+
+Hemingway stared into his glass. His expression was distinctly
+disapproving, but, undismayed, the consul continued.
+
+"Now, we all know that this morning you gave that polo pony to Lady
+Firth, and one of us guesses that you first offered it to some one
+else, who refused it. One of us thinks that very soon, to-morrow, or
+even to-night, at this party you may offer that same person something
+else, something worth more than a polo pony, and that if she refuses
+that, it is going to break you all up, is going to hurt you for the
+rest of your life."
+
+Lifting his eyes from his glass, Hemingway shot at his friend a glance
+of warning. In haste, Harris continued:
+
+"I know," he protested, answering the look, "I know that this is where
+Mr. Buttinsky is told to mind his business. But I'm going right on.
+I'm going to state a hypothetical case with no names mentioned and no
+questions asked, or answered. I'm going to state a theory, and let you
+draw your own deductions."
+
+He slid into a chair, and across the table fastened his eyes on those
+of his friend. Confidently and undisturbed, but with a wry smile of
+dislike, Hemingway stared fixedly back at him.
+
+"What," demanded Harris, "is the first rule in detective work?"
+
+Hemingway started. He was prepared for something unpleasant, but not
+for that particular form of unpleasantness. But his faith was
+unshaken, and he smiled confidently. He let the consul answer his own
+question.
+
+"It is to follow the woman," declared Harris. "And, accordingly, what
+should be the first precaution of a man making his get-away? To see
+that the woman does not follow. But suppose we are dealing with a
+fugitive of especial intelligence, with a criminal who has imagination
+and brains? He might fix it so that the woman could follow him without
+giving him away, he might plan it so that no one would suspect. She
+might arrive at his hiding-place only after many months, only after
+each had made separately a long circuit of the globe, only after a
+journey with a plausible and legitimate object. She would arrive
+disguised in every way, and they would meet as total strangers. And,
+as strangers under the eyes of others, they would become acquainted,
+would gradually grow more friendly, would be seen more frequently
+together, until at last people would say: 'Those two mean to make a
+match of it.' And then, one day, openly, in the sight of all men, with
+the aid of the law and the church, they would resume those relations
+that existed before the man ran away and the woman followed."
+
+There was a short silence.
+
+Hemingway broke it in a tone that would accept no denial.
+
+"You can't talk like that to me," he cried. "What do you mean?"
+
+Without resentment, the consul regarded him with grave solicitude. His
+look was one of real affection, and, although his tone held the
+absolute finality of the family physician who delivers a sentence of
+death, he spoke with gentleness and regret.
+
+"I mean," he said, "that Mrs. Adair is not a widow, that the man she
+speaks of as her late husband is not dead; that that man is Fearing!"
+
+Hemingway felt afraid. A month before a rhinoceros had charged him and
+had dropped at his feet. At another time a wounded lioness had leaped
+into his path and crouched to spring. Then he had not been afraid.
+Then he had aimed as confidently as though he were firing at a straw
+target. But now he felt real fear: fear of something he did not
+comprehend, of a situation he could not master, of an adversary as
+strong as Fate. By a word something had been snatched from him that he
+now knew was as dear to him as life, that was life, that was what made
+it worth continuing. And he could do nothing to prevent it; he could
+not help himself. He was as impotent as the prisoner who hears the
+judge banish him into exile. He tried to adjust his mind to the
+calamity. But his mind refused. As easily as with his finger a man
+can block the swing of a pendulum and halt the progress of the clock,
+Harris with a word had brought the entire world to a full stop.
+
+And then, above his head, Hemingway heard the lazy whisper of the
+punka, and from the harbor the raucous whistle of the Crown Prince
+Eitel, signalling her entrance. The world had not stopped; for the
+punka-boy, for the captain of the German steamer, for Harris seated
+with face averted, the world was still going gayly and busily forward.
+Only for him had it stopped.
+
+In spite of the confident tone in which Harris had spoken, in spite of
+the fact that unless he knew it was the truth, he would not have
+spoken, Hemingway tried to urge himself to believe there had been some
+hideous, absurd error. But in answer came back to him snatches of talk
+or phrases the girl had last addressed to him: "You can command the
+future, but you cannot change the past. I cannot marry you, or any
+one! I am not free!"
+
+And then to comfort himself, he called up the look he had surprised in
+her eyes when he stood holding her hands in his. He clung to it, as a
+drowning man will clutch even at a piece of floating seaweed.
+
+When he tried to speak he found his voice choked and stifled, and that
+his distress was evident, he knew from the pity he read in the eyes of
+Harris.
+
+In a voice strange to him, he heard himself saying: "Why do you think
+that? You've got to tell me. I have a right to know. This morning I
+asked Mrs. Adair to marry me."
+
+The consul exclaimed with dismay and squirmed unhappily. "I didn't
+know," he protested. "I thought I was in time. I ought to have told
+you days ago, but--"
+
+"Tell me now," commanded Hemingway.
+
+"I know it in a thousand ways," began Harris.
+
+Hemingway raised his eyes hopefully.
+
+But the consul shook his head. "But to convince you," he went on, "I
+need tell you only one. The thousand other proofs are looks they have
+exchanged, sentences I have chanced to overhear, and that each of them
+unknown to the other has told me of little happenings and incidents
+which I found were common to both. Each has described the house in
+which he or she lived, and it was the same house. They claim to come
+from different cities in New England, they came from the same city.
+They claim--"
+
+"That is no proof," cried Hemingway, "either that they are married, or
+that the man is a criminal."
+
+For a moment Harris regarded the other in silence. Then he said:
+"You're making it very hard for me. I see I've got to show you. It's
+kindest, after all, to cut quick." He leaned farther forward, and his
+voice dropped. Speaking quickly, he said:
+
+"Last summer I lived outside the town in a bungalow on the Pearl Road.
+Fearing's house was next to mine. This was before Mrs. Adair went to
+live at the agency, and while she was alone in another bungalow farther
+down the road. I was ill that summer; my nerves went back on me. I
+couldn't sleep. I used to sit all night on my veranda and pray for the
+sun to rise. From where I sat it was dark and no one could see me, but
+I could see the veranda of Fearing's house and into his garden. And
+night after night I saw Mrs. Adair creep out of Fearing's house, saw
+him walk with her to the gate, saw him in the shadow of the bushes take
+her in his arms, and saw them kiss." The voice of the consul rose
+sharply. "No one knows that but you and I, and," he cried defiantly,
+"it is impossible for us to believe ill of Polly Adair. The easy
+explanation we refuse. It is intolerable. And so you must believe as I
+believe; that when she visited Fearing by night she went to him because
+she had the right to go to him, because already she was his wife. And
+now when every one here believes they met for the first time in
+Zanzibar, when no one will be surprised if they should marry, they will
+go through the ceremony again, and live as man and wife, as they are,
+as they were before he fled from America!"
+
+Hemingway was seated with his elbows on the table and his face in his
+hands. He was so long silent that Harris struck the table roughly with
+his palm.
+
+"Well," he demanded, "why don't you speak? Do you doubt her? Don't you
+believe she is his wife?"
+
+"I refuse to believe anything else!" said Hemingway. He rose, and
+slowly and heavily moved toward the door. "And I will not trouble them
+any more," he added. "I'll leave at sunrise on the Eitel."
+
+Harris exclaimed in dismay, but Hemingway did not hear him. In the
+doorway he halted and turned back. From his voice all trace of emotion
+had departed. "Why," he asked dully, "do you think Fearing is a
+fugitive? Not that it matters to her, since she loves him, or that it
+matters to me. Only I would like to think you were wrong. I want her
+to have only the best."
+
+Again the consul moved unhappily.
+
+"I oughtn't to tell you," he protested, "and if I do I ought to tell
+the State Department, and a detective agency first. They have the
+call. They want him, or a man damned like him." His voice dropped to a
+whisper. "The man wanted is Henry Brownell, a cashier of a bank in
+Waltham, Mass., thirty-five years of age, smooth-shaven, college-bred,
+speaking with a marked New England accent, and--and with other marks
+that fit Fearing like the cover on a book. The department and the
+Pinkertons have been devilling the life out of me about it for nine
+months. They are positive he is on the coast of Africa. I put them
+off. I wasn't sure."
+
+"You've been protecting them," said Hemingway.
+
+"I wasn't sure," reiterated Harris. "And if I were, the Pinkertons can
+do their own sleuthing. The man's living honestly now, anyway, isn't
+he?" he demanded; "and she loves him. At least she's stuck by him.
+Why should I punish her?"
+
+His tone seemed to challenge and upbraid.
+
+"Good God!" cried the other, "I'm not blaming you! I'd be proud of the
+chance to do as much. I asked because I'd like to go away thinking
+she's content, thinking she's happy with him."
+
+"Doesn't it look as though she were?" Harris protested. "She's
+followed him--followed him half around the globe. If she'd been
+happier away from him, she'd have stayed away from him."
+
+So intent had been the men upon their talk that neither had noted the
+passing of the minutes or, what at other times was an event of moment,
+that the mail steamer had distributed her mail and passengers; and when
+a servant entered bearing lamps, and from the office the consul's clerk
+appeared with a bundle of letters from the Eitel, both were taken by
+surprise.
+
+"So late?" exclaimed Hemingway. "I must go. If I'm to sail with the
+Eitel at daybreak, I've little time!"
+
+But he did not go.
+
+As he advanced toward Harris with his hand outstretched in adieu, the
+face of the consul halted him. With the letters, the clerk had placed
+upon the table a visiting-card, and as it lay in the circle of light
+from the lamp the consul, as though it were alive and menacing, stared
+at it in fascination. Moving stiffly, he turned it so that Hemingway
+could see. On it Hemingway read, "George S. Sheyer," and, on a lower
+line, "Representing William L. Pinkerton."
+
+To the woman he loved the calamity they dreaded had come, and
+Hemingway, with a groan of dismay, exclaimed aloud:
+
+"It is the end!"
+
+From the darkness of the outer office a man stepped softly into the
+circle of the lamp. They could see his figure only from the waist
+down; the rest of him was blurred in shadows.
+
+"'It is the end'?" he repeated inquiringly. He spoke the phrase with
+peculiar emphasis, as though to impress it upon the memory of the two
+others. His voice was cool, alert, authoritative. "The end of what?"
+he demanded sharply.
+
+The question was most difficult. In the silence the detective moved
+into the light. He was tall and strongly built, his face was shrewd
+and intelligent. He might have been a prosperous man of business.
+
+"Which of you is the consul?" he asked. But he did not take his eyes
+from Hemingway.
+
+"I am the consul," said Harris. But still the detective did not turn
+from Hemingway.
+
+"Why," he asked, "did this gentleman, when he read my card, say, 'It is
+the end'? The end of what? Has anything been going on here that came to
+an end when he saw my card?"
+
+Disconcerted, in deep embarrassment, Harris struggled for a word. But
+his distress was not observed by the detective. His eyes, suspicious
+and accusing, still were fixed upon Hemingway, and under their scrutiny
+Harris saw his friend slowly retreat, slowly crumple up into a chair,
+slowly raise his hands to cover his face. As though in a nightmare, he
+heard him saying savagely:
+
+"It is the end of two years of hell, it is the end of two years of fear
+and agony! Now I shall have peace. Now I shall sleep! I thank God
+you've come! I thank God I can go back!"
+
+Harris broke the spell by leaping to his feet. He sprang between the
+two men.
+
+"What does this mean?" he commanded.
+
+Hemingway raised his eyes and surveyed him steadily.
+
+"It means," he said, "that I have deceived you, Harris--that I am the
+man you told me of, I am the man they want." He turned to the officer.
+
+"I fooled him for four months," he said. "I couldn't fool you for five
+minutes."
+
+The eyes of the detective danced with sudden excitement, joy, and
+triumph. He shot an eager glance from Hemingway to the consul.
+
+"This man," he demanded; "who is he?"
+
+With an impatient gesture Hemingway signified Harris.
+
+"He doesn't know who I am," he said. "He knows me as Hemingway. I am
+Henry Brownell, of Waltham, Mass." Again his face sank into the palms
+of his hands. "And I'm tired--tired," he moaned. "I am sick of not
+knowing, sick of running away. I give myself up."
+
+The detective breathed a sigh of relief that seemed to issue from his
+soul.
+
+"My God," he sighed, "you've given me a long chase! I've had eleven
+months of you, and I'm as sick of this as you are." He recovered
+himself sharply. As though reciting an incantation, he addressed
+Hemingway in crisp, emotionless notes.
+
+"Henry Brownell," he chanted, "I arrest you in the name of the
+commonwealth of Massachusetts for the robbery, on October the eleventh,
+nineteen hundred and nine, of the Waltham Title and Trust Company. I
+understand," he added, "you waive extradition and return with me of
+your own free will?"
+
+With his face still in his hands, Hemingway murmured assent. The
+detective stepped briskly and uninvited to the table and seated
+himself. He was beaming with triumph, with pleasurable excitement.
+
+"I want to send a message home, Mr. Consul," he said. "May I use your
+cable blanks?"
+
+Harris was still standing in the centre of the room looking down upon
+the bowed head and shoulders of Hemingway. Since, in amazement, he had
+sprung toward him, he had not spoken. And he was still silent.
+
+Inside the skull of Wilbur Harris, of Iowa, U. S. A., American consul
+to Zanzibar, East Africa, there was going forward a mighty struggle
+that was not fit to put into words. For Harris and his conscience had
+met and were at odds. One way or the other the fight must be settled
+at once, and whatever he decided must be for all time. This he
+understood, and as his sympathies and conscience struggled for the
+mastery the pen of the detective, scratching at racing speed across the
+paper, warned him that only a few seconds were left him in which to
+protest or else to forever after hold his peace.
+
+So realistic had been the acting of Hemingway that for an instant
+Harris himself had been deceived. But only for an instant. With his
+knowledge of the circumstances he saw that Hemingway was not confessing
+to a crime of his own, but drawing across the trail of the real
+criminal the convenient and useful red herring. He knew that already
+Hemingway had determined to sail the next morning. In leaving Zanzibar
+he was making no sacrifice. He merely was carrying out his original
+plan, and by taking away with him the detective was giving Brownell and
+his wife at least a month in which to again lose themselves.
+
+What was his own duty he could not determine. That of Hemingway he
+knew nothing, he could truthfully testify. And if now Hemingway
+claimed to be Henry Brownell, he had no certain knowledge to the
+contrary. That through his adventure Hemingway would come to harm did
+not greatly disturb him. He foresaw that his friend need only send a
+wireless from Nantucket and at the wharf witnesses would swarm to
+establish his identity and make it evident the detective had blundered.
+And in the meanwhile Brownell and his wife, in some settlement still
+further removed from observation, would for the second time have
+fortified themselves against pursuit and capture. He saw the eyes of
+Hemingway fixed upon him in appeal and warning.
+
+The brisk voice of the detective broke the silence.
+
+"You will testify, if need be, Mr. Consul," he said, "that you heard
+the prisoner admit he was Henry Brownell and that he surrendered
+himself of his own free will?"
+
+For an instant the consul hesitated, then he nodded stiffly.
+
+"I heard him," he said.
+
+Three hours later, at ten o' clock of the same evening, the detective
+and Hemingway leaned together on the rail of the Crown Prince Eitel.
+Forward, in the glare of her cargo lights, to the puffing and creaking
+of derricks and donkey engines, bundles of beeswax, of rawhides, and
+precious tusks of ivory were being hurled into the hold; from the
+shore-boats clinging to the ship's sides came the shrieks of the
+Zanzibar boys, from the smoking-room the blare of the steward's band
+and the clink of glasses. Those of the youth of Zanzibar who were on
+board, the German and English clerks and agents, saw in the presence of
+Hemingway only a purpose similar to their own; the desire of a homesick
+exile to gaze upon the mirrored glories of the Eitel's saloon, at the
+faces of white men and women, to listen to home-made music, to drink
+home-brewed beer. As he passed the smoking-room they called to him,
+and to the stranger at his elbow, but he only nodded smiling and,
+avoiding them, ascended to the shadow of the deserted boat-deck.
+
+"You are sure," he said, "you told no one?"
+
+"No one," the detective answered. "Of course your hotel proprietor
+knows you're sailing, but he doesn't know why. And, by sunrise, we'll
+be well out at sea."
+
+The words caught Hemingway by the throat. He turned his eyes to the
+town lying like a field of snow in the moonlight. Somewhere on one of
+its flat roofs a merry dinner-party was laughing, drinking, perhaps
+regretting his absence, wondering at his excuse of sudden illness. She
+was there, and he with the detective like a shadow at his elbow, was
+sailing out of her life forever. He had seen her for the last time:
+that morning for the last time had looked into her eyes, had held her
+hands in his. He saw the white beach, the white fortress-like walls,
+the hanging gardens, the courtesying palms, dimly. It was among those
+that he who had thought himself content, had found happiness, and had
+then seen it desert him and take out of his life pleasure in all other
+things. With a pain that seemed impossible to support, he turned his
+back upon Zanzibar and all it meant to him. And, as he turned, he
+faced, coming toward him, across the moonlit deck, Fearing.
+
+His instinct was to cry out to the man in warning, but his second
+thought showed him that through his very effort to protect the other,
+he might bring about his undoing. So, helpless to prevent, in
+agitation and alarm, he waited in silence. Of the two men, Fearing
+appeared the least disturbed. With a polite but authoritative gesture
+he turned to the detective. "I have something to say to this gentleman
+before he sails," he said; "would you kindly stand over there?"
+
+He pointed across the empty deck at the other rail.
+
+In the alert, confident young man in the English mess-jacket,
+clean-shaven and bronzed by the suns of the equator, the detective saw
+no likeness to the pale, bearded bank clerk of the New England city.
+This, he guessed, must be some English official, some friend of
+Brownell's who generously had come to bid the unfortunate fugitive
+Godspeed.
+
+Assured of this, the detective also bowed politely, and, out of
+hearing, but with his prisoner in full view, took up a position against
+the rail opposite.
+
+Turning his back upon the detective, and facing Hemingway with his eyes
+close to his, Fearing began abruptly. His voice was sunk to a whisper,
+but he spoke without the slightest sign of trepidation, without the
+hesitation of an instant.
+
+"Two years ago, when I was indicted," he whispered, "and ran away,
+Polly paid back half of the sum I stole. That left her without a
+penny; that's why she took to this typewriting. Since then, I have
+paid back nearly all the rest. But Polly was not satisfied. She
+wanted me to take my punishment and start fresh. She knew they were
+watching her so she couldn't write this to me, but she came to me by a
+roundabout way, taking a year to get here. And all the time she's been
+here, she's been begging me to go back and give myself up. I couldn't
+see it. I knew in a few months I'd have paid back all I took, and I
+thought that was enough. I wanted to keep out of jail. But she said I
+must take my medicine in our own country, and start square with a clean
+slate. She's done a lot for me, and whether I'd have done that for her
+or not, I don't know. But now, I must! What you did to-night to save
+me, leaves me no choice. So, I'll sail--"
+
+With an exclamation of anger, Hemingway caught the other by the
+shoulder and dragged him closer.
+
+"To save you!" he whispered. "No one's thinking of you. I didn't do
+it for you. I did it, that you both could escape together, to give you
+time--"
+
+"But I tell you," protested Fearing, "she doesn't want me to escape.
+And maybe she's right. Anyway, we're sailing with you at--"
+
+"We?" echoed Hemingway.
+
+That again he was to see the woman he loved, that for six weeks through
+summer seas he would travel in her company, filled him with alarm, with
+distress, with a wonderful happiness.
+
+"We?" he whispered, steadying his voice. "Then--then your wife is
+going with you?"
+
+Fearing gazed at him as though the other had suddenly gone mad.
+
+"My wife!" he exclaimed. "I haven't got a wife! If you mean
+Polly--Mrs. Adair, she is my sister! And she wants to thank you. She's
+below--"
+
+He was not allowed to finish. Hemingway had flung him to one side, and
+was racing down the deck.
+
+The detective sprang in pursuit.
+
+"One moment, there!" he shouted.
+
+But the man in the white mess-jacket barred his way.
+
+In the moonlight the detective saw that the alert, bronzed young man
+was smiling.
+
+"That's all right," said Fearing. "He'll be back in a minute.
+Besides, you don't want him. I'm the man you want."
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LONG ARM
+
+
+The safe was an old one that opened with a key. As adjutant, Captain
+Swanson had charge of certain funds of the regiment and kept in the
+safe about five thousand dollars. No one but himself and Rueff, his
+first sergeant, had access to it. And as Rueff proved an alibi, the
+money might have been removed by an outsider. The court-martial gave
+Swanson the benefit of the doubt, and a reprimand for not taking
+greater care of the keys, and Swanson made good the five thousand.
+
+Swanson did not think it was a burglar who had robbed the safe. He
+thought Rueff had robbed it, but he could not possibly prove that. At
+the time of the robbery Rueff was outside the Presidio, in uniform, at
+a moving-picture show in San Francisco. A dozen people saw him there.
+Besides, Rueff held an excellent record. He was a silent, clerk-like
+young man, better at "paper work" than campaigning, but even as a
+soldier he had never come upon the books. And he had seen service in
+two campaigns, and was supposed to cherish ambitions toward a
+commission. But, as he kept much to himself, his fellow non-coms could
+only guess that.
+
+On his captain's account he was loyally distressed over the
+court-martial, and in his testimony tried to shield Swanson, by
+agreeing heartily that through his own carelessness the keys might have
+fallen into the hands of some one outside the post. But his loyalty
+could not save his superior officer from what was a verdict virtually
+of "not proven."
+
+It was a most distressing affair, and, on account of the social
+prominence of Swanson's people, his own popularity, and the name he had
+made at Batangas and in the Boxer business, was much commented upon,
+not only in the services, but by the newspapers all over the United
+States.
+
+
+Every one who knew Swanson knew the court-martial was only a matter of
+form. Even his enemies ventured only to suggest that overnight he
+might have borrowed the money, meaning to replace it the next morning.
+And the only reason for considering this explanation was that Swanson
+was known to be in debt. For he was a persistent gambler. Just as at
+Pekin he had gambled with death for his number, in times of peace he
+gambled for money. It was always his own money.
+
+From the start Swanson's own attitude toward the affair was one of
+blind, unreasoning rage. In it he saw no necessary routine of
+discipline, only crass, ignorant stupidity. That any one should
+suspect him was so preposterous, so unintelligent, as to be nearly
+comic. And when, instantly, he demanded a court of inquiry, he could
+not believe it when he was summoned before a court-martial. It
+sickened, wounded, deeply affronted him; turned him quite savage.
+
+On his stand his attitude and answers were so insolent that his old
+friend and classmate, Captain Copley, who was acting as his counsel,
+would gladly have kicked him. The findings of the court-martial, that
+neither cleared nor condemned, and the reprimand, were an intolerable
+insult to his feelings, and, in a fit of bitter disgust with the
+service and every one in it, Swanson resigned. Of course, the moment
+he had done so he was sorry. Swanson's thought was that he could no
+longer associate with any one who could believe him capable of theft.
+It was his idea of showing his own opinion of himself and the army.
+
+But no one saw it in that light. On the contrary, people said:
+"Swanson has been allowed to resign." In the army, voluntarily
+resigning and being "allowed to resign" lest greater evils befall, are
+two vastly different things. And when it was too late no one than
+Swanson saw that more clearly. His anger gave way to extreme
+morbidness. He believed that in resigning he had assured every one of
+his guilt. In every friend and stranger he saw a man who doubted him.
+He imagined snubs, rebuffs, and coldnesses. His morbidness fastened
+upon his mind like a parasite upon a tree, and the brain sickened.
+When men and women glanced at his alert, well-set-up figure and
+shoulders, that even when he wore "cits" seemed to support epaulets,
+and smiled approvingly, Swanson thought they sneered. In a week he
+longed to be back in the army with a homesickness that made every one
+who belonged to it his enemy.
+
+He left San Francisco, where he was known to all, and travelled south
+through Texas, and then to New Orleans and Florida. He never could
+recall this period with clearness. He remembered changing from one
+train to another, from one hotel to the next. Nothing impressed itself
+upon him. For what he had lost nothing could give consolation.
+Without honor life held no charm. And he believed that in the eyes of
+all men he was a thief, a pariah, and an outcast.
+
+He had been in Cuba with the Army of Occupation, and of that beautiful
+island had grown foolishly fond. He was familiar with every part of
+it, and he believed in one or another of its pretty ports he could so
+completely hide himself that no one could intrude upon his misery. In
+the States, in the newspapers he seemed to read only of those places
+where he had seen service, of those places and friends and associates
+he most loved. In the little Cuban village in which he would bury
+himself he would cut himself off from all newspapers, from all who knew
+him; from those who had been his friends, and those who knew his name
+only to connect it with a scandal.
+
+On his way from Port Tampa to Cuba the boat stopped at Key West, and
+for the hour in which she discharged cargo Swanson went ashore and
+wandered aimlessly. The little town, reared on a flat island of coral
+and limestone, did not long detain him. The main street of shops,
+eating-houses, and saloons, the pretty residences with overhanging
+balconies, set among gardens and magnolia-trees, were soon explored,
+and he was returning to the boat when the martial music of a band
+caused him to halt. A side street led to a great gateway surmounted by
+an anchor. Beyond it Swanson saw lawns of well-kept grass, regular
+paths, pretty cottages, the two-starred flag of an admiral, and, rising
+high above these, like four Eiffel towers, the gigantic masts of a
+wireless. He recognized that he was at the entrance to the Key West
+naval station, and turned quickly away.
+
+He walked a few feet, the music of the band still in his ears. In an
+hour he would be steaming toward Cuba, and, should he hold to his
+present purpose, in many years this would be the last time he would
+stand on American soil, would see the uniform of his country, would
+hear a military band lull the sun to sleep. It would hurt, but he
+wondered if it were not worth the hurt. A smart sergeant of marines,
+in passing, cast one glance at the man who seemed always to wear
+epaulets, and brought his hand sharply to salute. The act determined
+Swanson. He had obtained the salute under false pretenses, but it had
+pleased, not hurt him. He turned back and passed into the gate of the
+naval station.
+
+From the gate a grass-lined carriage drive led to the waters of the
+harbor and the wharfs. At its extreme end was the band-stand, flanked
+on one side by the cottage of the admiral, on the other by a sail-loft
+with iron-barred windows and whitewashed walls. Upon the turf were
+pyramids of cannon-balls and, laid out in rows as though awaiting
+burial, old-time muzzle-loading guns. Across the harbor the sun was
+sinking into the coral reefs, and the spring air, still warm from its
+caresses, was stirred by the music of the band into gentle, rhythmic
+waves. The scene was one of peace, order, and content.
+
+But as Swanson advanced, the measure of the music was instantly
+shattered by a fierce volley of explosions. They came so suddenly and
+sharply as to make him start. It was as though from his flank a
+quick-firing gun in ambush had opened upon him. Swanson smiled at
+having been taken unawares. For in San Francisco he often had heard
+the roar and rattle of the wireless. But never before had he listened
+to an attack like this.
+
+From a tiny white-and-green cottage, squatting among the four giant
+masts, came the roar of a forest fire. One could hear the crackle of
+the flames, the crash of the falling tree-trunks. The air about the
+cottage was torn into threads; beneath the shocks of the electricity
+the lawn seemed to heave and tremble. It was like some giant monster,
+bound and fettered, struggling to be free. Now it growled sullenly,
+now in impotent rage it spat and spluttered, now it lashed about with
+crashing, stunning blows. It seemed as though the wooden walls of the
+station could not contain it.
+
+From the road Swanson watched, through the open windows of the cottage,
+the electric bolts flash and flare and disappear. The thing appealed
+to his imagination. Its power, its capabilities fascinated him. In it
+he saw a hungry monster reaching out to every corner of the continent
+and devouring the news of the world; feeding upon tales of shipwreck
+and disaster, lingering over some dainty morsel of scandal, snatching
+from ships and cities two thousand miles away the thrice-told tale of a
+conflagration, the score of a baseball match, the fall of a cabinet,
+the assassination of a king.
+
+In a sudden access of fierceness, as though in an ecstasy over some
+fresh horror just received, it shrieked and chortled. And then, as
+suddenly as it had broken forth, it sank to silence, and from the end
+of the carriage drive again rose, undisturbed, the music of the band.
+
+The musicians were playing to a select audience. On benches around the
+band-stand sat a half dozen nurse-maids with knitting in their hands,
+the baby-carriages within arm's length. On the turf older children of
+the officers were at play, and up and down the paths bareheaded girls,
+and matrons, and officers in uniform strolled leisurely. From the
+vine-covered cottage of Admiral Preble, set in a garden of flowering
+plants and bending palmettos, came the tinkle of tea-cups and the
+ripple of laughter, and at a respectful distance, seated on the
+dismantled cannon, were marines in khaki and bluejackets in glistening
+white.
+
+It was a family group, and had not Swanson recognized among the little
+audience others of the passengers from the steamer and natives of the
+town who, like himself, had been attracted by the music, he would have
+felt that he intruded. He now wished to remain. He wanted to carry
+with him into his exile a memory of the men in uniform, of the music,
+and pretty women, of the gorgeous crimson sunset. But, though he
+wished to remain, he did not wish to be recognized.
+
+From the glances already turned toward him, he saw that in this little
+family gathering the presence of a stranger was an event, and he was
+aware that during the trial the newspapers had made his face
+conspicuous. Also it might be that stationed at the post was some
+officer or enlisted man who had served with him in Cuba, China, or the
+Philippines, and who might point him out to others. Fearing this,
+Swanson made a detour and approached the band-stand from the wharf, and
+with his back to a hawser-post seated himself upon the string-piece.
+
+He was overcome with an intolerable melancholy. From where he sat he
+could see, softened into shadows by the wire screens of the veranda,
+Admiral Preble and his wife and their guests at tea. A month before,
+he would have reported to the admiral as the commandant of the station,
+and paid his respects. Now he could not do that; at least not without
+inviting a rebuff. A month before, he need only have shown his card to
+the admiral's orderly, and the orderly and the guard and the officers'
+mess and the admiral himself would have turned the post upside down to
+do him honor. But of what avail now was his record in three campaigns?
+Of what avail now was his medal of honor? They now knew him as Swanson,
+who had been court-martialled, who had been allowed to resign, who had
+left the army for the army's good; they knew him as a civilian without
+rank or authority, as an ex-officer who had robbed his brother
+officers, as an outcast.
+
+His position, as his morbid mind thus distorted it, tempted Swanson no
+longer. For being in this plight he did not feel that in any way he
+was to blame. But with a flaming anger he still blamed his brother
+officers of the court-martial who had not cleared his name and with a
+clean bill of health restored him to duty. Those were the men he
+blamed; not Rueff, the sergeant, who he believed had robbed him, nor
+himself, who, in a passion of wounded pride, had resigned and so had
+given reason for gossip; but the men who had not in tones like a
+bugle-call proclaimed his innocence, who, when they had handed him back
+his sword, had given it grudgingly, not with congratulation.
+
+
+As he saw it, he stood in a perpetual pillory. When they had robbed
+him of his honor they had left him naked, and life without honor had
+lost its flavor. He could eat, he could drink, he could exist. He
+knew that in many corners of the world white arms would reach out to
+him and men would beckon him to a place at table.
+
+But he could not cross that little strip of turf between him and the
+chattering group on the veranda and hand his card to the admiral's
+orderly. Swanson loved life. He loved it so that without help, money,
+or affection he could each morning have greeted it with a smile. But
+life without honor! He felt a sudden hot nausea of disgust. Why was he
+still clinging to what had lost its purpose, to what lacked the one
+thing needful?
+
+
+"If life be an ill thing," he thought, "I can lay it down!"
+
+The thought was not new to him, and during the two past weeks of
+aimless wandering he had carried with him his service automatic. To
+reassure himself he laid his fingers on its cold smooth surface. He
+would wait, he determined, until the musicians had finished their
+concert and the women and children had departed, and then--
+
+Then the orderly would find him where he was now seated, sunken against
+the hawser-post with a hole through his heart. To his disordered brain
+his decision appeared quite sane. He was sure he never had been more
+calm. And as he prepared himself for death he assured himself that for
+one of his standard no other choice was possible. Thoughts of the
+active past, or of what distress in the future his act would bring to
+others, did not disturb him. The thing had to be, no one lost more
+heavily than himself, and regrets were cowardly.
+
+He counted the money he had on his person and was pleased to find there
+was enough to pay for what services others soon must render him. In
+his pockets were letters, cards, a cigarette-case, each of which would
+tell his identity. He had no wish to conceal it, for of what he was
+about to do he was not ashamed. It was not his act. He would not have
+died "by his own hand." To his unbalanced brain the officers of the
+court-martial were responsible. It was they who had killed him. As he
+saw it, they had made his death as inevitable as though they had
+sentenced him to be shot at sunrise.
+
+A line from "The Drums of the Fore and Aft" came back to him. Often he
+had quoted it, when some one in the service had suffered through the
+fault of others. It was the death-cry of the boy officer, Devlin. The
+knives of the Ghazi had cut him down, but it was his own people's
+abandoning him in terror that had killed him. And so, with a sob, he
+flung the line at the retreating backs of his comrades: "You've killed
+me, you cowards!"
+
+Swanson, nursing his anger, repeated this savagely. He wished he could
+bring it home to those men of the court-martial. He wished he could
+make them know that his death lay at their door. He determined that
+they should know. On one of his visiting-cards he pencilled:
+
+"To the Officers of my Court-Martial: 'You've killed me, you cowards!'"
+
+He placed the card in the pocket of his waistcoat. They would find it
+just above the place where the bullet would burn the cloth.
+
+The band was playing "Auf Wiedersehen," and the waltz carried with it
+the sadness that had made people call the man who wrote it the waltz
+king. Swanson listened gratefully. He was glad that before he went
+out, his last mood had been of regret and gentleness. The sting of his
+anger had departed, the music soothed and sobered him. It had been a
+very good world. Until he had broken the spine of things it had
+treated him well, far better, he admitted, than he deserved. There
+were many in it who had been kind, to whom he was grateful. He wished
+there was some way by which he could let them know that. As though in
+answer to his wish, from across the parade-ground the wireless again
+began to crash and crackle; but now Swanson was at a greater distance
+from it, and the sighing rhythm of the waltz was not interrupted.
+
+Swanson considered to whom he might send a farewell message, but as in
+his mind he passed from one friend to another, he saw that to each such
+a greeting could bring only distress. He decided it was the music that
+had led him astray. This was no moment for false sentiment. He let
+his hand close upon the pistol.
+
+The audience now was dispersing. The nurse-maids had collected their
+charges, the musicians were taking apart their music-racks, and from
+the steps of the vine-covered veranda Admiral Preble was bidding the
+friends of his wife adieu. At his side his aide, young, alert,
+confident, with ill-concealed impatience awaited their departure.
+Swanson found that he resented the aide. He resented the manner in
+which he speeded the parting guests. Even if there were matters of
+importance he was anxious to communicate to his chief, he need not make
+it plain to the women folk that they were in the way.
+
+When, a month before, he had been adjutant, in a like situation he
+would have shown more self-command. He disapproved of the aide
+entirely. He resented the fact that he was as young as himself, that
+he was in uniform, that he was an aide. Swanson certainly hoped that
+when he was in uniform he had not looked so much the conquering hero,
+so self-satisfied, so supercilious. With a smile he wondered why, at
+such a moment, a man he had never seen before, and never would see
+again, should so disturb him.
+
+In his heart he knew. The aide was going forward just where he was
+leaving off. The ribbons on the tunic of the aide, the straps on his
+shoulders, told Swanson that they had served in the same campaigns,
+that they were of the same relative rank, and that when he himself, had
+he remained in the service, would have been a brigadier-general the
+aide would command a battle-ship. The possible future of the young
+sailor filled Swanson with honorable envy and bitter regret. With all
+his soul he envied him the right to look his fellow man in the eye, his
+right to die for his country, to give his life, should it be required
+of him, for ninety million people, for a flag. Swanson saw the two
+officers dimly, with eyes of bitter self-pity. He was dying, but he
+was not dying gloriously for a flag. He had lost the right to die for
+it, and he was dying because he had lost that right.
+
+The sun had sunk and the evening had grown chill. At the wharf where
+the steamer lay on which he had arrived, but on which he was not to
+depart, the electric cargo lights were already burning. But for what
+Swanson had to do there still was light enough. From his breast-pocket
+he took the card on which he had written his message to his brother
+officers, read and reread it, and replaced it.
+
+Save for the admiral and his aide at the steps of the cottage, and a
+bareheaded bluejacket who was reporting to them, and the admiral's
+orderly, who was walking toward Swanson, no one was in sight. Still
+seated upon the stringpiece of the wharf, Swanson so moved that his
+back was toward the four men. The moment seemed propitious, almost as
+though it had been prearranged. For with such an audience, for his
+taking off no other person could be blamed. There would be no question
+but that death had been self-inflicted.
+
+Approaching from behind him Swanson heard the brisk steps of the
+orderly drawing rapidly nearer. He wondered if the wharf were
+government property, if he were trespassing, and if for that reason the
+man had been sent to order him away. He considered bitterly that the
+government grudged him a place even in which to die. Well, he would not
+for long be a trespasser. His hand slipped into his pocket, with his
+thumb he lowered the safety-catch of the pistol.
+
+But the hand with the pistol in it did not leave his pocket. The steps
+of the orderly had come to a sudden silence. Raising his head heavily,
+Swanson saw the man, with his eyes fixed upon him, standing at salute.
+They had first made his life unsupportable, Swanson thought, now they
+would not let him leave it.
+
+"Captain Swanson, sir?" asked the orderly.
+
+Swanson did not speak or move.
+
+"The admiral's compliments, sir," snapped the orderly, "and will the
+captain please speak with him?"
+
+Still Swanson did not move.
+
+
+He felt that the breaking-point of his self-control had come. This
+impertinent interruption, this thrusting into the last few seconds of
+his life of a reminder of all that he had lost, this futile
+postponement of his end, was cruel, unhuman, unthinkable. The pistol
+was still in his hand. He had but to draw it and press it close, and
+before the marine could leap upon him he would have escaped.
+
+From behind, approaching hurriedly, came the sound of impatient
+footsteps.
+
+The orderly stiffened to attention. "The admiral!" he warned.
+
+Twelve years of discipline, twelve years of recognition of authority,
+twelve years of deference to superior officers, dragged Swanson's hand
+from his pistol and lifted him to his feet. As he turned, Admiral
+Preble, the aide, and the bareheaded bluejacket were close upon him.
+The admiral's face beamed, his eyes were young with pleasurable
+excitement; with the eagerness of a boy he waved aside formal greetings.
+
+"My dear Swanson," he cried, "I assure you it's a most astonishing,
+most curious coincidence! See this man?" He flung out his arm at the
+bluejacket. "He's my wireless chief. He was wireless operator on the
+transport that took you to Manila. When you came in here this
+afternoon he recognized you. Half an hour later he picks up a
+message--picks it up two thousand miles from here--from San
+Francisco--Associated Press news--it concerns you; that is, not really
+concerns you, but I thought, we thought"--as though signalling for
+help, the admiral glanced unhappily at his aide--"we thought you'd like
+to know. Of course, to us," he added hastily, "it's quite
+superfluous--quite superfluous, but--"
+
+The aide coughed apologetically. "You might read, sir," he suggested.
+
+"What? Exactly! Quite so!" cried the admiral.
+
+In the fading light he held close to his eyes a piece of paper.
+
+"San Francisco, April 20," he read. "Rueff, first sergeant, shot
+himself here to-day, leaving written confession theft of regimental
+funds for which Swanson, captain, lately court-martialled. Money found
+intact in Rueff's mattress. Innocence of Swanson never questioned, but
+dissatisfied with findings of court-martial has left army. Brother
+officers making every effort to find him and persuade return."
+
+The admiral sighed happily. "And my wife," he added, with an
+impressiveness that was intended to show he had at last arrived at the
+important part of his message, "says you are to stay to dinner."
+
+Abruptly, rudely, Swanson swung upon his heel and turned his face from
+the admiral. His head was thrown back, his arms held rigid at his
+sides. In slow, deep breaths, like one who had been dragged from
+drowning, he drank in the salt, chill air. After one glance the four
+men also turned, and in the falling darkness stood staring at nothing,
+and no one spoke.
+
+The aide was the first to break the silence. In a polite tone, as
+though he were continuing a conversation which had not been
+interrupted, he addressed the admiral. "Of course, Rueff's written
+confession was not needed," he said.
+
+"His shooting himself proved that he was guilty."
+
+Swanson started as though across his naked shoulders the aide had drawn
+a whip.
+
+In penitence and gratitude he raised his eyes to the stars. High above
+his head the strands of the wireless, swinging from the towering masts
+like the strings of a giant Aeolian harp, were swept by the wind from
+the ocean. To Swanson the sighing and whispering wires sang in praise
+and thanksgiving.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+
+
+The God of Coincidence is fortunate in possessing innumerable press
+agents. They have made the length of his arm a proverb. How at
+exactly the right moment he extends it across continents and drags two
+and two together, thus causing four to result where but for him sixes
+and sevens would have obtained, they have made known to the readers of
+all of our best magazines. For instance, Holworthy is leaving for the
+Congo to find a cure for the sleeping sickness, and for himself any
+sickness from which one is warranted never to wake up. This is his
+condition because the beautiful million-heiress who is wintering at the
+Alexander Young Hotel in Honolulu has refused to answer his letters,
+cables, and appeals.
+
+He is leaning upon the rail taking his last neck-breaking look at the
+Woolworth Building. The going-ashore bugle has sounded,
+pocket-handkerchiefs are waving; and Joe Hutton, the last visitor to
+leave the ship, is at the gangway.
+
+"Good-by, Holworthy!" he calls. "Where do you keep yourself? Haven't
+seen you at the club in a year!"
+
+"Haven't been there in a year--nor mean to!" is the ungracious reply of
+our hero.
+
+"Then, for Heaven's sake," exclaims Hutton, "send some one to take your
+mail out of the H box! Every time I look for letters I wade through
+yours."
+
+"Tear them up!" calls Holworthy. "They're bills."
+
+Hutton now is half-way down the gangplank.
+
+"Then your creditors," he shouts back, "must all live at the Alexander
+Young Hotel in Honolulu!"
+
+That night an express train shrieking through the darkness carried with
+it toward San Francisco--
+
+In this how evident is the fine Italian hand of the God of Coincidence!
+
+Had Hutton's name begun with an M; had the H in Hutton been silent; had
+he not carried to the Mauretania a steamer basket for his rich aunt;
+had he not resented the fact that since Holworthy's election to the Van
+Sturtevant Club he had ceased to visit the Grill Club--a cure for
+sleeping sickness might have been discovered; but two loving hearts
+never would have been reunited and that story would not have been
+written.
+
+Or, Mrs. Montclair, with a suit-case, is leaving her home forever to
+join handsome Harry Bellairs, who is at the corner with a racing-car
+and all the money of the bank of which he has been cashier. As the
+guilty woman places the farewell letter against the pin-cushion where
+her husband will be sure to find it, her infant son turns in his sleep
+and jabs himself with a pin. His howl of anguish resembles that of a
+puppy on a moonlight night. The mother recognizes her master's voice.
+She believes her child dying, flies to the bedside, tears up the
+letter, unpacks the suit-case. The next morning at breakfast her
+husband, reading the newspaper, exclaims aloud:
+
+"Harry Bellairs," he cries, "has skipped with the bank's money! I
+always told you he was not a man you ought to know."
+
+"His manner to me," she says severely, "always was that of a perfect
+gentleman."
+
+Again coincidence gets the credit. Had not the child tossed--had not
+at the critical moment the safety pin proved untrue to the man who
+invented it--that happy family reunion would have been impossible.
+
+Or, it might be told this way:
+
+Old Man McCurdy, the Pig-Iron King, forbids his daughter Gwendolyn even
+to think of marrying poor but honest Beef Walters, the baseball
+pitcher, and denies him his house. The lovers plan an elopement. At
+midnight Beef is to stand at the tradesman's entrance and whistle
+"Waiting at the Church"; and down the silent stairs Gwendolyn is to
+steal into his arms. At the very same hour the butler has planned with
+the policeman on fixed post to steal Mother McCurdy's diamonds and pass
+them to a brother of the policeman, who is to wait at the tradesman's
+entrance and whistle "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee."
+
+This sounds improbable--especially that the policeman would allow even
+his brother to get the diamonds before he did; but, with the God of
+Coincidence on the job, you shall see that it will all come out right.
+Beef is first at the door. He whistles. The butler--an English
+butler--with no ear for music, shoves into his hands tiaras and
+sunbursts. Honest Beef hands over the butler to the policeman and the
+tiaras to Mother McCurdy.
+
+"How can I reward you?" exclaims the grateful woman.
+
+"Your daughter's hand!"
+
+Again the God of Coincidence scores and Beef Walters is credited with
+an assist. And for preventing the robbery McCurdy has the peg-post cop
+made a captain; thus enabling him to wear diamonds of his own and
+raising him above the need of taking them from others.
+
+These examples of what the god can do are mere fiction; the story that
+comes now really happened. It also is a story of coincidence. It shows
+how this time the long arm was stretched out to make two young people
+happy; it again illustrates that, in the instruments he chooses, the
+God of Coincidence works in a mysterious way his wonders to perform.
+This time the tool he used was a hat of green felt.
+
+The story really should be called "The Man in the Green Hat."
+
+At St. James's Palace the plenipotentiaries of the Allies and of Turkey
+were trying to bring peace to Europe; in Russell Square, Bloomsbury,
+Sam Lowell was trying to arrange a peace with Mrs. Wroxton, his
+landlady. The ultimatum of the Allies was: "Adrianople or fight!" The
+last words of Mrs. Wroxton were: "Five pounds or move out!"
+
+Sam did not have five pounds. He was a stranger in London; he had lost
+his position in New York and that very morning had refused to marry the
+girl he loved--Polly Seward, the young woman the Sunday papers called
+"The Richest Girl in America."
+
+For any man--for one day--that would seem to be trouble enough; but to
+the Sultan of Turkey that day brought troubles far more serious. And,
+as his losses were Sam's gain, we must follow the troubles of the
+Sultan. Until, with the aid of a green felt hat, the God of
+Coincidence turns the misfortunes of the Sultan into a fortune for Sam,
+Sam must wait.
+
+From the first days of the peace conference it was evident there was a
+leak. The negotiations had been opened under a most solemn oath of
+secrecy. As to the progress of the conference, only such information
+or misinformation--if the diplomats considered it better--as was
+mutually agreed upon by the plenipotentiaries was given to a waiting
+world. But each morning, in addition to the official report of the
+proceedings of the day previous, one newspaper, the Times, published an
+account which differed from that in every other paper, and which
+undoubtedly came from the inside. In details it was far more generous
+than the official report; it gave names, speeches, arguments; it
+described the wordy battles of the diplomats, the concessions, bluffs,
+bargains.
+
+After three days the matter became public scandal. At first, the
+plenipotentiaries declared the events described in the Times were
+invented each evening in the office of the Times; but the proceedings
+of the day following showed the public this was not so.
+
+Some one actually present at the conference was telling tales out of
+school. These tales were cabled to Belgrade, Sofia, Athens,
+Constantinople; and hourly from those capitals the plenipotentiaries
+were assailed by advice, abuse, and threats. The whole world began to
+take part in their negotiations; from every side they were attacked;
+from home by the Young Turks, or the On to Constantinople Party; and
+from abroad by peace societies, religious bodies, and chambers of
+commerce. Even the armies in the field, instead of waiting for the
+result of their deliberations, told them what to do, and that unless
+they did it they would better remain in exile. To make matters worse,
+in every stock exchange gambling on the news furnished by the Times
+threatened the financial peace of Europe. To work under such
+conditions of publicity was impossible. The delegates appealed to
+their hosts of the British Foreign Office.
+
+Unless the chiel amang them takin' notes was discovered and the leak
+stopped, they declared the conference must end. Spurred on by
+questions in Parliament, by appeals from the great banking world, by
+criticisms not altogether unselfish from the other newspapers, the
+Foreign Office surrounded St. James's Palace and the office of the
+Times with an army of spies. Every secretary, stenographer, and
+attendant at the conference was under surveillance, his past record
+looked into, his present comings and goings noted. Even the
+plenipotentiaries themselves were watched; and employees of the Times
+were secretly urged to sell the government the man who was selling
+secrets to them. But those who were willing to be "urged" did not know
+the man; those who did know him refused to be bought.
+
+By a process of elimination suspicion finally rested upon one Adolf
+Hertz, a young Hungarian scholar who spoke and wrote all the mongrel
+languages of the Balkans; who for years, as a copying clerk and
+translator, had been employed by the Foreign Office, and who now by it
+had been lent to the conference. For the reason that when he lived in
+Budapest he was a correspondent of the Times, the police, in seeking
+for the leak, centred their attention upon Hertz. But, though every
+moment he was watched, and though Hertz knew he was watched, no present
+link between him and the Times had been established--and this in spite
+of the fact that the hours during which it was necessary to keep him
+under closest observation were few. Those were the hours between the
+closing of the conference, and midnight, when the provincial edition of
+the Times went to press. For the remainder of the day, so far as the
+police cared, Hertz could go to the devil! But for those hours, except
+when on his return from the conference he locked himself in his
+lodgings in Jermyn Street, detectives were always at his elbow.
+
+It was supposed that it was during this brief period when he was locked
+in his room that he wrote his report; but how, later, he conveyed it to
+the Times no one could discover. In his rooms there was no telephone;
+his doors and windows were openly watched; and after leaving his rooms
+his movements were--as they always had been--methodical, following a
+routine open to observation. His programme was invariably the same.
+Each night at seven from his front door he walked west. At Regent
+Street he stopped to buy an evening paper from the aged news-vender at
+the corner; he then crossed Piccadilly Circus into Coventry Street,
+skirted Leicester Square, and at the end of Green Street entered
+Pavoni's Italian restaurant. There he took his seat always at the same
+table, hung his hat always on the same brass peg, ordered the same
+Hungarian wine, and read the same evening paper. He spoke to no one;
+no one spoke to him.
+
+When he had finished his coffee and his cigarette he returned to his
+lodgings, and there he remained until he rang for breakfast. From the
+time at which he left his home until his return to it he spoke to only
+two persons--the news-vender to whom he handed a halfpenny; the waiter
+who served him the regular table d'hote dinner--between whom and Hertz
+nothing passed but three and six for the dinner and sixpence for the
+waiter himself.
+
+Each evening, the moment he moved into the street a plain-clothes man
+fell into step beside him; another followed at his heels; and from
+across the street more plain-clothes men kept their eyes on every one
+approaching him in front or from the rear. When he bought his evening
+paper six pairs of eyes watched him place a halfpenny in the hand of
+the news-vender, and during the entire time of his stay in Pavoni's
+every mouthful he ate was noted--every direction he gave the waiter was
+overheard.
+
+Of this surveillance Hertz was well aware. To have been ignorant of it
+would have argued him blind and imbecile. But he showed no resentment.
+With eyes grave and untroubled, he steadily regarded his escort; but
+not by the hastening of a footstep or the acceleration of a gesture did
+he admit that by his audience he was either distressed or embarrassed.
+That was the situation on the morning when the Treaty of London was to
+be signed and sealed.
+
+In spite of the publicity given to the conference by the Times,
+however, what the terms of the treaty might be no one knew. If
+Adrianople were surrendered; if Salonika were given to Greece; if
+Servia obtained a right-of-way to the Adriatic--peace was assured; but,
+should the Young Turks refuse--should Austria prove obstinate--not only
+would the war continue, but the Powers would be involved, and that
+greater, more awful war--the war dreaded by all the Christian
+world--might turn Europe into a slaughter-house.
+
+Would Turkey and Austria consent and peace ensue? Would they refuse and
+war follow? That morning those were the questions on the lips of every
+man in London save one. He was Sam Lowell; and he was asking himself
+another and more personal question: "How can I find five pounds and
+pacify Mrs. Wroxton?"
+
+He had friends in New York who would cable him money to pay his passage
+home; but he did not want to go home. He preferred to starve in London
+than be vulgarly rich anywhere else. That was not because he loved
+London, but because above everything in life he loved Polly Seward--and
+Polly Seward was in London. He had begun to love her on class day of
+his senior year; and, after his father died and left him with no one
+else to care for, every day he had loved her more.
+
+Until a month before he had been in the office of Wetmore & Hastings, a
+smart brokers' firm in Wall Street. He had obtained the position not
+because he was of any use to Wetmore & Hastings, but because the firm
+was the one through which his father had gambled the money that would
+otherwise have gone to Sam. In giving Sam a job the firm thought it
+was making restitution. Sam thought it was making the punishment fit
+the crime; for he knew nothing of the ways of Wall Street, and having
+to learn them bored him extremely. He wanted to write stories for the
+magazines. He wanted to bind them in a book and dedicate them to
+Polly. And in this wish editors humored him--but not so many editors
+or with such enthusiasm as to warrant his turning his back on Wall
+Street.
+
+That he did later when, after a tour of the world that had begun from
+the San Francisco side, Polly Seward and her mother and Senator Seward
+reached Naples. There Senator Seward bought old Italian furniture for
+his office on the twenty-fifth floor of the perfectly new Seward
+building. Mrs. Seward tried to buy for Polly a prince nearly as old as
+the furniture, and Polly bought picture post-cards which she sent to
+Sam.
+
+Polly had been absent six months, and Sam's endurance had been so timed
+as just to last out the half-year. It was not guaranteed to withstand
+any change of schedule, and the two months' delay in Italy broke his
+heart. It could not run overtime on a starvation diet of post-cards;
+so when he received a cable reading, "Address London, Claridge's," his
+heart told him it could no longer wait--and he resigned his position
+and sailed.
+
+On her trip round the world Polly had learned many things. She was
+observant, alert, intent on asking questions, hungering for facts. And
+a charming young woman who seeks facts rather than attention will never
+lack either. But of all the facts Polly collected, the one of
+surpassing interest, and which gave her the greatest happiness, was
+that she could not live without Sam Lowell. She had suspected this,
+and it was partly to make sure that she had consented to the trip round
+the world. Now that she had made sure, she could not too soon make up
+for the days lost. Sam had spent his money, and he either must return
+to New York and earn more or remain near Polly and starve. It was an
+embarrassing choice. Polly herself made the choice even more difficult.
+
+One morning when they walked in St. James's Park to feed the ducks she
+said to him:
+
+"Sam, when are we to be married?"
+
+When for three years a man has been begging a girl to marry him, and
+she consents at the exact moment when, without capitulation to all that
+he holds honorable, he cannot marry anybody, his position deserves
+sympathy.
+
+"My dear one," exclaimed the unhappy youth, "you make me the most
+miserable of men! I can't marry! I'm in an awful place! If I married
+you now I'd be a crook! It isn't a question of love in a cottage, with
+bread and cheese. If cottages were renting for a dollar a year I
+couldn't rent one for ten minutes. I haven't cheese enough to bait a
+mouse-trap. It's terrible! But we have got to wait."
+
+"Wait!" cried Polly. "I thought you had been waiting! Have I been away
+too long? Do you love some one else?"
+
+"Don't be ridiculous!" said Sam crossly. "Look at me," he commanded,
+"and tell me whom I love!"
+
+Polly did not take time to look.
+
+"But I," she protested, "have so much money!"
+
+"It's not your money," explained Sam. "It's your mother's money or
+your father's, and both of them dislike me. They even have told me so.
+Your mother wants you to marry that Italian; and your father, having
+half the money in America, naturally wants to marry you to the other
+half. If I were selfish and married you I'd be all the things they
+think I am."
+
+"You are selfish!" cried Polly. "You're thinking of yourself and of
+what people will say, instead of how to make me happy. What's the use
+of money if you can't buy what you want?"
+
+"Are you suggesting you can buy me?" demanded Sam.
+
+"Surely," said Polly--"if I can't get you any other way. And you may
+name your own price, too."
+
+"When I am making enough to support myself without sponging on you,"
+explained Sam, "you can have as many millions as you like; but I must
+first make enough to keep me alive. A man who can't do that isn't fit
+to marry."
+
+"How much," demanded Polly, "do you need to keep you alive? Maybe I
+could lend it to you."
+
+Sam was entirely serious.
+
+"Three thousand a year," he said.
+
+Polly exclaimed indignantly.
+
+"I call that extremely extravagant!" she cried. "If we wait until you
+earn three thousand a year we may be dead. Do you expect to earn that
+writing stories?"
+
+"I can try," said Sam--"or I will rob a bank."
+
+Polly smiled upon him appealingly.
+
+"You know how I love your stories," she said, "and I wouldn't hurt your
+feelings for the world; but, Sam dear, I think you had better rob a
+bank!"
+
+Addressing an imaginary audience, supposedly of men, Sam exclaimed:
+
+"Isn't that just like a woman? She wouldn't care," he protested, "how I
+got the money!"
+
+Polly smiled cheerfully.
+
+"Not if I got you!" she said. In extenuation, also, she addressed an
+imaginary audience, presumably of women. "That's how I love him!" she
+exclaimed. "And he asks me to wait! Isn't that just like a man?
+Seriously," she went on, "if we just go ahead and get married father
+would have to help us. He'd make you a vice-president or something."
+
+At this suggestion Sam expressed his extreme displeasure.
+
+"The last time I talked to your father," he said, "I was in a position
+to marry, and I told him I wanted to marry you. What he said to that
+was: 'Don't be an ass!' Then I told him he was unintelligent--and I
+told him why. First, because he could not see that a man might want to
+marry his daughter in spite of her money; and second, because he
+couldn't see that her money wouldn't make up to a man for having him
+for a father-in-law."
+
+"Did you have to tell him that?" asked Polly.
+
+"Some one had to tell him," said Sam gloomily. "Anyway, as a source of
+revenue father is eliminated. I have still one chance in London. If
+that fails I must go home. I've been promised a job in New York
+reporting for a Wall Street paper--and I'll write stories on the side.
+I've cabled for money, and if the London job falls through I shall sail
+Wednesday."
+
+"Wednesday!" cried Polly. "When you say things like 'Wednesday' you
+make the world so dark! You must stay here! It has been such a long six
+months; and before you earn three thousand dollars I shall be an old,
+old maid. But if you get work here we could see each other every day."
+
+They were in the Sewards' sitting-room at Claridge's. Sam took up the
+desk telephone.
+
+"In London," he said, "my one best and only bet is a man named
+Forsythe, who helps edit the Pall Mall. I'll telephone him now. If he
+can promise me even a shilling a day I'll stay on and starve--but I'll
+be near you. If Forsythe fails me I shall sail Wednesday."
+
+The telephone call found Forsythe at the Pall Mall office. He would be
+charmed to advise Mr. Lowell on a matter of business. Would he that
+night dine with Mr. Lowell? He would. And might he suggest that they
+dine at Pavoni's? He had a special reason for going there, and the
+dinner would cost only three and six.
+
+"That's reason enough!" Sam told him.
+
+"And don't forget," said Polly when, for the fifth time, Sam rose to
+go, "that after your dinner you are to look for me at the Duchess of
+Deptford's dance. I asked her for a card and you will find it at your
+lodgings. Everybody will be there; but it is a big place-full of dark
+corners where we can hide."
+
+"Don't hide until I arrive," said Sam. "I shall be very late, as I
+shall have to walk. After I pay for Forsythe's dinner and for white
+gloves for your dance I shall not be in a position to hire a taxi. But
+maybe I shall bring good news. Maybe Forsythe will give me the job.
+If he does we will celebrate in champagne."
+
+"You will let me at least pay for the champagne?" begged Polly.
+
+"No," said Sam firmly--"the duchess will furnish that."
+
+When Sam reached his lodgings in Russell Square, which he approached
+with considerable trepidation, he found Mrs. Wroxton awaiting him. But
+her attitude no longer was hostile. On the contrary, as she handed him
+a large, square envelope, decorated with the strawberry leaves of a
+duke, her manner was humble.
+
+Sam opened the envelope and, with apparent carelessness, stuck it over
+the fireplace.
+
+"About that back rent," he said; "I have cabled for money, and as
+soon--"
+
+"I know," said Mrs. Wroxton. "I read the cable." She was reading the
+card of invitation also. "There's no hurry, sir," protested Mrs.
+Wroxton. "Any of my young gentlemen who is made welcome at Deptford
+House is made welcome here!"
+
+"Credit, Mrs. Wroxton," observed Sam, "is better than cash. If you
+have only cash you spend it and nothing remains. But with credit you
+can continue indefinitely to-to-"
+
+"So you can!" exclaimed Mrs. Wroxton enthusiastically. "Stay as long
+as you like, Mr. Lowell."
+
+At Pavoni's Sam found Forsythe already seated and, with evident
+interest, observing the scene of gayety before him. The place was new
+to Sam, and after the darkness and snow of the streets it appeared both
+cheerful and resplendent. It was brilliantly lighted; a ceiling of gay
+panels picked out with gold, and red plush sofas, backed against walls
+hung with mirrors and faced by rows of marble-topped tables, gave it an
+air of the Continent.
+
+Sam surrendered his hat and coat to the waiter. The hat was a soft
+Alpine one of green felt. The waiter hung it where Sam could see it,
+on one of many hooks that encircled a gilded pillar.
+
+After two courses had been served Forsythe said:
+
+"I hope you don't object to this place. I had a special reason for
+wishing to be here on this particular night. I wanted to be in at the
+death!"
+
+"Whose death?" asked Sam. "Is the dinner as bad as that?"
+
+Forsythe leaned back against the mirror behind them and, bringing his
+shoulder close to Sam's, spoke in a whisper.
+
+"As you know," he said, "to-day the delegates sign the Treaty of
+London. It still must receive the signatures of the Sultan and the
+three kings; and they will sign it. But until they do, what the terms
+of the treaty are no one can find out."
+
+"I'll bet the Times finds out!" said Sam.
+
+"That's it!" returned Forsythe. "Hertz, the man who is supposed to be
+selling the secrets of the conference to the Times, dines here.
+To-night is his last chance. If to-night he can slip the Times a copy
+of the Treaty of London without being caught, and the Times has the
+courage to publish it, it will be the biggest newspaper sensation of
+modern times; and it will either cause a financial panic all over
+Europe--or prevent one. The man they suspect is facing us. Don't look
+now, but in a minute you will see him sitting alone at a table on the
+right of the middle pillar. The people at the tables nearest him--even
+the women--are detectives. His waiter is in the employ of Scotland
+Yard. The maitre d'hotel, whom you will see always hovering round his
+table, is a police agent lent by Bulgaria. For the Allies are even
+more anxious to stop the leak than we are. We are interested only as
+their hosts; with them it is a matter of national life or death. A
+week ago one of our own inspectors tipped me off to what is going on,
+and every night since then I've dined here, hoping to see something
+suspicious."
+
+"Have you?" asked Sam.
+
+"Only this," whispered Forsythe--"on four different nights I've
+recognized men I know are on the staff of the Times, and on the other
+nights men I don't know may have been here. But after all that proves
+nothing, for this place is a resort of newspaper writers and
+editors--and the Times men's being here may have been only a
+coincidence."
+
+"And Hertz?" asked Sam--"what does he do?"
+
+The Englishman exclaimed with irritation.
+
+"Just what you see him doing now!" he protested. "He eats his dinner!
+Look at him!" he commanded. "Of all in the room he's the least
+concerned."
+
+Sam looked and saw the suspected Adolf Hertz dangling a mass of
+macaroni on the end of his fork. Sam watched him until it disappeared.
+
+"Maybe that's a signal!" suggested Sam. "Maybe everything he does is
+part of a cipher code! He gives the signals and the Times men read them
+and write them down."
+
+"A man would have a fine chance to write anything down in this room!"
+said Forsythe.
+
+"But maybe," persisted Sam, "when he makes those strange movements with
+his lips he is talking to a confederate who can read the lip language.
+The confederate writes it down at the office and--"
+
+"Fantastic and extremely improbable!" commented Forsythe. "But,
+nevertheless, the fact remains, the fellow does communicate with some
+one from the Times; and the police are positive he does it here and
+that he is doing it now!"
+
+The problem that so greatly disturbed his friend would have more deeply
+interested Sam had the solving of his own trouble been less imperative.
+That alone filled his mind. And when the coffee was served and the
+cigars lit, without beating about the bush Sam asked Forsythe bluntly
+if on his paper a rising and impecunious genius could find a place.
+With even less beating about the bush Forsythe assured him he could
+not. The answer was final, and the disappointment was so keen that Sam
+soon begged his friend to excuse him, paid his bill, and rose to depart.
+
+"Better wait!" urged Forsythe. "You'll find nothing so good out at a
+music-hall. This is Houdini getting out of his handcuffs before an
+audience entirely composed of policemen."
+
+Sam shook his head gloomily.
+
+"I have a few handcuffs of my own to get rid of," he said, "and it
+makes me poor company."
+
+He bade his friend good night and, picking his way among the tables,
+moved toward the pillar on which the waiter had hung his hat. The
+pillar was the one beside which Hertz was sitting, and as Sam
+approached the man he satisfied his curiosity by a long look. Under
+the glance Hertz lowered his eyes and fixed them upon his newspaper.
+Sam retrieved his hat and left the restaurant.
+
+His mind immediately was overcast. He remembered his disappointment
+and that the parting between himself and Polly was now inevitable.
+Without considering his direction he turned toward Charing Cross Road.
+But he was not long allowed to meditate undisturbed.
+
+He had only crossed the little street that runs beside the restaurant
+and passed into the shadow of the National Gallery when, at the base of
+the Irving Memorial, from each side he was fiercely attacked. A young
+man of eminently respectable appearance kicked his legs from under him,
+and another of equally impeccable exterior made an honest effort to
+knock off his head.
+
+Sam plunged heavily to the sidewalk. As he sprawled forward his hat
+fell under him and in his struggle to rise was hidden by the skirts of
+his greatcoat. That, also, he had fallen heavily upon his hat with
+both knees Sam did not know. The strange actions of his assailants
+enlightened him. To his surprise, instead of continuing their assault
+or attempting a raid upon his pockets, he found them engaged solely in
+tugging at the hat. And so preoccupied were they in this that, though
+still on his knees, Sam was able to land some lusty blows before a rush
+of feet caused the young men to leap to their own and, pursued by
+several burly forms, disappear in the heart of the traffic.
+
+Sam rose and stood unsteadily. He found himself surrounded by all of
+those who but a moment before he had left contentedly dining at
+Pavoni's. In an excited circle waiters and patrons of the restaurant,
+both men and women, stood in the falling snow, bareheaded, coatless,
+and cloakless, staring at him. Forsythe pushed them aside and took Sam
+by the arm.
+
+"What happened?" demanded Sam.
+
+"You ought to know," protested Forsythe. "You started it! The moment
+you left the restaurant two men grabbed their hats and jumped after
+you; a dozen other men, without waiting for hats, jumped after them.
+The rest of us got out just as the two men and the detectives dived
+into the traffic."
+
+A big man, with an air of authority, drew Sam to one side.
+
+"Did they take anything from you, sir?" he asked.
+
+"I've nothing they could take," said Sam. "And they didn't try to find
+out. They just knocked me down."
+
+Forsythe turned to the big man.
+
+"This gentleman is a friend of mine, inspector," he said. "He is a
+stranger in town and was at Pavoni's only by accident."
+
+"We might need his testimony," suggested the official.
+
+Sam gave his card to the inspector and then sought refuge in a taxicab.
+For the second time he bade his friend good night.
+
+"And when next we dine," he called to him in parting, "choose a
+restaurant where the detective service is quicker!"
+
+Three hours later, brushed and repaired by Mrs. Wroxton, and again
+resplendent, Sam sat in a secluded corner of Deptford House and bade
+Polly a long farewell. It was especially long, owing to the unusual
+number of interruptions; for it was evident that Polly had many friends
+in London, and that not to know the Richest One in America and her
+absurd mother, and the pompous, self-satisfied father, argued oneself
+nobody. But finally the duchess carried Polly off to sup with her; and
+as the duchess did not include Sam in her invitation--at least not in
+such a way that any one could notice it-- Sam said good-night--but not
+before he had arranged a meeting with Polly for eleven that same
+morning. If it was clear, the meeting was to be at the duck pond in
+St. James's Park; if it snowed, at the National Gallery in front of the
+"Age of Innocence."
+
+After robbing the duchess of three suppers, Sam descended to the hall
+and from an attendant received his coat and hat, which latter the
+attendant offered him with the inside of the hat showing. Sam saw in
+it the trademark of a foreign maker.
+
+"That's not my hat," said Sam.
+
+The man expressed polite disbelief.
+
+"I found it rolled up in the pocket of your greatcoat, sir," he
+protested.
+
+The words reminded Sam that on arriving at Deptford House he had
+twisted the hat into a roll and stuffed it into his overcoat pocket.
+
+"Quite right," said Sam. But it was not his hat; and with some hope of
+still recovering his property he made way for other departing guests
+and at one side waited.
+
+For some clew to the person he believed was now wearing his hat, Sam
+examined the one in his hand. Just showing above the inside band was
+something white. Thinking it might be the card of the owner, Sam
+removed it. It was not a card, but a long sheet of thin paper, covered
+with typewriting, and many times folded. Sam read the opening
+paragraph. Then he backed suddenly toward a great chair of gold and
+velvet, and fell into it.
+
+He was conscious the attendants in pink stockings were regarding him
+askance; that, as they waited in the drafty hall for cars and taxis,
+the noble lords in stars and ribbons, the noble ladies in tiaras and
+showing much-fur-lined galoshes, were discussing his strange
+appearance. They might well believe the youth was ill; they might
+easily have considered him intoxicated. Outside rose the voices of
+servants and police calling the carriages. Inside other servants
+echoed them.
+
+"The Duchess of Sutherland's car!" they chanted. "Mrs. Trevor Hill's
+carriage! The French ambassador's carriage! Baron Haussmann's car!"
+
+Like one emerging from a trance, Sam sprang upright. A little fat man,
+with mild blue eyes and curly red hair, was shyly and with murmured
+apologies pushing toward the exit. Before he gained it Sam had
+wriggled a way to his elbow.
+
+"Baron Haussmann!" he stammered. "I must speak to you. It's a matter
+of gravest importance. Send away your car," he begged, "and give me
+five minutes."
+
+The eyes of the little fat man opened wide in surprise, almost in
+alarm. He stared at Sam reprovingly.
+
+"Impossible!" he murmured. "I--I do not know you."
+
+"This is a letter of introduction," said Sam. Into the unwilling
+fingers of the banker he thrust the folded paper. Bending over him, he
+whispered in his ear. "That," said Sam, "is the Treaty of London!"
+
+The alarm of Baron Haussmann increased to a panic.
+
+"Impossible!" he gasped. And, with reproach, he repeated: "I do not
+know you, sir! I do not know you!"
+
+At that moment, towering above the crush, appeared the tall figure of
+Senator Seward. The rich man of the New World and the rich man of
+Europe knew each other only by sight. But, upon seeing Sam in earnest
+converse with the great banker, the senator believed that without
+appearing to seek it he might through Sam effect a meeting. With a
+hearty slap on the shoulder he greeted his fellow countryman.
+
+"Halloo, Sam!" he cried genially. "You walking home with me?"
+
+Sam did not even turn his head.
+
+"No!" he snapped. "I'm busy. Go 'way!"
+
+Crimson, the senator disappeared. Baron Haussmann regarded the young
+stranger with amazed interest.
+
+"You know him!" he protested. "He called you Sam!"
+
+"Know him?" cried Sam impatiently. "I've got to know him! He's going
+to be my father-in-law."
+
+The fingers of the rich man clutched the folded paper as the claws of a
+parrot cling to the bars of his cage. He let his sable coat slip into
+the hands of a servant; he turned back toward the marble staircase.
+
+"Come!" he commanded.
+
+Sam led him to the secluded corner Polly and he had left vacant and
+told his story.
+
+"So, it is evident," concluded Sam, "that each night some one in the
+service of the Times dined at Pavoni's, and that his hat was the same
+sort of hat as the one worn by Hertz; and each night, inside the lining
+of his hat, Hertz hid the report of that day's proceedings. And when
+the Times man left the restaurant he exchanged hats with Hertz. But
+to-night--I got Hertz's hat and with it the treaty!"
+
+In perplexity the blue eyes of the little great man frowned.
+
+"It is a remarkable story," he said.
+
+"You mean you don't believe me!" retorted Sam. "If I had financial
+standing--if I had credit--if I were not a stranger--you would not
+hesitate."
+
+Baron Haussmann neither agreed nor contradicted. He made a polite and
+deprecatory gesture. Still in doubt, he stared at the piece of white
+paper. Still deep in thought, he twisted and creased between his
+fingers the Treaty of London!
+
+Returning with the duchess from supper, Polly caught sight of Sam and,
+with a happy laugh, ran toward him. Seeing he was not alone, she
+halted and waved her hand.
+
+"Don't forget!" she called. "At eleven!"
+
+She made a sweet and lovely picture. Sam rose and bowed.
+
+"I'll be there at ten," he answered.
+
+With his mild blue eyes the baron followed Polly until she had
+disappeared. Then he turned and smiled at Sam.
+
+"Permit me," he said, "to offer you my felicitations. Your young lady
+is very beautiful and very good." Sam bowed his head. "If she trusts
+you," murmured the baron, "I think I can trust you too."
+
+"How wonderful is credit!" exclaimed Sam. "I was just saying so to my
+landlady. If you have only cash you spend it and nothing remains. But
+with credit you can--"
+
+"How much," interrupted the banker, "do you want for this?"
+
+Sam returned briskly to the business of the moment.
+
+"To be your partner," he said--"to get half of what you make out of it."
+
+The astonished eyes of the baron were large with wonder. Again he
+reproved Sam.
+
+"What I shall make out of it?" he demanded incredulously. "Do you know
+how much I shall make out of it?"
+
+"I cannot even guess," said Sam; "but I want half."
+
+The baron smiled tolerantly.
+
+"And how," he asked, "could you possibly know what I give you is really
+half?"
+
+In his turn, Sam made a deprecatory gesture.
+
+"Your credit," said Sam, "is good!"
+
+That morning, after the walk in St. James's Park, when Sam returned
+with Polly to Claridge's, they encountered her father in the hall.
+Mindful of the affront of the night before, he greeted Sam only with a
+scowl.
+
+"Senator," cried Sam happily, "you must be the first to hear the news!
+Polly and I are going into partnership. We are to be married."
+
+This time Senator Seward did not trouble himself even to tell Sam he
+was an ass. He merely grinned cynically.
+
+"Is that all your news?" he demanded with sarcasm.
+
+"No," said Sam--"I am going into partnership with Baron Haussmann too!"
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+
+
+Young Everett at last was a minister plenipotentiary. In London as
+third secretary he had splashed around in the rain to find the
+ambassador's carriage. In Rome as a second secretary he had served as
+a clearing-house for the Embassy's visiting-cards; and in Madrid as
+first secretary he had acted as interpreter for a minister who, though
+valuable as a national chairman, had much to learn of even his own
+language. But although surrounded by all the wonders and delights of
+Europe, although he walked, talked, wined, and dined with statesmen and
+court beauties, Everett was not happy. He was never his own master.
+Always he answered the button pressed by the man higher up. Always
+over him loomed his chief; always, for his diligence and zeal, his
+chief received credit.
+
+As His Majesty's naval attache put it sympathetically, "Better be a
+top-side man on a sampan than First Luff on the Dreadnought. Don't be
+another man's right hand. Be your own right hand." Accordingly when
+the State Department offered to make him minister to the Republic of
+Amapala, Everett gladly deserted the flesh-pots of Europe, and, on
+mule-back over trails in the living rock, through mountain torrents
+that had never known the shadow of a bridge, through swamp and jungle,
+rode sunburnt and saddle-sore into his inheritance.
+
+When giving him his farewell instructions, the Secretary of State had
+not attempted to deceive him.
+
+"Of all the smaller republics of Central America," he frankly told him,
+"Amapala is the least desirable, least civilized, least acceptable. It
+offers an ambitious young diplomat no chance. But once a minister,
+always a minister. Having lifted you out of the secretary class we
+can't demote you. Your days of deciphering cablegrams are over, and if
+you don't die of fever, of boredom, or brandy, call us up in a year or
+two and we will see what we can do."
+
+Everett regarded the Secretary blankly.
+
+"Has the department no interest in Amapala?" he begged. "Is there
+nothing you want there?"
+
+"There is one thing we very much want," returned the Secretary, "but we
+can't get it. We want a treaty to extradite criminals."
+
+The young minister laughed confidently.
+
+"Why!" he exclaimed, "that should be easy."
+
+The Secretary smiled.
+
+"You have our full permission to get it," he said. "This department,"
+he explained, "under three administrations has instructed four
+ministers to arrange such a treaty. The Bankers' Association wants it;
+the Merchants' Protective Alliance wants it. Amapala is the only place
+within striking distance of our country where a fugitive is safe. It is
+the only place where a dishonest cashier, swindler, or felon can find
+refuge. Sometimes it seems almost as though when a man planned a crime
+he timed it exactly so as to catch the boat for Amapala. And, once
+there, we can't lay our hands on him; and, what's more, we can't lay
+our hands on the money he takes with him. I have no right to make a
+promise," said the great man, "but the day that treaty is signed you
+can sail for a legation in Europe. Do I make myself clear?"
+
+"So clear, sir," cried Everett, laughing, "that if I don't arrange that
+treaty I will remain in Amapala until I do."
+
+"Four of your predecessors," remarked the Secretary, "made exactly the
+same promise, but none of them got us the treaty."
+
+"Probably none of them remained in Amapala, either," retorted Everett.
+
+"Two did," corrected the Secretary; "as you ride into Camaguay you see
+their tombstones."
+
+Everett found the nine-day mule-ride from the coast to the capital
+arduous, but full of interest. After a week at his post he appreciated
+that until he left it and made the return journey nothing of equal
+interest was again likely to occur. For life in Camaguay, the capital
+of Amapala, proved to be one long, dreamless slumber. In the morning
+each of the inhabitants engaged in a struggle to get awake; after the
+second breakfast he ceased struggling, and for a siesta sank into his
+hammock. After dinner, at nine o'clock, he was prepared to sleep in
+earnest, and went to bed. The official life as explained to Everett by
+Garland, the American consul, was equally monotonous. When President
+Mendoza was not in the mountains deer-hunting, or suppressing a
+revolution, each Sunday he invited the American minister to dine at the
+palace. In return His Excellency expected once a week to be invited to
+breakfast with the minister. He preferred that the activities of that
+gentleman should go no further. Life in the diplomatic circle was even
+less strenuous. Everett was the doyen of the diplomatic corps because
+he was the only diplomat. All other countries were represented by
+consuls who were commission merchants and shopkeepers. They were
+delighted at having among them a minister plenipotentiary. When he
+took pity on them and invited them to tea, which invitations he
+delivered in person to each consul at the door of each shop, the entire
+diplomatic corps, as the consuls were pleased to describe themselves,
+put up the shutters, put on their official full-dress uniforms and
+arrived in a body.
+
+The first week at his post Everett spent in reading the archives of the
+legation. They were most discouraging. He found that for the sixteen
+years prior to his arrival the only events reported to the department
+by his predecessors were revolutions and the refusals of successive
+presidents to consent to a treaty of extradition. On that point all
+Amapalans were in accord. Though overnight the government changed
+hands, though presidents gave way to dictators, and dictators to
+military governors, the national policy of Amapala continued to be "No
+extradition!" The ill success of those who had preceded him appalled
+Everett. He had promised himself by a brilliant assault to secure the
+treaty and claim the legation in Europe. But the record of sixteen
+years of failure caused him to alter his strategy. Instead of an
+attack he prepared for a siege. He unpacked his books, placed the
+portrait of his own President over the office desk, and proceeded to
+make friends with his fellow exiles.
+
+Of the foreign colony in Camaguay some fifty were Americans, and from
+the rest of the world they were as hopelessly separated as the crew of
+a light-ship. From the Pacific they were cut off by the Cordilleras,
+from the Caribbean by a nine-day mule-ride. To the north and south,
+jungle, forests, swamp-lands, and mountains hemmed them in.
+
+Of the fifty Americans, one-half were constantly on the trail; riding
+to the coast to visit their plantations, or into the mountains to
+inspect their mines. When Everett arrived, of those absent the two
+most important were Chester Ward and Colonel Goddard. Indeed, so
+important were these gentlemen that Everett was made to understand
+that, until they approved, his recognition as the American minister was
+in a manner temporary.
+
+Chester Ward, or "Chet," as the exiles referred to him, was one of the
+richest men in Amapala, and was engaged in exploring the ruins of the
+lost city of Cobre, which was a one-hour ride from the capital. Ward
+possessed the exclusive right to excavate that buried city and had held
+it against all comers. The offers of American universities, of
+archaeological and geographical societies that also wished to dig up
+the ancient city and decipher the hieroglyphs on her walls, were met
+with a curt rebuff. That work, the government of Amapala would reply,
+was in the trained hands of Senor Chester Ward. In his chosen effort
+the government would not disturb him, nor would it permit others coming
+in at the eleventh hour to rob him of his glory. This Everett learned
+from the consul, Garland.
+
+"Ward and Colonel Goddard," the consul explained, "are two of five
+countrymen of ours who run the American colony, and, some say, run the
+government. The others are Mellen, who has the asphalt monopoly;
+Jackson, who is building the railroads, and Major Feiberger, of the San
+Jose silver-mines. They hold monopolies and pay President Mendoza ten
+per cent of the earnings, and, on the side, help him run the country.
+Of the five, the Amapalans love Goddard best, because he's not trying
+to rob them. Instead, he wants to boost Amapala. His ideas are
+perfectly impracticable, but he doesn't know that, and neither do they.
+He's a kind of Colonel Mulberry Sellers and a Southerner. Not the
+professional sort, that fight elevator-boys because they're colored,
+and let off rebel yells in rathskellers when a Hungarian band plays
+'Dixie,' but the sort you read about and so seldom see. He was once
+State Treasurer of Alabama."
+
+"What's he doing down here?" asked the minister.
+
+"Never the same thing two months together," the consul told him;
+"railroads, mines, rubber. He says all Amapala needs is developing."
+
+As men who can see a joke even when it is against themselves, the two
+exiles smiled ruefully.
+
+"That's all it needs," said Everett.
+
+For a moment the consul regarded him thoughtfully.
+
+"I might as well tell you," he said, "you'll learn it soon enough
+anyway, that the men who will keep you from getting your treaty are
+these five, especially old man Goddard and Ward."
+
+Everett exclaimed indignantly:
+
+"Why should they interfere?"
+
+"Because," explained the consul, "they are fugitives from justice, and
+they don't want to go home. Ward is wanted for forgery or some polite
+crime, I don't know which. And Colonel Goddard for appropriating the
+State funds of Alabama. Ward knew what he was doing and made a lot out
+of it. He's still rich. No one's weeping over him. Goddard's case is
+different. He was imposed on and made a catspaw. When he was State
+treasurer the men who appointed him came to him one night and said they
+must have some of the State's funds to show a bank examiner in the
+morning. They appealed to him on the ground of friendship, as the men
+who'd given him his job. They would return the money the next evening.
+Goddard believed they would. They didn't, and when some one called for
+a show-down the colonel was shy about fifty thousand dollars of the
+State's money. He lost his head, took the boat out of Mobile to Porto
+Cortez, and hid here. He's been here twenty years and all the
+Amapalans love him. He's the adopted father of their country. They're
+so afraid he'll be taken back and punished that they'll never consent
+to an extradition treaty even if the other Americans, Mellen, Jackson,
+and Feiberger, weren't paying them big money not to consent. President
+Mendoza himself told me that as long as Colonel Goddard honored his
+country by remaining in it, he was his guest, and he would never agree
+to extradition. 'I could as soon,' he said, 'sign his death-warrant.'"
+
+Everett grinned dismally.
+
+"That's rather nice of them," he said, "but it's hard on me. But," he
+demanded, "why Ward? What has he done for Amapala? Is it because of
+Cobre, because of his services as an archaeologist?"
+
+The consul glanced around the patio and dragged his chair nearer to
+Everett.
+
+"This is my own dope," he whispered; "it may be wrong. Anyway, it's
+only for your private information."
+
+He waited until, with a smile, Everett agreed to secrecy.
+
+"Chet Ward," protested the consul, "is no more an archaeologist than I
+am! He talks well about Cobre, and he ought to, because every word he
+speaks is cribbed straight from Hauptmann's monograph, published in
+1855. And he has dug up something at Cobre; something worth a darned
+sight more than stone monkeys and carved altars. But his explorations
+are a bluff. They're a blind to cover up what he's really after; what
+I think he's found!"
+
+As though wishing to be urged, the young man paused, and Everett nodded
+for him to continue. He was wondering whether life in Amapala might
+not turn out to be more interesting than at first it had appeared, or
+whether Garland was not a most charming liar.
+
+"Ward visits the ruins every month," continued Garland. "But he takes
+with him only two mule-drivers to cook and look after the pack-train,
+and he doesn't let even the drivers inside the ruins. He remains at
+Cobre three or four days and, to make a show, fills his saddle-bags
+with broken tiles and copper ornaments. He turns them over to the
+government, and it dumps them in the back yard of the palace. You
+can't persuade me that he holds his concession with that junk. He's
+found something else at Cobre and he shares it with Mendoza, and I
+believe it's gold."
+
+The minister smiled delightedly.
+
+"What kind of gold?
+
+"Maybe in the rough," said the consul. "But I prefer to think it's
+treasure. The place is full of secret chambers, tombs, and
+passage-ways cut through the rock, deep under the surface. I believe
+Ward has stumbled on some vault where the priests used to hide their
+loot. I believe he's getting it out bit by bit and going shares with
+Mendoza."
+
+"If that were so," ventured Everett, "why wouldn't Mendoza take it all?"
+
+"Because Ward," explained the consul, "is the only one who knows where
+it is. The ruins cover two square miles. You might search for years.
+They tried to follow and spy on him, but Ward was too clever for them.
+He turned back at once. If they don't take what he gives, they get
+nothing. So they protect him from real explorers and from extradition.
+The whole thing is unfair. A real archaeologist turned up here a month
+ago. He had letters from the Smithsonian Institute and several big
+officials at Washington, but do you suppose they would let him so much
+as smell of Cobre? Not they! Not even when I spoke for him as consul.
+Then he appealed to Ward, and Ward turned him down hard. You were
+arriving, so he's hung on here hoping you may have more influence. His
+name is Peabody; he's a professor, but he's young and full of 'get
+there,' and he knows more about the ruins of Cobre now than Ward does
+after having them all to himself for two years. He's good people and I
+hope you'll help him."
+
+Everett shook his head doubtfully.
+
+"If the government has given the concession to him," he pointed out,
+"no matter who Ward may be, or what its motives were for giving it to
+him, I can't ask it to break its promise. As an American citizen Ward
+is as much entitled to my help--officially--as Professor Peabody,
+whatever his standing."
+
+"Ward's a forger," protested Garland, "a fugitive from justice; and
+Peabody is a scholar and a gentleman. I'm not keen about dead cities
+myself--this one we're in now is dead enough for me--but if
+civilization is demanding to know what Cobre was like eight hundred
+years ago, civilization is entitled to find out, and Peabody seems the
+man for the job. It's a shame to turn him down for a gang of grafters."
+
+"Tell him to come and talk to me," said the minister.
+
+"He rode over to the ruins of Copan last week," explained Garland,
+"where the Harvard expedition is. But he's coming back to-morrow on
+purpose to see you."
+
+The consul had started toward the door when he suddenly returned.
+
+"And there's some one else coming to see you," he said. "Some one," he
+added anxiously, "you want to treat right. That's Monica Ward. She's
+Chester Ward's sister, and you mustn't get her mixed up with anything I
+told you about her brother. She's coming to ask you to help start a
+Red Cross Society. She was a volunteer nurse in the hospital in the
+last two revolutions, and what she saw makes her want to be sure she
+won't see it again. She's taught the native ladies the 'first aid'
+drill, and they expect you to be honorary president of the society.
+You'd better accept."
+
+Shaking his head, Garland smiled pityingly upon the new minister.
+
+"You've got a swell chance to get your treaty," he declared. "Monica is
+another one who will prevent it."
+
+Everett sighed patiently.
+
+"What," he demanded, "might her particular crime be; murder,
+shoplifting, treason--"
+
+"If her brother had to leave this country," interrupted Garland, "she'd
+leave with him. And the people don't want that. Her pull is the same
+as old man Goddard's. Everybody loves him and everybody loves her. I
+love her," exclaimed the consul cheerfully; "the President loves her,
+the sisters in the hospital, the chain-gang in the street, the
+washerwomen in the river, the palace guard, everybody in this
+flea-bitten, God-forsaken country loves Monica Ward--and when you meet
+her you will, too."
+
+Garland had again reached the door to the outer hall before Everett
+called him back.
+
+"If it is not a leading question," asked the minister, "what little
+indiscretion in your life brought you to Amapala?"
+
+Garland grinned appreciatively.
+
+"I know they sound a queer lot," he assented, "but when you get to know
+'em, you like 'em. My own trouble," he added, "was a horse. I never
+could see why they made such a fuss about him. He was lame when I took
+him."
+
+Disregarding Garland's pleasantry, for some time His Excellency sat
+with his hands clasped behind his head, frowning up from the open patio
+into the hot, cloudless sky. On the ridge of his tiled roof a foul
+buzzard blinked at him from red-rimmed eyes, across the yellow wall a
+lizard ran for shelter, at his elbow a macaw compassing the circle of
+its tin prison muttered dreadful oaths. Outside, as the washerwomen
+beat their linen clubs upon the flat rocks of the river, the hot, stale
+air was spanked with sharp reports. In Camaguay theirs was the only
+industry, the only sign of cleanliness; and recognizing that another
+shirt had been thrashed into subjection and rags, Everett winced. No
+less visibly did his own thoughts cause him to wince. Garland he had
+forgotten, and he was sunk deep in self-pity. His thoughts were of
+London, with its world politics, its splendid traditions, its great and
+gracious ladies; of Paris in the spring sunshine, when he cantered
+through the Bois; of Madrid, with its pomp and royalty, and the gray
+walls of its galleries proclaiming Murillo and Velasquez. These things
+he had forsaken because he believed he was ambitious; and behold into
+what a cul-de-sac his ambition had led him! A comic-opera country that
+was not comic, but dead and buried from the world; a savage people,
+unread, unenlightened, unclean; and for society of his countrymen,
+pitiful derelicts in hiding from the law. In his soul he rebelled. In
+words he exploded bitterly.
+
+"This is one hell of a hole, Garland," cried the diplomat. His jaws
+and his eyes hardened. "I'm going back to Europe. And the only way I
+can go is to get that treaty. I was sent here to get it. Those were
+my orders. And I'll get it if I have to bribe them out of my own
+pocket; if I have to outbid Mr. Ward, and send him and your good
+Colonel Goddard and all the rest of the crew to the jails where they
+belong!"
+
+Garland heard him without emotion. From long residence near the
+equator he diagnosed the outbreak as a case of tropic choler,
+aggravated by nostalgia and fleas.
+
+"I'll bet you don't," he said.
+
+"I'll bet you your passage-money home," shouted Everett, "against my
+passage-money to Europe."
+
+"Done!" said Garland. "How much time do you want--two years?"
+
+The diplomat exclaimed mockingly:
+
+"Two months!"
+
+"I win now," said the consul. "I'll go home and pack."
+
+The next morning his clerk told Everett that in the outer office Monica
+Ward awaited him.
+
+Overnight Everett had developed a prejudice against Miss Ward. What
+Garland had said in her favor had only driven him the wrong way. Her
+universal popularity he disliked. He argued that to gain popularity
+one must concede and capitulate. He felt that the sister of an
+acknowledged crook, no matter how innocent she might be, were she a
+sensitive woman, would wish to efface herself. And he had found that,
+as a rule, women who worked in hospitals and organized societies bored
+him. He did not admire the militant, executive sister. He pictured
+Miss Ward as probably pretty, but with the coquettish effrontery of the
+village belle and with the pushing, "good-fellow" manners of the new
+school. He was prepared either to have her slap him on the back or,
+from behind tilted eye-glasses, make eyes at him. He was sure she wore
+eye-glasses, and was large, plump, and Junoesque. With reluctance he
+entered the outer office. He saw, all in white, a girl so young that
+she was hardly more than a child, but with the tall, slim figure of a
+boy. Her face was lovely as the face of a violet, and her eyes were as
+shy. But shy not through lack of confidence in Everett, nor in any
+human being, but in herself. They seemed to say, "I am a very
+unworthy, somewhat frightened young person; but you, who are so big and
+generous, will overlook that, and you are going to be my friend.
+Indeed, I see you are my friend."
+
+Everett stood quite still. He nodded gloomily.
+
+"Garland was right," he exclaimed; "I do!"
+
+The young lady was plainly distressed.
+
+"Do what?" she stammered.
+
+"Some day I will tell you," said the young man. "Yes," he added,
+without shame, "I am afraid I will." He bowed her into the inner
+office.
+
+"I am sorry," apologized Monica, "but I am come to ask a favor--two
+favors; one of you and one of the American minister."
+
+Everett drew his armchair from his desk and waved Monica into it.
+
+"I was sent here," he said, "to do exactly what you want. The last
+words the President addressed to me were, 'On arriving at your post
+report to Miss Monica Ward."'
+
+Fearfully, Monica perched herself on the edge of the armchair; as
+though for protection she clasped the broad table before her.
+
+"The favor I want," she hastily assured him, "is not for myself."
+
+"I am sorry," said Everett, "for it is already granted."
+
+"You are very good," protested Monica.
+
+"No," replied Everett, "I am only powerful. I represent ninety-five
+million Americans, and they are all entirely at your service. So is
+the army and navy."
+
+Monica smiled and shook her head. The awe she felt was due an American
+minister was rapidly disappearing, and in Mr. Everett himself her
+confidence was increasing. The other ministers plenipotentiary she had
+seen at Camaguay had been old, with beards like mountain-goats, and had
+worn linen dusters. They always were very red in the face and very
+damp. Monica decided Mr. Everett also was old; she was sure he must be
+at least thirty-five; but in his silk pongee and pipe-clayed
+tennis-shoes he was a refreshing spectacle. Just to look at him turned
+one quite cool.
+
+"We have a very fine line of battle-ships this morning at Guantanamo,"
+urged Everett; "if you want one I'll cable for it."
+
+Monica laughed softly. It was good to hear nonsense spoken. The
+Amapalans had never learned it, and her brother said just what he meant
+and no more.
+
+"Our sailors were here once," Monica volunteered. She wanted Mr.
+Everett to know he was not entirely cut off from the world. "During the
+revolution," she explained. "We were so glad to see them; they made us
+all feel nearer home. They set up our flag in the plaza, and the
+color-guard let me photograph it, with them guarding it. And when they
+marched away the archbishop stood on the cathedral steps and blessed
+them, and we rode out along the trail to where it comes to the jungle.
+And then we waved good-by, and they cheered us. We all cried."
+
+For a moment, quite unconsciously, Monica gave an imitation of how they
+all cried. It made the appeal of the violet eyes even more disturbing.
+
+"Don't you love our sailors?" begged Monica.
+
+Fearful of hurting the feelings of others, she added hastily, "And, of
+course, our marines, too."
+
+Everett assured her if there was one thing that meant more to him than
+all else, it was an American bluejacket, and next to him an American
+leatherneck.
+
+It took a long time to arrange the details of the Red Cross Society.
+In spite of his reputation for brilliancy, it seemed to Monica Mr.
+Everett had a mind that plodded. For his benefit it was necessary
+several times to repeat the most simple proposition. She was sure his
+inability to fasten his attention on her League of Mercy was because
+his brain was occupied with problems of state. It made her feel
+selfish and guilty. When his visitor decided that to explain further
+was but to waste his valuable time and had made her third effort to go,
+Everett went with her. He suggested that she take him to the hospital
+and introduce him to the sisters. He wanted to talk to them about the
+Red Cross League. It was a charming walk. Every one lifted his hat to
+Monica; the beggars, the cab-drivers, the barefooted policemen, and the
+social lights of Camaguay on the sidewalks in front of the cafes rose
+and bowed.
+
+"It is like walking with royalty!" exclaimed Everett.
+
+While at the hospital he talked to the Mother Superior--his eyes
+followed Monica. As she moved from cot to cot he noted how the younger
+sisters fluttered happily around her, like bridesmaids around a bride,
+and how as she passed, the eyes of those in the cots followed her
+jealously, and after she had spoken with them smiled in content.
+
+"She is good," the Mother Superior was saying, "and her brother, too,
+is very good."
+
+Everett had forgotten the brother. With a start he lifted his eyes and
+found the Mother Superior regarding him.
+
+"He is very good," she repeated. "For us, he built this wing of the
+hospital. It was his money. We should be very sorry if any harm came
+to Mr. Ward. Without his help we would starve." She smiled, and with
+a gesture signified the sick. "I mean they would starve; they would
+die of disease and fever." The woman fixed upon him grave, inscrutable
+eyes. "Will Your Excellency remember?" she said. It was less of a
+question than a command. "Where the church can forgive--" she paused.
+
+Like a real diplomat Everett sought refuge in mere words.
+
+"The church is all-powerful, Mother," he said. "Her power to forgive
+is her strongest weapon. I have no such power. It lies beyond my
+authority. I am just a messenger-boy carrying the wishes of the
+government of one country to the government of another."
+
+The face of the Mother Superior remained grave, but undisturbed.
+
+"Then, as regards our Mr. Ward," she said, "the wishes of your
+government are--"
+
+Again she paused; again it was less of a question than a command. With
+interest Everett gazed at the whitewashed ceiling.
+
+"I have not yet," he said, "communicated them to any one."
+
+That night, after dinner in the patio, he reported to Garland the words
+of the Mother Superior.
+
+"That was my dream, O Prophet," concluded Everett; "you who can read
+this land of lotus-eaters, interpret! What does it mean?"
+
+"It only means what I've been telling you," said the consul. "It means
+that if you're going after that treaty, you've only got to fight the
+Catholic Church. That's all it means!"
+
+Later in the evening Garland said: "I saw you this morning crossing the
+plaza with Monica. When I told you everybody in this town loved her,
+was I right?"
+
+"Absolutely!" assented Everett. "But why didn't you tell me she was a
+flapper?"
+
+"I don't know what a flapper is," promptly retorted Garland. "And if I
+did, I wouldn't call Monica one."
+
+"A flapper is a very charming person," protested Everett. "I used the
+term in its most complimentary sense. It means a girl between fourteen
+and eighteen. It's English slang, and in England at the present the
+flapper is very popular. She is driving her sophisticated elder
+sister, who has been out two or three seasons, and the predatory
+married woman to the wall. To men of my years the flapper is really at
+the dangerous age."
+
+In his bamboo chair Garland tossed violently and snorted.
+
+"I sized you up," he cried, "as a man of the finest perceptions. I was
+wrong. You don't appreciate Monica! Dangerous! You might as well say
+God's sunshine is dangerous, or a beautiful flower is dangerous."
+
+Everett shook his head at the other man reproachfully:
+
+"Did you ever hear of a sunstroke?" he demanded. "Don't you know if
+you smell certain beautiful flowers you die? Can't you grasp any other
+kind of danger than being run down by a trolley-car? Is the danger of
+losing one's peace of mind nothing, of being unfaithful to duty,
+nothing! Is--"
+
+Garland raised his arms.
+
+"Don't shoot!" he begged. "I apologize. You do appreciate Monica. You
+have your consul's permission to walk with her again."
+
+The next day young Professor Peabody called and presented his letters.
+He was a forceful young man to whom the delays of diplomacy did not
+appeal, and one apparently accustomed to riding off whatever came in
+his way. He seemed to consider any one who opposed him, or who even
+disagreed with his conclusions, as offering a personal affront. With
+indignation he launched into his grievance.
+
+"These people," he declared, "are dogs in the manger, and Ward is the
+worst of the lot. He knows no more of archaeology than a congressman.
+The man's a faker! He showed me a spear-head of obsidian and called it
+flint; and he said the Aztecs borrowed from the Mayas, and that the
+Toltecs were a myth. And he got the Aztec solar calendar mixed with
+the Ahau. He's as ignorant as that."
+
+"I can't believe it!" exclaimed Everett.
+
+"You may laugh," protested the professor, "but the ruins of Cobre hold
+secrets the students of two continents are trying to solve. They hide
+the history of a lost race, and I submit it's not proper one man should
+keep that knowledge from the world, certainly not for a few gold
+armlets!"
+
+Everett raised his eyes.
+
+"What makes you say that?"' he demanded.
+
+"I've been kicking my heels in this town for a month," Peabody told
+him, "and I've talked to the people here, and to the Harvard expedition
+at Copan, and everybody tells me this fellow has found treasure." The
+archaeologist exclaimed with indignation: "What's gold," he snorted,
+"compared to the discovery of a lost race?"
+
+"I applaud your point of view," Everett assured him. "I am to see the
+President tomorrow, and I will lay the matter before him. I'll ask him
+to give you a look in."
+
+To urge his treaty of extradition was the reason for the audience with
+the President, and with all the courtesy that a bad case demanded
+Mendoza protested against it. He pointed out that governments entered
+into treaties only when the ensuing benefits were mutual. For Amapala
+in a treaty of extradition he saw no benefit. Amapala was not so far
+"advanced" as to produce defaulting bank presidents, get-rich-quick
+promoters, counterfeiters, and thieving cashiers. Her fugitives were
+revolutionists who had fought and lost, and every one was glad to have
+them go, and no one wanted them back.
+
+"Or," suggested the President, "suppose I am turned out by a
+revolution, and I seek asylum in your country? My enemies desire my
+life. They would ask for my extradition--"
+
+"If the offense were political," Everett corrected, "my government
+would surrender no one."
+
+"But my enemies would charge me with murder," explained the President.
+"Remember Castro. And by the terms of the treaty your government would
+be forced to surrender me. And I am shot against the wall." The
+President shrugged his shoulders. "That treaty would not be nice for
+me!"
+
+"Consider the matter as a patriot," said the diplomat. "Is it good
+that the criminals of my country should make their home in yours? When
+you are so fortunate as to have no dishonest men of your own, why
+import ours? We don't seek the individual. We want to punish him only
+as a warning to others. And we want the money he takes with him.
+Often it is the savings of the very poor."
+
+The President frowned. It was apparent that both the subject and
+Everett bored him.
+
+"I name no names," exclaimed Mendoza, "but to those who come here we
+owe the little railroads we possess. They develop our mines and our
+coffee plantations. In time they will make this country very modern,
+very rich. And some you call criminals we have learned to love. Their
+past does not concern us. We shut our ears. We do not spy. They have
+come to us as to a sanctuary, and so long as they claim the right of
+sanctuary, I will not violate it."
+
+As Everett emerged from the cool, dark halls of the palace into the
+glare of the plaza he was scowling; and he acknowledged the salute of
+the palace guard as though those gentlemen had offered him an insult.
+
+Garland was waiting in front of a cafe and greeted him with a mocking
+grin.
+
+"Congratulations," he shouted.
+
+"I have still twenty-two days," said Everett.
+
+The aristocracy of Camaguay invited the new minister to formal dinners
+of eighteen courses, and to picnics less formal. These latter Everett
+greatly enjoyed, because while Monica Ward was too young to attend the
+state dinners, she was exactly the proper age for the all-day
+excursions to the waterfalls, the coffee plantations, and the asphalt
+lakes. The native belles of Camaguay took no pleasure in riding
+farther afield than the military parade-ground. Climbing a trail so
+steep that you viewed the sky between the ears of your pony, or where
+with both hands you forced a way through hanging vines and creepers,
+did not appeal. But to Monica, with the seat and balance of a cowboy,
+riding astride, with her leg straight and the ball of her foot just
+feeling the stirrup, these expeditions were the happiest moments in her
+exile. So were they to Everett; and that on the trail one could ride
+only in single file was a most poignant regret. In the column the
+place of honor was next to whoever rode at the head, but Everett
+relinquished this position in favor of Monica. By this manoeuvre she
+always was in his sight, and he could call upon her to act as his guide
+and to explain what lay on either hand. His delight and wonder in her
+grew daily. He found that her mind leaped instantly and with gratitude
+to whatever was most fair. Just out of reach of her pony's hoofs he
+pressed his own pony forward, and she pointed out to him what in the
+tropic abundance about them she found most beautiful. Sometimes it was
+the tumbling waters of a cataract; sometimes, high in the topmost
+branches of a ceiba-tree, a gorgeous orchid; sometimes a shaft of
+sunshine as rigid as a search-light, piercing the shadow of the jungle.
+At first she would turn in the saddle and call to him, but as each day
+they grew to know each other better she need only point with her
+whip-hand and he would answer, "Yes," and each knew the other
+understood.
+
+As a body, the exiles resented Everett. They knew his purpose in
+regard to the treaty, and for them he always must be the enemy. Even
+though as a man they might like him, they could not forget that his
+presence threatened their peace and safety. Chester Ward treated him
+with impeccable politeness; but, although his house was the show-place
+of Camaguay, he never invited the American minister to cross the
+threshold. On account of Monica, Everett regretted this and tried to
+keep the relations of her brother and himself outwardly pleasant. But
+Ward made it difficult. To no one was his manner effusive, and for
+Monica only he seemed to hold any real feeling. The two were alone in
+the world; he was her only relative, and to the orphan he had been
+father and mother. When she was a child he had bought her toys and
+dolls; now, had the sisters permitted, he would have dressed her in
+imported frocks, and with jewels killed her loveliness. He seemed to
+understand how to spend his money as little as did the gossips of
+Camaguay understand from whence it came.
+
+That Monica knew why her brother lived in Camaguay Everett was
+uncertain. She did not complain of living there, but she was not at
+rest, and constantly she was asking Everett of foreign lands. As
+Everett was homesick for them, he was most eloquent.
+
+"I should like to see them for myself," said Monica, "but until my
+brother's work here is finished we must wait. And I am young, and
+after a few years Europe will be just as old. When my brother leaves
+Amapala, he promises to take me wherever I ask to go: to London, to
+Paris, to Rome. So I read and read of them; books of history, books
+about painting, books about the cathedrals. But the more I read the
+more I want to go at once, and that is disloyal."
+
+"Disloyal?" asked Everett.
+
+"To my brother," explained Monica. "He does so much for me. I should
+think only of his work. That is all that really counts. For the world
+is waiting to learn what he has discovered. It is like having a
+brother go in search of the North Pole. You are proud of what he is
+doing, but you want him back to keep him to yourself. Is that selfish?"
+
+Everett was a trained diplomat, but with his opinion of Chester Ward he
+could not think of the answer. Instead, he was thinking of Monica in
+Europe; of taking her through the churches and galleries which she had
+seen only in black and white. He imagined himself at her side facing
+the altar of some great cathedral, or some painting in the Louvre, and
+watching her face lighten and the tears come to her eyes, as they did
+now, when things that were beautiful hurt her. Or he imagined her rid
+of her half-mourning and accompanying him through a cyclonic diplomatic
+career that carried them to Japan, China, Persia; to Berlin, Paris, and
+London. In these imaginings Monica appeared in pongee and a sun-hat
+riding an elephant, in pearls and satin receiving royalty, in tweed
+knickerbockers and a woollen jersey coasting around the hairpin curve
+at Saint Moritz.
+
+Of course he recognized that except as his wife Monica could not
+accompany him to all these strange lands and high diplomatic posts. And
+of course that was ridiculous. He had made up his mind for the success
+of what he called his career, that he was too young to marry; but he
+was sure, should he propose to marry Monica, every one would say he was
+too old. And there was another consideration. What of the brother?
+Would his government send him to a foreign post when his wife was the
+sister of a man they had just sent to the penitentiary?
+
+He could hear them say in London, "We know your first secretary, but
+who is Mrs. Everett?" And the American visitor would explain: "She is
+the sister of 'Inky Dink,' the forger. He is bookkeeping in Sing Sing."
+
+Certainly it would be a handicap. He tried to persuade himself that
+Monica so entirely filled his thoughts because in Camaguay there was no
+one else; it was a case of propinquity; her loneliness and the fact
+that she lay under a shadow for which she was not to blame appealed to
+his chivalry. So, he told himself, in thinking of Monica except as a
+charming companion, he was an ass. And then, arguing that in calling
+himself an ass he had shown his saneness and impartiality, he felt
+justified in seeing her daily.
+
+One morning Garland came to the legation to tell Everett that Peabody
+was in danger of bringing about international complications by having
+himself thrust into the cartel.
+
+"If he qualifies for this local jail," said Garland, "you will have a
+lot of trouble setting him free. You'd better warn him it's easier to
+keep out than to get out."
+
+"What has he been doing?" asked the minister.
+
+"Poaching on Ward's ruins," said the consul. "He certainly is a
+hustler. He pretends to go to Copan, but really goes to Cobre. Ward
+had him followed and threatened to have him arrested. Peabody claims
+any tourist has a right to visit the ruins so long as he does no
+excavating. Ward accused him of exploring the place by night and
+taking photographs by flash-light of the hieroglyphs. He's put an armed
+guard at the ruins, and he told Peabody they are to shoot on sight. So
+Peabody went to Mendoza and said if anybody took a shot at him he'd
+bring warships down here and blow Amapala off the map."
+
+"A militant archaeologist," said Everett, "is something new. Peabody
+is too enthusiastic. He and his hieroglyphs are becoming a bore."
+
+He sent for Peabody and told him unless he curbed his spirit his
+minister could not promise to keep him out of a very damp and dirty
+dungeon.
+
+"I am too enthusiastic," Peabody admitted, "but to me this fellow Ward
+is like a red flag to the bull. His private graft is holding up the
+whole scientific world. He won't let us learn the truth, and he's too
+ignorant to learn it himself. Why, he told me Cobre dated from 1578,
+when Palacio wrote of it to Philip the Second, not knowing that in that
+very letter Palacio states that he found Cobre in ruins. Is it right a
+man as ignorant--"
+
+Everett interrupted by levelling his finger.
+
+"You," he commanded, "keep out of those ruins! My dear professor," he
+continued reproachfully, "you are a student, a man of peace. Don't try
+to wage war on these Amapalans. They're lawless, they're unscrupulous.
+So is Ward. Besides, you are in the wrong, and if they turn ugly, your
+minister cannot help you." He shook his head and smiled doubtfully.
+"I can't understand," he exclaimed, "why you're so keen. It's only a
+heap of broken pottery. Sometimes I wonder if your interest in Cobre
+is that only of the archaeologist."
+
+"What other interest--" demanded Peabody.
+
+"Doesn't Ward's buried treasure appeal at all?" asked the minister. "I
+mean, of course, to your imagination. It does to mine."
+
+The young professor laughed tolerantly.
+
+"Buried treasure!" he exclaimed. "If Ward has found treasure, and I
+think he has, he's welcome to it. What we want is what you call the
+broken pottery. It means nothing to you, but to men like myself, who
+live eight hundred years behind the times, it is much more precious
+than gold."
+
+A few moments later Professor Peabody took his leave, and it was not
+until he had turned the corner of the Calle Morazan that he halted and,
+like a man emerging from water, drew a deep breath.
+
+"Gee!" muttered the distinguished archeologist, "that was a close call!"
+
+One or two women had loved Everett, and after five weeks, in which
+almost daily he had seen Monica, he knew she cared for him. This
+discovery made him entirely happy and filled him with dismay. It was a
+complication he had not foreseen. It left him at the parting of two
+ways, one of which he must choose. For his career he was willing to
+renounce marriage, but now that Monica loved him, even though he had
+consciously not tried to make her love him, had he the right to
+renounce it for her also? He knew that the difference between Monica
+and his career lay in the fact that he loved Monica and was in love
+with his career. Which should he surrender? Of this he thought long
+and deeply, until one night, without thinking at all, he chose.
+
+Colonel Goddard had given a dance, and, as all invited were Americans,
+the etiquette was less formal than at the gatherings of the Amapalans.
+For one thing, the minister and Monica were able to sit on the veranda
+overlooking the garden without his having to fight a duel in the
+morning.
+
+It was not the moonlight, or the music, or the palms that made Everett
+speak. It was simply the knowledge that it was written, that it had to
+be. And he heard himself, without prelude or introduction, talking
+easily and assuredly of the life they would lead as man and wife. From
+this dream Monica woke him. The violet eyes were smiling at him
+through tears.
+
+"When you came," said the girl, "and I loved you, I thought that was
+the greatest happiness. Now that I know you love me I ask nothing
+more. And I can bear it."
+
+Everett felt as though an icy finger had moved swiftly down his spine.
+He pretended not to understand.
+
+"Bear what?" he demanded roughly.
+
+"That I cannot marry you," said the girl. "Even had you not asked me,
+in loving you I would have been happy. Now that I know you thought of
+me as your wife, I am proud. I am grateful. And the obstacle--"
+
+Everett laughed scornfully.
+
+"There is no obstacle."
+
+Monica shook her head. Unafraid, she looked into his eyes, her own
+filled with her love for him.
+
+"Don't make it harder," she said. "My brother is hiding from the law.
+What he did I don't know. When it happened I was at the convent, and
+he did not send for me until he had reached Amapala. I never asked why
+we came, but were I to marry you, with your name and your position,
+every one else would ask. And the scandal would follow you; wherever
+you went it would follow; it would put an end to your career."
+
+His career, now that Monica urged it as her rival, seemed to Everett
+particularly trivial.
+
+"I don't know what your brother did either," he said. "His sins are on
+his own head. They're not on yours, nor on mine. I don't judge him;
+neither do I intend to let him spoil my happiness. Now that I have
+found you I will never let you go."
+
+Sadly Monica shook her head and smiled.
+
+"When you leave here," she said, "for some new post, you won't forget
+me, but you'll be grateful that I let you go alone; that I was not a
+drag on you. When you go back to your great people and your proud and
+beautiful princesses, all this will seem a strange dream, and you will
+be glad you are awake--and free."
+
+"The idea of marrying you, Monica," said Everett, "is not new. It did
+not occur to me only since we moved out here into the moonlight. Since
+I first saw you I've thought of you, and only of you. I've thought of
+you with me in every corner of the globe, as my wife, my sweetheart, my
+partner, riding through jungles as we ride here, sitting opposite me at
+our own table, putting the proud and beautiful princesses at their
+ease. And in all places, at all moments, you make all other women
+tawdry and absurd. And I don't think you are the most wonderful person
+I ever met because I love you, but I love you because you are the most
+wonderful person I ever met."
+
+"I am young," said Monica, "but since I began to love you I am very
+old. And I see clearly that it cannot be."
+
+"Dear heart," cried Everett, "that is quite morbid. What the devil do
+I care what your brother has done! I am not marrying your brother."
+
+For a long time, leaning forward with her elbows on her knees and her
+face buried in her hands, the girl sat silent. It was as though she
+were praying. Everett knew it was not of him, but of her brother, she
+was thinking, and his heart ached for her. For him to cut the brother
+out of his life was not difficult; what it meant to her he could guess.
+
+When the girl raised her eyes they were eloquent with distress.
+
+"He has been so good to me," she said; "always so gentle. He has been
+mother and father to me. He is the first person I can remember. When I
+was a child he put me to bed, he dressed me, and comforted me. When we
+became rich there was nothing he did not wish to give me. I cannot
+leave him. He needs me more than ever I needed him. I am all he has.
+And there is this besides. Were I to marry, of all the men in the
+world it would be harder for him if I married you. For if you succeed
+in what you came here to do, the law will punish him, and he will know
+it was through you he was punished. And even between you and me there
+always would be that knowledge, that feeling."
+
+"That is not fair," cried Everett. "I am not an individual fighting
+less fortunate individuals. I am an insignificant wheel in a great
+machine. You must not blame me because I-"
+
+With an exclamation the girl reproached him.
+
+"Because you do your duty!" she protested. "Is that fair to me? If for
+my sake or my brother you failed in your duty, if you were less
+vigilant, less eager, even though we suffer, I could not love you."
+
+Everett sighed happily.
+
+"As long as you love me," he said, "neither your brother nor any one
+else can keep us apart."
+
+"My brother," said the girl, as though she were pronouncing a sentence,
+"always will keep us apart, and I will always love you."
+
+It was a week before he again saw her, and then the feeling he had read
+in her eyes was gone--or rigorously concealed. Now her manner was that
+of a friend, of a young girl addressing a man older than herself, one
+to whom she looked up with respect and liking, but with no sign of any
+feeling deeper or more intimate.
+
+It upset Everett completely. When he pleaded with her, she asked:
+
+"Do you think it is easy for me? But--" she protested, "I know I am
+doing right. I am doing it to make you happy."
+
+"You are succeeding," Everett assured her, "in making us both damned
+miserable."
+
+For Everett, in the second month of his stay in Amapala, events began
+to move quickly. Following the example of two of his predecessors, the
+Secretary of State of the United States was about to make a grand tour
+of Central America. He came on a mission of peace and brotherly love,
+to foster confidence and good-will, and it was secretly hoped that, in
+the wake of his escort of battle-ships, trade would follow fast. There
+would be salutes and visits of ceremony, speeches, banquets, reviews.
+But in these rejoicings Amapala would have no part.
+
+For, so Everett was informed by cable, unless, previous to the visit of
+the Secretary, Amapala fell into line with her sister republics and
+signed a treaty of extradition, from the itinerary of the great man
+Amapala would find herself pointedly excluded. It would be a
+humiliation. In the eyes of her sister republics it would place her
+outside the pale. Everett saw that in his hands his friend the
+Secretary had placed a powerful weapon; and lost no time in using it.
+He caught the President alone, sitting late at his dinner, surrounded
+by bottles, and read to him the Secretary's ultimatum. General Mendoza
+did not at once surrender. Before he threw over the men who fed him
+the golden eggs that made him rich, and for whom he had sworn never to
+violate the right of sanctuary, he first, for fully half an hour, raged
+and swore. During that time, while Everett sat anxiously expectant,
+the President paced and repaced the length of the dining-hall. When to
+relight his cigar, or to gulp brandy from a tumbler, he halted at the
+table, his great bulk loomed large in the flickering candle-flames, and
+when he continued his march, he would disappear into the shadows, and
+only his scabbard clanking on the stone floor told of his presence. At
+last he halted and shrugged his shoulders so that the tassels of his
+epaulets tossed like wheat.
+
+"You drive a hard bargain, sir," he said. "And I have no choice.
+To-morrow bring the treaty and I will sign."
+
+Everett at once produced it and a fountain pen.
+
+"I should like to cable to-night," he urged, "that you have signed.
+They are holding back the public announcement of the Secretary's route
+until hearing from Your Excellency. This is only tentative," he
+pointed out; "the Senate must ratify. But our Senate will ratify it,
+and when you sign now, it is a thing accomplished."
+
+Over the place at which Everett pointed, the pen scratched harshly; and
+then, throwing it from him, the President sat in silence. With eyes
+inflamed by anger and brandy he regarded the treaty venomously. As
+though loath to let it go, his hands played with it, as a cat plays
+with the mouse between her paws. Watching him breathlessly, Everett
+feared the end was not yet. He felt a depressing premonition that if
+ever the treaty were to reach Washington he best had snatch it and run.
+Even as he waited, the end came. An orderly, appearing suddenly in the
+light of the candles, announced the arrival, in the room adjoining, of
+"the Colonel Goddard and Senor Mellen." They desired an immediate
+audience. Their business with the President was most urgent. Whether
+from Washington their agents had warned them, whether in Camaguay they
+had deciphered the cablegram from the State Department, Everett could
+only guess, but he was certain the cause of their visit was the treaty.
+That Mendoza also believed this was most evident.
+
+Into the darkness, from which the two exiles might emerge, he peered
+guiltily. With an oath he tore the treaty in half. Crushing the
+pieces of paper into a ball, he threw it at Everett's feet. His voice
+rose to a shriek. It was apparent he intended his words to carry to
+the men outside. Like an actor on a stage he waved his arms.
+
+"That is my answer!" he shouted. "Tell your Secretary the choice he
+offers is an insult! It is blackmail. We will not sign his treaty. We
+do not desire his visit to our country." Thrilled by his own bravado,
+his voice rose higher. "Nor," he shouted, "do we desire the presence
+of his representative. Your usefulness is at an end. You will receive
+your passports in the morning."
+
+As he might discharge a cook, he waved Everett away. His hand,
+trembling with excitement, closed around the neck of the brandy-bottle.
+Everett stooped and secured the treaty. On his return to Washington,
+torn and rumpled as it was, it would be his justification. It was his
+"Exhibit A."
+
+As he approached the legation he saw drawn up in front of it three
+ponies ready saddled. For an instant he wondered if Mendoza intended
+further to insult him, if he planned that night to send him under guard
+to the coast. He determined hotly sooner than submit to such an
+indignity he would fortify the legation, and defend himself. But no
+such heroics were required of him. As he reached the door, Garland,
+with an exclamation of relief, hailed him, and Monica, stepping from
+the shadow, laid an appealing hand upon his sleeve.
+
+"My brother!" she exclaimed. "The guard at Cobre has just sent word
+that they found Peabody prowling in the ruins and fired on him. He
+fired back, and he is still there hiding. My brother and others have
+gone to take him. I don't know what may happen if he resists. Chester
+is armed, and he is furious; he is beside himself; he would not listen
+to me. But he must listen to you. Will you go," the girl begged, "and
+speak to him; speak to him, I mean," she added, "as the American
+minister?"
+
+Everett already had his foot in the stirrup. "I'm the American
+minister only until to-morrow," he said. "I've got my walking-papers.
+But I'll do all I can to stop this to-night. Garland," he asked, "will
+you take Miss Ward home, and then follow me?"
+
+"If I do not go with you," said Monica, "I will go alone."
+
+Her tone was final. With a clatter of hoofs that woke alarmed echoes
+in the sleeping streets the three horses galloped abreast toward Cobre.
+In an hour they left the main trail and at a walk picked their way to
+where the blocks of stone, broken columns, and crumbling temples of the
+half-buried city checked the jungle.
+
+The moon made it possible to move in safety, and at different distances
+the lights of torches told them the man-hunt still was in progress.
+
+"Thank God," breathed Monica, "we are in time."
+
+Everett gave the ponies in care of one of the guards. He turned to
+Garland.
+
+"Catch up with those lights ahead of us," he said, "and we will join
+this party to the right. If you find Ward, tell him I forbid him
+taking the law into his own hands; tell him I will protect his
+interests. If you meet Peabody, make him give up his gun, and see that
+the others don't harm him!"
+
+Everett and the girl did not overtake the lights they had seen flashing
+below them. Before they were within hailing distance, that searching
+party had disappeared, and still farther away other torches beckoned.
+
+Stumbling and falling, now in pursuit of one will-o'-the-wisp, now of
+another, they scrambled forward. But always the lights eluded them.
+From their exertions and the moist heat they were breathless, and their
+bodies dripped with water. Panting, they halted at the entrance of
+what once had been a tomb. From its black interior came a damp mist;
+above them, alarmed by their intrusion, the vampire bats whirled
+blindly in circles. Monica, who by day possessed some slight knowledge
+of the ruins, had, in the moonlight, lost all sense of direction.
+
+"We're lost," said Monica, in a low tone. Unconsciously both were
+speaking in whispers. "I thought we were following what used to be the
+main thoroughfare of the city; but I have never seen this place before.
+From what I have read I think we must be among the tombs of the kings."
+
+She was silenced by Everett placing one hand quickly on her arm, and
+with the other pointing. In the uncertain moonlight she saw moving
+cautiously away from them, and unconscious of their presence, a white,
+ghostlike figure.
+
+"Peabody," whispered Everett.
+
+"Call him," commanded Monica.
+
+"The others might hear," objected Everett. "We must overtake him. If
+we're with him when they meet, they wouldn't dare--"
+
+With a gasp of astonishment, his words ceased.
+
+Like a ghost, the ghostlike figure had vanished.
+
+"He walked through that rock!" cried Monica.
+
+Everett caught her by the wrist. "Come!" he commanded.
+
+Over the face of the rock, into which Peabody had dived as into water,
+hung a curtain of vines. Everett tore it apart. Concealed by the
+vines was the narrow mouth to a tunnel; and from it they heard, rapidly
+lessening in the distance, the patter of footsteps.
+
+"Will you wait," demanded Everett, "or come with me?"
+
+With a shudder of distaste, Monica answered by seizing his hand.
+
+With his free arm Everett swept aside the vines, and, Monica following,
+they entered the tunnel. It was a passageway cleanly cut through the
+solid rock and sufficiently wide to permit of their moving freely. At
+the farther end, at a distance of a hundred yards, it opened into a
+great vault, also hollowed from the rock and, as they saw to their
+surprise, brilliantly lighted.
+
+For an instant, in black silhouette, the figure of Peabody blocked the
+entrance to this vault, and then, turning to the right, again vanished.
+Monica felt an untimely desire to laugh. Now that they were on the
+track of Peabody she no longer feared the outcome of the adventure. In
+the presence of the American minister and of herself there would be no
+violence; and as they trailed the archaeologist through the tunnel she
+was reminded of Alice and her pursuit of the white rabbit. This
+thought, and her sense of relief that the danger was over, caused her
+to laugh aloud.
+
+They had gained the farther end of the tunnel and the entrance to the
+vault, when at once her amusement turned to wonder. For the vault
+showed every evidence of use and of recent occupation. In brackets,
+and burning brightly, were lamps of modern make; on the stone floor
+stood a canvas cot, saddle-bags, camp-chairs, and in the centre of the
+vault a collapsible table. On this were bottles filled with chemicals,
+trays, and presses such as are used in developing photographs, and
+apparently hung there to dry, swinging from strings, the proofs of many
+negatives.
+
+Loyal to her brother, Monica exclaimed indignantly. At the proofs she
+pointed an accusing finger.
+
+"Look!" she whispered. "This is Peabody's darkroom, where he develops
+the flash-lights he takes of the hieroglyphs! Chester has a right to be
+furious!"
+
+Impulsively she would have pushed past Everett; but with an exclamation
+he sprang in front of her.
+
+"No!" he commanded, "come away!"
+
+He had fallen into a sudden panic. His tone spoke of some catastrophe,
+imminent and overwhelming. Monica followed the direction of his eyes.
+They were staring in fear at the proofs.
+
+The girl leaned forward; and now saw them clearly.
+
+Each was a United States Treasury note for five hundred dollars.
+
+Around the turn of the tunnel, approaching the vault apparently from
+another passage, they heard hurrying footsteps; and then, close to them
+from the vault itself, the voice of Professor Peabody.
+
+It was harsh, sharp, peremptory.
+
+"Hands up!" it commanded. "Drop that gun!"
+
+As though halted by a precipice, the footsteps fell into instant
+silence. There was a pause, and then the ring of steel upon the stone
+floor. There was another pause, and Monica heard the voice of her
+brother. Broken, as though with running, it still retained its level
+accent, its note of insolence.
+
+"So," it said, "I have caught you?"
+
+Monica struggled toward the lighted vault, but around her Everett threw
+his arm.
+
+"Come away!" he begged.
+
+Monica fought against the terror of something unknown. She could not
+understand. They had come only to prevent a meeting between her
+brother and Peabody; and now that they had met, Everett was endeavoring
+to escape.
+
+It was incomprehensible.
+
+And the money in the vault, the yellow bills hanging from a cobweb of
+strings; why should they terrify her; what did they threaten? Dully,
+and from a distance, Monica heard the voice of Peabody.
+
+"No," he answered; "I have caught you! And I've had a hell of a time
+doing it!"
+
+Monica tried to call out, to assure her brother of her presence. But,
+as though in a nightmare, she could make no sound. Fingers of fear
+gripped at her throat. To struggle was no longer possible.
+
+The voice of Peabody continued:
+
+"Six months ago we traced these bills to New Orleans. So we guessed
+the plant was in Central America. We knew only one man who could make
+them. When I found you were in Amapala and they said you had struck
+'buried treasure'--the rest was easy."
+
+Monica heard the voice of her brother answer with a laugh.
+
+"Easy?" he mocked. "There's no extradition. You can't touch me.
+You're lucky if you get out of here alive. I've only to raise my
+voice--"
+
+"And, I'll kill you!"
+
+This was danger Monica could understand.
+
+Freed from the nightmare of doubt, with a cry she ran forward. She saw
+Peabody, his back against a wall, a levelled automatic in his hand; her
+brother at the entrance to a tunnel like the one from which she had
+just appeared. His arms were raised above his head. At his feet lay a
+revolver. For an instant, with disbelief, he stared at Monica, and
+then, as though assured that it was she, his eyes dilated. In them
+were fear and horror. So genuine was the agony in the face of the
+counterfeiter that Everett, who had followed, turned his own away. But
+the eyes of the brother and sister remained fixed upon each other,
+hers, appealingly; his, with despair. He tried to speak, but the words
+did not come. When he did break the silence his tone was singularly
+wistful, most tenderly kind.
+
+"Did you hear?" he asked.
+
+Monica slowly bowed her head. With the same note of gentleness her
+brother persisted:
+
+"Did you understand?"
+
+Between them stretched the cobweb of strings hung with yellow
+certificates; each calling for five hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+Stirred by the night air from the open tunnels, they fluttered and
+flaunted.
+
+Against the sight of them, Monica closed her eyes. Heavily, as though
+with a great physical effort, again she bowed her head.
+
+The eyes of her brother searched about him wildly. They rested on the
+mouth of the tunnel.
+
+With his lowered arm he pointed.
+
+"Who is that?" he cried.
+
+Instinctively the others turned.
+
+It was for an instant. The instant sufficed.
+
+Monica saw her brother throw himself upon the floor, felt herself flung
+aside as Everett and the detective leaped upon him; saw her brother
+press his hands against his heart, the two men dragging at his arms.
+
+The cavelike room was shaken with a report, an acrid smoke assailed her
+nostrils. The men ceased struggling. Her brother lay still.
+
+Monica sprang toward the body, but a black wave rose and submerged her.
+As she fainted, to save herself she threw out her arms, and as she fell
+she dragged down with her the buried treasure of Cobre.
+
+Stretched upon the stone floor beside her brother, she lay motionless.
+Beneath her, and wrapped about and covering her, as the leaves covered
+the babes in the wood, was a vast cobweb of yellow bills, each for five
+hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+
+
+A month later the harbor of Porto Cortez in Honduras was shaken with
+the roar of cannon. In comparison, the roaring of all the cannon of
+all the revolutions that that distressful country ever had known, were
+like fire-crackers under a barrel.
+
+Faithful to his itinerary, the Secretary of State of the United States
+was paying his formal visit to Honduras, and the President of that
+republic, waiting upon the Fruit Company's wharf to greet him, was
+receiving the salute of the American battle-ships. Back of him, on the
+wharf, his own barefooted artillerymen in their turn were saluting,
+excitedly and spasmodically, the distinguished visitor. As an honor he
+had at last learned to accept without putting a finger in each ear, the
+Secretary of State smiled with gracious calm. Less calm was the
+President of Honduras. He knew something the Secretary did not know.
+He knew that at any moment a gun of his saluting battery might turn
+turtle, or blow into the harbor himself, his cabinet, and the larger
+part of his standing army.
+
+Made fast to the wharf on the side opposite to the one at which the
+Secretary had landed was one of the Fruit Company's steamers. She was
+on her way north, and Porto Cortez was a port of call. That her
+passengers might not intrude upon the ceremonies, her side of the wharf
+was roped off and guarded by the standing army. But from her decks and
+from behind the ropes the passengers, with a battery of cameras, were
+perpetuating the historic scene.
+
+Among them, close to the ropes, viewing the ceremony with the cynical
+eye of one who in Europe had seen kings and emperors meet upon the
+Field of the Cloth of Gold, was Everett. He made no effort to bring
+himself to the attention of his former chief. But when the
+introductions were over, the Secretary of State turned his eyes to his
+fellow countrymen crowding the rails of the American steamer. They
+greeted him with cheers. The great man raised his hat, and his eyes
+fell upon Everett. The Secretary advanced quickly, his hand extended,
+brushing to one side the standing army.
+
+"What are you doing here?" he demanded.
+
+"On my way home, sir," said Everett. "I couldn't leave sooner; there
+were--personal reasons. But I cabled the department my resignation the
+day Mendoza gave me my walking-papers. You may remember," Everett
+added dryly, "the department accepted by cable."
+
+The great man showed embarrassment.
+
+"It was most unfortunate," he sympathized. "We wanted that treaty, and
+while, no doubt, you made every effort--"
+
+He became aware of the fact that Everett's attention was not
+exclusively his own. Following the direction of the young man's eyes
+the Secretary saw on the deck just above them, leaning upon the rail, a
+girl in deep mourning.
+
+She was very beautiful. Her face was as lovely as a violet and as shy.
+To the Secretary a beautiful woman was always a beautiful woman. But he
+had read the papers. Who had not? He was sure there must be some
+mistake. This could not be the sister of a criminal; the woman for
+whom Everett had smashed his career.
+
+The Secretary masked his astonishment, but not his admiration.
+
+"Mrs. Everett?" he asked. His very tone conveyed congratulations.
+
+"Yes," said the ex-diplomat. "Some day I shall be glad to present you."
+
+The Secretary did not wait for an introduction. Raising his eyes to
+the ship's rail, he made a deep and courtly bow. With a gesture worthy
+of d'Artagnan, his high hat swept the wharf. The members of his staff,
+the officers from the war-ships, the President of Honduras and the
+members of his staff endeavored to imitate his act of homage, and in
+confusion Mrs. Everett blushed becomingly.
+
+"When I return to Washington," said the Secretary hastily, "come and
+see me. You are too valuable to lose. Your career--"
+
+Again Everett was looking at his wife. Her distress at having been so
+suddenly drawn into the lime-light amused him, and he was smiling.
+Then, as though aware of the Secretary's meaning, he laughed.
+
+"My dear sir!" he protested. His tone suggested he was about to add
+"mind your own business," or "go to the devil."
+
+Instead he said: "I'm not worrying about my career. My career has just
+begun."
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BOY SCOUT
+
+
+A rule of the Boy Scouts is every day to do some one a good turn. Not
+because the copybooks tell you it deserves another, but in spite of
+that pleasing possibility. If you are a true scout, until you have
+performed your act of kindness your day is dark. You are as unhappy as
+is the grown-up who has begun his day without shaving or reading the
+New York Sun. But as soon as you have proved yourself you may, with a
+clear conscience, look the world in the face and untie the knot in your
+kerchief.
+
+Jimmie Reeder untied the accusing knot in his scarf at just ten minutes
+past eight on a hot August morning after he had given one dime to his
+sister Sadie. With that she could either witness the first-run films
+at the Palace, or by dividing her fortune patronize two of the nickel
+shows on Lenox Avenue. The choice Jimmie left to her. He was setting
+out for the annual encampment of the Boy Scouts at Hunter's Island, and
+in the excitement of that adventure even the movies ceased to thrill.
+But Sadie also could be unselfish. With a heroism of a camp-fire
+maiden she made a gesture which might have been interpreted to mean she
+was returning the money.
+
+"I can't, Jimmie!" she gasped. "I can't take it off you. You saved
+it, and you ought to get the fun of it."
+
+"I haven't saved it yet," said Jimmie. "I'm going to cut it out of the
+railroad fare. I'm going to get off at City Island instead of at
+Pelham Manor and walk the difference. That's ten cents cheaper."
+
+Sadie exclaimed with admiration:
+
+"An' you carryin' that heavy grip!"
+
+"Aw, that's nothin'," said the man of the family.
+
+"Good-by, mother. So long, Sadie."
+
+To ward off further expressions of gratitude he hurriedly advised Sadie
+to take in "The Curse of Cain" rather than "The Mohawk's Last Stand,"
+and fled down the front steps.
+
+He wore his khaki uniform. On his shoulders was his knapsack, from his
+hands swung his suit-case, and between his heavy stockings and his
+"shorts" his kneecaps, unkissed by the sun, as yet unscathed by
+blackberry vines, showed as white and fragile as the wrists of a girl.
+As he moved toward the "L" station at the corner, Sadie and his mother
+waved to him; in the street, boys too small to be scouts hailed him
+enviously; even the policeman glancing over the newspapers on the
+news-stand nodded approval.
+
+"You a scout, Jimmie?" he asked.
+
+"No," retorted Jimmie, for was not he also in uniform? "I'm Santa Claus
+out filling Christmas stockings."
+
+The patrolman also possessed a ready wit.
+
+"Then get yourself a pair," he advised. "If a dog was to see your
+legs--"
+
+Jimmie escaped the insult by fleeing up the steps of the Elevated.
+
+
+An hour later, with his valise in one hand and staff in the other, he
+was tramping up the Boston Post Road and breathing heavily. The day was
+cruelly hot. Before his eyes, over an interminable stretch of asphalt,
+the heat waves danced and flickered. Already the knapsack on his
+shoulders pressed upon him like an Old Man of the Sea; the linen in the
+valise had turned to pig iron, his pipe-stem legs were wabbling, his
+eyes smarted with salt sweat, and the fingers supporting the valise
+belonged to some other boy, and were giving that boy much pain. But as
+the motor-cars flashed past with raucous warnings, or, that those who
+rode might better see the boy with bare knees, passed at "half speed,"
+Jimmie stiffened his shoulders and stepped jauntily forward. Even when
+the joy-riders mocked with "Oh, you scout!" he smiled at them. He was
+willing to admit to those who rode that the laugh was on the one who
+walked. And he regretted--oh, so bitterly--having left the train. He
+was indignant that for his "one good turn a day" he had not selected
+one less strenuous--that, for instance, he had not assisted a
+frightened old lady through the traffic. To refuse the dime she might
+have offered, as all true scouts refuse all tips, would have been
+easier than to earn it by walking five miles, with the sun at
+ninety-nine degrees, and carrying excess baggage. Twenty times James
+shifted the valise to the other hand, twenty times he let it drop and
+sat upon it.
+
+And then, as again he took up his burden, the good Samaritan drew near.
+He drew near in a low gray racing-car at the rate of forty miles an
+hour, and within a hundred feet of Jimmie suddenly stopped and backed
+toward him. The good Samaritan was a young man with white hair. He
+wore a suit of blue, a golf cap; the hands that held the wheel were
+disguised in large yellow gloves. He brought the car to a halt and
+surveyed the dripping figure in the road with tired and uncurious eyes.
+
+"You a Boy Scout?" he asked.
+
+With alacrity for the twenty-first time Jimmie dropped the valise,
+forced his cramped fingers into straight lines, and saluted.
+
+The young man in the car nodded toward the seat beside him.
+
+"Get in," he commanded.
+
+When James sat panting happily at his elbow the old young man, to
+Jimmie's disappointment, did not continue to shatter the speed limit.
+Instead, he seemed inclined for conversation, and the car, growling
+indignantly, crawled.
+
+"I never saw a Boy Scout before," announced the old young man. "Tell me
+about it. First, tell me what you do when you're not scouting."
+
+Jimmie explained volubly. When not in uniform he was an office boy,
+and from peddlers and beggars guarded the gates of Carroll and
+Hastings, stock-brokers. He spoke the names of his employers with awe.
+It was a firm distinguished, conservative, and long established. The
+white-haired young man seemed to nod in assent.
+
+"Do you know them?" demanded Jimmie suspiciously. "Are you a customer
+of ours?"
+
+"I know them," said the young man. "They are customers of mine."
+
+Jimmie wondered in what way Carroll and Hastings were customers of the
+white-haired young man. Judging him by his outer garments, Jimmie
+guessed he was a Fifth Avenue tailor; he might be even a haberdasher.
+Jimmie continued. He lived, he explained, with his mother at One
+Hundred and Forty-sixth Street; Sadie, his sister, attended the public
+school; he helped support them both, and he now was about to enjoy a
+well-earned vacation camping out on Hunter's Island, where he would
+cook his own meals, and, if the mosquitoes permitted, sleep in a tent.
+
+"And you like that?" demanded the young man. "You call that fun?"
+
+"Sure!" protested Jimmie. "Don't you go camping out?"
+
+"I go camping out," said the good Samaritan, "whenever I leave New
+York."
+
+Jimmie had not for three years lived in Wall Street not to understand
+that the young man spoke in metaphor.
+
+"You don't look," objected the young man critically, "as though you
+were built for the strenuous life."
+
+Jimmie glanced guiltily at his white knees.
+
+"You ought ter see me two weeks from now," he protested. "I get all
+sunburnt and hard--hard as anything!"
+
+The young man was incredulous.
+
+"You were near getting sunstruck when I picked you up," he laughed.
+"If you're going to Hunter's Island, why didn't you go to Pelham Manor?"
+
+"That's right!" assented Jimmie eagerly. "But I wanted to save the ten
+cents so's to send Sadie to the movies. So I walked."
+
+The young man looked his embarrassment.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he murmured.
+
+But Jimmie did not hear him. From the back of the car he was dragging
+excitedly at the hated suit-case.
+
+"Stop!" he commanded. "I got ter get out. I got ter walk."
+
+The young man showed his surprise.
+
+"Walk!" he exclaimed. "What is it--a bet?"
+
+Jimmie dropped the valise and followed it into the roadway. It took
+some time to explain to the young man. First, he had to be told about
+the scout law and the one good turn a day, and that it must involve
+some personal sacrifice. And, as Jimmie pointed out, changing from a
+slow suburban train to a racing-car could not be listed as a sacrifice.
+He had not earned the money, Jimmie argued; he had only avoided paying
+it to the railroad. If he did not walk he would be obtaining the
+gratitude of Sadie by a falsehood. Therefore, he must walk.
+
+"Not at all," protested the young man. "You've got it wrong. What
+good will it do your sister to have you sunstruck? I think you are
+sunstruck. You're crazy with the heat. You get in here, and we'll
+talk it over as we go along."
+
+Hastily Jimmie backed away. "I'd rather walk," he said.
+
+The young man shifted his legs irritably.
+
+"Then how'll this suit you?" he called. "We'll declare that first 'one
+good turn' a failure and start afresh. Do me a good turn."
+
+Jimmie halted in his tracks and looked back suspiciously.
+
+"I'm going to Hunter's Island Inn," called the young man, "and I've
+lost my way. You get in here and guide me. That'll be doing me a good
+turn."
+
+On either side of the road, blotting out the landscape, giant hands
+picked out in electric-light bulbs pointed the way to Hunter's Island
+Inn. Jimmie grinned and nodded toward them.
+
+"Much obliged," he called. "I got ter walk." Turning his back upon
+temptation, he waddled forward into the flickering heat waves.
+
+
+The young man did not attempt to pursue. At the side of the road,
+under the shade of a giant elm, he had brought the car to a halt and
+with his arms crossed upon the wheel sat motionless, following with
+frowning eyes the retreating figure of Jimmie. But the narrow-chested
+and knock-kneed boy staggering over the sun-baked asphalt no longer
+concerned him. It was not Jimmie, but the code preached by Jimmie, and
+not only preached but before his eyes put into practice, that
+interested him. The young man with white hair had been running away
+from temptation. At forty miles an hour he had been running away from
+the temptation to do a fellow mortal "a good turn." That morning, to
+the appeal of a drowning Caesar to "Help me, Cassius, or I sink," he
+had answered: "Sink!" That answer he had no wish to reconsider. That
+he might not reconsider he had sought to escape. It was his experience
+that a sixty-horse-power racing-machine is a jealous mistress. For
+retrospective, sentimental, or philanthropic thoughts she grants no
+leave of absence. But he had not escaped. Jimmie had halted him,
+tripped him by the heels, and set him again to thinking. Within the
+half-hour that followed those who rolled past saw at the side of the
+road a car with her engine running, and leaning upon the wheel, as
+unconscious of his surroundings as though he sat at his own fireplace,
+a young man who frowned and stared at nothing. The half-hour passed
+and the young man swung his car back toward the city. But at the first
+road-house that showed a blue-and-white telephone sign he left it, and
+into the iron box at the end of the bar dropped a nickel. He wished to
+communicate with Mr. Carroll, of Carroll and Hastings; and when he
+learned Mr. Carroll had just issued orders that he must not be
+disturbed, the young man gave his name.
+
+The effect upon the barkeeper was instantaneous. With the aggrieved
+air of one who feels he is the victim of a jest he laughed scornfully.
+
+"What are you putting over?" he demanded.
+
+The young man smiled reassuringly. He had begun to speak and, though
+apparently engaged with the beer-glass he was polishing, the barkeeper
+listened.
+
+Down in Wall Street the senior member of Carroll and Hastings also
+listened. He was alone in the most private of all his private offices,
+and when interrupted had been engaged in what, of all undertakings, is
+the most momentous. On the desk before him lay letters to his lawyer,
+to the coroner, to his wife; and hidden by a mass of papers, but within
+reach of his hand, was an automatic pistol. The promise it offered of
+swift release had made the writing of the letters simple, had given him
+a feeling of complete detachment, had released him, at least in
+thought, from all responsibilities. And when at his elbow the
+telephone coughed discreetly, it was as though some one had called him
+from a world from which already he had made his exit.
+
+Mechanically, through mere habit, he lifted the receiver.
+
+The voice over the telephone came in brisk, staccato sentences.
+
+"That letter I sent this morning? Forget it. Tear it up. I've been
+thinking and I'm going to take a chance. I've decided to back you
+boys, and I know you'll make good. I'm speaking from a road-house in
+the Bronx; going straight from here to the bank. So you can begin to
+draw against us within an hour. And--hello!--will three millions see
+you through?"
+
+From Wall Street there came no answer, but from the hands of the
+barkeeper a glass crashed to the floor.
+
+The young man regarded the barkeeper with puzzled eyes.
+
+"He doesn't answer," he exclaimed. "He must have hung up."
+
+"He must have fainted!" said the barkeeper.
+
+The white-haired one pushed a bill across the counter. "To pay for
+breakage," he said, and disappeared down Pelham Parkway.
+
+Throughout the day, with the bill, for evidence, pasted against the
+mirror, the barkeeper told and retold the wondrous tale.
+
+"He stood just where you're standing now," he related, "blowing in
+million-dollar bills like you'd blow suds off a beer. If I'd knowed it
+was him, I'd have hit him once and hid him in the cellar for the
+reward. Who'd I think he was? I thought he was a wire-tapper, working
+a con game!"
+
+Mr. Carroll had not "hung up," but when in the Bronx the beer-glass
+crashed, in Wall Street the receiver had slipped from the hand of the
+man who held it, and the man himself had fallen forward. His desk hit
+him in the face and woke him--woke him to the wonderful fact that he
+still lived; that at forty he had been born again; that before him
+stretched many more years in which, as the young man with the white
+hair had pointed out, he still could make good.
+
+The afternoon was far advanced when the staff of Carroll and Hastings
+were allowed to depart, and, even late as was the hour, two of them
+were asked to remain. Into the most private of the private offices
+Carroll invited Gaskell, the head clerk; in the main office Hastings
+had asked young Thorne, the bond clerk, to be seated.
+
+
+Until the senior partner has finished with Gaskell young Thorne must
+remain seated.
+
+"Gaskell," said Mr. Carroll, "if we had listened to you, if we'd run
+this place as it was when father was alive, this never would have
+happened. It hasn't happened, but we've had our lesson. And after
+this we're going slow and going straight. And we don't need you to
+tell us how to do that. We want you to go away--on a month's vacation.
+When I thought we were going under I planned to send the children on a
+sea voyage with the governess--so they wouldn't see the newspapers.
+But now that I can look them in the eye again, I need them, I can't let
+them go. So, if you'd like to take your wife on an ocean trip to Nova
+Scotia and Quebec, here are the cabins I reserved for the kids. They
+call it the royal suite--whatever that is--and the trip lasts a month.
+The boat sails to-morrow morning. Don't sleep too late or you may miss
+her."
+
+The head clerk was secreting the tickets in the inside pocket of his
+waistcoat. His fingers trembled, and when he laughed his voice
+trembled.
+
+"Miss the boat!" the head clerk exclaimed. "If she gets away from
+Millie and me she's got to start now. We'll go on board to-night!"
+
+A half-hour later Millie was on her knees packing a trunk, and her
+husband was telephoning to the drug-store for a sponge-bag and a cure
+for seasickness.
+
+Owing to the joy in her heart and to the fact that she was on her
+knees, Millie was alternately weeping into the trunk-tray and offering
+up incoherent prayers of thanksgiving. Suddenly she sank back upon the
+floor.
+
+"John!" she cried, "doesn't it seem sinful to sail away in a 'royal
+suite' and leave this beautiful flat empty?"
+
+Over the telephone John was having trouble with the drug clerk.
+
+"No!" he explained, "I'm not seasick now. The medicine I want is to be
+taken later. I know I'm speaking from the Pavonia; but the Pavonia
+isn't a ship; it's an apartment-house."
+
+He turned to Millie. "We can't be in two places at the same time," he
+suggested.
+
+"But, think," insisted Millie, "of all the poor people stifling
+to-night in this heat, trying to sleep on the roofs and fire-escapes;
+and our flat so cool and big and pretty--and no one in it."
+
+John nodded his head proudly.
+
+"I know it's big," he said, "but it isn't big enough to hold all the
+people who are sleeping to-night on the roofs and in the parks."
+
+"I was thinking of your brother--and Grace," said Millie. "They've
+been married only two weeks now, and they're in a stuffy hall bedroom
+and eating with all the other boarders. Think what our flat would mean
+to them; to be by themselves, with eight rooms and their own kitchen
+and bath, and our new refrigerator and the gramophone! It would be
+heaven! It would be a real honeymoon!"
+
+Abandoning the drug clerk, John lifted Millie in his arms and kissed
+her, for, next to his wife, nearest his heart was the younger brother.
+
+
+The younger brother and Grace were sitting on the stoop of the
+boarding-house. On the upper steps, in their shirt-sleeves, were the
+other boarders; so the bride and bridegroom spoke in whispers. The air
+of the cross street was stale and stagnant; from it rose exhalations of
+rotting fruit, the gases of an open subway, the smoke of passing
+taxicabs. But between the street and the hall bedroom, with its odors
+of a gas-stove and a kitchen, the choice was difficult.
+
+"We've got to cool off somehow," the young husband was saying, "or you
+won't sleep. Shall we treat ourselves to ice-cream sodas or a trip on
+the Weehawken ferry-boat?"
+
+"The ferry-boat!" begged the girl, "where we can get away from all
+these people."
+
+A taxicab with a trunk in front whirled into the street, kicked itself
+to a stop, and the head clerk and Millie spilled out upon the pavement.
+They talked so fast, and the younger brother and Grace talked so fast,
+that the boarders, although they listened intently, could make nothing
+of it.
+
+They distinguished only the concluding sentences:
+
+"Why don't you drive down to the wharf with us," they heard the elder
+brother ask, "and see our royal suite?"
+
+But the younger brother laughed him to scorn.
+
+"What's your royal suite," he mocked, "to our royal palace?"
+
+An hour later, had the boarders listened outside the flat of the head
+clerk, they would have heard issuing from his bathroom the cooling
+murmur of running water and from his gramophone the jubilant notes of
+"Alexander's Rag-time Band."
+
+When in his private office Carroll was making a present of the royal
+suite to the head clerk, in the main office Hastings, the junior
+partner, was addressing "Champ" Thorne, the bond clerk. He addressed
+him familiarly and affectionately as "Champ." This was due partly to
+the fact that twenty-six years before Thorne had been christened
+Champneys and to the coincidence that he had captained the football
+eleven of one of the Big Three to the championship.
+
+"Champ," said Mr. Hastings, "last month, when you asked me to raise
+your salary, the reason I didn't do it was not because you didn't
+deserve it, but because I believed if we gave you a raise you'd
+immediately get married."
+
+The shoulders of the ex-football captain rose aggressively; he snorted
+with indignation.
+
+"And why should I not get married?" he demanded. "You're a fine one to
+talk! You're the most offensively happy married man I ever met."
+
+"Perhaps I know I am happy better than you do," reproved the junior
+partner; "but I know also that it takes money to support a wife."
+
+"You raise me to a hundred a week," urged Champ, "and I'll make it
+support a wife whether it supports me or not."
+
+"A month ago," continued Hastings, "we could have promised you a
+hundred, but we didn't know how long we could pay it. We didn't want
+you to rush off and marry some fine girl--"
+
+"Some fine girl!" muttered Mr. Thorne. "The finest girl!"
+
+"The finer the girl," Hastings pointed out, "the harder it would have
+been for you if we had failed and you had lost your job."
+
+The eyes of the young man opened with sympathy and concern.
+
+"Is it as bad as that?" he murmured.
+
+Hastings sighed happily.
+
+"It was," he said, "but this morning the Young Man of Wall Street did
+us a good turn--saved us--saved our creditors, saved our homes, saved
+our honor. We're going to start fresh and pay our debts, and we agreed
+the first debt we paid would be the small one we owe you. You've
+brought us more than we've given, and if you'll stay with us we're
+going to 'see' your fifty and raise it a hundred. What do you say?"
+
+Young Mr. Thorne leaped to his feet. What he said was: "Where'n hell's
+my hat?"
+
+But by the time he had found the hat and the door he mended his manners.
+
+"I say, 'Thank you a thousand times,"' he shouted over his shoulder.
+"Excuse me, but I've got to go. I've got to break the news to--"
+
+He did not explain to whom he was going to break the news; but Hastings
+must have guessed, for again he sighed happily and then, a little
+hysterically laughed aloud. Several months had passed since he had
+laughed aloud.
+
+In his anxiety to break the news Champ Thorne almost broke his neck.
+In his excitement he could not remember whether the red flash meant the
+elevator was going down or coming up, and sooner than wait to find out
+he started to race down eighteen flights of stairs when fortunately the
+elevator-door swung open.
+
+"You get five dollars," he announced to the elevator man, "if you drop
+to the street without a stop. Beat the speed limit! Act like the
+building is on fire and you're trying to save me before the roof falls."
+
+Senator Barnes and his entire family, which was his daughter Barbara,
+were at the Ritz-Carlton. They were in town in August because there
+was a meeting of the directors of the Brazil and Cuyaba Rubber Company,
+of which company Senator Barnes was president. It was a secret
+meeting. Those directors who were keeping cool at the edge of the
+ocean had been summoned by telegraph; those who were steaming across
+the ocean, by wireless.
+
+Up from the equator had drifted the threat of a scandal, sickening,
+grim, terrible. As yet it burned beneath the surface, giving out only
+an odor, but an odor as rank as burning rubber itself. At any moment
+it might break into flame. For the directors, was it the better wisdom
+to let the scandal smoulder, and take a chance, or to be the first to
+give the alarm, the first to lead the way to the horror and stamp it
+out?
+
+It was to decide this that, in the heat of August, the directors and
+the president had foregathered.
+
+Champ Thorne knew nothing of this; he knew only that by a miracle
+Barbara Barnes was in town; that at last he was in a position to ask
+her to marry him; that she would certainly say she would. That was all
+he cared to know.
+
+A year before he had issued his declaration of independence. Before he
+could marry, he told her, he must be able to support a wife on what he
+earned, without her having to accept money from her father, and until
+he received "a minimum wage" of five thousand dollars they must wait.
+
+"What is the matter with my father's money?" Barbara had demanded.
+
+Thorne had evaded the direct question.
+
+"There is too much of it," he said.
+
+"Do you object to the way he makes it?" insisted Barbara. "Because
+rubber is most useful. You put it in golf balls and auto tires and
+galoshes. There is nothing so perfectly respectable as galoshes. And
+what is there 'tainted' about a raincoat?"
+
+Thorne shook his head unhappily.
+
+"It's not the finished product to which I refer," he stammered; "it's
+the way they get the raw material."
+
+"They get it out of trees," said Barbara. Then she exclaimed with
+enlightenment--"Oh!" she cried, "you are thinking of the Congo. There
+it is terrible! That is slavery. But there are no slaves on the
+Amazon. The natives are free and the work is easy. They just tap the
+trees the way the farmers gather sugar in Vermont. Father has told me
+about it often."
+
+Thorne had made no comment. He could abuse a friend, if the friend
+were among those present, but denouncing any one he disliked as
+heartily as he disliked Senator Barnes was a public service he
+preferred to leave to others. And he knew besides that if the father
+she loved and the man she loved distrusted each other, Barbara would
+not rest until she learned the reason why.
+
+One day, in a newspaper, Barbara read of the Puju Mayo atrocities, of
+the Indian slaves in the jungles and backwaters of the Amazon, who are
+offered up as sacrifices to "red rubber." She carried the paper to her
+father. What it said, her father told her, was untrue, and if it were
+true it was the first he had heard of it.
+
+Senator Barnes loved the good things of life, but the thing he loved
+most was his daughter; the thing he valued the highest was her good
+opinion. So when for the first time she looked at him in doubt, he
+assured her he at once would order an investigation.
+
+"But, of course," he added, "it will be many months before our agents
+can report. On the Amazon news travels very slowly."
+
+In the eyes of his daughter the doubt still lingered.
+
+"I am afraid," she said, "that that is true."
+
+That was six months before the directors of the Brazil and Cuyaba
+Rubber Company were summoned to meet their president at his rooms in
+the Ritz-Carlton. They were due to arrive in half an hour, and while
+Senator Barnes awaited their coming Barbara came to him. In her eyes
+was a light that helped to tell the great news. It gave him a sharp,
+jealous pang. He wanted at once to play a part in her happiness, to
+make her grateful to him, not alone to this stranger who was taking her
+away. So fearful was he that she would shut him out of her life that
+had she asked for half his kingdom he would have parted with it.
+
+"And besides giving my consent," said the rubber king, "for which no
+one seems to have asked, what can I give my little girl to make her
+remember her old father? Some diamonds to put on her head, or pearls to
+hang around her neck, or does she want a vacant lot on Fifth Avenue?"
+
+The lovely hands of Barbara rested upon his shoulders; her lovely face
+was raised to his; her lovely eyes were appealing, and a little
+frightened.
+
+"What would one of those things cost?" asked Barbara.
+
+The question was eminently practical. It came within the scope of the
+senator's understanding. After all, he was not to be cast into outer
+darkness. His smile was complacent. He answered airily:
+
+"Anything you like," he said; "a million dollars?"
+
+The fingers closed upon his shoulders. The eyes, still frightened,
+still searched his in appeal.
+
+"Then, for my wedding-present," said the girl, "I want you to take that
+million dollars and send an expedition to the Amazon. And I will
+choose the men. Men unafraid; men not afraid of fever or sudden death;
+not afraid to tell the truth--even to you. And all the world will
+know. And they--I mean you--will set those people free!"
+
+Senator Barnes received the directors with an embarrassment which he
+concealed under a manner of just indignation.
+
+"My mind is made up," he told them. "Existing conditions cannot
+continue. And to that end, at my own expense, I am sending an
+expedition across South America. It will investigate, punish, and
+establish reforms. I suggest, on account of this damned heat, we do
+now adjourn."
+
+That night, over on Long Island, Carroll told his wife all, or nearly
+all. He did not tell her about the automatic pistol. And together on
+tiptoe they crept to the nursery and looked down at their sleeping
+children. When she rose from her knees the mother said: "But how can I
+thank him?"
+
+By "him" she meant the Young Man of Wall Street.
+
+"You never can thank him," said Carroll; "that's the worst of it."
+
+But after a long silence the mother said: "I will send him a photograph
+of the children. Do you think he will understand?"
+
+Down at Seabright, Hastings and his wife walked in the sunken garden.
+The moon was so bright that the roses still held their color.
+
+"I would like to thank him," said the young wife. She meant the Young
+Man of Wall Street. "But for him we would have lost this."
+
+Her eyes caressed the garden, the fruit-trees, the house with wide,
+hospitable verandas. "To-morrow I will send him some of these roses,"
+said the young wife. "Will he understand that they mean our home?"
+
+At a scandalously late hour, in a scandalous spirit of independence,
+Champ Thorne and Barbara were driving around Central Park in a taxicab.
+
+"How strangely the Lord moves, his wonders to perform," misquoted
+Barbara. "Had not the Young Man of Wall Street saved Mr. Hastings, Mr.
+Hastings could not have raised your salary; you would not have asked me
+to marry you, and had you not asked me to marry you, father would not
+have given me a wedding-present, and--"
+
+"And," said Champ, taking up the tale, "thousands of slaves would still
+be buried in the jungles, hidden away from their wives and children and
+the light of the sun and their fellow men. They still would be dying
+of fever, starvation, tortures."
+
+He took her hand in both of his and held her finger-tips against his
+lips.
+
+"And they will never know," he whispered, "when their freedom comes,
+that they owe it all to you."
+
+
+On Hunter's Island, Jimmie Reeder and his bunkie, Sam Sturges, each on
+his canvas cot, tossed and twisted. The heat, the moonlight, and the
+mosquitoes would not let them even think of sleep.
+
+"That was bully," said Jimmie, "what you did to-day about saving that
+dog. If it hadn't been for you he'd ha' drownded."
+
+"He would not!" said Sammy with punctilious regard for the truth; "it
+wasn't deep enough."
+
+"Well, the scout-master ought to know," argued Jimmie; "he said it was
+the best 'one good turn' of the day!"
+
+Modestly Sam shifted the lime-light so that it fell upon his bunkie.
+
+"I'll bet," he declared loyally, "your 'one good turn' was a better
+one!"
+
+Jimmie yawned, and then laughed scornfully.
+
+"Me!" he scoffed. "I didn't do nothing. I sent my sister to the
+movies."
+
+
+
+
+
+"SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE"
+
+
+Marie Gessler, known as Marie Chaumontel, Jeanne d'Avrechy, the
+Countess d'Aurillac, was German. Her father, who served through the
+Franco-Prussian War, was a German spy. It was from her mother she
+learned to speak French sufficiently well to satisfy even an
+Academician and, among Parisians, to pass as one. Both her parents
+were dead. Before they departed, knowing they could leave their
+daughter nothing save their debts, they had had her trained as a nurse.
+But when they were gone, Marie in the Berlin hospitals played politics,
+intrigued, indiscriminately misused the appealing, violet eyes. There
+was a scandal; several scandals. At the age of twenty-five she was
+dismissed from the Municipal Hospital, and as now-save for the violet
+eyes--she was without resources, as a compagnon de voyage with a German
+doctor she travelled to Monte Carlo. There she abandoned the doctor
+for Henri Ravignac, a captain in the French Aviation Corps, who, when
+his leave ended, escorted her to Paris.
+
+The duties of Captain Ravignac kept him in barracks near the aviation
+field, but Marie he established in his apartments on the Boulevard
+Haussmann. One day he brought from the barracks a roll of blue-prints,
+and as he was locking them in a drawer, said: "The Germans would pay
+through the nose for those!" The remark was indiscreet, but then Marie
+had told him she was French, and any one would have believed her.
+
+The next morning the same spirit of adventure that had exiled her from
+the Berlin hospitals carried her with the blue-prints to the German
+embassy. There, greatly shocked, they first wrote down her name and
+address, and then, indignant at her proposition, ordered her out. But
+the day following a strange young German who was not at all indignant,
+but, on the contrary, quite charming, called upon Marie. For the
+blue-prints he offered her a very large sum, and that same hour with
+them and Marie departed for Berlin. Marie did not need the money. Nor
+did the argument that she was serving her country greatly impress her.
+It was rather that she loved intrigue. And so she became a spy.
+
+Henri Ravignac, the man she had robbed of the blue-prints, was tried by
+court-martial. The charge was treason, but Charles Ravignac, his
+younger brother, promised to prove that the guilty one was the girl,
+and to that end obtained leave of absence and spent much time and
+money. At the trial he was able to show the record of Marie in Berlin
+and Monte Carlo; that she was the daughter of a German secret agent;
+that on the afternoon the prints disappeared Marie, with an agent of
+the German embassy, had left Paris for Berlin. In consequence of this
+the charge of selling military secrets was altered to one of "gross
+neglect," and Henri Ravignac was sentenced to two years in the military
+prison at Tours. But he was of an ancient and noble family, and when
+they came to take him from his cell in the Cherche-Midi, he was dead.
+Charles, his brother, disappeared. It was said he also had killed
+himself; that he had been appointed a military attache in South
+America; that to revenge his brother he had entered the secret service;
+but whatever became of him no one knew. All that was certain was that,
+thanks to the act of Marie Gessler, on the rolls of the French army the
+ancient and noble name of Ravignac no longer appeared.
+
+In her chosen profession Marie Gessler found nothing discreditable. Of
+herself her opinion was not high, and her opinion of men was lower.
+For her smiles she had watched several sacrifice honor, duty, loyalty;
+and she held them and their kind in contempt. To lie, to cajole, to
+rob men of secrets they thought important, and of secrets the
+importance of which they did not even guess, was to her merely an
+intricate and exciting game.
+
+She played it very well. So well that in the service her advance was
+rapid. On important missions she was sent to Russia, through the
+Balkans; even to the United States. There, with credentials as an army
+nurse, she inspected our military hospitals and unobtrusively asked
+many innocent questions.
+
+When she begged to be allowed to work in her beloved Paris, "they" told
+her when war came "they" intended to plant her inside that city, and
+that, until then, the less Paris knew of her the better.
+
+But just before the great war broke, to report on which way Italy might
+jump, she was sent to Rome, and it was not until September she was
+recalled. The telegram informed her that her Aunt Elizabeth was ill,
+and that at once she must return to Berlin. This, she learned from the
+code book wrapped under the cover of her thermos bottle, meant that she
+was to report to the general commanding the German forces at Soissons.
+
+From Italy she passed through Switzerland, and, after leaving Basle, on
+military trains was rushed north to Luxemburg, and then west to Laon.
+She was accompanied by her companion, Bertha, an elderly and
+respectable, even distinguished-looking female. In the secret service
+her number was 528. Their passes from the war office described them as
+nurses of the German Red Cross. Only the Intelligence Department knew
+their real mission. With her, also, as her chauffeur, was a young
+Italian soldier of fortune, Paul Anfossi. He had served in the Belgian
+Congo, in the French Foreign Legion in Algiers, and spoke all the
+European languages. In Rome, where as a wireless operator he was
+serving a commercial company, in selling Marie copies of messages he
+had memorized, Marie had found him useful, and when war came she
+obtained for him, from the Wilhelmstrasse, the number 292. From Laon,
+in one of the automobiles of the General Staff, the three spies were
+driven first to Soissons, and then along the road to Meaux and Paris,
+to the village of Neufchelles. They arrived at midnight, and in a
+chateau of one of the Champagne princes, found the colonel commanding
+the Intelligence Bureau. He accepted their credentials, destroyed
+them, and replaced them with a laissez-passer signed by the mayor of
+Laon. That dignitary, the colonel explained, to citizens of Laon
+fleeing to Paris and the coast had issued many passes. But as now
+between Laon and Paris there were three German armies, the refugees had
+been turned back and their passes confiscated.
+
+"From among them," said the officer, "we have selected one for you. It
+is issued to the wife of Count d'Aurillac, a captain of reserves, and
+her aunt, Madame Benet. It asks for those ladies and their chauffeur,
+Briand, a safe-conduct through the French military lines. If it gets
+you into Paris you will destroy it and assume another name. The Count
+d'Aurillac is now with his regiment in that city. If he learned of the
+presence there of his wife, he would seek her, and that would not be
+good for you. So, if you reach Paris, you will become a Belgian
+refugee. You are high-born and rich. Your chateau has been destroyed.
+But you have money. You will give liberally to the Red Cross. You
+will volunteer to nurse in the hospitals. With your sad story of ill
+treatment by us, with your high birth, and your knowledge of nursing,
+which you acquired, of course, only as an amateur, you should not find
+it difficult to join the Ladies of France, or the American Ambulance.
+What you learn from the wounded English and French officers and the
+French doctors you will send us through the usual channels."
+
+"When do I start?" asked the woman.
+
+"For a few days," explained the officer, "you remain in this chateau.
+You will keep us informed of what is going forward after we withdraw."
+
+"Withdraw?" It was more of an exclamation than a question. Marie was
+too well trained to ask questions.
+
+"We are taking up a new position," said the officer, "on the Aisne."
+
+The woman, incredulous, stared.
+
+"And we do not enter Paris?"
+
+"You do," returned the officer. "That is all that concerns you. We
+will join you later--in the spring. Meanwhile, for the winter we
+intrench ourselves along the Aisne. In a chimney of this chateau we
+have set up a wireless outfit. We are leaving it intact. The chauffeur
+Briand--who, you must explain to the French, you brought with you from
+Laon, and who has been long in your service--will transmit whatever you
+discover. We wish especially to know of any movement toward our left.
+If they attack in front from Soissons, we are prepared; but of any
+attempt to cross the Oise and take us in flank you must warn us."
+
+The officer rose and hung upon himself his field-glasses, map-cases,
+and side-arms.
+
+"We leave you now," he said. "When the French arrive you will tell
+them your reason for halting at this chateau was that the owner,
+Monsieur Iverney, and his family are friends of your husband. You
+found us here, and we detained you. And so long as you can use the
+wireless, make excuses to remain. If they offer to send you on to
+Paris, tell them your aunt is too ill to travel."
+
+"But they will find the wireless," said the woman. "They are sure to
+use the towers for observation, and they will find it."
+
+"In that case," said the officer, "you will suggest to them that we
+fled in such haste we had no time to dismantle it. Of course, you had
+no knowledge that it existed, or, as a loyal French woman, you would
+have at once told them." To emphasize his next words the officer
+pointed at her: "Under no circumstances," he continued, "must you be
+suspected. If they should take Briand in the act, should they have
+even the least doubt concerning him, you must repudiate him entirely.
+If necessary, to keep your own skirts clear, it would be your duty
+yourself to denounce him as a spy."
+
+"Your first orders," said the woman, "were to tell them Briand had been
+long in my service; that I brought him from my home in Laon."
+
+"He might be in your service for years," returned the colonel, "and you
+not know he was a German agent."
+
+"If to save myself I inform upon him," said Marie, "of course you know
+you will lose him."
+
+The officer shrugged his shoulders. "A wireless operator," he
+retorted, "we can replace. But for you, and for the service you are to
+render in Paris, we have no substitute. You must not be found out.
+You are invaluable."
+
+The spy inclined her head. "I thank you," she said.
+
+The officer sputtered indignantly.
+
+"It is not a compliment," he exclaimed; "it is an order. You must not
+be found out!"
+
+Withdrawn some two hundred yards from the Paris road, the chateau stood
+upon a wooded hill. Except directly in front, trees of great height
+surrounded it. The tips of their branches brushed the windows;
+interlacing, they continued until they overhung the wall of the estate.
+Where it ran with the road the wall gave way to a lofty gate and iron
+fence, through which those passing could see a stretch of noble turf,
+as wide as a polo-field, borders of flowers disappearing under the
+shadows of the trees; and the chateau itself, with its terrace, its
+many windows, its high-pitched, sloping roof, broken by towers and
+turrets.
+
+Through the remainder of the night there came from the road to those in
+the chateau the roar and rumbling of the army in retreat. It moved
+without panic, disorder, or haste, but unceasingly. Not for an instant
+was there a breathing-spell. And when the sun rose, the three
+spies--the two women and the chauffeur--who in the great chateau were
+now alone, could see as well as hear the gray column of steel rolling
+past below them.
+
+The spies knew that the gray column had reached Claye, had stood within
+fifteen miles of Paris, and then upon Paris had turned its back. They
+knew also that the reverberations from the direction of Meaux, that
+each moment grew more loud and savage, were the French "seventy-fives"
+whipping the gray column forward. Of what they felt the Germans did
+not speak. In silence they looked at each other, and in the eyes of
+Marie was bitterness and resolve.
+
+Toward noon Marie met Anfossi in the great drawing-room that stretched
+the length of the terrace and from the windows of which, through the
+park gates, they could see the Paris road.
+
+"This, that is passing now," said Marie, "is the last of our
+rear-guard. Go to your tower," she ordered, "and send word that except
+for stragglers and the wounded our column has just passed through
+Neufchelles, and that any moment we expect the French." She raised her
+hand impressively. "From now," she warned, "we speak French, we think
+French, we are French!"
+
+Anfossi, or Briand, as now he called himself, addressed her in that
+language. His tone was bitter. "Pardon my lese-majesty," he said,
+"but this chief of your Intelligence Department is a dummer Mensch. He
+is throwing away a valuable life."
+
+Marie exclaimed in dismay. She placed her hand upon his arm, and the
+violet eyes filled with concern.
+
+"Not yours!" she protested.
+
+"Absolutely!" returned the Italian. "I can send nothing by this
+knapsack wireless that they will not learn from others; from airmen,
+Uhlans, the peasants in the fields. And certainly I will be caught.
+Dead I am dead, but alive and in Paris the opportunities are unending.
+From the French Legion Etranger I have my honorable discharge. I am an
+expert wireless operator and in their Signal Corps I can easily find a
+place. Imagine me, then, on the Eiffel Tower. From the air I snatch
+news from all of France, from the Channel, the North Sea. You and I
+could work together, as in Rome. But here, between the lines, with a
+pass from a village sous-prefet, it is ridiculous. I am not afraid to
+die. But to die because some one else is stupid, that is hard."
+
+Marie clasped his hand in both of hers.
+
+"You must not speak of death," she cried; "you know I must carry out my
+orders, that I must force you to take this risk. And you know that
+thought of harm to you tortures me!"
+
+Quickly the young man disengaged his hand. The woman exclaimed with
+anger.
+
+"Why do you doubt me?" she cried.
+
+Briand protested vehemently.
+
+"I do not doubt you."
+
+"My affection, then?" In a whisper that carried with it the feeling of
+a caress Marie added softly: "My love?"
+
+The young man protested miserably. "You make it very hard,
+mademoiselle," he cried. "You are my superior officer, I am your
+servant. Who am I that I should share with others--"
+
+The woman interrupted eagerly.
+
+"Ah, you are jealous!" she cried. "Is that why you are so cruel? But
+when I tell you I love you, and only you, can you not feel it is the
+truth?"
+
+The young man frowned unhappily.
+
+"My duty, mademoiselle!" he stammered.
+
+With an exclamation of anger Marie left him. As the door slammed
+behind her, the young man drew a deep breath. On his face was the
+expression of ineffable relief.
+
+In the hall Marie met her elderly companion, Bertha, now her aunt,
+Madame Benet.
+
+"I heard you quarrelling," Bertha protested. "It is most indiscreet.
+It is not in the part of the Countess d'Aurillac that she makes love to
+her chauffeur."
+
+Marie laughed noiselessly and drew her farther down the hall. "He is
+imbecile!" she exclaimed. "He will kill me with his solemn face and
+his conceit. I make love to him--yes--that he may work the more
+willingly. But he will have none of it. He is jealous of the others."
+
+Madame Benet frowned.
+
+"He resents the others," she corrected. "I do not blame him. He is a
+gentleman!"
+
+"And the others," demanded Marie; "were they not of the most noble
+families of Rome?"
+
+"I am old and I am ugly," said Bertha, "but to me Anfossi is always as
+considerate as he is to you who are so beautiful."
+
+"An Italian gentleman," returned Marie, "does not serve in Belgian
+Congo unless it is--the choice of that or the marble quarries."
+
+"I do not know what his past may be," sighed Madame Benet, "nor do I
+ask. He is only a number, as you and I are only numbers. And I beg you
+to let us work in harmony. At such a time your love-affairs threaten
+our safety. You must wait."
+
+Marie laughed insolently. "With the Du Barry," she protested, "I can
+boast that I wait for no man."
+
+"No," replied the older woman; "you pursue him!"
+
+Marie would have answered sharply, but on the instant her interest was
+diverted. For one week, by day and night, she had lived in a world
+peopled only by German soldiers. Beside her in the railroad carriage,
+on the station platforms, at the windows of the trains that passed the
+one in which she rode, at the grade crossings, on the bridges, in the
+roads that paralleled the tracks, choking the streets of the villages
+and spread over the fields of grain, she had seen only the gray-green
+uniforms. Even her professional eye no longer distinguished regiment
+from regiment, dragoon from grenadier, Uhlan from Hussar or Landsturm.
+Stripes, insignia, numerals, badges of rank, had lost their meaning.
+Those who wore them no longer were individuals. They were not even
+human. During the three last days the automobile, like a motor-boat
+fighting the tide, had crept through a gray-green river of men,
+stained, as though from the banks, by mud and yellow clay. And for
+hours, while the car was blocked, and in fury the engine raced and
+purred, the gray-green river had rolled past her, slowly but as
+inevitably as lava down the slope of a volcano, bearing on its surface
+faces with staring eyes, thousands and thousands of eyes, some fierce
+and bloodshot, others filled with weariness, homesickness, pain. At
+night she still saw them: the white faces under the sweat and dust, the
+eyes dumb, inarticulate, asking the answer. She had been suffocated by
+German soldiers, by the mass of them, engulfed and smothered; she had
+stifled in a land inhabited only by gray-green ghosts.
+
+And suddenly, as though a miracle had been wrought, she saw upon the
+lawn, riding toward her, a man in scarlet, blue, and silver. One man
+riding alone.
+
+Approaching with confidence, but alert; his reins fallen, his hands
+nursing his carbine, his eyes searched the shadows of the trees, the
+empty windows, even the sun-swept sky. His was the new face at the
+door, the new step on the floor. And the spy knew had she beheld an
+army corps it would have been no more significant, no more menacing,
+than the solitary chasseur a cheval scouting in advance of the enemy.
+
+"We are saved!" exclaimed Marie, with irony. "Go quickly," she
+commanded, "to the bedroom on the second floor that opens upon the
+staircase, so that you can see all who pass. You are too ill to
+travel. They must find you in bed."
+
+"And you?" said Bertha.
+
+"I," cried Marie rapturously, "hasten to welcome our preserver!"
+
+The preserver was a peasant lad. Under the white dust his cheeks were
+burned a brown-red, his eyes, honest and blue, through much staring at
+the skies and at horizon lines, were puckered and encircled with tiny
+wrinkles. Responsibility had made him older than his years, and in
+speech brief. With the beautiful lady who with tears of joy ran to
+greet him, and who in an ecstasy of happiness pressed her cheek against
+the nose of his horse, he was unimpressed. He returned to her her
+papers and gravely echoed her answers to his questions. "This
+chateau," he repeated, "was occupied by their General Staff; they have
+left no wounded here; you saw the last of them pass a half-hour since."
+He gathered up his reins.
+
+Marie shrieked in alarm. "You will not leave us?" she cried.
+
+For the first time the young man permitted himself to smile. "Others
+arrive soon," he said.
+
+He touched his shako, wheeled his horse in the direction from which he
+had come, and a minute later Marie heard the hoofs echoing through the
+empty village.
+
+When they came, the others were more sympathetic. Even in times of war
+a beautiful woman is still a beautiful woman. And the staff officers
+who moved into the quarters so lately occupied by the enemy found in
+the presence of the Countess d'Aurillac nothing to distress them. In
+the absence of her dear friend, Madame Iverney, the chatelaine of the
+chateau, she acted as their hostess. Her chauffeur showed the company
+cooks the way to the kitchen, the larder, and the charcoal-box. She,
+herself, in the hands of General Andre placed the keys of the famous
+wine-cellar, and to the surgeon, that the wounded might be freshly
+bandaged, intrusted those of the linen-closet. After the indignities
+she had suffered while "detained" by les Boches, her delight and relief
+at again finding herself under the protection of her own people would
+have touched a heart of stone. And the hearts of the staff were not of
+stone. It was with regret they gave the countess permission to
+continue on her way. At this she exclaimed with gratitude. She
+assured them, were her aunt able to travel, she would immediately
+depart.
+
+"In Paris she will be more comfortable than here," said the kind
+surgeon. He was a reservist, and in times of peace a fashionable
+physician and as much at his ease in a boudoir as in a field hospital.
+"Perhaps if I saw Madam Benet?"
+
+At the suggestion the countess was overjoyed. But they found Madame
+Benet in a state of complete collapse. The conduct of the Germans had
+brought about a nervous breakdown.
+
+"Though the bridges are destroyed at Meaux," urged the surgeon, "even
+with a detour, you can be in Paris in four hours. I think it is worth
+the effort."
+
+But the mere thought of the journey threw Madame Benet into hysterics.
+She asked only to rest, she begged for an opiate to make her sleep.
+She begged also that they would leave the door open, so that when she
+dreamed she was still in the hands of the Germans, and woke in terror,
+the sound of the dear French voices and the sight of the beloved French
+uniforms might reassure her. She played her part well. Concerning her
+Marie felt not the least anxiety. But toward Briand, the chauffeur,
+the new arrivals were less easily satisfied.
+
+The general sent his adjutant for the countess. When the adjutant had
+closed the door General Andre began abruptly:
+
+"The chauffeur Briand," he asked, "you know him; you can vouch for him?"
+
+"But, certainly!" protested Marie. "He is an Italian."
+
+As though with sudden enlightenment, Marie laughed. It was as if now
+in the suspicion of the officer she saw a certain reasonableness.
+"Briand was so long in the Foreign Legion in Algiers," she explained,
+"where my husband found him, that we have come to think of him as
+French. As much French as ourselves, I assure you."
+
+The general and his adjutant were regarding each other questioningly.
+
+"Perhaps I should tell the countess," began the general, "that we have
+learned--"
+
+The signal from the adjutant was so slight, so swift, that Marie barely
+intercepted it.
+
+The lips of the general shut together like the leaves of a book. To
+show the interview was at an end, he reached for a pen.
+
+"I thank you," he said.
+
+"Of course," prompted the adjutant, "Madame d'Aurillac understands the
+man must not know we inquired concerning him."
+
+General Andre frowned at Marie.
+
+"Certainly not!" he commanded. "The honest fellow must not know that
+even for a moment he was doubted."
+
+Marie raised the violet eyes reprovingly.
+
+"I trust," she said with reproach, "I too well understand the feelings
+of a French soldier to let him know his loyalty is questioned."
+
+With a murmur of appreciation the officers bowed and with a gesture of
+gracious pardon Marie left them.
+
+Outside in the hall, with none but orderlies to observe, like a cloak
+the graciousness fell from her. She was drawn two ways. In her work
+Anfossi was valuable. But Anfossi suspected was less than of no value;
+he became a menace, a death-warrant.
+
+General Andre had said, "We have learned--" and the adjutant had halted
+him. What had he learned? To know that, Marie would have given much.
+Still, one important fact comforted her. Anfossi alone was suspected.
+Had there been concerning herself the slightest doubt, they certainly
+would not have allowed her to guess her companion was under
+surveillance; they would not have asked one who was herself suspected
+to vouch for the innocence of a fellow conspirator. Marie found the
+course to follow difficult. With Anfossi under suspicion his usefulness
+was for the moment at an end; and to accept the chance offered her to
+continue on to Paris seemed most wise. On the other hand, if,
+concerning Anfossi, she had succeeded in allaying their doubts, the
+results most to be desired could be attained only by remaining where
+they were.
+
+Their position inside the lines was of the greatest strategic value.
+The rooms of the servants were under the roof, and that Briand should
+sleep in one of them was natural. That to reach or leave his room he
+should constantly be ascending or descending the stairs also was
+natural. The field-wireless outfit, or, as he had disdainfully
+described it, the "knapsack" wireless, was situated not in the bedroom
+he had selected for himself, but in one adjoining. At other times this
+was occupied by the maid of Madame Iverney. To summon her maid Madame
+Iverney, from her apartment on the second floor, had but to press a
+button. And it was in the apartment of Madame Iverney, and on the bed
+of that lady, that Madame Benet now reclined. When through the open
+door she saw an officer or soldier mount the stairs, she pressed the
+button that rang a bell in the room of the maid. In this way, long
+before whoever was ascending the stairs could reach the top floor,
+warning of his approach came to Anfossi. It gave him time to replace
+the dustboard over the fireplace in which the wireless was concealed
+and to escape into his own bedroom. The arrangement was ideal. And
+already information picked up in the halls below by Marie had been
+conveyed to Anfossi to relay in a French cipher to the German General
+Staff at Rheims.
+
+Marie made an alert and charming hostess. To all who saw her it was
+evident that her mind was intent only upon the comfort of her guests.
+Throughout the day many came and went, but each she made welcome; to
+each as he departed she called "bonne chance."
+
+Efficient, tireless, tactful, she was everywhere: in the dining-room,
+in the kitchen, in the bedrooms, for the wounded finding mattresses to
+spread in the gorgeous salons of the Champagne prince; for the
+soldier-chauffeurs carrying wine into the courtyard, where the
+automobiles panted and growled, and the arriving and departing shrieked
+for right of way. At all times an alluring person, now the one woman in
+a tumult of men, her smart frock covered by an apron, her head and arms
+bare, undismayed by the sight of the wounded or by the distant rumble
+of the guns, the Countess d'Aurillac was an inspiring and beautiful
+picture. The eyes of the officers, young and old, informed her of that
+fact, one of which already she was well aware. By the morning of the
+next day she was accepted as the owner of the chateau.
+
+And though continually she reminded the staff she was present only as
+the friend of her schoolmate, Madame Iverney, they deferred to her as
+to a hostess. Many of them she already saluted by name, and to those
+who with messages were constantly motoring to and from the front at
+Soissons she was particularly kind. Overnight the legend of her charm,
+of her devotion to the soldiers of all ranks, had spread from Soissons
+to Meaux, and from Meaux to Paris. It was noon of that day when from
+the window of the second story Marie saw an armored automobile sweep
+into the courtyard. It was driven by an officer, young and appallingly
+good-looking, and, as was obvious by the way he spun his car, one who
+held in contempt both the law of gravity and death. That he was some
+one of importance seemed evident. Before he could alight the adjutant
+had raced to meet him. With her eye for detail Marie observed that the
+young officer, instead of imparting information, received it. He must,
+she guessed, have just arrived from Paris, and his brother officer
+either was telling him the news or giving him his orders. Whichever it
+might be, in what was told him the new arrival was greatly interested.
+One instant in indignation his gauntleted fist beat upon the
+steering-wheel, the next he smiled with pleasure. To interpret this
+pantomime was difficult; and, the better to inform herself, Marie
+descended the stairs.
+
+As she reached the lower hall the two officers entered. To the spy the
+man last to arrive was always the one of greatest importance; and Marie
+assured herself that through her friend, the adjutant, to meet with
+this one would prove easy.
+
+But the chauffeur-commander of the armored car made it most difficult.
+At sight of Marie, much to her alarm, as though greeting a dear friend,
+he snatched his kepi from his head and sprang toward her.
+
+"The major," he cried, "told me you were here, that you are Madame
+d'Aurillac." His eyes spoke his admiration. In delight he beamed upon
+her. "I might have known it!" he murmured. With the confidence of one
+who is sure he brings good news, he laughed happily. "And I," he
+cried, "am 'Pierrot'!"
+
+Who the devil "Pierrot" might be the spy could not guess. She knew
+only that she wished by a German shell "Pierrot" and his car had been
+blown to tiny fragments. Was it a trap, she asked herself, or was the
+handsome youth really some one the Countess d'Aurillac should know.
+But, as from his introducing himself it was evident he could not know
+that lady very well, Marie took courage and smiled.
+
+"Which 'Pierrot'?" she parried.
+
+"Pierre Thierry!" cried the youth.
+
+To the relief of Marie he turned upon the adjutant and to him explained
+who Pierre Thierry might be.
+
+"Paul d'Aurillac," he said, "is my dearest friend. When he married
+this charming lady I was stationed in Algiers, and but for the war I
+might never have met her."
+
+To Marie, with his hand on his heart in a most charming manner, he
+bowed. His admiration he made no effort to conceal.
+
+"And so," he said, "I know why there is war!"
+
+The adjutant smiled indulgently, and departed on his duties, leaving
+them alone. The handsome eyes of Captain Thierry were raised to the
+violet eyes of Marie. They appraised her boldly and as boldly
+expressed their approval.
+
+In burlesque the young man exclaimed indignantly: "Paul deceived me!"
+he cried. "He told me he had married the most beautiful woman in Laon.
+He has married the most beautiful woman in France!"
+
+To Marie this was not impertinence, but gallantry.
+
+This was a language she understood, and this was the type of man,
+because he was the least difficult to manage, she held most in contempt.
+
+"But about you Paul did not deceive me," she retorted. In apparent
+confusion her eyes refused to meet his. "He told me 'Pierrot' was a
+most dangerous man!"
+
+She continued hurriedly. With wifely solicitude she asked concerning
+Paul. She explained that for a week she had been a prisoner in the
+chateau, and, since the mobilization, of her husband save that he was
+with his regiment in Paris she had heard nothing. Captain Thierry was
+able to give her later news. Only the day previous, on the boulevards,
+he had met Count d'Aurillac. He was at the Grand Hotel, and as Thierry
+was at once motoring back to Paris he would give Paul news of their
+meeting. He hoped he might tell him that soon his wife also would be
+in Paris. Marie explained that only the illness of her aunt prevented
+her from that same day joining her husband. Her manner became serious.
+
+"And what other news have you?" she asked. "Here on the firing-line we
+know less of what is going forward than you in Paris."
+
+So Pierre Thierry told her all he knew. They were preparing despatches
+he was at once to carry back to the General Staff, and, for the moment,
+his time was his own. How could he better employ it than in talking of
+the war with a patriotic and charming French woman?
+
+In consequence Marie acquired a mass of facts, gossip, and guesses.
+From these she mentally selected such information as, to her employers
+across the Aisne, would be of vital interest.
+
+And to rid herself of Thierry and on the fourth floor seek Anfossi was
+now her only wish. But, in attempting this, by the return of the
+adjutant she was delayed. To Thierry the adjutant gave a sealed
+envelope.
+
+"Thirty-one, Boulevard des Invalides," he said. With a smile he turned
+to Marie. "And you will accompany him!"
+
+"I!" exclaimed Marie. She was sick with sudden terror.
+
+But the tolerant smile of the adjutant reassured her.
+
+"The count, your husband," he explained, "has learned of your detention
+here by the enemy, and he has besieged the General Staff to have you
+convoyed safely to Paris." The adjutant glanced at a field telegram he
+held open in his hand. "He asks," he continued, "that you be permitted
+to return in the car of his friend, Captain Thierry, and that on
+arriving you join him at the Grand Hotel."
+
+Thierry exclaimed with delight.
+
+"But how charming!" he cried. "To-night you must both dine with me at
+La Rue's." He saluted his superior officer. "Some petrol, sir," he
+said. "And I am ready." To Marie he added: "The car will be at the
+steps in five minutes." He turned and left them.
+
+The thoughts of Marie, snatching at an excuse for delay, raced madly.
+The danger of meeting the Count d'Aurillac, her supposed husband, did
+not alarm her. The Grand Hotel has many exits, and, even before they
+reached it, for leaving the car she could invent an excuse that the
+gallant Thierry would not suspect. But what now concerned her was how,
+before she was whisked away to Paris, she could convey to Anfossi the
+information she had gathered from Thierry. First, of a woman overcome
+with delight at being reunited with her husband she gave an excellent
+imitation; then she exclaimed in distress: "But my aunt, Madame Benet!"
+she cried. "I cannot leave her!"
+
+"The Sisters of St. Francis," said the adjutant, "arrive within an hour
+to nurse the wounded. They will care also for your aunt."
+
+Marie concealed her chagrin. "Then I will at once prepare to go," she
+said.
+
+The adjutant handed her a slip of paper. "Your laissez-passer to
+Paris," he said. "You leave in five minutes, madame!"
+
+As temporary hostess of the chateau Marie was free to visit any part of
+it, and as she passed her door a signal from Madame Benet told her that
+Anfossi was on the fourth floor, that he was at work, and that the
+coast was clear. Softly, in the felt slippers she always wore, as she
+explained, in order not to disturb the wounded, she mounted the
+staircase. In her hand she carried the housekeeper's keys, and as an
+excuse it was her plan to return with an armful of linen for the
+arriving Sisters. But Marie never reached the top of the stairs. When
+her eyes rose to the level of the fourth floor she came to a sudden
+halt. At what she saw terror gripped her, bound her hand and foot, and
+turned her blood to ice.
+
+At her post for an instant Madame Benet had slept, and an officer of
+the staff, led by curiosity, chance, or suspicion, had, unobserved and
+unannounced, mounted to the fourth floor. When Marie saw him he was in
+front of the room that held the wireless. His back was toward her, but
+she saw that he was holding the door to the room ajar, that his eye was
+pressed to the opening, and that through it he had pushed the muzzle of
+his automatic. What would be the fate of Anfossi Marie knew. Nor did
+she for an instant consider it. Her thoughts were of her own safety;
+that she might live.
+
+Not that she might still serve the Wilhelmstrasse, the Kaiser, or the
+Fatherland; but that she might live. In a moment Anfossi would be
+denounced, the chateau would ring with the alarm, and, though she knew
+Anfossi would not betray her, by others she might be accused. To avert
+suspicion from herself she saw only one way open. She must be the
+first to denounce Anfossi.
+
+Like a deer, she leaped down the marble stairs and, in a panic she had
+no need to assume, burst into the presence of the staff.
+
+"Gentlemen!" she gasped, "my servant--the chauffeur--Briand is a spy!
+There is a German wireless in the chateau. He is using it! I have seen
+him." With exclamations, the officers rose to their feet. General
+Andre alone remained seated. General Andre was a veteran of many
+Colonial wars: Cochin-China, Algiers, Morocco. The great war, when it
+came, found him on duty in the Intelligence Department. His aquiline
+nose, bristling white eyebrows, and flashing, restless eyes gave him
+his nickname of l'Aigle.
+
+In amazement, the flashing eyes were now turned upon Marie. He glared
+at her as though he thought she suddenly had flown mad.
+
+"A German wireless!" he protested. "It is impossible!"
+
+"I was on the fourth floor," panted Marie, "collecting linen for the
+Sisters. In the room next to the linen-closet I heard a strange
+buzzing sound. I opened the door softly. I saw Briand with his back
+to me seated by an instrument. There were receivers clamped to his
+ears! My God! The disgrace! The disgrace to my husband and to me, who
+vouched for him to you!" Apparently in an agony of remorse, the
+fingers of the woman laced and interlaced. "I cannot forgive myself!"
+
+The officers moved toward the door, but General Andre halted them.
+Still in a tone of incredulity, he demanded: "When did you see this?"
+
+Marie knew the question was coming, knew she must explain how she saw
+Briand, and yet did not see the staff officer who, with his prisoner,
+might now at any instant appear. She must make it plain she had
+discovered the spy and left the upper part of the house before the
+officer had visited it. When that was she could not know, but the
+chance was that he had preceded her by only a few minutes.
+
+"When did you see this?" repeated the general.
+
+"But just now," cried Marie; "not ten minutes since."
+
+"Why did you not come to me at once?"
+
+"I was afraid," replied Marie. "If I moved I was afraid he might hear
+me, and he, knowing I would expose him, would kill me-and so escape
+you!" There was an eager whisper of approval. For silence, General
+Andre slapped his hand upon the table.
+
+"Then," continued Marie, "I understood with the receivers on his ears
+he could not have heard me open the door, nor could he hear me leave,
+and I ran to my aunt. The thought that we had harbored such an animal
+sickened me, and I was weak enough to feel faint. But only for an
+instant. Then I came here." She moved swiftly to the door. "Let me
+show you the room," she begged; "you can take him in the act." Her
+eyes, wild with the excitement of the chase, swept the circle. "Will
+you come?" she begged.
+
+Unconscious of the crisis he interrupted, the orderly on duty opened
+the door.
+
+"Captain Thierry's compliments," he recited mechanically, "and is he to
+delay longer for Madame d'Aurillac?"
+
+With a sharp gesture General Andre waved Marie toward the door. Without
+rising, he inclined his head. "Adieu, madame," he said. "We act at
+once upon your information. I thank you!"
+
+As she crossed from the hall to the terrace, the ears of the spy were
+assaulted by a sudden tumult of voices. They were raised in threats
+and curses. Looking back, she saw Anfossi descending the stairs. His
+hands were held above his head; behind him, with his automatic, the
+staff officer she had surprised on the fourth floor was driving him
+forward. Above the clinched fists of the soldiers that ran to meet
+him, the eyes of Anfossi were turned toward her. His face was
+expressionless. His eyes neither accused nor reproached. And with the
+joy of one who has looked upon and then escaped the guillotine, Marie
+ran down the steps to the waiting automobile. With a pretty cry of
+pleasure she leaped into the seat beside Thierry. Gayly she threw out
+her arms. "To Paris!" she commanded. The handsome eyes of Thierry,
+eloquent with admiration, looked back into hers. He stooped, threw in
+the clutch, and the great gray car, with the machine gun and its crew
+of privates guarding the rear, plunged through the park.
+
+"To Paris!" echoed Thierry.
+
+In the order in which Marie had last seen them, Anfossi and the staff
+officer entered the room of General Andre, and upon the soldiers in the
+hall the door was shut. The face of the staff officer was grave, but
+his voice could not conceal his elation.
+
+"My general," he reported, "I found this man in the act of giving
+information to the enemy. There is a wireless-"
+
+General Andre rose slowly. He looked neither at the officer nor at his
+prisoner. With frowning eyes he stared down at the maps upon his table.
+
+"I know," he interrupted. "Some one has already told me." He paused,
+and then, as though recalling his manners, but still without raising
+his eyes, he added: "You have done well, sir."
+
+In silence the officers of the staff stood motionless. With surprise
+they noted that, as yet, neither in anger nor curiosity had General
+Andre glanced at the prisoner. But of the presence of the general the
+spy was most acutely conscious. He stood erect, his arms still raised,
+but his body strained forward, and on the averted eyes of the general
+his own were fixed.
+
+In an agony of supplication they asked a question.
+
+At last, as though against his wish, toward the spy the general turned
+his head, and their eyes met. And still General Andre was silent.
+Then the arms of the spy, like those of a runner who has finished his
+race and breasts the tape exhausted, fell to his sides. In a voice low
+and vibrant he spoke his question.
+
+"It has been so long, sir," he pleaded. "May I not come home?"
+
+General Andre turned to the astonished group surrounding him. His
+voice was hushed like that of one who speaks across an open grave.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "my children," he added. "A German spy, a
+woman, involved in a scandal your brother in arms, Henri Ravignac. His
+honor, he thought, was concerned, and without honor he refused to live.
+To prove him guiltless his younger brother Charles asked leave to seek
+out the woman who had betrayed Henri, and by us was detailed on secret
+service. He gave up home, family, friends. He lived in exile, in
+poverty, at all times in danger of a swift and ignoble death. In the
+War Office we know him as one who has given to his country services she
+cannot hope to reward. For she cannot return to him the years he has
+lost. She cannot return to him his brother. But she can and will
+clear the name of Henri Ravignac, and upon his brother Charles bestow
+promotion and honors."
+
+The general turned and embraced the spy. "My children," he said,
+"welcome your brother. He has come home."
+
+Before the car had reached the fortifications, Marie Gessler had
+arranged her plan of escape. She had departed from the chateau without
+even a hand-bag, and she would say that before the shops closed she
+must make purchases.
+
+Le Printemps lay in their way, and she asked that, when they reached
+it, for a moment she might alight. Captain Thierry readily gave
+permission.
+
+From the department store it would be most easy to disappear, and in
+anticipation Marie smiled covertly. Nor was the picture of Captain
+Thierry impatiently waiting outside unamusing.
+
+But before Le Printemps was approached, the car turned sharply down a
+narrow street. On one side, along its entire length, ran a high gray
+wall, grim and forbidding. In it was a green gate studded with iron
+bolts. Before this the automobile drew suddenly to a halt. The crew of
+the armored car tumbled off the rear seat, and one of them beat upon
+the green gate. Marie felt a hand of ice clutch at her throat. But
+she controlled herself.
+
+"And what is this?" she cried gayly.
+
+At her side Captain Thierry was smiling down at her, but his smile was
+hateful.
+
+"It is the prison of St. Lazare," he said. "It is not becoming," he
+added sternly, "that the name of the Countess d'Aurillac should be made
+common as the Paris road!"
+
+Fighting for her life, Marie thrust herself against him; her arm that
+throughout the journey had rested on the back of the driving-seat
+caressed his shoulders; her lips and the violet eyes were close to his.
+
+"Why should you care?" she whispered fiercely. "You have me! Let the
+Count d'Aurillac look after the honor of his wife himself."
+
+The charming Thierry laughed at her mockingly.
+
+"He means to," he said. "I am the Count d'Aurillac!"
+
+
+
+
+
+THE DESERTER
+
+
+In Salonika, the American consul, the Standard Oil man, and the war
+correspondents formed the American colony. The correspondents were
+waiting to go to the front. Incidentally, as we waited, the front was
+coming rapidly toward us. There was "Uncle" Jim, the veteran of many
+wars, and of all the correspondents, in experience the oldest and in
+spirit the youngest, and there was the Kid, and the Artist. The Kid
+jeered at us, and proudly described himself as the only Boy Reporter
+who jumped from a City Hall assignment to cover a European War. "I
+don't know strategy," he would boast; "neither does the Man at Home.
+He wants 'human interest' stuff, and I give him what he wants. I write
+exclusively for the subway guard and the farmers in the wheat belt.
+When you fellows write about the 'Situation,' they don't understand it.
+Neither do you. Neither does Venizelos or the King. I don't
+understand it myself. So, I write my people heart-to-heart talks about
+refugees and wounded, and what kind of ploughs the Servian peasants
+use, and that St. Paul wrote his letters to the Thessalonians from the
+same hotel where I write mine; and I tell 'em to pronounce Salonika
+'eeka,' and not put the accent on the 'on.' This morning at the
+refugee camp I found all the little Servians of the Frothingham unit in
+American Boy Scout uniforms. That's my meat. That's 'home week'
+stuff. You fellows write for the editorial page; and nobody reads it.
+I write for the man that turns first to Mutt and Jeff, and then looks
+to see where they are running the new Charlie Chaplin release. When
+that man has to choose between 'our military correspondent' and the
+City Hall Reporter, he chooses me!"
+
+The third man was John, "Our Special Artist." John could write a news
+story, too, but it was the cartoons that had made him famous. They
+were not comic page, but front page cartoons, and before making up
+their minds what they thought, people waited to see what their Artist
+thought. So, it was fortunate his thoughts were as brave and clean as
+they were clever. He was the original Little Brother to the Poor. He
+was always giving away money. When we caught him, he would prevaricate.
+He would say the man was a college chum, that he had borrowed the money
+from him, and that this was the first chance he had had to pay it back.
+The Kid suggested it was strange that so many of his college chums
+should at the same moment turn up, dead broke, in Salonika, and that
+half of them should be women.
+
+John smiled disarmingly. "It was a large college," he explained, "and
+coeducational." There were other Americans; Red Cross doctors and
+nurses just escaped through the snow from the Bulgars, and hyphenated
+Americans who said they had taken out their first papers. They thought
+hyphenated citizens were so popular with us, that we would pay their
+passage to New York. In Salonika they were transients. They had no
+local standing. They had no local lying-down place, either, or place
+to eat, or to wash, although they did not look as though that worried
+them, or place to change their clothes. Or clothes to change. It was
+because we had clothes to change, and a hotel bedroom, instead of a
+bench in a cafe, that we were ranked as residents and from the Greek
+police held a "permission to sojourn." Our American colony was a very
+close corporation. We were only six Americans against 300,000 British,
+French, Greek, and Servian soldiers, and 120,000 civilian Turks,
+Spanish Jews, Armenians, Persians, Egyptians, Albanians, and Arabs, and
+some twenty more other races that are not listed. We had arrived in
+Salonika before the rush, and at the Hotel Hermes on the water-front
+had secured a vast room. The edge of the stone quay was not forty feet
+from us, the only landing steps directly opposite our balcony.
+Everybody who arrived on the Greek passenger boats from Naples or the
+Piraeus, or who had shore leave from a man-of-war, transport, or
+hospital ship, was raked by our cameras. There were four windows--one
+for each of us and his work table. It was not easy to work. What was
+the use? The pictures and stories outside the windows fascinated us,
+but when we sketched them or wrote about them, they only proved us
+inadequate. All day long the pinnaces, cutters, gigs, steam launches
+shoved and bumped against the stone steps, marines came ashore for the
+mail, stewards for fruit and fish, Red Cross nurses to shop, tiny
+midshipmen to visit the movies, and the sailors and officers of the
+Russian, French, British, Italian, and Greek war-ships to stretch their
+legs in the park of the Tour Blanche, or to cramp them under a cafe
+table. Sometimes the ambulances blocked the quay and the wounded and
+frost-bitten were lifted into the motor-boats, and sometimes a squad of
+marines lined the landing stage, and as a coffin under a French or
+English flag was borne up the stone steps stood at salute. So crowded
+was the harbor that the oars of the boatmen interlocked.
+
+Close to the stone quay, stretched along the three-mile circle, were
+the fishing smacks, beyond them, so near that the anchor chains fouled,
+were the passenger ships with gigantic Greek flags painted on their
+sides, and beyond them transports from Marseilles, Malta, and Suvla
+Bay, black colliers, white hospital ships, burning green electric
+lights, red-bellied tramps and freighters, and, hemming them in, the
+grim, mouse-colored destroyers, submarines, cruisers, dreadnaughts. At
+times, like a wall, the cold fog rose between us and the harbor, and
+again the curtain would suddenly be ripped asunder, and the sun would
+flash on the brass work of the fleet, on the white wings of the
+aeroplanes, on the snow-draped shoulders of Mount Olympus. We often
+speculated as to how in the early days the gods and goddesses, dressed
+as they were, or as they were not, survived the snows of Mount Olympus.
+Or was it only their resort for the summer?
+
+It got about that we had a vast room to ourselves, where one might
+obtain a drink, or a sofa for the night, or even money to cable for
+money. So, we had many strange visitors, some half starved, half
+frozen, with terrible tales of the Albanian trail, of the Austrian
+prisoners fallen by the wayside, of the mountain passes heaped with
+dead, of the doctors and nurses wading waist-high in snow-drifts and
+for food killing the ponies. Some of our visitors wanted to get their
+names in the American papers so that the folks at home would know they
+were still alive, others wanted us to keep their names out of the
+papers, hoping the police would think them dead; another, convinced it
+was of pressing news value, desired us to advertise the fact that he
+had invented a poisonous gas for use in the trenches. With difficulty
+we prevented him from casting it adrift in our room. Or, he had for
+sale a second-hand motor-cycle, or he would accept a position as
+barkeeper, or for five francs would sell a state secret that, once made
+public, in a month would end the war. It seemed cheap at the price.
+
+Each of us had his "scouts" to bring him the bazaar rumor, the Turkish
+bath rumor, the cafe rumor. Some of our scouts journeyed as far afield
+as Monastir and Doiran, returning to drip snow on the floor, and to
+tell us tales, one-half of which we refused to believe, and the other
+half the censor refused to pass. With each other's visitors it was
+etiquette not to interfere. It would have been like tapping a private
+wire. When we found John sketching a giant stranger in a cap and coat
+of wolf skin we did not seek to know if he were an Albanian brigand, or
+a Servian prince incognito, and when a dark Levantine sat close to the
+Kid, whispering, and the Kid banged on his typewriter, we did not
+listen.
+
+So, when I came in one afternoon and found a strange American youth
+writing at John's table, and no one introduced us, I took it for
+granted he had sold the Artist an "exclusive" story, and asked no
+questions. But I could not help hearing what they said. Even though I
+tried to drown their voices by beating on the Kid's typewriter. I was
+taking my third lesson, and I had printed, "I Amm 5w writjng This,
+5wjth my own lilly w?ite handS," when I heard the Kid saying:
+
+"You can beat the game this way. Let John buy you a ticket to the
+Piraeus. If you go from one Greek port to another you don't need a
+vise. But, if you book from here to Italy, you must get a permit from
+the Italian consul, and our consul, and the police. The plot is to get
+out of the war zone, isn't it? Well, then, my dope is to get out quick,
+and map the rest of your trip when you're safe in Athens."
+
+It was no business of mine, but I had to look up. The stranger was now
+pacing the floor. I noticed that while his face was almost black with
+tan, his upper lip was quite white. I noticed also that he had his
+hands in the pockets of one of John's blue serge suits, and that the
+pink silk shirt he wore was one that once had belonged to the Kid.
+Except for the pink shirt, in the appearance of the young man there was
+nothing unusual. He was of a familiar type. He looked like a young
+business man from our Middle West, matter-of-fact and unimaginative,
+but capable and self-reliant. If he had had a fountain pen in his
+upper waistcoat pocket, I would have guessed he was an insurance agent,
+or the publicity man for a new automobile. John picked up his hat, and
+said, "That's good advice. Give me your steamer ticket, Fred, and I'll
+have them change it." He went out; but he did not ask Fred to go with
+him.
+
+Uncle Jim rose, and murmured something about the Cafe Roma, and tea.
+But neither did he invite Fred to go with him. Instead, he told him to
+make himself at home, and if he wanted anything the waiter would bring
+it from the cafe downstairs. Then the Kid, as though he also was
+uncomfortable at being left alone with us, hurried to the door. "Going
+to get you a suit-case," he explained. "Back in five minutes."
+
+The stranger made no answer. Probably he did not hear him. Not a
+hundred feet from our windows three Greek steamers were huddled
+together, and the eyes of the American were fixed on them. The one for
+which John had gone to buy him a new ticket lay nearest. She was to
+sail in two hours. Impatiently, in short quick steps, the stranger
+paced the length of the room, but when he turned and so could see the
+harbor, he walked slowly, devouring it with his eyes. For some time,
+in silence, he repeated this manoeuvre; and then the complaints of the
+typewriter disturbed him. He halted and observed my struggles. Under
+his scornful eye, in my embarrassment I frequently hit the right
+letter. "You a newspaper man, too?" he asked. I boasted I was, but
+begged not to be judged by my typewriting.
+
+"I got some great stories to write when I get back to God's country,"
+he announced. "I was a reporter for two years in Kansas City before
+the war, and now I'm going back to lecture and write. I got enough
+material to keep me at work for five years. All kinds of
+stuff--specials, fiction, stories, personal experiences, maybe a novel."
+
+I regarded him with envy. For the correspondents in the greatest of
+all wars the pickings had been meagre. "You are to be congratulated,"
+I said. He brushed aside my congratulations. "For what?" he demanded.
+"I didn't go after the stories; they came to me. The things I saw I
+had to see. Couldn't get away from them. I've been with the British,
+serving in the R. A. M. C. Been hospital steward, stretcher bearer,
+ambulance driver. I've been sixteen months at the front, and all the
+time on the firing-line. I was in the retreat from Mons, with French
+on the Marne, at Ypres, all through the winter fighting along the
+Canal, on the Gallipoli Peninsula, and, just lately, in Servia. I've
+seen more of this war than any soldier. Because, sometimes, they give
+the soldier a rest; they never give the medical corps a rest. The only
+rest I got was when I was wounded."
+
+He seemed no worse for his wounds, so again I tendered congratulations.
+This time he accepted them. The recollection of the things he had
+seen, things incredible, terrible, unique in human experience, had
+stirred him. He talked on, not boastfully, but in a tone, rather, of
+awe and disbelief, as though assuring himself that it was really he to
+whom such things had happened.
+
+"I don't believe there's any kind of fighting I haven't seen," he
+declared; "hand-to-hand fighting with bayonets, grenades, gun butts.
+I've seen 'em on their knees in the mud choking each other, beating
+each other with their bare fists. I've seen every kind of airship,
+bomb, shell, poison gas, every kind of wound. Seen whole villages
+turned into a brickyard in twenty minutes; in Servia seen bodies of
+women frozen to death, bodies of babies starved to death, seen men in
+Belgium swinging from trees; along the Yzer for three months I saw the
+bodies of men I'd known sticking out of the mud, or hung up on the barb
+wire, with the crows picking them.
+
+"I've seen some of the nerviest stunts that ever were pulled off in
+history. I've seen real heroes. Time and time again I've seen a man
+throw away his life for his officer, or for a chap he didn't know, just
+as though it was a cigarette butt. I've seen the women nurses of our
+corps steer a car into a village and yank out a wounded man while
+shells were breaking under the wheels and the houses were pitching into
+the streets." He stopped and laughed consciously.
+
+"Understand," he warned me, "I'm not talking about myself, only of
+things I've seen. The things I'm going to put in my book. It ought to
+be a pretty good book-what?"
+
+My envy had been washed clean in admiration.
+
+"It will make a wonderful book," I agreed. "Are you going to syndicate
+it first?"
+
+Young Mr. Hamlin frowned importantly.
+
+"I was thinking," he said, "of asking John for letters to the magazine
+editors. So, they'll know I'm not faking, that I've really been
+through it all. Letters from John would help a lot." Then he asked
+anxiously: "They would, wouldn't they?"
+
+I reassured him. Remembering the Kid's gibes at John and his numerous
+dependents, I said: "You another college chum of John's?" The young man
+answered my question quite seriously. "No," he said; "John graduated
+before I entered; but we belong to the same fraternity. It was the
+luckiest chance in the world my finding him here. There was a
+month-old copy of the Balkan News blowing around camp, and his name was
+in the list of arrivals. The moment I found he was in Salonika, I
+asked for twelve hours leave, and came down in an ambulance. I made
+straight for John; gave him the grip, and put it up to him to help me."
+
+"I don't understand," I said. "I thought you were sailing on the
+Adriaticus?"
+
+The young man was again pacing the floor. He halted and faced the
+harbor.
+
+"You bet I'm sailing on the Adriaticus," he said. He looked out at
+that vessel, at the Blue Peter flying from her foremast, and grinned.
+"In just two hours!"
+
+It was stupid of me, but I still was unenlightened. "But your twelve
+hours' leave?" I asked.
+
+The young man laughed. "They can take my twelve hours' leave," he said
+deliberately, "and feed it to the chickens. I'm beating it."
+
+"What d'you mean, you're beating it?"
+
+"What do you suppose I mean?" he demanded. "What do you suppose I'm
+doing out of uniform, what do you suppose I'm lying low in the room
+for? So's I won't catch cold?"
+
+"If you're leaving the army without a discharge, and without
+permission," I said, "I suppose you know it's desertion."
+
+Mr. Hamlin laughed easily. "It's not my army," he said. "I'm an
+American."
+
+"It's your desertion," I suggested.
+
+The door opened and closed noiselessly, and Billy, entering, placed a
+new travelling bag on the floor. He must have heard my last words, for
+he looked inquiringly at each of us. But he did not speak and, walking
+to the window, stood with his hands in his pockets, staring out at the
+harbor. His presence seemed to encourage the young man. "Who knows
+I'm deserting?" he demanded. "No one's ever seen me in Salonika
+before, and in these 'cits' I can get on board all right. And then
+they can't touch me. What do the folks at home care how I left the
+British army? They'll be so darned glad to get me back alive that they
+won't ask if I walked out or was kicked out. I should worry!"
+
+"It's none of my business," I began, but I was interrupted. In his
+restless pacings the young man turned quickly.
+
+"As you say," he remarked icily, "it is none of your business. It's
+none of your business whether I get shot as a deserter, or go home,
+or--"
+
+"You can go to the devil for all I care," I assured him. "I wasn't
+considering you at all. I was only sorry that I'll never be able to
+read your book."
+
+For a moment Mr. Hamlin remained silent, then he burst forth with a
+jeer.
+
+"No British firing squad," he boasted, "will ever stand me up."
+
+"Maybe not," I agreed, "but you will never write that book."
+
+Again there was silence, and this time it was broken by the Kid. He
+turned from the window and looked toward Hamlin. "That's right!" he
+said.
+
+He sat down on the edge of the table, and at the deserter pointed his
+forefinger.
+
+"Son," he said, "this war is some war. It's the biggest war in
+history, and folks will be talking about nothing else for the next
+ninety years; folks that never were nearer it than Bay City, Mich. But
+you won't talk about it. And you've been all through it. You've been
+to hell and back again. Compared with what you know about hell, Dante
+is in the same class with Dr. Cook. But you won't be able to talk
+about this war, or lecture, or write a book about it."
+
+"I won't?" demanded Hamlin. "And why won't I?"
+
+"Because of what you're doing now," said Billy. "Because you're
+queering yourself. Now, you've got everything." The Kid was very much
+in earnest. His tone was intimate, kind, and friendly. "You've seen
+everything, done everything. We'd give our eye-teeth to see what
+you've seen, and to write the things you can write. You've got a
+record now that'll last you until you're dead, and your grandchildren
+are dead-and then some. When you talk the table will have to sit up
+and listen. You can say 'I was there.' 'I was in it.' 'I saw.' 'I
+know.' When this war is over you'll have everything out of it that's
+worth getting-all the experiences, all the inside knowledge, all the
+'nosebag' news; you'll have wounds, honors, medals, money, reputation.
+And you're throwing all that away!"
+
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted savagely.
+
+"To hell with their medals," he said. "They can take their medals and
+hang 'em on Christmas trees. I don't owe the British army anything.
+It owes me. I've done my bit. I've earned what I've got, and there's
+no one can take it away from me."
+
+"You can," said the Kid. Before Hamlin could reply the door opened and
+John came in, followed by Uncle Jim. The older man was looking very
+grave, and John very unhappy. Hamlin turned quickly to John.
+
+"I thought these men were friends of yours," he began, "and Americans.
+They're fine Americans. They're as full of human kindness and red
+blood as a kippered herring!"
+
+John looked inquiringly at the Kid.
+
+"He wants to hang himself," explained Billy, "and because we tried to
+cut him down, he's sore."
+
+"They talked to me," protested Hamlin, "as though I was a yellow dog.
+As though I was a quitter. I'm no quitter! But, if I'm ready to quit,
+who's got a better right? I'm not an Englishman, but there are several
+million Englishmen haven't done as much for England in this was as I
+have. What do you fellows know about it? You write about it, about the
+'brave lads in the trenches'; but what do you know about the trenches?
+What you've seen from automobiles. That's all. That's where you get
+off! I've lived in the trenches for fifteen months, froze in 'em,
+starved in 'em, risked my life in 'em, and I've saved other lives, too,
+by hauling men out of the trenches. And that's no airy persiflage,
+either!"
+
+He ran to the wardrobe where John's clothes hung, and from the bottom
+of it dragged a khaki uniform. It was still so caked with mud and snow
+that when he flung it on the floor it splashed like a wet bathing suit.
+"How would you like to wear one of those?" he Demanded. "Stinking with
+lice and sweat and blood; the blood of other men, the men you've helped
+off the field, and your own blood."
+
+As though committing hara-kiri, he slashed his hand across his stomach,
+and then drew it up from his waist to his chin. "I'm scraped with
+shrapnel from there to there," said Mr. Hamlin. "And another time I got
+a ball in the shoulder. That would have been a 'blighty' for a
+fighting man--they're always giving them leave--but all I got was six
+weeks at Havre in hospital. Then it was the Dardanelles, and sunstroke
+and sand; sleeping in sand, eating sand, sand in your boots, sand in
+your teeth; hiding in holes in the sand like a dirty prairie dog. And
+then, 'Off to Servia!' And the next act opens in the snow and the mud!
+Cold? God, how cold it was! And most of us in sun helmets."
+
+As though the cold still gnawed at his bones, he shivered.
+
+"It isn't the danger," he protested. "It isn't that I'm getting away
+from. To hell with the danger! It's just the plain discomfort of it!
+It's the never being your own master, never being clean, never being
+warm." Again he shivered and rubbed one hand against the other.
+"There were no bridges over the streams," he went on, "and we had to
+break the ice and wade in, and then sleep in the open with the khaki
+frozen to us. There was no firewood; not enough to warm a pot of tea.
+There were no wounded; all our casualties were frost bite and
+Pneumonia. When we take them out of the blankets their toes fall off.
+We've been in camp for a month now near Doiran, and it's worse there
+than on the march. It's a frozen swamp. You can't sleep for the cold;
+can't eat; the only ration we get is bully beef, and our insides are
+frozen so damn tight we can't digest it. The cold gets into your
+blood, gets into your brains. It won't let you think; or else, you
+think crazy things. It makes you afraid." He shook himself like a man
+coming out of a bad dream.
+
+"So, I'm through," he said. In turn he scowled at each of us, as
+though defying us to contradict him. "That's why I'm quitting," he
+added. "Because I've done my bit. Because I'm damn well fed up on
+it." He kicked viciously at the water-logged uniform on the floor.
+"Any one who wants my job can have it!" He walked to the window,
+turned his back on us, and fixed his eyes hungrily on the Adriaticus.
+There was a long pause. For guidance we looked at John, but he was
+staring down at the desk blotter, scratching on it marks that he did
+not see.
+
+Finally, where angels feared to tread, the Kid rushed in. "That's
+certainly a hard luck story," he said; "but," he added cheerfully,
+"it's nothing to the hard luck you'll strike when you can't tell why
+you left the army." Hamlin turned with an exclamation, but Billy held
+up his hand. "Now wait," he begged, "we haven't time to get mussy. At
+six o'clock your leave is up, and the troop train starts back to camp,
+and--"
+
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted sharply. "And the Adriaticus starts at five."
+
+Billy did not heed him. "You've got two hours to change your mind," he
+said. "That's better than being sorry you didn't the rest of your
+life."
+
+Mr. Hamlin threw back his head and laughed. It was a most unpleasant
+laugh. "You're a fine body of men," he jeered. "America must be proud
+of you!"
+
+"If we weren't Americans," explained Billy patiently, "we wouldn't give
+a damn whether you deserted or not. You're drowning and you don't know
+it, and we're throwing you a rope. Try to see it that way. We'll cut
+out the fact that you took an oath, and that you're breaking it.
+That's up to you. We'll get down to results. When you reach home, if
+you can't tell why you left the army, the folks will darned soon guess.
+And that will queer everything you've done. When you come to sell your
+stuff, it will queer you with the editors, queer you with the
+publishers. If they know you broke your word to the British army, how
+can they know you're keeping faith with them? How can they believe
+anything you tell them? Every 'story' you write, every statement of
+yours will make a noise like a fake. You won't come into court with
+clean hands. You'll be licked before you start.
+
+"Of course, you're for the Allies. Well, all the Germans at home will
+fear that; and when you want to lecture on your 'Fifteen Months at the
+British Front,' they'll look up your record; and what will they do to
+you? This is what they'll do to you. When you've shown 'em your moving
+pictures and say, 'Does any gentleman in the audience want to ask a
+question?' a German agent will get up and say, 'Yes, I want to ask a
+question. Is it true that you deserted from the British army, and that
+if you return to it, they will shoot you?'"
+
+I was scared. I expected the lean and muscular Mr. Hamlin to fall on
+Billy, and fling him where he had flung the soggy uniform. But instead
+he remained motionless, his arms pressed across his chest. His eyes,
+filled with anger and distress, returned to the Adriaticus.
+
+"I'm sorry," muttered the Kid.
+
+John rose and motioned to the door, and guiltily and only too gladly we
+escaped. John followed us into the hall. "Let me talk to him," he
+whispered. "The boat sails in an hour. Please don't come back until
+she's gone."
+
+We went to the moving picture palace next door, but I doubt if the
+thoughts of any of us were on the pictures. For after an hour, when
+from across the quay there came the long-drawn warning of a steamer's
+whistle, we nudged each other and rose and went out.
+
+Not a hundred yards from us the propeller blades of the Adriaticus were
+slowly churning, and the rowboats were falling away from her sides.
+
+"Good-bye, Mr. Hamlin," called Billy. "You had everything and you
+chucked it away. I can spell your finish. It's 'check' for yours."
+
+But when we entered our room, in the centre of it, under the bunch of
+electric lights, stood the deserter. He wore the water-logged uniform.
+The sun helmet was on his head.
+
+"Good man!" shouted Billy.
+
+He advanced, eagerly holding out his hand.
+
+Mr. Hamlin brushed past him. At the door he turned and glared at us,
+even at John. He was not a good loser. "I hope you're satisfied," he
+snarled. He pointed at the four beds in a row. I felt guiltily
+conscious of them. At the moment they appeared so unnecessarily clean
+and warm and soft. The silk coverlets at the foot of each struck me as
+being disgracefully effeminate. They made me ashamed.
+
+"I hope," said Mr. Hamlin, speaking slowly and picking his words, "when
+you turn into those beds to-night you'll think of me in the mud. I
+hope when you're having your five-course dinner and your champagne
+you'll remember my bully beef. I hope when a shell or Mr. Pneumonia
+gets me, you'll write a nice little sob story about the 'brave lads in
+the trenches.'"
+
+He looked at us, standing like schoolboys, sheepish, embarrassed, and
+silent, and then threw open the door. "I hope," he added, "you all
+choke!"
+
+With an unconvincing imitation of the college chum manner, John cleared
+his throat and said: "Don't forget, Fred, if there's anything I can
+do--"
+
+Hamlin stood in the doorway smiling at us.
+
+"There's something you can all do," he said.
+
+"Yes?" asked John heartily.
+
+"You can all go to hell!" said Mr. Hamlin.
+
+We heard the door slam, and his hobnailed boots pounding down the
+stairs. No one spoke. Instead, in unhappy silence, we stood staring
+at the floor. Where the uniform had lain was a pool of mud and melted
+snow and the darker stains of stale blood.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Lost Road, by Richard Harding Davis
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+**The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Lost Road, etc, by Davis**
+#30 in our series by Richard Harding Davis
+
+
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+The Lost Road, etc.
+
+by Richard Harding Davis
+
+August, 2000 [Etext #2283]
+
+
+Contains:
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+THE LONG ARM
+THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+THE BOY SCOUT
+SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE
+THE DESERTER
+
+
+**The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Lost Road, etc, by Davis**
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+
+
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+
+
+THE NOVELS AND STORIES OF
+
+RICHARD HARDING DAVIS
+
+
+
+
+TO
+
+MY WIFE
+
+
+
+
+Contains:
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+THE LONG ARM
+THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+THE BOY SCOUT
+SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE
+THE DESERTER
+
+
+
+
+AN INTRODUCTION BY
+JOHN T. McCUTCHEON
+
+WITH DAVIS IN VERA CRUZ, BRUSSELS, AND SALONIKA
+
+In common with many others who have been with Richard Harding
+Davis as correspondents, I find it difficult to realize that he
+has covered his last story and that he will not be seen again
+with the men who follow the war game, rushing to distant places
+upon which the spotlight of news interest suddenly centres.
+
+It seems a sort of bitter irony that he who had covered so many
+big events of world importance in the past twenty years should
+be abruptly torn away in the midst of the greatest event of
+them all, while the story is still unfinished and its outcome
+undetermined. If there is a compensating thought, it lies in the
+reflection that he had a life of almost unparalleled fulness,
+crowded to the brim, up to the last moment, with those
+experiences and achievements which he particularly aspired to
+have. He left while the tide was at its flood, and while he still
+held supreme his place as the best reporter in his country. He
+escaped the bitterness of seeing the ebb set in, when the youth
+to which he clung had slipped away, and when he would have to sit
+impatient in the audience, while younger men were in the thick of
+great, world-stirring dramas on the stage.
+
+This would have been a real tragedy in "Dick" Davis's case, for,
+while his body would have aged, it is doubtful if his spirit ever
+would have lost its youthful freshness or boyish enthusiasm.
+
+It was my privilege to see a good deal of Davis in the last two
+years.
+
+He arrived in Vera Cruz among the first of the sixty or seventy
+correspondents who flocked to that news centre when the situation
+was so full of sensational possibilities. It was a time when the
+American newspaper-reading public was eager for thrills, and the
+ingenuity and resourcefulness of the correspondents in Vera Cruz
+were tried to the uttermost to supply the demand.
+
+In the face of the fiercest competition it fell to Davis's lot to
+land the biggest story of those days of marking time.
+
+The story "broke" when it became known that Davis, Medill
+McCormick, and Frederick Palmer had gone through the Mexican
+lines in an effort to reach Mexico City. Davis and McCormick,
+with letters to the Brazilian and British ministers, got through
+and reached the capital on the strength of those letters, but
+Palmer, having only an American passport, was turned back.
+
+After an ominous silence which furnished American newspapers with
+a lively period of suspense, the two men returned safely with
+wonderful stories of their experiences while under arrest in the
+hands of the Mexican authorities. McCormick, in recently speaking
+of Davis at that time, said that, "as a correspondent in
+difficult and dangerous situations, he was incomparable--cheerful,
+ingenious, and undiscouraged. When the time came to choose
+between safety and leaving his companion he stuck by his fellow
+captive even though, as they both said, a firing-squad and a blank
+wall were by no means a remote possibility."
+
+This Mexico City adventure was a spectacular achievement
+which gave Davis and McCormick a distinction which no other
+correspondents of all the ambitious and able corps had managed to
+attain.
+
+Davis usually "hunted" alone. He depended entirely upon his own
+ingenuity and wonderful instinct for news situations. He had the
+energy and enthusiasm of a beginner, with the experience and
+training of a veteran. His interest in things remained as keen
+as though he had not been years at a game which often leaves a
+man jaded and blase. His acquaintanceship in the American army
+and navy was wide, and for this reason, as well as for the
+prestige which his fame and position as a national character gave
+him, he found it easy to establish valuable connections in the
+channels from which news emanates. And yet, in spite of the fact
+that he was "on his own" instead of having a working partnership
+with other men, he was generous in helping at times when he was
+able to do so.
+
+Davis was a conspicuous figure in Vera Cruz, as he inevitably had
+been in all such situations. Wherever he went, he was pointed
+out. His distinction of appearance, together with a distinction
+in dress, which, whether from habit or policy, was a valuable
+asset in his work, made him a marked man. He dressed and looked
+the "war correspondent," such a one as he would describe in one
+of his stories. He fulfilled the popular ideal of what a member
+of that fascinating profession should look like. His code of life
+and habits was as fixed as that of the Briton who takes his
+habits and customs and games and tea wherever he goes, no matter
+how benighted or remote the spot may be.
+
+He was just as loyal to his code as is the Briton. He carried his
+bath-tub, his immaculate linen, his evening clothes, his war
+equipment--in which he had the pride of a connoisseur--wherever
+he went, and, what is more, he had the courage to use the evening
+clothes at times when their use was conspicuous. He was the only
+man who wore a dinner coat in Vera Cruz, and each night, at his
+particular table in the crowded "Portales," at the Hotel
+Diligencia, he was to be seen, as fresh and clean as though he
+were in a New York or London restaurant.
+
+Each day he was up early to take the train out to the "gap,"
+across which came arrivals from Mexico City. Sometimes a good
+"story" would come down, as when the long-heralded and long-
+expected arrival of Consul Silliman gave a first-page "feature"
+to all the American papers.
+
+In the afternoon he would play water polo over at the navy
+aviation camp, and always at a certain time of the day his
+"striker" would bring him his horse and for an hour or more he
+would ride out along the beach roads within the American lines.
+After the first few days it was difficult to extract real thrills
+from the Vera Cruz situation, but we used to ride out to El Tejar
+with the cavalry patrol and imagine that we might be fired on at
+some point in the long ride through unoccupied territory; or else
+go out to the "front," at Legarto, where a little American force
+occupied a sun-baked row of freight-cars, surrounded by malarial
+swamps. From the top of the railroad water-tank, we could look
+across to the Mexican outposts a mile or so away. It was not very
+exciting, and what thrills we got lay chiefly in our imagination.
+
+Before my acquaintanceship with Davis at Vera Cruz I had not
+known him well. Our trails didn't cross while I was in Japan in
+the Japanese-Russian War, and in the Transvaal I missed him by a
+few days, but in Vera Cruz I had many enjoyable opportunities of
+becoming well acquainted with him.
+
+The privilege was a pleasant one, for it served to dispel a
+preconceived and not an entirely favorable impression of his
+character. For years I had heard stories about Richard Harding
+Davis--stories which emphasized an egotism and self-assertiveness
+which, if they ever existed, had happily ceased to be obtrusive
+by the time I got to know him.
+
+He was a different Davis from the Davis whom I had expected to
+find; and I can imagine no more charming and delightful companion
+than he was in Vera Cruz. There was no evidence of those
+qualities which I feared to find, and his attitude was one of
+unfailing kindness, considerateness, and generosity.
+
+In the many talks I had with him, I was always struck by his
+evident devotion to a fixed code of personal conduct. In his writings
+he was the interpreter of chivalrous, well-bred youth, and his heroes
+were young, clean-thinking college men, heroic big-game hunters,
+war correspondents, and idealized men about town, who always did
+the noble thing, disdaining the unworthy in act or motive. It seemed
+to me that he was modelling his own life, perhaps unconsciously,
+after the favored types which his imagination had created for his
+stories. In a certain sense he was living a life of make-believe,
+wherein he was the hero of the story, and in which he was bound
+by his ideals always to act as he would have the hero of his
+story act. It was a quality which only one could have who had
+preserved a fresh youthfulness of outlook in spite of the
+hardening processes of maturity.
+
+His power of observation was extraordinarily keen, and he not
+only had the rare gift of sensing the vital elements of a
+situation, but also had, to an unrivalled degree, the ability to
+describe them vividly. I don't know how many of those men at Verz
+Cruz tried to describe the kaleidoscopic life of the city during
+the American occupation, but I know that Davis's story was far
+and away the most faithful and satisfying picture. The story was
+photographic, even to the sounds and smells.
+
+The last I saw of him in Vera Cruz was when, on the Utah, he
+steamed past the flagship Wyoming, upon which I was quartered,
+and started for New York. The Battenberg cup race had just been
+rowed, and the Utah and Florida crews had tied. As the Utah was
+sailing immediately after the race, there was no time in which to
+row off the tie. So it was decided that the names of both ships
+should be engraved on the cup, and that the Florida crew should
+defend the title against a challenging crew from the British
+Admiral Craddock's flagship.
+
+By the end of June, the public interest in Vera Cruz had waned,
+and the corps of correspondents dwindled until there were only a
+few left.
+
+Frederick Palmer and I went up to join Carranza and Villa, and on
+the 26th of July we were in Monterey waiting to start with the
+triumphal march of Carranza's army toward Mexico City. There was
+no sign of serious trouble abroad. That night ominous telegrams
+came, and at ten o'clock on the following morning we were on a
+train headed for the States.
+
+Palmer and Davis caught the Lusitania, sailing August 4 from New
+York, and I followed on the Saint Paul, leaving three days later.
+On the 17th of August I reached Brussels, and it seemed the most
+natural thing in the world to find Davis already there. He was at
+the Palace Hotel, where a number of American and English
+correspondents were quartered.
+
+Things moved quickly. On the 19th Irvin Cobb, Will Irwin, Arno
+Dosch, and I were caught between the Belgian and German lines in
+Louvain; our retreat to Brussels was cut, and for three days,
+while the vast German army moved through the city, we were
+detained. Then, the army having passed, we were allowed to go
+back to the capital.
+
+In the meantime Davis was in Brussels. The Germans reached the
+outskirts of the city on the morning of the 20th, and the
+correspondents who had remained in Brussels were feverishly
+writing despatches describing the imminent fall of the city. One
+of them, Harry Hansen, of the Chicago Daily News, tells the
+following story, which I give in his words:
+
+"While we were writing," says Hansen, "Richard Harding Davis
+walked into the writing-room of the Palace Hotel with a bunch of
+manuscript in his hand. With an amused expression he surveyed
+the three correspondents filling white paper.
+
+"'I say, men,' said Davis, 'do you know when the next train
+leaves?'
+
+"'There is one at three o'clock,' said a correspondent, looking
+up.
+
+"'That looks like our only chance to get a story out,' said
+Davis. 'Well, we'll trust to that.'
+
+"The story was the German invasion of Brussels, and the train
+mentioned was considered the forlorn hope of the correspondents
+to connect with the outside world--that is, every correspondent
+thought it to be the other man's hope. Secretly each had prepared
+to outwit the other, and secretly Davis had already sent his
+story to Ostend. He meant to emulate Archibald Forbes, who
+despatched a courier with his real manuscript, and next day
+publicly dropped a bulky package in the mail-bag.
+
+"Davis had sensed the news in the occupation of Brussels long
+before it happened. With dawn he went out to the Louvain road,
+where the German army stood, prepared to smash the capital if
+negotiations failed. His observant eye took in all the details.
+Before noon he had written a comprehensive sketch of the
+occupation, and when word was received that it was under way, he
+trusted his copy to an old Flemish woman, who spoke not a word of
+English, and saw her safely on board the train that pulled out
+under Belgian auspices for Ostend."
+
+With passes which the German commandant in Brussels gave us the
+correspondents immediately started out to see how far those
+passes would carry us. A number of us left on the afternoon of
+August 23 for Waterloo, where it was expected that the great
+clash between the German and the Anglo-French forces would occur.
+We had planned to be back the same evening, and went prepared
+only for an afternoon's drive in a couple of hired street
+carriages. It was seven weeks before we again saw Brussels.
+
+On the following day (August 24) Davis started for Mons. He wore
+the khaki uniform which he had worn in many campaigns. Across his
+breast was a narrow bar of silk ribbon indicating the campaigns
+in which he had served as a correspondent. He so much resembled a
+British officer that he was arrested as a British derelict and was informed
+that he would be shot at once.
+
+He escaped only by offering to walk to Brand Whitlock, in Brussels,
+reporting to each officer he met on the way. His plan was approved,
+and as a hostage on parole he appeared before the American minister,
+who quickly established his identity as an American of good standing,
+to the satisfaction of the Germans.
+
+In the following few months our trails were widely separated. I read
+of his arrest by German officers on the road to Mons; later I
+read the story of his departure from Brussels by train to
+Holland--a trip which carried him through Louvain while the town
+still was burning; and still later I read that he was with the
+few lucky men who were in Rheims during one of the early
+bombardments that damaged the cathedral. By amazing luck,
+combined with a natural news sense which drew him instinctively
+to critical places at the psychological moment, he had been a
+witness of the two most widely featured stories of the early
+weeks of the war.
+
+Arrested by the Germans in Belgium, and later by the French in
+France, he was convinced that the restrictions on correspondents
+were too great to permit of good work.
+
+So he left the European war zone with the widely quoted remark:
+"The day of the war correspondent is over."
+
+And yet I was not surprised when, one evening, late in November
+of last year, he suddenly walked into the room in Salonika where
+William G. Shepherd, of the United Press, "Jimmy Hare," the
+veteran war photographer, and I had established ourselves several
+weeks before.
+
+The hotel was jammed, and the city, with a normal capacity of
+about one hundred and seventy-five thousand, was struggling to
+accommodate at least a hundred thousand more. There was not a
+room to be had in any of the better hotels, and for several days
+we lodged Davis in our room, a vast chamber which formerly had
+been the main dining-room of the establishment, and which now was
+converted into a bedroom. There was room for a dozen men, if
+necessary, and whenever stranded Americans arrived and could find
+no hotel accommodations we simply rigged up emergency cots for
+their temporary use.
+
+The weather in Salonika at this time, late November, was
+penetratingly cold. In the mornings the steam coils struggled
+feebly to dispel the chill in the room.
+
+Early in the morning after Davis had arrived, we were aroused by
+the sound of violent splashing, accompanied by shuddering gasps,
+and we looked out from the snug warmth of our beds to see Davis
+standing in his portable bath-tub and drenching himself with
+ice-cold water. As an exhibition of courageous devotion to an
+established custom of life it was admirable, but I'm not sure
+that it was prudent.
+
+For some reason, perhaps a defective circulation or a weakened
+heart, his system failed to react from these cold-water baths.
+All through the days he complained of feeling chilled. He never
+seemed to get thoroughly warmed, and of us all he was the one who
+suffered most keenly from the cold. It was all the more
+surprising, for his appearance was always that of a man in the
+pink of athletic fitness--ruddy-faced, clear-eyed, and full of
+tireless energy.
+
+On one occasion we returned from the French front in Serbia to
+Salonika in a box car lighted only by candles, bitterly cold, and
+frightfully exhausting. We were seven hours in travelling
+fifty-five miles, and we arrived at our destination at three
+o'clock in the morning. Several of the men contracted desperate
+colds, which clung to them for weeks. Davis was chilled through,
+and said that of all the cold he had ever experienced that which
+swept across the Macedonian plain from the Balkan highlands was
+the most penetrating. Even his heavy clothing could not afford him
+adequate protection.
+
+When he was settled in his own room in our hotel he installed an
+oil-stove which burned beside him as he sat at his desk and wrote
+his stories. The room was like an oven, but even then he still
+complained of the cold.
+
+When he left he gave us the stove, and when we left, some time
+later, it was presented to one of our doctor friends out in a
+British hospital, where I'm sure it is doing its best to thaw the
+Balkan chill out of sick and wounded soldiers.
+
+Davis was always up early, and his energy and interest were as
+keen as a boy's. We had our meals together, sometimes in the
+crowded and rather smart Bastasini's, but more often in the
+maelstrom of humanity that nightly packed the Olympos Palace
+restaurant. Davis, Shepherd, Hare, and I, with sometimes Mr. and
+Mrs. John Bass, made up these parties, which, for a period of
+about two weeks or so, were the most enjoyable daily events of
+our lives.
+
+Under the glaring lights of the restaurant, and surrounded by
+British, French, Greek, and Serbian officers, German, Austrian,
+and Bulgarian civilians, with a sprinkling of American, English,
+and Scotch nurses and doctors, packed so solidly in the huge,
+high-ceilinged room that the waiters could barely pick their way
+among the tables, we hung for hours over our dinners, and left
+only when the landlord and his Austrian wife counted the day's
+receipts and paid the waiters at the end of the evening.
+
+One could not imagine a more charming and delightful companion
+than Davis during these days. While he always asserted that he
+could not make a speech, and was terrified at the thought of
+standing up at a banquet-table, yet, sitting at a dinner-table
+with a few friends who were only too eager to listen rather than
+to talk, his stories, covering personal experiences in all parts
+of the world, were intensely vivid, with that remarkable
+"holding" quality of description which characterizes his
+writings.
+
+He brought his own bread--a coarse, brown sort, which he preferred
+to the better white bread--and with it he ate great quantities of
+butter. As we sat down at the table his first demand was for
+"Mastika," a peculiar Greek drink distilled from mastic gum, and
+his second demand invariably was "Du beurre!" with the "r's" as
+silent as the stars; and if it failed to come at once the waiter
+was made to feel the enormity of his tardiness.
+
+The reminiscences ranged from his early newspaper days in
+Philadelphia, and skipping from Manchuria to Cuba and Central
+America, to his early Sun days under Arthur Brisbane; they ranged
+through an endless variety of personal experiences which very
+nearly covered the whole course of American history in the past
+twenty years.
+
+Perhaps to him it was pleasant to go over his remarkable adventures,
+but it could not have been half as pleasant as it was to hear them, told
+as they were with a keenness of description and brilliancy of humorous
+comment that made them gems of narrative.
+
+At times, in our work, we all tried our hands at describing the
+Salonika of those early days of the Allied occupation, for it was
+really what one widely travelled British officer called it--"the
+most amazingly interesting situation I've ever seen"---but Davis's
+description was far and away the best, just as his description of
+Vera Cruz was the best, and his wonderful story of the entry of
+the German army into Brussels was matchless as one of the great
+pieces of reporting in the present war.
+
+In thinking of Davis, I shall always remember him for the
+delightful qualities which he showed in Salonika. He was
+unfailingly considerate and thoughtful. Through his narratives
+one could see the pride which he took in the width and breadth of
+his personal relation to the great events of the past twenty
+years. His vast scope of experiences and equally wide
+acquaintanceship with the big figures of our time, were amazing,
+and it was equally amazing that one of such a rich and
+interesting history could tell his stories in such a simple way
+that the personal element was never obtrusive.
+
+When he left Salonika he endeavored to obtain permission from
+the British staff to visit Moudros, but, failing in this, he booked
+his passage on a crowded little Greek steamer, where the only
+obtainable accommodation was a lounge in the dining saloon.
+We gave him a farewell dinner, at which the American consul
+and his family, with all the other Americans then in Salonika, were
+present, and after the dinner we rowed out to his ship and saw
+him very uncomfortably installed for his voyage.
+
+He came down the sea ladder and waved his hand as we rowed away.
+That was the last I saw of Richard Harding Davis.
+
+JOHN T. MCCUTCHEON.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+
+
+
+
+During the war with Spain, Colton Lee came into the service as a
+volunteer. For a young man, he always had taken life almost too
+seriously, and when, after the campaign in Cuba, he elected to
+make soldiering his profession, the seriousness with which he
+attacked his new work surprised no one. Finding they had lost him
+forever, his former intimates were bored, but his colonel was
+enthusiastic, and the men of his troop not only loved, but
+respected him.
+
+From the start he determined in his new life women should have no
+part--a determination that puzzled no one so much as the women,
+for to Lee no woman, old or young, had found cause to be
+unfriendly. But he had read that the army is a jealous mistress
+who brooks no rival, that "red lips tarnish the scabbard steel,"
+that "he travels the fastest who travels alone."
+
+So, when white hands beckoned and pretty eyes signalled, he did
+not look. For five years, until just before he sailed for his
+three years of duty in the Philippines, he succeeded not only in
+not looking, but in building up for himself such a fine
+reputation as a woman-hater that all women were crazy about him.
+Had he not been ordered to Agawamsett that fact would not have
+affected him. But at the Officers' School he had indulged in hard
+study rather than in hard riding, had overworked, had brought
+back his Cuban fever, and was in poor shape to face the tropics.
+So, for two months before the transport was to sail, they ordered
+him to Cape Cod to fill his lungs with the bracing air of a New
+England autumn.
+
+He selected Agawamsett, because, when at Harvard, it was there he
+had spent his summer vacations, and he knew he would find
+sailboats and tennis and, through the pine woods back of the
+little whaling village, many miles of untravelled roads. He
+promised himself that over these he would gallop an imaginary
+troop in route marches, would manoeuvre it against possible
+ambush, and, in combat patrols, ground scouts, and cossack
+outposts, charge with it "as foragers." But he did none of these
+things. For at Agawamsett he met Frances Gardner, and his
+experience with her was so disastrous that, in his determination
+to avoid all women, he was convinced he was right.
+
+When later he reached Manila he vowed no other woman would
+ever again find a place in his thoughts. No other woman did.
+Not because he had the strength to keep his vow, but because he
+so continually thought of Frances Gardner that no other woman
+had a chance.
+
+Miss Gardner was a remarkable girl. Her charm appealed to all
+kinds of men, and, unfortunately for Lee, several kinds of men
+appealed to her. Her fortune and her relations were bound up in
+the person of a rich aunt with whom she lived, and who, it was
+understood, some day would leave her all the money in the world.
+But, in spite of her charm, certainly in spite of the rich aunt,
+Lee, true to his determination, might not have noticed the girl
+had not she ridden so extremely well.
+
+It was to the captain of cavalry she first appealed. But even a
+cavalry captain, whose duty in life is to instruct sixty men in
+the art of taking the life of as many other men as possible, may
+turn his head in the direction of a good-looking girl. And when
+for weeks a man rides at the side of one through pine forests as
+dim and mysterious as the aisles of a great cathedral, when he
+guides her across the wet marshes when the sun is setting crimson
+in the pools and the wind blows salt from the sea, when he loses
+them both by moonlight in wood-roads where the hoofs of the
+horses sink silently into dusty pine needles, he thinks more
+frequently of the girl at his side than of the faithful troopers
+waiting for him in San Francisco. The girl at his side thought
+frequently of him.
+
+With the "surface indications" of a young man about to ask her
+to marry him she was painfully familiar; but this time the possibility
+was the reverse of painful. What she meant to do about it she did
+not know, but she did know that she was strangely happy. Between
+living on as the dependent of a somewhat exacting relative and
+becoming the full partner of this young stranger, who with men
+had proved himself so masterful, and who with her was so gentle,
+there seemed but little choice. But she did not as yet wish to make
+the choice. She preferred to believe she was not certain. She assured
+him that before his leave of absence was over she would tell him
+whether she would remain on duty with the querulous aunt, who had
+befriended her, or as his wife accompany him to the Philippines.
+
+It was not the answer he wanted; but in her happiness, which was
+evident to every one, he could not help but take hope. And in the
+questions she put to him of life in the tropics, of the life of
+the "officers' ladies," he saw that what was in her mind was a
+possible life with him, and he was content.
+
+She became to him a wonderful, glorious person, and each day she
+grew in loveliness. It had been five years of soldiering in Cuba,
+China, and on the Mexican border since he had talked to a woman
+with interest, and now in all she said, in all her thoughts and
+words and delights, he found fresher and stronger reasons for
+discarding his determination to remain wedded only to the United
+States Army. He did not need reasons. He was far too much in love
+to see in any word or act of hers anything that was not fine and
+beautiful.
+
+In their rides they had one day stumbled upon a long-lost and
+long-forgotten road through the woods, which she had claimed as
+their own by right of discovery, and, no matter to what point
+they set forth each day, they always returned by it. Their way
+through the woods stretched for miles. It was concealed in a
+forest of stunted oaks and black pines, with no sign of human
+habitation, save here and there a clearing now long neglected and
+alive only with goldenrod. Trunks of trees, moss-grown and
+crumbling beneath the touch of the ponies' hoofs, lay in their
+path, and above it the branches of a younger generation had
+clasped hands. At their approach squirrels raced for shelter,
+woodcock and partridge shot deeper into the network of vines and
+saplings, and the click of the steel as the ponies tossed their
+bits, and their own whispers, alone disturbed the silence.
+
+"It is an enchanted road," said the girl; "or maybe we are
+enchanted."
+
+"Not I," cried the young man loyally. "I was never so sane, never
+so sure, never so happy in knowing just what I wanted! If only
+you could be as sure!"
+
+One day she came to him in high excitement with a book of verse.
+"He has written a poem," she cried, "about our own woods, about
+our lost road! Listen" she commanded, and she read to him:
+
+"'They shut the road through the woods
+Seventy years ago.
+Weather and rain have undone it again,
+And now you would never know
+There was once a road through the woods
+Before they planted the trees.
+It is underneath the coppice and heath,
+And the thin anemones.
+Only the keeper sees
+That, where the ringdove broods,
+And the badgers roll at ease,
+There was once a road through the woods.
+
+"'Yet, if you enter the woods
+Of a summer evening late,
+When the night air cools on the trout-ringed pools
+Where the otter whistles his mate
+(They fear not men in the woods
+Because they see so few),
+You will hear the beat of a horse's feet,
+And the swish of a skirt in the dew,
+Steadily cantering through
+The misty solitudes,
+As though they perfectly knew
+The old lost road through the woods. . . .
+But there is no road through the woods.'"
+
+
+"I don't like that at all," cried the soldierman. "It's too--too
+sad--it doesn't give you any encouragement. The way it ends, I
+mean: 'But there is no road through the woods.' Of course there's
+a road! For us there always will be. I'm going to make sure. I'm
+going to buy those woods, and keep the lost road where we can
+always find it."
+
+"I don't think," said the girl, "that he means a real road."
+
+"I know what he means," cried the lover, "and he's wrong! There
+is a road, and you and I have found it, and we are going to
+follow it for always."
+
+The girl shook her head, but her eyes were smiling happily.
+
+The "season" at Agawamsett closed with the tennis tournament, and
+it was generally conceded fit and proper, from every point of
+view, that in mixed doubles Lee and Miss Gardner should be
+partners. Young Stedman, the Boston artist, was the only one who
+made objection. Up in the sail-loft that he had turned into a
+studio he was painting a portrait of the lovely Miss Gardner, and
+he protested that the three days' tournament would sadly
+interrupt his work. And Frances, who was very much interested in
+the portrait, was inclined to agree.
+
+But Lee beat down her objections. He was not at all interested in
+the portrait. He disapproved of it entirely. For the sittings
+robbed him of Frances during the better part of each morning, and
+he urged that when he must so soon leave her, between the man who
+wanted her portrait and the man who wanted her, it would be kind
+to give her time to the latter.
+
+"But I had no idea," protested Frances, "he would take so long.
+He told me he'd finish it in three sittings. But he's so critical
+of his own work that he goes over it again and again. He says
+that I am a most difficult subject, but that I inspire him. And
+he says, if I will only give him time, he believes this will be
+the best thing he has done."
+
+"That's an awful thought," said the cavalry officer.
+
+"You don't like him," reproved Miss Gardner. "He is always very
+polite to you."
+
+"He's polite to everybody," said Lee; "that's why I don't like
+him. He's not a real artist. He's a courtier. God gave him a
+talent, and he makes a mean use of it. Uses it to flatter people.
+He's like these long-haired violinists who play anything you ask
+them to in the lobster palaces."
+
+Miss Gardner looked away from him. Her color was high and her
+eyes very bright.
+
+"I think," she said steadily, "that Mr. Stedman is a great
+artist, and some day all the world will think so, too!"
+
+Lee made no answer. Not because he disagreed with her estimate of
+Mr. Stedman's genius-he made no pretense of being an art
+critic--but because her vehement admiration had filled him with
+sudden panic. He was not jealous. For that he was far too humble.
+Indeed, he thought himself so utterly unworthy of Frances Gardner
+that the fact that to him she might prefer some one else was in
+no way a surprise. He only knew that if she should prefer some
+one else not all his troop horses nor all his men could put
+Humpty Dumpty back again.
+
+But if, in regard to Mr. Stedman, Miss Gardner had for a moment
+been at odds with the man who loved her, she made up for it the
+day following on the tennis court. There she was in accord with
+him in heart, soul, and body, and her sharp "Well played,
+partner!" thrilled him like one of his own bugle calls. For two
+days against visiting and local teams they fought their way
+through the tournament, and the struggle with her at his side
+filled Lee with a great happiness. Not that the championship of
+Agawamsett counted greatly to one exiled for three years to live
+among the Moros. He wanted to win because she wanted to win.
+But his happiness came in doing something in common with her,
+in helping her and in having her help him, in being, if only in
+play, if only for three days, her "partner."
+
+After they won they walked home together, each swinging a fat,
+heavy loving-cup. On each was engraved:
+
+"Mixed doubles, Agawamsett, 1910."
+
+Lee held his up so that the setting sun flashed on the silver.
+
+"I am going to keep that," he said, "as long as I live. It means
+you were once my 'partner.' It's a sign that once we two worked
+together for something and won." In the words the man showed
+such feeling that the girl said soberly:
+
+"Mine means that to me, too. I will never part with mine,
+either."
+
+Lee turned to her and smiled, appealing wistfully.
+
+"It seems a pity to separate them," he said. "They'd look well
+together over an open fireplace."
+
+The girl frowned unhappily. "I don't know," she protested. "I
+don't know."
+
+The next day Lee received from the War Department a telegram
+directing him to "proceed without delay" to San Francisco, and
+there to embark for the Philippines.
+
+That night he put the question to her directly, but again she
+shook her head unhappily; again she said: "I don't know!"
+
+So he sailed without her, and each evening at sunset, as the
+great transport heaved her way across the swell of the Pacific,
+he stood at the rail and looked back. With the aid of the first
+officer he calculated the difference in time between a whaling
+village situated at forty-four degrees north and an army
+transport dropping rapidly toward the equator, and so, each day,
+kept in step with the girl he loved.
+
+"Now," he would tell himself, "she is in her cart in front of the
+post-office, and while they sort the morning mail she gossips
+with the fisher folks, the summer folks, the grooms, and
+chauffeurs. Now she is sitting for her portrait to Stedman" (he
+did not dwell long on that part of her day), "and now she is at
+tennis, or, as she promised, riding alone at sunset down our lost
+road through the woods."
+
+But that part of her day from which Lee hurried was that part
+over which the girl herself lingered. As he turned his eyes from
+his canvas to meet hers, Stedman, the charming, the deferential,
+the adroit, who never allowed his painting to interrupt his talk,
+told her of what he was pleased to call his dreams and ambitions,
+of the great and beautiful ladies who had sat before his easel,
+and of the only one of them who had given him inspiration.
+Especially of the only one who had given him inspiration. With
+her always to uplift him, he could become one of the world's most
+famous artists, and she would go down into history as the
+beautiful woman who had helped him, as the wife of Rembrandt
+had inspired Rembrandt, as "Mona Lisa" had made Leonardo.
+
+Gilbert wrote: "It is not the lover who comes to woo, but the
+lover's way of wooing!" His successful lover was the one who
+threw the girl across his saddle and rode away with her. But one
+kind of woman does not like to have her lover approach shouting:
+"At the gallop! Charge!"
+
+She prefers a man not because he is masterful, but because he is
+not. She likes to believe the man needs her more than she needs
+him, that she, and only she, can steady him, cheer him, keep him
+true to the work he is in the world to perform. It is called the
+"mothering" instinct.
+
+Frances felt this mothering instinct toward the sensitive,
+imaginative, charming Stedman. She believed he had but two
+thoughts, his art and herself. She was content to place his art first.
+She could not guess that to one so unworldly, to one so wrapped up
+in his art, the fortune of a rich aunt might prove alluring.
+
+When the transport finally picked up the landfalls of Cavite
+Harbor, Lee, with the instinct of a soldier, did not exclaim:
+"This is where Dewey ran the forts and sank the Spanish fleet!"
+On the contrary, he was saying: "When she comes to join me, it
+will be here I will first see her steamer. I will be waiting with
+a field-glass on the end of that wharf. No, I will be out here in
+a shore-boat waving my hat. And of all those along the rail, my
+heart will tell me which is she!"
+
+Then a barefooted Filipino boy handed him an unsigned cablegram.
+It read: "If I wrote a thousand words I could not make it easier
+for either of us. I am to marry Arthur Stedman in December."
+
+Lee was grateful for the fact that he was not permitted to linger
+in Manila. Instead, he was at once ordered up-country, where at a
+one-troop post he administered the affairs of a somewhat hectic
+province, and under the guidance of the local constabulary chased
+will-o'-the-wisp brigands. On a shelf in his quarters he placed
+the silver loving-cup, and at night, when the village slept, he
+would sit facing it, filling one pipe after another, and through
+the smoke staring at the evidence to the fact that once Frances
+Gardner and he had been partners.
+
+In these post-mortems he saw nothing morbid. With his present
+activities they in no way interfered, and in thinking of the days
+when they had been together, in thinking of what he had lost, he
+found deep content. Another man, having lost the woman he loved,
+would have tried to forget her and all she meant to him. But Lee
+was far too honest with himself to substitute other thoughts for
+those that were glorious, that still thrilled him. The girl could
+take herself from him, but she could not take his love for her
+from him. And for that he was grateful. He never had considered
+himself worthy, and so could not believe he had been ill used. In
+his thoughts of her there was no bitterness: for that also he was
+grateful. And, as he knew he would not care for any other woman
+in the way he cared for her, he preferred to care in that way,
+even for one who was lost, than in a lesser way for a possible
+she who some day might greatly care for him. So she still
+remained in his thoughts, and was so constantly with him that he
+led a dual existence, in which by day he directed the affairs of
+an alien and hostile people and by night again lived through the
+wonderful moments when she had thought she loved him, when he
+first had learned to love her. At times she seemed actually at
+his side, and he could not tell whether he was pretending that
+this were so or whether the force of his love had projected her
+image half around the world.
+
+Often, when in single file he led the men through the forest, he
+seemed again to be back on Cape Cod picking his way over their
+own lost road through the wood, and he heard "the beat of a
+horse's feet and the swish of a skirt in the dew." And then a
+carbine would rattle, or a horse would stumble and a trooper
+swear, and he was again in the sweating jungle, where men, intent
+upon his life, crouched in ambush.
+
+She spared him the mockery of wedding-cards; but the announcement
+of the wedding came to him in a three-months-old newspaper. Hoping
+they would speak of her in their letters, he kept up a somewhat one-sided
+correspondence with friends of Mrs. Stedman's in Boston, where she now
+lived. But for a year in none of their letters did her name appear. When
+a mutual friend did write of her Lee understood the silence.
+
+From the first, the mutual friend wrote, the life of Mrs. Stedman
+and her husband was thoroughly miserable. Stedman blamed her
+because she came to him penniless. The rich aunt, who had
+heartily disapproved of the artist, had spoken of him so frankly
+that Frances had quarrelled with her, and from her no longer
+would accept money. In his anger at this Stedman showed himself
+to Frances as he was. And only two months after their marriage
+she was further enlightened.
+
+An irate husband made him the central figure in a scandal that
+filled the friends of Frances with disgust, and that for her was
+an awakening cruel and humiliating. Men no longer permitted their
+womenfolk to sit to Stedman for a portrait, and the need of money
+grew imperative. He the more blamed Frances for having quarrelled
+with her aunt, told her it was for her money he had married her,
+that she had ruined his career, and that she was to blame for his
+ostracism--a condition that his own misconduct had brought upon
+him. Finally, after twelve months of this, one morning he left a
+note saying he no longer would allow her to be a drag upon him,
+and sailed for Europe.
+
+They learned that, in Paris, he had returned to that life which
+before his marriage, even in that easy-going city, had made him
+notorious. "And Frances," continued Lee's correspondent, "has
+left Boston, and now lives in New York. She wouldn't let any of
+us help her, nor even know where she is. The last we heard of her
+she was in charge of the complaint department of a millinery
+shop, for which work she was receiving about the same wages I
+give my cook."
+
+Lee did not stop to wonder why the same woman, who to one man was
+a "drag," was to another, even though separated from her by half
+the world, a joy and a blessing. Instead, he promptly wrote his
+lawyers to find Mrs. Stedman, and, in such a way as to keep her
+ignorant of their good offices, see that she obtained a position
+more congenial than her present one, and one that would pay her
+as much as, without arousing her suspicions, they found it
+possible to give.
+
+Three months had passed, and this letter had not been answered,
+when in Manila, where he had been ordered to make a report, he
+heard of her again. One evening, when the band played on the
+Luneta, he met a newly married couple who had known him in
+Agawamsett. They now were on a ninety-day cruise around the
+world. Close friends of Frances Gardner, they remembered him as
+one of her many devotees and at once spoke of her.
+
+"That blackguard she married," the bridegroom told him, "was
+killed three months ago racing with another car from Versailles
+back to Paris after a dinner at which, it seems, all present
+drank 'burgundy out of the fingerbowls.' Coming down that steep
+hill into Saint Cloud, the cars collided, and Stedman and a
+woman, whose husband thought she was somewhere else, were killed.
+He couldn't even die without making a scandal of it."
+
+"But the worst," added the bride, "is that, in spite of the way
+the little beast treated her, I believe Frances still cares for
+him, and always will. That's the worst of it, isn't it?" she
+demanded.
+
+In words, Lee did not answer, but in his heart he agreed that was
+much the worst of it. The fact that Frances was free filled him
+with hope; but that she still cared for the man she had married,
+and would continue to think only of him, made him ill with
+despair.
+
+He cabled his lawyers for her address. He determined that, at
+once, on learning it, he would tell her that with him nothing was
+changed. He had forgotten nothing, and had learned much. He had
+learned that his love for her was a splendid and inspiring
+passion, that even without her it had lifted him up, helped and
+cheered him, made the whole world kind and beautiful. With her he
+could not picture a world so complete with happiness.
+
+Since entering the army he had never taken a leave of absence, and he
+was sure, if now he asked for one, it would not be refused. He determined,
+if the answer to his cable gave him the address, he would return at once,
+and again offer her his love, which he now knew was deeper, finer, and
+infinitely more tender than the love he first had felt for her. But the cable
+balked him. "Address unknown," it read; "believed to have gone abroad in
+capacity of governess. Have employed foreign agents. Will cable their
+report."
+
+Whether to wait for and be guided by the report of the
+detectives, or to proceed to Europe and search for her himself,
+Lee did not know. He finally determined that to seek for her with
+no clew to her whereabouts would be but a waste of precious
+moments, while, if in their search the agents were successful, he
+would be able to go directly to her. Meanwhile, by cable, he
+asked for protracted leave of absence and, while waiting for his
+answer, returned to his post. There, within a week, he received
+his leave of absence, but in a fashion that threatened to remove
+him forever from the army.
+
+The constabulary had located the will-o'-the-wisp brigands behind
+a stockade built about an extinct volcano, and Lee and his troop
+and a mountain battery attempted to dislodge them. In the fight that
+followed Lee covered his brows with laurel wreaths and received
+two bullet wounds in his body.
+
+For a month death stood at the side of his cot; and then, still weak
+and at times delirious with fever, by slow stages he was removed to the
+hospital in Manila. In one of his sane moments a cable was shown
+him. It read: "Whereabouts still unknown." Lee at once rebelled
+against his doctors. He must rise, he declared, and proceed to
+Europe. It was upon a matter of life and death. The surgeons
+assured him his remaining exactly where he was also was a matter
+of as great consequence. Lee's knowledge of his own lack of
+strength told him they were right.
+
+Then, from headquarters, he was informed that, as a reward for
+his services and in recognition of his approaching convalescence,
+he was ordered to return to his own climate and that an easy
+billet had been found for him as a recruiting officer in New York
+City. Believing the woman he loved to be in Europe, this plan for
+his comfort only succeeded in bringing on a relapse. But the day
+following there came another cablegram. It put an abrupt end to
+his mutiny, and brought him and the War Department into complete
+accord.
+
+"She is in New York," it read, "acting as agent for a charitable
+institution, which one not known, but hope in a few days to cable
+correct address."
+
+In all the world there was no man so happy. The next morning a
+transport was sailing, and, probably because they had read the
+cablegram, the surgeons agreed with Lee that a sea voyage would
+do him no harm. He was carried on board, and when the propellers
+first churned the water and he knew he was moving toward her, the
+hero of the fight around the crater shed unmanly tears. He would
+see her again, hear her voice; the same great city would shelter
+them. It was worth a dozen bullets.
+
+He reached New York in a snow-storm, a week before Christmas, and
+went straight to the office of his lawyers. They received him with
+embarrassment. Six weeks before, on the very day they had
+cabled him that Mrs. Stedman was in New York, she had left the
+charitable institution where she had been employed, and had again
+disappeared.
+
+Lee sent his trunks to the Army and Navy Club, which was
+immediately around the corner from the recruiting office in Sixth
+Avenue, and began discharging telegrams at every one who had ever
+known Frances Gardner. The net result was discouraging. In the
+year and a half in which he had been absent every friend of the
+girl he sought had temporarily changed his place of residence or
+was permanently dead.
+
+Meanwhile his arrival by the transport was announced in the
+afternoon papers. At the wharf an admiring trooper had told a
+fine tale of his conduct at the battle of the crater, and
+reporters called at the club to see him. He did not discourage
+them, as he hoped through them the fact of his return might be
+made known to Frances. She might send him a line of welcome, and
+he would discover her whereabouts. But, though many others sent
+him hearty greetings, from her there was no word.
+
+On the second day after his arrival one of the telegrams was
+answered in person by a friend of Mrs. Stedman. He knew only that
+she had been in New York, that she was very poor and in ill
+health, that she shunned all of her friends, and was earning her
+living as the matron of some sort of a club for working girls. He
+did not know the name of it.
+
+On the third day there still was no news. On the fourth Lee
+decided that the next morning he would advertise. He would say
+only: "Will Mrs. Arthur Stedman communicate with Messrs. Fuller &
+Fuller?" Fuller & Fuller were his lawyers. That afternoon he
+remained until six o'clock at the recruiting office, and when he
+left it the electric street lights were burning brightly. A heavy
+damp snow was falling, and the lights and the falling flakes and
+the shouts of drivers and the toots of taxicabs made for the man
+from the tropics a welcome homecoming.
+
+Instead of returning at once to his club, he slackened his steps.
+The shop windows of Sixth Avenue hung with Christmas garlands,
+and colored lamps glowed like open fireplaces. Lee passed slowly
+before them, glad that he had been able to get back at such a
+season. For the moment he had forgotten the woman he sought, and
+was conscious only of his surroundings. He had paused in front of
+the window of a pawn-shop. Over the array of cheap jewelry, of
+banjos, shot-guns, and razors, his eyes moved idly. And then they
+became transfixed and staring. In the very front of the window,
+directly under his nose, was a tarnished silver loving-cup. On it
+was engraved, "Mixed Doubles. Agawamsett, 1910." In all the world
+there were only two such cups, and as though he were dodging the
+slash of a bolo, Lee leaped into the shop. Many precious seconds
+were wasted in persuading Mrs. Cohen that he did not believe the
+cup had been stolen; that he was not from the Central Office;
+that he believed the lady who had pawned the cup had come by it
+honestly; that he meant no harm to the lady; that he meant no
+harm to Mrs. Cohen; that, much as the young lady may have needed
+the money Mrs. Cohen had loaned her on the cup, he needed the
+address of the young lady still more.
+
+Mrs. Cohen retired behind a screen, and Lee was conscious that
+from the other side of it the whole family of Cohens were taking
+his measurements. He approved of their efforts to protect the
+owner of the cup, but not from him.
+
+He offered, if one of the younger Cohens would take him to the
+young lady, to let him first ask her if she would receive Captain Lee,
+and for his service he would give the young Cohen untold gold.
+He exhibited the untold gold. The young Cohen choked at the sight
+and sprang into the seat beside the driver of a taxicab.
+
+"To the Working Girls' Home, on Tenth Street!" he commanded.
+
+
+Through the falling snow and the flashing lights they slid,
+skidded, and leaped. Inside the cab Lee shivered with excitement,
+with cold, with fear that it might not be true. He could not
+realize she was near. It was easier to imagine himself still in
+the jungle, with months of time and sixteen thousand miles of
+land and water separating them; or in the hospital, on a
+white-enamel cot, watching the shadow creep across the
+whitewashed wall; or lying beneath an awning that did not move,
+staring at a burning, brazen sea that did not move, on a transport
+that, timed by the beating of his heart, stood still.
+
+Those days were within the radius of his experience. Separation,
+absence, the immutable giants of time and space, he knew. With
+them he had fought and could withstand them. But to be near her,
+to hear her voice, to bring his love into her actual presence, that was
+an attack upon his feelings which found him without weapons. That
+for a very few dollars she had traded the cup from which she had sworn
+never to part did not concern him. Having parted from him, what she
+did with a silver mug was of little consequence. It was of significance
+only in that it meant she was poor. And that she was either an inmate
+or a matron of a lodging-house for working girls also showed she was
+poor.
+
+He had been told that was her condition, and that she was in ill health,
+and that from all who loved her she had refused to accept help. At the
+thought his jaws locked pugnaciously. There was one who loved her,
+who, should she refuse his aid, was prepared to make her life intolerable.
+He planned in succession at lightning speed all he might do for her. Among
+other things he would make this Christmas the happiest she or he would
+ever know. Not for an instant did he question that she who had refused
+help from all who loved her could refuse anything he offered. For he
+knew it was offered with a love that demanded nothing in return, with
+a love that asked only to be allowed to love, and to serve. To refuse help
+inspired by such a feeling as his would be morbid, wicked, ridiculous,
+as though a flower refused to turn its face to the sun, and shut its lips
+to the dew.
+
+The cab stopped in front of a brick building adorned with many fire-
+escapes. Afterward he remembered a bare, brilliantly lit hall hung with
+photographs of the Acropolis, and a stout, capable woman in a cap, who
+looked him over and said:
+
+"You will find Mrs. Stedman in the writing-room."
+
+And he remembered entering a room filled with Mission furniture and
+reading-lamps under green shades. It was empty, except for a young
+girl in deep black, who was seated facing him, her head bent above a
+writing-desk. As he came into the circle of the lamps the girl raised
+her eyes and as though lifted to her feet by what she saw, and through
+no effort of her own, stood erect.
+
+And the young man who had persuaded himself his love demanded
+nothing, who asked only to worship at her gate, found his arms reaching
+out, and heard his voice as though it came from a great distance, cry,
+"Frances!"
+
+And the girl who had refused the help of all who loved her, like a
+homing pigeon walked straight into the outstretched arms.
+
+After five minutes, when he was almost able to believe it was true,
+he said in his commanding, masterful way: "And now I'm going to
+take you out of here. I'm going to buy you a ring, and a sable coat,
+and a house to live in, and a dinner. Which shall we buy first?"
+
+"First," said Frances, frowning happily, "I am afraid we must go
+to the Ritz, to tell Aunt Emily. She always loved you, and it will
+make her so happy."
+
+"To the Ritz!" stammered the young man. "To Aunt Emily! I thought
+they told me your aunt and-you-"
+
+"We quarrelled, yes," said Frances, "and she has forgiven me; but she
+has not forgiven herself, so she spoils me, and already I have a house
+to live in, and several sable coats, and, oh! everything, everything but
+the ring."
+
+"I am so sorry!" cried Lee. "I thought you were poor. I hoped you were
+poor. But you are joking!" he exclaimed delightedly. "You are here in
+a working girls' home-"
+
+"It is one of Aunt Emily's charities. She built it," said Frances. "I
+come here to talk to the girls."
+
+"But," persisted Lee triumphantly, "if you are not poor, why did you
+pawn our silver loving-cup?"
+
+The face of the girl became a lovely crimson, and tears rose to her eyes.
+As though at a confessional, she lifted her hands penitently.
+
+"Try to understand," she begged; "I wanted you to love me, not for
+my money-"
+
+"But you knew!" cried Lee.
+
+"I had to be sure," begged the girl; "and I wanted to believe you loved
+me even if I did not love you. When it was too late I knew you loved me
+as no woman ever deserved to be loved; and I wanted that love. I could
+not live without it. So when I read in the papers you had returned I
+wouldn't let myself write you; I wouldn't let myself beg you to come
+to see me. I set a test for you. I knew from the papers you were at the
+Army and Navy Club, and that around the corner was the recruiting
+office. I'd often seen the sergeant there, in uniform, at the door. I knew
+you must pass from your club to the office many times each day, so I
+thought of the loving-cup and the pawn-shop. I planted it there. It was
+a trick, a test. I thought if you saw it in a pawn-shop you would believe I
+no longer cared for you, and that I was very poor. If you passed it by,
+then I would know you yourself had stopped caring, but if you asked
+about it, if you inquired for me, then I would know you came to me of
+your own wish, because you-"
+
+Lee shook his head.
+
+"You don't have to tell me," he said gently, "why I came. I've a cab
+outside. You will get in it," he commanded, "and we will rescue our
+cup. I always told you they would look well together over an open
+fireplace."
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+
+
+
+
+This is the story of a gallant officer who loved his profession,
+his regiment, his country, but above all, whiskey; of his
+miraculous conversion to total abstinence, and of the humble
+instrument that worked the miracle. At the time it was worked,
+a battalion of the Thirty-third Infantry had been left behind to
+guard the Zone, and was occupying impromptu barracks on the hill
+above Las Palmas. That was when Las Palmas was one of the four
+thousand stations along the forty miles of the Panama Railroad.
+When the railroad was "reconstructed" the name of Las Palmas did
+not appear on the new time-table, and when this story appears
+Las Palmas will be eighty feet under water. So if any one wishes
+to dispute the miracle he will have to conduct his investigation
+in a diving-bell.
+
+On this particular evening young Major Aintree, in command of the
+battalion, had gone up the line to Panama to dine at the Hotel
+Tivoli, and had dined well. To prevent his doing this a paternal
+government had ordered that at the Tivoli no alcoholic liquors
+may be sold; but only two hundred yards from the hotel, outside
+the zone of temperance, lies Panama and Angelina's, and during
+the dinner, between the Tivoli and Angelina's, the Jamaican
+waiter-boys ran relay races.
+
+After the dinner, the Jamaican waiter-boys proving too slow, the
+dinner-party in a body adjourned to Angelina's, and when later,
+Major Aintree moved across the street to the night train to Las
+Palmas, he moved unsteadily.
+
+Young Standish of the Canal Zone police, who, though but twenty-
+six, was a full corporal, was for that night on duty as "train
+guard," and was waiting at the rear steps of the last car. As
+Aintree approached the steps he saw indistinctly a boyish figure
+in khaki, and, mistaking it for one of his own men, he clasped
+the handrail for support, and halted frowning.
+
+Observing the condition of the officer the policeman also frowned,
+but in deference to the uniform, slowly and with reluctance raised
+his hand to his sombrero. The reluctance was more apparent than
+the salute. It was less of a salute than an impertinence.
+
+Partly out of regard for his rank, partly from temper, chiefly
+from whiskey, Aintree saw scarlet.
+
+"When you s'lute your s'perior officer," he shouted, "you s'lute him
+quick. You unnerstan', you s'lute him quick! S'lute me again," he
+commanded, "and s'lute me damn quick."
+
+Standish remained motionless. As is the habit of policemen over
+all the world, his thumbs were stuck in his belt. He answered
+without offense, in tones matter-of-fact and calm.
+
+"You are not my superior officer," he said.
+
+It was the calmness that irritated Aintree. His eyes sought for
+the infantryman's cap and found a sombrero.
+
+"You damned leatherneck," he began, "I'll report--"
+
+"I'm not a marine, either," interrupted Standish. "I'm a policeman.
+Move on," he ordered, "you're keeping these people waiting."
+
+Others of the dinner-party formed a flying wedge around Aintree
+and crowded him up the steps and into a seat and sat upon him.
+Ten minutes later, when Standish made his rounds of the cars,
+Aintree saw him approaching. He had a vague recollection that
+he had been insulted, and by a policeman.
+
+"You!" he called, and so loudly that all in the car turned, "I'm
+going to report you, going to report you for insolence. What's
+your name?"
+
+Looking neither at Aintree nor at the faces turned toward him,
+Standish replied as though Aintree had asked him what time it was.
+
+"Standish," he said, "corporal, shield number 226, on train
+guard." He continued down the aisle.
+
+"I'll remember you," Aintree shouted.
+
+But in the hot, glaring dawn of the morning after, Aintree forgot.
+It was Standish who remembered.
+
+The men of the Zone police are hand-picked. They have been
+soldiers, marines, cowboys, sheriffs, "Black Hussars" of the
+Pennsylvania State constabulary, rough riders with Roosevelt,
+mounted police in Canada, irregular horse in South Africa; they
+form one of the best-organized, best-disciplined, most efficient,
+most picturesque semi-military bodies in the world. Standish
+joined them from the Philippine constabulary in which he had
+been a second lieutenant. There are several like him in the
+Zone police, and in England they would be called gentlemen
+rankers. On the Isthmus, because of his youth, his fellow
+policemen called Standish "Kid." And smart as each of them was,
+each of them admitted the Kid wore his uniform with a difference.
+With him it always looked as though it had come freshly ironed
+from the Colon laundry; his leather leggings shone like
+meerschaum pipes; the brim of his sombrero rested impudently on
+the bridge of his nose.
+
+"He's been an officer," they used to say in extenuation. "You can
+tell when he salutes. He shows the back of his hand." Secretly,
+they were proud of him. Standish came of a long chain of soldiers,
+and that the weakest link in the chain had proved to be himself was
+a sorrow no one else but himself could fathom. Since he was three
+years old he had been trained to be a soldier, as carefully, with the
+same singleness of purpose, as the crown prince is trained to be a
+king. And when, after three happy, glorious years at West Point,
+he was found not clever enough to pass the examinations and was
+dropped, he did not curse the gods and die, but began again to work
+his way up. He was determined he still would wear shoulder-straps.
+He owed it to his ancestors. It was the tradition of his family, the one
+thing he wanted; it was his religion. He would get into the army
+even if by the side door, if only after many years of rough and
+patient service. He knew that some day, through his record,
+through the opportunity of a war, he would come into his
+inheritance. Meanwhile he officered his soul, disciplined his
+body, and daily tried to learn the lesson that he who hopes to
+control others must first control himself.
+
+He allowed himself but one dissipation, one excess. That was
+to hate Major Aintree, commanding the Thirty-third Infantry. Of
+all the world could give, Aintree possessed everything that
+Standish considered the most to be desired. He was a graduate of
+West Point, he had seen service in Cuba, in the Boxer business,
+and in the Philippines. For an act of conspicuous courage at
+Batangas, he had received the medal of honor. He had had the
+luck of the devil. Wherever he held command turned out to be the
+place where things broke loose. And Aintree always attacked and
+routed them, always was the man on the job. It was his name that
+appeared in the newspapers, it was his name that headed the list
+of the junior officers mentioned for distinguished conduct.
+Standish had followed his career with an admiration and a joy
+that was without taint of envy or detraction. He gloried in
+Aintree, he delighted to know the army held such a man. He was
+grateful to Aintree for upholding the traditions of a profession
+to which he himself gave all the devotion of a fanatic. He made
+a god of him. This was the attitude of mind toward Aintree before
+he came to the Isthmus. Up to that time he had never seen his
+idol. Aintree had been only a name signed to brilliant articles
+in the service magazines, a man of whom those who had served with
+him or under him, when asked concerning him, spoke with loyalty
+and awe, the man the newspapers called "the hero of Batangas."
+And when at last he saw his hero, he believed his worship was
+justified. For Aintree looked the part. He was built like a
+greyhound with the shoulders of a stevedore. His chin was as
+projecting, and as hard, as the pointed end of a flat-iron. His every
+movement showed physical fitness, and his every glance and tone a
+confidence in himself that approached insolence. He was thirty-
+eight, twelve years older than the youth who had failed to make
+his commission, and who, as Aintree strode past, looked after him
+with wistful, hero-worshipping eyes. The revulsion, when it came,
+was extreme. The hero-worship gave way to contempt, to indignant
+condemnation, in which there was no pity, no excuse. That one upon
+whom so much had been lavished, who for himself had accomplished
+such good things, should bring disgrace upon his profession,
+should by his example demoralize his men, should risk losing all
+he had attained, all that had been given, was intolerable. When
+Standish learned his hero was a drunkard, when day after day
+Aintree furnished visible evidences of that fact, Standish felt
+Aintree had betrayed him and the army and the government that had
+educated, trained, clothed, and fed him. He regarded Aintree as
+worse than Benedict Arnold, because Arnold had turned traitor for
+power and money; Aintree was a traitor through mere weakness,
+because he could not say "no" to a bottle.
+
+Only in secret Standish railed against Aintree. When his brother
+policemen gossiped and jested about him, out of loyalty to the
+army he remained silent. But in his heart he could not forgive.
+The man he had so generously envied, the man after whose career
+he had wished to model his own, had voluntarily stepped from his
+pedestal and made a swine of himself. And not only could he not
+forgive, but as day after day Aintree furnished fresh food for
+his indignation he felt a fierce desire to punish.
+
+Meanwhile, of the conduct of Aintree, men older and wiser, if less
+intolerant than Standish, were beginning to take notice. It was
+after a dinner on Ancon Hill, and the women had left the men to
+themselves. They were the men who were placing the Panama Canal
+on the map. They were officers of the army who for five years had
+not worn a uniform. But for five years they had been at war with
+an enemy that never slept. Daily they had engaged in battle with
+mountains, rivers, swamps, two oceans, and disease. Where Aintree
+commanded five hundred soldiers, they commanded a body of men
+better drilled, better disciplined, and in number half as many as
+those who formed the entire army of the United States. The mind
+of each was occupied with a world problem. They thought and
+talked in millions --of millions of cubic yards of dirt, of
+millions of barrels of cement, of millions of tons of steel, of
+hundreds of millions of dollars, of which latter each received
+enough to keep himself and his family just beyond the reach of
+necessity. To these men with the world waiting upon the outcome
+of their endeavor, with responsibilities that never relaxed,
+Aintree's behavior was an incident, an annoyance of less
+importance than an overturned dirt train that for five minutes
+dared to block the completion of their work. But they were human
+and loyal to the army, and in such an infrequent moment as this,
+over the coffee and cigars, they could afford to remember the
+junior officer, to feel sorry for him, for the sake of the army,
+to save him from himself.
+
+"He takes his orders direct from the War Department," said the
+chief. "I've no authority over him. If he'd been one of my workmen
+I'd have shipped him north three months ago."
+
+"That's it," said the surgeon, "he's not a workman. He has nothing
+to do, and idleness is the curse of the army. And in this climate--"
+
+"Nothing to do!" snorted the civil administrator. "Keeping his
+men in hand is what he has to do! They're running amuck all over
+Panama, getting into fights with the Spiggoty police, bringing
+the uniform into contempt. As for the climate, it's the same
+climate for all of us. Look at Butler's marines and Barber's Zone
+police. The climate hasn't hurt them. They're as smart men as
+ever wore khaki. It's not the climate or lack of work that ails
+the Thirty- third, it's their commanding officer. 'So the
+colonel, so the regiment.' That's as old as the hills. Until
+Aintree takes a brace, his men won't. Some one ought to talk to
+him. It's a shame to see a fine fellow like that going to the
+dogs because no one has the courage to tell him the truth."
+
+The chief smiled mockingly.
+
+"Then why don't you?" he asked.
+
+"I'm a civilian," protested the administrator. "If I told him he was
+going to the dogs he'd tell me to go to the devil. No, one of you
+army men must do it. He'll listen to you."
+
+Young Captain Haldane of the cavalry was at the table; he was
+visiting Panama on leave as a tourist. The chief turned to him.
+
+"Haldane's the man," he said. "You're his friend and you're his
+junior in rank, so what you say won't sound official. Tell him
+people are talking; tell him it won't be long before they'll be
+talking in Washington. Scare him!"
+
+The captain of cavalry smiled dubiously.
+
+"Aintree's a hard man to scare," he said. "But if it's as bad as you
+all seem to think, I'll risk it. But, why is it," he complained,
+"that whenever a man has to be told anything particularly
+unpleasant they always pick on his best friend to tell him? It
+makes them both miserable. Why not let his bitterest enemy try
+it? The enemy at least would have a fine time."
+
+"Because," said the chief, "Aintree hasn't an enemy in the world-
+except Aintree."
+The next morning, as he had promised, Haldane called upon his
+friend. When he arrived at Las Palmas, although the morning was
+well advanced toward noon, he found Aintree still under his
+mosquito bars and awake only to command a drink. The situation
+furnished Haldane with his text. He expressed his opinion of
+any individual, friend or no friend, officer or civilian, who on
+the Zone, where all men begin work at sunrise, could be found
+at noon still in his pajamas and preparing to face the duties of
+the day on an absinth cocktail. He said further that since he had
+arrived on the isthmus he had heard only of Aintree's misconduct,
+that soon the War Department would hear of it, that Aintree would
+lose his commission, would break the backbone of a splendid career.
+
+"It's a friend talking," continued Haldane, "and you know it! It's
+because I am your friend that I've risked losing your friendship!
+And, whether you like it or not, it's the truth. You're going down-hill,
+going fast, going like a motor-bus running away, and unless you put
+on the brakes you'll smash!"
+
+Aintree was not even annoyed.
+
+"That's good advice for the right man," he granted, "but why waste
+it on me? I can do things other men can't. I can stop drinking this
+minute, and it will mean so little to me that I won't know I've stopped."
+
+"Then stop," said Haldane.
+
+"Why?" demanded Aintree. "I like it. Why should I stop anything
+I like? Because a lot of old women are gossiping? Because old men
+who can't drink green mint without dancing turkey-trots think I'm
+going to the devil because I can drink whiskey? I'm not afraid of
+whiskey," he laughed tolerantly. "It amuses me, that's all it does
+to me; it amuses me." He pulled back the coat of his pajamas and
+showed his giant chest and shoulder. With his fist he struck his
+bare flesh and it glowed instantly a healthy, splendid pink.
+
+"See that!" commanded Aintree. "If there's a man on the isthmus in
+any better physical shape than I am, I'll--" He interrupted himself
+to begin again eagerly. "I'll make you a sporting proposition,"
+he announced "I'll fight any man on the isthmus ten rounds--
+no matter who he is, a wop laborer, shovel man, Barbadian
+nigger, marine, anybody--and if he can knock me out I'll stop
+drinking. You see," he explained patiently, "I'm no mollycoddle
+or jelly-fish. I can afford a headache. And besides, it's my own
+head. If I don't give anybody else a headache, I don't see that it's
+anybody else's damned business."
+
+"But you do," retorted Haldane steadily. "You're giving your own
+men worse than a headache, you're setting them a rotten example,
+you're giving the Thirty-third a bad name-"
+
+Aintree vaulted off his cot and shook his fist at his friend.
+"You can't say that to me," he cried.
+
+"I do say it," protested Haldane. "When you were in Manila your
+men were models; here they're unshaven, sloppy, undisciplined.
+They look like bell-hops. And it's your fault. And everybody
+thinks so."
+
+Slowly and carefully Aintree snapped his fingers.
+
+"And you can tell everybody, from me," he cried, "that's all I care
+what they think! And now," he continued, smiling hospitably, "let
+me congratulate you on your success as a missionary, and, to show
+you there's not a trace of hard feeling, we will have a drink."
+
+Informally Haldane reported back to the commission, and the wife
+of one of them must have talked, for it was soon known that a
+brother officer had appealed to Aintree to reform, and Aintree
+had refused to listen.
+
+When she heard this, Grace Carter, the wife of Major Carter, one
+of the surgeons at the Ancon Hospital, was greatly perturbed.
+Aintree was engaged to be married to Helen Scott, who was her
+best friend and who was arriving by the next steamer to spend the
+winter. When she had Helen safely under her roof, Mrs. Carter had
+planned to marry off the young couple out of hand on the isthmus.
+But she had begun to wonder if it would not be better they should
+delay, or best that they should never marry.
+
+"The awakening is going to be a terrible blow to Helen," she said
+to her husband. "She is so proud of him."
+
+"On the contrary," he protested, "it will be the awakening of
+Aintree--if Helen will stand for the way he's acting, she is not
+the girl I know. And when he finds she won't, and that he may lose
+her, he'll pull up short. He's talked Helen to me night after
+night until he's bored me so I could strangle him. He cares more
+for her than he does for anything, for the army, or for himself,
+and that's saying a great deal. One word from her will be enough."
+
+Helen spoke the word three weeks after she arrived. It had not
+been necessary to tell her of the manner in which her lover was
+misconducting himself. At various dinners given in their honor
+he had made a nuisance of himself; on another occasion, while in
+uniform, he had created a scene in the dining-room of the Tivoli
+under the prying eyes of three hundred seeing-the-Canal tourists;
+and one night he had so badly beaten up a cabman who had laughed
+at his condition that the man went to the hospital. Major Carter,
+largely with money, had healed the injuries of the cabman, but
+Helen, who had witnessed the assault, had suffered an injury that
+money could not heal.
+
+She sent for Aintree, and at the home of her friend delivered
+her ultimatum.
+
+"I hit him because he was offensive to you," said Aintree. "That's
+why I hit him. If I'd not had a drink in a year, I'd have hit him
+just as quick and just as hard."
+
+"Can't you see," said the girl, "that in being not yourself when
+I was in your care you were much more insulting to me than any
+cabman could possibly be? When you are like that you have no
+respect for me, or for yourself. Part of my pride in you is that
+you are so strong, that you control yourself, that common
+pleasures never get a hold on you. If you couldn't control your
+temper I wouldn't blame you, because you've a villainous temper
+and you were born with it. But you weren't born with a taste for
+liquor. None of your people drank. You never drank until you went
+into the army. If I were a man," declared the girl, "I'd be ashamed
+to admit anything was stronger than I was. You never let pain beat
+you. I've seen you play polo with a broken arm, but in this you give
+pain to others, you shame and humiliate the one you pretend to love,
+just because you are weak, just because you can't say 'no.'"
+
+Aintree laughed angrily.
+
+"Drink has no hold on me," he protested. "It affects me as much as the
+lights and the music affect a girl at her first dance, and no more. But,
+if you ask me to stop--"
+
+"I do not!" said the girl. "If you stop, you'll stop not because
+I have any influence over you, but because you don't need my
+influence. If it's wrong, if it's hurting you, if it's taking away
+your usefulness and your power for good, that's why you'll stop.
+Not because a girl begs you. Or you're not the man I think you."
+
+Aintree retorted warmly. "I'm enough of a man for this," he
+protested: "I'm enough of a man not to confess I can't drink
+without making a beast of myself. It's easy not to drink at all.
+But to stop altogether is a confession of weakness. I'd look on
+my doing that as cowardly. I give you my word--not that I'll swear
+off, that I'll never do--but I promise you you'll have no further
+reason to be what you call humiliated, or ashamed. You have my
+word for it."
+
+A week later Aintree rode his pony into a railway cutting and
+rolled with it to the tracks below, and, if at the time he had
+not been extremely drunk, would have been killed. The pony,
+being quite sober, broke a leg and was destroyed.
+
+When word of this came to Helen she was too sick at heart to see
+Aintree, and by others it was made known to him that on the first
+steamer Miss Scott would return North. Aintree knew why she was
+going, knew she had lost faith and patience, knew the woman he
+loved had broken with him and put him out of her life. Appalled
+at this calamity, he proceeded to get drunk in earnest.
+
+
+The night was very hot and the humidity very heavy, and at Las
+Palmas inside the bungalow that served as a police-station the
+lamps on either side of the lieutenant's desk burned like tiny
+furnaces. Between them, panting in the moist heat and with the
+sweat from his forehead and hand dripping upon an otherwise
+immaculate report, sat Standish. Two weeks before, the chief had
+made him one of his six lieutenants. With the force the promotion
+had been most popular.
+
+Since his promotion Standish had been in charge of the police-
+station at Las Palmas and daily had seen Aintree as, on his way
+down the hill from the barracks to the railroad, the hero of
+Batangas passed the door of the station-house. Also, on the
+morning Aintree had jumped his horse over the embankment,
+Standish had seen him carried up the hill on a stretcher. At the
+sight the lieutenant of police had taken from his pocket a notebook,
+and on a flyleaf made a cross. On the flyleaf were many other dates
+and opposite each a cross. It was Aintree's record and as the number
+of black crosses grew, the greater had grown the resentment of Standish,
+the more greatly it had increased his anger against the man who had put
+this affront upon the army, the greater became his desire to punish.
+
+In police circles the night had been quiet, the cells in the yard
+were empty, the telephone at his elbow had remained silent, and
+Standish, alone in the station-house, had employed himself in
+cramming "Moss's Manual for Subalterns." He found it a fascinating
+exercise. The hope that soon he might himself be a subaltern
+always burned brightly, and to be prepared seemed to make the
+coming of that day more certain. It was ten o'clock and Las Palmas
+lay sunk in slumber, and after the down train which was now due
+had passed, there was nothing likely to disturb her slumber until
+at sunrise the great army of dirt-diggers with shrieks of whistles,
+with roars of dynamite, with the rumbling of dirt-trains and
+steam-shovels, again sprang to the attack. Down the hill, a
+hundred yards below Standish, the night train halted at the
+station, with creakings and groanings continued toward Colon,
+and again Las Palmas returned to sleep.
+
+And, then, quickly and viciously, like the crack of a mule-whip,
+came the reports of a pistol; and once more the hot and dripping
+silence.
+
+On post at the railroad-station, whence the shots came, was Meehan,
+one of the Zone police, an ex-sergeant of marines. On top of the hill,
+outside the infantry barracks, was another policeman, Bullard, once a
+cowboy.
+
+Standish ran to the veranda and heard the pebbles scattering as
+Bullard leaped down the hill, and when, in the light from the
+open door, he passed, the lieutenant shouted at him to find Meehan
+and report back. Then the desk telephone rang, and Standish
+returned to his chair.
+
+"This is Meehan," said a voice. "Those shots just now were fired
+by Major Aintree. He came down on the night train and jumped off
+after the train was pulling out and stumbled into a negro, and
+fell. He's been drinking and he swore the nigger pushed him; and
+the man called Aintree a liar. Aintree pulled his gun and the
+nigger ran. Aintree fired twice; then I got to him and knocked
+the gun out of his hand with my nightstick."
+
+There was a pause. Until he was sure his voice would be steady
+and official, the boy lieutenant did not speak.
+
+"Did he hit the negro?" he asked.
+
+"I don't know," Meehan answered. "The man jumped for the darkest
+spot he could find." The voice of Meehan lost its professional
+calm and became personal and aggrieved.
+
+"Aintree's on his way to see you now, lieutenant. He's going to
+report me."
+
+"For what?"
+
+The voice over the telephone rose indignantly.
+
+"For knocking the gun out of his hand. He says it's an assault.
+He's going to break me!"
+
+Standish made no comment.
+
+"Report here," he ordered.
+
+He heard Bullard hurrying up the hill and met him at the foot of
+the steps.
+
+"There's a nigger," began Bullard, "lying under some bushes--"
+
+"Hush!" commanded Standish.
+
+From the path below came the sound of footsteps approaching
+unsteadily, and the voice of a man swearing and muttering to
+himself. Standish pulled the ex-cowboy into the shadow of the
+darkness and spoke in eager whispers.
+
+"You understand," he concluded, "you will not report until you
+see me pick up a cigar from the desk and light it. You will wait
+out here in the darkness. When you see me light the cigar, you
+will come in and report."
+
+The cowboy policeman nodded, but without enthusiasm. "I
+understand, lieutenant," he said, "but," he shook his head doubtfully,
+"it sizes up to me like what those police up in New York call a
+'frame-up.'"
+
+Standish exclaimed impatiently.
+
+"It's not my frame-up!" he said. "The man's framed himself up.
+All I'm going to do is to nail him to the wall!"
+
+Standish had only time to return to his desk when Aintree stumbled
+up the path and into the station-house. He was "fighting drunk,"
+ugly, offensive, all but incoherent with anger.
+
+"You in charge?" he demanded. He did not wait for an answer.
+"I've been 'saulted!" he shouted. "'Saulted by one of your damned
+policemen. He struck me--struck me when I was protecting myself.
+He had a nigger with him. First the nigger tripped me; then, when
+I tried to protect myself, this thug of yours hits me, clubs me, you
+unnerstan', clubs me! I want him--"
+
+He was interrupted by the entrance of Meehan, who moved into the
+light from the lamps and saluted his lieutenant.
+
+"That's the man!" roared Aintree. The sight of Meehan whipped him
+into greater fury.
+
+"I want that man broke. I want to see you strip his shield off
+him--now, you unnerstan', now--for 'saulting me, for 'saulting an
+officer in the United States army. And, if you don't," he threw
+himself into a position of the prize-ring, "I'll beat him up and
+you, too." Through want of breath, he stopped, and panted. Again
+his voice broke forth hysterically. "I'm not afraid of your damned
+night-sticks," he taunted. "I got five hundred men on top this hill,
+all I've got to do is to say the word, and they'll rough-house this
+place and throw it into the cut--and you with it."
+
+Standish rose to his feet, and across the desk looked steadily at
+Aintree. To Aintree the steadiness of his eyes and the quietness
+of his voice were an added aggravation.
+
+"Suppose you did," said Standish, "that would not save you."
+
+"From what?" roared Aintree. "Think I'm afraid of your night-
+sticks?"
+
+"From arrest!"
+
+"Arrest me!" yelled Aintree. "Do you know who's talking to you?
+Do you know who I am? I'm Major Aintree, damn you, commanding
+the infantry. An' I'm here to charge that thug--"
+
+"You are here because you are under arrest," said Standish. "You
+are arrested for threatening the police, drunkenness, and assaulting
+a citizen with intent to kill--" The voice of the young man turned shrill
+and rasping. "And if the man should die--"
+
+Aintree burst into a bellow of mocking laughter.
+
+Standish struck the desk with his open palm.
+
+"Silence!" he commanded.
+
+"Silence to me!" roared Aintree, "you impertinent pup!" He flung
+himself forward, shaking his fist. "I'm Major Aintree. I'm your
+superior officer. I'm an officer an' a gentleman--"
+
+"You are not!" replied Standish. "You are a drunken loafer!"
+
+Aintree could not break the silence. Amazement, rage, stupefaction
+held him in incredulous wonder. Even Meehan moved uneasily.
+Between the officer commanding the infantry and an officer of
+police, he feared the lieutenant would not survive.
+
+But he heard the voice of his lieutenant continuing, evenly,
+coldly, like the voice of a judge delivering sentence.
+
+"You are a drunken loafer," repeated the boy. "And you know it.
+And I mean that to-morrow morning every one on the Zone shall know
+it. And I mean to-morrow night every one in the States shall know
+it. You've killed a man, or tried to, and I'm going to break you."
+With his arm he pointed to Meehan. "Break that man?" he demanded.
+"For doing his duty, for trying to stop a murder? Strip him of his
+shield?" The boy laughed savagely. "It's you I am going to strip,
+Aintree," he cried, "you 'hero of Batangas'; I'm going to strip you
+naked. I'm going to 'cut the buttons off your coat, and tear the stripes
+away.' I'm going to degrade you and disgrace you, and drive you out
+of the army!" He threw his note-book on the table. "There's your dossier,
+Aintree," he said. "For three months you've been drunk, and there's your
+record. The police got it for me; it's written there with dates and the names
+of witnesses. I'll swear to it. I've been after you to get you, and I've got
+you.
+With that book, with what you did to-night, you'll leave the army. You
+may resign, you may be court-martialled, you may be hung. I don't
+give a damn what they do to you, but you will leave the army!"
+
+He turned to Meehan, and with a jerk of the hand signified Aintree.
+
+"Put him in a cell," he said. "If he resists--"
+
+Aintree gave no sign of resisting. He stood motionless, his arms
+hanging limp, his eyes protruding. The liquor had died in him, and
+his anger had turned chill. He tried to moisten his lips to speak,
+but his throat was baked, and no sound issued. He tried to focus
+his eyes upon the menacing little figure behind the desk, but
+between the two lamps it swayed, and shrank and swelled. Of one
+thing only was he sure, that some grave disaster had overtaken
+him, something that when he came fully to his senses still would
+overwhelm him, something he could not conquer with his fists.
+His brain, even befuddled as it was, told him he had been caught
+by the heels, that he was in a trap, that smashing this boy who
+threatened him could not set him free. He recognized, and it was
+this knowledge that stirred him with alarm, that this was no
+ordinary officer of justice, but a personal enemy, an avenging
+spirit who, for some unknown reason, had spread a trap; who, for
+some private purpose of revenge, would drag him down.
+
+Frowning painfully, he waved Meehan from him.
+
+"Wait," he commanded. "I don' unnerstan'. What good's it goin' to
+do you to lock me up an' disgrace me? What harm have I done you?
+Who asked you to run the army, anyway? Who are you?"
+
+"My name is Standish," said the lieutenant. "My father was colonel
+of the Thirty-third when you first joined it from the Academy."
+
+Aintree exclaimed with surprise and enlightenment. He broke into
+hurried speech, but Standish cut him short.
+
+"And General Standish of the Mexican War," he continued, "was my
+grandfather. Since Washington all my people have been officers of
+the regular army, and I'd been one, too, if I'd been bright enough.
+That's why I respect the army. That's why I'm going to throw you
+out of it. You've done harm fifty men as good as you can't undo.
+You've made drunkards of a whole battalion. You've taught boys
+who looked up to you, as I looked up to you once, to laugh at
+discipline, to make swine of themselves. You've set them an example.
+I'm going to make an example of you. That's all there is to this. I've
+got no grudge against you. I'm not vindictive; I'm sorry for you. But,"
+he paused and pointed his hand at Aintree as though it held a gun,
+"you are going to leave the army!"
+
+Like a man coming out of an ugly dream, Aintree opened and shut
+his eyes, shivered, and stretched his great muscles. They watched
+him with an effort of the will force himself back to consciousness.
+When again he spoke, his tone was sane.
+
+"See here, Standish," he began, "I'll not beg of you or any man.
+I only ask you to think what you're doing. This means my finish.
+If you force this through to-night it means court-martial, it means
+I lose my commission, I lose--lose things you know nothing about.
+And, if I've got a record for drinking, I've got a record for other
+things, too. Don't forget that!"
+
+Standish shook his head. "I didn't forget it," he said.
+
+"Well, suppose I did," demanded Aintree. "Suppose I did go on
+the loose, just to pass the time, just because I'm sick of this damned
+ditch? Is it fair to wipe out all that went before, for that? I'm the
+youngest major in the army, I served in three campaigns, I'm a
+medal-of-honor man, I've got a career ahead of me, and--and I'm
+going to be married. If you give me a chance-"
+
+Standish struck the table with his fist.
+
+"I will give you a chance," he cried. "If you'll give your word to this
+man and to me, that, so help you God, you'll never drink again--I'll
+let you go."
+
+If what Standish proposed had been something base, Aintree could
+not have accepted it with more contempt.
+
+"I'll see you in hell first," he said.
+
+As though the interview was at an end, Standish dropped into his
+chair and leaning forward, from the table picked up a cigar. As
+he lit it, he motioned Meehan toward his prisoner, but before the
+policeman could advance the sound of footsteps halted him.
+
+Bullard, his eyes filled with concern, leaped up the steps, and
+ran to the desk.
+
+"Lieutenant!" he stammered, "that man--the nigger that officer
+shot--he's dead!"
+
+Aintree gave a gasp that was partly a groan, partly a cry of
+protest, and Bullard, as though for the first time aware of his
+presence, sprang back to the open door and placed himself between
+it and Aintree.
+
+"It's murder!" he said.
+
+None of the three men spoke; and when Meehan crossed to where
+Aintree stood, staring fearfully at nothing, he had only to touch
+his sleeve, and Aintree, still staring, fell into step beside him.
+
+From the yard outside Standish heard the iron door of the cell
+swing shut, heard the key grate in the lock, and the footsteps of
+Meehan returning.
+
+Meehan laid the key upon the desk, and with Bullard stood at
+attention, waiting.
+
+"Give him time," whispered Standish. "Let it sink in!"
+
+At the end of half an hour Standish heard Aintree calling, and,
+with Meehan carrying a lantern, stepped into the yard and stopped
+at the cell door.
+
+Aintree was quite sober. His face was set and white, his voice
+was dull with suffering. He stood erect, clasping the bars in his
+hands.
+
+"Standish," he said, "you gave me a chance a while ago, and I
+refused it. I was rough about it. I'm sorry. It made me hot
+because I thought you were forcing my hand, blackmailing me into
+doing something I ought to do as a free agent. Now, I am a free
+agent. You couldn't give me a chance now, you couldn't let me go
+now, not if I swore on a thousand Bibles. I don't know what
+they'll give me--Leavenworth for life, or hanging, or just dismissal.
+But, you've got what you wanted--I'm leaving the army!" Between
+the bars he stretched out his arms and held a hand toward Meehan
+and Standish. In the same dull, numbed voice he continued.
+
+"So, now," he went on, "that I've nothing to gain by it, I want
+to swear to you and to this man here, that whether I hang, or go
+to jail, or am turned loose, I will never, so help me God, take
+another drink."
+
+Standish was holding the hand of the man who once had been his
+hero. He clutched it tight.
+
+"Aintree," he cried, "suppose I could work a miracle; suppose I've
+played a trick on you, to show you your danger, to show you what
+might come to you any day--does that oath still stand?"
+
+The hand that held his ground the bones together.
+
+"I've given my word!" cried Aintree. "For the love of God, don't
+torture me. Is the man alive?"
+
+As Standish swung open the cell door, the hero of Batangas,
+he who could thrash any man on the isthmus, crumpled up
+like a child upon his shoulder.
+
+And Meehan, as he ran for water, shouted joyfully.
+
+"That nigger," he called to Bullard, "can go home now. The lieutenant
+don't want him no more.
+"
+
+
+
+
+EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+
+
+
+As a rule, the instant the season closed Aline Proctor sailed on
+the first steamer for London, where awaited her many friends,
+both English and American--and to Paris, where she selected those
+gowns that on and off the stage helped to make her famous. But
+this particular summer she had spent with the Endicotts at Bar
+Harbor, and it was at their house Herbert Nelson met her. After
+Herbert met her very few other men enjoyed that privilege. This
+was her wish as well as his.
+
+They behaved disgracefully. Every morning after breakfast they
+disappeared and spent the day at opposite ends of a canoe. She,
+knowing nothing of a canoe, was happy in stabbing the waters with
+her paddle while he told her how he loved her and at the same
+time, with anxious eyes on his own paddle, skilfully frustrated
+her efforts to drown them both. While the affair lasted it was
+ideal and beautiful, but unfortunately it lasted only two months.
+
+Then Lord Albany, temporarily in America as honorary attache to
+the British embassy, his adoring glances, his accent, and the way
+he brushed his hair, proved too much for the susceptible heart of
+Aline, and she chucked Herbert and asked herself how a woman of
+her age could have seriously considered marrying a youth just out
+of Harvard! At that time she was a woman of nineteen; but, as she
+had been before the public ever since she was eleven, the women
+declared she was not a day under twenty-six; and the men knew she
+could not possibly be over sixteen!
+
+Aline's own idea of herself was that without some one in love
+with her she could not exist--that, unless she knew some man cared
+for her and for her alone, she would wither and die. As a matter
+of fact, whether any one loved her or not did not in the least
+interest her. There were several dozen men who could testify to
+that. They knew! What she really wanted was to be head over ears
+in love--to adore some one, to worship him, to imagine herself
+starving for him and making sacrifice hits for him; but when the
+moment came to make the sacrifice hit and marry the man, she
+invariably found that a greater, truer love had arisen--for some
+one else.
+
+This greater and truer love always made her behave abominably to
+the youth she had just jilted. She wasted no time on post-mortems.
+She was so eager to show her absolute loyalty to the new monarch
+that she grudged every thought she ever had given the one she had
+cast into exile. She resented him bitterly. She could not forgive him
+for having allowed her to be desperately in love with him. He should
+have known he was not worthy of such a love as hers. He should have
+known that the real prince was waiting only just round the corner.
+
+As a rule the rejected ones behaved well. Each decided Aline was much
+too wonderful a creature for him, and continued to love her cautiously
+and from a distance. None of them ever spoke or thought ill of her and
+would gladly have punched any one who did. It was only the women
+whose young men Aline had temporarily confiscated, and then returned
+saddened and chastened, who were spiteful. And they dared say no more
+than that Aline would probably have known her mind better if she had
+had a mother to look after her. This, coming to the ears of Aline,
+caused her to reply that a girl who could not keep straight herself,
+but needed a mother to help her, would not keep straight had she a
+dozen mothers. As she put it cheerfully, a girl who goes wrong and
+then pleads "no mother to guide her" is like a jockey who pulls a race
+and then blames the horse.
+
+Each of the young men Aline rejected married some one else and,
+except when the name of Aline Proctor in the theatrical
+advertisements or in electric lights on Broadway gave him a
+start, forgot that for a month her name and his own had been
+linked together from Portland to San Francisco. But the girl he
+married did not forget. She never understood what the public saw
+in Aline Proctor. That Aline was the queen of musical comedy she
+attributed to the fact that Aline knew the right people and got
+herself written about in the right way. But that she could sing,
+dance, act; that she possessed compelling charm; that she "got
+across" not only to the tired business man, the wine agent, the
+college boy, but also to the children and the old ladies, was to
+her never apparent.
+
+Just as Aline could not forgive the rejected suitor for allowing
+her to love him, so the girl he married never forgave Aline for
+having loved her husband. Least of all could Sally Winthrop, who
+two years after the summer at Bar Harbor married Herbert Nelson,
+forgive her. And she let Herbert know it. Herbert was properly
+in love with Sally Winthrop, but he liked to think that his
+engagement to Aline, though brief and abruptly terminated, had
+proved him to be a man fatally attractive to all women. And
+though he was hypnotizing himself into believing that his feeling
+for Aline had been the grand passion, the truth was that all that
+kept her in his thoughts was his own vanity. He was not
+discontented with his lot--his lot being Sally Winthrop, her
+millions, and her estate of three hundred acres near Westbury.
+Nor was he still longing for Aline. It was only that his vanity
+was flattered by the recollection that one of the young women
+most beloved by the public had once loved him.
+
+"I once was a king in Babylon," he used to misquote to himself,
+"and she was a Christian slave."
+
+He was as young as that.
+
+Had he been content in secret to assure himself that he once had
+been a reigning monarch, his vanity would have harmed no one;
+but, unfortunately, he possessed certain documentary evidence to
+that fact. And he was sufficiently foolish not to wish to destroy
+it. The evidence consisted of a dozen photographs he had snapped
+of Aline during the happy days at Bar Harbor, and on which she
+had written phrases somewhat exuberant and sentimental.
+
+From these photographs Nelson was loath to part--especially with
+one that showed Aline seated on a rock that ran into the waters of
+the harbor, and on which she had written: "As long as this rock
+lasts!" Each time she was in love Aline believed it would last.
+That in the past it never had lasted did not discourage her.
+
+What to do with these photographs that so vividly recalled the
+most tumultuous period of his life Nelson could not decide. If he
+hid them away and Sally found them, he knew she would make his
+life miserable. If he died and Sally then found them, when he no
+longer was able to explain that they meant nothing to him, she
+would believe he always had loved the other woman, and it would
+make her miserable. He felt he could not safely keep them in his
+own house; his vanity did not permit him to burn them, and,
+accordingly, he decided to unload them on some one else.
+
+The young man to whom he confided his collection was Charles
+Cochran. Cochran was a charming person from the West. He had
+studied in the Beaux Arts and on foot had travelled over England
+and Europe, preparing himself to try his fortune in New York as
+an architect. He was now in the office of the architects Post &
+Constant, and lived alone in a tiny farmhouse he had made over
+for himself near Herbert Nelson, at Westbury, Long Island.
+
+Post & Constant were a fashionable firm and were responsible for
+many of the French chateaux and English country houses that were
+rising near Westbury, Hempstead, and Roslyn; and it was Cochran's
+duty to drive over that territory in his runabout, keep an eye on
+the contractors, and dissuade clients from grafting mansard roofs
+on Italian villas. He had built the summer home of the Herbert
+Nelsons, and Herbert and Charles were very warm friends. Charles
+was of the same lack of years as was Herbert, of an enthusiastic
+and sentimental nature; and, like many other young men, the story
+of his life also was the lovely and much-desired Aline Proctor.
+It was this coincidence that had made them friends and that had
+led Herbert to select Charles as the custodian of his treasure.
+As a custodian and confidant Charles especially appealed to his
+new friend, because, except upon the stage and in restaurants,
+Charles had never seen Aline Proctor, did not know her--and
+considered her so far above him, so unattainable, that he had no
+wish to seek her out. Unknown, he preferred to worship at a
+distance. In this determination Herbert strongly encouraged him.
+
+When he turned over the pictures to Charles, Herbert could not
+resist showing them to him. They were in many ways charming.
+They presented the queen of musical comedy in several new roles.
+In one she was in a sailor suit, giving an imitation of a girl
+paddling a canoe. In another she was in a riding-habit mounted
+upon a pony of which she seemed very much afraid.
+
+In some she sat like a siren among the rocks with the waves and
+seaweed snatching at her feet, and in another she crouched
+beneath the wheel of Herbert's touring car. All of the
+photographs were unprofessional and intimate, and the
+legends scrawled across them were even more intimate.
+
+"'As long as this rock lasts!'" read Herbert. At arm's length he
+held the picture for Cochran to see, and laughed bitterly and
+unmirthfully as he had heard leading men laugh in problem plays.
+
+"That is what she wrote," he mocked--"but how long did it last?
+Until she saw that little red-headed Albany playing polo. That
+lasted until his mother heard of it. She thought her precious
+lamb was in the clutches of a designing actress, and made the
+Foreign Office cable him home. Then Aline took up one of those
+army aviators, and chucked him for that fellow who painted her
+portrait, and threw him over for the lawn-tennis champion. Now
+she's engaged to Chester Griswold, and Heaven pity her! Of course
+he's the greatest catch in America; but he's a prig and a snob, and
+he's so generous with his money that he'll give you five pennies for
+a nickel any time you ask him. He's got a heart like the metre of a
+taxicab, and he's jealous as a cat. Aline will have a fine time with
+Chester! I knew him at St. Paul's and at Harvard, and he's got as
+much red blood in him as an eel!"
+
+Cochran sprang to the defense of the lady of his dreams.
+
+"There must be some good in the man," he protested, "or Miss
+Proctor-"
+
+"Oh, those solemn snobs," declared Herbert, "impress women by
+just keeping still. Griswold pretends the reason he doesn't speak
+to you is because he's too superior, but the real reason is that
+he knows whenever he opens his mouth he shows he is an ass."
+
+Reluctantly Herbert turned over to Charles the precious pictures.
+"It would be a sin to destroy them, wouldn't it?" he prompted.
+
+Cochran agreed heartily.
+
+"You might even," suggested Herbert, "leave one or two of them
+about. You have so many of Aline already that one more wouldn't
+be noticed. Then when I drop in I could see it." He smiled
+ingratiatingly.
+
+"But those I have I bought," Cochran pointed out. "Anybody can
+buy them, but yours are personal. And they're signed."
+
+"No one will notice that but me," protested Herbert. "Just one or
+two," he coaxed-"stuck round among the others. They'd give me a
+heap of melancholy pleasure."
+
+Charles shook his head doubtfully.
+
+"Your wife often comes here with you," he said. "I don't believe
+they'd give her melancholy pleasure. The question is, are you married
+to Sally or to Aline Proctor?"
+
+"Oh, of course," exclaimed Herbert--" if you refuse!"
+
+With suspicious haste Charles surrendered.
+
+"I don't refuse," he explained; "I only ask if it's wise. Sally
+knows you were once very fond of Miss Proctor--knows you were
+engaged to her."
+
+"But," protested Herbert, "Sally sees your photographs of Aline.
+What difference can a few more make? After she's seen a dozen
+she gets used to them."
+
+No sooner had Herbert left him than the custodian of the treasure
+himself selected the photographs he would display. In them the
+young woman he had--from the front row of the orchestra--so
+ardently admired appeared in a new light. To Cochran they seemed
+at once to render her more kindly, more approachable; to show her
+as she really was, the sort of girl any youth would find it extremely
+difficult not to love. Cochran found it extremely easy. The photographs
+gave his imagination all the room it wanted. He believed they also gave
+him an insight into her real character that was denied to anybody else.
+He had always credited her with all the virtues; he now endowed her
+with every charm of mind and body. In a week to the two photographs
+he had selected from the loan collection for purposes of display and to
+give Herbert melancholy pleasure he had added three more. In two
+weeks there were half a dozen. In a month, nobly framed in silver,
+in leather of red, green, and blue, the entire collection smiled upon him
+from every part of his bedroom. For he now kept them where no one
+but himself could see them. No longer was he of a mind to share
+his borrowed treasure with others--not even with the rightful
+owner.
+
+Chester Griswold, spurred on by Aline Proctor, who wanted to
+build a summer home on Long Island, was motoring with Post, of
+Post & Constant, in the neighborhood of Westbury. Post had
+pointed out several houses designed by his firm, which he hoped
+might assist Griswold in making up his mind as to the kind of
+house he wanted; but none they had seen had satisfied his client.
+
+"What I want is a cheap house," explained the young millionaire.
+"I don't really want a house at all," he complained. "It's Miss
+Proctor's idea. When we are married I intend to move into my
+mother's town house, but Miss Proctor wants one for herself in
+the country. I've agreed to that; but it must be small and it
+must be cheap."
+
+"Cheap" was a word that the clients of Post & Constant never
+used; but Post knew the weaknesses of some of the truly rich, and
+he knew also that no house ever built cost only what the
+architect said it would cost.
+
+"I know the very house you want!" he exclaimed. "One of our
+young men owns it. He made it over from an old farmhouse. It's
+very well arranged; we've used his ground-plan several times and
+it works out splendidly. If he's not at home, I'11 show you over the
+place myself. And if you like the house he's the man to build you one."
+
+When they reached Cochran's home he was at Garden City playing
+golf, but the servant knew Mr. Post, and to him and his client
+threw open every room in the house.
+
+"Now, this," exclaimed the architect enthusiastically, "is the
+master's bedroom. In your case it would probably be your wife's
+room and you would occupy the one adjoining, which Cochran now
+uses as a guest-room. As you see, they are entirely cut off from-"
+
+Mr. Griswold did not see. Up to that moment he had given every
+appearance of being both bored and sulky. Now his attention was
+entirely engaged--but not upon the admirable simplicity of Mr.
+Cochran's ground-plan, as Mr. Post had hoped. Instead, the eyes
+of the greatest catch in America were intently regarding a display
+of photographs that smiled back at him from every corner of the
+room. Not only did he regard these photographs with a savage glare,
+but he approached them and carefully studied the inscriptions scrawled
+across the face of each.
+
+Post himself cast a glance at the nearest photographs, and then
+hastily manoeuvred his client into the hall and closed the door.
+
+"We will now," he exclaimed, "visit the butler's pantry, which
+opens upon the dining-room and kitchen, thus saving--"
+
+But Griswold did not hear him. Without giving another glance at
+the house he stamped out of it and, plumping himself down in the
+motor-car, banged the door. Not until Post had driven him well
+into New York did he make any comment.
+
+"What did you say," he then demanded, "is the name of the man who
+owns that last house we saw?"
+
+Post told him.
+
+"I never heard of him!" said Griswold as though he were
+delivering young Cochran's death sentence. "Who is he?"
+
+"He's an architect in our office," said Post. "We think a lot of
+him. He'll leave us soon, of course. The best ones always do. His
+work is very popular. So is he."
+
+"I never heard of him," repeated Griswold. Then, with sudden
+heat, he added savagely: "But I mean to to-night."
+
+When Griswold had first persuaded Aline Proctor to engage herself
+to him he had suggested that, to avoid embarrassment, she should
+tell him the names of the other men to whom she had been engaged.
+
+"What kind of embarrassment would that avoid?"
+
+"If I am talking to a man," said Griswold, "and he knows the
+woman I'm going to marry was engaged to him and I don't know
+that, he has me at a disadvantage."
+
+"I don't see that he has," said Aline. "If we suppose, for the sake
+of argument, that to marry me is desirable, I would say that the
+man who was going to marry me had the advantage over the one
+I had declined to marry."
+
+"I want to know who those men are," explained Griswold, "because
+I want to avoid them. I don't want to talk to them. I don't want
+even to know them."
+
+"I don't see how I can help you," said Aline. "I haven't the
+slightest objection to telling you the names of the men I have
+cared for, if I can remember them, but I certainly do not intend
+to tell you the name of any man who cared for me enough to ask me
+to marry him. That's his secret, not mine--certainly not yours."
+
+Griswold thought he was very proud. He really was very vain; and
+as jealousy is only vanity in its nastiest development he was
+extremely jealous. So he persisted.
+
+"Will you do this?" he demanded. "If I ever ask you, 'Is that one
+of the men you cared for?' will you tell me?"
+
+"If you wish it," said Aline; "but I can't see any health in it.
+It will only make you uncomfortable. So long as you know I have
+given you the greatest and truest love I am capable of, why
+should you concern yourself with my mistakes?"
+
+"So that I can avoid meeting what you call your mistakes," said
+Griswold--" and being friendly with them."
+
+"I assure you," laughed Aline, "it wouldn't hurt you a bit to be
+as friendly with them as they'd let you. Maybe they weren't as
+proud of their families as you are, but they made up for that by
+being a darned sight prouder of me!"
+
+Later, undismayed by this and unashamed, on two occasions
+Griswold actually did demand of Aline if a genial youth she had
+just greeted joyfully was one of those for whom she once had
+cared.
+
+And Aline had replied promptly and truthfully that he was. But in
+the case of Charles Cochran, Griswold did not ask Aline if he was
+one of those for whom she once had cared. He considered the
+affair with Cochran so serious that, in regard to that man, he
+adopted a different course.
+
+In digging rivals out of the past his jealousy had made him
+indefatigable, but in all his researches he never had heard the
+name of Charles Cochran. That fact and the added circumstance
+that Aline herself never had mentioned the man was in his eyes so
+suspicious as to be almost a damning evidence of deception. And
+he argued that if in the past Aline had deceived him as to Charles
+Cochran she would continue to do so. Accordingly, instead
+of asking her frankly for the truth he proceeded to lay traps for
+it. And if there is one thing Truth cannot abide, it is being
+hunted by traps.
+
+That evening Aline and he were invited to a supper in her honor,
+and as he drove her from the theatre to the home of their hostess
+he told her of his search earlier in the day.
+
+The electric light in the limousine showed Aline's face as
+clearly as though it were held in a spotlight, and as he prepared
+his trap Griswold regarded her jealously.
+
+"Post tells me," he said, "he has the very man you want for your
+architect. He's sure you'll find him most understanding and--and-
+-
+sympathetic. He's a young man who is just coming to the front,
+and he's very popular, especially with women."
+
+"What's his being popular with women," asked Aline, "got to do
+with his carrying out my ideas of a house?"
+
+"That's just it," said Griswold--"it's the woman who generally has
+the most to say as to how her house shall be built, and this man
+understands woman. I have reasons for believing he will certainly
+understand you!"
+
+"If he understands me well enough to give me all the
+linen-closets I want," said Aline, "he will be perfectly
+satisfactory."
+
+Before delivering his blow Griswold sank back into his corner of
+the car, drew his hat brim over his forehead, and fixed spying
+eyes upon the very lovely face of the girl he had asked to marry
+him.
+
+"His name," he said in fateful tones, "is Charles Cochran!"
+
+It was supposed to be a body blow; but, to his distress, Aline
+neither started nor turned pale. Neither, for trying to trick
+her, did she turn upon him in reproof and anger. Instead, with
+alert eyes, she continued to peer out of the window at the
+electric-light advertisements and her beloved Broadway.
+
+"Well?" demanded Griswold; his tone was hoarse and heavy with
+meaning.
+
+"Well what?" asked Aline pleasantly.
+
+"How," demanded Griswold, "do you like Charles Cochran for an
+architect?"
+
+"How should I know?" asked Aline. "I've not met him yet!"
+
+She had said it! And she had said it without the waver of one of
+her lovely eyelashes. No wonder the public already hailed her as
+a finished actress! Griswold felt that his worst fears were
+justified. She had lied to him. And, as he knew she had never
+before lied to him, that now she did so proved beyond hope of
+doubt that the reason for it was vital, imperative, and compelling.
+But of his suspicions Griswold gave no sign. He would not at
+once expose her. He had trapped her, but as yet she must not
+know that. He would wait until he had still further entangled
+her--until she could not escape; and then, with complete proof
+of her deceit, he would confront and overwhelm her.
+
+With this amiable purpose in mind he called early the next morning
+upon Post & Constant and asked to see Mr. Cochran. He wished,
+he said, to consult him about the new house. Post had not yet
+reached the office, and of Griswold's visit with Post to his house
+Cochran was still ignorant. He received Griswold most courteously.
+He felt that the man who was loved by the girl he also had long and
+hopelessly worshipped was deserving of the highest consideration.
+Griswold was less magnanimous. When he found his rival--for as
+such he beheld him--was of charming manners and gallant appearance
+he considered that fact an additional injury; but he concealed his
+resentment, for he was going to trap Cochran, too.
+
+He found the architect at work leaning over a drawing-board, and
+as they talked Cochran continued to stand. He was in his shirt-sleeves,
+which were rolled to his shoulders; and the breadth of those shoulders
+and the muscles of his sunburned arms were much in evidence.
+Griswold considered it a vulgar exhibition.
+
+For over ten minutes they talked solely of the proposed house,
+but not once did Griswold expose the fact that he had seen any
+more of it than any one might see from the public road. When he
+rose to take his leave he said:
+
+"How would it do if I motored out Sunday and showed your house
+to Miss Proctor? Sunday is the only day she has off, and if it would not
+inconvenience you--"
+
+The tender heart of Cochran leaped in wild tumult; he could not
+conceal his delight, nor did he attempt to do so; and his expression
+made it entirely unnecessary for him to assure Griswold that such a
+visit would be entirely welcome and that they might count on finding
+him at home. As though it were an afterthought, Griswold halted at
+the door and said:
+
+"I believe you are already acquainted with Miss Proctor."
+
+Cochran, conscious of five years of devotion, found that he was
+blushing, and longed to strangle himself. Nor was the blush lost
+upon Griswold.
+
+"I'm sorry," said Cochran, "but I've not had that honor. On the
+stage, of course--"
+
+He shrugged the broad shoulders deprecatingly, as though to suggest
+that not to know Miss Proctor as an artist argues oneself unknown.
+
+Griswold pretended to be puzzled. As though endeavoring to recall
+a past conversation he frowned.
+
+"But Aline," he said, "told me she had met you-met you at Bar
+Harbor." In the fatal photographs the familiar landfalls of Bar
+Harbor had been easily recognized.
+
+The young architect shook his head.
+
+"It must be another Cochran," he suggested. "I have never been in
+Bar Harbor."
+
+With the evidence of the photographs before him this last
+statement was a verdict of guilty, and Griswold, not with the
+idea of giving Cochran a last chance to be honest, but to cause
+him to dig the pit still deeper, continued to lead him on. "Maybe
+she meant York Harbor?"
+
+Again Cochran shook his head and laughed.
+
+"Believe me," he said, "if I'd ever met Miss Proctor anywhere I
+wouldn't forget it!"
+
+Ten minutes later Griswold was talking to Aline over the telephone.
+He intended to force matters. He would show Aline she could neither
+trifle with nor deceive Chester Griswold; but the thought that he had
+been deceived was not what most hurt him. What hurt him was to
+think that Aline had preferred a man who looked like an advertisement
+for ready-made clothes and who worked in his shirt-sleeves.
+
+Griswold took it for granted that any woman would be glad to marry him.
+So many had been willing to do so that he was convinced, when one of
+them was not, it was not because there was anything wrong with him,
+but because the girl herself lacked taste and perception.
+
+That the others had been in any degree moved by his many millions
+had never suggested itself. He was convinced each had loved him for
+himself alone; and if Aline, after meeting him, would still consider any
+one else, it was evident something was very wrong with Aline. He was
+determined that she must be chastened--must be brought to a proper
+appreciation of her good fortune and of his condescension.
+
+On being called to the telephone at ten in the morning, Aline
+demanded to know what could excuse Griswold for rousing her
+in the middle of the night!
+
+Griswold replied that, though the day was young, it also was
+charming; that on Sunday there might be rain; and that if she
+desired to see the house he and Post thought would most suit her,
+he and his car would be delighted to convey her to it. They could
+make the run in an hour, lunch with friends at Westbury, and
+return in plenty of time for the theatre. Aline was delighted at
+the sudden interest Griswold was showing in the new house.
+Without a moment's hesitation she walked into the trap. She
+would go, she declared, with pleasure. In an hour he should
+call for her.
+
+Exactly an hour later Post arrived at his office. He went directly
+to Cochran.
+
+"Charles," he said, "I'm afraid I got you into trouble yesterday.
+I took a client to see your house. You have often let us do it before;
+but since I was there last you've made some changes. In your bedroom--"
+Post stopped.
+
+Cochran's naive habit of blushing told him it was not necessary
+to proceed. In tones of rage and mortification Cochran swore
+explosively; Post was relieved to find he was swearing at himself.
+
+"I ought to be horsewhipped!" roared Cochran. "I'll never forgive
+myself! Who," he demanded, "saw the pictures? Was it a man or a
+woman?"
+
+Post laughed unhappily.
+
+"It was Chester Griswold."
+
+A remarkable change came over Cochran. Instead of sobering him,
+as Post supposed it would, the information made him even more
+angry--only now his anger was transferred from himself to Griswold.
+
+"The blankety-blank bounder!" yelled Cochran. "That was what he
+wanted! That's why he came here!"
+
+"Here!" demanded Post.
+
+"Not an hour ago," cried Cochran. "He asked me about Bar Harbor.
+He saw those pictures were taken at Bar Harbor!"
+
+"I think," said Post soothingly, "he'd a right to ask questions.
+There were so many pictures, and they were very--well--very!"
+
+"I'd have answered his questions," roared Cochran, "if he'd asked
+them like a man, but he came snooping down here to spy on me.
+He tried to trick me. He insulted me! He insulted her!" He emitted
+a howl of dismay. "And I told him I'd never been to Bar Harbor--
+that I'd never met Aline Proctor!"
+
+Cochran seized his coat and hat. He shouted to one of the office
+boys to telephone the garage for his car.
+
+"What are you--where are you going?" demanded Post.
+
+"I'm going home first," cried Cochran, "to put those pictures in
+a safe, as I should have done three months ago. And then I'm
+going to find Chester Griswold and tell him he's an ass and a
+puppy!"
+
+"If you do that," protested Post, "you're likely to lose us a very
+valuable client."
+
+"And your client," roared Charles, "is likely to lose some very
+valuable teeth!"
+
+As Charles whirled into the country road in which stood his house
+he saw drawn up in front of it the long gray car in which, that morning,
+Chester Griswold had called at the office. Cochran emitted a howl of
+anger. Was his home again to be invaded? And again while he was
+absent? To what extreme would Griswold's jealousy next lead him?
+He fell out of his own car while it still moved, and leaped up the garden
+walk. The front rooms of the house were empty, but from his bedroom
+he heard, raised in excited tones, the voice of Griswold. The audacity
+of the man was so surprising, and his own delight at catching him
+red-handed so satisfying, that no longer was Cochran angry. The Lord
+had delivered his enemy into his hands! And, as he advanced toward his
+bedroom, not only was he calm, but, at the thought of his revenge,
+distinctly jubilant. In the passageway a frightened maid servant, who,
+at his unexpected arrival, was now even more frightened, endeavored
+to give him an explanation; but he waved her into silence, and, striding
+before her, entered his bedroom.
+
+He found confronting him a tall and beautiful young woman. It was
+not the Aline Proctor he knew. It was not the well-poised, gracious,
+and distinguished beauty he had seen gliding among the tables at
+Sherry's or throwing smiles over the footlights. This Aline Proctor
+was a very indignant young person, with flashing eyes, tossing head,
+and a stamping foot. Extended from her at arm's length, she held a
+photograph of herself in a heavy silver frame; and, as though it were
+a weapon, she was brandishing it in the face of Chester Griswold.
+As Cochran, in amazement, halted in the doorway she was exclaiming:
+
+"I told you I didn't know Charles Cochran! I tell you so now! If you
+can't believe me-"
+
+Out of the corner of her flashing eyes the angry lady caught sight of
+Cochran in the doorway. She turned upon the intruder as though she
+meant forcibly to eject him.
+
+"Who are you?" she demanded. Her manner and tone seemed to add:
+"And what the deuce are you doing here?"
+
+Charles answered her tone.
+
+"I am Charles Cochran," he said. "I live here. This is my house!"
+
+These words had no other effect upon Miss Proctor than to switch
+her indignation down another track. She now turned upon Charles.
+
+"Then, if this is your house," cried that angry young person,
+"why have you filled it with photographs of me that belong to
+some one else?"
+
+Charles saw that his hour had come. His sin had found him out. He
+felt that to prevaricate would be only stupid.
+
+Griswold had tried devious methods--and look where his devious
+methods had dumped him! Griswold certainly was in wrong. Charles
+quickly determined to adopt a course directly opposite. Griswold
+had shown an utter lack of confidence in Aline. Charles decided
+that he would give her his entire confidence, would throw himself
+upon the mercy of the court.
+
+"I have those photographs in my house, Miss Proctor," he said,
+"because I have admired you a long time. They were more like you
+than those I could buy. Having them here has helped me a lot, and it
+hasn't done you any harm. You know very well you have anonymous
+admirers all over this country. I'm only one of them. If I have offended,
+I have offended with many, many thousands."
+
+Already it has been related that Cochran was very good to look
+upon. At the present moment, as he spoke in respectful, even
+soulful accents, meekly and penitently proclaiming his
+long-concealed admiration, Miss Proctor found her indignation
+melting like an icicle in the sun.
+
+Still, she did not hold herself cheaply. She was accustomed to
+such open flattery. She would not at once capitulate.
+
+"But these pictures," she protested, "I gave to a man I knew. You
+have no right to them. They are not at all the sort of picture I
+would give to an utter stranger!" With anxiety the lovely lady
+paused for a reply. She hoped that the reply the tall young man
+with appealing eyes would make would be such as to make it
+possible for her to forgive him.
+
+He was not given time to reply. With a mocking snort Griswold
+interrupted. Aline and Charles had entirely forgotten him.
+
+"An utter stranger!" mimicked Griswold. "Oh, yes; he's an utter
+stranger! You're pretty good actors, both of you; but you can't
+keep that up long, and you'd better stop it now."
+
+"Stop what?" asked Miss Proctor. Her tone was cold and calm, but
+in her eyes was a strange light. It should have warned Griswold
+that he would have been safer under the bed.
+
+"Stop pretending!" cried Griswold. "I won't have it!"
+
+"I don't understand," said Miss Proctor. She spoke in the same
+cold voice, only now it had dropped several degrees nearer freezing.
+"I don't think you understand yourself. You won't have what?"
+
+Griswold now was frightened, and that made him reckless. Instead
+of withdrawing he plunged deeper.
+
+"I won't have you two pretending you don't know each other," he
+blustered. "I won't stand being fooled! If you're going to deceive
+me before we're married, what will you do after we're married?"
+
+Charles emitted a howl. It was made up of disgust, amazement, and
+rage. Fiercely he turned upon Miss Proctor.
+
+"Let me have him!" he begged.
+
+"No!" almost shouted Miss Proctor. Her tone was no longer cold--it
+was volcanic. Her eyes, flashing beautifully, were fixed upon Griswold.
+She made a gesture as though to sweep Charles out of the room.
+"Please go!" she demanded. "This does not concern you."
+
+Her tone was one not lightly to be disregarded. Charles disregarded it.
+
+"It does concern me," he said briskly. "Nobody can insult a woman
+in my house--you, least of all!" He turned upon the greatest catch
+in America. "Griswold," he said, "I never met this lady until I
+came into this room; but I know her, understand her, value her
+better than you'd understand her if you knew her a thousand
+years!"
+
+Griswold allowed him to go no farther.
+
+"I know this much," he roared: "she was in love with the man who
+took those photographs, and that man was in love with her! And
+you're that man!"
+
+"What if I am!" roared back Charles. "Men always have loved her;
+men always will--because she's a fine, big, wonderful woman! You
+can't see that, and you never will. You insulted her! Now I'll give
+you time to apologize for that, and then I'll order you out of this
+house! And if Miss Proctor is the sort of girl I think she is, she'll
+order you out of it, too!"
+
+Both men swung toward Miss Proctor. Her eyes were now smiling
+excitedly. She first turned them upon Charles, blushing most
+becomingly.
+
+"Miss Proctor," she said, "hopes she is the sort of girl
+Mr. Cochran thinks she is." She then turned upon the greatest
+catch in America. "You needn't wait, Chester," she said, "not
+even to apologize."
+
+Chester Griswold, alone in his car, was driven back to New York.
+On the way he invented a story to explain why, at the eleventh
+hour, he had jilted Aline Proctor; but when his thoughts reverted
+to the young man he had seen working with his sleeves rolled up
+he decided it would be safer to let Miss Proctor tell of the broken
+engagement in her own way.
+
+Charles would not consent to drive his fair guest back to New
+York until she had first honored him with her presence at
+luncheon. It was served for two, on his veranda, under the
+climbing honeysuckles. During the luncheon he told her all.
+
+Miss Proctor, in the light of his five years of devotion,
+magnanimously forgave him.
+
+"Such a pretty house!" she exclaimed as they drove away from it.
+"When Griswold selected it for our honeymoon he showed his first
+appreciation of what I really like."
+
+"It is still at your service!" said Charles.
+
+Miss Proctor's eyes smiled with a strange light, but she did not
+speak. It was a happy ride; but when Charles left her at the door
+of her apartment-house he regarded sadly and with regret the
+bundle of retrieved photographs that she carried away.
+
+"What is it?" she asked kindly.
+
+"I'm thinking of going back to those empty frames," said Charles,
+and blushed deeply. Miss Proctor blushed also. With delighted
+and guilty eyes she hastily scanned the photographs. Snatching one
+from the collection, she gave it to him and then ran up the steps.
+
+In the light of the spring sunset the eyes of Charles devoured
+the photograph of which, at last, he was the rightful owner. On
+it was written: "As long as this rock lasts!"
+
+As Charles walked to his car his expression was distinctly
+thoughtful.
+
+
+
+
+THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+
+
+
+When his hunting trip in Uganda was over, Hemingway shipped his
+specimens and weapons direct from Mombasa to New York, but he
+himself journeyed south over the few miles that stretched to
+Zanzibar.
+
+On the outward trip the steamer had touched there, and the
+little he saw of the place had so charmed him that all the time
+he was on safari he promised himself he would not return home
+without revisiting it. On the morning he arrived he had called
+upon Harris, his consul, to inquire about the hotel; and that
+evening Harris had returned his call and introduced him at
+the club.
+
+One of the men there asked Hemingway what brought him to
+Africa, and when he answered simply and truthfully that he had
+come to shoot big game, it was as though he had said something
+clever, and every one smiled. On the way back to the hotel, as
+they felt their way through the narrow slits in the wall that
+served as streets, he asked the consul why every one had smiled.
+
+The consul laughed evasively.
+
+"It's a local joke," he explained. "A lot of men come here for
+reasons best kept to themselves, and they all say what you said,
+that they've come to shoot big game. It's grown to be a polite
+way of telling a man it is none of his business."
+
+"But I didn't mean it that way," protested Hemingway. "I really
+have been after big game for the last eight months."
+
+In the tone one uses to quiet a drunken man or a child, the
+consul answered soothingly.
+
+"Of course," he assented-- "of course you have." But to show he
+was not hopelessly credulous, and to keep Hemingway from
+involving himself deeper, he hinted tactfully: "Maybe they
+noticed you came ashore with only one steamer trunk and no
+gun-cases."
+
+"Oh, that's easily explained," laughed Hemingway. "My heavy
+luggage--"
+
+The consul had reached his house and his "boy" was pounding upon
+it with his heavy staff.
+
+"Please don't explain to me," he begged. "It's quite unnecessary.
+Down here we're so darned glad to see any white man that we don't
+ask anything of him except that he won't hurry away. We judge
+them as they behave themselves here; we don't care what they are
+at home or why they left it."
+
+Hemingway was highly amused. To find that he, a respectable,
+sport-loving Hemingway of Massachusetts, should be mistaken for a
+gun-runner, slave-dealer, or escaping cashier greatly delighted
+him.
+
+"All right!" he exclaimed. "I'll promise not to bore you with my past,
+and I agree to be judged by Zanzibar standards. I only hope I can
+live up to them, for I see I am going to like the place very much."
+
+Hemingway kept his promise. He bored no one with confidences as
+to his ancestors. Of his past he made a point never to speak. He
+preferred that the little community into which he had dropped
+should remain unenlightened, should take him as they found him.
+Of the fact that a college was named after his grandfather and
+that on his father's railroad he could travel through many
+States, he was discreetly silent.
+
+The men of Zanzibar asked no questions. That Hemingway could play
+a stiff game of tennis, a stiffer game of poker, and, on the piano, songs
+from home was to them sufficient recommendation. In a week he had
+become one of the most popular members of Zanzibar society. It was
+as though he had lived there always. Hemingway found himself reaching
+out to grasp the warmth of the place as a flower turns to the sun. He
+discovered that for thirty years something in him had been cheated.
+For thirty years he had believed that completely to satisfy his soul all
+he needed was the gray stone walls and the gray-shingled cabins under
+the gray skies of New England, that what in nature he most loved was
+the pine forests and the fields of goldenrod on the rock-bound coast
+of the North Shore. But now, like a man escaped from prison, he
+leaped and danced in the glaring sunlight of the equator, he revelled
+in the reckless generosity of nature, in the glorious confusion of
+colors, in the "blooming blue" of the Indian Ocean, in the Arabian
+nights spent upon the housetops under the purple sky, and beneath
+silver stars so near that he could touch them with his hand.
+
+He found it like being perpetually in a comic opera and playing a
+part in one. For only the scenic artist would dare to paint houses
+in such yellow, pink, and cobalt-blue; only a "producer" who had
+never ventured farther from Broadway than the Atlantic City
+boardwalk would have conceived costumes so mad and so
+magnificent. Instinctively he cast the people of Zanzibar in the
+conventional roles of musical comedy.
+
+His choruses were already in waiting. There was the Sultan's
+body-guard in gold-laced turbans, the merchants of the bazaars in
+red fezzes and gowns of flowing silk, the Malay sailors in blue,
+the black native police in scarlet, the ladies of the harems closely
+veiled and cloaked, the market women in a single garment of
+orange, or scarlet, or purple, or of all three, and the happy,
+hilarious Zanzibari boys in the color God gave them.
+
+For hours he would sit under the yellow-and-green awning of the
+Greek hotel and watch the procession pass, or he would lie under
+an umbrella on the beach and laugh as the boatmen lifted their
+passengers to their shoulders and with them splash through the
+breakers, or in the bazaars for hours he would bargain with the
+Indian merchants, or in the great mahogany hall of the Ivory
+House, to the whisper of a punka and the tinkle of ice in a tall
+glass, listen to tales of Arab raids, of elephant poachers, of
+the trade in white and black ivory, of the great explorers who
+had sat in that same room--of Emin Pasha, of Livingstone, of
+Stanley. His comic opera lacked only a heroine and the love
+interest.
+
+When he met Mrs. Adair he found both. Polly Adair, as every
+one who dared to do so preferred to call her, was, like himself, an
+American and, though absurdly young, a widow. In the States she
+would have been called an extremely pretty girl. In a community
+where the few dozen white women had wilted and faded in the
+fierce sun of the equator, and where the rest of the women were
+jet black except their teeth, which were dyed an alluring purple,
+Polly Adair was as beautiful as a June morning. At least, so
+Hemingway thought the first time he saw her, and each succeeding
+time he thought her more beautiful, more lovely, more to be loved.
+
+He met her, three days after his arrival, at the residence of the
+British agent and consul-general, where Lady Firth was giving tea
+to the six nurses from the English hospital and to all the other
+respectable members of Zanzibar society.
+
+"My husband's typist," said her ladyship as she helped Hemingway
+to tea, "is a copatriot of yours. She's such a nice gell; not a bit like
+an American. I don't know what I'd do in this awful place without her.
+Promise me," she begged tragically, "you will not ask her to marry you."
+
+Unconscious of his fate, Hemingway promised.
+
+"Because all the men do," sighed Lady Firth, "and I never know
+what morning one of the wretches won't carry her off to a home of
+her own. And then what would become of me? Men are so selfish!
+If you must fall in love," suggested her ladyship, "promise me you
+will fall in love with"--she paused innocently and raised baby-blue
+eyes, in a baby-like stare--"with some one else."
+
+Again Hemingway promised. He bowed gallantly. "That will be quite
+easy," he said.
+
+Her ladyship smiled, but Hemingway did not see the smile. He was
+looking past her at a girl from home, who came across the terrace
+carrying in her hand a stenographer's note-book.
+
+Lady Firth followed the direction of his eyes and saw the look in
+them. She exclaimed with dismay:
+
+"Already! Already he deserts me, even before the ink is dry on
+the paper."
+
+She drew the note-book from Mrs. Adair's fingers and dropped it
+under the tea-table.
+
+"Letters must wait, my child," she declared.
+
+"But Sir George--" protested the girl.
+
+"Sir George must wait, too," continued his wife; "the Foreign Office
+must wait, the British Empire must wait until you have had your tea."
+
+The girl laughed helplessly. As though assured her fellow
+countryman would comprehend, she turned to him.
+
+"They're so exactly like what you want them to be," she said--"I
+mean about their tea!"
+
+Hemingway smiled back with such intimate understanding that
+Lady Firth glanced up inquiringly.
+
+"Have you met Mrs. Adair already?" she asked.
+
+"No," said Hemingway, "but I have been trying to meet her for
+thirty years."
+
+Perplexed, the Englishwoman frowned, and then, with delight at
+her own perspicuity, laughed aloud.
+
+"I know," she cried, "in your country you are what they call a
+'hustler'! Is that right?" She waved them away. "Take Mrs. Adair
+over there," she commanded, "and tell her all the news from home.
+Tell her about the railroad accidents and 'washouts' and the
+latest thing in lynching."
+
+The young people stretched out in long wicker chairs in the shade
+of a tree covered with purple flowers. On a perch at one side of
+them an orang-outang in a steel belt was combing the whiskers of
+her infant daughter; at their feet what looked like two chow puppies,
+but which happened to be Lady Firth's pet lions, were chewing each
+other's toothless gums; and in the immediate foreground the hospital
+nurses were defying the sun at tennis while the Sultan's band played
+selections from a Gaiety success of many years in the past. With these
+surroundings it was difficult to talk of home. Nor on any later occasions,
+except through inadvertence, did they talk of home.
+
+For the reasons already stated, it amused Hemingway to volunteer
+no confidences. On account of what that same evening Harris told
+him of Mrs. Adair, he asked none.
+
+Harris himself was a young man in no way inclined to withhold
+confidences. He enjoyed giving out information. He enjoyed
+talking about himself, his duties, the other consuls, the Zanzibaris,
+and his native State of Iowa. So long as he was permitted to talk,
+the listener could select the subject. But, combined with his loquacity,
+Hemingway had found him kind-hearted, intelligent, observing, and
+the call of a common country had got them quickly together.
+
+Hemingway was quite conscious that the girl he had seen but once
+had impressed him out of all proportion to what he knew of her.
+She seemed too good to be true. And he tried to persuade himself
+that after eight months in the hinterland among hippos and zebras
+any reasonably attractive girl would have proved equally disturbing.
+
+But he was not convinced. He did not wish to be convinced. He
+assured himself that had he met Mrs. Adair at home among hundreds
+of others he would have recognized her as a woman of exceptional
+character, as one especially charming. He wanted to justify this
+idea of her; he wanted to talk of Mrs. Adair to Harris, not to learn
+more concerning her, but just for the pleasure of speaking her name.
+
+He was much upset at that, and the discovery that on meeting a
+woman for the first time he still could be so boyishly and ingenuously
+moved greatly pleased him. It was a most delightful secret. So he acted
+on the principle that when a man immensely admires a woman and
+wishes to conceal that fact from every one else he can best do so by
+declaring his admiration in the frankest and most open manner. After
+the tea-party, as Harris and himself sat in the consulate, he so expressed
+himself.
+
+"What an extraordinary nice girl," he exclaimed, "is that Mrs. Adair!
+I had a long talk with her. She is most charming. However did a
+woman like that come to be in a place like this?"
+
+Judging from his manner, it seemed to Hemingway that at the
+mention of Mrs. Adair's name he had found Harris mentally on
+guard, as though the consul had guessed the question would come
+and had prepared for it.
+
+"She just dropped in here one day," said Harris, "from no place
+in particular. Personally, I always have thought from heaven."
+
+"It's a good address," said Hemingway.
+
+"It seems to suit her," the consul agreed. "Anyway, if she doesn't come
+from there, that's where she's going--just on account of the good she's
+done us while she's been here. She arrived four months ago with a
+typewriting-machine and letters to me from our consuls in Cape Town
+and Durban. She had done some typewriting for them. It seems that
+after her husband died, which was a few months after they were married,
+she learned to make her living by typewriting. She worked too hard
+and broke down, and the doctor said she must go to hot countries, the
+'hotter the better.' So she's worked her way half around the world
+typewriting. She worked chiefly for her own consuls or for the American
+commission houses. Sometimes she stayed a month, sometimes only over
+one steamer day. But when she got here Lady Firth took such a fancy to
+her that she made Sir George engage her as his private secretary, and she's
+been here ever since."
+
+In a community so small as was that of Zanzibar the white residents
+saw one another every day, and within a week Hemingway had met
+Mrs. Adair many times. He met her at dinner, at the British agency;
+he met her in the country club, where the white exiles gathered for
+tea and tennis. He hired a launch and in her honor gave a picnic
+on the north coast of the island, and on three glorious and memorable
+nights, after different dinner-parties had ascended to the roof, he sat
+at her side and across the white level of the housetops looked down
+into the moonlit harbor.
+
+What interest the two young people felt in each other was in no
+way discouraged by their surroundings. In the tropics the tender
+emotions are not winter killed. Had they met at home, the
+conventions, his own work, her social duties would have kept the
+progress of their interest within a certain speed limit. But they
+were in a place free of conventions, and the preceding eight
+months which Hemingway had spent in the jungle and on the plain
+had made the society of his fellow man, and of Mrs. Adair in
+particular, especially attractive.
+
+Hemingway had no work to occupy his time, and he placed it
+unreservedly at the disposition of his countrywoman. In doing so
+it could not be said that Mrs. Adair encouraged him. Hemingway
+himself would have been the first to acknowledge this. From the
+day he met her he was conscious that always there was an intangible
+barrier between them. Even before she possibly could have guessed
+that his interest in her was more than even she, attractive as she was,
+had the right to expect, she had wrapped around herself an invisible
+mantle of defense.
+
+There were certain speeches of his which she never heard, certain tones
+to which she never responded. At moments when he was complimenting
+himself that at last she was content to be in his company, she would
+suddenly rise and join the others, and he would be left wondering in
+what way he could possibly have offended.
+
+He assured himself that a woman, young and attractive, in a
+strange land in her dependent position must of necessity be
+discreet, but in his conduct there certainly had been nothing
+that was not considerate, courteous, and straightforward.
+
+When he appreciated that he cared for her seriously, that he was
+gloriously happy in caring, and proud of the way in which he
+cared, the fact that she persistently held him at arm's length
+puzzled and hurt. At first when he had deliberately set to work
+to make her like him he was glad to think that, owing to his
+reticence about himself, if she did like him it would be for himself
+alone and not for his worldly goods. But when he knew her better
+he understood that if once Mrs. Adair made up her mind to take
+a second husband, the fact that he was a social and financial
+somebody, and not, as many in Zanzibar supposed Hemingway
+to be, a social outcast, would make but little difference.
+
+Nor was her manner to be explained by the fact that the majority
+of women found him unattractive. As to that, the pleasant burden
+of his experience was to the contrary. He at last wondered if
+there was some one else, if he had come into her life too late.
+He set about looking for the man and so, he believed, he soon
+found him.
+
+Of the little colony, Arthur Fearing was the man of whom Hemingway
+had seen the least. That was so because Fearing wished it. Like
+himself, Fearing was an American, young, and a bachelor, but,
+very much unlike Hemingway, a hermit and a recluse.
+
+Two years before he had come to Zanzibar looking for an
+investment for his money. In Zanzibar there were gentlemen
+adventurers of every country, who were welcome to live in any
+country save their own.
+
+To them Mr. Fearing seemed a heaven-sent victim. But to him their
+alluring tales of the fortunes that were to rise from buried treasures,
+lost mines, and pearl beds did not appeal. Instead he conferred
+with the consuls, the responsible merchants, the partners in the
+prosperous trading houses. After a month of "looking around" he
+had purchased outright the goodwill and stock of one of the oldest
+of the commission houses, and soon showed himself to be a most
+capable man of business. But, except as a man of business, no one
+knew him. From the dim recesses of his warehouse he passed each
+day to the seclusion of his bungalow in the country. And, although
+every one was friendly to him, he made no friends.
+
+It was only after the arrival of Mrs. Adair that he consented to show
+himself, and it was soon noted that it was only when she was invited
+that he would appear, and that on these occasions he devoted himself
+entirely to her. In the presence of others, he still was shy, gravely
+polite, and speaking but little, and never of himself; but with
+Mrs. Adair his shyness seemed to leave him, and when with her
+he was seen to talk easily and eagerly. And, on her part, to what
+he said, Polly Adair listened with serious interest.
+
+Lady Firth, who, at home, was a trained and successful match-maker,
+and who, in Zanzibar, had found but a limited field for her activities,
+decided that if her companion and protegee must marry, she should
+marry Fearing.
+
+Fearing was no gentleman adventurer, remittance-man, or humble
+clerk serving his apprenticeship to a steamship line or an ivory
+house. He was one of the pillars of Zanzibar society. The trading
+house he had purchased had had its beginnings in the slave-trade,
+and now under his alert direction was making a turnover equal to
+that of any of its ancient rivals. Personally, Fearing was a most
+desirable catch. He was well-mannered, well-read, of good
+appearance, steady, and, in a latitude only six degrees removed
+from the equator, of impeccable morals.
+
+It is said that it is the person who is in love who always is the
+first to discover his successful rival. It is either an instinct
+or because his concern is deeper than that of others.
+
+And so, when Hemingway sought for the influence that separated
+him from Polly Adair, the trail led to Fearing. To find that the
+obstacle in the path of his true love was a man greatly relieved
+him. He had feared that what was in the thoughts of Mrs. Adair
+was the memory of her dead husband. He had no desire to cross
+swords with a ghost. But to a living rival he could afford to be
+generous.
+
+For he was sure no one could care for Polly Adair as he cared,
+and, like every other man in love, he believed that he alone had
+discovered in her beauties of soul and character that to the rest
+of mankind were hidden. This knowledge, he assured himself, had
+aroused in him a depth of devotion no one else could hope to
+imitate, and this depth of devotion would in time so impress her,
+would become so necessary to her existence, that it would force
+her at last into the arms of the only man who could offer it.
+
+Having satisfied himself in this fashion, he continued cheerfully
+on his way, and the presence of a rival in no way discouraged
+him. It only was Polly Adair who discouraged him. And this,
+in spite of the fact that every hour of the day he tried to bring
+himself pleasantly to her notice. All that an idle young man in
+love, aided and abetted by imagination and an unlimited letter of
+credit, could do, Hemingway did. But to no end.
+
+The treasures he dug out of the bazaars and presented to her,
+under false pretenses as trinkets he happened at that moment
+to find in his pockets, were admired by her at their own great
+value, and returned also under false pretenses, as having been
+offered her only to examine.
+
+"It is for your sister at home, I suppose," she prompted. "It's
+quite lovely. Thank you for letting me see it."
+
+After having been several times severely snubbed in this fashion,
+Hemingway remarked grimly as he put a black pearl back into his
+pocket:
+
+"At this rate sister will be mighty glad to see me when I get
+home. It seems almost a pity I haven't got a sister."
+
+The girl answered this only with a grave smile.
+
+On another occasion she admired a polo pony that had been
+imported for the stable of the boy Sultan. But next morning
+Hemingway, after much diplomacy, became the owner of it and
+proudly rode it to the agency. Lady Firth and Polly Adair walked
+out to meet him arm in arm, but at sight of the pony there came
+into the eyes of the secretary a look that caused Hemingway to
+wish himself and his mount many miles in the jungle. He saw
+that before it had been proffered, his gift-horse had been rejected.
+He acted promptly.
+
+"Lady Firth," he said, "you've been so awfully kind to me, made this
+place so like a home to me, that I want you to put this mare in your
+stable. The Sultan wanted her, but when he learned I meant to turn
+her over to you, he let her go. We both hope you'll accept."
+
+Lady Firth had no scruples. In five minutes she had accepted, had
+clapped a side-saddle on her rich gift, and was cantering joyously
+down the Pearl Road.
+
+Polly Adair looked after her with an expression that was
+distinctly wistful. Thus encouraged, Hemingway said:
+
+"I'm glad you are sorry. I hope every time you see that pony
+you'll be sorry."
+
+"Why should I be sorry?" asked the girl.
+
+"Because you have been unkind," said Hemingway, "and it is not your
+character to be unkind. And that you have shown lack of character
+ought to make you sorry."
+
+"But you know perfectly well," said Mrs. Adair, "that if I were
+to take any one of these wonderful things you bring me, I wouldn't
+have any character left."
+
+She smiled at him reassuringly. "And you know," she added, "that
+that is not why I do not take them. It isn't because I can't afford to,
+or because I don't want them, because I do; but it's because I don't
+deserve them, because I can give you nothing in return."
+
+"As the copy-book says," returned Hemingway, "'the pleasure is in
+the giving.' If the copy-book don't say that, I do. And to pretend
+that you give me nothing, that is ridiculous!"
+
+It was so ridiculous that he rushed on vehemently. "Why, every
+minute you give me something," he exclaimed. "Just to see you,
+just to know you are alive, just to be certain when I turn in at
+night that when the world wakes up again you will still be a part
+of it; that is what you give me. And its name is--Happiness!"
+
+He had begun quite innocently; he had had no idea that it would
+come. But he had said it. As clearly as though he had dropped
+upon one knee, laid his hand over his heart and exclaimed: "Most
+beautiful of your sex, I love you! Will you marry me?" His eyes
+and the tone of his voice had said it. And he knew that he had
+said it, and that she knew.
+
+Her eyes were filled with sudden tears, and so wonderful was the
+light in them that for one mad moment Hemingway thought they were
+tears of happiness. But the light died, and what had been tears
+became only wet drops of water, and he saw to his dismay that she
+was most miserable.
+
+The girl moved ahead of him to the cliff on which the agency
+stood, and which overhung the harbor and the Indian Ocean. Her
+eyes were filled with trouble. As she raised them to his they begged
+of him to be kind.
+
+"I am glad you told me," she said. "I have been afraid it was
+coming. But until you told me I could not say anything. I tried
+to stop you. I was rude and unkind--"
+
+"You certainly were," Hemingway agreed cheerfully. "And the more
+you would have nothing to do with me, the more I admired you. And
+then I learned to admire you more, and then to love you. It seems now
+as though I had always known and always loved you. And now this
+is what we are going to do."
+
+He wouldn't let her speak; he rushed on precipitately.
+
+"We are first going up to the house to get your typewriting-machine,
+and we will bring it back here and hurl it as far as we can off this cliff.
+I want to see the splash! I want to hear it smash when it hits that rock.
+It has been my worst enemy, because it helped you to be independent
+of me, because it kept you from me. Time after time, on the veranda,
+when I was pretending to listen to Lady Firth, I was listening to that
+damned machine banging and complaining and tiring your pretty
+fingers and your dear eyes. So first it has got to go. You have been
+its slave, now I am going to be your slave. You have only to rub
+the lamp and things will happen. And because I've told you nothing
+about myself, you mustn't think that the money that helps to make
+them happen is 'tainted.' It isn't. Nor am I, nor my father, nor my
+father's father. I am asking you to marry a perfectly respectable
+young man. And, when you do--"
+
+Again he gave her no opportunity to interrupt, but rushed on
+impetuously: "We will sail away across that ocean to wherever
+you will take me. To Ceylon and Tokio and San Francisco, to Naples
+and New York, to Greece and Athens. They are all near. They are
+all yours. Will you accept them and me?" He smiled appealingly,
+but most miserably. For though he had spoken lightly and with
+confidence, it was to conceal the fact that he was not at all confident.
+As he had read in her eyes her refusal of his pony, he had read, even
+as he spoke, her refusal of himself. When he ceased speaking the girl
+answered:
+
+"If I say that what you tell me makes me proud, I am saying too little."
+She shook her head firmly, with an air of finality that frightened
+Hemingway. "But what you ask--what you suggest is impossible."
+
+"You don't like me?" said Hemingway.
+
+"I like you very much," returned the girl, "and, if I don't seem
+unhappy that it can't be, it is because I always have known it can't
+be--"
+
+"Why can't it be?" rebelled Hemingway. "I don't mean that I can't
+understand your not wanting to marry me, but if I knew your
+objection, maybe, I could beat it down."
+
+Again, with the same air of finality, the girl moved her head
+slowly, as though considering each word; she began cautiously.
+
+"I cannot tell you the reason," she said, "because it does not
+concern only myself."
+
+"If you mean you care for some one else," pleaded Hemingway,
+"that does not frighten me at all." It did frighten him extremely,
+but, believing that a faint heart never won anything, he pretended
+to be brave.
+
+"For you," he boasted, "I would go down into the grave as deep as
+any man. He that hath more let him give. I know what I offer. I
+know I love you as no other man--"
+
+The girl backed away from him as though he had struck her. "You
+must not say that," she commanded.
+
+For the first time he saw that she was moved, that the fingers
+she laced and unlaced were trembling. "It is final!" exclaimed
+the girl. "I cannot marry--you, or any one. I--I have promised.
+I am not free."
+
+"Nothing in the world is final," returned Hemingway sharply,
+"except death." He raised his hat and, as though to leave her,
+moved away. Not because he admitted defeat, but because he
+felt that for the present to continue might lose him the chance to
+fight again. But, to deliver an ultimatum, he turned back.
+
+"As long as you are alive, and I am alive," he told her, "all
+things are possible. I don't give up hope. I don't give up you."
+
+The girl exclaimed with a gesture of despair. "He won't understand!"
+she cried.
+
+Hemingway advanced eagerly.
+
+"Help me to understand," he begged.
+
+"You won't understand," explained the girl, "that I am speaking
+the truth. You are right that things can change in the future,
+but nothing can change the past. Can't you understand that?"
+
+"What do I care for the past?" cried the young man scornfully. "I
+know you as well as though I had known you for a thousand years
+and I love you."
+
+The girl flushed crimson.
+
+"Not my past," she gasped. "I meant--"
+
+"I don't care what you meant," said Hemingway. "I'm not prying
+into your little secrets. I know only one thing--two things, that
+I love you and that, until you love me, I am going to make your
+life hell!"
+
+He caught at her hands, and for an instant she let him clasp them
+in both of his, while she looked at him.
+
+Something in her face, other than distress and pity, caused his
+heart to leap. But he was too wise to speak, and, that she might
+not read the hope in his eyes, turned quickly and left her. He
+had not crossed the grounds of the agency before he had made up
+his mind as to the reason for her repelling him.
+
+"She is engaged to Fearing!" he told himself. "She has promised
+to marry Fearing! She thinks that it is too late to consider another
+man!" The prospect of a fight for the woman he loved thrilled him
+greatly. His lower jaw set pugnaciously.
+
+"I'll show her it's not too late," he promised himself. "I'll show her
+which of us is the man to make her happy. And, if I am not the
+man, I'll take the first outbound steamer and trouble them no more.
+But before that happens," he also promised himself, "Fearing must
+show he is the better man."
+
+In spite of his brave words, in spite of his determination, within the
+day Hemingway had withdrawn in favor of his rival, and, on the
+Crown Prince Eitel, bound for Genoa and New York, had booked his
+passage home.
+
+On the afternoon of the same day he had spoken to Polly Adair,
+Hemingway at the sunset hour betook himself to the consulate. At
+that hour it had become his custom to visit his fellow countryman
+and with him share the gossip of the day and such a cocktail as
+only a fellow countryman could compose. Later he was to dine at
+the house of the Ivory Company and, as his heart never ceased
+telling him, Mrs. Adair also was to be present.
+
+"It will be a very pleasant party," said Harris. "They gave me a
+bid, too, but it's steamer day to-morrow, and I've got to get my
+mail ready for the Crown Prince Eitel. Mrs. Adair is to be
+there."
+
+Hemingway nodded, and with pleasant anticipation waited. Of Mrs.
+Adair, Harris always spoke with reverent enthusiasm, and the man
+who loved her delighted to listen. But this time Harris disappointed
+him.
+
+"And Fearing, too," he added.
+
+Again Hemingway nodded. The conjunction of the two names surprised
+him, but he made no sign. Loquacious as he knew Harris to be, he never
+before had heard his friend even suggest the subject that to Zanzibar
+had become of acute interest.
+
+Harris filled the two glasses, and began to pace the room. When
+he spoke it was in the aggrieved tone of one who feels himself
+placed in a false position.
+
+"There's no one," he complained suddenly, "so popularly unpopular
+as the man who butts in. I know that, but still I've always taken his
+side. I've always been for him." He halted, straddling with legs
+apart and hands deep in his trousers pockets, and frowned down
+upon his guest.
+
+"Suppose," he began aggressively, "I see a man driving his car
+over a cliff. If I tell him that road will take him over a cliff,
+the worst that can happen to me is to be told to mind my own
+business, and I can always answer back: 'I was only trying to
+help you.' If I don't speak, the man breaks his neck. Between
+the two, it seems to me, sooner than have any one's life on my
+hands, I'd rather be told to mind my own business."
+
+Hemingway stared into his glass. His expression was distinctly
+disapproving, but, undismayed, the consul continued.
+
+"Now, we all know that this morning you gave that polo pony
+to Lady Firth, and one of us guesses that you first offered it to
+some one else, who refused it. One of us thinks that very soon,
+to-morrow, or even to-night, at this party you may offer that
+same person something else, something worth more than a polo
+pony, and that if she refuses that, it is going to break you all
+up, is going to hurt you for the rest of your life."
+
+Lifting his eyes from his glass, Hemingway shot at his friend a
+glance of warning. In haste, Harris continued:
+
+"I know," he protested, answering the look, "I know that this is
+where Mr. Buttinsky is told to mind his business. But I'm going
+right on. I'm going to state a hypothetical case with no names
+mentioned and no questions asked, or answered. I'm going to
+state a theory, and let you draw your own deductions."
+
+He slid into a chair, and across the table fastened his eyes on those
+of his friend. Confidently and undisturbed, but with a wry smile
+of dislike, Hemingway stared fixedly back at him.
+
+"What," demanded Harris, "is the first rule in detective work?"
+
+Hemingway started. He was prepared for something unpleasant, but
+not for that particular form of unpleasantness. But his faith was
+unshaken, and he smiled confidently. He let the consul answer his
+own question.
+
+"It is to follow the woman," declared Harris. "And, accordingly,
+what should be the first precaution of a man making his get-away?
+To see that the woman does not follow. But suppose we are dealing
+with a fugitive of especial intelligence, with a criminal who has
+imagination and brains? He might fix it so that the woman could
+follow him without giving him away, he might plan it so that no one
+would suspect. She might arrive at his hiding-place only after many
+months, only after each had made separately a long circuit of the
+globe, only after a journey with a plausible and legitimate object.
+She would arrive disguised in every way, and they would meet as
+total strangers. And, as strangers under the eyes of others, they
+would become acquainted, would gradually grow more friendly,
+would be seen more frequently together, until at last people would
+say: 'Those two mean to make a match of it.' And then, one day,
+openly, in the sight of all men, with the aid of the law and the
+church, they would resume those relations that existed before the
+man ran away and the woman followed."
+
+There was a short silence.
+
+Hemingway broke it in a tone that would accept no denial.
+
+"You can't talk like that to me," he cried. "What do you mean?"
+
+Without resentment, the consul regarded him with grave solicitude.
+His look was one of real affection, and, although his tone held the
+absolute finality of the family physician who delivers a sentence
+of death, he spoke with gentleness and regret.
+
+"I mean," he said, "that Mrs. Adair is not a widow, that the man
+she speaks of as her late husband is not dead; that that man is
+Fearing!"
+
+Hemingway felt afraid. A month before a rhinoceros had charged
+him and had dropped at his feet. At another time a wounded lioness
+had leaped into his path and crouched to spring. Then he had not
+been afraid. Then he had aimed as confidently as though he were
+firing at a straw target. But now he felt real fear: fear of something
+he did not comprehend, of a situation he could not master, of an
+adversary as strong as Fate. By a word something had been snatched
+from him that he now knew was as dear to him as life, that was life,
+that was what made it worth continuing. And he could do nothing
+to prevent it; he could not help himself. He was as impotent as the
+prisoner who hears the judge banish him into exile. He tried to adjust
+his mind to the calamity. But his mind refused. As easily as with his
+finger a man can block the swing of a pendulum and halt the progress
+of the clock, Harris with a word had brought the entire world to a full
+stop.
+
+And then, above his head, Hemingway heard the lazy whisper of the
+punka, and from the harbor the raucous whistle of the Crown Prince
+Eitel, signalling her entrance. The world had not stopped; for the
+punka-boy, for the captain of the German steamer, for Harris seated
+with face averted, the world was still going gayly and busily forward.
+Only for him had it stopped.
+
+In spite of the confident tone in which Harris had spoken, in spite of
+the fact that unless he knew it was the truth, he would not have spoken,
+Hemingway tried to urge himself to believe there had been some
+hideous, absurd error. But in answer came back to him snatches
+of talk or phrases the girl had last addressed to him: "You can
+command the future, but you cannot change the past. I cannot
+marry you, or any one! I am not free!"
+
+And then to comfort himself, he called up the look he had surprised
+in her eyes when he stood holding her hands in his. He clung to it,
+as a drowning man will clutch even at a piece of floating seaweed.
+
+When he tried to speak he found his voice choked and stifled, and
+that his distress was evident, he knew from the pity he read in the
+eyes of Harris.
+
+In a voice strange to him, he heard himself saying: "Why do you
+think that? You've got to tell me. I have a right to know. This
+morning I asked Mrs. Adair to marry me."
+
+The consul exclaimed with dismay and squirmed unhappily. "I
+didn't know," he protested. "I thought I was in time. I ought to
+have told you days ago, but--"
+
+"Tell me now," commanded Hemingway.
+
+"I know it in a thousand ways," began Harris.
+
+Hemingway raised his eyes hopefully.
+
+But the consul shook his head. "But to convince you," he went on,
+"I need tell you only one. The thousand other proofs are looks they
+have exchanged, sentences I have chanced to overhear, and that each
+of them unknown to the other has told me of little happenings and
+incidents which I found were common to both. Each has described
+the house in which he or she lived, and it was the same house. They
+claim to come from different cities in New England, they came from
+the same city. They claim--"
+
+"That is no proof," cried Hemingway, "either that they are married,
+or that the man is a criminal."
+
+For a moment Harris regarded the other in silence. Then he said:
+"You're making it very hard for me. I see I've got to show you.
+It's kindest, after all, to cut quick." He leaned farther forward,
+and his voice dropped. Speaking quickly, he said:
+
+"Last summer I lived outside the town in a bungalow on the Pearl
+Road. Fearing's house was next to mine. This was before Mrs.
+Adair went to live at the agency, and while she was alone in
+another bungalow farther down the road. I was ill that summer;
+my nerves went back on me. I couldn't sleep. I used to sit all night
+on my veranda and pray for the sun to rise. From where I sat it was
+dark and no one could see me, but I could see the veranda of Fearing's
+house and into his garden. And night after night I saw Mrs. Adair
+creep out of Fearing's house, saw him walk with her to the gate, saw
+him in the shadow of the bushes take her in his arms, and saw them
+kiss." The voice of the consul rose sharply. "No one knows that but
+you and I, and," he cried defiantly, "it is impossible for us to believe
+ill of Polly Adair. The easy explanation we refuse. It is intolerable.
+And so you must believe as I believe; that when she visited Fearing
+by night she went to him because she had the right to go to him,
+because already she was his wife. And now when every one here
+believes they met for the first time in Zanzibar, when no one will be
+surprised if they should marry, they will go through the ceremony
+again, and live as man and wife, as they are, as they were before he
+fled from America!"
+
+Hemingway was seated with his elbows on the table and his face in
+his hands. He was so long silent that Harris struck the table roughly
+with his palm.
+
+"Well," he demanded, "why don't you speak? Do you doubt her?
+Don't you believe she is his wife?"
+
+"I refuse to believe anything else!" said Hemingway. He rose, and
+slowly and heavily moved toward the door. "And I will not trouble
+them any more," he added. "I'll leave at sunrise on the Eitel."
+
+Harris exclaimed in dismay, but Hemingway did not hear him. In
+the doorway he halted and turned back. From his voice all trace
+of emotion had departed. "Why," he asked dully, "do you think
+Fearing is a fugitive? Not that it matters to her, since she loves
+him, or that it matters to me. Only I would like to think you were
+wrong. I want her to have only the best."
+
+Again the consul moved unhappily.
+
+"I oughtn't to tell you," he protested, "and if I do I ought to tell the
+State Department, and a detective agency first. They have the call.
+They want him, or a man damned like him." His voice dropped to a
+whisper. "The man wanted is Henry Brownell, a cashier of a bank in
+Waltham, Mass., thirty-five years of age, smooth-shaven, college-bred,
+speaking with a marked New England accent, and--and with other
+marks that fit Fearing like the cover on a book. The department and
+the Pinkertons have been devilling the life out of me about it for nine
+months. They are positive he is on the coast of Africa. I put them off.
+I wasn't sure."
+
+"You've been protecting them," said Hemingway.
+
+"I wasn't sure," reiterated Harris. "And if I were, the Pinkertons can do
+their own sleuthing. The man's living honestly now, anyway, isn't he?"
+he demanded; "and she loves him. At least she's stuck by him. Why
+should I punish her?"
+
+His tone seemed to challenge and upbraid.
+
+"Good God!" cried the other, "I'm not blaming you! I'd be proud of the
+chance to do as much. I asked because I'd like to go away thinking she's
+content, thinking she's happy with him."
+
+"Doesn't it look as though she were?" Harris protested. "She's followed
+him--followed him half around the globe. If she'd been happier away
+from him, she'd have stayed away from him."
+
+So intent had been the men upon their talk that neither had noted
+the passing of the minutes or, what at other times was an event
+of moment, that the mail steamer had distributed her mail and
+passengers; and when a servant entered bearing lamps, and from
+the office the consul's clerk appeared with a bundle of letters
+from the Eitel, both were taken by surprise.
+
+"So late?" exclaimed Hemingway. "I must go. If I'm to sail with
+the Eitel at daybreak, I've little time!"
+
+But he did not go.
+
+As he advanced toward Harris with his hand outstretched in adieu,
+the face of the consul halted him. With the letters, the clerk
+had placed upon the table a visiting-card, and as it lay in the
+circle of light from the lamp the consul, as though it were alive
+and menacing, stared at it in fascination. Moving stiffly, he
+turned it so that Hemingway could see. On it Hemingway read,
+"George S. Sheyer," and, on a lower line, "Representing William
+L. Pinkerton."
+
+To the woman he loved the calamity they dreaded had come, and
+Hemingway, with a groan of dismay, exclaimed aloud:
+
+"It is the end!"
+
+From the darkness of the outer office a man stepped softly into
+the circle of the lamp. They could see his figure only from the
+waist down; the rest of him was blurred in shadows.
+
+"'It is the end'?" he repeated inquiringly. He spoke the phrase
+with peculiar emphasis, as though to impress it upon the memory
+of the two others. His voice was cool, alert, authoritative. "The
+end of what?" he demanded sharply.
+
+The question was most difficult. In the silence the detective
+moved into the light. He was tall and strongly built, his face
+was shrewd and intelligent. He might have been a prosperous man
+of business.
+
+"Which of you is the consul?" he asked. But he did not take his
+eyes from Hemingway.
+
+"I am the consul," said Harris. But still the detective did not
+turn from Hemingway.
+
+"Why," he asked, "did this gentleman, when he read my card, say,
+'It is the end'? The end of what? Has anything been going on here
+that came to an end when he saw my card?"
+
+Disconcerted, in deep embarrassment, Harris struggled for a word.
+But his distress was not observed by the detective. His eyes,
+suspicious and accusing, still were fixed upon Hemingway, and
+under their scrutiny Harris saw his friend slowly retreat, slowly
+crumple up into a chair, slowly raise his hands to cover his
+face. As though in a nightmare, he heard him saying savagely:
+
+"It is the end of two years of hell, it is the end of two years
+of fear and agony! Now I shall have peace. Now I shall sleep!
+I thank God you've come! I thank God I can go back!"
+
+Harris broke the spell by leaping to his feet. He sprang between
+the two men.
+
+"What does this mean?" he commanded.
+
+Hemingway raised his eyes and surveyed him steadily.
+
+"It means," he said, "that I have deceived you, Harris--that I am
+the man you told me of, I am the man they want." He turned to the
+officer.
+
+"I fooled him for four months," he said. "I couldn't fool you for
+five minutes."
+
+The eyes of the detective danced with sudden excitement, joy, and
+triumph. He shot an eager glance from Hemingway to the consul.
+
+"This man," he demanded; "who is he?"
+
+With an impatient gesture Hemingway signified Harris.
+
+"He doesn't know who I am," he said. "He knows me as Hemingway.
+I am Henry Brownell, of Waltham, Mass." Again his face sank into
+the palms of his hands. "And I'm tired--tired," he moaned. "I am
+sick of not knowing, sick of running away. I give myself up."
+
+The detective breathed a sigh of relief that seemed to issue from
+his soul.
+
+"My God," he sighed, "you've given me a long chase! I've had
+eleven months of you, and I'm as sick of this as you are." He
+recovered himself sharply. As though reciting an incantation, he
+addressed Hemingway in crisp, emotionless notes.
+
+"Henry Brownell," he chanted, "I arrest you in the name of the
+commonwealth of Massachusetts for the robbery, on October the
+eleventh, nineteen hundred and nine, of the Waltham Title and
+Trust Company. I understand," he added, "you waive extradition
+and return with me of your own free will?"
+
+With his face still in his hands, Hemingway murmured assent. The
+detective stepped briskly and uninvited to the table and seated himself.
+He was beaming with triumph, with pleasurable excitement.
+
+"I want to send a message home, Mr. Consul," he said. "May I use
+your cable blanks?"
+
+Harris was still standing in the centre of the room looking down
+upon the bowed head and shoulders of Hemingway. Since, in
+amazement, he had sprung toward him, he had not spoken. And
+he was still silent.
+
+Inside the skull of Wilbur Harris, of Iowa, U. S. A., American
+consul to Zanzibar, East Africa, there was going forward a mighty
+struggle that was not fit to put into words. For Harris and his
+conscience had met and were at odds. One way or the other the
+fight must be settled at once, and whatever he decided must be
+for all time. This he understood, and as his sympathies and
+conscience struggled for the mastery the pen of the detective,
+scratching at racing speed across the paper, warned him that only
+a few seconds were left him in which to protest or else to forever
+after hold his peace.
+
+So realistic had been the acting of Hemingway that for an instant
+Harris himself had been deceived. But only for an instant. With
+his knowledge of the circumstances he saw that Hemingway was not
+confessing to a crime of his own, but drawing across the trail of the
+real criminal the convenient and useful red herring. He knew that
+already Hemingway had determined to sail the next morning. In
+leaving Zanzibar he was making no sacrifice. He merely was
+carrying out his original plan, and by taking away with him the
+detective was giving Brownell and his wife at least a month in
+which to again lose themselves.
+
+What was his own duty he could not determine. That of Hemingway
+he knew nothing, he could truthfully testify. And if now Hemingway
+claimed to be Henry Brownell, he had no certain knowledge to the
+contrary. That through his adventure Hemingway would come to
+harm did not greatly disturb him. He foresaw that his friend need
+only send a wireless from Nantucket and at the wharf witnesses
+would swarm to establish his identity and make it evident the
+detective had blundered. And in the meanwhile Brownell and
+his wife, in some settlement still further removed from observation,
+would for the second time have fortified themselves against pursuit
+and capture. He saw the eyes of Hemingway fixed upon him in appeal
+and warning.
+
+The brisk voice of the detective broke the silence.
+
+"You will testify, if need be, Mr. Consul," he said, "that you
+heard the prisoner admit he was Henry Brownell and that he
+surrendered himself of his own free will?"
+
+For an instant the consul hesitated, then he nodded stiffly.
+
+"I heard him," he said.
+
+Three hours later, at ten o' clock of the same evening, the detective
+and Hemingway leaned together on the rail of the Crown Prince
+Eitel. Forward, in the glare of her cargo lights, to the puffing and
+creaking of derricks and donkey engines, bundles of beeswax, of
+rawhides, and precious tusks of ivory were being hurled into the
+hold; from the shore-boats clinging to the ship's sides came the
+shrieks of the Zanzibar boys, from the smoking-room the blare of
+the steward's band and the clink of glasses. Those of the youth of
+Zanzibar who were on board, the German and English clerks and
+agents, saw in the presence of Hemingway only a purpose similar
+to their own; the desire of a homesick exile to gaze upon the mirrored
+glories of the Eitel's saloon, at the faces of white men and women, to
+listen to home-made music, to drink home-brewed beer. As he passed
+the smoking-room they called to him, and to the stranger at his elbow,
+but he only nodded smiling and, avoiding them, ascended to the shadow
+of the deserted boat-deck.
+
+"You are sure," he said, "you told no one?"
+
+"No one," the detective answered. "Of course your hotel proprietor
+knows you're sailing, but he doesn't know why. And, by sunrise,
+we'll be well out at sea."
+
+The words caught Hemingway by the throat. He turned his eyes to
+the town lying like a field of snow in the moonlight. Somewhere
+on one of its flat roofs a merry dinner-party was laughing, drinking,
+perhaps regretting his absence, wondering at his excuse of sudden
+illness. She was there, and he with the detective like a shadow at
+his elbow, was sailing out of her life forever. He had seen her for
+the last time: that morning for the last time had looked into her
+eyes, had held her hands in his. He saw the white beach, the white
+fortress-like walls, the hanging gardens, the courtesying palms,
+dimly. It was among those that he who had thought himself content,
+had found happiness, and had then seen it desert him and take out of
+his life pleasure in all other things. With a pain that seemed impossible
+to support, he turned his back upon Zanzibar and all it meant to him.
+And, as he turned, he faced, coming toward him, across the moonlit deck,
+Fearing.
+
+His instinct was to cry out to the man in warning, but his second
+thought showed him that through his very effort to protect the other,
+he might bring about his undoing. So, helpless to prevent, in agitation
+and alarm, he waited in silence. Of the two men, Fearing appeared the
+least disturbed. With a polite but authoritative gesture he turned to the
+detective. "I have something to say to this gentleman before he sails,"
+he said; "would you kindly stand over there?"
+
+He pointed across the empty deck at the other rail.
+
+In the alert, confident young man in the English mess-jacket,
+clean-shaven and bronzed by the suns of the equator, the detective
+saw no likeness to the pale, bearded bank clerk of the New England
+city. This, he guessed, must be some English official, some friend
+of Brownell's who generously had come to bid the unfortunate fugitive
+Godspeed.
+
+Assured of this, the detective also bowed politely, and, out of
+hearing, but with his prisoner in full view, took up a position
+against the rail opposite.
+
+Turning his back upon the detective, and facing Hemingway with
+his eyes close to his, Fearing began abruptly. His voice was sunk
+to a whisper, but he spoke without the slightest sign of trepidation,
+without the hesitation of an instant.
+
+"Two years ago, when I was indicted," he whispered, "and ran
+away, Polly paid back half of the sum I stole. That left her
+without a penny; that's why she took to this typewriting. Since
+then, I have paid back nearly all the rest. But Polly was not
+satisfied. She wanted me to take my punishment and start fresh.
+She knew they were watching her so she couldn't write this to me,
+but she came to me by a roundabout way, taking a year to get
+here. And all the time she's been here, she's been begging me to
+go back and give myself up. I couldn't see it. I knew in a few
+months I'd have paid back all I took, and I thought that was enough.
+I wanted to keep out of jail. But she said I must take my medicine
+in our own country, and start square with a clean slate. She's done
+a lot for me, and whether I'd have done that for her or not, I don't
+know. But now, I must! What you did to-night to save me, leaves
+me no choice. So, I'll sail--"
+
+With an exclamation of anger, Hemingway caught the other by the
+shoulder and dragged him closer.
+
+"To save you!" he whispered. "No one's thinking of you. I didn't
+do it for you. I did it, that you both could escape together, to
+give you time--"
+
+"But I tell you," protested Fearing, "she doesn't want me to escape.
+And maybe she's right. Anyway, we're sailing with you at--"
+
+"We?" echoed Hemingway.
+
+That again he was to see the woman he loved, that for six weeks
+through summer seas he would travel in her company, filled him
+with alarm, with distress, with a wonderful happiness.
+
+"We?" he whispered, steadying his voice. "Then--then your wife is
+going with you?"
+
+Fearing gazed at him as though the other had suddenly gone mad.
+
+"My wife!" he exclaimed. "I haven't got a wife!" If you mean
+Polly--Mrs. Adair, she is my sister! And she wants to thank you.
+She's below--"
+
+He was not allowed to finish. Hemingway had flung him to one
+side, and was racing down the deck.
+
+The detective sprang in pursuit.
+
+"One moment, there!" he shouted.
+
+But the man in the white mess-jacket barred his way.
+
+In the moonlight the detective saw that the alert, bronzed young man
+was smiling.
+
+"That's all right," said Fearing. "He'll be back in a minute. Besides,
+you don't want him. I'm the man you want."
+
+
+
+
+THE LONG ARM
+
+
+
+The safe was an old one that opened with a key. As adjutant,
+Captain Swanson had charge of certain funds of the regiment and
+kept in the safe about five thousand dollars. No one but himself
+and Rueff, his first sergeant, had access to it. And as Rueff proved
+an alibi, the money might have been removed by an outsider. The
+court-martial gave Swanson the benefit of the doubt, and a reprimand
+for not taking greater care of the keys, and Swanson made good the
+five thousand.
+
+Swanson did not think it was a burglar who had robbed the safe.
+He thought Rueff had robbed it, but he could not possibly prove
+that. At the time of the robbery Rueff was outside the Presidio,
+in uniform, at a moving-picture show in San Francisco. A dozen
+people saw him there. Besides, Rueff held an excellent record.
+He was a silent, clerk-like young man, better at "paper work" than
+campaigning, but even as a soldier he had never come upon the books.
+And he had seen service in two campaigns, and was supposed to
+cherish ambitions toward a commission. But, as he kept much to
+himself, his fellow non-coms could only guess that.
+
+On his captain's account he was loyally distressed over the
+court-martial, and in his testimony tried to shield Swanson, by
+agreeing heartily that through his own carelessness the keys
+might have fallen into the hands of some one outside the post.
+But his loyalty could not save his superior officer from what was
+a verdict virtually of "not proven."
+
+It was a most distressing affair, and, on account of the social
+prominence of Swanson's people, his own popularity, and the name
+he had made at Batangas and in the Boxer business, was much
+commented upon, not only in the services, but by the newspapers
+all over the United States.
+
+
+Every one who knew Swanson knew the court-martial was only a
+matter of form. Even his enemies ventured only to suggest that
+overnight he might have borrowed the money, meaning to replace it
+the next morning. And the only reason for considering this explanation
+was that Swanson was known to be in debt. For he was a persistent
+gambler. Just as at Pekin he had gambled with death for his number,
+in times of peace he gambled for money. It was always his own money.
+
+From the start Swanson's own attitude toward the affair was one
+of blind, unreasoning rage. In it he saw no necessary routine of
+discipline, only crass, ignorant stupidity. That any one should
+suspect him was so preposterous, so unintelligent, as to be nearly
+comic. And when, instantly, he demanded a court of inquiry, he
+could not believe it when he was summoned before a court-martial.
+It sickened, wounded, deeply affronted him; turned him quite savage.
+
+On his stand his attitude and answers were so insolent that his
+old friend and classmate, Captain Copley, who was acting as his
+counsel, would gladly have kicked him. The findings of the
+court-martial, that neither cleared nor condemned, and the
+reprimand, were an intolerable insult to his feelings, and, in a
+fit of bitter disgust with the service and every one in it, Swanson
+resigned. Of course, the moment he had done so he was sorry.
+Swanson's thought was that he could no longer associate with
+any one who could believe him capable of theft. It was his
+idea of showing his own opinion of himself and the army.
+
+But no one saw it in that light. On the contrary, people said:
+"Swanson has been allowed to resign." I n the army, voluntarily
+resigning and being "allowed to resign" lest greater evils befall,
+are two vastly different things. And when it was too late no one
+than Swanson saw that more clearly. His anger gave way to extreme
+morbidness. He believed that in resigning he had assured every one
+of his guilt. In every friend and stranger he saw a man who doubted
+him. He imagined snubs, rebuffs, and coldnesses. His morbidness
+fastened upon his mind like a parasite upon a tree, and the brain
+sickened. When men and women glanced at his alert, well-set-up
+figure and shoulders, that even when he wore "cits" seemed to support
+epaulets, and smiled approvingly, Swanson thought they sneered. In
+a week he longed to be back in the army with a homesickness that made
+every one who belonged to it his enemy.
+
+He left San Francisco, where he was known to all, and travelled
+south through Texas, and then to New Orleans and Florida. He
+never could recall this period with clearness. He remembered
+changing from one train to another, from one hotel to the next.
+Nothing impressed itself upon him. For what he had lost nothing
+could give consolation. Without honor life held no charm. And
+he believed that in the eyes of all men he was a thief, a pariah,
+and an outcast.
+
+He had been in Cuba with the Army of Occupation, and of that
+beautiful island had grown foolishly fond. He was familiar with
+every part of it, and he believed in one or another of its pretty
+ports he could so completely hide himself that no one could
+intrude upon his misery. In the States, in the newspapers he
+seemed to read only of those places where he had seen service, of
+those places and friends and associates he most loved. In the
+little Cuban village in which he would bury himself he would cut
+himself off from all newspapers, from all who knew him; from
+those who had been his friends, and those who knew his name only
+to connect it with a scandal.
+
+On his way from Port Tampa to Cuba the boat stopped at Key West,
+and for the hour in which she discharged cargo Swanson went
+ashore and wandered aimlessly. The little town, reared on a flat
+island of coral and limestone, did not long detain him. The main
+street of shops, eating-houses, and saloons, the pretty residences
+with overhanging balconies, set among gardens and magnolia-trees,
+were soon explored, and he was returning to the boat when the martial
+music of a band caused him to halt. A side street led to a great gateway
+surmounted by an anchor. Beyond it Swanson saw lawns of well-kept
+grass, regular paths, pretty cottages, the two-starred flag of an admiral,
+and, rising high above these, like four Eiffel towers, the gigantic masts
+of a wireless. He recognized that he was at the entrance to the Key
+West naval station, and turned quickly away.
+
+He walked a few feet, the music of the band still in his ears. In
+an hour he would be steaming toward Cuba, and, should he hold to
+his present purpose, in many years this would be the last time he
+would stand on American soil, would see the uniform of his country,
+would hear a military band lull the sun to sleep. It would hurt, but
+he wondered if it were not worth the hurt. A smart sergeant of marines,
+in passing, cast one glance at the man who seemed always to wear
+epaulets, and brought his hand sharply to salute. The act determined
+Swanson. He had obtained the salute under false pretenses, but it had
+pleased, not hurt him. He turned back and passed into the gate of the
+naval station.
+
+From the gate a grass-lined carriage drive led to the waters of
+the harbor and the wharfs. At its extreme end was the band-stand,
+flanked on one side by the cottage of the admiral, on the other
+by a sail-loft with iron-barred windows and whitewashed walls.
+Upon the turf were pyramids of cannon-balls and, laid out in rows
+as though awaiting burial, old-time muzzle-loading guns. Across
+the harbor the sun was sinking into the coral reefs, and the spring
+air, still warm from its caresses, was stirred by the music of the
+band into gentle, rhythmic waves. The scene was one of peace,
+order, and content.
+
+But as Swanson advanced, the measure of the music was instantly
+shattered by a fierce volley of explosions. They came so suddenly
+and sharply as to make him start. It was as though from his flank
+a quick-firing gun in ambush had opened upon him. Swanson smiled
+at having been taken unawares. For in San Francisco he often had
+heard the roar and rattle of the wireless. But never before had he
+listened to an attack like this.
+
+From a tiny white-and-green cottage, squatting among the four
+giant masts, came the roar of a forest fire. One could hear the
+crackle of the flames, the crash of the falling tree-trunks. The
+air about the cottage was torn into threads; beneath the shocks
+of the electricity the lawn seemed to heave and tremble. It was
+like some giant monster, bound and fettered, struggling to be
+free. Now it growled sullenly, now in impotent rage it spat and
+spluttered, now it lashed about with crashing, stunning blows. It
+seemed as though the wooden walls of the station could not
+contain it.
+
+From the road Swanson watched, through the open windows of the
+cottage, the electric bolts flash and flare and disappear. The thing
+appealed to his imagination. Its power, its capabilities fascinated
+him. In it he saw a hungry monster reaching out to every corner
+of the continent and devouring the news of the world; feeding
+upon tales of shipwreck and disaster, lingering over some dainty
+morsel of scandal, snatching from ships and cities two thousand
+miles away the thrice-told tale of a conflagration, the score of a
+baseball match, the fall of a cabinet, the assassination of a king.
+
+In a sudden access of fierceness, as though in an ecstasy over
+some fresh horror just received, it shrieked and chortled. And
+then, as suddenly as it had broken forth, it sank to silence, and
+from the end of the carriage drive again rose, undisturbed, the
+music of the band.
+
+The musicians were playing to a select audience. On benches
+around the band-stand sat a half dozen nurse-maids with knitting
+in their hands, the baby-carriages within arm's length. On the
+turf older children of the officers were at play, and up and down
+the paths bareheaded girls, and matrons, and officers in uniform
+strolled leisurely. From the vine-covered cottage of Admiral
+Preble, set in a garden of flowering plants and bending palmettos,
+came the tinkle of tea-cups and the ripple of laughter, and at a
+respectful distance, seated on the dismantled cannon, were
+marines in khaki and bluejackets in glistening white.
+
+It was a family group, and had not Swanson recognized among the
+little audience others of the passengers from the steamer and
+natives of the town who, like himself, had been attracted by the
+music, he would have felt that he intruded. He now wished to
+remain. He wanted to carry with him into his exile a memory of
+the men in uniform, of the music, and pretty women, of the gorgeous
+crimson sunset. But, though he wished to remain, he did not wish
+to be recognized.
+
+From the glances already turned toward him, he saw that in this
+little family gathering the presence of a stranger was an event,
+and he was aware that during the trial the newspapers had made
+his face conspicuous. Also it might be that stationed at the post
+was some officer or enlisted man who had served with him in Cuba,
+China, or the Philippines, and who might point him out to others.
+Fearing this, Swanson made a detour and approached the band-stand
+from the wharf, and with his back to a hawser-post seated himself
+upon the string-piece.
+
+He was overcome with an intolerable melancholy. From where he
+sat he could see, softened into shadows by the wire screens of the
+veranda, Admiral Preble and his wife and their guests at tea. A
+month before, he would have reported to the admiral as the
+commandant of the station, and paid his respects. Now he could
+not do that; at least not without inviting a rebuff. A month
+before, he need only have shown his card to the admiral's orderly,
+and the orderly and the guard and the officers' mess and the
+admiral himself would have turned the post upside down to do
+him honor. But of what avail now was his record in three
+campaigns? Of what avail now was his medal of honor? They
+now knew him as Swanson, who had been court-martialled, who
+had been allowed to resign, who had left the army for the army's
+good; they knew him as a civilian without rank or authority, as an
+ex-officer who had robbed his brother officers, as an outcast.
+
+His position, as his morbid mind thus distorted it, tempted
+Swanson no longer. For being in this plight he did not feel that
+in any way he was to blame. But with a flaming anger he still
+blamed his brother officers of the court-martial who had not
+cleared his name and with a clean bill of health restored him to
+duty. Those were the men he blamed; not Rueff, the sergeant, who
+he believed had robbed him, nor himself, who, in a passion of
+wounded pride, had resigned and so had given reason for gossip;
+but the men who had not in tones like a bugle-call proclaimed his
+innocence, who, when they had handed him back his sword, had
+given it grudgingly, not with congratulation.
+
+
+As he saw it, he stood in a perpetual pillory. When they had
+robbed him of his honor they had left him naked, and life without
+honor had lost its flavor. He could eat, he could drink, he could
+exist. He knew that in many corners of the world white arms would
+reach out to him and men would beckon him to a place at table.
+
+But he could not cross that little strip of turf between him and
+the chattering group on the veranda and hand his card to the
+admiral's orderly. Swanson loved life. He loved it so that
+without help, money, or affection he could each morning have
+greeted it with a smile. But life without honor! He felt a sudden
+hot nausea of disgust. Why was he still clinging to what had
+lost its purpose, to what lacked the one thing needful?
+
+
+"If life be an ill thing," he thought, "I can lay it down!"
+
+The thought was not new to him, and during the two past weeks of
+aimless wandering he had carried with him his service automatic.
+To reassure himself he laid his fingers on its cold smooth surface.
+He would wait, he determined, until the musicians had finished
+their concert and the women and children had departed, and then--
+
+Then the orderly would find him where he was now seated, sunken
+against the hawser-post with a hole through his heart. To his disordered
+brain his decision appeared quite sane. He was sure he never had been
+more calm. And as he prepared himself for death he assured himself
+that for one of his standard no other choice was possible. Thoughts
+of the active past, or of what distress in the future his act would bring
+to others, did not disturb him. The thing had to be, no one lost more
+heavily than himself, and regrets were cowardly.
+
+He counted the money he had on his person and was pleased to find
+there was enough to pay for what services others soon must render
+him. In his pockets were letters, cards, a cigarette-case, each of
+which would tell his identity. He had no wish to conceal it, for of
+what he was about to do he was not ashamed. It was not his act.
+He would not have died "by his own hand." To his unbalanced
+brain the officers of the court-martial were responsible. It was
+they who had killed him. As he saw it, they had made his death
+as inevitable as though they had sentenced him to be shot at
+sunrise.
+
+A line from "The Drums of the Fore and Aft" came back to him.
+Often he had quoted it, when some one in the service had suffered
+through the fault of others. It was the death-cry of the boy officer,
+Devlin. The knives of the Ghazi had cut him down, but it was his
+own people's abandoning him in terror that had killed him. And so,
+with a sob, he flung the line at the retreating backs of his comrades:
+"You've killed me, you cowards!"
+
+Swanson, nursing his anger, repeated this savagely. He wished he
+could bring it home to those men of the court-martial. He wished
+he could make them know that his death lay at their door. He
+determined that they should know. On one of his visiting-cards he
+pencilled:
+"To the Officers of my Court-Martial: 'You've killed me, you
+cowards!'"
+
+He placed the card in the pocket of his waistcoat. They would
+find it just above the place where the bullet would burn the cloth.
+
+The band was playing "Auf Wiedersehen," and the waltz carried
+with it the sadness that had made people call the man who wrote
+it the waltz king. Swanson listened gratefully. He was glad that
+before he went out, his last mood had been of regret and gentleness.
+The sting of his anger had departed, the music soothed and sobered
+him. It had been a very good world. Until he had broken the spine
+of things it had treated him well, far better, he admitted, than he
+deserved. There were many in it who had been kind, to whom he
+was grateful. He wished there was some way by which he could let
+them know that. As though in answer to his wish, from across the
+parade-ground the wireless again began to crash and crackle; but now
+Swanson was at a greater distance from it, and the sighing rhythm of
+the waltz was not interrupted.
+
+Swanson considered to whom he might send a farewell message, but
+as in his mind he passed from one friend to another, he saw that to
+each such a greeting could bring only distress. He decided it was
+the music that had led him astray. This was no moment for false
+sentiment. He let his hand close upon the pistol.
+
+The audience now was dispersing. The nurse-maids had collected
+their charges, the musicians were taking apart their music-racks,
+and from the steps of the vine-covered veranda Admiral Preble was
+bidding the friends of his wife adieu. At his side his aide, young,
+alert, confident, with ill-concealed impatience awaited their departure.
+Swanson found that he resented the aide. He resented the manner in
+which he speeded the parting guests. Even if there were matters of
+importance he was anxious to communicate to his chief, he need not
+make it plain to the women folk that they were in the way.
+
+When, a month before, he had been adjutant, in a like situation he
+would have shown more self-command. He disapproved of the aide
+entirely. He resented the fact that he was as young as himself,
+that he was in uniform, that he was an aide. Swanson certainly
+hoped that when he was in uniform he had not looked so much the
+conquering hero, so self-satisfied, so supercilious. With a smile
+he wondered why, at such a moment, a man he had never seen
+before, and never would see again, should so disturb him.
+
+In his heart he knew. The aide was going forward just where he
+was leaving off. The ribbons on the tunic of the aide, the straps
+on his shoulders, told Swanson that they had served in the same
+campaigns, that they were of the same relative rank, and that
+when he himself, had he remained in the service, would have been
+a brigadier-general the aide would command a battle-ship. The
+possible future of the young sailor filled Swanson with honorable
+envy and bitter regret. With all his soul he envied him the right
+to look his fellow man in the eye, his right to die for his country,
+to give his life, should it be required of him, for ninety million
+people, for a flag. Swanson saw the two officers dimly, with eyes
+of bitter self-pity. He was dying, but he was not dying gloriously
+for a flag. He had lost the right to die for it, and he was dying
+because he had lost that right.
+
+The sun had sunk and the evening had grown chill. At the wharf
+where the steamer lay on which he had arrived, but on which he
+was not to depart, the electric cargo lights were already burning.
+But for what Swanson had to do there still was light enough.
+From his breast-pocket he took the card on which he had
+written his message to his brother officers, read and reread it,
+and replaced it.
+
+Save for the admiral and his aide at the steps of the cottage,
+and a bareheaded bluejacket who was reporting to them, and the
+admiral's orderly, who was walking toward Swanson, no one was
+in sight. Still seated upon the stringpiece of the wharf, Swanson
+so moved that his back was toward the four men. The moment
+seemed propitious, almost as though it had been prearranged. For
+with such an audience, for his taking off no other person could be
+blamed. There would be no question but that death had been
+self-inflicted.
+
+Approaching from behind him Swanson heard the brisk steps of the
+orderly drawing rapidly nearer. He wondered if the wharf were
+government property, if he were trespassing, and if for that reason
+the man had been sent to order him away. He considered bitterly
+that the government grudged him a place even in which to die.
+Well, he would not for long be a trespasser. His hand slipped
+into his pocket, with his thumb he lowered the safety-catch of
+the pistol.
+
+But the hand with the pistol in it did not leave his pocket. The
+steps of the orderly had come to a sudden silence. Raising his
+head heavily, Swanson saw the man, with his eyes fixed upon him,
+standing at salute. They had first made his life unsupportable,
+Swanson thought, now they would not let him leave it.
+
+"Captain Swanson, sir?" asked the orderly.
+
+Swanson did not speak or move.
+
+"The admiral's compliments, sir," snapped the orderly, "and will
+the captain please speak with him?"
+
+Still Swanson did not move.
+
+
+He felt that the breaking-point of his self-control had come.
+This impertinent interruption, this thrusting into the last few
+seconds of his life of a reminder of all that he had lost, this
+futile postponement of his end, was cruel, unhuman, unthinkable.
+The pistol was still in his hand. He had but to draw it and
+press it close, and before the marine could leap upon him he
+would have escaped.
+
+From behind, approaching hurriedly, came the sound of
+impatient footsteps.
+
+The orderly stiffened to attention. "The admiral!" he warned.
+
+Twelve years of discipline, twelve years of recognition of authority,
+twelve years of deference to superior officers, dragged Swanson's
+hand from his pistol and lifted him to his feet. As he turned,
+Admiral Preble, the aide, and the bareheaded bluejacket were
+close upon him. The admiral's face beamed, his eyes were young
+with pleasurable excitement; with the eagerness of a boy he waved
+aside formal greetings.
+
+"My dear Swanson," he cried, "I assure you it's a most astonishing,
+most curious coincidence! See this man?" He flung out his arm at
+the bluejacket. "He's my wireless chief. He was wireless operator
+on the transport that took you to Manila. When you came in here
+this afternoon he recognized you. Half an hour later he picks up
+a message--picks it up two thousand miles from here--from San
+Francisco--Associated Press news--it concerns you; that is, not
+really concerns you, but I thought, we thought"-as though
+signalling for help, the admiral glanced unhappily at his aide-
+"we thought you'd like to know. Of course, to us," he added
+hastily, "it's quite superfluous--quite superfluous, but--"
+
+The aide coughed apologetically. "You might read, sir," he
+suggested.
+
+"What? Exactly! Quite so!" cried the admiral.
+
+In the fading light he held close to his eyes a piece of paper.
+
+"San Francisco, April 20," he read. "Rueff, first sergeant, shot
+himself here to-day, leaving written confession theft of regimental
+funds for which Swanson, captain, lately court-martialled. Money
+found intact in Rueff's mattress. Innocence of Swanson never
+questioned, but dissatisfied with findings of court-martial has
+left army. Brother officers making every effort to find him and
+persuade return."
+
+The admiral sighed happily. "And my wife," he added, with an
+impressiveness that was intended to show he had at last arrived
+at the important part of his message, "says you are to stay to
+dinner."
+
+Abruptly, rudely, Swanson swung upon his heel and turned his face
+from the admiral. His head was thrown back, his arms held rigid
+at his sides. In slow, deep breaths, like one who had been dragged
+from drowning, he drank in the salt, chill air. After one glance the
+four men also turned, and in the falling darkness stood staring at
+nothing, and no one spoke.
+
+The aide was the first to break the silence. In a polite tone, as
+though he were continuing a conversation which had not been
+interrupted, he addressed the admiral. "Of course, Rueff's written
+confession was not needed," he said.
+
+"His shooting himself proved that he was guilty."
+
+Swanson started as though across his naked shoulders the aide had
+drawn a whip.
+
+In penitence and gratitude he raised his eyes to the stars. High
+above his head the strands of the wireless, swinging from the
+towering masts like the strings of a giant Aeolian harp, were
+swept by the wind from the ocean. To Swanson the sighing and
+whispering wires sang in praise and thanksgiving.
+
+
+
+
+THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+
+
+
+The God of Coincidence is fortunate in possessing innumerable
+press agents. They have made the length of his arm a proverb. How
+at exactly the right moment he extends it across continents and
+drags two and two together, thus causing four to result where but
+for him sixes and sevens would have obtained, they have made
+known to the readers of all of our best magazines. For instance,
+Holworthy is leaving for the Congo to find a cure for the sleeping
+sickness, and for himself any sickness from which one is warranted
+never to wake up. This is his condition because the beautiful
+million-heiress who is wintering at the Alexander Young Hotel
+in Honolulu has refused to answer his letters, cables, and appeals.
+
+He is leaning upon the rail taking his last neck-breaking look at
+the Woolworth Building. The going-ashore bugle has sounded,
+pocket-handkerchiefs are waving; and Joe Hutton, the last visitor
+to leave the ship, is at the gangway.
+
+"Good-by, Holworthy!" he calls. "Where do you keep yourself?
+Haven't seen you at the club in a year!"
+
+"Haven't been there in a year--nor mean to!" is the ungracious
+reply of our hero.
+
+"Then, for Heaven's sake," exclaims Hutton, "send some one to
+take your mail out of the H box! Every time I look for letters
+I wade through yours."
+
+"Tear them up!" calls Holworthy. "They're bills."
+
+Hutton now is half-way down the gangplank.
+
+"Then your creditors," he shouts back, "must all live at the
+Alexander Young Hotel in Honolulu!"
+
+That night an express train shrieking through the darkness
+carried with it toward San Francisco--
+
+In this how evident is the fine Italian hand of the God of
+Coincidence!
+
+Had Hutton's name begun with an M; had the H in Hutton been
+silent; had he not carried to the Mauretania a steamer basket for
+his rich aunt; had he not resented the fact that since Holworthy's
+election to the Van Sturtevant Club he had ceased to visit the
+Grill Club--a cure for sleeping sickness might have been discovered;
+but two loving hearts never would have been reunited and that story
+would not have been written.
+
+Or, Mrs. Montclair, with a suit-case, is leaving her home forever
+to join handsome Harry Bellairs, who is at the corner with a
+racing-car and all the money of the bank of which he has been
+cashier. As the guilty woman places the farewell letter against
+the pin-cushion where her husband will be sure to find it, her
+infant son turns in his sleep and jabs himself with a pin. His
+howl of anguish resembles that of a puppy on a moonlight night.
+The mother recognizes her master's voice. She believes her child
+dying, flies to the bedside, tears up the letter, unpacks the suit-case.
+The next morning at breakfast her husband, reading the newspaper,
+exclaims aloud:
+
+"Harry Bellairs," he cries, "has skipped with the bank's money! I
+always told you he was not a man you ought to know."
+
+"His manner to me," she says severely, "always was that of a
+perfect gentleman."
+
+Again coincidence gets the credit. Had not the child tossed--had
+not at the critical moment the safety pin proved untrue to the man
+who invented it--that happy family reunion would have been
+impossible.
+
+Or, it might be told this way:
+
+Old Man McCurdy, the Pig-Iron King, forbids his daughter Gwendolyn
+even to think of marrying poor but honest Beef Walters, the baseball
+pitcher, and denies him his house. The lovers plan an elopement.
+At midnight Beef is to stand at the tradesman's entrance and whistle
+"Waiting at the Church"; and down the silent stairs Gwendolyn is to
+steal into his arms. At the very same hour the butler has planned with
+the policeman on fixed post to steal Mother McCurdy's diamonds
+and pass them to a brother of the policeman, who is to wait at the
+tradesman's entrance and whistle "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee."
+
+This sounds improbable--especially that the policeman would
+allow even his brother to get the diamonds before he did; but,
+with the God of Coincidence on the job, you shall see that it
+will all come out right. Beef is first at the door. He whistles.
+The butler--an English butler--with no ear for music, shoves into
+his hands tiaras and sunbursts. Honest Beef hands over the butler
+to the policeman and the tiaras to Mother McCurdy.
+
+"How can I reward you?" exclaims the grateful woman.
+
+"Your daughter's hand!"
+
+Again the God of Coincidence scores and Beef Walters is credited
+with an assist. And for preventing the robbery McCurdy has the
+peg-post cop made a captain; thus enabling him to wear diamonds
+of his own and raising him above the need of taking them from
+others.
+
+These examples of what the god can do are mere fiction; the story
+that comes now really happened. It also is a story of coincidence.
+It shows how this time the long arm was stretched out to make two
+young people happy; it again illustrates that, in the instruments he
+chooses, the God of Coincidence works in a mysterious way his
+wonders to perform. This time the tool he used was a hat of green felt.
+
+The story really should be called "The Man in the Green Hat."
+
+At St. James's Palace the plenipotentiaries of the Allies and of Turkey
+were trying to bring peace to Europe; in Russell Square, Bloomsbury,
+Sam Lowell was trying to arrange a peace with Mrs. Wroxton, his
+landlady. The ultimatum of the Allies was: "Adrianople or fight!"
+The last words of Mrs. Wroxton were: "Five pounds or move out!"
+
+Sam did not have five pounds. He was a stranger in London; he had
+lost his position in New York and that very morning had refused to
+marry the girl he loved--Polly Seward, the young woman the Sunday
+papers called "The Richest Girl in America."
+
+For any man--for one day--that would seem to be trouble enough; but
+to the Sultan of Turkey that day brought troubles far more serious.
+And, as his losses were Sam's gain, we must follow the troubles of
+the Sultan. Until, with the aid of a green felt hat, the God of
+Coincidence turns the misfortunes of the Sultan into a fortune
+for Sam, Sam must wait.
+
+From the first days of the peace conference it was evident there
+was a leak. The negotiations had been opened under a most solemn
+oath of secrecy. As to the progress of the conference, only such
+information or misinformation--if the diplomats considered it better-
+as was mutually agreed upon by the plenipotentiaries was given to
+a waiting world. But each morning, in addition to the official report
+of the proceedings of the day previous, one newspaper, the Times,
+published an account which differed from that in every other paper,
+and which undoubtedly came from the inside. In details it was far
+more generous than the official report; it gave names, speeches,
+arguments; it described the wordy battles of the diplomats, the
+concessions, bluffs, bargains.
+
+After three days the matter became public scandal. At first, the
+plenipotentiaries declared the events described in the Times were
+invented each evening in the office of the Times; but the proceedings
+of the day following showed the public this was not so.
+
+Some one actually present at the conference was telling tales out
+of school. These tales were cabled to Belgrade, Sofia, Athens,
+Constantinople; and hourly from those capitals the plenipotentiaries
+were assailed by advice, abuse, and threats. The whole world began
+to take part in their negotiations; from every side they were attacked;
+from home by the Young Turks, or the On to Constantinople Party;
+and from abroad by peace societies, religious bodies, and chambers
+of commerce. Even the armies in the field, instead of waiting for the
+result of their deliberations, told them what to do, and that unless
+they did it they would better remain in exile. To make matters worse,
+in every stock exchange gambling on the news furnished by the Times
+threatened the financial peace of Europe. To work under such
+conditions of publicity was impossible. The delegates appealed to
+their hosts of the British Foreign Office.
+
+Unless the chiel amang them takin' notes was discovered and the
+leak stopped, they declared the conference must end. Spurred on
+by questions in Parliament, by appeals from the great banking world,
+by criticisms not altogether unselfish from the other newspapers,
+the Foreign Office surrounded St. James's Palace and the office
+of the Times with an army of spies. Every secretary, stenographer,
+and attendant at the conference was under surveillance, his past
+record looked into, his present comings and goings noted. Even
+the plenipotentiaries themselves were watched; and employees of
+the Times were secretly urged to sell the government the man who
+was selling secrets to them. But those who were willing to be "urged"
+did not know the man; those who did know him refused to be bought.
+
+By a process of elimination suspicion finally rested upon one
+Adolf Hertz, a young Hungarian scholar who spoke and wrote all
+the mongrel languages of the Balkans; who for years, as a copying
+clerk and translator, had been employed by the Foreign Office,
+and who now by it had been lent to the conference. For the reason
+that when he lived in Budapest he was a correspondent of the
+Times, the police, in seeking for the leak, centred their attention
+upon Hertz. But, though every moment he was watched, and though
+Hertz knew he was watched, no present link between him and the
+Times had been established- and this in spite of the fact that the
+hours during which it was necessary to keep him under closest
+observation were few. Those were the hours between the closing
+of the conference, and midnight, when the provincial edition of the
+Times went to press. For the remainder of the day, so far as the
+police cared, Hertz could go to the devil! But for those hours,
+except when on his return from the conference he locked himself
+in his lodgings in Jermyn Street, detectives were always at his elbow.
+
+It was supposed that it was during this brief period when he was
+locked in his room that he wrote his report; but how, later, he
+conveyed it to the Times no one could discover. In his rooms there
+was no telephone; his doors and windows were openly watched;
+and after leaving his rooms his movements were--as they always
+had been--methodical, following a routine open to observation.
+His programme was invariably the same. Each night at seven from
+his front door he walked west. At Regent Street he stopped to buy
+an evening paper from the aged news-vender at the corner; he then
+crossed Piccadilly Circus into Coventry Street, skirted Leicester
+Square, and at the end of Green Street entered Pavoni's Italian
+restaurant. There he took his seat always at the same table, hung
+his hat always on the same brass peg, ordered the same Hungarian
+wine, and read the same evening paper. He spoke to no one; no one
+spoke to him.
+
+When he had finished his coffee and his cigarette he returned to
+his lodgings, and there he remained until he rang for breakfast.
+From the time at which he left his home until his return to it he
+spoke to only two persons--the news-vender to whom he handed
+a halfpenny; the waiter who served him the regular table d'hote
+dinner--between whom and Hertz nothing passed but three and six
+for the dinner and sixpence for the waiter himself.
+
+Each evening, the moment he moved into the street a plain-clothes
+man fell into step beside him; another followed at his heels; and
+from across the street more plain-clothes men kept their eyes on
+every one approaching him in front or from the rear. When he
+bought his evening paper six pairs of eyes watched him place a
+halfpenny in the hand of the news-vender, and during the entire
+time of his stay in Pavoni's every mouthful he ate was noted-
+-
+every direction he gave the waiter was overheard.
+
+Of this surveillance Hertz was well aware. To have been ignorant
+of it would have argued him blind and imbecile. But he showed no
+resentment. With eyes grave and untroubled, he steadily regarded
+his escort; but not by the hastening of a footstep or the acceleration
+of a gesture did he admit that by his audience he was either distressed
+or embarrassed. That was the situation on the morning when the
+Treaty of London was to be signed and sealed.
+
+In spite of the publicity given to the conference by the Times,
+however, what the terms of the treaty might be no one knew. If
+Adrianople were surrendered; if Salonika were given to Greece; if
+Servia obtained a right-of-way to the Adriatic--peace was assured;
+but, should the Young Turks refuse--should Austria prove obstinate-
+not only would the war continue, but the Powers would be involved,
+and that greater, more awful war--the war dreaded by all the Christian
+world--might turn Europe into a slaughter-house.
+
+Would Turkey and Austria consent and peace ensue? Would they
+refuse and war follow? That morning those were the questions on
+the lips of every man in London save one. He was Sam Lowell; and
+he was asking himself another and more personal question: "How
+can I find five pounds and pacify Mrs. Wroxton?"
+
+He had friends in New York who would cable him money to pay his
+passage home; but he did not want to go home. He preferred to
+starve in London than be vulgarly rich anywhere else. That was
+not because he loved London, but because above everything in life
+he loved Polly Seward--and Polly Seward was in London. He had
+begun to love her on class day of his senior year; and, after his
+father died and left him with no one else to care for, every day
+he had loved her more.
+
+Until a month before he had been in the office of Wetmore &
+Hastings, a smart brokers' firm in Wall Street. He had obtained
+the position not because he was of any use to Wetmore & Hastings,
+but because the firm was the one through which his father had
+gambled the money that would otherwise have gone to Sam. In
+giving Sam a job the firm thought it was making restitution. Sam
+thought it was making the punishment fit the crime; for he knew
+nothing of the ways of Wall Street, and having to learn them bored
+him extremely. He wanted to write stories for the magazines. He
+wanted to bind them in a book and dedicate them to Polly. And
+in this wish editors humored him--but not so many editors or with
+such enthusiasm as to warrant his turning his back on Wall Street.
+
+That he did later when, after a tour of the world that had begun
+from the San Francisco side, Polly Seward and her mother and
+Senator Seward reached Naples. There Senator Seward bought
+old Italian furniture for his office on the twenty-fifth floor of the
+perfectly new Seward building. Mrs. Seward tried to buy for Polly
+a prince nearly as old as the furniture, and Polly bought picture
+post-cards which she sent to Sam.
+
+Polly had been absent six months, and Sam's endurance had been so
+timed as just to last out the half-year. It was not guaranteed to
+withstand any change of schedule, and the two months' delay in
+Italy broke his heart. It could not run overtime on a starvation
+diet of post-cards; so when he received a cable reading, "Address
+London, Claridge's," his heart told him it could no longer wait-
+and he resigned his position and sailed.
+
+On her trip round the world Polly had learned many things. She
+was observant, alert, intent on asking questions, hungering for
+facts. And a charming young woman who seeks facts rather than
+attention will never lack either. But of all the facts Polly collected,
+the one of surpassing interest, and which gave her the greatest
+happiness, was that she could not live without Sam Lowell. She
+had suspected this, and it was partly to make sure that she had
+consented to the trip round the world. Now that she had made
+sure, she could not too soon make up for the days lost. Sam had
+spent his money, and he either must return to New York and earn
+more or remain near Polly and starve. It was an embarrassing
+choice. Polly herself made the choice even more difficult.
+
+One morning when they walked in St. James's Park to feed the
+ducks she said to him:
+
+"Sam, when are we to be married?"
+
+When for three years a man has been begging a girl to marry him,
+and she consents at the exact moment when, without capitulation
+to all that he holds honorable, he cannot marry anybody, his
+position deserves sympathy.
+
+"My dear one," exclaimed the unhappy youth, "you make me the
+most miserable of men! I can't marry! I'm in an awful place! If I
+married you now I'd be a crook! It isn't a question of love in a
+cottage, with bread and cheese. If cottages were renting for a
+dollar a year I couldn't rent one for ten minutes. I haven't cheese
+enough to bait a mouse-trap. It's terrible! But we have got to wait."
+
+"Wait!" cried Polly. "I thought you had been waiting! Have I been
+away too long? Do you love some one else?"
+
+"Don't be ridiculous!" said Sam crossly. "Look at me," he
+commanded, "and tell me whom I love!"
+
+Polly did not take time to look.
+
+"But I," she protested, "have so much money!"
+
+"It's not your money," explained Sam. "It's your mother's money
+or your father's, and both of them dislike me. They even have told
+me so. Your mother wants you to marry that Italian; and your
+father, having half the money in America, naturally wants to
+marry you to the other half. If I were selfish and married you
+I'd be all the things they think I am."
+
+"You are selfish!" cried Polly. "You're thinking of yourself and
+of what people will say, instead of how to make me happy. What's
+the use of money if you can't buy what you want?"
+
+"Are you suggesting you can buy me?" demanded Sam.
+
+"Surely," said Polly--"if I can't get you any other way. And you
+may name your own price, too."
+
+"When I am making enough to support myself without sponging on
+you," explained Sam, "you can have as many millions as you like;
+but I must first make enough to keep me alive. A man who can't do
+that isn't fit to marry."
+
+"How much," demanded Polly, "do you need to keep you alive? Maybe
+I could lend it to you."
+
+Sam was entirely serious.
+
+"Three thousand a year," he said.
+
+Polly exclaimed indignantly.
+
+"I call that extremely extravagant!" she cried. "If we wait until you
+earn three thousand a year we may be dead. Do you expect to earn
+that writing stories?"
+
+"I can try," said Sam--"or I will rob a bank."
+
+Polly smiled upon him appealingly.
+
+"You know how I love your stories," she said, "and I wouldn't
+hurt your feelings for the world; but, Sam dear, I think you had
+better rob a bank!"
+
+Addressing an imaginary audience, supposedly of men, Sam
+exclaimed:
+
+"Isn't that just like a woman? She wouldn't care," he protested,
+"how I got the money!"
+
+Polly smiled cheerfully.
+
+"Not if I got you!" she said. In extenuation, also, she addressed
+an imaginary audience, presumably of women. "That's how I love
+him!" she exclaimed. "And he asks me to wait! Isn't that just like
+a man? Seriously," she went on, "if we just go ahead and get married
+father would have to help us. He'd make you a vice-president or
+something."
+
+At this suggestion Sam expressed his extreme displeasure.
+
+"The last time I talked to your father," he said, "I was in a position
+to marry, and I told him I wanted to marry you. What he said to
+that was: 'Don't be an ass!' Then I told him he was unintelligent--
+and I told him why. First, because he could not see that a man
+might want to marry his daughter in spite of her money; and
+second, because he couldn't see that her money wouldn't make
+up to a man for having him for a father-in-law."
+
+"Did you have to tell him that?" asked Polly.
+
+"Some one had to tell him," said Sam gloomily. "Anyway, as a
+source of revenue father is eliminated. I have still one chance
+in London. If that fails I must go home. I've been promised a job
+in New York reporting for a Wall Street paper--and I'll write stories
+on the side. I've cabled for money, and if the London job falls
+through I shall sail Wednesday."
+
+"Wednesday!" cried Polly. "When you say things like 'Wednesday'
+you make the world so dark! You must stay here! It has been such
+a long six months; and before you earn three thousand dollars I
+shall be an old, old maid. But if you get work here we could see
+each other every day."
+
+They were in the Sewards' sitting-room at Claridge's. Sam took up
+the desk telephone.
+
+"In London," he said, "my one best and only bet is a man named
+Forsythe, who helps edit the Pall Mall. I'll telephone him now.
+If he can promise me even a shilling a day I'll stay on and starve--
+but I'll be near you. If Forsythe fails me I shall sail Wednesday."
+
+The telephone call found Forsythe at the Pall Mall office. He would
+be charmed to advise Mr. Lowell on a matter of business. Would he
+that night dine with Mr. Lowell? He would. And might he suggest
+that they dine at Pavoni's? He had a special reason for going there,
+and the dinner would cost only three and six.
+
+"That's reason enough!" Sam told him.
+
+"And don't forget," said Polly when, for the fifth time, Sam rose
+to go, "that after your dinner you are to look for me at the Duchess
+of Deptford's dance. I asked her for a card and you will find it at
+your lodgings. Everybody will be there; but it is a big place-full
+of dark corners where we can hide."
+
+"Don't hide until I arrive," said Sam. "I shall be very late, as
+I shall have to walk. After I pay for Forsythe's dinner and for
+white gloves for your dance I shall not be in a position to hire
+a taxi. But maybe I shall bring good news. Maybe Forsythe will
+give me the job. If he does we will celebrate in champagne.
+"
+
+"You will let me at least pay for the champagne?" begged Polly.
+
+"No," said Sam firmly--"the duchess will furnish that."
+
+When Sam reached his lodgings in Russell Square, which he
+approached with considerable trepidation, he found Mrs. Wroxton
+awaiting him. But her attitude no longer was hostile. On the
+contrary, as she handed him a large, square envelope, decorated
+with the strawberry leaves of a duke, her manner was humble.
+
+Sam opened the envelope and, with apparent carelessness, stuck it
+over the fireplace.
+
+"About that back rent," he said; "I have cabled for money, and as
+soon--"
+
+"I know," said Mrs. Wroxton. "I read the cable." She was reading
+the card of invitation also. "There's no hurry, sir," protested Mrs.
+Wroxton. "Any of my young gentlemen who is made welcome at
+Deptford House is made welcome here!"
+
+"Credit, Mrs. Wroxton," observed Sam, "is better than cash. If
+you have only cash you spend it and nothing remains. But with
+credit you can continue indefinitely to-to-"
+
+"So you can!" exclaimed Mrs. Wroxton enthusiastically. "Stay as
+long as you like, Mr. Lowell."
+
+At Pavoni's Sam found Forsythe already seated and, with evident
+interest, observing the scene of gayety before him. The place was
+new to Sam, and after the darkness and snow of the streets it
+appeared both cheerful and resplendent. It was brilliantly lighted;
+a ceiling of gay panels picked out with gold, and red plush sofas,
+backed against walls hung with mirrors and faced by rows of
+marble-topped tables, gave it an air of the Continent.
+
+Sam surrendered his hat and coat to the waiter. The hat was a
+soft Alpine one of green felt. The waiter hung it where Sam
+could see it, on one of many hooks that encircled a gilded pillar.
+
+After two courses had been served Forsythe said:
+
+"I hope you don't object to this place. I had a special reason
+for wishing to be here on this particular night. I wanted to be
+in at the death!"
+
+"Whose death?" asked Sam. "Is the dinner as bad as that?"
+
+Forsythe leaned back against the mirror behind them and, bringing
+his shoulder close to Sam's, spoke in a whisper.
+
+"As you know," he said, "to-day the delegates sign the Treaty of
+London. It still must receive the signatures of the Sultan and
+the three kings; and they will sign it. But until they do, what
+the terms of the treaty are no one can find out."
+
+"I'll bet the Times finds out!" said Sam.
+
+"That's it!" returned Forsythe. "Hertz, the man who is supposed to
+be selling the secrets of the conference to the Times, dines here.
+To-night is his last chance. If to-night he can slip the Times a
+copy of the Treaty of London without being caught, and the
+Times has the courage to publish it, it will be the biggest
+newspaper sensation of modern times; and it will either cause
+a financial panic all over Europe--or prevent one. The man they
+suspect is facing us. Don't look now, but in a minute you will
+see him sitting alone at a table on the right of the middle pillar.
+The people at the tables nearest him--even the women--are
+detectives. His waiter is in the employ of Scotland Yard. The
+maitre d'hotel, whom you will see always hovering round his
+table, is a police agent lent by Bulgaria. For the Allies are even
+more anxious to stop the leak than we are. We are interested
+only as their hosts; with them it is a matter of national life or
+death. A week ago one of our own inspectors tipped me off to
+what is going on, and every night since then I've dined here,
+hoping to see something suspicious."
+
+"Have you?" asked Sam.
+
+"Only this," whispered Forsythe--"on four different nights I've
+recognized men I know are on the staff of the Times, and on the
+other nights men I don't know may have been here. But after all
+that proves nothing, for this place is a resort of newspaper writers
+and editors--and the Times men's being here may have been only
+a coincidence."
+
+"And Hertz?" asked Sam--"what does he do?"
+
+The Englishman exclaimed with irritation.
+
+"Just what you see him doing now!" he protested. "He eats his
+dinner! Look at him!" he commanded. "Of all in the room he's the
+least concerned."
+
+Sam looked and saw the suspected Adolf Hertz dangling a mass
+of macaroni on the end of his fork. Sam watched him until it
+disappeared.
+
+"Maybe that's a signal!" suggested Sam. "Maybe everything he does
+is part of a cipher code! He gives the signals and the Times men
+read them and write them down."
+
+"A man would have a fine chance to write anything down in this
+room!" said Forsythe.
+
+"But maybe," persisted Sam, "when he makes those strange
+movements with his lips he is talking to a confederate who can
+read the lip language. The confederate writes it down at the
+office and--"
+
+"Fantastic and extremely improbable!" commented Forsythe. "But,
+nevertheless, the fact remains, the fellow does communicate with
+some one from the Times; and the police are positive he does it
+here and that he is doing it now!"
+
+The problem that so greatly disturbed his friend would have more
+deeply interested Sam had the solving of his own trouble been
+less imperative. That alone filled his mind. And when the coffee
+was served and the cigars lit, without beating about the bush Sam
+asked Forsythe bluntly if on his paper a rising and impecunious
+genius could find a place. With even less beating about the bush
+Forsythe assured him he could not. The answer was final, and the
+disappointment was so keen that Sam soon begged his friend to
+excuse him, paid his bill, and rose to depart.
+
+"Better wait!" urged Forsythe. "You'll find nothing so good out
+at a music-hall. This is Houdini getting out of his handcuffs
+before an audience entirely composed of policemen."
+
+Sam shook his head gloomily.
+
+"I have a few handcuffs of my own to get rid of," he said, "and
+it makes me poor company."
+
+He bade his friend good night and, picking his way among the
+tables, moved toward the pillar on which the waiter had hung his
+hat. The pillar was the one beside which Hertz was sitting, and
+as Sam approached the man he satisfied his curiosity by a long
+look. Under the glance Hertz lowered his eyes and fixed them
+upon his newspaper. Sam retrieved his hat and left the restaurant.
+
+His mind immediately was overcast. He remembered his disappointment
+and that the parting between himself and Polly was now inevitable.
+Without considering his direction he turned toward Charing Cross
+Road. But he was not long allowed to meditate undisturbed.
+
+He had only crossed the little street that runs beside the restaurant
+and passed into the shadow of the National Gallery when, at the
+base of the Irving Memorial, from each side he was fiercely attacked.
+A young man of eminently respectable appearance kicked his legs
+from under him, and another of equally impeccable exterior made
+an honest effort to knock off his head.
+
+Sam plunged heavily to the sidewalk. As he sprawled forward his
+hat fell under him and in his struggle to rise was hidden by the
+skirts of his greatcoat. That, also, he had fallen heavily upon his
+hat with both knees Sam did not know. The strange actions of
+his assailants enlightened him. To his surprise, instead of
+continuing their assault or attempting a raid upon his pockets,
+he found them engaged solely in tugging at the hat. And so
+preoccupied were they in this that, though still on his knees,
+Sam was able to land some lusty blows before a rush of feet
+caused the young men to leap to their own and, pursued by
+several burly forms, disappear in the heart of the traffic.
+
+Sam rose and stood unsteadily. He found himself surrounded by
+all of those who but a moment before he had left contentedly
+dining at Pavoni's. In an excited circle waiters and patrons of
+the restaurant, both men and women, stood in the falling snow,
+bareheaded, coatless, and cloakless, staring at him. Forsythe
+pushed them aside and took Sam by the arm.
+
+"What happened?" demanded Sam.
+
+"You ought to know," protested Forsythe. "You started it! The
+moment you left the restaurant two men grabbed their hats and
+jumped after you; a dozen other men, without waiting for hats,
+jumped after them. The rest of us got out just as the two men
+and the detectives dived into the traffic."
+
+A big man, with an air of authority, drew Sam to one side.
+
+"Did they take anything from you, sir?" he asked.
+
+"I've nothing they could take," said Sam. "And they didn't try to
+find out. They just knocked me down."
+
+Forsythe turned to the big man.
+
+"This gentleman is a friend of mine, inspector," he said. "He is
+a stranger in town and was at Pavoni's only by accident."
+
+"We might need his testimony," suggested the official.
+
+Sam gave his card to the inspector and then sought refuge in a
+taxicab. For the second time he bade his friend good night.
+
+"And when next we dine," he called to him in parting, "choose a
+restaurant where the detective service is quicker!"
+
+Three hours later, brushed and repaired by Mrs. Wroxton, and
+again resplendent, Sam sat in a secluded corner of Deptford House
+and bade Polly a long farewell. It was especially long, owing to
+the unusual number of interruptions; for it was evident that Polly
+had many friends in London, and that not to know the Richest One
+in America and her absurd mother, and the pompous, self-satisfied
+father, argued oneself nobody. But finally the duchess carried Polly
+off to sup with her; and as the duchess did not include Sam in her
+invitation--at least not in such a way that any one could notice it--
+Sam said good-night--but not before he had arranged a meeting
+with Polly for eleven that same morning. If it was clear, the
+meeting was to be at the duck pond in St. James's Park; if it
+snowed, at the National Gallery in front of the "Age of
+Innocence."
+
+After robbing the duchess of three suppers, Sam descended to
+the hall and from an attendant received his coat and hat, which
+latter the attendant offered him with the inside of the hat
+showing. Sam saw in it the trademark of a foreign maker.
+
+"That's not my hat," said Sam.
+
+The man expressed polite disbelief.
+
+"I found it rolled up in the pocket of your greatcoat, sir," he
+protested.
+
+The words reminded Sam that on arriving at Deptford House he had
+twisted the hat into a roll and stuffed it into his overcoat
+pocket.
+
+"Quite right," said Sam. But it was not his hat; and with some hope
+of still recovering his property he made way for other departing
+guests and at one side waited.
+
+For some clew to the person he believed was now wearing his hat,
+Sam examined the one in his hand. Just showing above the inside
+band was something white. Thinking it might be the card of the
+owner, Sam removed it. It was not a card, but a long sheet of thin
+paper, covered with typewriting, and many times folded. Sam
+read the opening paragraph. Then he backed suddenly toward a
+great chair of gold and velvet, and fell into it.
+
+He was conscious the attendants in pink stockings were regarding
+him askance; that, as they waited in the drafty hall for cars and taxis,
+the noble lords in stars and ribbons, the noble ladies in tiaras and
+showing much-fur-lined galoshes, were discussing his strange
+appearance. They might well believe the youth was ill; they might
+easily have considered him intoxicated. Outside rose the voices of
+servants and police calling the carriages. Inside other servants echoed
+them.
+
+"The Duchess of Sutherland's car!" they chanted. "Mrs. Trevor
+Hill's carriage! The French ambassador's carriage! Baron
+Haussmann's car!"
+
+Like one emerging from a trance, Sam sprang upright. A little fat
+man, with mild blue eyes and curly red hair, was shyly and with
+murmured apologies pushing toward the exit. Before he gained it
+Sam had wriggled a way to his elbow.
+
+"Baron Haussmann!" he stammered. "I must speak to you. It's a
+matter of gravest importance. Send away your car," he begged,
+"and give me five minutes."
+
+The eyes of the little fat man opened wide in surprise, almost in
+alarm. He stared at Sam reprovingly.
+
+"Impossible!" he murmured. "I--I do not know you."
+
+"This is a letter of introduction," said Sam. Into the unwilling
+fingers of the banker he thrust the folded paper. Bending over
+him, he whispered in his ear. "That," said Sam, "is the Treaty of
+London!"
+
+The alarm of Baron Haussmann increased to a panic.
+
+"Impossible!" he gasped. And, with reproach, he repeated: "I do
+not know you, sir! I do not know you!"
+
+At that moment, towering above the crush, appeared the tall figure
+of Senator Seward. The rich man of the New World and the rich
+man of Europe knew each other only by sight. But, upon seeing
+Sam in earnest converse with the great banker, the senator
+believed that without appearing to seek it he might through Sam
+effect a meeting. With a hearty slap on the shoulder he greeted
+his fellow countryman.
+
+"Halloo, Sam!" he cried genially. "You walking home with me?"
+
+Sam did not even turn his head.
+
+"No!" he snapped. "I'm busy. Go 'way!"
+
+Crimson, the senator disappeared. Baron Haussmann regarded the
+young stranger with amazed interest.
+
+"You know him!" he protested. "He called you Sam!"
+
+"Know him?" cried Sam impatiently. "I've got to know him! He's
+going to be my father-in-law."
+
+The fingers of the rich man clutched the folded paper as the
+claws of a parrot cling to the bars of his cage. He let his sable
+coat slip into the hands of a servant; he turned back toward the
+marble staircase.
+
+"Come!" he commanded.
+
+Sam led him to the secluded corner Polly and he had left vacant
+and told his story.
+
+"So, it is evident," concluded Sam, "that each night some one in
+the service of the Times dined at Pavoni's, and that his hat was
+the same sort of hat as the one worn by Hertz; and each night,
+inside the lining of his hat, Hertz hid the report of that day's
+proceedings. And when the Times man left the restaurant he
+exchanged hats with Hertz. But to-night--I got Hertz's hat and
+with it the treaty!"
+
+In perplexity the blue eyes of the little great man frowned.
+
+"It is a remarkable story," he said.
+
+"You mean you don't believe me!" retorted Sam. "If I had
+financial standing--if I had credit--if I were not a stranger-
+you would not hesitate."
+
+Baron Haussmann neither agreed nor contradicted. He made a polite
+and deprecatory gesture. Still in doubt, he stared at the piece of white
+paper. Still deep in thought, he twisted and creased between his fingers
+the Treaty of London!
+
+Returning with the duchess from supper, Polly caught sight of Sam
+and, with a happy laugh, ran toward him. Seeing he was not alone,
+she halted and waved her hand.
+
+"Don't forget!" she called. "At eleven!"
+
+She made a sweet and lovely picture. Sam rose and bowed.
+
+"I'll be there at ten," he answered.
+
+With his mild blue eyes the baron followed Polly until she had
+disappeared. Then he turned and smiled at Sam.
+
+"Permit me," he said, "to offer you my felicitations. Your young
+lady is very beautiful and very good." Sam bowed his head. "If
+she trusts you," murmured the baron, "I think I can trust you
+too."
+
+"How wonderful is credit!" exclaimed Sam. "I was just saying so
+to my landlady. If you have only cash you spend it and nothing
+remains. But with credit you can--"
+
+"How much," interrupted the banker, "do you want for this?"
+
+Sam returned briskly to the business of the moment.
+
+"To be your partner," he said--"to get half of what you make out
+of it."
+
+The astonished eyes of the baron were large with wonder. Again he
+reproved Sam.
+
+"What I shall make out of it?" he demanded incredulously. "Do you
+know how much I shall make out of it?"
+
+"I cannot even guess," said Sam; "but I want half."
+
+The baron smiled tolerantly.
+
+"And how," he asked, "could you possibly know what I give you is
+really half?"
+
+In his turn, Sam made a deprecatory gesture.
+
+"Your credit," said Sam, "is good!"
+
+That morning, after the walk in St. James's Park, when Sam returned
+with Polly to Claridge's, they encountered her father in the hall.
+Mindful of the affront of the night before, he greeted Sam only
+with a scowl.
+
+"Senator," cried Sam happily, "you must be the first to hear the news!
+Polly and I are going into partnership. We are to be married."
+
+This time Senator Seward did not trouble himself even to tell Sam
+he was an ass. He merely grinned cynically.
+
+"Is that all your news?" he demanded with sarcasm.
+
+"No," said Sam--"I am going into partnership with Baron Haussmann
+too!"
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+
+
+
+Young Everett at last was a minister plenipotentiary. In London
+as third secretary he had splashed around in the rain to find the
+ambassador's carriage. In Rome as a second secretary he had
+served as a clearing-house for the Embassy's visiting-cards; and
+in Madrid as first secretary he had acted as interpreter for a
+minister who, though valuable as a national chairman, had much
+to learn of even his own language. But although surrounded by
+all the wonders and delights of Europe, although he walked, talked,
+wined, and dined with statesmen and court beauties, Everett was
+not happy. He was never his own master. Always he answered the
+button pressed by the man higher up. Always over him loomed his
+chief; always, for his diligence and zeal, his chief received credit.
+
+As His Majesty's naval attache put it sympathetically, "Better be
+a top-side man on a sampan than First Luff on the Dreadnought.
+Don't be another man's right hand. Be your own right hand."
+Accordingly when the State Department offered to make him
+minister to the Republic of Amapala, Everett gladly deserted the
+flesh-pots of Europe, and, on mule-back over trails in the living
+rock, through mountain torrents that had never known the shadow
+of a bridge, through swamp and jungle, rode sunburnt and
+saddle-sore into his inheritance.
+
+When giving him his farewell instructions, the Secretary of State
+had not attempted to deceive him.
+
+"Of all the smaller republics of Central America," he frankly told
+him, "Amapala is the least desirable, least civilized, least acceptable.
+It offers an ambitious young diplomat no chance. But once a minister,
+always a minister. Having lifted you out of the secretary class we can't
+demote you. Your days of deciphering cablegrams are over, and if you
+don't die of fever, of boredom, or brandy, call us up in a year or two
+and we will see what we can do."
+
+Everett regarded the Secretary blankly.
+
+"Has the department no interest in Amapala?" he begged. "Is there
+nothing you want there?"
+
+"There is one thing we very much want," returned the Secretary,
+"but we can't get it. We want a treaty to extradite criminals."
+
+The young minister laughed confidently.
+
+"Why!" he exclaimed, "that should be easy."
+
+The Secretary smiled.
+
+"You have our full permission to get it," he said. "This department,"
+he explained, "under three administrations has instructed four
+ministers to arrange such a treaty. The Bankers' Association wants
+it; the Merchants' Protective Alliance wants it. Amapala is the only
+place within striking distance of our country where a fugitive is safe.
+It is the only place where a dishonest cashier, swindler, or felon can
+find refuge. Sometimes it seems almost as though when a man planned
+a crime he timed it exactly so as to catch the boat for Amapala. And,
+once there, we can't lay our hands on him; and, what's more, we can't
+lay our hands on the money he takes with him. I have no right to make
+a promise," said the great man, "but the day that treaty is signed you
+can sail for a legation in Europe. Do I make myself clear?"
+
+"So clear, sir," cried Everett, laughing, "that if I don't
+arrange that treaty I will remain in Amapala until I do."
+
+"Four of your predecessors," remarked the Secretary, "made
+exactly the same promise, but none of them got us the treaty."
+
+"Probably none of them remained in Amapala, either," retorted
+Everett.
+
+"Two did," corrected the Secretary; "as you ride into Camaguay
+you see their tombstones."
+
+Everett found the nine-day mule-ride from the coast to the capital
+arduous, but full of interest. After a week at his post he appreciated
+that until he left it and made the return journey nothing of equal
+interest was again likely to occur. For life in Camaguay, the capital
+of Amapala, proved to be one long, dreamless slumber. In the morning
+each of the inhabitants engaged in a struggle to get awake; after the
+second breakfast he ceased struggling, and for a siesta sank into his
+hammock. After dinner, at nine o'clock, he was prepared to sleep in
+earnest, and went to bed. The official life as explained to Everett by
+Garland, the American consul, was equally monotonous. When
+President Mendoza was not in the mountains deer-hunting, or
+suppressing a revolution, each Sunday he invited the American
+minister to dine at the palace. In return His Excellency expected
+once a week to be invited to breakfast with the minister. He preferred
+that the activities of that gentleman should go no further. Life in the
+diplomatic circle was even less strenuous. Everett was the doyen
+of the diplomatic corps because he was the only diplomat. All
+other countries were represented by consuls who were commission
+merchants and shopkeepers. They were delighted at having among
+them a minister plenipotentiary. When he took pity on them and
+invited them to tea, which invitations he delivered in person to
+each consul at the door of each shop, the entire diplomatic corps,
+as the consuls were pleased to describe themselves, put up the
+shutters, put on their official full-dress uniforms and arrived in
+a body.
+The first week at his post Everett spent in reading the archives of
+the legation. They were most discouraging. He found that for the
+sixteen years prior to his arrival the only events reported to the
+department by his predecessors were revolutions and the refusals
+of successive presidents to consent to a treaty of extradition. On
+that point all Amapalans were in accord. Though overnight the
+government changed hands, though presidents gave way to dictators,
+and dictators to military governors, the national policy of Amapala
+continued to be "No extradition!" The ill success of those who had
+preceded him appalled Everett. He had promised himself by a
+brilliant assault to secure the treaty and claim the legation in
+Europe. But the record of sixteen years of failure caused him
+to alter his strategy. Instead of an attack he prepared for a siege.
+He unpacked his books, placed the portrait of his own President
+over the office desk, and proceeded to make friends with his fellow
+exiles.
+
+Of the foreign colony in Camaguay some fifty were Americans, and
+from the rest of the world they were as hopelessly separated as the
+crew of a light-ship. From the Pacific they were cut off by the
+Cordilleras, from the Caribbean by a nine-day mule-ride. To the
+north and south, jungle, forests, swamp-lands, and mountains
+hemmed them in.
+
+Of the fifty Americans, one-half were constantly on the trail;
+riding to the coast to visit their plantations, or into the mountains
+to inspect their mines. When Everett arrived, of those absent
+the two most important were Chester Ward and Colonel Goddard.
+Indeed, so important were these gentlemen that Everett was made
+to understand that, until they approved, his recognition as the
+American minister was in a manner temporary.
+
+Chester Ward, or "Chet," as the exiles referred to him, was one of
+the richest men in Amapala, and was engaged in exploring the ruins
+of the lost city of Cobre, which was a one-hour ride from the capital.
+Ward possessed the exclusive right to excavate that buried city and
+had held it against all comers. The offers of American universities,
+of archaeological and geographical societies that also wished to dig
+up the ancient city and decipher the hieroglyphs on her walls, were
+met with a curt rebuff. That work, the government of Amapala would
+reply, was in the trained hands of Senor Chester Ward. In his chosen
+effort the government would not disturb him, nor would it permit others
+coming in at the eleventh hour to rob him of his glory. This Everett
+learned from the consul, Garland.
+
+"Ward and Colonel Goddard," the consul explained, "are two of
+five countrymen of ours who run the American colony, and, some
+say, run the government. The others are Mellen, who has the
+asphalt monopoly; Jackson, who is building the railroads, and
+Major Feiberger, of the San Jose silver-mines. They hold
+monopolies and pay President Mendoza ten per cent of the
+earnings, and, on the side, help him run the country. Of the
+five, the Amapalans love Goddard best, because he's not trying
+to rob them. Instead, he wants to boost Amapala. His ideas are
+perfectly impracticable, but he doesn't know that, and neither do
+they. He's a kind of Colonel Mulberry Sellers and a Southerner.
+Not the professional sort, that fight elevator-boys because they're
+colored, and let off rebel yells in rathskellers when a Hungarian
+band plays 'Dixie,' but the sort you read about and so seldom see.
+He was once State Treasurer of Alabama."
+
+"What's he doing down here?" asked the minister.
+
+"Never the same thing two months together," the consul told him;
+"railroads, mines, rubber. He says all Amapala needs is developing."
+
+As men who can see a joke even when it is against themselves, the
+two exiles smiled ruefully.
+
+"That's all it needs," said Everett.
+
+For a moment the consul regarded him thoughtfully.
+
+"I might as well tell you," he said, "you'll learn it soon enough
+anyway, that the men who will keep you from getting your treaty
+are these five, especially old man Goddard and Ward."
+
+Everett exclaimed indignantly:
+
+"Why should they interfere?"
+
+"Because," explained the consul, "they are fugitives from justice,
+and they don't want to go home. Ward is wanted for forgery or
+some polite crime, I don't know which. And Colonel Goddard
+for appropriating the State funds of Alabama. Ward knew what
+he was doing and made a lot out of it. He's still rich. No one's
+weeping over him. Goddard's case is different. He was imposed
+on and made a catspaw. When he was State treasurer the men
+who appointed him came to him one night and said they must
+have some of the State's funds to show a bank examiner in the
+morning. They appealed to him on the ground of friendship, as
+the men who'd given him his job. They would return the money
+the next evening. Goddard believed they would. They didn't,
+and when some one called for a show-down the colonel was shy
+about fifty thousand dollars of the State's money. He lost his head,
+took the boat out of Mobile to Porto Cortez, and hid here. He's
+been here twenty years and all the Amapalans love him. He's the
+adopted father of their country. They're so afraid he'll be taken
+back and punished that they'll never consent to an extradition
+treaty even if the other Americans, Mellen, Jackson, and Feiberger,
+weren't paying them big money not to consent. President Mendoza
+himself told me that as long as Colonel Goddard honored his
+country by remaining in it, he was his guest, and he would never
+agree to extradition. 'I could as soon,' he said, 'sign his
+death-warrant.'"
+
+Everett grinned dismally.
+
+"That's rather nice of them," he said, "but it's hard on me. But," he
+demanded, "why Ward? What has he done for Amapala? Is it because
+of Cobre, because of his services as an archaeologist?"
+
+The consul glanced around the patio and dragged his chair nearer
+to Everett.
+
+"This is my own dope," he whispered; "it may be wrong. Anyway,
+it's only for your private information."
+
+He waited until, with a smile, Everett agreed to secrecy.
+
+"Chet Ward," protested the consul, "is no more an archaeologist
+than I am! He talks well about Cobre, and he ought to, because
+every word he speaks is cribbed straight from Hauptmann's
+monograph, published in 1855. And he has dug up something at
+Cobre; something worth a darned sight more than stone monkeys
+and carved altars. But his explorations are a bluff. They're a blind
+to cover up what he's really after; what I think he's found!"
+
+As though wishing to be urged, the young man paused, and Everett
+nodded for him to continue. He was wondering whether life in
+Amapala might not turn out to be more interesting than at first
+it had appeared, or whether Garland was not a most charming liar.
+
+"Ward visits the ruins every month," continued Garland. "But he
+takes with him only two mule-drivers to cook and look after the
+pack-train, and he doesn't let even the drivers inside the ruins.
+He remains at Cobre three or four days and, to make a show, fills
+his saddle-bags with broken tiles and copper ornaments. He turns
+them over to the government, and it dumps them in the back yard
+of the palace. You can't persuade me that he holds his concession
+with that junk. He's found something else at Cobre and he shares
+it with Mendoza, and I believe it's gold."
+
+The minister smiled delightedly.
+
+"What kind of gold?
+
+"Maybe in the rough," said the consul. "But I prefer to think
+it's treasure. The place is full of secret chambers, tombs, and
+passage-ways cut through the rock, deep under the surface. I
+believe Ward has stumbled on some vault where the priests used
+to hide their loot. I believe he's getting it out bit by bit and
+going shares with Mendoza."
+
+"If that were so," ventured Everett, "why wouldn't Mendoza take
+it all?"
+
+"Because Ward," explained the consul, "is the only one who knows
+where it is. The ruins cover two square miles. You might search
+for years. They tried to follow and spy on him, but Ward was too
+clever for them. He turned back at once. If they don't take what
+he gives, they get nothing. So they protect him from real explorers
+and from extradition. The whole thing is unfair. A real archaeologist
+turned up here a month ago. He had letters from the Smithsonian
+Institute and several big officials at Washington, but do you suppose
+they would let him so much as smell of Cobre? Not they! Not even
+when I spoke for him as consul. Then he appealed to Ward, and Ward
+turned him down hard. You were arriving, so he's hung on here hoping
+you may have more influence. His name is Peabody; he's a professor,
+but he's young and full of 'get there,' and he knows more about the ruins
+of Cobre now than Ward does after having them all to himself for two
+years. He's good people and I hope you'll help him."
+
+Everett shook his head doubtfully.
+
+"If the government has given the concession to him," he pointed
+out, "no matter who Ward may be, or what its motives were for
+giving it to him, I can't ask it to break its promise. As an
+American citizen Ward is as much entitled to my help--
+officially--as Professor Peabody, whatever his standing."
+
+"Ward's a forger," protested Garland, "a fugitive from justice; and
+Peabody is a scholar and a gentleman. I'm not keen about dead
+cities myself--this one we're in now is dead enough for me--but if
+civilization is demanding to know what Cobre was like eight
+hundred years ago, civilization is entitled to find out, and
+Peabody seems the man for the job. It's a shame to turn him
+down for a gang of grafters."
+
+"Tell him to come and talk to me," said the minister.
+
+"He rode over to the ruins of Copan last week," explained Garland,
+"where the Harvard expedition is. But he's coming back to-morrow
+on purpose to see you."
+
+The consul had started toward the door when he suddenly returned.
+
+"And there's some one else coming to see you," he said. "Some
+one," he added anxiously, "you want to treat right. That's Monica
+Ward. She's Chester Ward's sister, and you mustn't get her mixed
+up with anything I told you about her brother. She's coming to
+ask you to help start a Red Cross Society. She was a volunteer
+nurse in the hospital in the last two revolutions, and what she
+saw makes her want to be sure she won't see it again. She's
+taught the native ladies the 'first aid' drill, and they expect
+you to be honorary president of the society. You'd better
+accept."
+
+Shaking his head, Garland smiled pityingly upon the new minister.
+
+"You've got a swell chance to get your treaty," he declared.
+"Monica is another one who will prevent it."
+
+Everett sighed patiently.
+
+"What," he demanded, "might her particular crime be; murder,
+shoplifting, treason--"
+
+"If her brother had to leave this country," interrupted Garland,
+"she'd leave with him. And the people don't want that. Her pull
+is the same as old man Goddard's. Everybody loves him and
+everybody loves her. I love her," exclaimed the consul
+cheerfully; "the President loves her, the sisters in the hospital,
+the chain-gang in the street, the washerwomen in the river,
+the palace guard, everybody in this flea-bitten, God-forsaken
+country loves Monica Ward--and when you meet her you
+will, too."
+
+Garland had again reached the door to the outer hall before
+Everett called him back.
+
+"If it is not a leading question," asked the minister, "what
+little indiscretion in your life brought you to Amapala?"
+
+Garland grinned appreciatively.
+
+"I know they sound a queer lot," he assented, "but when you get
+to know 'em, you like 'em. My own trouble," he added, "was a
+horse. I never could see why they made such a fuss about him. He
+was lame when I took him."
+
+Disregarding Garland's pleasantry, for some time His Excellency
+sat with his hands clasped behind his head, frowning up from the
+open patio into the hot, cloudless sky. On the ridge of his tiled
+roof a foul buzzard blinked at him from red-rimmed eyes, across
+the yellow wall a lizard ran for shelter, at his elbow a macaw
+compassing the circle of its tin prison muttered dreadful oaths.
+Outside, as the washerwomen beat their linen clubs upon the flat
+rocks of the river, the hot, stale air was spanked with sharp reports.
+In Camaguay theirs was the only industry, the only sign of
+cleanliness; and recognizing that another shirt had been thrashed
+into subjection and rags, Everett winced. No less visibly did his
+own thoughts cause him to wince. Garland he had forgotten,
+and he was sunk deep in self-pity. His thoughts were of London,
+with its world politics, its splendid traditions, its great and gracious
+ladies; of Paris in the spring sunshine, when he cantered through the
+Bois; of Madrid, with its pomp and royalty, and the gray walls of its
+galleries proclaiming Murillo and Velasquez. These things he had
+forsaken because he believed he was ambitious; and behold into
+what a cul-de-sac his ambition had led him! A comic-opera country
+that was not comic, but dead and buried from the world; a savage
+people, unread, unenlightened, unclean; and for society of his
+countrymen, pitiful derelicts in hiding from the law. In his soul
+he rebelled. In words he exploded bitterly.
+
+"This is one hell of a hole, Garland," cried the diplomat. His
+jaws and his eyes hardened. "I'm going back to Europe. And
+the only way I can go is to get that treaty. I was sent here to get
+it. Those were my orders. And I'll get it if I have to bribe them
+out of my own pocket; if I have to outbid Mr. Ward, and send
+him and your good Colonel Goddard and all the rest of the crew
+to the jails where they belong!"
+
+Garland heard him without emotion. From long residence near the
+equator he diagnosed the outbreak as a case of tropic choler,
+aggravated by nostalgia and fleas.
+
+"I'll bet you don't," he said.
+
+"I'll bet you your passage-money home," shouted Everett, "against
+my passage-money to Europe."
+
+"Done!" said Garland. "How much time do you want--two years?"
+
+The diplomat exclaimed mockingly:
+
+"Two months!"
+
+"I win now, "said the consul. "I'll go home and pack."
+
+The next morning his clerk told Everett that in the outer office
+Monica Ward awaited him.
+
+Overnight Everett had developed a prejudice against Miss Ward.
+What Garland had said in her favor had only driven him the wrong
+way. Her universal popularity he disliked. He argued that to gain
+popularity one must concede and capitulate. He felt that the sister
+of an acknowledged crook, no matter how innocent she might be,
+were she a sensitive woman, would wish to efface herself. And
+he had found that, as a rule, women who worked in hospitals and
+organized societies bored him. He did not admire the militant,
+executive sister. He pictured Miss Ward as probably pretty, but
+with the coquettish effrontery of the village belle and with the
+pushing, "good-fellow" manners of the new school. He was prepared
+either to have her slap him on the back or, from behind tilted
+eye-glasses, make eyes at him. He was sure she wore eye-glasses,
+and was large, plump, and Junoesque. With reluctance he entered
+the outer office. He saw, all in white, a girl so young that she
+was hardly more than a child, but with the tall, slim figure of a
+boy. Her face was lovely as the face of a violet, and her eyes
+were as shy. But shy not through lack of confidence in Everett,
+nor in any human being, but in herself. They seemed to say, "I am
+a very unworthy, somewhat frightened young person; but you, who
+are so big and generous, will overlook that, and you are going to
+be my friend. Indeed, I see you are my friend."
+
+Everett stood quite still. He nodded gloomily.
+
+"Garland was right," he exclaimed; "I do!"
+
+The young lady was plainly distressed.
+
+"Do what?" she stammered.
+
+"Some day I will tell you," said the young man. "Yes," he added,
+without shame, "I am afraid I will." He bowed her into the inner
+office.
+
+"I am sorry," apologized Monica, "but I am come to ask a favor--
+two favors; one of you and one of the American minister."
+
+Everett drew his armchair from his desk and waved Monica into it.
+
+"I was sent here," he said, "to do exactly what you want. The
+last words the President addressed to me were, 'On arriving at
+your post report to Miss Monica Ward."'
+
+Fearfully, Monica perched herself on the edge of the armchair; as
+though for protection she clasped the broad table before her.
+
+"The favor I want," she hastily assured him, "is not for myself."
+
+"I am sorry," said Everett, "for it is already granted."
+
+"You are very good," protested Monica.
+
+"No," replied Everett, "I am only powerful. I represent ninety-five
+million Americans, and they are all entirely at your service. So is
+the army and navy."
+
+Monica smiled and shook her head. The awe she felt was due an
+American minister was rapidly disappearing, and in Mr. Everett
+himself her confidence was increasing. The other ministers
+plenipotentiary she had seen at Camaguay had been old, with
+beards like mountain-goats, and had worn linen dusters. They
+always were very red in the face and very damp. Monica decided
+Mr. Everett also was old; she was sure he must be at least
+thirty-five; but in his silk pongee and pipe-clayed tennis-shoes
+he was a refreshing spectacle. Just to look at him turned one
+quite cool.
+
+"We have a very fine line of battle-ships this morning at
+Guantanamo," urged Everett; "if you want one I'll cable for it."
+
+Monica laughed softly. It was good to hear nonsense spoken. The
+Amapalans had never learned it, and her brother said just what he
+meant and no more.
+
+"Our sailors were here once," Monica volunteered. She wanted
+Mr. Everett to know he was not entirely cut off from the world.
+"During the revolution," she explained. "We were so glad to see
+them; they made us all feel nearer home. They set up our flag in
+the plaza, and the color-guard let me photograph it, with them
+guarding it. And when they marched away the archbishop stood
+on the cathedral steps and blessed them, and we rode out along the
+trail to where it comes to the jungle. And then we waved good-by,
+and they cheered us. We all cried."
+
+For a moment, quite unconsciously, Monica gave an imitation of
+how they all cried. It made the appeal of the violet eyes even more
+disturbing.
+"Don't you love our sailors?" begged Monica.
+
+Fearful of hurting the feelings of others, she added hastily,
+"And, of course, our marines, too."
+
+Everett assured her if there was one thing that meant more to him
+than all else, it was an American bluejacket, and next to him an
+American leatherneck.
+
+It took a long time to arrange the details of the Red Cross
+Society. In spite of his reputation for brilliancy, it seemed to
+Monica Mr. Everett had a mind that plodded. For his benefit it
+was necessary several times to repeat the most simple proposition.
+She was sure his inability to fasten his attention on her League
+of Mercy was because his brain was occupied with problems of
+state. It made her feel selfish and guilty. When his visitor
+decided that to explain further was but to waste his valuable
+time and had made her third effort to go, Everett went with her.
+He suggested that she take him to the hospital and introduce him
+to the sisters. He wanted to talk to them about the Red Cross
+League. It was a charming walk. Every one lifted his hat to
+Monica; the beggars, the cab-drivers, the barefooted policemen,
+and the social lights of Camaguay on the sidewalks in front of
+the cafes rose and bowed.
+
+"It is like walking with royalty!" exclaimed Everett.
+
+While at the hospital he talked to the Mother Superior--his eyes
+followed Monica. As she moved from cot to cot he noted how
+the younger sisters fluttered happily around her, like bridesmaids
+around a bride, and how as she passed, the eyes of those in the
+cots followed her jealously, and after she had spoken with them
+smiled in content.
+
+"She is good," the Mother Superior was saying, "and her brother,
+too, is very good."
+
+Everett had forgotten the brother. With a start he lifted his eyes
+and found the Mother Superior regarding him.
+
+"He is very good," she repeated. "For us, he built this wing of
+the hospital. It was his money. We should be very sorry if any
+harm came to Mr. Ward. Without his help we would starve." She
+smiled, and with a gesture signified the sick. "I mean they would
+starve; they would die of disease and fever." The woman fixed
+upon him grave, inscrutable eyes. "Will Your Excellency
+remember?" she said. It was less of a question than a command.
+"Where the church can forgive--" she paused.
+
+Like a real diplomat Everett sought refuge in mere words.
+
+"The church is all-powerful, Mother," he said. "Her power to
+forgive is her strongest weapon. I have no such power. It lies
+beyond my authority. I am just a messenger-boy carrying the
+wishes of the government of one country to the government of
+another."
+
+The face of the Mother Superior remained grave, but undisturbed.
+
+"Then, as regards our Mr. Ward," she said, "the wishes of your
+government are--"
+
+Again she paused; again it was less of a question than a command.
+With interest Everett gazed at the whitewashed ceiling.
+
+"I have not yet," he said, "communicated them to any one."
+
+That night, after dinner in the patio, he reported to Garland the
+words of the Mother Superior.
+
+"That was my dream, 0 Prophet," concluded Everett; "you who can
+read this land of lotus-eaters, interpret! What does it mean?"
+
+"It only means what I've been telling you," said the consul. "It means
+that if you're going after that treaty, you've only got to fight the
+Catholic Church. That's all it means!"
+
+Later in the evening Garland said: "I saw you this morning crossing
+the plaza with Monica. When I told you everybody in this town
+loved her, was I right?"
+
+"Absolutely!" assented Everett. "But why didn't you tell me she
+was a flapper?"
+
+"I don't know what a flapper is," promptly retorted Garland. "And
+if I did, I wouldn't call Monica one."
+
+"A flapper is a very charming person," protested Everett. "I used
+the term in its most complimentary sense. It means a girl between
+fourteen and eighteen. It's English slang, and in England at the
+present the flapper is very popular. She is driving her sophisticated
+elder sister, who has been out two or three seasons, and the predatory
+married woman to the wall. To men of my years the flapper is really
+at the dangerous age."
+
+In his bamboo chair Garland tossed violently and snorted.
+
+"I sized you up," he cried, "as a man of the finest perceptions. I was
+wrong. You don't appreciate Monica! Dangerous! You might as
+well say God's sunshine is dangerous, or a beautiful flower is
+dangerous."
+
+Everett shook his head at the other man reproachfully:
+
+"Did you ever hear of a sunstroke?" he demanded. "Don't you know
+if you smell certain beautiful flowers you die? Can't you grasp any
+other kind of danger than being run down by a trolley-car? Is the
+danger of losing one's peace of mind nothing, of being unfaithful
+to duty, nothing! Is--"
+
+Garland raised his arms.
+
+"Don't shoot!" he begged. "I apologize. You do appreciate Monica.
+You have your consul's permission to walk with her again."
+
+The next day young Professor Peabody called and presented his
+letters. He was a forceful young man to whom the delays of
+diplomacy did not appeal, and one apparently accustomed to riding
+off whatever came in his way. He seemed to consider any one who
+opposed him, or who even disagreed with his conclusions, as
+offering a personal affront. With indignation he launched into
+his grievance.
+
+"These people," he declared, "are dogs in the manger, and Ward is
+the worst of the lot. He knows no more of archaeology than a
+congressman. The man's a faker! He showed me a spear-head of
+obsidian and called it flint; and he said the Aztecs borrowed from
+the Mayas, and that the Toltecs were a myth. And he got the Aztec
+solar calendar mixed with the Ahau. He's as ignorant as that."
+
+"I can't believe it!" exclaimed Everett.
+
+"You may laugh," protested the professor, "but the ruins of Cobre
+hold secrets the students of two continents are trying to solve.
+They hide the history of a lost race, and I submit it's not proper
+one man should keep that knowledge from the world, certainly
+not for a few gold armlets!"
+
+Everett raised his eyes.
+
+"What makes you say that?"' he demanded.
+
+"I've been kicking my heels in this town for a month," Peabody
+told him, "and I've talked to the people here, and to the Harvard
+expedition at Copan, and everybody tells me this fellow has found
+treasure." The archaeologist exclaimed with indignation: "What's
+gold," he snorted, "compared to the discovery of a lost race?"
+
+"I applaud your point of view," Everett assured him. "I am to see the
+President tomorrow, and I will lay the matter before him. I'll ask him
+to give you a look in."
+
+To urge his treaty of extradition was the reason for the audience with
+the President, and with all the courtesy that a bad case demanded
+Mendoza protested against it. He pointed out that governments
+entered into treaties only when the ensuing benefits were mutual.
+For Amapala in a treaty of extradition he saw no benefit. Amapala
+was not so far "advanced" as to produce defaulting bank presidents,
+get-rich-quick promoters, counterfeiters, and thieving cashiers. Her
+fugitives were revolutionists who had fought and lost, and every one
+was glad to have them go, and no one wanted them back.
+
+"Or," suggested the President, "suppose I am turned out by a
+revolution, and I seek asylum in your country? My enemies desire
+my life. They would ask for my extradition--"
+
+"If the offense were political," Everett corrected, "my government
+would surrender no one."
+
+"But my enemies would charge me with murder," explained the
+President. "Remember Castro. And by the terms of the treaty your
+government would be forced to surrender me. And I am shot against
+the wall." The President shrugged his shoulders. "That treaty would
+not be nice for me!"
+
+"Consider the matter as a patriot," said the diplomat. "Is it good that
+the criminals of my country should make their home in yours? When
+you are so fortunate as to have no dishonest men of your own, why
+import ours? We don't seek the individual. We want to punish him
+only as a warning to others. And we want the money he takes with
+him. Often it is the savings of the very poor."
+
+The President frowned. It was apparent that both the subject and
+Everett bored him.
+
+"I name no names," exclaimed Mendoza, "but to those who come
+here we owe the little railroads we possess. They develop our mines
+and our coffee plantations. In time they will make this country very
+modern, very rich. And some you call criminals we have learned to
+love. Their past does not concern us. We shut our ears. We do not
+spy. They have come to us as to a sanctuary, and so long as they claim
+the right of sanctuary, I will not violate it."
+
+As Everett emerged from the cool, dark halls of the palace into
+the glare of the plaza he was scowling; and he acknowledged the
+salute of the palace guard as though those gentlemen had offered
+him an insult.
+
+Garland was waiting in front of a cafe and greeted him with a
+mocking grin.
+
+"Congratulations," he shouted.
+
+"I have still twenty-two days," said Everett
+.
+
+The aristocracy of Camaguay invited the new minister to formal
+dinners of eighteen courses, and to picnics less formal. These
+latter Everett greatly enjoyed, because while Monica Ward was too
+young to attend the state dinners, she was exactly the proper age
+for the all-day excursions to the waterfalls, the coffee plantations,
+and the asphalt lakes. The native belles of Camaguay took no
+pleasure in riding farther afield than the military parade-ground.
+Climbing a trail so steep that you viewed the sky between the ears
+of your pony, or where with both hands you forced a way through
+hanging vines and creepers, did not appeal. But to Monica, with
+the seat and balance of a cowboy, riding astride, with her leg straight
+and the ball of her foot just feeling the stirrup, these expeditions were
+the happiest moments in her exile. So were they to Everett; and that
+on the trail one could ride only in single file was a most poignant
+regret. In the column the place of honor was next to whoever rode
+at the head, but Everett relinquished this position in favor of Monica.
+By this manoeuvre she always was in his sight, and he could call
+upon her to act as his guide and to explain what lay on either hand.
+His delight and wonder in her grew daily. He found that her mind
+leaped instantly and with gratitude to whatever was most fair. Just
+out of reach of her pony's hoofs he pressed his own pony forward,
+and she pointed out to him what in the tropic abundance about them
+she found most beautiful. Sometimes it was the tumbling waters of
+a cataract; sometimes, high in the topmost branches of a ceiba-tree,
+a gorgeous orchid; sometimes a shaft of sunshine as rigid as a
+search-light, piercing the shadow of the jungle. At first she would
+turn in the saddle and call to him, but as each day they grew to know
+each other better she need only point with her whip-hand and he would
+answer, "Yes," and each knew the other understood.
+
+As a body, the exiles resented Everett. They knew his purpose in
+regard to the treaty, and for them he always must be the enemy.
+Even though as a man they might like him, they could not forget
+that his presence threatened their peace and safety. Chester Ward
+treated him with impeccable politeness; but, although his house
+was the show-place of Camaguay, he never invited the American
+minister to cross the threshold. On account of Monica, Everett
+regretted this and tried to keep the relations of her brother and
+himself outwardly pleasant. But Ward made it difficult. To no
+one was his manner effusive, and for Monica only he seemed to
+hold any real feeling. The two were alone in the world; he was
+her only relative, and to the orphan he had been father and mother.
+When she was a child he had bought her toys and dolls; now, had
+the sisters permitted, he would have dressed her in imported frocks,
+and with jewels killed her loveliness. He seemed to understand
+how to spend his money as little as did the gossips of Camaguay
+understand from whence it came.
+
+That Monica knew why her brother lived in Camaguay Everett was
+uncertain. She did not complain of living there, but she was not
+at rest, and constantly she was asking Everett of foreign lands.
+As Everett was homesick for them, he was most eloquent.
+
+"I should like to see them for myself," said Monica, "but until my
+brother's work here is finished we must wait. And I am young,
+and after a few years Europe will be just as old. When my brother
+leaves Amapala, he promises to take me wherever I ask to go: to
+London, to Paris, to Rome. So I read and read of them; books of
+history, books about painting, books about the cathedrals. But
+the more I read the more I want to go at once, and that is disloyal."
+
+"Disloyal?" asked Everett.
+
+"To my brother," explained Monica. "He does so much for me.
+I should think only of his work. That is all that really counts.
+For the world is waiting to learn what he has discovered. It is
+like having a brother go in search of the North Pole. You are
+proud of what he is doing, but you want him back to keep him
+to yourself. Is that selfish?"
+
+Everett was a trained diplomat, but with his opinion of Chester Ward
+he could not think of the answer. Instead, he was thinking of Monica
+in Europe; of taking her through the churches and galleries which she
+had seen only in black and white. He imagined himself at her side
+facing the altar of some great cathedral, or some painting in the Louvre,
+and watching her face lighten and the tears come to her eyes, as they
+did now, when things that were beautiful hurt her. Or he imagined her
+rid of her half-mourning and accompanying him through a cyclonic
+diplomatic career that carried them to Japan, China, Persia; to Berlin,
+Paris, and London. In these imaginings Monica appeared in pongee
+and a sun-hat riding an elephant, in pearls and satin receiving
+royalty, in tweed knickerbockers and a woollen jersey coasting
+around the hairpin curve at Saint Moritz.
+
+Of course he recognized that except as his wife Monica could not
+accompany him to all these strange lands and high diplomatic posts.
+And of course that was ridiculous. He had made up his mind for
+the success of what he called his career, that he was too young to
+marry; but he was sure, should he propose to marry Monica, every
+one would say he was too old. And there was another consideration.
+What of the brother? Would his government send him to a foreign
+post when his wife was the sister of a man they had just sent to the
+penitentiary?
+
+He could hear them say in London, "We know your first secretary,
+but who is Mrs. Everett?" And the American visitor would explain:
+"She is the sister of 'Inky Dink,' the forger. He is bookkeeping
+in Sing Sing."
+
+Certainly it would be a handicap. He tried to persuade himself
+that Monica so entirely filled his thoughts because in Camaguay
+there was no one else; it was a case of propinquity; her loneliness
+and the fact that she lay under a shadow for which she was not to
+blame appealed to his chivalry. So, he told himself, in thinking of
+Monica except as a charming companion, he was an ass. And then,
+arguing that in calling himself an ass he had shown his saneness
+and impartiality, he felt justified in seeing her daily.
+
+One morning Garland came to the legation to tell Everett that
+Peabody was in danger of bringing about international
+complications by having himself thrust into the cartel.
+
+"If he qualifies for this local jail," said Garland, "you will have
+a lot of trouble setting him free. You'd better warn him it's
+easier to keep out than to get out."
+
+"What has he been doing?" asked the minister.
+
+"Poaching on Ward's ruins," said the consul. "He certainly is a
+hustler. He pretends to go to Copan, but really goes to Cobre.
+Ward had him followed and threatened to have him arrested.
+Peabody claims any tourist has a right to visit the ruins so long
+as he does no excavating. Ward accused him of exploring the place
+by night and taking photographs by flash-light of the hieroglyphs.
+He's put an armed guard at the ruins, and he told Peabody they are
+to shoot on sight. So Peabody went to Mendoza and said if anybody
+took a shot at him he'd bring warships down here and blow Amapala
+off the map."
+
+"A militant archaeologist," said Everett, "is something new. Peabody
+is too enthusiastic. He and his hieroglyphs are becoming a bore."
+
+He sent for Peabody and told him unless he curbed his spirit his
+minister could not promise to keep him out of a very damp and
+dirty dungeon.
+
+"I am too enthusiastic," Peabody admitted, "but to me this fellow
+Ward is like a red flag to the bull. His private graft is holding
+up the whole scientific world. He won't let us learn the truth,
+and he's too ignorant to learn it himself. Why, he told me Cobre
+dated from 1578, when Palacio wrote of it to Philip the Second,
+not knowing that in that very letter Palacio states that he found
+Cobre in ruins. Is it right a man as ignorant--"
+
+Everett interrupted by levelling his finger.
+
+"You," he commanded, "keep out of those ruins! My dear professor,"
+he continued reproachfully, "you are a student, a man of peace.
+Don't try to wage war on these Amapalans. They're lawless, they're
+unscrupulous. So is Ward. Besides, you are in the wrong, and if
+they turn ugly, your minister cannot help you." He shook his head
+and smiled doubtfully. "I can't understand," he exclaimed, "why
+you're so keen. It's only a heap of broken pottery. Sometimes I
+wonder if your interest in Cobre is that only of the archaeologist."
+
+"What other interest--" demanded Peabody.
+
+"Doesn't Ward's buried treasure appeal at all?" asked the
+minister. "I mean, of course, to your imagination. It does to
+mine."
+
+The young professor laughed tolerantly.
+
+"Buried treasure!" he exclaimed. "If Ward has found treasure, and
+I think he has, he's welcome to it. What we want is what you call
+the broken pottery. It means nothing to you, but to men like
+myself, who live eight hundred years behind the times, it is much
+more precious than gold."
+
+A few moments later Professor Peabody took his leave, and it was
+not until he had turned the corner of the Calle Morazan that he
+halted and, like a man emerging from water, drew a deep breath.
+
+"Gee!" muttered the distinguished archeologist, "that was a close
+call!"
+
+One or two women had loved Everett, and after five weeks, in
+which almost daily he had seen Monica, he knew she cared for him.
+This discovery made him entirely happy and filled him with dismay.
+It was a complication he had not foreseen. It left him at the parting
+of two ways, one of which he must choose. For his career he was
+willing to renounce marriage, but now that Monica loved him, even
+though he had consciously not tried to make her love him, had he
+the right to renounce it for her also? He knew that the difference
+between Monica and his career lay in the fact that he loved Monica
+and was in love with his career. Which should he surrender? Of this
+he thought long and deeply, until one night, without thinking at all,
+he chose.
+
+Colonel Goddard had given a dance, and, as all invited were
+Americans, the etiquette was less formal than at the gatherings
+of the Amapalans. For one thing, the minister and Monica were
+able to sit on the veranda overlooking the garden without his
+having to fight a duel in the morning.
+
+It was not the moonlight, or the music, or the palms that made
+Everett speak. It was simply the knowledge that it was written,
+that it had to be. And he heard himself, without prelude or
+introduction, talking easily and assuredly of the life they would
+lead as man and wife. From this dream Monica woke him. The
+violet eyes were smiling at him through tears.
+
+"When you came," said the girl, "and I loved you, I thought that
+was the greatest happiness. Now that I know you love me I ask
+nothing more. And I can bear it."
+
+Everett felt as though an icy finger had moved swiftly down his
+spine. He pretended not to understand.
+
+"Bear what?" he demanded roughly.
+
+"That I cannot marry you," said the girl. "Even had you not asked
+me, in loving you I would have been happy. Now that I know you
+thought of me as your wife, I am proud. I am grateful. And the
+obstacle--"
+
+Everett laughed scornfully.
+
+"There is no obstacle."
+
+Monica shook her head. Unafraid, she looked into his eyes, her
+own filled with her love for him.
+
+"Don't make it harder," she said. "My brother is hiding from the
+law. What he did I don't know. When it happened I was at the
+convent, and he did not send for me until he had reached Amapala.
+I never asked why we came, but were I to marry you, with your name
+and your position, every one else would ask. And the scandal would
+follow you; wherever you went it would follow; it would put an end
+to your career."
+
+His career, now that Monica urged it as her rival, seemed to
+Everett particularly trivial.
+
+"I don't know what your brother did either," he said. "His sins
+are on his own head. They're not on yours, nor on mine. I don't
+judge him; neither do I intend to let him spoil my happiness. Now
+that I have found you I will never let you go."
+
+Sadly Monica shook her head and smiled.
+
+"When you leave here," she said, "for some new post, you won't
+forget me, but you'll be grateful that I let you go alone; that I was
+not a drag on you. When you go back to your great people and
+your proud and beautiful princesses, all this will seem a strange
+dream, and you will be glad you are awake--and free."
+
+"The idea of marrying you, Monica," said Everett, "is not new. It did
+not occur to me only since we moved out here into the moonlight.
+Since I first saw you I've thought of you, and only of you. I've
+thought of you with me in every corner of the globe, as my wife,
+my sweetheart, my partner, riding through jungles as we ride here,
+sitting opposite me at our own table, putting the proud and beautiful
+princesses at their ease. And in all places, at all moments, you make
+all other women tawdry and absurd. And I don't think you are the
+most wonderful person I ever met because I love you, but I love you
+because you are the most wonderful person I ever met."
+
+"I am young," said Monica, "but since I began to love you I am
+very old. And I see clearly that it cannot be."
+
+"Dear heart," cried Everett, "that is quite morbid. What the
+devil do I care what your brother has done! I am not marrying
+your brother."
+
+For a long time, leaning forward with her elbows on her knees and
+her face buried in her hands, the girl sat silent. It was as though she
+were praying. Everett knew it was not of him, but of her brother,
+she was thinking, and his heart ached for her. For him to cut the
+brother out of his life was not difficult; what it meant to her he
+could guess.
+
+When the girl raised her eyes they were eloquent with distress.
+
+"He has been so good to me," she said; "always so gentle. He has
+been mother and father to me. He is the first person I can remember.
+When I was a child he put me to bed, he dressed me, and comforted
+me. When we became rich there was nothing he did not wish to give
+me. I cannot leave him. He needs me more than ever I needed him. I
+am all he has. And there is this besides. Were I to marry, of all the
+men in the world it would be harder for him if I married you. For if
+you succeed in what you came here to do, the law will punish him,
+and he will know it was through you he was punished. And even
+between you and me there always would be that knowledge, that
+feeling."
+
+"That is not fair," cried Everett. "I am not an individual fighting
+less fortunate individuals. I am an insignificant wheel in a great
+machine. You must not blame me because I-"
+
+With an exclamation the girl reproached him.
+
+"Because you do your duty!" she protested. "Is that fair to me?
+If for my sake or my brother you failed in your duty, if you were
+less vigilant, less eager, even though we suffer, I could not
+love you."
+
+Everett sighed happily.
+
+"As long as you love me," he said, "neither your brother nor any
+one else can keep us apart."
+
+"My brother," said the girl, as though she were pronouncing a
+sentence, "always will keep us apart, and I will always love
+you."
+
+It was a week before he again saw her, and then the feeling he
+had read in her eyes was gone--or rigorously concealed. Now her
+manner was that of a friend, of a young girl addressing a man
+older than herself, one to whom she looked up with respect and
+liking, but with no sign of any feeling deeper or more intimate.
+
+It upset Everett completely. When he pleaded with her, she asked:
+
+"Do you think it is easy for me? But--" she protested, "I know I
+am doing right. I am doing it to make you happy."
+
+"You are succeeding," Everett assured her, "in making us both
+damned miserable."
+
+For Everett, in the second month of his stay in Amapala, events
+began to move quickly. Following the example of two of his
+predecessors, the Secretary of State of the United States was
+about to make a grand tour of Central America. He came on a
+mission of peace and brotherly love, to foster confidence and
+good-will, and it was secretly hoped that, in the wake of his
+escort of battle-ships, trade would follow fast. There would
+be salutes and visits of ceremony, speeches, banquets, reviews.
+But in these rejoicings Amapala would have no part.
+
+For, so Everett was informed by cable, unless, previous to the
+visit of the Secretary, Amapala fell into line with her sister
+republics and signed a treaty of extradition, from the itinerary
+of the great man Amapala would find herself pointedly excluded.
+It would be a humiliation. In the eyes of her sister republics it
+would place her outside the pale. Everett saw that in his hands
+his friend the Secretary had placed a powerful weapon; and lost
+no time in using it. He caught the President alone, sitting late at
+his dinner, surrounded by bottles, and read to him the Secretary's
+ultimatum. General Mendoza did not at once surrender. Before he
+threw over the men who fed him the golden eggs that made him rich,
+and for whom he had sworn never to violate the right of sanctuary,
+he first, for fully half an hour, raged and swore. During that time,
+while Everett sat anxiously expectant, the President paced and
+repaced the length of the dining-hall. When to relight his cigar,
+or to gulp brandy from a tumbler, he halted at the table, his great
+bulk loomed large in the flickering candle-flames, and when he
+continued his march, he would disappear into the shadows, and
+only his scabbard clanking on the stone floor told of his presence.
+At last he halted and shrugged his shoulders so that the tassels of
+his epaulets tossed like wheat.
+
+"You drive a hard bargain, sir," he said. "And I have no choice.
+To-morrow bring the treaty and I will sign."
+
+Everett at once produced it and a fountain pen.
+
+"I should like to cable to-night," he urged, "that you have signed.
+They are holding back the public announcement of the Secretary's
+route until hearing from Your Excellency. This is only tentative,"
+he pointed out; "the Senate must ratify. But our Senate will ratify
+it, and when you sign now, it is a thing accomplished."
+
+Over the place at which Everett pointed, the pen scratched harshly;
+and then, throwing it from him, the President sat in silence. With
+eyes inflamed by anger and brandy he regarded the treaty venomously.
+As though loath to let it go, his hands played with it, as a cat plays
+with the mouse between her paws. Watching him breathlessly,
+Everett feared the end was not yet. He felt a depressing premonition
+that if ever the treaty were to reach Washington he best had snatch it
+and run. Even as he waited, the end came. An orderly, appearing
+suddenly in the light of the candles, announced the arrival, in the
+room adjoining, of "the Colonel Goddard and Senor Mellen." They
+desired an immediate audience. Their business with the President
+was most urgent. Whether from Washington their agents had warned
+them, whether in Camaguay they had deciphered the cablegram from
+the State Department, Everett could only guess, but he was certain the
+cause of their visit was the treaty. That Mendoza also believed this
+was most evident.
+
+Into the darkness, from which the two exiles might emerge, he
+peered guiltily. With an oath he tore the treaty in half. Crushing
+the pieces of paper into a ball, he threw it at Everett's feet. His
+voice rose to a shriek. It was apparent he intended his words to
+carry to the men outside. Like an actor on a stage he waved his
+arms.
+
+"That is my answer!" he shouted. "Tell your Secretary the choice
+he offers is an insult! It is blackmail. We will not sign his treaty.
+We do not desire his visit to our country." Thrilled by his own
+bravado, his voice rose higher. "Nor," he shouted, "do we desire
+the presence of his representative. Your usefulness is at an end.
+You will receive your passports in the morning."
+
+As he might discharge a cook, he waved Everett away. His hand,
+trembling with excitement, closed around the neck of the brandy-
+bottle. Everett stooped and secured the treaty. On his return to
+Washington, torn and rumpled as it was, it would be his
+justification. It was his "Exhibit A."
+
+As he approached the legation he saw drawn up in front of it three
+ponies ready saddled. For an instant he wondered if Mendoza
+intended further to insult him, if he planned that night to send
+him under guard to the coast. He determined hotly sooner than
+submit to such an indignity he would fortify the legation, and
+defend himself. But no such heroics were required of him. As he
+reached the door, Garland, with an exclamation of relief, hailed
+him, and Monica, stepping from the shadow, laid an appealing
+hand upon his sleeve.
+
+"My brother!" she exclaimed. "The guard at Cobre has just sent
+word that they found Peabody prowling in the ruins and fired on
+him. He fired back, and he is still there hiding. My brother and
+others have gone to take him. I don't know what may happen if he
+resists. Chester is armed, and he is furious; he is beside himself;
+he would not listen to me. But he must listen to you. Will you
+go," the girl begged, "and speak to him; speak to him, I mean,"
+she added, "as the American minister?"
+
+Everett already had his foot in the stirrup. "I'm the American minister
+only until to-morrow," he said. "I've got my walking-papers. But I'll
+do all I can to stop this to-night. Garland," he asked, "will you take
+Miss Ward home, and then follow me?"
+
+"If I do not go with you," said Monica, "I will go alone."
+
+Her tone was final. With a clatter of hoofs that woke alarmed
+echoes in the sleeping streets the three horses galloped abreast
+toward Cobre. In an hour they left the main trail and at a walk
+picked their way to where the blocks of stone, broken columns,
+and crumbling temples of the half-buried city checked the jungle.
+
+The moon made it possible to move in safety, and at different
+distances the lights of torches told them the man-hunt still was
+in progress.
+
+"Thank God," breathed Monica, "we are in time."
+
+Everett gave the ponies in care of one of the guards. He turned
+to Garland.
+
+"Catch up with those lights ahead of us," he said, "and we will
+join this party to the right. If you find Ward, tell him I forbid
+him taking the law into his own hands; tell him I will protect
+his interests. If you meet Peabody, make him give up his gun,
+and see that the others don't harm him!"
+
+Everett and the girl did not overtake the lights they had seen
+flashing below them. Before they were within hailing distance,
+that searching party had disappeared, and still farther away
+other torches beckoned.
+
+Stumbling and falling, now in pursuit of one will-o'-the-wisp,
+now of another, they scrambled forward. But always the lights
+eluded them. From their exertions and the moist heat they were
+breathless, and their bodies dripped with water. Panting, they
+halted at the entrance of what once had been a tomb. From its
+black interior came a damp mist; above them, alarmed by their
+intrusion, the vampire bats whirled blindly in circles. Monica,
+who by day possessed some slight knowledge of the ruins, had,
+in the moonlight, lost all sense of direction.
+
+"We're lost," said Monica, in a low tone. Unconsciously both were
+speaking in whispers. "I thought we were following what used to
+be the main thoroughfare of the city; but I have never seen this place
+before. From what I have read I think we must be among the tombs
+of the kings."
+
+She was silenced by Everett placing one hand quickly on her arm,
+and with the other pointing. In the uncertain moonlight she saw
+moving cautiously away from them, and unconscious of their
+presence, a white, ghostlike figure.
+
+"Peabody," whispered Everett.
+
+"Call him," commanded Monica.
+
+"The others might hear," objected Everett. "We must overtake him.
+If we're with him when they meet, they wouldn't dare--"
+
+With a gasp of astonishment, his words ceased.
+
+Like a ghost, the ghostlike figure had vanished.
+
+"He walked through that rock!" cried Monica.
+
+Everett caught her by the wrist. "Come!" he commanded.
+
+Over the face of the rock, into which Peabody had dived as into
+water, hung a curtain of vines. Everett tore it apart. Concealed
+by the vines was the narrow mouth to a tunnel; and from it they
+heard, rapidly lessening in the distance, the patter of footsteps.
+
+"Will you wait," demanded Everett, "or come with me?"
+
+With a shudder of distaste, Monica answered by seizing his hand.
+
+With his free arm Everett swept aside the vines, and, Monica
+following, they entered the tunnel. It was a passageway cleanly
+cut through the solid rock and sufficiently wide to permit of their
+moving freely. At the farther end, at a distance of a hundred
+yards, it opened into a great vault, also hollowed from the rock
+and, as they saw to their surprise, brilliantly lighted.
+
+For an instant, in black silhouette, the figure of Peabody
+blocked the entrance to this vault, and then, turning to the
+right, again vanished. Monica felt an untimely desire to laugh.
+Now that they were on the track of Peabody she no longer feared
+the outcome of the adventure. In the presence of the American
+minister and of herself there would be no violence; and as they
+trailed the archaeologist through the tunnel she was reminded of
+Alice and her pursuit of the white rabbit. This thought, and her
+sense of relief that the danger was over, caused her to laugh aloud.
+
+They had gained the farther end of the tunnel and the entrance to
+the vault, when at once her amusement turned to wonder. For the
+vault showed every evidence of use and of recent occupation. In
+brackets, and burning brightly, were lamps of modern make; on
+the stone floor stood a canvas cot, saddle-bags, camp-chairs,
+and in the centre of the vault a collapsible table. On this were
+bottles filled with chemicals, trays, and presses such as are used
+in developing photographs, and apparently hung there to dry,
+
+swinging from strings, the proofs of many negatives.
+
+Loyal to her brother, Monica exclaimed indignantly. At the proofs
+she pointed an accusing finger.
+
+"Look!" she whispered. "This is Peabody's darkroom, where he
+develops the flash-lights he takes of the hieroglyphs! Chester has
+a right to be furious!"
+
+Impulsively she would have pushed past Everett; but with an
+exclamation he sprang in front of her.
+
+"No!" he commanded, "come away!"
+
+He had fallen into a sudden panic. His tone spoke of some
+catastrophe, imminent and overwhelming. Monica followed
+the direction of his eyes. They were staring in fear at the proofs.
+
+The girl leaned forward; and now saw them clearly.
+
+Each was a United States Treasury note for five hundred dollars.
+
+Around the turn of the tunnel, approaching the vault apparently
+from another passage, they heard hurrying footsteps; and then,
+close to them from the vault itself, the voice of Professor Peabody.
+
+It was harsh, sharp, peremptory.
+
+"Hands up!" it commanded. "Drop that gun!"
+
+As though halted by a precipice, the footsteps fell into instant
+silence. There was a pause, and then the ring of steel upon the
+stone floor. There was another pause, and Monica heard the
+voice of her brother. Broken, as though with running, it still
+retained its level accent, its note of insolence.
+
+"So," it said, "I have caught you?"
+
+Monica struggled toward the lighted vault, but around her Everett
+threw his arm.
+
+"Come away!" he begged.
+
+Monica fought against the terror of something unknown. She could
+not understand. They had come only to prevent a meeting between
+her brother and Peabody; and now that they had met, Everett was
+endeavoring to escape.
+
+It was incomprehensible.
+
+And the money in the vault, the yellow bills hanging from a
+cobweb of strings; why should they terrify her; what did they
+threaten? Dully, and from a distance, Monica heard the voice
+of Peabody.
+
+"No," he answered; "I have caught you! And I've had a hell of a
+time doing it!"
+
+Monica tried to call out, to assure her brother of her presence.
+But, as though in a nightmare, she could make no sound. Fingers
+of fear gripped at her throat. To struggle was no longer possible.
+
+The voice of Peabody continued:
+
+"Six months ago we traced these bills to New Orleans. So we guessed
+the plant was in Central America. We knew only one man who could
+make them. When I found you were in Amapala and they said you had
+struck 'buried treasure'--the rest was easy."
+
+Monica heard the voice of her brother answer with a laugh.
+
+"Easy?" he mocked. "There's no extradition. You can't touch me.
+You're lucky if you get out of here alive. I've only to raise my voice--"
+
+"And, I'll kill you!"
+
+This was danger Monica could understand.
+
+Freed from the nightmare of doubt, with a cry she ran forward.
+She saw Peabody, his back against a wall, a levelled automatic in
+his hand; her brother at the entrance to a tunnel like the one from
+which she had just appeared. His arms were raised above his head.
+At his feet lay a revolver. For an instant, with disbelief, he stared
+at Monica, and then, as though assured that it was she, his eyes
+dilated. In them were fear and horror. So genuine was the agony
+in the face of the counterfeiter that Everett, who had followed,
+turned his own away. But the eyes of the brother and sister
+remained fixed upon each other, hers, appealingly; his, with
+despair. He tried to speak, but the words did not come. When
+he did break the silence his tone was singularly wistful, most
+tenderly kind.
+
+"Did you hear?" he asked.
+
+Monica slowly bowed her head. With the same note of gentleness
+her brother persisted:
+
+"Did you understand?"
+
+Between them stretched the cobweb of strings hung with yellow
+certificates; each calling for five hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+Stirred by the night air from the open tunnels, they fluttered and
+flaunted.
+
+Against the sight of them, Monica closed her eyes. Heavily, as
+though with a great physical effort, again she bowed her head.
+
+The eyes of her brother searched about him wildly. They rested on
+the mouth of the tunnel.
+
+With his lowered arm he pointed.
+
+"Who is that?" he cried.
+
+Instinctively the others turned.
+
+It was for an instant. The instant sufficed.
+
+Monica saw her brother throw himself upon the floor, felt herself
+flung aside as Everett and the detective leaped upon him; saw her
+brother press his hands against his heart, the two men dragging
+at his arms.
+
+The cavelike room was shaken with a report, an acrid smoke
+assailed her nostrils. The men ceased struggling. Her brother lay
+still.
+
+Monica sprang toward the body, but a black wave rose and
+submerged her. As she fainted, to save herself she threw out her
+arms, and as she fell she dragged down with her the buried
+treasure of Cobre.
+
+Stretched upon the stone floor beside her brother, she lay motionless.
+Beneath her, and wrapped about and covering her, as the leaves
+covered the babes in the wood, was a vast cobweb of yellow bills,
+each for five hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+
+
+A month later the harbor of Porto Cortez in Honduras was shaken
+with the roar of cannon. In comparison, the roaring of all the cannon
+of all the revolutions that that distressful country ever had known,
+were like fire-crackers under a barrel.
+
+Faithful to his itinerary, the Secretary of State of the United States
+was paying his formal visit to Honduras, and the President of that
+republic, waiting upon the Fruit Company's wharf to greet him, was
+receiving the salute of the American battle-ships. Back of him, on
+the wharf, his own barefooted artillerymen in their turn were saluting,
+excitedly and spasmodically, the distinguished visitor. As an honor
+he had at last learned to accept without putting a finger in each ear,
+the Secretary of State smiled with gracious calm. Less calm was the
+President of Honduras. He knew something the Secretary did not
+know. He knew that at any moment a gun of his saluting battery
+might turn turtle, or blow into the harbor himself, his cabinet, and
+the larger part of his standing army.
+
+Made fast to the wharf on the side opposite to the one at which
+the Secretary had landed was one of the Fruit Company's steamers.
+She was on her way north, and Porto Cortez was a port of call.
+That her passengers might not intrude upon the ceremonies, her
+side of the wharf was roped off and guarded by the standing army.
+But from her decks and from behind the ropes the passengers, with
+a battery of cameras, were perpetuating the historic scene.
+
+Among them, close to the ropes, viewing the ceremony with the
+cynical eye of one who in Europe had seen kings and emperors
+meet upon the Field of the Cloth of Gold, was Everett. He made
+no effort to bring himself to the attention of his former chief. But
+when the introductions were over, the Secretary of State turned
+his eyes to his fellow countrymen crowding the rails of the
+American steamer. They greeted him with cheers. The great
+man raised his hat, and his eyes fell upon Everett. The Secretary
+advanced quickly, his hand extended, brushing to one side the
+standing army.
+
+"What are you doing here?" he demanded.
+
+"On my way home, sir," said Everett. "I couldn't leave sooner; there
+were--personal reasons. But I cabled the department my resignation
+the day Mendoza gave me my walking-papers. You may remember,"
+Everett added dryly, "the department accepted by cable."
+
+The great man showed embarrassment.
+
+"It was most unfortunate," he sympathized. "We wanted that treaty,
+and while, no doubt, you made every effort--"
+
+He became aware of the fact that Everett's attention was not
+exclusively his own. Following the direction of the young man's
+eyes the Secretary saw on the deck just above them, leaning upon
+the rail, a girl in deep mourning.
+
+She was very beautiful. Her face was as lovely as a violet and as shy.
+To the Secretary a beautiful woman was always a beautiful woman.
+But he had read the papers. Who had not? He was sure there must
+be some mistake. This could not be the sister of a criminal; the
+woman for whom Everett had smashed his career.
+
+The Secretary masked his astonishment, but not his admiration.
+
+"Mrs. Everett?" he asked. His very tone conveyed congratulations.
+
+"Yes," said the ex-diplomat. "Some day I shall be glad to present
+you."
+
+The Secretary did not wait for an introduction. Raising his eyes
+to the ship's rail, he made a deep and courtly bow. With a gesture
+worthy of d'Artagnan, his high hat swept the wharf. The members
+of his staff, the officers from the war-ships, the President of
+Honduras and the members of his staff endeavored to imitate his
+act of homage, and in confusion Mrs. Everett blushed becomingly.
+
+"When I return to Washington," said the Secretary hastily, "come
+and see me. You are too valuable to lose. Your career--"
+
+Again Everett was looking at his wife. Her distress at having been
+so suddenly drawn into the lime-light amused him, and he was
+smiling. Then, as though aware of the Secretary's meaning, he
+laughed.
+
+"My dear sir!" he protested. His tone suggested he was about to
+add "mind your own business," or "go to the devil."
+
+Instead he said: "I'm not worrying about my career. My career has
+just begun."
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BOY SCOUT
+
+
+
+
+A rule of the Boy Scouts is every day to do some one a good turn.
+Not because the copybooks tell you it deserves another, but in
+spite of that pleasing possibility. If you are a true scout, until
+you have performed your act of kindness your day is dark. You
+are as unhappy as is the grown-up who has begun his day without
+shaving or reading the New York Sun. But as soon as you have
+proved yourself you may, with a clear conscience, look the world
+in the face and untie the knot in your kerchief.
+
+Jimmie Reeder untied the accusing knot in his scarf at just ten
+minutes past eight on a hot August morning after he had given one
+dime to his sister Sadie. With that she could either witness the
+first-run films at the Palace, or by dividing her fortune patronize
+two of the nickel shows on Lenox Avenue. The choice Jimmie
+left to her. He was setting out for the annual encampment of
+the Boy Scouts at Hunter's Island, and in the excitement of that
+adventure even the movies ceased to thrill. But Sadie also could
+be unselfish. With a heroism of a camp-fire maiden she made
+a gesture which might have been interpreted to mean she was
+returning the money.
+
+"I can't, Jimmie!" she gasped. "I can't take it off you. You
+saved it, and you ought to get the fun of it."
+
+"I haven't saved it yet," said Jimmie. "I'm going to cut it out
+of the railroad fare. I'm going to get off at City Island instead
+of at Pelham Manor and walk the difference. That's ten cents
+cheaper."
+
+Sadie exclaimed with admiration:
+
+"An' you carryin' that heavy grip!"
+
+"Aw, that's nothin'," said the man of the family.
+
+"Good-by, mother. So long, Sadie."
+
+To ward off further expressions of gratitude he hurriedly advised
+Sadie to take in "The Curse of Cain" rather than "The Mohawk's
+Last Stand," and fled down the front steps.
+
+He wore his khaki uniform. On his shoulders was his knapsack,
+from his hands swung his suit-case, and between his heavy stockings
+and his "shorts" his kneecaps, unkissed by the sun, as yet unscathed
+by blackberry vines, showed as white and fragile as the wrists of a girl.
+As he moved toward the "L" station at the corner, Sadie and his mother
+waved to him; in the street, boys too small to be scouts hailed him
+enviously; even the policeman glancing over the newspapers on the
+news-stand nodded approval.
+
+"You a scout, Jimmie?" he asked.
+
+"No," retorted Jimmie, for was not he also in uniform? "I'm Santa
+Claus out filling Christmas stockings."
+
+The patrolman also possessed a ready wit.
+
+"Then get yourself a pair," he advised. "If a dog was to see your
+legs--"
+
+Jimmie escaped the insult by fleeing up the steps of the
+Elevated.
+
+
+An hour later, with his valise in one hand and staff in the other,
+he was tramping up the Boston Post Road and breathing heavily.
+The day was cruelly hot. Before his eyes, over an interminable
+stretch of asphalt, the heat waves danced and flickered. Already
+the knapsack on his shoulders pressed upon him like an Old Man
+of the Sea; the linen in the valise had turned to pig iron, his pipe-
+stem legs were wabbling, his eyes smarted with salt sweat, and the
+fingers supporting the valise belonged to some other boy, and were
+giving that boy much pain. But as the motor-cars flashed past with
+raucous warnings, or, that those who rode might better see the boy
+with bare knees, passed at "half speed," Jimmie stiffened his shoulders
+and stepped jauntily forward. Even when the joy-riders mocked with
+"Oh, you scout!" he smiled at them. He was willing to admit to those
+who rode that the laugh was on the one who walked. And he regretted--
+oh, so bitterly--having left the train. He was indignant that for his
+"one good turn a day" he had not selected one less strenuous--that,
+for instance, he had not assisted a frightened old lady through the
+traffic. To refuse the dime she might have offered, as all true scouts
+refuse all tips, would have been easier than to earn it by walking five
+miles, with the sun at ninety-nine degrees, and carrying excess baggage.
+Twenty times James shifted the valise to the other hand, twenty times
+he let it drop and sat upon it.
+
+And then, as again he took up his burden, the good Samaritan drew
+near. He drew near in a low gray racing-car at the rate of forty miles
+an hour, and within a hundred feet of Jimmie suddenly stopped and
+backed toward him. The good Samaritan was a young man with white
+hair. He wore a suit of blue, a golf cap; the hands that held the wheel
+were disguised in large yellow gloves. He brought the car to a halt and
+surveyed the dripping figure in the road with tired and uncurious eyes.
+
+"You a Boy Scout?" he asked.
+
+With alacrity for the twenty-first time Jimmie dropped the valise,
+forced his cramped fingers into straight lines, and saluted.
+
+The young man in the car nodded toward the seat beside him.
+
+"Get in," he commanded.
+
+When James sat panting happily at his elbow the old young man, to
+Jimmie's disappointment, did not continue to shatter the speed limit.
+Instead, he seemed inclined for conversation, and the car, growling
+indignantly, crawled.
+
+"I never saw a Boy Scout before," announced the old young man.
+"Tell me about it. First, tell me what you do when you're not
+scouting."
+
+Jimmie explained volubly. When not in uniform he was an office
+boy, and from peddlers and beggars guarded the gates of Carroll
+and Hastings, stock-brokers. He spoke the names of his employers
+with awe. It was a firm distinguished, conservative, and long
+established. The white-haired young man seemed to nod in assent.
+
+"Do you know them?" demanded Jimmie suspiciously. "Are you a
+customer of ours?"
+
+"I know them," said the young man. "They are customers of mine."
+
+Jimmie wondered in what way Carroll and Hastings were customers
+of the white-haired young man. Judging him by his outer garments,
+Jimmie guessed he was a Fifth Avenue tailor; he might be even a
+haberdasher. Jimmie continued. He lived, he explained, with his
+mother at One Hundred and Forty-sixth Street; Sadie, his sister,
+attended the public school; he helped support them both, and he
+now was about to enjoy a well-earned vacation camping out on
+Hunter's Island, where he would cook his own meals, and, if the
+mosquitoes permitted, sleep in a tent.
+
+"And you like that?" demanded the young man. "You call that fun?"
+
+"Sure!" protested Jimmie. "Don't you go camping out?"
+
+"I go camping out," said the good Samaritan, "whenever I leave
+New York."
+
+Jimmie had not for three years lived in Wall Street not to
+understand that the young man spoke in metaphor.
+
+"You don't look," objected the young man critically, "as though
+you were built for the strenuous life."
+
+Jimmie glanced guiltily at his white knees.
+
+"You ought ter see me two weeks from now," he protested. "I get all
+sunburnt and hard-
+-hard as anything!"
+
+The young man was incredulous.
+
+"You were near getting sunstruck when I picked you up," he
+laughed. "If you're going to Hunter's Island, why didn't you go
+to Pelham Manor?"
+
+"That's right!" assented Jimmie eagerly. "But I wanted to save
+the ten cents so's to send Sadie to the movies. So I walked."
+
+The young man looked his embarrassment.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he murmured.
+
+But Jimmie did not hear him. From the back of the car he was
+dragging excitedly at the hated suit-case.
+
+"Stop!" he commanded. "I got ter get out. I got ter walk."
+
+The young man showed his surprise.
+
+"Walk!" he exclaimed. "What is it--a bet?"
+
+Jimmie dropped the valise and followed it into the roadway. It
+took some time to explain to the young man. First, he had to be
+told about the scout law and the one good turn a day, and that it
+must involve some personal sacrifice. And, as Jimmie pointed out,
+changing from a slow suburban train to a racing-car could not be
+listed as a sacrifice. He had not earned the money, Jimmie argued;
+he had only avoided paying it to the railroad. If he did not walk
+he would be obtaining the gratitude of Sadie by a falsehood.
+Therefore, he must walk.
+
+"Not at all," protested the young man. "You've got it wrong. What
+good will it do your sister to have you sunstruck? I think you are
+sunstruck. You're crazy with the heat. You get in here, and we'll
+talk it over as we go along."
+
+Hastily Jimmie backed away. "I'd rather walk," he said.
+
+The young man shifted his legs irritably.
+
+"Then how'll this suit you?" he called. "We'll declare that first 'one
+good turn' a failure and start afresh. Do me a good turn."
+
+Jimmie halted in his tracks and looked back suspiciously.
+
+"I'm going to Hunter's Island Inn," called the young man, "and I've
+lost my way. You get in here and guide me. That'll be doing me
+a good turn."
+
+On either side of the road, blotting out the landscape, giant
+hands picked out in electric-light bulbs pointed the way to
+Hunter's Island Inn. Jimmie grinned and nodded toward them.
+
+"Much obliged," he called. "I got ter walk." Turning his back
+upon temptation, he waddled forward into the flickering heat
+waves.
+
+
+The young man did not attempt to pursue. At the side of the road,
+under the shade of a giant elm, he had brought the car to a halt and
+with his arms crossed upon the wheel sat motionless, following with
+frowning eyes the retreating figure of Jimmie. But the narrow-chested
+and knock-kneed boy staggering over the sun-baked asphalt no longer
+concerned him. It was not Jimmie, but the code preached by Jimmie,
+and not only preached but before his eyes put into practice, that
+interested him. The young man with white hair had been running
+away from temptation. At forty miles an hour he had been running
+away from the temptation to do a fellow mortal "a good turn." That
+morning, to the appeal of a drowning Caesar to "Help me, Cassius,
+or I sink," he had answered: "Sink!" That answer he had no wish to
+reconsider. That he might not reconsider he had sought to escape.
+It was his experience that a sixty-horse-power racing-machine is a
+jealous mistress. For retrospective, sentimental, or philanthropic
+thoughts she grants no leave of absence. But he had not escaped.
+Jimmie had halted him, tripped him by the heels, and set him again
+to thinking. Within the half-hour that followed those who rolled
+past saw at the side of the road a car with her engine running, and
+leaning upon the wheel, as unconscious of his surroundings as
+though he sat at his own fireplace, a young man who frowned and
+stared at nothing. The half-hour passed and the young man swung
+his car back toward the city. But at the first road-house that showed
+a blue-and-white telephone sign he left it, and into the iron box at
+the end of the bar dropped a nickel. He wished to communicate with
+Mr. Carroll, of Carroll and Hastings; and when he learned Mr. Carroll
+had just issued orders that he must not be disturbed, the young man
+gave his name.
+
+The effect upon the barkeeper was instantaneous. With the aggrieved
+air of one who feels he is the victim of a jest he laughed scornfully.
+
+"What are you putting over?" he demanded.
+
+The young man smiled reassuringly. He had begun to speak and,
+though apparently engaged with the beer-glass he was polishing,
+the barkeeper listened.
+
+Down in Wall Street the senior member of Carroll and Hastings
+also listened. He was alone in the most private of all his private
+offices, and when interrupted had been engaged in what, of all
+undertakings, is the most momentous. On the desk before him
+lay letters to his lawyer, to the coroner, to his wife; and hidden
+by a mass of papers, but within reach of his hand, was an
+automatic pistol. The promise it offered of swift release had
+made the writing of the letters simple, had given him a feeling
+of complete detachment, had released him, at least in thought,
+from all responsibilities. And when at his elbow the telephone
+coughed discreetly, it was as though some one had called him
+from a world from which already he had made his exit.
+
+Mechanically, through mere habit, he lifted the receiver.
+
+The voice over the telephone came in brisk, staccato sentences.
+
+"That letter I sent this morning? Forget it. Tear it up. I've been
+thinking and I'm going to take a chance. I've decided to back you
+boys, and I know you'll make good. I'm speaking from a road-house
+in the Bronx; going straight from here to the bank. So you can begin
+to draw against us within an hour. And--hello!--will three millions
+see you through?"
+
+From Wall Street there came no answer, but from the hands of the
+barkeeper a glass crashed to the floor.
+
+The young man regarded the barkeeper with puzzled eyes.
+
+"He doesn't answer," he exclaimed. "He must have hung up."
+
+"He must have fainted!" said the barkeeper.
+
+The white-haired one pushed a bill across the counter. "To pay
+for breakage," he said, and disappeared down Pelham Parkway.
+
+Throughout the day, with the bill, for evidence, pasted against
+the mirror, the barkeeper told and retold the wondrous tale.
+
+"He stood just where you're standing now," he related, "blowing
+in million-dollar bills like you'd blow suds off a beer. If I'd
+knowed it was him, I'd have hit him once and hid him in the
+cellar for the reward. Who'd I think he was? I thought he was
+a wire-tapper, working a con game!"
+
+Mr. Carroll had not "hung up," but when in the Bronx the
+beer-glass crashed, in Wall Street the receiver had slipped from
+the hand of the man who held it, and the man himself had fallen
+forward. His desk hit him in the face and woke him--woke him
+to the wonderful fact that he still lived; that at forty he had been
+born again; that before him stretched many more years in which,
+as the young man with the white hair had pointed out, he still
+could make good.
+
+The afternoon was far advanced when the staff of Carroll and
+Hastings were allowed to depart, and, even late as was the hour,
+two of them were asked to remain. Into the most private of the
+private offices Carroll invited Gaskell, the head clerk; in the
+main office Hastings had asked young Thorne, the bond clerk,
+to be seated.
+
+
+Until the senior partner has finished with Gaskell young Thorne
+must remain seated.
+
+"Gaskell," said Mr. Carroll, "if we had listened to you, if we'd run
+this place as it was when father was alive, this never would have
+happened. It hasn't happened, but we've had our lesson. And
+after this we're going slow and going straight. And we don't need
+you to tell us how to do that. We want you to go away--on a month's
+vacation. When I thought we were going under I planned to send the
+children on a sea voyage with the governess--so they wouldn't see the
+newspapers. But now that I can look them in the eye again, I need
+them, I can't let them go. So, if you'd like to take your wife on an
+ocean trip to Nova Scotia and Quebec, here are the cabins I reserved
+for the kids. They call it the royal suite--whatever that is--and the trip
+lasts a month. The boat sails to-morrow morning. Don't sleep too late
+or you may miss her."
+
+The head clerk was secreting the tickets in the inside pocket of
+his waistcoat. His fingers trembled, and when he laughed his
+voice trembled.
+
+"Miss the boat!" the head clerk exclaimed. "If she gets away from
+Millie and me she's got to start now. We'll go on board to-night!"
+
+A half-hour later Millie was on her knees packing a trunk, and
+her husband was telephoning to the drug-store for a sponge-bag
+and a cure for seasickness.
+
+Owing to the joy in her heart and to the fact that she was on her
+knees, Millie was alternately weeping into the trunk-tray and
+offering up incoherent prayers of thanksgiving. Suddenly she
+sank back upon the floor.
+
+"John!" she cried, "doesn't it seem sinful to sail away in a
+'royal suite' and leave this beautiful flat empty?"
+
+Over the telephone John was having trouble with the drug clerk.
+
+"No!" he explained, "I'm not seasick now. The medicine I want is
+to be taken later. I know I'm speaking from the Pavonia; but the
+Pavonia isn't a ship; it's an apartment-house."
+
+He turned to Millie. "We can't be in two places at the same
+time," he suggested.
+
+"But, think," insisted Millie, "of all the poor people stifling
+to-night in this heat, trying to sleep on the roofs and fire-escapes;
+and our flat so cool and big and pretty--and no one in it."
+
+John nodded his head proudly.
+
+"I know it's big," he said, "but it isn't big enough to hold all
+the people who are sleeping to-night on the roofs and in the
+parks."
+
+"I was thinking of your brother--and Grace," said Millie. "They've
+been married only two weeks now, and they're in a stuffy hall
+bedroom and eating with all the other boarders. Think what our
+flat would mean to them; to be by themselves, with eight rooms
+and their own kitchen and bath, and our new refrigerator and the
+gramophone! It would be heaven! It would be a real honeymoon!"
+
+Abandoning the drug clerk, John lifted Millie in his arms and
+kissed her, for, next to his wife, nearest his heart was the
+younger brother.
+
+
+The younger brother and Grace were sitting on the stoop of the
+boarding-house. On the upper steps, in their shirt-sleeves, were
+the other boarders; so the bride and bridegroom spoke in whispers.
+The air of the cross street was stale and stagnant; from it rose
+exhalations of rotting fruit, the gases of an open subway, the
+smoke of passing taxicabs. But between the street and the hall
+bedroom, with its odors of a gas-stove and a kitchen, the choice
+was difficult.
+
+"We've got to cool off somehow," the young husband was saying,
+"or you won't sleep. Shall we treat ourselves to ice-cream sodas
+or a trip on the Weehawken ferry-boat?"
+
+"The ferry-boat!" begged the girl, "where we can get away from
+all these people."
+
+A taxicab with a trunk in front whirled into the street, kicked
+itself to a stop, and the head clerk and Millie spilled out upon
+the pavement. They talked so fast, and the younger brother and
+Grace talked so fast, that the boarders, although they listened
+intently, could make nothing of it.
+
+They distinguished only the concluding sentences:
+
+"Why don't you drive down to the wharf with us," they heard the
+elder brother ask, "and see our royal suite?"
+
+But the younger brother laughed him to scorn.
+
+"What's your royal suite," he mocked, "to our royal palace?"
+
+An hour later, had the boarders listened outside the flat of the
+head clerk, they would have heard issuing from his bathroom the
+cooling murmur of running water and from his gramophone the
+jubilant notes of "Alexander's Rag-time Band."
+
+When in his private office Carroll was making a present of the
+royal suite to the head clerk, in the main office Hastings, the
+junior partner, was addressing "Champ" Thorne, the bond clerk.
+He addressed him familiarly and affectionately as "Champ." This
+was due partly to the fact that twenty-six years before Thorne had
+been christened Champneys and to the coincidence that he had
+captained the football eleven of one of the Big Three to the
+championship.
+
+"Champ," said Mr. Hastings, "last month, when you asked me to
+raise your salary, the reason I didn't do it was not because you
+didn't deserve it, but because I believed if we gave you a raise
+you'd immediately get married."
+
+The shoulders of the ex-football captain rose aggressively; he
+snorted with indignation.
+
+"And why should I not get married?" he demanded. "You're a fine
+one to talk! You're the most offensively happy married man I ever
+met."
+
+"Perhaps I know I am happy better than you do," reproved the
+junior partner; "but I know also that it takes money to support a
+wife."
+
+"You raise me to a hundred a week," urged Champ, "and I'll make
+it support a wife whether it supports me or not."
+
+"A month ago," continued Hastings, "we could have promised you a
+hundred, but we didn't know how long we could pay it. We didn't
+want you to rush off and marry some fine girl--"
+
+"Some fine girl!" muttered Mr. Thorne. "The finest girl!"
+
+"The finer the girl," Hastings pointed out, "the harder it would
+have been for you if we had failed and you had lost your job."
+
+The eyes of the young man opened with sympathy and concern.
+
+"Is it as bad as that?" he murmured.
+
+Hastings sighed happily.
+
+"It was," he said, "but this morning the Young Man of Wall Street
+did us a good turn--saved us--saved our creditors, saved our homes,
+saved our honor. We're going to start fresh and pay our debts, and
+we agreed the first debt we paid would be the small one we owe you.
+You've brought us more than we've given, and if you'll stay with us
+we're going to 'see' your fifty and raise it a hundred. What do you
+say?"
+
+Young Mr. Thorne leaped to his feet. What he said was: "Where'n
+hell's my hat?"
+
+But by the time he had found the hat and the door he mended his
+manners.
+
+"I say, 'Thank you a thousand times,"' he shouted over his
+shoulder. "Excuse me, but I've got to go. I've got to break the
+news to--"
+
+He did not explain to whom he was going to break the news; but
+Hastings must have guessed, for again he sighed happily and then,
+a little hysterically laughed aloud. Several months had passed
+since he had laughed aloud.
+
+In his anxiety to break the news Champ Thorne almost broke his
+neck. In his excitement he could not remember whether the red
+flash meant the elevator was going down or coming up, and sooner
+than wait to find out he started to race down eighteen flights of
+stairs when fortunately the elevator-door swung open.
+
+"You get five dollars," he announced to the elevator man, "if you
+drop to the street without a stop. Beat the speed limit! Act like
+the building is on fire and you're trying to save me before the
+roof falls."
+
+Senator Barnes and his entire family, which was his daughter
+Barbara, were at the Ritz-Carlton. They were in town in August
+because there was a meeting of the directors of the Brazil and
+Cuyaba Rubber Company, of which company Senator Barnes was
+president. It was a secret meeting. Those directors who were
+keeping cool at the edge of the ocean had been summoned by
+telegraph; those who were steaming across the ocean, by wireless.
+
+Up from the equator had drifted the threat of a scandal, sickening,
+grim, terrible. As yet it burned beneath the surface, giving out only
+an odor, but an odor as rank as burning rubber itself. At any moment
+it might break into flame. For the directors, was it the better wisdom
+to let the scandal smoulder, and take a chance, or to be the first to give
+the alarm, the first to lead the way to the horror and stamp it out?
+
+It was to decide this that, in the heat of August, the directors and the
+president had foregathered.
+
+Champ Thorne knew nothing of this; he knew only that by a miracle
+Barbara Barnes was in town; that at last he was in a position to ask
+her to marry him; that she would certainly say she would. That was
+all he cared to know.
+
+A year before he had issued his declaration of independence.
+Before he could marry, he told her, he must be able to support a
+wife on what he earned, without her having to accept money from
+her father, and until he received "a minimum wage" of five thousand
+dollars they must wait.
+
+"What is the matter with my father's money?" Barbara had demanded.
+
+Thorne had evaded the direct question.
+
+"There is too much of it," he said.
+
+"Do you object to the way he makes it?" insisted Barbara. "Because
+rubber is most useful. You put it in golf balls and auto tires and
+galoshes. There is nothing so perfectly respectable as galoshes.
+And what is there 'tainted' about a raincoat?"
+
+Thorne shook his head unhappily.
+
+"It's not the finished product to which I refer," he stammered; "it's
+the way they get the raw material."
+
+"They get it out of trees," said Barbara. Then she exclaimed with
+enlightenment--"Oh!" she cried, "you are thinking of the Congo.
+There it is terrible! That is slavery. But there are no slaves on the
+Amazon. The natives are free and the work is easy. They just tap
+the trees the way the farmers gather sugar in Vermont. Father has
+told me about it often."
+
+Thorne had made no comment. He could abuse a friend, if the
+friend were among those present, but denouncing any one he
+disliked as heartily as he disliked Senator Barnes was a public
+service he preferred to leave to others. And he knew besides that
+if the father she loved and the man she loved distrusted each
+other, Barbara would not rest until she learned the reason why.
+
+One day, in a newspaper, Barbara read of the Puju Mayo atrocities,
+of the Indian slaves in the jungles and backwaters of the Amazon,
+who are offered up as sacrifices to "red rubber." She carried the
+paper to her father. What it said, her father told her, was untrue,
+and if it were true it was the first he had heard of it.
+
+Senator Barnes loved the good things of life, but the thing he
+loved most was his daughter; the thing he valued the highest was
+her good opinion. So when for the first time she looked at him in
+doubt, he assured her he at once would order an investigation.
+
+"But, of course," he added, "it will be many months before our
+agents can report. On the Amazon news travels very slowly."
+
+In the eyes of his daughter the doubt still lingered.
+
+"I am afraid," she said, "that that is true."
+
+That was six months before the directors of the Brazil and Cuyaba
+Rubber Company were summoned to meet their president at his
+rooms in the Ritz-Carlton. They were due to arrive in half an hour,
+and while Senator Barnes awaited their coming Barbara came to
+him. In her eyes was a light that helped to tell the great news. It
+gave him a sharp, jealous pang. He wanted at once to play a part
+in her happiness, to make her grateful to him, not alone to this
+stranger who was taking her away. So fearful was he that she
+would shut him out of her life that had she asked for half his
+kingdom he would have parted with it.
+
+"And besides giving my consent," said the rubber king, "for which
+no one seems to have asked, what can I give my little girl to make
+her remember her old father? Some diamonds to put on her head,
+or pearls to hang around her neck, or does she want a vacant lot
+on Fifth Avenue?"
+
+The lovely hands of Barbara rested upon his shoulders; her lovely
+face was raised to his; her lovely eyes were appealing, and a little
+frightened.
+
+"What would one of those things cost?" asked Barbara.
+
+The question was eminently practical. It came within the scope of
+the senator's understanding. After all, he was not to be cast into
+outer darkness. His smile was complacent. He answered airily:
+
+"Anything you like," he said; "a million dollars?"
+
+The fingers closed upon his shoulders. The eyes, still frightened,
+still searched his in appeal.
+
+"Then, for my wedding-present," said the girl, "I want you to take
+that million dollars and send an expedition to the Amazon. And I
+will choose the men. Men unafraid; men not afraid of fever or
+sudden death; not afraid to tell the truth--even to you. And all the
+world will know. And they--I mean you--will set those people free!"
+
+Senator Barnes received the directors with an embarrassment which
+he concealed under a manner of just indignation.
+
+"My mind is made up," he told them. "Existing conditions cannot
+continue. And to that end, at my own expense, I am sending an
+expedition across South America. It will investigate, punish, and
+establish reforms. I suggest, on account of this damned heat, we
+do now adjourn."
+
+That night, over on Long Island, Carroll told his wife all, or
+nearly all. He did not tell her about the automatic pistol. And
+together on tiptoe they crept to the nursery and looked down at
+their sleeping children. When she rose from her knees the mother
+said: "But how can I thank him?"
+
+By "him" she meant the Young Man of Wall Street.
+
+"You never can thank him," said Carroll; "that's the worst of it."
+
+But after a long silence the mother said: "I will send him a
+photograph of the children. Do you think he will understand?"
+
+Down at Seabright, Hastings and his wife walked in the sunken
+garden. The moon was so bright that the roses still held their
+color.
+
+"I would like to thank him," said the young wife. She meant the
+Young Man of Wall Street. "But for him we would have lost this."
+
+Her eyes caressed the garden, the fruit-trees, the house with wide,
+hospitable verandas. "To-morrow I will send him some of these
+roses," said the young wife. "Will he understand that they mean
+our home?"
+
+At a scandalously late hour, in a scandalous spirit of independence,
+Champ Thorne and Barbara were driving around Central Park in a
+taxicab.
+
+"How strangely the Lord moves, his wonders to perform," misquoted
+Barbara. "Had not the Young Man of Wall Street saved Mr. Hastings,
+Mr. Hastings could not have raised your salary; you would not have
+asked me to marry you, and had you not asked me to marry you,
+father would not have given me a wedding-present, and--"
+
+"And," said Champ, taking up the tale, "thousands of slaves would
+still be buried in the jungles, hidden away from their wives and
+children and the light of the sun and their fellow men. They
+still would be dying of fever, starvation, tortures."
+
+He took her hand in both of his and held her finger-tips against
+his lips.
+
+"And they will never know," he whispered, "when their freedom
+comes, that they owe it all to you."
+
+
+On Hunter's Island, Jimmie Reeder and his bunkie, Sam Sturges,
+each on his canvas cot, tossed and twisted. The heat, the moonlight,
+and the mosquitoes would not let them even think of sleep.
+
+"That was bully," said Jimmie, "what you did to-day about saving
+that dog. If it hadn't been for you he'd ha' drownded."
+
+"He would not!" said Sammy with punctilious regard for the truth;
+"it wasn't deep enough."
+
+"Well, the scout-master ought to know," argued Jimmie; "he said
+it was the best 'one good turn' of the day!"
+
+Modestly Sam shifted the lime-light so that it fell upon his
+bunkie.
+
+"I'll bet," he declared loyally, "your 'one good turn' was a
+better one!"
+
+Jimmie yawned, and then laughed scornfully.
+
+"Me!" he scoffed. "I didn't do nothing. I sent my sister to the
+movies."
+
+
+
+
+
+"SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE"
+
+
+
+
+Marie Gessler, known as Marie Chaumontel, Jeanne d'Avrechy,
+the Countess d'Aurillac, was German. Her father, who served
+through the Franco-Prussian War, was a German spy. It was
+from her mother she learned to speak French sufficiently well
+to satisfy even an Academician and, among Parisians, to pass
+as one. Both her parents were dead. Before they departed,
+knowing they could leave their daughter nothing save their
+debts, they had had her trained as a nurse. But when they
+were gone, Marie in the Berlin hospitals played politics,
+intrigued, indiscriminately misused the appealing, violet
+eyes. There was a scandal; several scandals. At the age of
+twenty-five she was dismissed from the Municipal Hospital,
+and as now-save for the violet eyes--she was without resources,
+as a compagnon de voyage with a German doctor she travelled
+to Monte Carlo. There she abandoned the doctor for Henri
+Ravignac, a captain in the French Aviation Corps, who,
+when his leave ended, escorted her to Paris.
+
+The duties of Captain Ravignac kept him in barracks near the
+aviation field, but Marie he established in his apartments on the
+Boulevard Haussmann. One day he brought from the barracks a
+roll of blue-prints, and as he was locking them in a drawer, said:
+"The Germans would pay through the nose for those!" The remark
+was indiscreet, but then Marie had told him she was French, and
+any one would have believed her.
+
+The next morning the same spirit of adventure that had exiled her
+from the Berlin hospitals carried her with the blue-prints to the
+German embassy. There, greatly shocked, they first wrote down her
+name and address, and then, indignant at her proposition, ordered
+her out. But the day following a strange young German who was
+not at all indignant, but, on the contrary, quite charming, called
+upon Marie. For the blue-prints he offered her a very large sum,
+and that same hour with them and Marie departed for Berlin. Marie
+did not need the money. Nor did the argument that she was serving
+her country greatly impress her. It was rather that she loved intrigue.
+And so she became a spy.
+
+Henri Ravignac, the man she had robbed of the blue-prints, was tried
+by court-martial. The charge was treason, but Charles Ravignac, his
+younger brother, promised to prove that the guilty one was the girl,
+and to that end obtained leave of absence and spent much time and
+money. At the trial he was able to show the record of Marie in
+Berlin and Monte Carlo; that she was the daughter of a German
+secret agent; that on the afternoon the prints disappeared Marie,
+with an agent of the German embassy, had left Paris for Berlin.
+In consequence of this the charge of selling military secrets was
+altered to one of "gross neglect," and Henri Ravignac was sentenced
+to two years in the military prison at Tours. But he was of an ancient
+and noble family, and when they came to take him from his cell in the
+Cherche-Midi, he was dead. Charles, his brother, disappeared. It was
+said he also had killed himself; that he had been appointed a military
+attache in South America; that to revenge his brother he had entered
+the secret service; but whatever became of him no one knew. All that
+was certain was that, thanks to the act of Marie Gessler, on the rolls
+of the French army the ancient and noble name of Ravignac no longer
+appeared.
+
+In her chosen profession Marie Gessler found nothing discreditable.
+Of herself her opinion was not high, and her opinion of men was
+lower. For her smiles she had watched several sacrifice honor, duty,
+loyalty; and she held them and their kind in contempt. To lie, to
+cajole, to rob men of secrets they thought important, and of secrets
+the importance of which they did not even guess, was to her merely
+an intricate and exciting game.
+
+She played it very well. So well that in the service her advance
+was rapid. On important missions she was sent to Russia, through
+the Balkans; even to the United States. There, with credentials
+as an army nurse, she inspected our military hospitals and
+unobtrusively asked many innocent questions.
+
+When she begged to be allowed to work in her beloved Paris,
+"they" told her when war came "they" intended to plant her
+inside that city, and that, until then, the less Paris knew of
+her the better.
+
+But just before the great war broke, to report on which way Italy
+might jump, she was sent to Rome, and it was not until September
+she was recalled. The telegram informed her that her Aunt
+Elizabeth was ill, and that at once she must return to Berlin.
+This, she learned from the code book wrapped under the cover
+of her thermos bottle, meant that she was to report to the general
+commanding the German forces at Soissons.
+
+From Italy she passed through Switzerland, and, after leaving Basle,
+on military trains was rushed north to Luxemburg, and then west to
+Laon. She was accompanied by her companion, Bertha, an elderly
+and respectable, even distinguished-looking female. In the secret
+service her number was 528. Their passes from the war office
+described them as nurses of the German Red Cross. Only the
+Intelligence Department knew their real mission. With her, also,
+as her chauffeur, was a young Italian soldier of fortune, Paul
+Anfossi. He had served in the Belgian Congo, in the French
+Foreign Legion in Algiers, and spoke all the European languages.
+In Rome, where as a wireless operator he was serving a commercial
+company, in selling Marie copies of messages he had memorized,
+Marie had found him useful, and when war came she obtained
+for him, from the Wilhelmstrasse, the number 292. From Laon,
+in one of the automobiles of the General Staff, the three spies
+were driven first to Soissons, and then along the road to Meaux
+and Paris, to the village of Neufchelles. They arrived at midnight,
+and in a chateau of one of the Champagne princes, found the
+colonel commanding the Intelligence Bureau. He accepted their
+credentials, destroyed them, and replaced them with a laissez-
+passer signed by the mayor of Laon. That dignitary, the colonel
+explained, to citizens of Laon fleeing to Paris and the coast had
+issued many passes. But as now between Laon and Paris there were
+three German armies, the refugees had been turned back and their
+passes confiscated.
+
+"From among them," said the officer, "we have selected one for
+you. It is issued to the wife of Count d'Aurillac, a captain of
+reserves, and her aunt, Madame Benet. It asks for those ladies
+and their chauffeur, Briand, a safe-conduct through the French
+military lines. If it gets you into Paris you will destroy it and
+assume another name. The Count d'Aurillac is now with his
+regiment in that city. If he learned of the presence there of his
+wife, he would seek her, and that would not be good for you. So,
+if you reach Paris, you will become a Belgian refugee. You are
+high-born and rich. Your chateau has been destroyed. But you
+have money. You will give liberally to the Red Cross. You will
+volunteer to nurse in the hospitals. With your sad story of ill
+treatment by us, with your high birth, and your knowledge of
+nursing, which you acquired, of course, only as an amateur, you
+should not find it difficult to join the Ladies of France, or the
+American Ambulance. What you learn from the wounded English
+and French officers and the French doctors you will send us through
+the usual channels."
+
+"When do I start?" asked the woman.
+
+"For a few days," explained the officer, "you remain in this chateau.
+You will keep us informed of what is going forward after we
+withdraw."
+
+"Withdraw?" It was more of an exclamation than a question. Marie
+was too well trained to ask questions.
+
+"We are taking up a new position," said the officer, "on the
+Aisne."
+
+The woman, incredulous, stared.
+
+"And we do not enter Paris?"
+
+"You do," returned the officer. "That is all that concerns you.
+We will join you later--in the spring. Meanwhile, for the winter
+we intrench ourselves along the Aisne. In a chimney of this
+chateau we have set up a wireless outfit. We are leaving it intact.
+The chauffeur Briand--who, you must explain to the French, you
+brought with you from Laon, and who has been long in your
+service--will transmit whatever you discover. We wish especially
+to know of any movement toward our left. If they attack in front
+from Soissons, we are prepared; but of any attempt to cross the
+Oise and take us in flank you must warn us."
+
+The officer rose and hung upon himself his field-glasses,
+map-cases, and side-arms.
+
+"We leave you now," he said. "When the French arrive you will
+tell them your reason for halting at this chateau was that the owner,
+Monsieur Iverney, and his family are friends of your husband. You
+found us here, and we detained you. And so long as you can use the
+wireless, make excuses to remain. If they offer to send you on to Paris,
+tell them your aunt is too ill to travel."
+
+"But they will find the wireless," said the woman. "They are sure to
+use the towers for observation, and they will find it."
+
+"In that case," said the officer, "you will suggest to them that
+we fled in such haste we had no time to dismantle it. Of course,
+you had no knowledge that it existed, or, as a loyal French woman,
+you would have at once told them." To emphasize his next words
+the officer pointed at her: "Under no circumstances," he continued,
+"must you be suspected. If they should take Briand in the act,
+should they have even the least doubt concerning him, you must
+repudiate him entirely. If necessary, to keep your own skirts clear,
+it would be your duty yourself to denounce him as a spy."
+
+"Your first orders," said the woman, "were to tell them Briand had
+been long in my service; that I brought him from my home in Laon."
+
+"He might be in your service for years," returned the colonel,
+"and you not know he was a German agent."
+
+"If to save myself I inform upon him," said Marie, "of course you
+know you will lose him."
+
+The officer shrugged his shoulders. "A wireless operator," he
+retorted, "we can replace. But for you, and for the service you
+are to render in Paris, we have no substitute. You must not be
+found out. You are invaluable."
+
+The spy inclined her head. "I thank you," she said.
+
+The officer sputtered indignantly.
+
+"It is not a compliment," he exclaimed; "it is an order. You must
+not be found out!"
+
+Withdrawn some two hundred yards from the Paris road, the
+chateau stood upon a wooded hill. Except directly in front,
+trees of great height surrounded it. The tips of their branches
+brushed the windows; interlacing, they continued until they
+overhung the wall of the estate. Where it ran with the road the
+wall gave way to a lofty gate and iron fence, through which those
+passing could see a stretch of noble turf, as wide as a polo-field,
+borders of flowers disappearing under the shadows of the trees;
+and the chateau itself, with its terrace, its many windows, its
+high-pitched, sloping roof, broken by towers and turrets.
+
+Through the remainder of the night there came from the road to
+those in the chateau the roar and rumbling of the army in retreat.
+It moved without panic, disorder, or haste, but unceasingly. Not
+for an instant was there a breathing-spell. And when the sun rose,
+the three spies--the two women and the chauffeur--who in the great
+chateau were now alone, could see as well as hear the gray column
+of steel rolling past below them.
+
+The spies knew that the gray column had reached Claye, had stood
+within fifteen miles of Paris, and then upon Paris had turned its
+back. They knew also that the reverberations from the direction
+of Meaux, that each moment grew more loud and savage, were the
+French "seventy-fives" whipping the gray column forward. Of what
+they felt the Germans did not speak. In silence they looked at each
+other, and in the eyes of Marie was bitterness and resolve.
+
+Toward noon Marie met Anfossi in the great drawing-room that
+stretched the length of the terrace and from the windows of which,
+through the park gates, they could see the Paris road.
+
+"This, that is passing now," said Marie, "is the last of our rear-guard.
+Go to your tower," she ordered, "and send word that except for
+stragglers and the wounded our column has just passed through
+NeufchelIes, and that any moment we expect the French." She
+raised her hand impressively. "From now," she warned, "we
+speak French, we think French, we are French!"
+
+Anfossi, or Briand, as now he called himself, addressed her in
+that language. His tone was bitter. "Pardon my lese-majesty," he
+said, "but this chief of your Intelligence Department is a dummer
+Mensch. He is throwing away a valuable life."
+
+Marie exclaimed in dismay. She placed her hand upon his arm, and
+the violet eyes filled with concern.
+
+"Not yours!" she protested.
+
+"Absolutely!" returned the Italian. "I can send nothing by this
+knapsack wireless that they will not learn from others; from airmen,
+Uhlans, the peasants in the fields. And certainly I will be caught.
+Dead I am dead, but alive and in Paris the opportunities are unending.
+From the French Legion Etranger I have my honorable discharge. I
+am an expert wireless operator and in their Signal Corps I can easily
+find a place. Imagine me, then, on the Eiffel Tower. From the air I
+snatch news from all of France, from the Channel, the North Sea.
+You and I could work together, as in Rome. But here, between the
+lines, with a pass from a village sous-prefet, it is ridiculous. I am
+not afraid to die. But to die because some one else is stupid, that is
+hard."
+
+Marie clasped his hand in both of hers.
+
+"You must not speak of death," she cried; "you know I must carry out
+my orders, that I must force you to take this risk. And you know that
+thought of harm to you tortures me!"
+
+Quickly the young man disengaged his hand. The woman exclaimed
+with anger.
+
+"Why do you doubt me?" she cried.
+
+Briand protested vehemently.
+
+"I do not doubt you."
+
+"My affection, then?" In a whisper that carried with it the
+feeling of a caress Marie added softly: "My love?"
+
+The young man protested miserably. "You make it very hard,
+mademoiselle," he cried. "You are my superior officer, I am your
+servant. Who am I that I should share with others--"
+
+The woman interrupted eagerly.
+
+"Ah, you are jealous!" she cried. "Is that why you are so cruel?
+But when I tell you I love you, and only you, can you not feel it
+is the truth?"
+
+The young man frowned unhappily.
+
+"My duty, mademoiselle!" he stammered.
+
+With an exclamation of anger Marie left him. As the door slammed
+behind her, the young man drew a deep breath. On his face was the
+expression of ineffable relief.
+
+In the hall Marie met her elderly companion, Bertha, now her
+aunt, Madame Benet.
+
+"I heard you quarrelling," Bertha protested. "It is most indiscreet.
+It is not in the part of the Countess d'Aurillac that she makes love
+to her chauffeur."
+
+Marie laughed noiselessly and drew her farther down the hall. "He
+is imbecile!" she exclaimed. "He will kill me with his solemn face
+and his conceit. I make love to him--yes--that he may work the
+more willingly. But he will have none of it. He is jealous of the
+others."
+
+Madame Benet frowned.
+
+"He resents the others," she corrected. "I do not blame him. He is
+a gentleman!"
+
+"And the others," demanded Marie; "were they not of the most
+noble families of Rome?"
+
+"I am old and I am ugly," said Bertha, "but to me Anfossi is
+always as considerate as he is to you who are so beautiful."
+
+"An Italian gentleman," returned Marie, "does not serve in
+Belgian Congo unless it is--the choice of that or the marble
+quarries."
+
+"I do not know what his past may be," sighed Madame Benet,
+"nor do I ask. He is only a number, as you and I are only numbers.
+And I beg you to let us work in harmony. At such a time your
+love-affairs threaten our safety. You must wait."
+
+Marie laughed insolently. "With the Du Barry," she protested, "I
+can boast that I wait for no man."
+
+"No," replied the older woman; "you pursue him!"
+
+Marie would have answered sharply, but on the instant her
+interest was diverted. For one week, by day and night, she had
+lived in a world peopled only by German soldiers. Beside her
+in the railroad carriage, on the station platforms, at the windows
+of the trains that passed the one in which she rode, at the grade
+crossings, on the bridges, in the roads that paralleled the tracks,
+choking the streets of the villages and spread over the fields of
+grain, she had seen only the gray-green uniforms. Even her
+professional eye no longer distinguished regiment from regiment,
+dragoon from grenadier, Uhlan from Hussar or Landsturm.
+Stripes, insignia, numerals, badges of rank, had lost their meaning.
+Those who wore them no longer were individuals. They were not
+even human. During the three last days the automobile, like a
+motor-boat fighting the tide, had crept through a gray-green
+river of men, stained, as though from the banks, by mud and
+yellow clay. And for hours, while the car was blocked, and in
+fury the engine raced and purred, the gray-green river had rolled
+past her, slowly but as inevitably as lava down the slope of a
+volcano, bearing on its surface faces with staring eyes, thousands
+and thousands of eyes, some fierce and bloodshot, others filled
+with weariness, homesickness, pain. At night she still saw them:
+the white faces under the sweat and dust, the eyes dumb, inarticulate,
+asking the answer. She had been suffocated by German soldiers, by
+the mass of them, engulfed and smothered; she had stifled in a land
+inhabited only by gray-green ghosts.
+
+And suddenly, as though a miracle had been wrought, she saw upon
+the lawn, riding toward her, a man in scarlet, blue, and silver. One
+man riding alone.
+
+Approaching with confidence, but alert; his reins fallen, his hands
+nursing his carbine, his eyes searched the shadows of the trees, the
+empty windows, even the sun-swept sky. His was the new face at
+the door, the new step on the floor. And the spy knew had she
+beheld an army corps it would have been no more significant,
+no more menacing, than the solitary chasseur a cheval scouting
+in advance of the enemy.
+
+"We are saved!" exclaimed Marie, with irony. "Go quickly," she
+commanded, "to the bedroom on the second floor that opens upon
+the staircase, so that you can see all who pass. You are too ill
+to travel. They must find you in bed."
+
+"And you?" said Bertha.
+
+"I," cried Marie rapturously, "hasten to welcome our preserver!"
+
+The preserver was a peasant lad. Under the white dust his cheeks
+were burned a brown-red, his eyes, honest and blue, through much
+staring at the skies and at horizon lines, were puckered and
+encircled with tiny wrinkles. Responsibility had made him older
+than his years, and in speech brief. With the beautiful lady who
+with tears of joy ran to greet him, and who in an ecstasy of
+happiness pressed her cheek against the nose of his horse, he was
+unimpressed. He returned to her her papers and gravely echoed her
+answers to his questions. "This chateau," he repeated, "was
+occupied by their General Staff; they have left no wounded here;
+you saw the last of them pass a half-hour since." He gathered up
+his reins.
+
+Marie shrieked in alarm. "You will not leave us?" she cried.
+
+For the first time the young man permitted himself to smile.
+"Others arrive soon," he said.
+
+He touched his shako, wheeled his horse in the direction from
+which he had come, and a minute later Marie heard the hoofs
+echoing through the empty village.
+
+When they came, the others were more sympathetic. Even in
+times of war a beautiful woman is still a beautiful woman. And
+the staff officers who moved into the quarters so lately occupied
+by
+the enemy found in the presence of the Countess d'Aurillac
+nothing to distress them. In the absence of her dear friend,
+Madame Iverney, the chatelaine of the chateau, she acted as their
+hostess. Her chauffeur showed the company cooks the way to the
+kitchen, the larder, and the charcoal-box. She, herself, in the
+hands of General Andre placed the keys of the famous wine-cellar,
+and to the surgeon, that the wounded might be freshly bandaged,
+intrusted those of the linen-closet. After the indignities she had
+suffered while "detained" by les Boches, her delight and relief at
+again finding herself under the protection of her own people would
+have touched a heart of stone. And the hearts of the staff were not
+of stone. It was with regret they gave the countess permission to
+continue on her way. At this she exclaimed with gratitude. She
+assured them, were her aunt able to travel, she would immediately
+depart.
+
+"In Paris she will be more comfortable than here," said the kind
+surgeon. He was a reservist, and in times of peace a fashionable
+physician and as much at his ease in a boudoir as in a field
+hospital. "Perhaps if I saw Madam Benet?"
+
+At the suggestion the countess was overjoyed. But they found
+Madame Benet in a state of complete collapse. The conduct of
+the Germans had brought about a nervous breakdown.
+
+"Though the bridges are destroyed at Meaux," urged the surgeon,
+"even with a detour, you can be in Paris in four hours. I think it is
+worth the effort."
+
+But the mere thought of the journey threw Madame Benet into
+hysterics. She asked only to rest, she begged for an opiate to
+make her sleep. She begged also that they would leave the door
+open, so that when she dreamed she was still in the hands of the
+Germans, and woke in terror, the sound of the dear French voices
+and the sight of the beloved French uniforms might reassure her.
+She played her part well. Concerning her Marie felt not the least
+anxiety. But toward Briand, the chauffeur, the new arrivals were
+less easily satisfied.
+
+The general sent his adjutant for the countess. When the adjutant
+had closed the door General Andre began abruptly:
+
+"The chauffeur Briand," he asked, "you know him; you can vouch
+for him?"
+
+"But, certainly!" protested Marie. "He is an Italian."
+
+As though with sudden enlightenment, Marie laughed. It was
+as if now in the suspicion of the officer she saw a certain
+reasonableness. "Briand was so long in the Foreign Legion
+in Algiers," she explained, "where my husband found him,
+that we have come to think of him as French. As much French
+as ourselves, I assure you."
+
+The general and his adjutant were regarding each other
+questioningly.
+
+"Perhaps I should tell the countess," began the general, "that we
+have learned--"
+
+The signal from the adjutant was so slight, so swift, that Marie
+barely intercepted it.
+
+The lips of the general shut together like the leaves of a book.
+To show the interview was at an end, he reached for a pen.
+
+"I thank you," he said.
+
+"Of course," prompted the adjutant, "Madame d'Aurillac understands
+the man must not know we inquired concerning him."
+
+General Andre frowned at Marie.
+
+"Certainly not!" he commanded. "The honest fellow must not know
+that even for a moment he was doubted."
+
+Marie raised the violet eyes reprovingly.
+
+"I trust," she said with reproach, "I too well understand the
+feelings of a French soldier to let him know his loyalty is
+questioned."
+
+With a murmur of appreciation the officers bowed and with a
+gesture of gracious pardon Marie left them.
+
+Outside in the hall, with none but orderlies to observe, like a cloak
+the graciousness fell from her. She was drawn two ways. In her
+work Anfossi was valuable. But Anfossi suspected was less than
+of no value; he became a menace, a death-warrant.
+
+General Andre had said, "We have learned--" and the adjutant
+had halted him. What had he learned? To know that, Marie
+would have given much. Still, one important fact comforted her.
+Anfossi alone was suspected. Had there been concerning herself
+the slightest doubt, they certainly would not have allowed her to
+guess her companion was under surveillance; they would not have
+asked one who was herself suspected to vouch for the innocence of
+a fellow conspirator. Marie found the course to follow difficult.
+With Anfossi under suspicion his usefulness was for the moment
+at an end; and to accept the chance offered her to continue on to
+Paris seemed most wise. On the other hand, if, concerning
+Anfossi, she had succeeded in allaying their doubts, the results
+most to be desired could be attained only by remaining where they
+were.
+
+Their position inside the lines was of the greatest strategic
+value. The rooms of the servants were under the roof, and that
+Briand should sleep in one of them was natural. That to reach or
+leave his room he should constantly be ascending or descending
+the stairs also was natural. The field-wireless outfit, or, as he
+had disdainfully described it, the "knapsack" wireless, was
+situated not in the bedroom he had selected for himself, but in
+one adjoining. At other times this was occupied by the maid of
+Madame Iverney. To summon her maid Madame Iverney, from her
+apartment on the second floor, had but to press a button. And it
+was in the apartment of Madame Iverney, and on the bed of that
+lady, that Madame Benet now reclined. When through the open
+door she saw an officer or soldier mount the stairs, she pressed
+the button that rang a bell in the room of the maid. In this way,
+long before whoever was ascending the stairs could reach the top
+floor, warning of his approach came to Anfossi. It gave him time
+to replace the dustboard over the fireplace in which the wireless
+was concealed and to escape into his own bedroom. The arrangement
+was ideal. And already information picked up in the halls below
+by Marie had been conveyed to Anfossi to relay in a French cipher
+to the German General Staff at Rheims.
+
+Marie made an alert and charming hostess. To all who saw her
+it was evident that her mind was intent only upon the comfort of
+her guests. Throughout the day many came and went, but each
+she made welcome; to each as he departed she called "bonne
+chance."
+Efficient, tireless, tactful, she was everywhere: in the
+dining-room, in the kitchen, in the bedrooms, for the wounded
+finding mattresses to spread in the gorgeous salons of the
+Champagne prince; for the soldier-chauffeurs carrying wine into
+the courtyard, where the automobiles panted and growled, and the
+arriving and departing shrieked for right of way. At all times an
+alluring person, now the one woman in a tumult of men, her smart
+frock covered by an apron, her head and arms bare, undismayed
+by the sight of the wounded or by the distant rumble of the guns,
+the Countess d'Aurillac was an inspiring and beautiful picture.
+The eyes of the officers, young and old, informed her of that
+fact, one of which already she was well aware. By the morning
+of the next day she was accepted as the owner of the chateau.
+
+And though continually she reminded the staff she was present
+only as the friend of her schoolmate, Madame Iverney, they
+deferred to her as to a hostess. Many of them she already
+saluted by name, and to those who with messages were
+constantly motoring to and from the front at Soissons she
+was particularly kind. Overnight the legend of her charm,
+of her devotion to the soldiers of all ranks, had spread from
+Soissons to Meaux, and from Meaux to Paris. It was noon of
+that day when from the window of the second story Marie saw
+an armored automobile sweep into the courtyard. It was driven
+by an officer, young and appallingly good-looking, and, as was
+obvious by the way he spun his car, one who held in contempt
+both the law of gravity and death. That he was some one of
+importance seemed evident. Before he could alight the adjutant
+had raced to meet him. With her eye for detail Marie observed
+that the young officer, instead of imparting information, received
+it. He must, she guessed, have just arrived from Paris, and his
+brother officer either was telling him the news or giving him his
+orders. Whichever it might be, in what was told him the new
+arrival was greatly interested. One instant in indignation his
+gauntleted fist beat upon the steering-wheel, the next he smiled
+with pleasure. To interpret this pantomime was difficult; and,
+the better to inform herself, Marie descended the stairs.
+
+As she reached the lower hall the two officers entered. To the
+spy the man last to arrive was always the one of greatest
+importance; and Marie assured herself that through her friend,
+the adjutant, to meet with this one would prove easy.
+
+But the chauffeur-commander of the armored car made it most
+difficult. At sight of Marie, much to her alarm, as though
+greeting a dear friend, he snatched his kepi from his head and
+sprang toward her.
+
+"The major," he cried, "told me you were here, that you are Madame
+d'Aurillac." His eyes spoke his admiration. In delight he beamed
+upon her. "I might have known it!" he murmured. With the
+confidence of one who is sure he brings good news, he laughed
+happily. "And I," he cried, "am 'Pierrot'!"
+
+Who the devil "Pierrot" might be the spy could not guess. She
+knew only that she wished by a German shell "Pierrot" and his
+car had been blown to tiny fragments. Was it a trap, she asked
+herself, or was the handsome youth really some one the Countess
+d'Aurillac should know. But, as from his introducing himself it
+was evident he could not know that lady very well, Marie took
+courage and smiled.
+
+"Which 'Pierrot'?" she parried.
+
+"Pierre Thierry!" cried the youth.
+
+To the relief of Marie he turned upon the adjutant and to him
+explained who Pierre Thierry might be.
+
+"Paul d'Aurillac," he said, "is my dearest friend. When he married
+this charming lady I was stationed in Algiers, and but for the war
+I might never have met her."
+
+To Marie, with his hand on his heart in a most charming manner,
+he bowed. His admiration he made no effort to conceal.
+
+"And so," he said, "I know why there is war!"
+
+The adjutant smiled indulgently, and departed on his duties, leaving
+them alone. The handsome eyes of Captain Thierry were raised to
+the violet eyes of Marie. They appraised her boldly and as boldly
+expressed their approval.
+
+In burlesque the young man exclaimed indignantly: "Paul deceived
+me!" he cried. "He told me he had married the most beautiful woman
+in Laon. He has married the most beautiful woman in France!"
+
+To Marie this was not impertinence, but gallantry.
+
+This was a language she understood, and this was the type of man,
+because he was the least difficult to manage, she held most in
+contempt.
+
+"But about you Paul did not deceive me," she retorted. In
+apparent confusion her eyes refused to meet his. "He told me
+'Pierrot' was a most dangerous man!"
+
+She continued hurriedly. With wifely solicitude she asked
+concerning Paul. She explained that for a week she had been
+a prisoner in the chateau, and, since the mobilization, of her
+husband save that he was with his regiment in Paris she had heard
+nothing. Captain Thierry was able to give her later news. Only
+the day previous, on the boulevards, he had met Count d'Aurillac.
+He was at the Grand Hotel, and as Thierry was at once motoring
+back to Paris he would give Paul news of their meeting. He hoped
+he might tell him that soon his wife also would be in Paris. Marie
+explained that only the illness of her aunt prevented her from that
+same day joining her husband. Her manner became serious.
+
+"And what other news have you?" she asked. "Here on the
+firing-line we know less of what is going forward than you in
+Paris."
+
+So Pierre Thierry told her all he knew. They were preparing
+despatches he was at once to carry back to the General Staff,
+and, for the moment, his time was his own. How could he
+better employ it than in talking of the war with a patriotic
+and charming French woman?
+
+In consequence Marie acquired a mass of facts, gossip, and
+guesses. From these she mentally selected such information as,
+to her employers across the Aisne, would be of vital interest.
+
+And to rid herself of Thierry and on the fourth floor seek
+Anfossi was now her only wish. But, in attempting this, by
+the return of the adjutant she was delayed. To Thierry the
+adjutant gave a sealed envelope.
+
+"Thirty-one, Boulevard des Invalides," he said. With a smile he
+turned to Marie. "And you will accompany him!"
+
+"I!" exclaimed Marie. She was sick with sudden terror.
+
+But the tolerant smile of the adjutant reassured her.
+
+"The count, your husband," he explained, "has learned of your
+detention here by the enemy, and he has besieged the General
+Staff to have you convoyed safely to Paris." The adjutant glanced
+at a field telegram he held open in his hand. "He asks," he continued,
+"that you be permitted to return in the car of his friend, Captain
+Thierry, and that on arriving you join him at the Grand Hotel."
+
+Thierry exclaimed with delight.
+
+"But how charming!" he cried. "To-night you must both dine with
+me at La Rue's." He saluted his superior officer. "Some petrol,
+sir," he said. "And I am ready." To Marie he added: "The car will
+be at the steps in five minutes." He turned and left them.
+
+The thoughts of Marie, snatching at an excuse for delay, raced
+madly. The danger of meeting the Count d'Aurillac, her supposed
+husband, did not alarm her. The Grand Hotel has many exits, and,
+even before they reached it, for leaving the car she could invent
+an excuse that the gallant Thierry would not suspect. But what
+now concerned her was how, before she was whisked away to Paris,
+she could convey to Anfossi the information she had gathered from
+Thierry. First, of a woman overcome with delight at being reunited
+with her husband she gave an excellent imitation; then she exclaimed
+in distress: "But my aunt, Madame Benet!" she cried. "I cannot leave
+her!"
+
+"The Sisters of St. Francis," said the adjutant, "arrive within an hour
+to nurse the wounded. They will care also for your aunt."
+
+Marie concealed her chagrin. "Then I will at once prepare to go,"
+she said.
+
+The adjutant handed her a slip of paper. "Your laissez-passer to
+Paris," he said. "You leave in five minutes, madame!"
+
+As temporary hostess of the chateau Marie was free to visit
+any part of it, and as she passed her door a signal from Madame
+Benet told her that Anfossi was on the fourth floor, that he was
+at work, and that the coast was clear. Softly, in the felt slippers
+she always wore, as she explained, in order not to disturb the
+wounded, she mounted the staircase. In her hand she carried
+the housekeeper's keys, and as an excuse it was her plan to return
+with an armful of linen for the arriving Sisters. But Marie never
+reached the top of the stairs. When her eyes rose to the level
+of the fourth floor she came to a sudden halt. At what she saw
+terror gripped her, bound her hand and foot, and turned her blood
+to ice.
+
+At her post for an instant Madame Benet had slept, and an officer
+of the staff, led by curiosity, chance, or suspicion, had, unobserved
+and unannounced, mounted to the fourth floor. When Marie saw
+him he was in front of the room that held the wireless. His back
+was toward her, but she saw that he was holding the door to the
+room ajar, that his eye was pressed to the opening, and that
+through it he had pushed the muzzle of his automatic. What
+would be the fate of Anfossi Marie knew. Nor did she for an
+instant consider it. Her thoughts were of her own safety; that
+she might live.
+
+Not that she might still serve the Wilhelmstrasse, the Kaiser, or
+the Fatherland; but that she might live. In a moment Anfossi
+would be denounced, the chateau would ring with the alarm, and,
+though she knew Anfossi would not betray her, by others she might
+be accused. To avert suspicion from herself she saw only one way
+open. She must be the first to denounce Anfossi.
+
+Like a deer, she leaped down the marble stairs and, in a panic
+she had no need to assume, burst into the presence of the staff.
+
+"Gentlemen!" she gasped, "my servant--the chauffeur--Briand is a
+spy! There is a German wireless in the chateau. He is using it!
+I have seen him." With exclamations, the officers rose to their
+feet. General Andre alone remained seated. General Andre was
+a veteran of many Colonial wars: Cochin-China, Algiers, Morocco.
+The great war, when it came, found him on duty in the Intelligence
+Department. His aquiline nose, bristling white eyebrows, and
+flashing, restless eyes gave him his nickname of l'Aigle.
+
+In amazement, the flashing eyes were now turned upon Marie. He
+glared at her as though he thought she suddenly had flown mad.
+
+"A German wireless!" he protested. "It is impossible!"
+
+"I was on the fourth floor," panted Marie, "collecting linen for
+the Sisters. In the room next to the linen-closet I heard a strange
+buzzing sound. I opened the door softly. I saw Briand with his
+back to me seated by an instrument. There were receivers clamped
+to his ears! My God! The disgrace! The disgrace to my husband and
+to me, who vouched for him to you!" Apparently in an agony of
+remorse, the fingers of the woman laced and interlaced. "I cannot
+forgive myself!"
+
+The officers moved toward the door, but General Andre halted
+them. Still in a tone of incredulity, he demanded: "When did you
+see this?"
+
+Marie knew the question was coming, knew she must explain how
+she saw Briand, and yet did not see the staff officer who, with his
+prisoner, might now at any instant appear. She must make it plain
+she had discovered the spy and left the upper part of the house
+before the officer had visited it. When that was she could not
+know, but the chance was that he had preceded her by only a
+few minutes.
+
+"When did you see this?" repeated the general.
+
+"But just now," cried Marie; "not ten minutes since."
+
+"Why did you not come to me at once?"
+
+"I was afraid," replied Marie. "If I moved I was afraid he might hear
+me, and he, knowing I would expose him, would kill me-and so
+escape you!" There was an eager whisper of approval. For silence,
+General Andre slapped his hand upon the table.
+
+"Then," continued Marie, "I understood with the receivers on his
+ears he could not have heard me open the door, nor could he hear
+me leave, and I ran to my aunt. The thought that we had harbored
+such an animal sickened me, and I was weak enough to feel faint.
+But only for an instant. Then I came here." She moved swiftly to
+the door. "Let me show you the room," she begged; "you can take
+him in the act." Her eyes, wild with the excitement of the chase,
+swept the circle. "Will you come?" she begged.
+
+Unconscious of the crisis he interrupted, the orderly on duty
+opened the door.
+
+"Captain Thierry's compliments," he recited mechanically, "and is
+he to delay longer for Madame d'Aurillac?"
+
+With a sharp gesture General Andre waved Marie toward the door.
+Without rising, he inclined his head. "Adieu, madame," he said.
+"We act at once upon your information. I thank you!"
+
+As she crossed from the hall to the terrace, the ears of the spy were
+assaulted by a sudden tumult of voices. They were raised in threats
+and curses. Looking back, she saw Anfossi descending the stairs.
+His hands were held above his head; behind him, with his automatic,
+the staff officer she had surprised on the fourth floor was driving him
+forward. Above the clinched fists of the soldiers that ran to meet him,
+the eyes of Anfossi were turned toward her. His face was expressionless.
+His eyes neither accused nor reproached. And with the joy of one who
+has looked upon and then escaped the guillotine, Marie ran down the
+steps to the waiting automobile. With a pretty cry of pleasure she leaped
+into the seat beside Thierry. Gayly she threw out her arms. "To Paris!"
+she commanded. The handsome eyes of Thierry, eloquent with
+admiration, looked back into hers. He stooped, threw in the clutch,
+and the great gray car, with the machine gun and its crew of privates
+guarding the rear, plunged through the park.
+
+"To Paris!" echoed Thierry.
+
+In the order in which Marie had last seen them, Anfossi and the
+staff officer entered the room of General Andre, and upon the
+soldiers in the hall the door was shut. The face of the staff
+officer was grave, but his voice could not conceal his elation.
+
+"My general," he reported, "I found this man in the act of giving
+information to the enemy. There is a wireless-"
+
+General Andre rose slowly. He looked neither at the officer nor
+at his prisoner. With frowning eyes he stared down at the maps
+upon his table.
+
+"I know," he interrupted. "Some one has already told me." He
+paused, and then, as though recalling his manners, but still
+without raising his eyes, he added: "You have done well, sir."
+
+In silence the officers of the staff stood motionless. With surprise
+they noted that, as yet, neither in anger nor curiosity had General
+Andre glanced at the prisoner. But of the presence of the general
+the spy was most acutely conscious. He stood erect, his arms still
+raised, but his body strained forward, and on the averted eyes of the
+general his own were fixed.
+
+In an agony of supplication they asked a question.
+
+At last, as though against his wish, toward the spy the general
+turned his head, and their eyes met. And still General Andre was
+silent. Then the arms of the spy, like those of a runner who has
+finished his race and breasts the tape exhausted, fell to his sides.
+In a voice low and vibrant he spoke his question.
+
+"It has been so long, sir," he pleaded. "May I not come home?"
+
+General Andre turned to the astonished group surrounding him. His
+voice was hushed like that of one who speaks across an open grave.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "my children," he added. "A German spy, a
+woman, involved in a scandal your brother in arms, Henri Ravignac.
+His honor, he thought, was concerned, and without honor he refused
+to live. To prove him guiltless his younger brother Charles asked
+leave to seek out the woman who had betrayed Henri, and by us was
+detailed on secret service. He gave up home, family, friends. He lived
+in exile, in poverty, at all times in danger of a swift and ignoble death.
+In the War Office we know him as one who has given to his country
+services she cannot hope to reward. For she cannot return to him the
+years he has lost. She cannot return to him his brother. But she can
+and will clear the name of Henri Ravignac, and upon his brother
+Charles bestow promotion and honors."
+
+The general turned and embraced the spy. "My children," he said,
+"welcome your brother. He has come home."
+
+Before the car had reached the fortifications, Marie Gessler had
+arranged her plan of escape. She had departed from the chateau
+without even a hand-bag, and she would say that before the shops
+closed she must make purchases.
+
+Le Printemps lay in their way, and she asked that, when they
+reached it, for a moment she might alight. Captain Thierry
+readily gave permission.
+
+From the department store it would be most easy to disappear,
+and in anticipation Marie smiled covertly. Nor was the picture
+of Captain Thierry impatiently waiting outside unamusing.
+
+But before Le Printemps was approached, the car turned sharply
+down a narrow street. On one side, along its entire length, ran a
+high gray wall, grim and forbidding. In it was a green gate studded
+with iron bolts. Before this the automobile drew suddenly to a halt.
+The crew of the armored car tumbled off the rear seat, and one of
+them beat upon the green gate. Marie felt a hand of ice clutch at her
+throat. But she controlled herself.
+
+"And what is this?" she cried gayly.
+
+At her side Captain Thierry was smiling down at her, but his
+smile was hateful.
+
+"It is the prison of St. Lazare," he said. "It is not becoming,"
+he added sternly, "that the name of the Countess d'Aurillac
+should be made common as the Paris road!"
+
+Fighting for her life, Marie thrust herself against him; her
+arm that throughout the journey had rested on the back of the
+driving-seat caressed his shoulders; her lips and the violet eyes
+were close to his.
+
+"Why should you care?" she whispered fiercely. "You have me! Let
+the Count d'Aurillac look after the honor of his wife himself."
+
+The charming Thierry laughed at her mockingly.
+
+"He means to," he said. "I am the Count d'Aurillac!"
+
+
+
+THE DESERTER
+
+In Salonika, the American consul, the Standard Oil man, and
+the war correspondents formed the American colony. The
+correspondents were waiting to go to the front. Incidentally,
+as we waited, the front was coming rapidly toward us. There
+was "Uncle" Jim, the veteran of many wars, and of all the
+correspondents, in experience the oldest and in spirit the
+youngest, and there was the Kid, and the Artist. The Kid
+jeered at us, and proudly described himself as the only Boy
+Reporter who jumped from a City Hall assignment to cover a
+European War. "I don't know strategy," he would boast; "neither
+does the Man at Home. He wants 'human interest' stuff, and I give
+him what he wants. I write exclusively for the subway guard and
+the farmers in the wheat belt. When you fellows write about the
+'Situation,' they don't understand it. Neither do you. Neither does
+Venizelos or the King. I don't understand it myself. So, I write my
+people heart-to-heart talks about refugees and wounded, and what
+kind of ploughs the Servian peasants use, and that St. Paul wrote
+his letters to the Thessalonians from the same hotel where I write
+mine; and I tell 'em to pronounce Salonika 'eeka,' and not put
+the accent on the 'on.' This morning at the refugee camp I found
+all the little Servians of the Frothingham unit in American Boy
+Scout uniforms. That's my meat. That's 'home week' stuff. You
+fellows write for the editorial page; and nobody reads it. I write
+for the man that turns first to Mutt and Jeff, and then looks to see
+where they are running the new Charlie Chaplin release. When
+that man has to choose between 'our military correspondent' and
+the City Hall Reporter, he chooses me!"
+
+The third man was John, "Our Special Artist." John could write
+a news story, too, but it was the cartoons that had made him
+famous. They were not comic page, but front page cartoons, and
+before making up their minds what they thought, people waited to
+see what their Artist thought. So, it was fortunate his thoughts
+were as brave and clean as they were clever. He was the original
+Little Brother to the Poor. He was always giving away money.
+When we caught him, he would prevaricate. He would say the man
+was a college chum, that he had borrowed the money from him,
+and that this was the first chance he had had to pay it back. The Kid
+suggested it was strange that so many of his college chums should
+at the same moment turn up, dead broke, in Salonika, and that
+half of them should be women.
+
+John smiled disarmingly. "It was a large college," he explained,
+"and coeducational." There were other Americans; Red Cross
+doctors and nurses just escaped through the snow from the
+Bulgars, and hyphenated Americans who said they had taken
+out their first papers. They thought hyphenated citizens were
+so popular with us, that we would pay their passage to New York.
+In Salonika they were transients. They had no local standing. They
+had no local lying-down place, either, or place to eat, or to wash,
+although they did not look as though that worried them, or place
+to change their clothes. Or clothes to change. It was because we
+had clothes to change, and a hotel bedroom, instead of a bench in
+a cafe, that we were ranked as residents and from the Greek police
+held a "permission to sojourn." Our American colony was a very
+close corporation. We were only six Americans against 300,000
+British, French, Greek, and Servian soldiers, and 120,000 civilian
+Turks, Spanish Jews, Armenians, Persians, Egyptians, Albanians,
+and Arabs, and some twenty more other races that are not listed.
+We had arrived in Salonika before the rush, and at the Hotel Hermes
+on the water-front had secured a vast room. The edge of the stone
+quay was not forty feet from us, the only landing steps directly
+opposite our balcony. Everybody who arrived on the Greek
+passenger boats from Naples or the Piraeus, or who had shore
+leave from a man-of-war, transport, or hospital ship, was raked
+by our cameras. There were four windows--one for each of us
+and his work table. It was not easy to work. What was the use?
+The pictures and stories outside the windows fascinated us, but
+when we sketched them or wrote about them, they only proved
+us inadequate. All day long the pinnaces, cutters, gigs, steam
+launches shoved and bumped against the stone steps, marines
+came ashore for the mail, stewards for fruit and fish, Red Cross
+nurses to shop, tiny midshipmen to visit the movies, and the
+sailors and officers of the Russian, French, British, Italian,
+and Greek war-ships to stretch their legs in the park of the Tour
+Blanche, or to cramp them under a cafe table. Sometimes the
+ambulances blocked the quay and the wounded and frost-bitten
+were lifted into the motor-boats, and sometimes a squad of marines
+lined the landing stage, and as a coffin under a French or English
+flag was borne up the stone steps stood at salute. So crowded
+was the harbor that the oars of the boatmen interlocked.
+
+Close to the stone quay, stretched along the three-mile circle,
+were the fishing smacks, beyond them, so near that the anchor
+chains fouled, were the passenger ships with gigantic Greek flags
+painted on their sides, and beyond them transports from Marseilles,
+Malta, and Suvla Bay, black colliers, white hospital ships, burning
+green electric lights, red-bellied tramps and freighters, and, hemming
+them in, the grim, mouse-colored destroyers, submarines, cruisers,
+dreadnaughts. At times, like a wall, the cold fog rose between us
+and the harbor, and again the curtain would suddenly be ripped
+asunder, and the sun would flash on the brass work of the fleet,
+on the white wings of the aeroplanes, on the snow-draped
+shoulders of Mount Olympus. We often speculated as to how
+in the early days the gods and goddesses, dressed as they were,
+or as they were not, survived the snows of Mount Olympus. Or
+was it only their resort for the summer?
+
+It got about that we had a vast room to ourselves, where one
+might obtain a drink, or a sofa for the night, or even money to
+cable for money. So, we had many strange visitors, some half
+starved, half frozen, with terrible tales of the Albanian trail,
+of the Austrian prisoners fallen by the wayside, of the mountain
+passes heaped with dead, of the doctors and nurses wading
+waist-high in snow-drifts and for food killing the ponies. Some
+of our visitors wanted to get their names in the American papers
+so that the folks at home would know they were still alive,
+others wanted us to keep their names out of the papers, hoping
+the police would think them dead; another, convinced it was of
+pressing news value, desired us to advertise the fact that he had
+invented a poisonous gas for use in the trenches. With difficulty
+we prevented him from casting it adrift in our room. Or, he had
+for sale a second-hand motor-cycle, or he would accept a position
+as barkeeper, or for five francs would sell a state secret that, once
+made public, in a month would end the war. It seemed cheap at
+the price.
+
+Each of us had his "scouts" to bring him the bazaar rumor, the
+Turkish bath rumor, the cafe rumor. Some of our scouts journeyed
+as far afield as Monastir and Doiran, returning to drip snow on
+the floor, and to tell us tales, one-half of which we refused to
+believe, and the other half the censor refused to pass. With each
+other's visitors it was etiquette not to interfere. It would have
+been like tapping a private wire. When we found John sketching
+a giant stranger in a cap and coat of wolf skin we did not seek
+to know if he were an Albanian brigand, or a Servian prince
+incognito, and when a dark Levantine sat close to the Kid,
+whispering, and the Kid banged on his typewriter, we did not
+listen.
+
+So, when I came in one afternoon and found a strange American
+youth writing at John's table, and no one introduced us, I took
+it for granted he had sold the Artist an "exclusive" story, and
+asked no questions. But I could not help hearing what they said.
+Even though I tried to drown their voices by beating on the Kid's
+typewriter. I was taking my third lesson, and I had printed, "I
+Amm 5w writjng This, 5wjth my own lilly w?ite handS," when I
+heard the Kid saying:
+
+"You can beat the game this way. Let John buy you a ticket to the
+Piraeus. If you go from one Greek port to another you don't need
+a vise. But, if you book from here to Italy, you must get a permit
+from the Italian consul, and our consul, and the police. The plot
+is to get out of the war zone, isn't it? Well, then, my dope is to get
+out quick, and map the rest of your trip when you're safe in Athens."
+
+It was no business of mine, but I had to look up. The stranger
+was now pacing the floor. I noticed that while his face was
+almost black with tan, his upper lip was quite white. I noticed
+also that he had his hands in the pockets of one of John's blue
+serge suits, and that the pink silk shirt he wore was one that
+once had belonged to the Kid. Except for the pink shirt, in the
+appearance of the young man there was nothing unusual. He was
+of a familiar type. He looked like a young business man from our
+Middle West, matter-of-fact and unimaginative, but capable and
+self-reliant. If he had had a fountain pen in his upper waistcoat
+pocket, I would have guessed he was an insurance agent, or the
+publicity man for a new automobile. John picked up his hat,
+and said, "That's good advice. Give me your steamer ticket, Fred,
+and I'll have them change it." He went out; but he did not ask
+Fred to go with him.
+
+Uncle Jim rose, and murmured something about the Cafe Roma,
+and tea. But neither did he invite Fred to go with him. Instead,
+he told him to make himself at home, and if he wanted anything
+the waiter would bring it from the cafe downstairs. Then the Kid,
+as though he also was uncomfortable at being left alone with us,
+hurried to the door. "Going to get you a suit-case," he explained.
+"Back in five minutes."
+
+The stranger made no answer. Probably he did not hear him. Not a
+hundred feet from our windows three Greek steamers were huddled
+together, and the eyes of the American were fixed on them. The
+one for which John had gone to buy him a new ticket lay nearest.
+She was to sail in two hours. Impatiently, in short quick steps,
+the stranger paced the length of the room, but when he turned and
+so could see the harbor, he walked slowly, devouring it with his
+eyes. For some time, in silence, he repeated this manoeuvre; and
+then the complaints of the typewriter disturbed him. He halted
+and observed my struggles. Under his scornful eye, in my
+embarrassment I frequently hit the right letter. "You a
+newspaper man, too?" he asked. I boasted I was, but
+begged not to be judged by my typewriting.
+
+"I got some great stories to write when I get back to God's country,"
+he announced. "I was a reporter for two years in Kansas City before
+the war, and now I'm going back to lecture and write. I got enough
+material to keep me at work for five years. All kinds of stuff--
+specials, fiction, stories, personal experiences, maybe a novel."
+
+I regarded him with envy. For the correspondents in the
+greatest of all wars the pickings had been meagre. "You
+are to be congratulated," I said. He brushed aside my
+congratulations. "For what?" he demanded. "I didn't go
+after the stories; they came to me. The things I saw I had
+to see. Couldn't get away from them. I've been with the
+British, serving in the R. A. M. C. Been hospital steward,
+stretcher bearer, ambulance driver. I've been sixteen months
+at the front, and all the time on the firing-line. I was in the
+retreat from Mons, with French on the Marne, at Ypres, all
+through the winter fighting along the Canal, on the Gallipoli
+Peninsula, and, just lately, in Servia. I've seen more of this
+war than any soldier. Because, sometimes, they give the soldier
+a rest; they never give the medical corps a rest. The only rest I
+got was when I was wounded."
+
+He seemed no worse for his wounds, so again I tendered
+congratulations. This time he accepted them. The recollection
+of the things he had seen, things incredible, terrible, unique in
+human experience, had stirred him. He talked on, not boastfully,
+but in a tone, rather, of awe and disbelief, as though assuring
+himself that it was really he to whom such things had happened.
+
+"I don't believe there's any kind of fighting I haven't seen," he
+declared; "hand-to-hand fighting with bayonets, grenades, gun
+butts. I've seen 'em on their knees in the mud choking each
+other, beating each other with their bare fists. I've seen every
+kind of airship, bomb, shell, poison gas, every kind of wound.
+Seen whole villages turned into a brickyard in twenty minutes;
+in Servia seen bodies of women frozen to death, bodies of babies
+starved to death, seen men in Belgium swinging from trees; along
+the Yzer for three months I saw the bodies of men I'd known
+sticking out of the mud, or hung up on the barb wire, with the
+crows picking them.
+
+"I've seen some of the nerviest stunts that ever were pulled off
+in history. I've seen real heroes. Time and time again I've seen
+a man throw away his life for his officer, or for a chap he didn't
+know, just as though it was a cigarette butt. I've seen the women
+nurses of our corps steer a car into a village and yank out a wounded
+man while shells were breaking under the wheels and the houses
+were pitching into the streets." He stopped and laughed consciously.
+
+"Understand," he warned me, "I'm not talking about myself, only of
+things I've seen. The things I'm going to put in my book. It ought
+to be a pretty good book-what?"
+
+My envy had been washed clean in admiration.
+
+"It will make a wonderful book," I agreed. "Are you going to
+syndicate it first?"
+
+Young Mr. Hamlin frowned importantly.
+
+"I was thinking," he said, "of asking John for letters to the magazine
+editors. So, they'll know I'm not faking, that I've really been through
+it all. Letters from John would help a lot." Then he asked anxiously:
+"They would, wouldn't they?"
+
+I reassured him. Remembering the Kid's gibes at John and his
+numerous dependents, I said: "You another college chum of John's?"
+The young man answered my question quite seriously. "No," he said;
+"John graduated before I entered; but we belong to the same fraternity.
+It was the luckiest chance in the world my finding him here. There was
+a month-old copy of the Balkan News blowing around camp, and his
+name was in the list of arrivals. The moment I found he was in Salonika,
+I asked for twelve hours leave, and came down in an ambulance. I made
+straight for John; gave him the grip, and put it up to him to help me."
+
+"I don't understand," I said. "I thought you were sailing on the
+Adriaticus?"
+
+The young man was again pacing the floor. He halted and faced the
+harbor.
+
+"You bet I'm sailing on the Adriaticus," he said. He looked out at
+that vessel, at the Blue Peter flying from her foremast, and grinned.
+"In just two hours!"
+
+It was stupid of me, but I still was unenlightened. "But your twelve
+hours' leave?" I asked.
+
+The young man laughed. "They can take my twelve hours' leave,"
+he said deliberately, "and feed it to the chickens. I'm beating it."
+
+"What d'you mean, you're beating it?"
+
+"What do you suppose I mean?" he demanded. "What do you
+suppose I'm doing out of uniform, what do you suppose I'm lying
+low in the room for? So's I won't catch cold?"
+
+"If you're leaving the army without a discharge, and without
+permission," I said, "I suppose you know it's desertion."
+
+Mr. Hamlin laughed easily. "It's not my army," he said. "I'm an
+American."
+
+"It's your desertion," I suggested.
+
+The door opened and closed noiselessly, and Billy, entering,
+placed a new travelling bag on the floor. He must have heard my
+last words, for he looked inquiringly at each of us. But he did
+not speak and, walking to the window, stood with his hands in his
+pockets, staring out at the harbor. His presence seemed to encourage
+the young man. "Who knows I'm deserting?" he demanded. "No
+one's ever seen me in Salonika before, and in these 'cits' I can get on
+board all right. And then they can't touch me. What do the folks at
+home care how I left the British army? They'll be so darned glad to
+get me back alive that they won't ask if I walked out or was kicked
+out. I should worry!"
+
+"It's none of my business," I began, but I was interrupted. In
+his restless pacings the young man turned quickly.
+
+"As you say," he remarked icily, "it is none of your business.
+It's none of your business whether I get shot as a deserter, or
+go home, or--"
+
+"You can go to the devil for all I care," I assured him. "I
+wasn't considering you at all. I was only sorry that I'll never
+be able to read your book."
+
+For a moment Mr. Hamlin remained silent, then he burst forth
+with a jeer.
+
+"No British firing squad," he boasted, "will ever stand me up."
+
+"Maybe not," I agreed, "but you will never write that book."
+
+Again there was silence, and this time it was broken by the Kid.
+He turned from the window and looked toward Hamlin. "That's
+right!" he said.
+
+He sat down on the edge of the table, and at the deserter pointed
+his forefinger.
+
+"Son," he said, "this war is some war. It's the biggest war in
+history, and folks will be talking about nothing else for the next
+ninety years; folks that never were nearer it than Bay City, Mich.
+But you won't talk about it. And you've been all through it.
+You've been to hell and back again. Compared with what you
+know about hell, Dante is in the same class with Dr. Cook. But
+you won't be able to talk about this war, or lecture, or write a
+book about it."
+
+"I won't?" demanded Hamlin. "And why won't I?"
+
+"Because of what you're doing now," said Billy. "Because
+you're queering yourself. Now, you've got everything." The
+Kid was very much in earnest. His tone was intimate, kind, and
+friendly. "You've seen everything, done everything. We'd give
+our eye-teeth to see what you've seen, and to write the things you
+can write. You've got a record now that'll last you until you're
+dead, and your grandchildren are dead-and then some. When
+you talk the table will have to sit up and listen. You can say 'I
+was there.' 'I was in it.' 'I saw.' 'I know.' When this war is
+over you'll have everything out of it that's worth getting-all
+the experiences, all the inside knowledge, all the 'nosebag'
+news; you'll have wounds, honors, medals, money, reputation.
+And you're throwing all that away!"
+
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted savagely.
+
+"To hell with their medals," he said. "They can take their medals
+and hang 'em on Christmas trees. I don't owe the British army
+anything. It owes me. I've done my bit. I've earned what I've
+got, and there's no one can take it away from me."
+
+"You can," said the Kid. Before Hamlin could reply the door
+opened and John came in, followed by Uncle Jim. The older
+man was looking very grave, and John very unhappy. Hamlin
+turned quickly to John.
+
+"I thought these men were friends of yours," he began, "and
+Americans. They're fine Americans. They're as full of human
+kindness and red blood as a kippered herring!"
+
+John looked inquiringly at the Kid.
+
+"He wants to hang himself," explained Billy, "and because we
+tried to cut him down, he's sore."
+
+"They talked to me," protested Hamlin, "as though I was a
+yellow dog. As though I was a quitter. I'm no quitter! But,
+if I'm ready to quit, who's got a better right? I'm not an
+Englishman, but there are several million Englishmen haven't
+done as much for England in this was as I have. What do you
+fellows know about it? You write about it, about the 'brave
+lads in the trenches'; but what do you know about the trenches?
+What you've seen from automobiles. That's all. That's where
+you get off! I've lived in the trenches for fifteen months, froze
+in 'em, starved in 'em, risked my life in 'em, and I've saved other
+lives, too, by hauling men out of the trenches. And that's no airy
+persiflage, either!"
+
+He ran to the wardrobe where John's clothes hung, and from the
+bottom of it dragged a khaki uniform. It was still so caked with
+mud and snow that when he flung it on the floor it splashed like
+a wet bathing suit. "How would you like to wear one of those?" he
+Demanded. "Stinking with lice and sweat and blood; the blood of
+other men, the men you've helped off the field, and your own
+blood."
+
+As though committing hara-kiri, he slashed his hand across his
+stomach, and then drew it up from his waist to his chin. "I'm
+scraped with shrapnel from there to there," said Mr. Hamlin.
+"And another time I got a ball in the shoulder. That would have
+been a 'blighty' for a fighting man--they're always giving them
+leave--but all I got was six weeks at Havre in hospital. Then it
+was the Dardanelles, and sunstroke and sand; sleeping in sand,
+eating sand, sand in your boots, sand in your teeth; hiding in
+holes in the sand like a dirty prairie dog. And then, 'Off to
+Servia!' And the next act opens in the snow and the mud!
+Cold? God, how cold it was! And most of us in sun helmets."
+
+As though the cold still gnawed at his bones, he shivered.
+
+"It isn't the danger," he protested. "It isn't that I'm getting
+away from. To hell with the danger! It's just the plain
+discomfort of it! It's the never being your own master, never
+being clean, never being warm." Again he shivered and
+rubbed one hand against the other. "There were no bridges
+over the streams," he went on, "and we had to break the ice
+and wade in, and then sleep in the open with the khaki frozen
+to us. There was no firewood; not enough to warm a pot of tea.
+There were no wounded; all our casualties were frost bite and
+Pneumonia. When we take them out of the blankets their toes
+fall off. We've been in camp for a month now near Doiran, and
+it's worse there than on the march. It's a frozen swamp. You can't
+sleep for the cold; can't eat; the only ration we get is bully beef,
+and our insides are frozen so damn tight we can't digest it. The
+cold gets into your blood, gets into your brains. It won't let you
+think; or else, you think crazy things. It makes you afraid." He
+shook himself like a man coming out of a bad dream.
+
+So, I'm through," he said. In turn he scowled at each of us, as
+though defying us to contradict him. "That's why I'm quitting,"
+he added. "Because I've done my bit. Because I'm damn well fed
+up on it." He kicked viciously at the water-logged uniform on the
+floor. "Any one who wants my job can have it!" He walked to the
+window, turned his back on us, and fixed his eyes hungrily on the
+Adriaticus. There was a long pause. For guidance we looked at
+John, but he was staring down at the desk blotter, scratching on it
+marks that he did not see.
+
+Finally, where angels feared to tread, the Kid rushed in. "That's
+certainly a hard luck story," he said; "but," he added cheerfully,
+"it's nothing to the hard luck you'll strike when you can't tell
+why you left the army." Hamlin turned with an exclamation,
+but Billy held up his hand. "Now wait," he begged, "we haven't
+time to get mussy. At six o'clock your leave is up, and the troop
+train starts back to camp, and--"
+
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted sharply. "And the Adriaticus starts at
+five."
+
+Billy did not heed him. "You've got two hours to change your
+mind," he said. "That's better than being sorry you didn't the
+rest of your life."
+
+Mr. Hamlin threw back his head and laughed. It was a most
+unpleasant laugh. "You're a fine body of men," he jeered.
+"America must be proud of you!"
+
+"If we weren't Americans," explained Billy patiently, "we
+wouldn't give a damn whether you deserted or not. You're
+drowning and you don't know it, and we're throwing you a
+rope. Try to see it that way. We'll cut out the fact that you
+took an oath, and that you're breaking it. That's up to you.
+We'll get down to results. When you reach home, if you can't
+tell why you left the army, the folks will darned soon guess.
+And that will queer everything you've done. When you come
+to sell your stuff, it will queer you with the editors, queer you
+with the publishers. If they know you broke your word to the
+British army, how can they know you're keeping faith with them?
+How can they believe anything you tell them? Every 'story' you
+write, every statement of yours will make a noise like a fake.
+You won't come into court with clean hands. You'll be licked
+before you start.
+
+"Of course, you're for the Allies. Well, all the Germans at home
+will fear that; and when you want to lecture on your 'Fifteen
+Months at the British Front,' they'll look up your record; and
+what will they do to you? This is what they'll do to you. When
+you've shown 'em your moving pictures and say, 'Does any
+gentleman in the audience want to ask a question?' a German
+agent will get up and say, 'Yes, I want to ask a question. Is it
+true that you deserted from the British army, and that if you
+return to it, they will shoot you?'"
+
+I was scared. I expected the lean and muscular Mr. Hamlin to
+fall on Billy, and fling him where he had flung the soggy uniform.
+But instead he remained motionless, his arms pressed across his
+chest. His eyes, filled with anger and distress, returned to the
+Adriaticus.
+
+"I'm sorry," muttered the Kid.
+
+John rose and motioned to the door, and guiltily and only too
+gladly we escaped. John followed us into the hall. "Let me talk
+to him," he whispered. "The boat sails in an hour. Please don't
+come back until she's gone."
+
+We went to the moving picture palace next door, but I doubt if
+the thoughts of any of us were on the pictures. For after an
+hour, when from across the quay there came the long-drawn
+warning of a steamer's whistle, we nudged each other and rose
+and went out.
+
+Not a hundred yards from us the propeller blades of the
+Adriaticus were slowly churning, and the rowboats were falling
+away from her sides.
+
+"Good-bye, Mr. Hamlin," called Billy. "You had everything and
+you chucked it away. I can spell your finish. It's 'check' for yours."
+
+But when we entered our room, in the centre of it, under the
+bunch of electric lights, stood the deserter. He wore the
+water-logged uniform. The sun helmet was on his head.
+
+"Good man!" shouted Billy.
+
+He advanced, eagerly holding out his hand.
+
+Mr. Hamlin brushed past him. At the door he turned and glared
+at us, even at John. He was not a good loser. "I hope you're
+satisfied," he snarled. He pointed at the four beds in a row. I
+felt guiltily conscious of them. At the moment they appeared so
+unnecessarily clean and warm and soft. The silk coverlets at the
+foot of each struck me as being disgracefully effeminate. They
+made me ashamed.
+
+"I hope," said Mr. Hamlin, speaking slowly and picking his words,
+"when you turn into those beds to-night you'll think of me in the
+mud. I hope when you're having your five-course dinner and your
+champagne you'll remember my bully beef. I hope when a shell or
+Mr. Pneumonia gets me, you'll write a nice little sob story about
+the 'brave lads in the trenches.' "
+
+He looked at us, standing like schoolboys, sheepish, embarrassed,
+and silent, and then threw open the door. "I hope," he added,
+"you all choke!"
+
+With an unconvincing imitation of the college chum manner,
+John cleared his throat and said: "Don't forget, Fred, if there's
+anything I can do--"
+
+Hamlin stood in the doorway smiling at us.
+
+"There's something you can all do," he said.
+
+"Yes?" asked John heartily.
+
+"You can all go to hell!" said Mr. Hamlin.
+
+We heard the door slam, and his hobnailed boots pounding down
+the stairs. No one spoke. Instead, in unhappy silence, we stood
+staring at the floor. Where the uniform had lain was a pool of
+mud and melted snow and the darker stains of stale blood.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg etext of The Lost Road
+
+
+
+
+
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+
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+
+
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+
+
+THE NOVELS AND STORIES OF
+
+RICHARD HARDING DAVIS
+
+
+Contains:
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+THE LONG ARM
+THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+THE BOY SCOUT
+SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE
+THE DESERTER
+
+
+TO
+
+MY WIFE
+
+
+
+
+AN INTRODUCTION BY
+JOHN T. McCUTCHEON
+
+WITH DAVIS IN VERA CRUZ, BRUSSELS, AND SALONIKA
+
+
+In common with many others who have been with Richard Harding
+Davis as correspondents, I find it difficult to realize that he
+has covered his last story and that he will not be seen again
+with the men who follow the war game, rushing to distant places
+upon which the spotlight of news interest suddenly centres.
+
+It seems a sort of bitter irony that he who had covered so many
+big events of world importance in the past twenty years should
+be abruptly torn away in the midst of the greatest event of
+them all, while the story is still unfinished and its outcome
+undetermined. If there is a compensating thought, it lies in the
+reflection that he had a life of almost unparalleled fulness,
+crowded to the brim, up to the last moment, with those
+experiences and achievements which he particularly aspired to
+have. He left while the tide was at its flood, and while he still
+held supreme his place as the best reporter in his country. He
+escaped the bitterness of seeing the ebb set in, when the youth
+to which he clung had slipped away, and when he would have to sit
+impatient in the audience, while younger men were in the thick of
+great, world-stirring dramas on the stage.
+
+This would have been a real tragedy in "Dick" Davis's case, for,
+while his body would have aged, it is doubtful if his spirit ever
+would have lost its youthful freshness or boyish enthusiasm.
+
+It was my privilege to see a good deal of Davis in the last two
+years.
+
+He arrived in Vera Cruz among the first of the sixty or seventy
+correspondents who flocked to that news centre when the situation
+was so full of sensational possibilities. It was a time when the
+American newspaper-reading public was eager for thrills, and the
+ingenuity and resourcefulness of the correspondents in Vera Cruz
+were tried to the uttermost to supply the demand.
+
+In the face of the fiercest competition it fell to Davis's lot to
+land the biggest story of those days of marking time.
+
+The story "broke" when it became known that Davis, Medill
+McCormick, and Frederick Palmer had gone through the Mexican
+lines in an effort to reach Mexico City. Davis and McCormick,
+with letters to the Brazilian and British ministers, got through
+and reached the capital on the strength of those letters, but
+Palmer, having only an American passport, was turned back.
+
+After an ominous silence which furnished American newspapers with
+a lively period of suspense, the two men returned safely with
+wonderful stories of their experiences while under arrest in the
+hands of the Mexican authorities. McCormick, in recently speaking
+of Davis at that time, said that, "as a correspondent in
+difficult and dangerous situations, he was incomparable--cheerful,
+ingenious, and undiscouraged. When the time came to choose
+between safety and leaving his companion he stuck by his fellow
+captive even though, as they both said, a firing-squad and a blank
+wall were by no means a remote possibility."
+
+This Mexico City adventure was a spectacular achievement
+which gave Davis and McCormick a distinction which no other
+correspondents of all the ambitious and able corps had managed to
+attain.
+
+Davis usually "hunted" alone. He depended entirely upon his own
+ingenuity and wonderful instinct for news situations. He had the
+energy and enthusiasm of a beginner, with the experience and
+training of a veteran. His interest in things remained as keen
+as though he had not been years at a game which often leaves a
+man jaded and blase. His acquaintanceship in the American army
+and navy was wide, and for this reason, as well as for the
+prestige which his fame and position as a national character gave
+him, he found it easy to establish valuable connections in the
+channels from which news emanates. And yet, in spite of the fact
+that he was "on his own" instead of having a working partnership
+with other men, he was generous in helping at times when he was
+able to do so.
+
+Davis was a conspicuous figure in Vera Cruz, as he inevitably had
+been in all such situations. Wherever he went, he was pointed
+out. His distinction of appearance, together with a distinction
+in dress, which, whether from habit or policy, was a valuable
+asset in his work, made him a marked man. He dressed and looked
+the "war correspondent," such a one as he would describe in one
+of his stories. He fulfilled the popular ideal of what a member
+of that fascinating profession should look like. His code of life
+and habits was as fixed as that of the Briton who takes his
+habits and customs and games and tea wherever he goes, no matter
+how benighted or remote the spot may be.
+
+He was just as loyal to his code as is the Briton. He carried his
+bath-tub, his immaculate linen, his evening clothes, his war
+equipment--in which he had the pride of a connoisseur--wherever
+he went, and, what is more, he had the courage to use the evening
+clothes at times when their use was conspicuous. He was the only
+man who wore a dinner coat in Vera Cruz, and each night, at his
+particular table in the crowded "Portales," at the Hotel
+Diligencia, he was to be seen, as fresh and clean as though he
+were in a New York or London restaurant.
+
+Each day he was up early to take the train out to the "gap,"
+across which came arrivals from Mexico City. Sometimes a good
+"story" would come down, as when the long-heralded and long-
+expected arrival of Consul Silliman gave a first-page "feature"
+to all the American papers.
+
+In the afternoon he would play water polo over at the navy
+aviation camp, and always at a certain time of the day his
+"striker" would bring him his horse and for an hour or more he
+would ride out along the beach roads within the American lines.
+After the first few days it was difficult to extract real thrills
+from the Vera Cruz situation, but we used to ride out to El Tejar
+with the cavalry patrol and imagine that we might be fired on at
+some point in the long ride through unoccupied territory; or else
+go out to the "front," at Legarto, where a little American force
+occupied a sun-baked row of freight-cars, surrounded by malarial
+swamps. From the top of the railroad water-tank, we could look
+across to the Mexican outposts a mile or so away. It was not very
+exciting, and what thrills we got lay chiefly in our imagination.
+
+Before my acquaintanceship with Davis at Vera Cruz I had not
+known him well. Our trails didn't cross while I was in Japan in
+the Japanese-Russian War, and in the Transvaal I missed him by a
+few days, but in Vera Cruz I had many enjoyable opportunities of
+becoming well acquainted with him.
+
+The privilege was a pleasant one, for it served to dispel a
+preconceived and not an entirely favorable impression of his
+character. For years I had heard stories about Richard Harding
+Davis--stories which emphasized an egotism and self-assertiveness
+which, if they ever existed, had happily ceased to be obtrusive
+by the time I got to know him.
+
+He was a different Davis from the Davis whom I had expected to
+find; and I can imagine no more charming and delightful companion
+than he was in Vera Cruz. There was no evidence of those
+qualities which I feared to find, and his attitude was one of
+unfailing kindness, considerateness, and generosity.
+
+In the many talks I had with him, I was always struck by his
+evident devotion to a fixed code of personal conduct. In his writings
+he was the interpreter of chivalrous, well-bred youth, and his heroes
+were young, clean-thinking college men, heroic big-game hunters,
+war correspondents, and idealized men about town, who always did
+the noble thing, disdaining the unworthy in act or motive. It seemed
+to me that he was modelling his own life, perhaps unconsciously,
+after the favored types which his imagination had created for his
+stories. In a certain sense he was living a life of make-believe,
+wherein he was the hero of the story, and in which he was bound
+by his ideals always to act as he would have the hero of his
+story act. It was a quality which only one could have who had
+preserved a fresh youthfulness of outlook in spite of the
+hardening processes of maturity.
+
+His power of observation was extraordinarily keen, and he not
+only had the rare gift of sensing the vital elements of a
+situation, but also had, to an unrivalled degree, the ability to
+describe them vividly. I don't know how many of those men at Verz
+Cruz tried to describe the kaleidoscopic life of the city during
+the American occupation, but I know that Davis's story was far
+and away the most faithful and satisfying picture. The story was
+photographic, even to the sounds and smells.
+
+The last I saw of him in Vera Cruz was when, on the Utah, he
+steamed past the flagship Wyoming, upon which I was quartered,
+and started for New York. The Battenberg cup race had just been
+rowed, and the Utah and Florida crews had tied. As the Utah was
+sailing immediately after the race, there was no time in which to
+row off the tie. So it was decided that the names of both ships
+should be engraved on the cup, and that the Florida crew should
+defend the title against a challenging crew from the British
+Admiral Craddock's flagship.
+
+By the end of June, the public interest in Vera Cruz had waned,
+and the corps of correspondents dwindled until there were only a
+few left.
+
+Frederick Palmer and I went up to join Carranza and Villa, and on
+the 26th of July we were in Monterey waiting to start with the
+triumphal march of Carranza's army toward Mexico City. There was
+no sign of serious trouble abroad. That night ominous telegrams
+came, and at ten o'clock on the following morning we were on a
+train headed for the States.
+
+Palmer and Davis caught the Lusitania, sailing August 4 from New
+York, and I followed on the Saint Paul, leaving three days later.
+On the 17th of August I reached Brussels, and it seemed the most
+natural thing in the world to find Davis already there. He was at
+the Palace Hotel, where a number of American and English
+correspondents were quartered.
+
+Things moved quickly. On the 19th Irvin Cobb, Will Irwin, Arno
+Dosch, and I were caught between the Belgian and German lines in
+Louvain; our retreat to Brussels was cut, and for three days,
+while the vast German army moved through the city, we were
+detained. Then, the army having passed, we were allowed to go
+back to the capital.
+
+In the meantime Davis was in Brussels. The Germans reached the
+outskirts of the city on the morning of the 20th, and the
+correspondents who had remained in Brussels were feverishly
+writing despatches describing the imminent fall of the city. One
+of them, Harry Hansen, of the Chicago Daily News, tells the
+following story, which I give in his words:
+
+"While we were writing," says Hansen, "Richard Harding Davis
+walked into the writing-room of the Palace Hotel with a bunch of
+manuscript in his hand. With an amused expression he surveyed
+the three correspondents filling white paper.
+
+"'I say, men,' said Davis, 'do you know when the next train
+leaves?'
+
+"'There is one at three o'clock,' said a correspondent, looking
+up.
+
+"'That looks like our only chance to get a story out,' said
+Davis. 'Well, we'll trust to that.'
+
+"The story was the German invasion of Brussels, and the train
+mentioned was considered the forlorn hope of the correspondents
+to connect with the outside world--that is, every correspondent
+thought it to be the other man's hope. Secretly each had prepared
+to outwit the other, and secretly Davis had already sent his
+story to Ostend. He meant to emulate Archibald Forbes, who
+despatched a courier with his real manuscript, and next day
+publicly dropped a bulky package in the mail-bag.
+
+"Davis had sensed the news in the occupation of Brussels long
+before it happened. With dawn he went out to the Louvain road,
+where the German army stood, prepared to smash the capital if
+negotiations failed. His observant eye took in all the details.
+Before noon he had written a comprehensive sketch of the
+occupation, and when word was received that it was under way, he
+trusted his copy to an old Flemish woman, who spoke not a word of
+English, and saw her safely on board the train that pulled out
+under Belgian auspices for Ostend."
+
+With passes which the German commandant in Brussels gave us the
+correspondents immediately started out to see how far those
+passes would carry us. A number of us left on the afternoon of
+August 23 for Waterloo, where it was expected that the great
+clash between the German and the Anglo-French forces would occur.
+We had planned to be back the same evening, and went prepared
+only for an afternoon's drive in a couple of hired street
+carriages. It was seven weeks before we again saw Brussels.
+
+On the following day (August 24) Davis started for Mons. He wore
+the khaki uniform which he had worn in many campaigns. Across his
+breast was a narrow bar of silk ribbon indicating the campaigns
+in which he had served as a correspondent. He so much resembled a
+British officer that he was arrested as a British derelict and was informed
+that he would be shot at once.
+
+He escaped only by offering to walk to Brand Whitlock, in Brussels,
+reporting to each officer he met on the way. His plan was approved,
+and as a hostage on parole he appeared before the American minister,
+who quickly established his identity as an American of good standing,
+to the satisfaction of the Germans.
+
+In the following few months our trails were widely separated. I read
+of his arrest by German officers on the road to Mons; later I
+read the story of his departure from Brussels by train to
+Holland--a trip which carried him through Louvain while the town
+still was burning; and still later I read that he was with the
+few lucky men who were in Rheims during one of the early
+bombardments that damaged the cathedral. By amazing luck,
+combined with a natural news sense which drew him instinctively
+to critical places at the psychological moment, he had been a
+witness of the two most widely featured stories of the early
+weeks of the war.
+
+Arrested by the Germans in Belgium, and later by the French in
+France, he was convinced that the restrictions on correspondents
+were too great to permit of good work.
+
+So he left the European war zone with the widely quoted remark:
+"The day of the war correspondent is over."
+
+And yet I was not surprised when, one evening, late in November
+of last year, he suddenly walked into the room in Salonika where
+William G. Shepherd, of the United Press, "Jimmy Hare," the
+veteran war photographer, and I had established ourselves several
+weeks before.
+
+The hotel was jammed, and the city, with a normal capacity of
+about one hundred and seventy-five thousand, was struggling to
+accommodate at least a hundred thousand more. There was not a
+room to be had in any of the better hotels, and for several days
+we lodged Davis in our room, a vast chamber which formerly had
+been the main dining-room of the establishment, and which now was
+converted into a bedroom. There was room for a dozen men, if
+necessary, and whenever stranded Americans arrived and could find
+no hotel accommodations we simply rigged up emergency cots for
+their temporary use.
+
+The weather in Salonika at this time, late November, was
+penetratingly cold. In the mornings the steam coils struggled
+feebly to dispel the chill in the room.
+
+Early in the morning after Davis had arrived, we were aroused by
+the sound of violent splashing, accompanied by shuddering gasps,
+and we looked out from the snug warmth of our beds to see Davis
+standing in his portable bath-tub and drenching himself with
+ice-cold water. As an exhibition of courageous devotion to an
+established custom of life it was admirable, but I'm not sure
+that it was prudent.
+
+For some reason, perhaps a defective circulation or a weakened
+heart, his system failed to react from these cold-water baths.
+All through the days he complained of feeling chilled. He never
+seemed to get thoroughly warmed, and of us all he was the one who
+suffered most keenly from the cold. It was all the more
+surprising, for his appearance was always that of a man in the
+pink of athletic fitness--ruddy-faced, clear-eyed, and full of
+tireless energy.
+
+On one occasion we returned from the French front in Serbia to
+Salonika in a box car lighted only by candles, bitterly cold, and
+frightfully exhausting. We were seven hours in travelling
+fifty-five miles, and we arrived at our destination at three
+o'clock in the morning. Several of the men contracted desperate
+colds, which clung to them for weeks. Davis was chilled through,
+and said that of all the cold he had ever experienced that which
+swept across the Macedonian plain from the Balkan highlands was
+the most penetrating. Even his heavy clothing could not afford him
+adequate protection.
+
+When he was settled in his own room in our hotel he installed an
+oil-stove which burned beside him as he sat at his desk and wrote
+his stories. The room was like an oven, but even then he still
+complained of the cold.
+
+When he left he gave us the stove, and when we left, some time
+later, it was presented to one of our doctor friends out in a
+British hospital, where I'm sure it is doing its best to thaw the
+Balkan chill out of sick and wounded soldiers.
+
+Davis was always up early, and his energy and interest were as
+keen as a boy's. We had our meals together, sometimes in the
+crowded and rather smart Bastasini's, but more often in the
+maelstrom of humanity that nightly packed the Olympos Palace
+restaurant. Davis, Shepherd, Hare, and I, with sometimes Mr. and
+Mrs. John Bass, made up these parties, which, for a period of
+about two weeks or so, were the most enjoyable daily events of
+our lives.
+
+Under the glaring lights of the restaurant, and surrounded by
+British, French, Greek, and Serbian officers, German, Austrian,
+and Bulgarian civilians, with a sprinkling of American, English,
+and Scotch nurses and doctors, packed so solidly in the huge,
+high-ceilinged room that the waiters could barely pick their way
+among the tables, we hung for hours over our dinners, and left
+only when the landlord and his Austrian wife counted the day's
+receipts and paid the waiters at the end of the evening.
+
+One could not imagine a more charming and delightful companion
+than Davis during these days. While he always asserted that he
+could not make a speech, and was terrified at the thought of
+standing up at a banquet-table, yet, sitting at a dinner-table
+with a few friends who were only too eager to listen rather than
+to talk, his stories, covering personal experiences in all parts
+of the world, were intensely vivid, with that remarkable
+"holding" quality of description which characterizes his
+writings.
+
+He brought his own bread--a coarse, brown sort, which he preferred
+to the better white bread--and with it he ate great quantities of
+butter. As we sat down at the table his first demand was for
+"Mastika," a peculiar Greek drink distilled from mastic gum, and
+his second demand invariably was "Du beurre!" with the "r's" as
+silent as the stars; and if it failed to come at once the waiter
+was made to feel the enormity of his tardiness.
+
+The reminiscences ranged from his early newspaper days in
+Philadelphia, and skipping from Manchuria to Cuba and Central
+America, to his early Sun days under Arthur Brisbane; they ranged
+through an endless variety of personal experiences which very
+nearly covered the whole course of American history in the past
+twenty years.
+
+Perhaps to him it was pleasant to go over his remarkable adventures,
+but it could not have been half as pleasant as it was to hear them, told
+as they were with a keenness of description and brilliancy of humorous
+comment that made them gems of narrative.
+
+At times, in our work, we all tried our hands at describing the
+Salonika of those early days of the Allied occupation, for it was
+really what one widely travelled British officer called it--"the
+most amazingly interesting situation I've ever seen"---but Davis's
+description was far and away the best, just as his description of
+Vera Cruz was the best, and his wonderful story of the entry of
+the German army into Brussels was matchless as one of the great
+pieces of reporting in the present war.
+
+In thinking of Davis, I shall always remember him for the
+delightful qualities which he showed in Salonika. He was
+unfailingly considerate and thoughtful. Through his narratives
+one could see the pride which he took in the width and breadth of
+his personal relation to the great events of the past twenty
+years. His vast scope of experiences and equally wide
+acquaintanceship with the big figures of our time, were amazing,
+and it was equally amazing that one of such a rich and
+interesting history could tell his stories in such a simple way
+that the personal element was never obtrusive.
+
+When he left Salonika he endeavored to obtain permission from
+the British staff to visit Moudros, but, failing in this, he booked
+his passage on a crowded little Greek steamer, where the only
+obtainable accommodation was a lounge in the dining saloon.
+We gave him a farewell dinner, at which the American consul
+and his family, with all the other Americans then in Salonika, were
+present, and after the dinner we rowed out to his ship and saw
+him very uncomfortably installed for his voyage.
+
+He came down the sea ladder and waved his hand as we rowed away.
+That was the last I saw of Richard Harding Davis.
+
+JOHN T. MCCUTCHEON.
+
+
+
+
+
+THE LOST ROAD
+
+
+
+
+During the war with Spain, Colton Lee came into the service as a
+volunteer. For a young man, he always had taken life almost too
+seriously, and when, after the campaign in Cuba, he elected to
+make soldiering his profession, the seriousness with which he
+attacked his new work surprised no one. Finding they had lost him
+forever, his former intimates were bored, but his colonel was
+enthusiastic, and the men of his troop not only loved, but
+respected him.
+
+From the start he determined in his new life women should have no
+part--a determination that puzzled no one so much as the women,
+for to Lee no woman, old or young, had found cause to be
+unfriendly. But he had read that the army is a jealous mistress
+who brooks no rival, that "red lips tarnish the scabbard steel,"
+that "he travels the fastest who travels alone."
+
+So, when white hands beckoned and pretty eyes signalled, he did
+not look. For five years, until just before he sailed for his
+three years of duty in the Philippines, he succeeded not only in
+not looking, but in building up for himself such a fine
+reputation as a woman-hater that all women were crazy about him.
+Had he not been ordered to Agawamsett that fact would not have
+affected him. But at the Officers' School he had indulged in hard
+study rather than in hard riding, had overworked, had brought
+back his Cuban fever, and was in poor shape to face the tropics.
+So, for two months before the transport was to sail, they ordered
+him to Cape Cod to fill his lungs with the bracing air of a New
+England autumn.
+
+He selected Agawamsett, because, when at Harvard, it was there he
+had spent his summer vacations, and he knew he would find
+sailboats and tennis and, through the pine woods back of the
+little whaling village, many miles of untravelled roads. He
+promised himself that over these he would gallop an imaginary
+troop in route marches, would manoeuvre it against possible
+ambush, and, in combat patrols, ground scouts, and cossack
+outposts, charge with it "as foragers." But he did none of these
+things. For at Agawamsett he met Frances Gardner, and his
+experience with her was so disastrous that, in his determination
+to avoid all women, he was convinced he was right.
+
+When later he reached Manila he vowed no other woman would
+ever again find a place in his thoughts. No other woman did.
+Not because he had the strength to keep his vow, but because he
+so continually thought of Frances Gardner that no other woman
+had a chance.
+
+Miss Gardner was a remarkable girl. Her charm appealed to all
+kinds of men, and, unfortunately for Lee, several kinds of men
+appealed to her. Her fortune and her relations were bound up in
+the person of a rich aunt with whom she lived, and who, it was
+understood, some day would leave her all the money in the world.
+But, in spite of her charm, certainly in spite of the rich aunt,
+Lee, true to his determination, might not have noticed the girl
+had not she ridden so extremely well.
+
+It was to the captain of cavalry she first appealed. But even a
+cavalry captain, whose duty in life is to instruct sixty men in
+the art of taking the life of as many other men as possible, may
+turn his head in the direction of a good-looking girl. And when
+for weeks a man rides at the side of one through pine forests as
+dim and mysterious as the aisles of a great cathedral, when he
+guides her across the wet marshes when the sun is setting crimson
+in the pools and the wind blows salt from the sea, when he loses
+them both by moonlight in wood-roads where the hoofs of the
+horses sink silently into dusty pine needles, he thinks more
+frequently of the girl at his side than of the faithful troopers
+waiting for him in San Francisco. The girl at his side thought
+frequently of him.
+
+With the "surface indications" of a young man about to ask her
+to marry him she was painfully familiar; but this time the possibility
+was the reverse of painful. What she meant to do about it she did
+not know, but she did know that she was strangely happy. Between
+living on as the dependent of a somewhat exacting relative and
+becoming the full partner of this young stranger, who with men
+had proved himself so masterful, and who with her was so gentle,
+there seemed but little choice. But she did not as yet wish to make
+the choice. She preferred to believe she was not certain. She assured
+him that before his leave of absence was over she would tell him
+whether she would remain on duty with the querulous aunt, who had
+befriended her, or as his wife accompany him to the Philippines.
+
+It was not the answer he wanted; but in her happiness, which was
+evident to every one, he could not help but take hope. And in the
+questions she put to him of life in the tropics, of the life of
+the "officers' ladies," he saw that what was in her mind was a
+possible life with him, and he was content.
+
+She became to him a wonderful, glorious person, and each day she
+grew in loveliness. It had been five years of soldiering in Cuba,
+China, and on the Mexican border since he had talked to a woman
+with interest, and now in all she said, in all her thoughts and
+words and delights, he found fresher and stronger reasons for
+discarding his determination to remain wedded only to the United
+States Army. He did not need reasons. He was far too much in love
+to see in any word or act of hers anything that was not fine and
+beautiful.
+
+In their rides they had one day stumbled upon a long-lost and
+long-forgotten road through the woods, which she had claimed as
+their own by right of discovery, and, no matter to what point
+they set forth each day, they always returned by it. Their way
+through the woods stretched for miles. It was concealed in a
+forest of stunted oaks and black pines, with no sign of human
+habitation, save here and there a clearing now long neglected and
+alive only with goldenrod. Trunks of trees, moss-grown and
+crumbling beneath the touch of the ponies' hoofs, lay in their
+path, and above it the branches of a younger generation had
+clasped hands. At their approach squirrels raced for shelter,
+woodcock and partridge shot deeper into the network of vines and
+saplings, and the click of the steel as the ponies tossed their
+bits, and their own whispers, alone disturbed the silence.
+
+"It is an enchanted road," said the girl; "or maybe we are
+enchanted."
+
+"Not I," cried the young man loyally. "I was never so sane, never
+so sure, never so happy in knowing just what I wanted! If only
+you could be as sure!"
+
+One day she came to him in high excitement with a book of verse.
+"He has written a poem," she cried, "about our own woods, about
+our lost road! Listen" she commanded, and she read to him:
+
+"'They shut the road through the woods
+Seventy years ago.
+Weather and rain have undone it again,
+And now you would never know
+There was once a road through the woods
+Before they planted the trees.
+It is underneath the coppice and heath,
+And the thin anemones.
+Only the keeper sees
+That, where the ringdove broods,
+And the badgers roll at ease,
+There was once a road through the woods.
+
+"'Yet, if you enter the woods
+Of a summer evening late,
+When the night air cools on the trout-ringed pools
+Where the otter whistles his mate
+(They fear not men in the woods
+Because they see so few),
+You will hear the beat of a horse's feet,
+And the swish of a skirt in the dew,
+Steadily cantering through
+The misty solitudes,
+As though they perfectly knew
+The old lost road through the woods. . . .
+But there is no road through the woods.'"
+
+
+"I don't like that at all," cried the soldierman. "It's too--too
+sad--it doesn't give you any encouragement. The way it ends, I
+mean: 'But there is no road through the woods.' Of course there's
+a road! For us there always will be. I'm going to make sure. I'm
+going to buy those woods, and keep the lost road where we can
+always find it."
+
+"I don't think," said the girl, "that he means a real road."
+
+"I know what he means," cried the lover, "and he's wrong! There
+is a road, and you and I have found it, and we are going to
+follow it for always."
+
+The girl shook her head, but her eyes were smiling happily.
+
+The "season" at Agawamsett closed with the tennis tournament, and
+it was generally conceded fit and proper, from every point of
+view, that in mixed doubles Lee and Miss Gardner should be
+partners. Young Stedman, the Boston artist, was the only one who
+made objection. Up in the sail-loft that he had turned into a
+studio he was painting a portrait of the lovely Miss Gardner, and
+he protested that the three days' tournament would sadly
+interrupt his work. And Frances, who was very much interested in
+the portrait, was inclined to agree.
+
+But Lee beat down her objections. He was not at all interested in
+the portrait. He disapproved of it entirely. For the sittings
+robbed him of Frances during the better part of each morning, and
+he urged that when he must so soon leave her, between the man who
+wanted her portrait and the man who wanted her, it would be kind
+to give her time to the latter.
+
+"But I had no idea," protested Frances, "he would take so long.
+He told me he'd finish it in three sittings. But he's so critical
+of his own work that he goes over it again and again. He says
+that I am a most difficult subject, but that I inspire him. And
+he says, if I will only give him time, he believes this will be
+the best thing he has done."
+
+"That's an awful thought," said the cavalry officer.
+
+"You don't like him," reproved Miss Gardner. "He is always very
+polite to you."
+
+"He's polite to everybody," said Lee; "that's why I don't like
+him. He's not a real artist. He's a courtier. God gave him a
+talent, and he makes a mean use of it. Uses it to flatter people.
+He's like these long-haired violinists who play anything you ask
+them to in the lobster palaces."
+
+Miss Gardner looked away from him. Her color was high and her
+eyes very bright.
+
+"I think," she said steadily, "that Mr. Stedman is a great
+artist, and some day all the world will think so, too!"
+
+Lee made no answer. Not because he disagreed with her estimate of
+Mr. Stedman's genius-he made no pretense of being an art
+critic--but because her vehement admiration had filled him with
+sudden panic. He was not jealous. For that he was far too humble.
+Indeed, he thought himself so utterly unworthy of Frances Gardner
+that the fact that to him she might prefer some one else was in
+no way a surprise. He only knew that if she should prefer some
+one else not all his troop horses nor all his men could put
+Humpty Dumpty back again.
+
+But if, in regard to Mr. Stedman, Miss Gardner had for a moment
+been at odds with the man who loved her, she made up for it the
+day following on the tennis court. There she was in accord with
+him in heart, soul, and body, and her sharp "Well played,
+partner!" thrilled him like one of his own bugle calls. For two
+days against visiting and local teams they fought their way
+through the tournament, and the struggle with her at his side
+filled Lee with a great happiness. Not that the championship of
+Agawamsett counted greatly to one exiled for three years to live
+among the Moros. He wanted to win because she wanted to win.
+But his happiness came in doing something in common with her,
+in helping her and in having her help him, in being, if only in
+play, if only for three days, her "partner."
+
+After they won they walked home together, each swinging a fat,
+heavy loving-cup. On each was engraved:
+
+"Mixed doubles, Agawamsett, 1910."
+
+Lee held his up so that the setting sun flashed on the silver.
+
+"I am going to keep that," he said, "as long as I live. It means
+you were once my 'partner.' It's a sign that once we two worked
+together for something and won." In the words the man showed
+such feeling that the girl said soberly:
+
+"Mine means that to me, too. I will never part with mine,
+either."
+
+Lee turned to her and smiled, appealing wistfully.
+
+"It seems a pity to separate them," he said. "They'd look well
+together over an open fireplace."
+
+The girl frowned unhappily. "I don't know," she protested. "I
+don't know."
+
+The next day Lee received from the War Department a telegram
+directing him to "proceed without delay" to San Francisco, and
+there to embark for the Philippines.
+
+That night he put the question to her directly, but again she
+shook her head unhappily; again she said: "I don't know!"
+
+So he sailed without her, and each evening at sunset, as the
+great transport heaved her way across the swell of the Pacific,
+he stood at the rail and looked back. With the aid of the first
+officer he calculated the difference in time between a whaling
+village situated at forty-four degrees north and an army
+transport dropping rapidly toward the equator, and so, each day,
+kept in step with the girl he loved.
+
+"Now," he would tell himself, "she is in her cart in front of the
+post-office, and while they sort the morning mail she gossips
+with the fisher folks, the summer folks, the grooms, and
+chauffeurs. Now she is sitting for her portrait to Stedman" (he
+did not dwell long on that part of her day), "and now she is at
+tennis, or, as she promised, riding alone at sunset down our lost
+road through the woods."
+
+But that part of her day from which Lee hurried was that part
+over which the girl herself lingered. As he turned his eyes from
+his canvas to meet hers, Stedman, the charming, the deferential,
+the adroit, who never allowed his painting to interrupt his talk,
+told her of what he was pleased to call his dreams and ambitions,
+of the great and beautiful ladies who had sat before his easel,
+and of the only one of them who had given him inspiration.
+Especially of the only one who had given him inspiration. With
+her always to uplift him, he could become one of the world's most
+famous artists, and she would go down into history as the
+beautiful woman who had helped him, as the wife of Rembrandt
+had inspired Rembrandt, as "Mona Lisa" had made Leonardo.
+
+Gilbert wrote: "It is not the lover who comes to woo, but the
+lover's way of wooing!" His successful lover was the one who
+threw the girl across his saddle and rode away with her. But one
+kind of woman does not like to have her lover approach shouting:
+"At the gallop! Charge!"
+
+She prefers a man not because he is masterful, but because he is
+not. She likes to believe the man needs her more than she needs
+him, that she, and only she, can steady him, cheer him, keep him
+true to the work he is in the world to perform. It is called the
+"mothering" instinct.
+
+Frances felt this mothering instinct toward the sensitive,
+imaginative, charming Stedman. She believed he had but two
+thoughts, his art and herself. She was content to place his art first.
+She could not guess that to one so unworldly, to one so wrapped up
+in his art, the fortune of a rich aunt might prove alluring.
+
+When the transport finally picked up the landfalls of Cavite
+Harbor, Lee, with the instinct of a soldier, did not exclaim:
+"This is where Dewey ran the forts and sank the Spanish fleet!"
+On the contrary, he was saying: "When she comes to join me, it
+will be here I will first see her steamer. I will be waiting with
+a field-glass on the end of that wharf. No, I will be out here in
+a shore-boat waving my hat. And of all those along the rail, my
+heart will tell me which is she!"
+
+Then a barefooted Filipino boy handed him an unsigned cablegram.
+It read: "If I wrote a thousand words I could not make it easier
+for either of us. I am to marry Arthur Stedman in December."
+
+Lee was grateful for the fact that he was not permitted to linger
+in Manila. Instead, he was at once ordered up-country, where at a
+one-troop post he administered the affairs of a somewhat hectic
+province, and under the guidance of the local constabulary chased
+will-o'-the-wisp brigands. On a shelf in his quarters he placed
+the silver loving-cup, and at night, when the village slept, he
+would sit facing it, filling one pipe after another, and through
+the smoke staring at the evidence to the fact that once Frances
+Gardner and he had been partners.
+
+In these post-mortems he saw nothing morbid. With his present
+activities they in no way interfered, and in thinking of the days
+when they had been together, in thinking of what he had lost, he
+found deep content. Another man, having lost the woman he loved,
+would have tried to forget her and all she meant to him. But Lee
+was far too honest with himself to substitute other thoughts for
+those that were glorious, that still thrilled him. The girl could
+take herself from him, but she could not take his love for her
+from him. And for that he was grateful. He never had considered
+himself worthy, and so could not believe he had been ill used. In
+his thoughts of her there was no bitterness: for that also he was
+grateful. And, as he knew he would not care for any other woman
+in the way he cared for her, he preferred to care in that way,
+even for one who was lost, than in a lesser way for a possible
+she who some day might greatly care for him. So she still
+remained in his thoughts, and was so constantly with him that he
+led a dual existence, in which by day he directed the affairs of
+an alien and hostile people and by night again lived through the
+wonderful moments when she had thought she loved him, when he
+first had learned to love her. At times she seemed actually at
+his side, and he could not tell whether he was pretending that
+this were so or whether the force of his love had projected her
+image half around the world.
+
+Often, when in single file he led the men through the forest, he
+seemed again to be back on Cape Cod picking his way over their
+own lost road through the wood, and he heard "the beat of a
+horse's feet and the swish of a skirt in the dew." And then a
+carbine would rattle, or a horse would stumble and a trooper
+swear, and he was again in the sweating jungle, where men, intent
+upon his life, crouched in ambush.
+
+She spared him the mockery of wedding-cards; but the announcement
+of the wedding came to him in a three-months-old newspaper. Hoping
+they would speak of her in their letters, he kept up a somewhat one-sided
+correspondence with friends of Mrs. Stedman's in Boston, where she now
+lived. But for a year in none of their letters did her name appear. When
+a mutual friend did write of her Lee understood the silence.
+
+From the first, the mutual friend wrote, the life of Mrs. Stedman
+and her husband was thoroughly miserable. Stedman blamed her
+because she came to him penniless. The rich aunt, who had
+heartily disapproved of the artist, had spoken of him so frankly
+that Frances had quarrelled with her, and from her no longer
+would accept money. In his anger at this Stedman showed himself
+to Frances as he was. And only two months after their marriage
+she was further enlightened.
+
+An irate husband made him the central figure in a scandal that
+filled the friends of Frances with disgust, and that for her was
+an awakening cruel and humiliating. Men no longer permitted their
+womenfolk to sit to Stedman for a portrait, and the need of money
+grew imperative. He the more blamed Frances for having quarrelled
+with her aunt, told her it was for her money he had married her,
+that she had ruined his career, and that she was to blame for his
+ostracism--a condition that his own misconduct had brought upon
+him. Finally, after twelve months of this, one morning he left a
+note saying he no longer would allow her to be a drag upon him,
+and sailed for Europe.
+
+They learned that, in Paris, he had returned to that life which
+before his marriage, even in that easy-going city, had made him
+notorious. "And Frances," continued Lee's correspondent, "has
+left Boston, and now lives in New York. She wouldn't let any of
+us help her, nor even know where she is. The last we heard of her
+she was in charge of the complaint department of a millinery
+shop, for which work she was receiving about the same wages I
+give my cook."
+
+Lee did not stop to wonder why the same woman, who to one man was
+a "drag," was to another, even though separated from her by half
+the world, a joy and a blessing. Instead, he promptly wrote his
+lawyers to find Mrs. Stedman, and, in such a way as to keep her
+ignorant of their good offices, see that she obtained a position
+more congenial than her present one, and one that would pay her
+as much as, without arousing her suspicions, they found it
+possible to give.
+
+Three months had passed, and this letter had not been answered,
+when in Manila, where he had been ordered to make a report, he
+heard of her again. One evening, when the band played on the
+Luneta, he met a newly married couple who had known him in
+Agawamsett. They now were on a ninety-day cruise around the
+world. Close friends of Frances Gardner, they remembered him as
+one of her many devotees and at once spoke of her.
+
+"That blackguard she married," the bridegroom told him, "was
+killed three months ago racing with another car from Versailles
+back to Paris after a dinner at which, it seems, all present
+drank 'burgundy out of the fingerbowls.' Coming down that steep
+hill into Saint Cloud, the cars collided, and Stedman and a
+woman, whose husband thought she was somewhere else, were killed.
+He couldn't even die without making a scandal of it."
+
+"But the worst," added the bride, "is that, in spite of the way
+the little beast treated her, I believe Frances still cares for
+him, and always will. That's the worst of it, isn't it?" she
+demanded.
+
+In words, Lee did not answer, but in his heart he agreed that was
+much the worst of it. The fact that Frances was free filled him
+with hope; but that she still cared for the man she had married,
+and would continue to think only of him, made him ill with
+despair.
+
+He cabled his lawyers for her address. He determined that, at
+once, on learning it, he would tell her that with him nothing was
+changed. He had forgotten nothing, and had learned much. He had
+learned that his love for her was a splendid and inspiring
+passion, that even without her it had lifted him up, helped and
+cheered him, made the whole world kind and beautiful. With her he
+could not picture a world so complete with happiness.
+
+Since entering the army he had never taken a leave of absence, and he
+was sure, if now he asked for one, it would not be refused. He determined,
+if the answer to his cable gave him the address, he would return at once,
+and again offer her his love, which he now knew was deeper, finer, and
+infinitely more tender than the love he first had felt for her. But the cable
+balked him. "Address unknown," it read; "believed to have gone abroad in
+capacity of governess. Have employed foreign agents. Will cable their
+report."
+
+Whether to wait for and be guided by the report of the
+detectives, or to proceed to Europe and search for her himself,
+Lee did not know. He finally determined that to seek for her with
+no clew to her whereabouts would be but a waste of precious
+moments, while, if in their search the agents were successful, he
+would be able to go directly to her. Meanwhile, by cable, he
+asked for protracted leave of absence and, while waiting for his
+answer, returned to his post. There, within a week, he received
+his leave of absence, but in a fashion that threatened to remove
+him forever from the army.
+
+The constabulary had located the will-o'-the-wisp brigands behind
+a stockade built about an extinct volcano, and Lee and his troop
+and a mountain battery attempted to dislodge them. In the fight that
+followed Lee covered his brows with laurel wreaths and received
+two bullet wounds in his body.
+
+For a month death stood at the side of his cot; and then, still weak
+and at times delirious with fever, by slow stages he was removed to the
+hospital in Manila. In one of his sane moments a cable was shown
+him. It read: "Whereabouts still unknown." Lee at once rebelled
+against his doctors. He must rise, he declared, and proceed to
+Europe. It was upon a matter of life and death. The surgeons
+assured him his remaining exactly where he was also was a matter
+of as great consequence. Lee's knowledge of his own lack of
+strength told him they were right.
+
+Then, from headquarters, he was informed that, as a reward for
+his services and in recognition of his approaching convalescence,
+he was ordered to return to his own climate and that an easy
+billet had been found for him as a recruiting officer in New York
+City. Believing the woman he loved to be in Europe, this plan for
+his comfort only succeeded in bringing on a relapse. But the day
+following there came another cablegram. It put an abrupt end to
+his mutiny, and brought him and the War Department into complete
+accord.
+
+"She is in New York," it read, "acting as agent for a charitable
+institution, which one not known, but hope in a few days to cable
+correct address."
+
+In all the world there was no man so happy. The next morning a
+transport was sailing, and, probably because they had read the
+cablegram, the surgeons agreed with Lee that a sea voyage would
+do him no harm. He was carried on board, and when the propellers
+first churned the water and he knew he was moving toward her, the
+hero of the fight around the crater shed unmanly tears. He would
+see her again, hear her voice; the same great city would shelter
+them. It was worth a dozen bullets.
+
+He reached New York in a snow-storm, a week before Christmas, and
+went straight to the office of his lawyers. They received him with
+embarrassment. Six weeks before, on the very day they had
+cabled him that Mrs. Stedman was in New York, she had left the
+charitable institution where she had been employed, and had again
+disappeared.
+
+Lee sent his trunks to the Army and Navy Club, which was
+immediately around the corner from the recruiting office in Sixth
+Avenue, and began discharging telegrams at every one who had ever
+known Frances Gardner. The net result was discouraging. In the
+year and a half in which he had been absent every friend of the
+girl he sought had temporarily changed his place of residence or
+was permanently dead.
+
+Meanwhile his arrival by the transport was announced in the
+afternoon papers. At the wharf an admiring trooper had told a
+fine tale of his conduct at the battle of the crater, and
+reporters called at the club to see him. He did not discourage
+them, as he hoped through them the fact of his return might be
+made known to Frances. She might send him a line of welcome, and
+he would discover her whereabouts. But, though many others sent
+him hearty greetings, from her there was no word.
+
+On the second day after his arrival one of the telegrams was
+answered in person by a friend of Mrs. Stedman. He knew only that
+she had been in New York, that she was very poor and in ill
+health, that she shunned all of her friends, and was earning her
+living as the matron of some sort of a club for working girls. He
+did not know the name of it.
+
+On the third day there still was no news. On the fourth Lee
+decided that the next morning he would advertise. He would say
+only: "Will Mrs. Arthur Stedman communicate with Messrs. Fuller &
+Fuller?" Fuller & Fuller were his lawyers. That afternoon he
+remained until six o'clock at the recruiting office, and when he
+left it the electric street lights were burning brightly. A heavy
+damp snow was falling, and the lights and the falling flakes and
+the shouts of drivers and the toots of taxicabs made for the man
+from the tropics a welcome homecoming.
+
+Instead of returning at once to his club, he slackened his steps.
+The shop windows of Sixth Avenue hung with Christmas garlands,
+and colored lamps glowed like open fireplaces. Lee passed slowly
+before them, glad that he had been able to get back at such a
+season. For the moment he had forgotten the woman he sought, and
+was conscious only of his surroundings. He had paused in front of
+the window of a pawn-shop. Over the array of cheap jewelry, of
+banjos, shot-guns, and razors, his eyes moved idly. And then they
+became transfixed and staring. In the very front of the window,
+directly under his nose, was a tarnished silver loving-cup. On it
+was engraved, "Mixed Doubles. Agawamsett, 1910." In all the world
+there were only two such cups, and as though he were dodging the
+slash of a bolo, Lee leaped into the shop. Many precious seconds
+were wasted in persuading Mrs. Cohen that he did not believe the
+cup had been stolen; that he was not from the Central Office;
+that he believed the lady who had pawned the cup had come by it
+honestly; that he meant no harm to the lady; that he meant no
+harm to Mrs. Cohen; that, much as the young lady may have needed
+the money Mrs. Cohen had loaned her on the cup, he needed the
+address of the young lady still more.
+
+Mrs. Cohen retired behind a screen, and Lee was conscious that
+from the other side of it the whole family of Cohens were taking
+his measurements. He approved of their efforts to protect the
+owner of the cup, but not from him.
+
+He offered, if one of the younger Cohens would take him to the
+young lady, to let him first ask her if she would receive Captain Lee,
+and for his service he would give the young Cohen untold gold.
+He exhibited the untold gold. The young Cohen choked at the sight
+and sprang into the seat beside the driver of a taxicab.
+
+"To the Working Girls' Home, on Tenth Street!" he commanded.
+
+
+Through the falling snow and the flashing lights they slid,
+skidded, and leaped. Inside the cab Lee shivered with excitement,
+with cold, with fear that it might not be true. He could not
+realize she was near. It was easier to imagine himself still in
+the jungle, with months of time and sixteen thousand miles of
+land and water separating them; or in the hospital, on a
+white-enamel cot, watching the shadow creep across the
+whitewashed wall; or lying beneath an awning that did not move,
+staring at a burning, brazen sea that did not move, on a transport
+that, timed by the beating of his heart, stood still.
+
+Those days were within the radius of his experience. Separation,
+absence, the immutable giants of time and space, he knew. With
+them he had fought and could withstand them. But to be near her,
+to hear her voice, to bring his love into her actual presence, that was
+an attack upon his feelings which found him without weapons. That
+for a very few dollars she had traded the cup from which she had sworn
+never to part did not concern him. Having parted from him, what she
+did with a silver mug was of little consequence. It was of significance
+only in that it meant she was poor. And that she was either an inmate
+or a matron of a lodging-house for working girls also showed she was
+poor.
+
+He had been told that was her condition, and that she was in ill health,
+and that from all who loved her she had refused to accept help. At the
+thought his jaws locked pugnaciously. There was one who loved her,
+who, should she refuse his aid, was prepared to make her life intolerable.
+He planned in succession at lightning speed all he might do for her. Among
+other things he would make this Christmas the happiest she or he would
+ever know. Not for an instant did he question that she who had refused
+help from all who loved her could refuse anything he offered. For he
+knew it was offered with a love that demanded nothing in return, with
+a love that asked only to be allowed to love, and to serve. To refuse help
+inspired by such a feeling as his would be morbid, wicked, ridiculous,
+as though a flower refused to turn its face to the sun, and shut its lips
+to the dew.
+
+The cab stopped in front of a brick building adorned with many fire-
+escapes. Afterward he remembered a bare, brilliantly lit hall hung with
+photographs of the Acropolis, and a stout, capable woman in a cap, who
+looked him over and said:
+
+"You will find Mrs. Stedman in the writing-room."
+
+And he remembered entering a room filled with Mission furniture and
+reading-lamps under green shades. It was empty, except for a young
+girl in deep black, who was seated facing him, her head bent above a
+writing-desk. As he came into the circle of the lamps the girl raised
+her eyes and as though lifted to her feet by what she saw, and through
+no effort of her own, stood erect.
+
+And the young man who had persuaded himself his love demanded
+nothing, who asked only to worship at her gate, found his arms reaching
+out, and heard his voice as though it came from a great distance, cry,
+"Frances!"
+
+And the girl who had refused the help of all who loved her, like a
+homing pigeon walked straight into the outstretched arms.
+
+After five minutes, when he was almost able to believe it was true,
+he said in his commanding, masterful way: "And now I'm going to
+take you out of here. I'm going to buy you a ring, and a sable coat,
+and a house to live in, and a dinner. Which shall we buy first?"
+
+"First," said Frances, frowning happily, "I am afraid we must go
+to the Ritz, to tell Aunt Emily. She always loved you, and it will
+make her so happy."
+
+"To the Ritz!" stammered the young man. "To Aunt Emily! I thought
+they told me your aunt and-you-"
+
+"We quarrelled, yes," said Frances, "and she has forgiven me; but she
+has not forgiven herself, so she spoils me, and already I have a house
+to live in, and several sable coats, and, oh! everything, everything but
+the ring."
+
+"I am so sorry!" cried Lee. "I thought you were poor. I hoped you were
+poor. But you are joking!" he exclaimed delightedly. "You are here in
+a working girls' home-"
+
+"It is one of Aunt Emily's charities. She built it," said Frances. "I
+come here to talk to the girls."
+
+"But," persisted Lee triumphantly, "if you are not poor, why did you
+pawn our silver loving-cup?"
+
+The face of the girl became a lovely crimson, and tears rose to her eyes.
+As though at a confessional, she lifted her hands penitently.
+
+"Try to understand," she begged; "I wanted you to love me, not for
+my money-"
+
+"But you knew!" cried Lee.
+
+"I had to be sure," begged the girl; "and I wanted to believe you loved
+me even if I did not love you. When it was too late I knew you loved me
+as no woman ever deserved to be loved; and I wanted that love. I could
+not live without it. So when I read in the papers you had returned I
+wouldn't let myself write you; I wouldn't let myself beg you to come
+to see me. I set a test for you. I knew from the papers you were at the
+Army and Navy Club, and that around the corner was the recruiting
+office. I'd often seen the sergeant there, in uniform, at the door. I knew
+you must pass from your club to the office many times each day, so I
+thought of the loving-cup and the pawn-shop. I planted it there. It was
+a trick, a test. I thought if you saw it in a pawn-shop you would believe I
+no longer cared for you, and that I was very poor. If you passed it by,
+then I would know you yourself had stopped caring, but if you asked
+about it, if you inquired for me, then I would know you came to me of
+your own wish, because you-"
+
+Lee shook his head.
+
+"You don't have to tell me," he said gently, "why I came. I've a cab
+outside. You will get in it," he commanded, "and we will rescue our
+cup. I always told you they would look well together over an open
+fireplace."
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MIRACLE OF LAS PALMAS
+
+
+
+
+This is the story of a gallant officer who loved his profession,
+his regiment, his country, but above all, whiskey; of his
+miraculous conversion to total abstinence, and of the humble
+instrument that worked the miracle. At the time it was worked,
+a battalion of the Thirty-third Infantry had been left behind to
+guard the Zone, and was occupying impromptu barracks on the hill
+above Las Palmas. That was when Las Palmas was one of the four
+thousand stations along the forty miles of the Panama Railroad.
+When the railroad was "reconstructed" the name of Las Palmas did
+not appear on the new time-table, and when this story appears
+Las Palmas will be eighty feet under water. So if any one wishes
+to dispute the miracle he will have to conduct his investigation
+in a diving-bell.
+
+On this particular evening young Major Aintree, in command of the
+battalion, had gone up the line to Panama to dine at the Hotel
+Tivoli, and had dined well. To prevent his doing this a paternal
+government had ordered that at the Tivoli no alcoholic liquors
+may be sold; but only two hundred yards from the hotel, outside
+the zone of temperance, lies Panama and Angelina's, and during
+the dinner, between the Tivoli and Angelina's, the Jamaican
+waiter-boys ran relay races.
+
+After the dinner, the Jamaican waiter-boys proving too slow, the
+dinner-party in a body adjourned to Angelina's, and when later,
+Major Aintree moved across the street to the night train to Las
+Palmas, he moved unsteadily.
+
+Young Standish of the Canal Zone police, who, though but twenty-
+six, was a full corporal, was for that night on duty as "train
+guard," and was waiting at the rear steps of the last car. As
+Aintree approached the steps he saw indistinctly a boyish figure
+in khaki, and, mistaking it for one of his own men, he clasped
+the handrail for support, and halted frowning.
+
+Observing the condition of the officer the policeman also frowned,
+but in deference to the uniform, slowly and with reluctance raised
+his hand to his sombrero. The reluctance was more apparent than
+the salute. It was less of a salute than an impertinence.
+
+Partly out of regard for his rank, partly from temper, chiefly
+from whiskey, Aintree saw scarlet.
+
+"When you s'lute your s'perior officer," he shouted, "you s'lute him
+quick. You unnerstan', you s'lute him quick! S'lute me again," he
+commanded, "and s'lute me damn quick."
+
+Standish remained motionless. As is the habit of policemen over
+all the world, his thumbs were stuck in his belt. He answered
+without offense, in tones matter-of-fact and calm.
+
+"You are not my superior officer," he said.
+
+It was the calmness that irritated Aintree. His eyes sought for
+the infantryman's cap and found a sombrero.
+
+"You damned leatherneck," he began, "I'll report--"
+
+"I'm not a marine, either," interrupted Standish. "I'm a policeman.
+Move on," he ordered, "you're keeping these people waiting."
+
+Others of the dinner-party formed a flying wedge around Aintree
+and crowded him up the steps and into a seat and sat upon him.
+Ten minutes later, when Standish made his rounds of the cars,
+Aintree saw him approaching. He had a vague recollection that
+he had been insulted, and by a policeman.
+
+"You!" he called, and so loudly that all in the car turned, "I'm
+going to report you, going to report you for insolence. What's
+your name?"
+
+Looking neither at Aintree nor at the faces turned toward him,
+Standish replied as though Aintree had asked him what time it was.
+
+"Standish," he said, "corporal, shield number 226, on train
+guard." He continued down the aisle.
+
+"I'll remember you," Aintree shouted.
+
+But in the hot, glaring dawn of the morning after, Aintree forgot.
+It was Standish who remembered.
+
+The men of the Zone police are hand-picked. They have been
+soldiers, marines, cowboys, sheriffs, "Black Hussars" of the
+Pennsylvania State constabulary, rough riders with Roosevelt,
+mounted police in Canada, irregular horse in South Africa; they
+form one of the best-organized, best-disciplined, most efficient,
+most picturesque semi-military bodies in the world. Standish
+joined them from the Philippine constabulary in which he had
+been a second lieutenant. There are several like him in the
+Zone police, and in England they would be called gentlemen
+rankers. On the Isthmus, because of his youth, his fellow
+policemen called Standish "Kid." And smart as each of them was,
+each of them admitted the Kid wore his uniform with a difference.
+With him it always looked as though it had come freshly ironed
+from the Colon laundry; his leather leggings shone like
+meerschaum pipes; the brim of his sombrero rested impudently on
+the bridge of his nose.
+
+"He's been an officer," they used to say in extenuation. "You can
+tell when he salutes. He shows the back of his hand." Secretly,
+they were proud of him. Standish came of a long chain of soldiers,
+and that the weakest link in the chain had proved to be himself was
+a sorrow no one else but himself could fathom. Since he was three
+years old he had been trained to be a soldier, as carefully, with the
+same singleness of purpose, as the crown prince is trained to be a
+king. And when, after three happy, glorious years at West Point,
+he was found not clever enough to pass the examinations and was
+dropped, he did not curse the gods and die, but began again to work
+his way up. He was determined he still would wear shoulder-straps.
+He owed it to his ancestors. It was the tradition of his family, the one
+thing he wanted; it was his religion. He would get into the army
+even if by the side door, if only after many years of rough and
+patient service. He knew that some day, through his record,
+through the opportunity of a war, he would come into his
+inheritance. Meanwhile he officered his soul, disciplined his
+body, and daily tried to learn the lesson that he who hopes to
+control others must first control himself.
+
+He allowed himself but one dissipation, one excess. That was
+to hate Major Aintree, commanding the Thirty-third Infantry. Of
+all the world could give, Aintree possessed everything that
+Standish considered the most to be desired. He was a graduate of
+West Point, he had seen service in Cuba, in the Boxer business,
+and in the Philippines. For an act of conspicuous courage at
+Batangas, he had received the medal of honor. He had had the
+luck of the devil. Wherever he held command turned out to be the
+place where things broke loose. And Aintree always attacked and
+routed them, always was the man on the job. It was his name that
+appeared in the newspapers, it was his name that headed the list
+of the junior officers mentioned for distinguished conduct.
+Standish had followed his career with an admiration and a joy
+that was without taint of envy or detraction. He gloried in
+Aintree, he delighted to know the army held such a man. He was
+grateful to Aintree for upholding the traditions of a profession
+to which he himself gave all the devotion of a fanatic. He made
+a god of him. This was the attitude of mind toward Aintree before
+he came to the Isthmus. Up to that time he had never seen his
+idol. Aintree had been only a name signed to brilliant articles
+in the service magazines, a man of whom those who had served with
+him or under him, when asked concerning him, spoke with loyalty
+and awe, the man the newspapers called "the hero of Batangas."
+And when at last he saw his hero, he believed his worship was
+justified. For Aintree looked the part. He was built like a
+greyhound with the shoulders of a stevedore. His chin was as
+projecting, and as hard, as the pointed end of a flat-iron. His every
+movement showed physical fitness, and his every glance and tone a
+confidence in himself that approached insolence. He was thirty-
+eight, twelve years older than the youth who had failed to make
+his commission, and who, as Aintree strode past, looked after him
+with wistful, hero-worshipping eyes. The revulsion, when it came,
+was extreme. The hero-worship gave way to contempt, to indignant
+condemnation, in which there was no pity, no excuse. That one upon
+whom so much had been lavished, who for himself had accomplished
+such good things, should bring disgrace upon his profession,
+should by his example demoralize his men, should risk losing all
+he had attained, all that had been given, was intolerable. When
+Standish learned his hero was a drunkard, when day after day
+Aintree furnished visible evidences of that fact, Standish felt
+Aintree had betrayed him and the army and the government that had
+educated, trained, clothed, and fed him. He regarded Aintree as
+worse than Benedict Arnold, because Arnold had turned traitor for
+power and money; Aintree was a traitor through mere weakness,
+because he could not say "no" to a bottle.
+
+Only in secret Standish railed against Aintree. When his brother
+policemen gossiped and jested about him, out of loyalty to the
+army he remained silent. But in his heart he could not forgive.
+The man he had so generously envied, the man after whose career
+he had wished to model his own, had voluntarily stepped from his
+pedestal and made a swine of himself. And not only could he not
+forgive, but as day after day Aintree furnished fresh food for
+his indignation he felt a fierce desire to punish.
+
+Meanwhile, of the conduct of Aintree, men older and wiser, if less
+intolerant than Standish, were beginning to take notice. It was
+after a dinner on Ancon Hill, and the women had left the men to
+themselves. They were the men who were placing the Panama Canal
+on the map. They were officers of the army who for five years had
+not worn a uniform. But for five years they had been at war with
+an enemy that never slept. Daily they had engaged in battle with
+mountains, rivers, swamps, two oceans, and disease. Where Aintree
+commanded five hundred soldiers, they commanded a body of men
+better drilled, better disciplined, and in number half as many as
+those who formed the entire army of the United States. The mind
+of each was occupied with a world problem. They thought and
+talked in millions --of millions of cubic yards of dirt, of
+millions of barrels of cement, of millions of tons of steel, of
+hundreds of millions of dollars, of which latter each received
+enough to keep himself and his family just beyond the reach of
+necessity. To these men with the world waiting upon the outcome
+of their endeavor, with responsibilities that never relaxed,
+Aintree's behavior was an incident, an annoyance of less
+importance than an overturned dirt train that for five minutes
+dared to block the completion of their work. But they were human
+and loyal to the army, and in such an infrequent moment as this,
+over the coffee and cigars, they could afford to remember the
+junior officer, to feel sorry for him, for the sake of the army,
+to save him from himself.
+
+"He takes his orders direct from the War Department," said the
+chief. "I've no authority over him. If he'd been one of my workmen
+I'd have shipped him north three months ago."
+
+"That's it," said the surgeon, "he's not a workman. He has nothing
+to do, and idleness is the curse of the army. And in this climate--"
+
+"Nothing to do!" snorted the civil administrator. "Keeping his
+men in hand is what he has to do! They're running amuck all over
+Panama, getting into fights with the Spiggoty police, bringing
+the uniform into contempt. As for the climate, it's the same
+climate for all of us. Look at Butler's marines and Barber's Zone
+police. The climate hasn't hurt them. They're as smart men as
+ever wore khaki. It's not the climate or lack of work that ails
+the Thirty- third, it's their commanding officer. 'So the
+colonel, so the regiment.' That's as old as the hills. Until
+Aintree takes a brace, his men won't. Some one ought to talk to
+him. It's a shame to see a fine fellow like that going to the
+dogs because no one has the courage to tell him the truth."
+
+The chief smiled mockingly.
+
+"Then why don't you?" he asked.
+
+"I'm a civilian," protested the administrator. "If I told him he was
+going to the dogs he'd tell me to go to the devil. No, one of you
+army men must do it. He'll listen to you."
+
+Young Captain Haldane of the cavalry was at the table; he was
+visiting Panama on leave as a tourist. The chief turned to him.
+
+"Haldane's the man," he said. "You're his friend and you're his
+junior in rank, so what you say won't sound official. Tell him
+people are talking; tell him it won't be long before they'll be
+talking in Washington. Scare him!"
+
+The captain of cavalry smiled dubiously.
+
+"Aintree's a hard man to scare," he said. "But if it's as bad as you
+all seem to think, I'll risk it. But, why is it," he complained,
+"that whenever a man has to be told anything particularly
+unpleasant they always pick on his best friend to tell him? It
+makes them both miserable. Why not let his bitterest enemy try
+it? The enemy at least would have a fine time."
+
+"Because," said the chief, "Aintree hasn't an enemy in the world-
+except Aintree."
+The next morning, as he had promised, Haldane called upon his
+friend. When he arrived at Las Palmas, although the morning was
+well advanced toward noon, he found Aintree still under his
+mosquito bars and awake only to command a drink. The situation
+furnished Haldane with his text. He expressed his opinion of
+any individual, friend or no friend, officer or civilian, who on
+the Zone, where all men begin work at sunrise, could be found
+at noon still in his pajamas and preparing to face the duties of
+the day on an absinth cocktail. He said further that since he had
+arrived on the isthmus he had heard only of Aintree's misconduct,
+that soon the War Department would hear of it, that Aintree would
+lose his commission, would break the backbone of a splendid career.
+
+"It's a friend talking," continued Haldane, "and you know it! It's
+because I am your friend that I've risked losing your friendship!
+And, whether you like it or not, it's the truth. You're going down-hill,
+going fast, going like a motor-bus running away, and unless you put
+on the brakes you'll smash!"
+
+Aintree was not even annoyed.
+
+"That's good advice for the right man," he granted, "but why waste
+it on me? I can do things other men can't. I can stop drinking this
+minute, and it will mean so little to me that I won't know I've stopped."
+
+"Then stop," said Haldane.
+
+"Why?" demanded Aintree. "I like it. Why should I stop anything
+I like? Because a lot of old women are gossiping? Because old men
+who can't drink green mint without dancing turkey-trots think I'm
+going to the devil because I can drink whiskey? I'm not afraid of
+whiskey," he laughed tolerantly. "It amuses me, that's all it does
+to me; it amuses me." He pulled back the coat of his pajamas and
+showed his giant chest and shoulder. With his fist he struck his
+bare flesh and it glowed instantly a healthy, splendid pink.
+
+"See that!" commanded Aintree. "If there's a man on the isthmus in
+any better physical shape than I am, I'll--" He interrupted himself
+to begin again eagerly. "I'll make you a sporting proposition,"
+he announced "I'll fight any man on the isthmus ten rounds--
+no matter who he is, a wop laborer, shovel man, Barbadian
+nigger, marine, anybody--and if he can knock me out I'll stop
+drinking. You see," he explained patiently, "I'm no mollycoddle
+or jelly-fish. I can afford a headache. And besides, it's my own
+head. If I don't give anybody else a headache, I don't see that it's
+anybody else's damned business."
+
+"But you do," retorted Haldane steadily. "You're giving your own
+men worse than a headache, you're setting them a rotten example,
+you're giving the Thirty-third a bad name-"
+
+Aintree vaulted off his cot and shook his fist at his friend.
+"You can't say that to me," he cried.
+
+"I do say it," protested Haldane. "When you were in Manila your
+men were models; here they're unshaven, sloppy, undisciplined.
+They look like bell-hops. And it's your fault. And everybody
+thinks so."
+
+Slowly and carefully Aintree snapped his fingers.
+
+"And you can tell everybody, from me," he cried, "that's all I care
+what they think! And now," he continued, smiling hospitably, "let
+me congratulate you on your success as a missionary, and, to show
+you there's not a trace of hard feeling, we will have a drink."
+
+Informally Haldane reported back to the commission, and the wife
+of one of them must have talked, for it was soon known that a
+brother officer had appealed to Aintree to reform, and Aintree
+had refused to listen.
+
+When she heard this, Grace Carter, the wife of Major Carter, one
+of the surgeons at the Ancon Hospital, was greatly perturbed.
+Aintree was engaged to be married to Helen Scott, who was her
+best friend and who was arriving by the next steamer to spend the
+winter. When she had Helen safely under her roof, Mrs. Carter had
+planned to marry off the young couple out of hand on the isthmus.
+But she had begun to wonder if it would not be better they should
+delay, or best that they should never marry.
+
+"The awakening is going to be a terrible blow to Helen," she said
+to her husband. "She is so proud of him."
+
+"On the contrary," he protested, "it will be the awakening of
+Aintree--if Helen will stand for the way he's acting, she is not
+the girl I know. And when he finds she won't, and that he may lose
+her, he'll pull up short. He's talked Helen to me night after
+night until he's bored me so I could strangle him. He cares more
+for her than he does for anything, for the army, or for himself,
+and that's saying a great deal. One word from her will be enough."
+
+Helen spoke the word three weeks after she arrived. It had not
+been necessary to tell her of the manner in which her lover was
+misconducting himself. At various dinners given in their honor
+he had made a nuisance of himself; on another occasion, while in
+uniform, he had created a scene in the dining-room of the Tivoli
+under the prying eyes of three hundred seeing-the-Canal tourists;
+and one night he had so badly beaten up a cabman who had laughed
+at his condition that the man went to the hospital. Major Carter,
+largely with money, had healed the injuries of the cabman, but
+Helen, who had witnessed the assault, had suffered an injury that
+money could not heal.
+
+She sent for Aintree, and at the home of her friend delivered
+her ultimatum.
+
+"I hit him because he was offensive to you," said Aintree. "That's
+why I hit him. If I'd not had a drink in a year, I'd have hit him
+just as quick and just as hard."
+
+"Can't you see," said the girl, "that in being not yourself when
+I was in your care you were much more insulting to me than any
+cabman could possibly be? When you are like that you have no
+respect for me, or for yourself. Part of my pride in you is that
+you are so strong, that you control yourself, that common
+pleasures never get a hold on you. If you couldn't control your
+temper I wouldn't blame you, because you've a villainous temper
+and you were born with it. But you weren't born with a taste for
+liquor. None of your people drank. You never drank until you went
+into the army. If I were a man," declared the girl, "I'd be ashamed
+to admit anything was stronger than I was. You never let pain beat
+you. I've seen you play polo with a broken arm, but in this you give
+pain to others, you shame and humiliate the one you pretend to love,
+just because you are weak, just because you can't say 'no.'"
+
+Aintree laughed angrily.
+
+"Drink has no hold on me," he protested. "It affects me as much as the
+lights and the music affect a girl at her first dance, and no more. But,
+if you ask me to stop--"
+
+"I do not!" said the girl. "If you stop, you'll stop not because
+I have any influence over you, but because you don't need my
+influence. If it's wrong, if it's hurting you, if it's taking away
+your usefulness and your power for good, that's why you'll stop.
+Not because a girl begs you. Or you're not the man I think you."
+
+Aintree retorted warmly. "I'm enough of a man for this," he
+protested: "I'm enough of a man not to confess I can't drink
+without making a beast of myself. It's easy not to drink at all.
+But to stop altogether is a confession of weakness. I'd look on
+my doing that as cowardly. I give you my word--not that I'll swear
+off, that I'll never do--but I promise you you'll have no further
+reason to be what you call humiliated, or ashamed. You have my
+word for it."
+
+A week later Aintree rode his pony into a railway cutting and
+rolled with it to the tracks below, and, if at the time he had
+not been extremely drunk, would have been killed. The pony,
+being quite sober, broke a leg and was destroyed.
+
+When word of this came to Helen she was too sick at heart to see
+Aintree, and by others it was made known to him that on the first
+steamer Miss Scott would return North. Aintree knew why she was
+going, knew she had lost faith and patience, knew the woman he
+loved had broken with him and put him out of her life. Appalled
+at this calamity, he proceeded to get drunk in earnest.
+
+
+The night was very hot and the humidity very heavy, and at Las
+Palmas inside the bungalow that served as a police-station the
+lamps on either side of the lieutenant's desk burned like tiny
+furnaces. Between them, panting in the moist heat and with the
+sweat from his forehead and hand dripping upon an otherwise
+immaculate report, sat Standish. Two weeks before, the chief had
+made him one of his six lieutenants. With the force the promotion
+had been most popular.
+
+Since his promotion Standish had been in charge of the police-
+station at Las Palmas and daily had seen Aintree as, on his way
+down the hill from the barracks to the railroad, the hero of
+Batangas passed the door of the station-house. Also, on the
+morning Aintree had jumped his horse over the embankment,
+Standish had seen him carried up the hill on a stretcher. At the
+sight the lieutenant of police had taken from his pocket a notebook,
+and on a flyleaf made a cross. On the flyleaf were many other dates
+and opposite each a cross. It was Aintree's record and as the number
+of black crosses grew, the greater had grown the resentment of Standish,
+the more greatly it had increased his anger against the man who had put
+this affront upon the army, the greater became his desire to punish.
+
+In police circles the night had been quiet, the cells in the yard
+were empty, the telephone at his elbow had remained silent, and
+Standish, alone in the station-house, had employed himself in
+cramming "Moss's Manual for Subalterns." He found it a fascinating
+exercise. The hope that soon he might himself be a subaltern
+always burned brightly, and to be prepared seemed to make the
+coming of that day more certain. It was ten o'clock and Las Palmas
+lay sunk in slumber, and after the down train which was now due
+had passed, there was nothing likely to disturb her slumber until
+at sunrise the great army of dirt-diggers with shrieks of whistles,
+with roars of dynamite, with the rumbling of dirt-trains and
+steam-shovels, again sprang to the attack. Down the hill, a
+hundred yards below Standish, the night train halted at the
+station, with creakings and groanings continued toward Colon,
+and again Las Palmas returned to sleep.
+
+And, then, quickly and viciously, like the crack of a mule-whip,
+came the reports of a pistol; and once more the hot and dripping
+silence.
+
+On post at the railroad-station, whence the shots came, was Meehan,
+one of the Zone police, an ex-sergeant of marines. On top of the hill,
+outside the infantry barracks, was another policeman, Bullard, once a
+cowboy.
+
+Standish ran to the veranda and heard the pebbles scattering as
+Bullard leaped down the hill, and when, in the light from the
+open door, he passed, the lieutenant shouted at him to find Meehan
+and report back. Then the desk telephone rang, and Standish
+returned to his chair.
+
+"This is Meehan," said a voice. "Those shots just now were fired
+by Major Aintree. He came down on the night train and jumped off
+after the train was pulling out and stumbled into a negro, and
+fell. He's been drinking and he swore the nigger pushed him; and
+the man called Aintree a liar. Aintree pulled his gun and the
+nigger ran. Aintree fired twice; then I got to him and knocked
+the gun out of his hand with my nightstick."
+
+There was a pause. Until he was sure his voice would be steady
+and official, the boy lieutenant did not speak.
+
+"Did he hit the negro?" he asked.
+
+"I don't know," Meehan answered. "The man jumped for the darkest
+spot he could find." The voice of Meehan lost its professional
+calm and became personal and aggrieved.
+
+"Aintree's on his way to see you now, lieutenant. He's going to
+report me."
+
+"For what?"
+
+The voice over the telephone rose indignantly.
+
+"For knocking the gun out of his hand. He says it's an assault.
+He's going to break me!"
+
+Standish made no comment.
+
+"Report here," he ordered.
+
+He heard Bullard hurrying up the hill and met him at the foot of
+the steps.
+
+"There's a nigger," began Bullard, "lying under some bushes--"
+
+"Hush!" commanded Standish.
+
+From the path below came the sound of footsteps approaching
+unsteadily, and the voice of a man swearing and muttering to
+himself. Standish pulled the ex-cowboy into the shadow of the
+darkness and spoke in eager whispers.
+
+"You understand," he concluded, "you will not report until you
+see me pick up a cigar from the desk and light it. You will wait
+out here in the darkness. When you see me light the cigar, you
+will come in and report."
+
+The cowboy policeman nodded, but without enthusiasm. "I
+understand, lieutenant," he said, "but," he shook his head doubtfully,
+"it sizes up to me like what those police up in New York call a
+'frame-up.'"
+
+Standish exclaimed impatiently.
+
+"It's not my frame-up!" he said. "The man's framed himself up.
+All I'm going to do is to nail him to the wall!"
+
+Standish had only time to return to his desk when Aintree stumbled
+up the path and into the station-house. He was "fighting drunk,"
+ugly, offensive, all but incoherent with anger.
+
+"You in charge?" he demanded. He did not wait for an answer.
+"I've been 'saulted!" he shouted. "'Saulted by one of your damned
+policemen. He struck me--struck me when I was protecting myself.
+He had a nigger with him. First the nigger tripped me; then, when
+I tried to protect myself, this thug of yours hits me, clubs me, you
+unnerstan', clubs me! I want him--"
+
+He was interrupted by the entrance of Meehan, who moved into the
+light from the lamps and saluted his lieutenant.
+
+"That's the man!" roared Aintree. The sight of Meehan whipped him
+into greater fury.
+
+"I want that man broke. I want to see you strip his shield off
+him--now, you unnerstan', now--for 'saulting me, for 'saulting an
+officer in the United States army. And, if you don't," he threw
+himself into a position of the prize-ring, "I'll beat him up and
+you, too." Through want of breath, he stopped, and panted. Again
+his voice broke forth hysterically. "I'm not afraid of your damned
+night-sticks," he taunted. "I got five hundred men on top this hill,
+all I've got to do is to say the word, and they'll rough-house this
+place and throw it into the cut--and you with it."
+
+Standish rose to his feet, and across the desk looked steadily at
+Aintree. To Aintree the steadiness of his eyes and the quietness
+of his voice were an added aggravation.
+
+"Suppose you did," said Standish, "that would not save you."
+
+"From what?" roared Aintree. "Think I'm afraid of your night-
+sticks?"
+
+"From arrest!"
+
+"Arrest me!" yelled Aintree. "Do you know who's talking to you?
+Do you know who I am? I'm Major Aintree, damn you, commanding
+the infantry. An' I'm here to charge that thug--"
+
+"You are here because you are under arrest," said Standish. "You
+are arrested for threatening the police, drunkenness, and assaulting
+a citizen with intent to kill--" The voice of the young man turned shrill
+and rasping. "And if the man should die--"
+
+Aintree burst into a bellow of mocking laughter.
+
+Standish struck the desk with his open palm.
+
+"Silence!" he commanded.
+
+"Silence to me!" roared Aintree, "you impertinent pup!" He flung
+himself forward, shaking his fist. "I'm Major Aintree. I'm your
+superior officer. I'm an officer an' a gentleman--"
+
+"You are not!" replied Standish. "You are a drunken loafer!"
+
+Aintree could not break the silence. Amazement, rage, stupefaction
+held him in incredulous wonder. Even Meehan moved uneasily.
+Between the officer commanding the infantry and an officer of
+police, he feared the lieutenant would not survive.
+
+But he heard the voice of his lieutenant continuing, evenly,
+coldly, like the voice of a judge delivering sentence.
+
+"You are a drunken loafer," repeated the boy. "And you know it.
+And I mean that to-morrow morning every one on the Zone shall know
+it. And I mean to-morrow night every one in the States shall know
+it. You've killed a man, or tried to, and I'm going to break you."
+With his arm he pointed to Meehan. "Break that man?" he demanded.
+"For doing his duty, for trying to stop a murder? Strip him of his
+shield?" The boy laughed savagely. "It's you I am going to strip,
+Aintree," he cried, "you 'hero of Batangas'; I'm going to strip you
+naked. I'm going to 'cut the buttons off your coat, and tear the stripes
+away.' I'm going to degrade you and disgrace you, and drive you out
+of the army!" He threw his note-book on the table. "There's your dossier,
+Aintree," he said. "For three months you've been drunk, and there's your
+record. The police got it for me; it's written there with dates and the names
+of witnesses. I'll swear to it. I've been after you to get you, and I've got
+you.
+With that book, with what you did to-night, you'll leave the army. You
+may resign, you may be court-martialled, you may be hung. I don't
+give a damn what they do to you, but you will leave the army!"
+
+He turned to Meehan, and with a jerk of the hand signified Aintree.
+
+"Put him in a cell," he said. "If he resists--"
+
+Aintree gave no sign of resisting. He stood motionless, his arms
+hanging limp, his eyes protruding. The liquor had died in him, and
+his anger had turned chill. He tried to moisten his lips to speak,
+but his throat was baked, and no sound issued. He tried to focus
+his eyes upon the menacing little figure behind the desk, but
+between the two lamps it swayed, and shrank and swelled. Of one
+thing only was he sure, that some grave disaster had overtaken
+him, something that when he came fully to his senses still would
+overwhelm him, something he could not conquer with his fists.
+His brain, even befuddled as it was, told him he had been caught
+by the heels, that he was in a trap, that smashing this boy who
+threatened him could not set him free. He recognized, and it was
+this knowledge that stirred him with alarm, that this was no
+ordinary officer of justice, but a personal enemy, an avenging
+spirit who, for some unknown reason, had spread a trap; who, for
+some private purpose of revenge, would drag him down.
+
+Frowning painfully, he waved Meehan from him.
+
+"Wait," he commanded. "I don' unnerstan'. What good's it goin' to
+do you to lock me up an' disgrace me? What harm have I done you?
+Who asked you to run the army, anyway? Who are you?"
+
+"My name is Standish," said the lieutenant. "My father was colonel
+of the Thirty-third when you first joined it from the Academy."
+
+Aintree exclaimed with surprise and enlightenment. He broke into
+hurried speech, but Standish cut him short.
+
+"And General Standish of the Mexican War," he continued, "was my
+grandfather. Since Washington all my people have been officers of
+the regular army, and I'd been one, too, if I'd been bright enough.
+That's why I respect the army. That's why I'm going to throw you
+out of it. You've done harm fifty men as good as you can't undo.
+You've made drunkards of a whole battalion. You've taught boys
+who looked up to you, as I looked up to you once, to laugh at
+discipline, to make swine of themselves. You've set them an example.
+I'm going to make an example of you. That's all there is to this. I've
+got no grudge against you. I'm not vindictive; I'm sorry for you. But,"
+he paused and pointed his hand at Aintree as though it held a gun,
+"you are going to leave the army!"
+
+Like a man coming out of an ugly dream, Aintree opened and shut
+his eyes, shivered, and stretched his great muscles. They watched
+him with an effort of the will force himself back to consciousness.
+When again he spoke, his tone was sane.
+
+"See here, Standish," he began, "I'll not beg of you or any man.
+I only ask you to think what you're doing. This means my finish.
+If you force this through to-night it means court-martial, it means
+I lose my commission, I lose--lose things you know nothing about.
+And, if I've got a record for drinking, I've got a record for other
+things, too. Don't forget that!"
+
+Standish shook his head. "I didn't forget it," he said.
+
+"Well, suppose I did," demanded Aintree. "Suppose I did go on
+the loose, just to pass the time, just because I'm sick of this damned
+ditch? Is it fair to wipe out all that went before, for that? I'm the
+youngest major in the army, I served in three campaigns, I'm a
+medal-of-honor man, I've got a career ahead of me, and--and I'm
+going to be married. If you give me a chance-"
+
+Standish struck the table with his fist.
+
+"I will give you a chance," he cried. "If you'll give your word to this
+man and to me, that, so help you God, you'll never drink again--I'll
+let you go."
+
+If what Standish proposed had been something base, Aintree could
+not have accepted it with more contempt.
+
+"I'll see you in hell first," he said.
+
+As though the interview was at an end, Standish dropped into his
+chair and leaning forward, from the table picked up a cigar. As
+he lit it, he motioned Meehan toward his prisoner, but before the
+policeman could advance the sound of footsteps halted him.
+
+Bullard, his eyes filled with concern, leaped up the steps, and
+ran to the desk.
+
+"Lieutenant!" he stammered, "that man--the nigger that officer
+shot--he's dead!"
+
+Aintree gave a gasp that was partly a groan, partly a cry of
+protest, and Bullard, as though for the first time aware of his
+presence, sprang back to the open door and placed himself between
+it and Aintree.
+
+"It's murder!" he said.
+
+None of the three men spoke; and when Meehan crossed to where
+Aintree stood, staring fearfully at nothing, he had only to touch
+his sleeve, and Aintree, still staring, fell into step beside him.
+
+From the yard outside Standish heard the iron door of the cell
+swing shut, heard the key grate in the lock, and the footsteps of
+Meehan returning.
+
+Meehan laid the key upon the desk, and with Bullard stood at
+attention, waiting.
+
+"Give him time," whispered Standish. "Let it sink in!"
+
+At the end of half an hour Standish heard Aintree calling, and,
+with Meehan carrying a lantern, stepped into the yard and stopped
+at the cell door.
+
+Aintree was quite sober. His face was set and white, his voice
+was dull with suffering. He stood erect, clasping the bars in his
+hands.
+
+"Standish," he said, "you gave me a chance a while ago, and I
+refused it. I was rough about it. I'm sorry. It made me hot
+because I thought you were forcing my hand, blackmailing me into
+doing something I ought to do as a free agent. Now, I am a free
+agent. You couldn't give me a chance now, you couldn't let me go
+now, not if I swore on a thousand Bibles. I don't know what
+they'll give me--Leavenworth for life, or hanging, or just dismissal.
+But, you've got what you wanted--I'm leaving the army!" Between
+the bars he stretched out his arms and held a hand toward Meehan
+and Standish. In the same dull, numbed voice he continued.
+
+"So, now," he went on, "that I've nothing to gain by it, I want
+to swear to you and to this man here, that whether I hang, or go
+to jail, or am turned loose, I will never, so help me God, take
+another drink."
+
+Standish was holding the hand of the man who once had been his
+hero. He clutched it tight.
+
+"Aintree," he cried, "suppose I could work a miracle; suppose I've
+played a trick on you, to show you your danger, to show you what
+might come to you any day--does that oath still stand?"
+
+The hand that held his ground the bones together.
+
+"I've given my word!" cried Aintree. "For the love of God, don't
+torture me. Is the man alive?"
+
+As Standish swung open the cell door, the hero of Batangas,
+he who could thrash any man on the isthmus, crumpled up
+like a child upon his shoulder.
+
+And Meehan, as he ran for water, shouted joyfully.
+
+"That nigger," he called to Bullard, "can go home now. The lieutenant
+don't want him no more.
+"
+
+
+
+
+EVIL TO HIM WHO EVIL THINKS
+
+
+
+As a rule, the instant the season closed Aline Proctor sailed on
+the first steamer for London, where awaited her many friends,
+both English and American--and to Paris, where she selected those
+gowns that on and off the stage helped to make her famous. But
+this particular summer she had spent with the Endicotts at Bar
+Harbor, and it was at their house Herbert Nelson met her. After
+Herbert met her very few other men enjoyed that privilege. This
+was her wish as well as his.
+
+They behaved disgracefully. Every morning after breakfast they
+disappeared and spent the day at opposite ends of a canoe. She,
+knowing nothing of a canoe, was happy in stabbing the waters with
+her paddle while he told her how he loved her and at the same
+time, with anxious eyes on his own paddle, skilfully frustrated
+her efforts to drown them both. While the affair lasted it was
+ideal and beautiful, but unfortunately it lasted only two months.
+
+Then Lord Albany, temporarily in America as honorary attache to
+the British embassy, his adoring glances, his accent, and the way
+he brushed his hair, proved too much for the susceptible heart of
+Aline, and she chucked Herbert and asked herself how a woman of
+her age could have seriously considered marrying a youth just out
+of Harvard! At that time she was a woman of nineteen; but, as she
+had been before the public ever since she was eleven, the women
+declared she was not a day under twenty-six; and the men knew she
+could not possibly be over sixteen!
+
+Aline's own idea of herself was that without some one in love
+with her she could not exist--that, unless she knew some man cared
+for her and for her alone, she would wither and die. As a matter
+of fact, whether any one loved her or not did not in the least
+interest her. There were several dozen men who could testify to
+that. They knew! What she really wanted was to be head over ears
+in love--to adore some one, to worship him, to imagine herself
+starving for him and making sacrifice hits for him; but when the
+moment came to make the sacrifice hit and marry the man, she
+invariably found that a greater, truer love had arisen--for some
+one else.
+
+This greater and truer love always made her behave abominably to
+the youth she had just jilted. She wasted no time on post-mortems.
+She was so eager to show her absolute loyalty to the new monarch
+that she grudged every thought she ever had given the one she had
+cast into exile. She resented him bitterly. She could not forgive him
+for having allowed her to be desperately in love with him. He should
+have known he was not worthy of such a love as hers. He should have
+known that the real prince was waiting only just round the corner.
+
+As a rule the rejected ones behaved well. Each decided Aline was much
+too wonderful a creature for him, and continued to love her cautiously
+and from a distance. None of them ever spoke or thought ill of her and
+would gladly have punched any one who did. It was only the women
+whose young men Aline had temporarily confiscated, and then returned
+saddened and chastened, who were spiteful. And they dared say no more
+than that Aline would probably have known her mind better if she had
+had a mother to look after her. This, coming to the ears of Aline,
+caused her to reply that a girl who could not keep straight herself,
+but needed a mother to help her, would not keep straight had she a
+dozen mothers. As she put it cheerfully, a girl who goes wrong and
+then pleads "no mother to guide her" is like a jockey who pulls a race
+and then blames the horse.
+
+Each of the young men Aline rejected married some one else and,
+except when the name of Aline Proctor in the theatrical
+advertisements or in electric lights on Broadway gave him a
+start, forgot that for a month her name and his own had been
+linked together from Portland to San Francisco. But the girl he
+married did not forget. She never understood what the public saw
+in Aline Proctor. That Aline was the queen of musical comedy she
+attributed to the fact that Aline knew the right people and got
+herself written about in the right way. But that she could sing,
+dance, act; that she possessed compelling charm; that she "got
+across" not only to the tired business man, the wine agent, the
+college boy, but also to the children and the old ladies, was to
+her never apparent.
+
+Just as Aline could not forgive the rejected suitor for allowing
+her to love him, so the girl he married never forgave Aline for
+having loved her husband. Least of all could Sally Winthrop, who
+two years after the summer at Bar Harbor married Herbert Nelson,
+forgive her. And she let Herbert know it. Herbert was properly
+in love with Sally Winthrop, but he liked to think that his
+engagement to Aline, though brief and abruptly terminated, had
+proved him to be a man fatally attractive to all women. And
+though he was hypnotizing himself into believing that his feeling
+for Aline had been the grand passion, the truth was that all that
+kept her in his thoughts was his own vanity. He was not
+discontented with his lot--his lot being Sally Winthrop, her
+millions, and her estate of three hundred acres near Westbury.
+Nor was he still longing for Aline. It was only that his vanity
+was flattered by the recollection that one of the young women
+most beloved by the public had once loved him.
+
+"I once was a king in Babylon," he used to misquote to himself,
+"and she was a Christian slave."
+
+He was as young as that.
+
+Had he been content in secret to assure himself that he once had
+been a reigning monarch, his vanity would have harmed no one;
+but, unfortunately, he possessed certain documentary evidence to
+that fact. And he was sufficiently foolish not to wish to destroy
+it. The evidence consisted of a dozen photographs he had snapped
+of Aline during the happy days at Bar Harbor, and on which she
+had written phrases somewhat exuberant and sentimental.
+
+From these photographs Nelson was loath to part--especially with
+one that showed Aline seated on a rock that ran into the waters of
+the harbor, and on which she had written: "As long as this rock
+lasts!" Each time she was in love Aline believed it would last.
+That in the past it never had lasted did not discourage her.
+
+What to do with these photographs that so vividly recalled the
+most tumultuous period of his life Nelson could not decide. If he
+hid them away and Sally found them, he knew she would make his
+life miserable. If he died and Sally then found them, when he no
+longer was able to explain that they meant nothing to him, she
+would believe he always had loved the other woman, and it would
+make her miserable. He felt he could not safely keep them in his
+own house; his vanity did not permit him to burn them, and,
+accordingly, he decided to unload them on some one else.
+
+The young man to whom he confided his collection was Charles
+Cochran. Cochran was a charming person from the West. He had
+studied in the Beaux Arts and on foot had travelled over England
+and Europe, preparing himself to try his fortune in New York as
+an architect. He was now in the office of the architects Post &
+Constant, and lived alone in a tiny farmhouse he had made over
+for himself near Herbert Nelson, at Westbury, Long Island.
+
+Post & Constant were a fashionable firm and were responsible for
+many of the French chateaux and English country houses that were
+rising near Westbury, Hempstead, and Roslyn; and it was Cochran's
+duty to drive over that territory in his runabout, keep an eye on
+the contractors, and dissuade clients from grafting mansard roofs
+on Italian villas. He had built the summer home of the Herbert
+Nelsons, and Herbert and Charles were very warm friends. Charles
+was of the same lack of years as was Herbert, of an enthusiastic
+and sentimental nature; and, like many other young men, the story
+of his life also was the lovely and much-desired Aline Proctor.
+It was this coincidence that had made them friends and that had
+led Herbert to select Charles as the custodian of his treasure.
+As a custodian and confidant Charles especially appealed to his
+new friend, because, except upon the stage and in restaurants,
+Charles had never seen Aline Proctor, did not know her--and
+considered her so far above him, so unattainable, that he had no
+wish to seek her out. Unknown, he preferred to worship at a
+distance. In this determination Herbert strongly encouraged him.
+
+When he turned over the pictures to Charles, Herbert could not
+resist showing them to him. They were in many ways charming.
+They presented the queen of musical comedy in several new roles.
+In one she was in a sailor suit, giving an imitation of a girl
+paddling a canoe. In another she was in a riding-habit mounted
+upon a pony of which she seemed very much afraid.
+
+In some she sat like a siren among the rocks with the waves and
+seaweed snatching at her feet, and in another she crouched
+beneath the wheel of Herbert's touring car. All of the
+photographs were unprofessional and intimate, and the
+legends scrawled across them were even more intimate.
+
+"'As long as this rock lasts!'" read Herbert. At arm's length he
+held the picture for Cochran to see, and laughed bitterly and
+unmirthfully as he had heard leading men laugh in problem plays.
+
+"That is what she wrote," he mocked--"but how long did it last?
+Until she saw that little red-headed Albany playing polo. That
+lasted until his mother heard of it. She thought her precious
+lamb was in the clutches of a designing actress, and made the
+Foreign Office cable him home. Then Aline took up one of those
+army aviators, and chucked him for that fellow who painted her
+portrait, and threw him over for the lawn-tennis champion. Now
+she's engaged to Chester Griswold, and Heaven pity her! Of course
+he's the greatest catch in America; but he's a prig and a snob, and
+he's so generous with his money that he'll give you five pennies for
+a nickel any time you ask him. He's got a heart like the metre of a
+taxicab, and he's jealous as a cat. Aline will have a fine time with
+Chester! I knew him at St. Paul's and at Harvard, and he's got as
+much red blood in him as an eel!"
+
+Cochran sprang to the defense of the lady of his dreams.
+
+"There must be some good in the man," he protested, "or Miss
+Proctor-"
+
+"Oh, those solemn snobs," declared Herbert, "impress women by
+just keeping still. Griswold pretends the reason he doesn't speak
+to you is because he's too superior, but the real reason is that
+he knows whenever he opens his mouth he shows he is an ass."
+
+Reluctantly Herbert turned over to Charles the precious pictures.
+"It would be a sin to destroy them, wouldn't it?" he prompted.
+
+Cochran agreed heartily.
+
+"You might even," suggested Herbert, "leave one or two of them
+about. You have so many of Aline already that one more wouldn't
+be noticed. Then when I drop in I could see it." He smiled
+ingratiatingly.
+
+"But those I have I bought," Cochran pointed out. "Anybody can
+buy them, but yours are personal. And they're signed."
+
+"No one will notice that but me," protested Herbert. "Just one or
+two," he coaxed-"stuck round among the others. They'd give me a
+heap of melancholy pleasure."
+
+Charles shook his head doubtfully.
+
+"Your wife often comes here with you," he said. "I don't believe
+they'd give her melancholy pleasure. The question is, are you married
+to Sally or to Aline Proctor?"
+
+"Oh, of course," exclaimed Herbert--" if you refuse!"
+
+With suspicious haste Charles surrendered.
+
+"I don't refuse," he explained; "I only ask if it's wise. Sally
+knows you were once very fond of Miss Proctor--knows you were
+engaged to her."
+
+"But," protested Herbert, "Sally sees your photographs of Aline.
+What difference can a few more make? After she's seen a dozen
+she gets used to them."
+
+No sooner had Herbert left him than the custodian of the treasure
+himself selected the photographs he would display. In them the
+young woman he had--from the front row of the orchestra--so
+ardently admired appeared in a new light. To Cochran they seemed
+at once to render her more kindly, more approachable; to show her
+as she really was, the sort of girl any youth would find it extremely
+difficult not to love. Cochran found it extremely easy. The photographs
+gave his imagination all the room it wanted. He believed they also gave
+him an insight into her real character that was denied to anybody else.
+He had always credited her with all the virtues; he now endowed her
+with every charm of mind and body. In a week to the two photographs
+he had selected from the loan collection for purposes of display and to
+give Herbert melancholy pleasure he had added three more. In two
+weeks there were half a dozen. In a month, nobly framed in silver,
+in leather of red, green, and blue, the entire collection smiled upon him
+from every part of his bedroom. For he now kept them where no one
+but himself could see them. No longer was he of a mind to share
+his borrowed treasure with others--not even with the rightful
+owner.
+
+Chester Griswold, spurred on by Aline Proctor, who wanted to
+build a summer home on Long Island, was motoring with Post, of
+Post & Constant, in the neighborhood of Westbury. Post had
+pointed out several houses designed by his firm, which he hoped
+might assist Griswold in making up his mind as to the kind of
+house he wanted; but none they had seen had satisfied his client.
+
+"What I want is a cheap house," explained the young millionaire.
+"I don't really want a house at all," he complained. "It's Miss
+Proctor's idea. When we are married I intend to move into my
+mother's town house, but Miss Proctor wants one for herself in
+the country. I've agreed to that; but it must be small and it
+must be cheap."
+
+"Cheap" was a word that the clients of Post & Constant never
+used; but Post knew the weaknesses of some of the truly rich, and
+he knew also that no house ever built cost only what the
+architect said it would cost.
+
+"I know the very house you want!" he exclaimed. "One of our
+young men owns it. He made it over from an old farmhouse. It's
+very well arranged; we've used his ground-plan several times and
+it works out splendidly. If he's not at home, I'11 show you over the
+place myself. And if you like the house he's the man to build you one."
+
+When they reached Cochran's home he was at Garden City playing
+golf, but the servant knew Mr. Post, and to him and his client
+threw open every room in the house.
+
+"Now, this," exclaimed the architect enthusiastically, "is the
+master's bedroom. In your case it would probably be your wife's
+room and you would occupy the one adjoining, which Cochran now
+uses as a guest-room. As you see, they are entirely cut off from-"
+
+Mr. Griswold did not see. Up to that moment he had given every
+appearance of being both bored and sulky. Now his attention was
+entirely engaged--but not upon the admirable simplicity of Mr.
+Cochran's ground-plan, as Mr. Post had hoped. Instead, the eyes
+of the greatest catch in America were intently regarding a display
+of photographs that smiled back at him from every corner of the
+room. Not only did he regard these photographs with a savage glare,
+but he approached them and carefully studied the inscriptions scrawled
+across the face of each.
+
+Post himself cast a glance at the nearest photographs, and then
+hastily manoeuvred his client into the hall and closed the door.
+
+"We will now," he exclaimed, "visit the butler's pantry, which
+opens upon the dining-room and kitchen, thus saving--"
+
+But Griswold did not hear him. Without giving another glance at
+the house he stamped out of it and, plumping himself down in the
+motor-car, banged the door. Not until Post had driven him well
+into New York did he make any comment.
+
+"What did you say," he then demanded, "is the name of the man who
+owns that last house we saw?"
+
+Post told him.
+
+"I never heard of him!" said Griswold as though he were
+delivering young Cochran's death sentence. "Who is he?"
+
+"He's an architect in our office," said Post. "We think a lot of
+him. He'll leave us soon, of course. The best ones always do. His
+work is very popular. So is he."
+
+"I never heard of him," repeated Griswold. Then, with sudden
+heat, he added savagely: "But I mean to to-night."
+
+When Griswold had first persuaded Aline Proctor to engage herself
+to him he had suggested that, to avoid embarrassment, she should
+tell him the names of the other men to whom she had been engaged.
+
+"What kind of embarrassment would that avoid?"
+
+"If I am talking to a man," said Griswold, "and he knows the
+woman I'm going to marry was engaged to him and I don't know
+that, he has me at a disadvantage."
+
+"I don't see that he has," said Aline. "If we suppose, for the sake
+of argument, that to marry me is desirable, I would say that the
+man who was going to marry me had the advantage over the one
+I had declined to marry."
+
+"I want to know who those men are," explained Griswold, "because
+I want to avoid them. I don't want to talk to them. I don't want
+even to know them."
+
+"I don't see how I can help you," said Aline. "I haven't the
+slightest objection to telling you the names of the men I have
+cared for, if I can remember them, but I certainly do not intend
+to tell you the name of any man who cared for me enough to ask me
+to marry him. That's his secret, not mine--certainly not yours."
+
+Griswold thought he was very proud. He really was very vain; and
+as jealousy is only vanity in its nastiest development he was
+extremely jealous. So he persisted.
+
+"Will you do this?" he demanded. "If I ever ask you, 'Is that one
+of the men you cared for?' will you tell me?"
+
+"If you wish it," said Aline; "but I can't see any health in it.
+It will only make you uncomfortable. So long as you know I have
+given you the greatest and truest love I am capable of, why
+should you concern yourself with my mistakes?"
+
+"So that I can avoid meeting what you call your mistakes," said
+Griswold--" and being friendly with them."
+
+"I assure you," laughed Aline, "it wouldn't hurt you a bit to be
+as friendly with them as they'd let you. Maybe they weren't as
+proud of their families as you are, but they made up for that by
+being a darned sight prouder of me!"
+
+Later, undismayed by this and unashamed, on two occasions
+Griswold actually did demand of Aline if a genial youth she had
+just greeted joyfully was one of those for whom she once had
+cared.
+
+And Aline had replied promptly and truthfully that he was. But in
+the case of Charles Cochran, Griswold did not ask Aline if he was
+one of those for whom she once had cared. He considered the
+affair with Cochran so serious that, in regard to that man, he
+adopted a different course.
+
+In digging rivals out of the past his jealousy had made him
+indefatigable, but in all his researches he never had heard the
+name of Charles Cochran. That fact and the added circumstance
+that Aline herself never had mentioned the man was in his eyes so
+suspicious as to be almost a damning evidence of deception. And
+he argued that if in the past Aline had deceived him as to Charles
+Cochran she would continue to do so. Accordingly, instead
+of asking her frankly for the truth he proceeded to lay traps for
+it. And if there is one thing Truth cannot abide, it is being
+hunted by traps.
+
+That evening Aline and he were invited to a supper in her honor,
+and as he drove her from the theatre to the home of their hostess
+he told her of his search earlier in the day.
+
+The electric light in the limousine showed Aline's face as
+clearly as though it were held in a spotlight, and as he prepared
+his trap Griswold regarded her jealously.
+
+"Post tells me," he said, "he has the very man you want for your
+architect. He's sure you'll find him most understanding and--and-
+-
+sympathetic. He's a young man who is just coming to the front,
+and he's very popular, especially with women."
+
+"What's his being popular with women," asked Aline, "got to do
+with his carrying out my ideas of a house?"
+
+"That's just it," said Griswold--"it's the woman who generally has
+the most to say as to how her house shall be built, and this man
+understands woman. I have reasons for believing he will certainly
+understand you!"
+
+"If he understands me well enough to give me all the
+linen-closets I want," said Aline, "he will be perfectly
+satisfactory."
+
+Before delivering his blow Griswold sank back into his corner of
+the car, drew his hat brim over his forehead, and fixed spying
+eyes upon the very lovely face of the girl he had asked to marry
+him.
+
+"His name," he said in fateful tones, "is Charles Cochran!"
+
+It was supposed to be a body blow; but, to his distress, Aline
+neither started nor turned pale. Neither, for trying to trick
+her, did she turn upon him in reproof and anger. Instead, with
+alert eyes, she continued to peer out of the window at the
+electric-light advertisements and her beloved Broadway.
+
+"Well?" demanded Griswold; his tone was hoarse and heavy with
+meaning.
+
+"Well what?" asked Aline pleasantly.
+
+"How," demanded Griswold, "do you like Charles Cochran for an
+architect?"
+
+"How should I know?" asked Aline. "I've not met him yet!"
+
+She had said it! And she had said it without the waver of one of
+her lovely eyelashes. No wonder the public already hailed her as
+a finished actress! Griswold felt that his worst fears were
+justified. She had lied to him. And, as he knew she had never
+before lied to him, that now she did so proved beyond hope of
+doubt that the reason for it was vital, imperative, and compelling.
+But of his suspicions Griswold gave no sign. He would not at
+once expose her. He had trapped her, but as yet she must not
+know that. He would wait until he had still further entangled
+her--until she could not escape; and then, with complete proof
+of her deceit, he would confront and overwhelm her.
+
+With this amiable purpose in mind he called early the next morning
+upon Post & Constant and asked to see Mr. Cochran. He wished,
+he said, to consult him about the new house. Post had not yet
+reached the office, and of Griswold's visit with Post to his house
+Cochran was still ignorant. He received Griswold most courteously.
+He felt that the man who was loved by the girl he also had long and
+hopelessly worshipped was deserving of the highest consideration.
+Griswold was less magnanimous. When he found his rival--for as
+such he beheld him--was of charming manners and gallant appearance
+he considered that fact an additional injury; but he concealed his
+resentment, for he was going to trap Cochran, too.
+
+He found the architect at work leaning over a drawing-board, and
+as they talked Cochran continued to stand. He was in his shirt-sleeves,
+which were rolled to his shoulders; and the breadth of those shoulders
+and the muscles of his sunburned arms were much in evidence.
+Griswold considered it a vulgar exhibition.
+
+For over ten minutes they talked solely of the proposed house,
+but not once did Griswold expose the fact that he had seen any
+more of it than any one might see from the public road. When he
+rose to take his leave he said:
+
+"How would it do if I motored out Sunday and showed your house
+to Miss Proctor? Sunday is the only day she has off, and if it would not
+inconvenience you--"
+
+The tender heart of Cochran leaped in wild tumult; he could not
+conceal his delight, nor did he attempt to do so; and his expression
+made it entirely unnecessary for him to assure Griswold that such a
+visit would be entirely welcome and that they might count on finding
+him at home. As though it were an afterthought, Griswold halted at
+the door and said:
+
+"I believe you are already acquainted with Miss Proctor."
+
+Cochran, conscious of five years of devotion, found that he was
+blushing, and longed to strangle himself. Nor was the blush lost
+upon Griswold.
+
+"I'm sorry," said Cochran, "but I've not had that honor. On the
+stage, of course--"
+
+He shrugged the broad shoulders deprecatingly, as though to suggest
+that not to know Miss Proctor as an artist argues oneself unknown.
+
+Griswold pretended to be puzzled. As though endeavoring to recall
+a past conversation he frowned.
+
+"But Aline," he said, "told me she had met you-met you at Bar
+Harbor." In the fatal photographs the familiar landfalls of Bar
+Harbor had been easily recognized.
+
+The young architect shook his head.
+
+"It must be another Cochran," he suggested. "I have never been in
+Bar Harbor."
+
+With the evidence of the photographs before him this last
+statement was a verdict of guilty, and Griswold, not with the
+idea of giving Cochran a last chance to be honest, but to cause
+him to dig the pit still deeper, continued to lead him on. "Maybe
+she meant York Harbor?"
+
+Again Cochran shook his head and laughed.
+
+"Believe me," he said, "if I'd ever met Miss Proctor anywhere I
+wouldn't forget it!"
+
+Ten minutes later Griswold was talking to Aline over the telephone.
+He intended to force matters. He would show Aline she could neither
+trifle with nor deceive Chester Griswold; but the thought that he had
+been deceived was not what most hurt him. What hurt him was to
+think that Aline had preferred a man who looked like an advertisement
+for ready-made clothes and who worked in his shirt-sleeves.
+
+Griswold took it for granted that any woman would be glad to marry him.
+So many had been willing to do so that he was convinced, when one of
+them was not, it was not because there was anything wrong with him,
+but because the girl herself lacked taste and perception.
+
+That the others had been in any degree moved by his many millions
+had never suggested itself. He was convinced each had loved him for
+himself alone; and if Aline, after meeting him, would still consider any
+one else, it was evident something was very wrong with Aline. He was
+determined that she must be chastened--must be brought to a proper
+appreciation of her good fortune and of his condescension.
+
+On being called to the telephone at ten in the morning, Aline
+demanded to know what could excuse Griswold for rousing her
+in the middle of the night!
+
+Griswold replied that, though the day was young, it also was
+charming; that on Sunday there might be rain; and that if she
+desired to see the house he and Post thought would most suit her,
+he and his car would be delighted to convey her to it. They could
+make the run in an hour, lunch with friends at Westbury, and
+return in plenty of time for the theatre. Aline was delighted at
+the sudden interest Griswold was showing in the new house.
+Without a moment's hesitation she walked into the trap. She
+would go, she declared, with pleasure. In an hour he should
+call for her.
+
+Exactly an hour later Post arrived at his office. He went directly
+to Cochran.
+
+"Charles," he said, "I'm afraid I got you into trouble yesterday.
+I took a client to see your house. You have often let us do it before;
+but since I was there last you've made some changes. In your bedroom--"
+Post stopped.
+
+Cochran's naive habit of blushing told him it was not necessary
+to proceed. In tones of rage and mortification Cochran swore
+explosively; Post was relieved to find he was swearing at himself.
+
+"I ought to be horsewhipped!" roared Cochran. "I'll never forgive
+myself! Who," he demanded, "saw the pictures? Was it a man or a
+woman?"
+
+Post laughed unhappily.
+
+"It was Chester Griswold."
+
+A remarkable change came over Cochran. Instead of sobering him,
+as Post supposed it would, the information made him even more
+angry--only now his anger was transferred from himself to Griswold.
+
+"The blankety-blank bounder!" yelled Cochran. "That was what he
+wanted! That's why he came here!"
+
+"Here!" demanded Post.
+
+"Not an hour ago," cried Cochran. "He asked me about Bar Harbor.
+He saw those pictures were taken at Bar Harbor!"
+
+"I think," said Post soothingly, "he'd a right to ask questions.
+There were so many pictures, and they were very--well--very!"
+
+"I'd have answered his questions," roared Cochran, "if he'd asked
+them like a man, but he came snooping down here to spy on me.
+He tried to trick me. He insulted me! He insulted her!" He emitted
+a howl of dismay. "And I told him I'd never been to Bar Harbor--
+that I'd never met Aline Proctor!"
+
+Cochran seized his coat and hat. He shouted to one of the office
+boys to telephone the garage for his car.
+
+"What are you--where are you going?" demanded Post.
+
+"I'm going home first," cried Cochran, "to put those pictures in
+a safe, as I should have done three months ago. And then I'm
+going to find Chester Griswold and tell him he's an ass and a
+puppy!"
+
+"If you do that," protested Post, "you're likely to lose us a very
+valuable client."
+
+"And your client," roared Charles, "is likely to lose some very
+valuable teeth!"
+
+As Charles whirled into the country road in which stood his house
+he saw drawn up in front of it the long gray car in which, that morning,
+Chester Griswold had called at the office. Cochran emitted a howl of
+anger. Was his home again to be invaded? And again while he was
+absent? To what extreme would Griswold's jealousy next lead him?
+He fell out of his own car while it still moved, and leaped up the garden
+walk. The front rooms of the house were empty, but from his bedroom
+he heard, raised in excited tones, the voice of Griswold. The audacity
+of the man was so surprising, and his own delight at catching him
+red-handed so satisfying, that no longer was Cochran angry. The Lord
+had delivered his enemy into his hands! And, as he advanced toward his
+bedroom, not only was he calm, but, at the thought of his revenge,
+distinctly jubilant. In the passageway a frightened maid servant, who,
+at his unexpected arrival, was now even more frightened, endeavored
+to give him an explanation; but he waved her into silence, and, striding
+before her, entered his bedroom.
+
+He found confronting him a tall and beautiful young woman. It was
+not the Aline Proctor he knew. It was not the well-poised, gracious,
+and distinguished beauty he had seen gliding among the tables at
+Sherry's or throwing smiles over the footlights. This Aline Proctor
+was a very indignant young person, with flashing eyes, tossing head,
+and a stamping foot. Extended from her at arm's length, she held a
+photograph of herself in a heavy silver frame; and, as though it were
+a weapon, she was brandishing it in the face of Chester Griswold.
+As Cochran, in amazement, halted in the doorway she was exclaiming:
+
+"I told you I didn't know Charles Cochran! I tell you so now! If you
+can't believe me-"
+
+Out of the corner of her flashing eyes the angry lady caught sight of
+Cochran in the doorway. She turned upon the intruder as though she
+meant forcibly to eject him.
+
+"Who are you?" she demanded. Her manner and tone seemed to add:
+"And what the deuce are you doing here?"
+
+Charles answered her tone.
+
+"I am Charles Cochran," he said. "I live here. This is my house!"
+
+These words had no other effect upon Miss Proctor than to switch
+her indignation down another track. She now turned upon Charles.
+
+"Then, if this is your house," cried that angry young person,
+"why have you filled it with photographs of me that belong to
+some one else?"
+
+Charles saw that his hour had come. His sin had found him out. He
+felt that to prevaricate would be only stupid.
+
+Griswold had tried devious methods--and look where his devious
+methods had dumped him! Griswold certainly was in wrong. Charles
+quickly determined to adopt a course directly opposite. Griswold
+had shown an utter lack of confidence in Aline. Charles decided
+that he would give her his entire confidence, would throw himself
+upon the mercy of the court.
+
+"I have those photographs in my house, Miss Proctor," he said,
+"because I have admired you a long time. They were more like you
+than those I could buy. Having them here has helped me a lot, and it
+hasn't done you any harm. You know very well you have anonymous
+admirers all over this country. I'm only one of them. If I have offended,
+I have offended with many, many thousands."
+
+Already it has been related that Cochran was very good to look
+upon. At the present moment, as he spoke in respectful, even
+soulful accents, meekly and penitently proclaiming his
+long-concealed admiration, Miss Proctor found her indignation
+melting like an icicle in the sun.
+
+Still, she did not hold herself cheaply. She was accustomed to
+such open flattery. She would not at once capitulate.
+
+"But these pictures," she protested, "I gave to a man I knew. You
+have no right to them. They are not at all the sort of picture I
+would give to an utter stranger!" With anxiety the lovely lady
+paused for a reply. She hoped that the reply the tall young man
+with appealing eyes would make would be such as to make it
+possible for her to forgive him.
+
+He was not given time to reply. With a mocking snort Griswold
+interrupted. Aline and Charles had entirely forgotten him.
+
+"An utter stranger!" mimicked Griswold. "Oh, yes; he's an utter
+stranger! You're pretty good actors, both of you; but you can't
+keep that up long, and you'd better stop it now."
+
+"Stop what?" asked Miss Proctor. Her tone was cold and calm, but
+in her eyes was a strange light. It should have warned Griswold
+that he would have been safer under the bed.
+
+"Stop pretending!" cried Griswold. "I won't have it!"
+
+"I don't understand," said Miss Proctor. She spoke in the same
+cold voice, only now it had dropped several degrees nearer freezing.
+"I don't think you understand yourself. You won't have what?"
+
+Griswold now was frightened, and that made him reckless. Instead
+of withdrawing he plunged deeper.
+
+"I won't have you two pretending you don't know each other," he
+blustered. "I won't stand being fooled! If you're going to deceive
+me before we're married, what will you do after we're married?"
+
+Charles emitted a howl. It was made up of disgust, amazement, and
+rage. Fiercely he turned upon Miss Proctor.
+
+"Let me have him!" he begged.
+
+"No!" almost shouted Miss Proctor. Her tone was no longer cold--it
+was volcanic. Her eyes, flashing beautifully, were fixed upon Griswold.
+She made a gesture as though to sweep Charles out of the room.
+"Please go!" she demanded. "This does not concern you."
+
+Her tone was one not lightly to be disregarded. Charles disregarded it.
+
+"It does concern me," he said briskly. "Nobody can insult a woman
+in my house--you, least of all!" He turned upon the greatest catch
+in America. "Griswold," he said, "I never met this lady until I
+came into this room; but I know her, understand her, value her
+better than you'd understand her if you knew her a thousand
+years!"
+
+Griswold allowed him to go no farther.
+
+"I know this much," he roared: "she was in love with the man who
+took those photographs, and that man was in love with her! And
+you're that man!"
+
+"What if I am!" roared back Charles. "Men always have loved her;
+men always will--because she's a fine, big, wonderful woman! You
+can't see that, and you never will. You insulted her! Now I'll give
+you time to apologize for that, and then I'll order you out of this
+house! And if Miss Proctor is the sort of girl I think she is, she'll
+order you out of it, too!"
+
+Both men swung toward Miss Proctor. Her eyes were now smiling
+excitedly. She first turned them upon Charles, blushing most
+becomingly.
+
+"Miss Proctor," she said, "hopes she is the sort of girl
+Mr. Cochran thinks she is." She then turned upon the greatest
+catch in America. "You needn't wait, Chester," she said, "not
+even to apologize."
+
+Chester Griswold, alone in his car, was driven back to New York.
+On the way he invented a story to explain why, at the eleventh
+hour, he had jilted Aline Proctor; but when his thoughts reverted
+to the young man he had seen working with his sleeves rolled up
+he decided it would be safer to let Miss Proctor tell of the broken
+engagement in her own way.
+
+Charles would not consent to drive his fair guest back to New
+York until she had first honored him with her presence at
+luncheon. It was served for two, on his veranda, under the
+climbing honeysuckles. During the luncheon he told her all.
+
+Miss Proctor, in the light of his five years of devotion,
+magnanimously forgave him.
+
+"Such a pretty house!" she exclaimed as they drove away from it.
+"When Griswold selected it for our honeymoon he showed his first
+appreciation of what I really like."
+
+"It is still at your service!" said Charles.
+
+Miss Proctor's eyes smiled with a strange light, but she did not
+speak. It was a happy ride; but when Charles left her at the door
+of her apartment-house he regarded sadly and with regret the
+bundle of retrieved photographs that she carried away.
+
+"What is it?" she asked kindly.
+
+"I'm thinking of going back to those empty frames," said Charles,
+and blushed deeply. Miss Proctor blushed also. With delighted
+and guilty eyes she hastily scanned the photographs. Snatching one
+from the collection, she gave it to him and then ran up the steps.
+
+In the light of the spring sunset the eyes of Charles devoured
+the photograph of which, at last, he was the rightful owner. On
+it was written: "As long as this rock lasts!"
+
+As Charles walked to his car his expression was distinctly
+thoughtful.
+
+
+
+
+THE MEN OF ZANZIBAR
+
+
+
+When his hunting trip in Uganda was over, Hemingway shipped his
+specimens and weapons direct from Mombasa to New York, but he
+himself journeyed south over the few miles that stretched to
+Zanzibar.
+
+On the outward trip the steamer had touched there, and the
+little he saw of the place had so charmed him that all the time
+he was on safari he promised himself he would not return home
+without revisiting it. On the morning he arrived he had called
+upon Harris, his consul, to inquire about the hotel; and that
+evening Harris had returned his call and introduced him at
+the club.
+
+One of the men there asked Hemingway what brought him to
+Africa, and when he answered simply and truthfully that he had
+come to shoot big game, it was as though he had said something
+clever, and every one smiled. On the way back to the hotel, as
+they felt their way through the narrow slits in the wall that
+served as streets, he asked the consul why every one had smiled.
+
+The consul laughed evasively.
+
+"It's a local joke," he explained. "A lot of men come here for
+reasons best kept to themselves, and they all say what you said,
+that they've come to shoot big game. It's grown to be a polite
+way of telling a man it is none of his business."
+
+"But I didn't mean it that way," protested Hemingway. "I really
+have been after big game for the last eight months."
+
+In the tone one uses to quiet a drunken man or a child, the
+consul answered soothingly.
+
+"Of course," he assented-- "of course you have." But to show he
+was not hopelessly credulous, and to keep Hemingway from
+involving himself deeper, he hinted tactfully: "Maybe they
+noticed you came ashore with only one steamer trunk and no
+gun-cases."
+
+"Oh, that's easily explained," laughed Hemingway. "My heavy
+luggage--"
+
+The consul had reached his house and his "boy" was pounding upon
+it with his heavy staff.
+
+"Please don't explain to me," he begged. "It's quite unnecessary.
+Down here we're so darned glad to see any white man that we don't
+ask anything of him except that he won't hurry away. We judge
+them as they behave themselves here; we don't care what they are
+at home or why they left it."
+
+Hemingway was highly amused. To find that he, a respectable,
+sport-loving Hemingway of Massachusetts, should be mistaken for a
+gun-runner, slave-dealer, or escaping cashier greatly delighted
+him.
+
+"All right!" he exclaimed. "I'll promise not to bore you with my past,
+and I agree to be judged by Zanzibar standards. I only hope I can
+live up to them, for I see I am going to like the place very much."
+
+Hemingway kept his promise. He bored no one with confidences as
+to his ancestors. Of his past he made a point never to speak. He
+preferred that the little community into which he had dropped
+should remain unenlightened, should take him as they found him.
+Of the fact that a college was named after his grandfather and
+that on his father's railroad he could travel through many
+States, he was discreetly silent.
+
+The men of Zanzibar asked no questions. That Hemingway could play
+a stiff game of tennis, a stiffer game of poker, and, on the piano, songs
+from home was to them sufficient recommendation. In a week he had
+become one of the most popular members of Zanzibar society. It was
+as though he had lived there always. Hemingway found himself reaching
+out to grasp the warmth of the place as a flower turns to the sun. He
+discovered that for thirty years something in him had been cheated.
+For thirty years he had believed that completely to satisfy his soul all
+he needed was the gray stone walls and the gray-shingled cabins under
+the gray skies of New England, that what in nature he most loved was
+the pine forests and the fields of goldenrod on the rock-bound coast
+of the North Shore. But now, like a man escaped from prison, he
+leaped and danced in the glaring sunlight of the equator, he revelled
+in the reckless generosity of nature, in the glorious confusion of
+colors, in the "blooming blue" of the Indian Ocean, in the Arabian
+nights spent upon the housetops under the purple sky, and beneath
+silver stars so near that he could touch them with his hand.
+
+He found it like being perpetually in a comic opera and playing a
+part in one. For only the scenic artist would dare to paint houses
+in such yellow, pink, and cobalt-blue; only a "producer" who had
+never ventured farther from Broadway than the Atlantic City
+boardwalk would have conceived costumes so mad and so
+magnificent. Instinctively he cast the people of Zanzibar in the
+conventional roles of musical comedy.
+
+His choruses were already in waiting. There was the Sultan's
+body-guard in gold-laced turbans, the merchants of the bazaars in
+red fezzes and gowns of flowing silk, the Malay sailors in blue,
+the black native police in scarlet, the ladies of the harems closely
+veiled and cloaked, the market women in a single garment of
+orange, or scarlet, or purple, or of all three, and the happy,
+hilarious Zanzibari boys in the color God gave them.
+
+For hours he would sit under the yellow-and-green awning of the
+Greek hotel and watch the procession pass, or he would lie under
+an umbrella on the beach and laugh as the boatmen lifted their
+passengers to their shoulders and with them splash through the
+breakers, or in the bazaars for hours he would bargain with the
+Indian merchants, or in the great mahogany hall of the Ivory
+House, to the whisper of a punka and the tinkle of ice in a tall
+glass, listen to tales of Arab raids, of elephant poachers, of
+the trade in white and black ivory, of the great explorers who
+had sat in that same room--of Emin Pasha, of Livingstone, of
+Stanley. His comic opera lacked only a heroine and the love
+interest.
+
+When he met Mrs. Adair he found both. Polly Adair, as every
+one who dared to do so preferred to call her, was, like himself, an
+American and, though absurdly young, a widow. In the States she
+would have been called an extremely pretty girl. In a community
+where the few dozen white women had wilted and faded in the
+fierce sun of the equator, and where the rest of the women were
+jet black except their teeth, which were dyed an alluring purple,
+Polly Adair was as beautiful as a June morning. At least, so
+Hemingway thought the first time he saw her, and each succeeding
+time he thought her more beautiful, more lovely, more to be loved.
+
+He met her, three days after his arrival, at the residence of the
+British agent and consul-general, where Lady Firth was giving tea
+to the six nurses from the English hospital and to all the other
+respectable members of Zanzibar society.
+
+"My husband's typist," said her ladyship as she helped Hemingway
+to tea, "is a copatriot of yours. She's such a nice gell; not a bit like
+an American. I don't know what I'd do in this awful place without her.
+Promise me," she begged tragically, "you will not ask her to marry you."
+
+Unconscious of his fate, Hemingway promised.
+
+"Because all the men do," sighed Lady Firth, "and I never know
+what morning one of the wretches won't carry her off to a home of
+her own. And then what would become of me? Men are so selfish!
+If you must fall in love," suggested her ladyship, "promise me you
+will fall in love with"--she paused innocently and raised baby-blue
+eyes, in a baby-like stare--"with some one else."
+
+Again Hemingway promised. He bowed gallantly. "That will be quite
+easy," he said.
+
+Her ladyship smiled, but Hemingway did not see the smile. He was
+looking past her at a girl from home, who came across the terrace
+carrying in her hand a stenographer's note-book.
+
+Lady Firth followed the direction of his eyes and saw the look in
+them. She exclaimed with dismay:
+
+"Already! Already he deserts me, even before the ink is dry on
+the paper."
+
+She drew the note-book from Mrs. Adair's fingers and dropped it
+under the tea-table.
+
+"Letters must wait, my child," she declared.
+
+"But Sir George--" protested the girl.
+
+"Sir George must wait, too," continued his wife; "the Foreign Office
+must wait, the British Empire must wait until you have had your tea."
+
+The girl laughed helplessly. As though assured her fellow
+countryman would comprehend, she turned to him.
+
+"They're so exactly like what you want them to be," she said--"I
+mean about their tea!"
+
+Hemingway smiled back with such intimate understanding that
+Lady Firth glanced up inquiringly.
+
+"Have you met Mrs. Adair already?" she asked.
+
+"No," said Hemingway, "but I have been trying to meet her for
+thirty years."
+
+Perplexed, the Englishwoman frowned, and then, with delight at
+her own perspicuity, laughed aloud.
+
+"I know," she cried, "in your country you are what they call a
+'hustler'! Is that right?" She waved them away. "Take Mrs. Adair
+over there," she commanded, "and tell her all the news from home.
+Tell her about the railroad accidents and 'washouts' and the
+latest thing in lynching."
+
+The young people stretched out in long wicker chairs in the shade
+of a tree covered with purple flowers. On a perch at one side of
+them an orang-outang in a steel belt was combing the whiskers of
+her infant daughter; at their feet what looked like two chow puppies,
+but which happened to be Lady Firth's pet lions, were chewing each
+other's toothless gums; and in the immediate foreground the hospital
+nurses were defying the sun at tennis while the Sultan's band played
+selections from a Gaiety success of many years in the past. With these
+surroundings it was difficult to talk of home. Nor on any later occasions,
+except through inadvertence, did they talk of home.
+
+For the reasons already stated, it amused Hemingway to volunteer
+no confidences. On account of what that same evening Harris told
+him of Mrs. Adair, he asked none.
+
+Harris himself was a young man in no way inclined to withhold
+confidences. He enjoyed giving out information. He enjoyed
+talking about himself, his duties, the other consuls, the Zanzibaris,
+and his native State of Iowa. So long as he was permitted to talk,
+the listener could select the subject. But, combined with his loquacity,
+Hemingway had found him kind-hearted, intelligent, observing, and
+the call of a common country had got them quickly together.
+
+Hemingway was quite conscious that the girl he had seen but once
+had impressed him out of all proportion to what he knew of her.
+She seemed too good to be true. And he tried to persuade himself
+that after eight months in the hinterland among hippos and zebras
+any reasonably attractive girl would have proved equally disturbing.
+
+But he was not convinced. He did not wish to be convinced. He
+assured himself that had he met Mrs. Adair at home among hundreds
+of others he would have recognized her as a woman of exceptional
+character, as one especially charming. He wanted to justify this
+idea of her; he wanted to talk of Mrs. Adair to Harris, not to learn
+more concerning her, but just for the pleasure of speaking her name.
+
+He was much upset at that, and the discovery that on meeting a
+woman for the first time he still could be so boyishly and ingenuously
+moved greatly pleased him. It was a most delightful secret. So he acted
+on the principle that when a man immensely admires a woman and
+wishes to conceal that fact from every one else he can best do so by
+declaring his admiration in the frankest and most open manner. After
+the tea-party, as Harris and himself sat in the consulate, he so expressed
+himself.
+
+"What an extraordinary nice girl," he exclaimed, "is that Mrs. Adair!
+I had a long talk with her. She is most charming. However did a
+woman like that come to be in a place like this?"
+
+Judging from his manner, it seemed to Hemingway that at the
+mention of Mrs. Adair's name he had found Harris mentally on
+guard, as though the consul had guessed the question would come
+and had prepared for it.
+
+"She just dropped in here one day," said Harris, "from no place
+in particular. Personally, I always have thought from heaven."
+
+"It's a good address," said Hemingway.
+
+"It seems to suit her," the consul agreed. "Anyway, if she doesn't come
+from there, that's where she's going--just on account of the good she's
+done us while she's been here. She arrived four months ago with a
+typewriting-machine and letters to me from our consuls in Cape Town
+and Durban. She had done some typewriting for them. It seems that
+after her husband died, which was a few months after they were married,
+she learned to make her living by typewriting. She worked too hard
+and broke down, and the doctor said she must go to hot countries, the
+'hotter the better.' So she's worked her way half around the world
+typewriting. She worked chiefly for her own consuls or for the American
+commission houses. Sometimes she stayed a month, sometimes only over
+one steamer day. But when she got here Lady Firth took such a fancy to
+her that she made Sir George engage her as his private secretary, and she's
+been here ever since."
+
+In a community so small as was that of Zanzibar the white residents
+saw one another every day, and within a week Hemingway had met
+Mrs. Adair many times. He met her at dinner, at the British agency;
+he met her in the country club, where the white exiles gathered for
+tea and tennis. He hired a launch and in her honor gave a picnic
+on the north coast of the island, and on three glorious and memorable
+nights, after different dinner-parties had ascended to the roof, he sat
+at her side and across the white level of the housetops looked down
+into the moonlit harbor.
+
+What interest the two young people felt in each other was in no
+way discouraged by their surroundings. In the tropics the tender
+emotions are not winter killed. Had they met at home, the
+conventions, his own work, her social duties would have kept the
+progress of their interest within a certain speed limit. But they
+were in a place free of conventions, and the preceding eight
+months which Hemingway had spent in the jungle and on the plain
+had made the society of his fellow man, and of Mrs. Adair in
+particular, especially attractive.
+
+Hemingway had no work to occupy his time, and he placed it
+unreservedly at the disposition of his countrywoman. In doing so
+it could not be said that Mrs. Adair encouraged him. Hemingway
+himself would have been the first to acknowledge this. From the
+day he met her he was conscious that always there was an intangible
+barrier between them. Even before she possibly could have guessed
+that his interest in her was more than even she, attractive as she was,
+had the right to expect, she had wrapped around herself an invisible
+mantle of defense.
+
+There were certain speeches of his which she never heard, certain tones
+to which she never responded. At moments when he was complimenting
+himself that at last she was content to be in his company, she would
+suddenly rise and join the others, and he would be left wondering in
+what way he could possibly have offended.
+
+He assured himself that a woman, young and attractive, in a
+strange land in her dependent position must of necessity be
+discreet, but in his conduct there certainly had been nothing
+that was not considerate, courteous, and straightforward.
+
+When he appreciated that he cared for her seriously, that he was
+gloriously happy in caring, and proud of the way in which he
+cared, the fact that she persistently held him at arm's length
+puzzled and hurt. At first when he had deliberately set to work
+to make her like him he was glad to think that, owing to his
+reticence about himself, if she did like him it would be for himself
+alone and not for his worldly goods. But when he knew her better
+he understood that if once Mrs. Adair made up her mind to take
+a second husband, the fact that he was a social and financial
+somebody, and not, as many in Zanzibar supposed Hemingway
+to be, a social outcast, would make but little difference.
+
+Nor was her manner to be explained by the fact that the majority
+of women found him unattractive. As to that, the pleasant burden
+of his experience was to the contrary. He at last wondered if
+there was some one else, if he had come into her life too late.
+He set about looking for the man and so, he believed, he soon
+found him.
+
+Of the little colony, Arthur Fearing was the man of whom Hemingway
+had seen the least. That was so because Fearing wished it. Like
+himself, Fearing was an American, young, and a bachelor, but,
+very much unlike Hemingway, a hermit and a recluse.
+
+Two years before he had come to Zanzibar looking for an
+investment for his money. In Zanzibar there were gentlemen
+adventurers of every country, who were welcome to live in any
+country save their own.
+
+To them Mr. Fearing seemed a heaven-sent victim. But to him their
+alluring tales of the fortunes that were to rise from buried treasures,
+lost mines, and pearl beds did not appeal. Instead he conferred
+with the consuls, the responsible merchants, the partners in the
+prosperous trading houses. After a month of "looking around" he
+had purchased outright the goodwill and stock of one of the oldest
+of the commission houses, and soon showed himself to be a most
+capable man of business. But, except as a man of business, no one
+knew him. From the dim recesses of his warehouse he passed each
+day to the seclusion of his bungalow in the country. And, although
+every one was friendly to him, he made no friends.
+
+It was only after the arrival of Mrs. Adair that he consented to show
+himself, and it was soon noted that it was only when she was invited
+that he would appear, and that on these occasions he devoted himself
+entirely to her. In the presence of others, he still was shy, gravely
+polite, and speaking but little, and never of himself; but with
+Mrs. Adair his shyness seemed to leave him, and when with her
+he was seen to talk easily and eagerly. And, on her part, to what
+he said, Polly Adair listened with serious interest.
+
+Lady Firth, who, at home, was a trained and successful match-maker,
+and who, in Zanzibar, had found but a limited field for her activities,
+decided that if her companion and protegee must marry, she should
+marry Fearing.
+
+Fearing was no gentleman adventurer, remittance-man, or humble
+clerk serving his apprenticeship to a steamship line or an ivory
+house. He was one of the pillars of Zanzibar society. The trading
+house he had purchased had had its beginnings in the slave-trade,
+and now under his alert direction was making a turnover equal to
+that of any of its ancient rivals. Personally, Fearing was a most
+desirable catch. He was well-mannered, well-read, of good
+appearance, steady, and, in a latitude only six degrees removed
+from the equator, of impeccable morals.
+
+It is said that it is the person who is in love who always is the
+first to discover his successful rival. It is either an instinct
+or because his concern is deeper than that of others.
+
+And so, when Hemingway sought for the influence that separated
+him from Polly Adair, the trail led to Fearing. To find that the
+obstacle in the path of his true love was a man greatly relieved
+him. He had feared that what was in the thoughts of Mrs. Adair
+was the memory of her dead husband. He had no desire to cross
+swords with a ghost. But to a living rival he could afford to be
+generous.
+
+For he was sure no one could care for Polly Adair as he cared,
+and, like every other man in love, he believed that he alone had
+discovered in her beauties of soul and character that to the rest
+of mankind were hidden. This knowledge, he assured himself, had
+aroused in him a depth of devotion no one else could hope to
+imitate, and this depth of devotion would in time so impress her,
+would become so necessary to her existence, that it would force
+her at last into the arms of the only man who could offer it.
+
+Having satisfied himself in this fashion, he continued cheerfully
+on his way, and the presence of a rival in no way discouraged
+him. It only was Polly Adair who discouraged him. And this,
+in spite of the fact that every hour of the day he tried to bring
+himself pleasantly to her notice. All that an idle young man in
+love, aided and abetted by imagination and an unlimited letter of
+credit, could do, Hemingway did. But to no end.
+
+The treasures he dug out of the bazaars and presented to her,
+under false pretenses as trinkets he happened at that moment
+to find in his pockets, were admired by her at their own great
+value, and returned also under false pretenses, as having been
+offered her only to examine.
+
+"It is for your sister at home, I suppose," she prompted. "It's
+quite lovely. Thank you for letting me see it."
+
+After having been several times severely snubbed in this fashion,
+Hemingway remarked grimly as he put a black pearl back into his
+pocket:
+
+"At this rate sister will be mighty glad to see me when I get
+home. It seems almost a pity I haven't got a sister."
+
+The girl answered this only with a grave smile.
+
+On another occasion she admired a polo pony that had been
+imported for the stable of the boy Sultan. But next morning
+Hemingway, after much diplomacy, became the owner of it and
+proudly rode it to the agency. Lady Firth and Polly Adair walked
+out to meet him arm in arm, but at sight of the pony there came
+into the eyes of the secretary a look that caused Hemingway to
+wish himself and his mount many miles in the jungle. He saw
+that before it had been proffered, his gift-horse had been rejected.
+He acted promptly.
+
+"Lady Firth," he said, "you've been so awfully kind to me, made this
+place so like a home to me, that I want you to put this mare in your
+stable. The Sultan wanted her, but when he learned I meant to turn
+her over to you, he let her go. We both hope you'll accept."
+
+Lady Firth had no scruples. In five minutes she had accepted, had
+clapped a side-saddle on her rich gift, and was cantering joyously
+down the Pearl Road.
+
+Polly Adair looked after her with an expression that was
+distinctly wistful. Thus encouraged, Hemingway said:
+
+"I'm glad you are sorry. I hope every time you see that pony
+you'll be sorry."
+
+"Why should I be sorry?" asked the girl.
+
+"Because you have been unkind," said Hemingway, "and it is not your
+character to be unkind. And that you have shown lack of character
+ought to make you sorry."
+
+"But you know perfectly well," said Mrs. Adair, "that if I were
+to take any one of these wonderful things you bring me, I wouldn't
+have any character left."
+
+She smiled at him reassuringly. "And you know," she added, "that
+that is not why I do not take them. It isn't because I can't afford to,
+or because I don't want them, because I do; but it's because I don't
+deserve them, because I can give you nothing in return."
+
+"As the copy-book says," returned Hemingway, "'the pleasure is in
+the giving.' If the copy-book don't say that, I do. And to pretend
+that you give me nothing, that is ridiculous!"
+
+It was so ridiculous that he rushed on vehemently. "Why, every
+minute you give me something," he exclaimed. "Just to see you,
+just to know you are alive, just to be certain when I turn in at
+night that when the world wakes up again you will still be a part
+of it; that is what you give me. And its name is--Happiness!"
+
+He had begun quite innocently; he had had no idea that it would
+come. But he had said it. As clearly as though he had dropped
+upon one knee, laid his hand over his heart and exclaimed: "Most
+beautiful of your sex, I love you! Will you marry me?" His eyes
+and the tone of his voice had said it. And he knew that he had
+said it, and that she knew.
+
+Her eyes were filled with sudden tears, and so wonderful was the
+light in them that for one mad moment Hemingway thought they were
+tears of happiness. But the light died, and what had been tears
+became only wet drops of water, and he saw to his dismay that she
+was most miserable.
+
+The girl moved ahead of him to the cliff on which the agency
+stood, and which overhung the harbor and the Indian Ocean. Her
+eyes were filled with trouble. As she raised them to his they begged
+of him to be kind.
+
+"I am glad you told me," she said. "I have been afraid it was
+coming. But until you told me I could not say anything. I tried
+to stop you. I was rude and unkind--"
+
+"You certainly were," Hemingway agreed cheerfully. "And the more
+you would have nothing to do with me, the more I admired you. And
+then I learned to admire you more, and then to love you. It seems now
+as though I had always known and always loved you. And now this
+is what we are going to do."
+
+He wouldn't let her speak; he rushed on precipitately.
+
+"We are first going up to the house to get your typewriting-machine,
+and we will bring it back here and hurl it as far as we can off this cliff.
+I want to see the splash! I want to hear it smash when it hits that rock.
+It has been my worst enemy, because it helped you to be independent
+of me, because it kept you from me. Time after time, on the veranda,
+when I was pretending to listen to Lady Firth, I was listening to that
+damned machine banging and complaining and tiring your pretty
+fingers and your dear eyes. So first it has got to go. You have been
+its slave, now I am going to be your slave. You have only to rub
+the lamp and things will happen. And because I've told you nothing
+about myself, you mustn't think that the money that helps to make
+them happen is 'tainted.' It isn't. Nor am I, nor my father, nor my
+father's father. I am asking you to marry a perfectly respectable
+young man. And, when you do--"
+
+Again he gave her no opportunity to interrupt, but rushed on
+impetuously: "We will sail away across that ocean to wherever
+you will take me. To Ceylon and Tokio and San Francisco, to Naples
+and New York, to Greece and Athens. They are all near. They are
+all yours. Will you accept them and me?" He smiled appealingly,
+but most miserably. For though he had spoken lightly and with
+confidence, it was to conceal the fact that he was not at all confident.
+As he had read in her eyes her refusal of his pony, he had read, even
+as he spoke, her refusal of himself. When he ceased speaking the girl
+answered:
+
+"If I say that what you tell me makes me proud, I am saying too little."
+She shook her head firmly, with an air of finality that frightened
+Hemingway. "But what you ask--what you suggest is impossible."
+
+"You don't like me?" said Hemingway.
+
+"I like you very much," returned the girl, "and, if I don't seem
+unhappy that it can't be, it is because I always have known it can't
+be--"
+
+"Why can't it be?" rebelled Hemingway. "I don't mean that I can't
+understand your not wanting to marry me, but if I knew your
+objection, maybe, I could beat it down."
+
+Again, with the same air of finality, the girl moved her head
+slowly, as though considering each word; she began cautiously.
+
+"I cannot tell you the reason," she said, "because it does not
+concern only myself."
+
+"If you mean you care for some one else," pleaded Hemingway,
+"that does not frighten me at all." It did frighten him extremely,
+but, believing that a faint heart never won anything, he pretended
+to be brave.
+
+"For you," he boasted, "I would go down into the grave as deep as
+any man. He that hath more let him give. I know what I offer. I
+know I love you as no other man--"
+
+The girl backed away from him as though he had struck her. "You
+must not say that," she commanded.
+
+For the first time he saw that she was moved, that the fingers
+she laced and unlaced were trembling. "It is final!" exclaimed
+the girl. "I cannot marry--you, or any one. I--I have promised.
+I am not free."
+
+"Nothing in the world is final," returned Hemingway sharply,
+"except death." He raised his hat and, as though to leave her,
+moved away. Not because he admitted defeat, but because he
+felt that for the present to continue might lose him the chance to
+fight again. But, to deliver an ultimatum, he turned back.
+
+"As long as you are alive, and I am alive," he told her, "all
+things are possible. I don't give up hope. I don't give up you."
+
+The girl exclaimed with a gesture of despair. "He won't understand!"
+she cried.
+
+Hemingway advanced eagerly.
+
+"Help me to understand," he begged.
+
+"You won't understand," explained the girl, "that I am speaking
+the truth. You are right that things can change in the future,
+but nothing can change the past. Can't you understand that?"
+
+"What do I care for the past?" cried the young man scornfully. "I
+know you as well as though I had known you for a thousand years
+and I love you."
+
+The girl flushed crimson.
+
+"Not my past," she gasped. "I meant--"
+
+"I don't care what you meant," said Hemingway. "I'm not prying
+into your little secrets. I know only one thing--two things, that
+I love you and that, until you love me, I am going to make your
+life hell!"
+
+He caught at her hands, and for an instant she let him clasp them
+in both of his, while she looked at him.
+
+Something in her face, other than distress and pity, caused his
+heart to leap. But he was too wise to speak, and, that she might
+not read the hope in his eyes, turned quickly and left her. He
+had not crossed the grounds of the agency before he had made up
+his mind as to the reason for her repelling him.
+
+"She is engaged to Fearing!" he told himself. "She has promised
+to marry Fearing! She thinks that it is too late to consider another
+man!" The prospect of a fight for the woman he loved thrilled him
+greatly. His lower jaw set pugnaciously.
+
+"I'll show her it's not too late," he promised himself. "I'll show her
+which of us is the man to make her happy. And, if I am not the
+man, I'll take the first outbound steamer and trouble them no more.
+But before that happens," he also promised himself, "Fearing must
+show he is the better man."
+
+In spite of his brave words, in spite of his determination, within the
+day Hemingway had withdrawn in favor of his rival, and, on the
+Crown Prince Eitel, bound for Genoa and New York, had booked his
+passage home.
+
+On the afternoon of the same day he had spoken to Polly Adair,
+Hemingway at the sunset hour betook himself to the consulate. At
+that hour it had become his custom to visit his fellow countryman
+and with him share the gossip of the day and such a cocktail as
+only a fellow countryman could compose. Later he was to dine at
+the house of the Ivory Company and, as his heart never ceased
+telling him, Mrs. Adair also was to be present.
+
+"It will be a very pleasant party," said Harris. "They gave me a
+bid, too, but it's steamer day to-morrow, and I've got to get my
+mail ready for the Crown Prince Eitel. Mrs. Adair is to be
+there."
+
+Hemingway nodded, and with pleasant anticipation waited. Of Mrs.
+Adair, Harris always spoke with reverent enthusiasm, and the man
+who loved her delighted to listen. But this time Harris disappointed
+him.
+
+"And Fearing, too," he added.
+
+Again Hemingway nodded. The conjunction of the two names surprised
+him, but he made no sign. Loquacious as he knew Harris to be, he never
+before had heard his friend even suggest the subject that to Zanzibar
+had become of acute interest.
+
+Harris filled the two glasses, and began to pace the room. When
+he spoke it was in the aggrieved tone of one who feels himself
+placed in a false position.
+
+"There's no one," he complained suddenly, "so popularly unpopular
+as the man who butts in. I know that, but still I've always taken his
+side. I've always been for him." He halted, straddling with legs
+apart and hands deep in his trousers pockets, and frowned down
+upon his guest.
+
+"Suppose," he began aggressively, "I see a man driving his car
+over a cliff. If I tell him that road will take him over a cliff,
+the worst that can happen to me is to be told to mind my own
+business, and I can always answer back: 'I was only trying to
+help you.' If I don't speak, the man breaks his neck. Between
+the two, it seems to me, sooner than have any one's life on my
+hands, I'd rather be told to mind my own business."
+
+Hemingway stared into his glass. His expression was distinctly
+disapproving, but, undismayed, the consul continued.
+
+"Now, we all know that this morning you gave that polo pony
+to Lady Firth, and one of us guesses that you first offered it to
+some one else, who refused it. One of us thinks that very soon,
+to-morrow, or even to-night, at this party you may offer that
+same person something else, something worth more than a polo
+pony, and that if she refuses that, it is going to break you all
+up, is going to hurt you for the rest of your life."
+
+Lifting his eyes from his glass, Hemingway shot at his friend a
+glance of warning. In haste, Harris continued:
+
+"I know," he protested, answering the look, "I know that this is
+where Mr. Buttinsky is told to mind his business. But I'm going
+right on. I'm going to state a hypothetical case with no names
+mentioned and no questions asked, or answered. I'm going to
+state a theory, and let you draw your own deductions."
+
+He slid into a chair, and across the table fastened his eyes on those
+of his friend. Confidently and undisturbed, but with a wry smile
+of dislike, Hemingway stared fixedly back at him.
+
+"What," demanded Harris, "is the first rule in detective work?"
+
+Hemingway started. He was prepared for something unpleasant, but
+not for that particular form of unpleasantness. But his faith was
+unshaken, and he smiled confidently. He let the consul answer his
+own question.
+
+"It is to follow the woman," declared Harris. "And, accordingly,
+what should be the first precaution of a man making his get-away?
+To see that the woman does not follow. But suppose we are dealing
+with a fugitive of especial intelligence, with a criminal who has
+imagination and brains? He might fix it so that the woman could
+follow him without giving him away, he might plan it so that no one
+would suspect. She might arrive at his hiding-place only after many
+months, only after each had made separately a long circuit of the
+globe, only after a journey with a plausible and legitimate object.
+She would arrive disguised in every way, and they would meet as
+total strangers. And, as strangers under the eyes of others, they
+would become acquainted, would gradually grow more friendly,
+would be seen more frequently together, until at last people would
+say: 'Those two mean to make a match of it.' And then, one day,
+openly, in the sight of all men, with the aid of the law and the
+church, they would resume those relations that existed before the
+man ran away and the woman followed."
+
+There was a short silence.
+
+Hemingway broke it in a tone that would accept no denial.
+
+"You can't talk like that to me," he cried. "What do you mean?"
+
+Without resentment, the consul regarded him with grave solicitude.
+His look was one of real affection, and, although his tone held the
+absolute finality of the family physician who delivers a sentence
+of death, he spoke with gentleness and regret.
+
+"I mean," he said, "that Mrs. Adair is not a widow, that the man
+she speaks of as her late husband is not dead; that that man is
+Fearing!"
+
+Hemingway felt afraid. A month before a rhinoceros had charged
+him and had dropped at his feet. At another time a wounded lioness
+had leaped into his path and crouched to spring. Then he had not
+been afraid. Then he had aimed as confidently as though he were
+firing at a straw target. But now he felt real fear: fear of something
+he did not comprehend, of a situation he could not master, of an
+adversary as strong as Fate. By a word something had been snatched
+from him that he now knew was as dear to him as life, that was life,
+that was what made it worth continuing. And he could do nothing
+to prevent it; he could not help himself. He was as impotent as the
+prisoner who hears the judge banish him into exile. He tried to adjust
+his mind to the calamity. But his mind refused. As easily as with his
+finger a man can block the swing of a pendulum and halt the progress
+of the clock, Harris with a word had brought the entire world to a full
+stop.
+
+And then, above his head, Hemingway heard the lazy whisper of the
+punka, and from the harbor the raucous whistle of the Crown Prince
+Eitel, signalling her entrance. The world had not stopped; for the
+punka-boy, for the captain of the German steamer, for Harris seated
+with face averted, the world was still going gayly and busily forward.
+Only for him had it stopped.
+
+In spite of the confident tone in which Harris had spoken, in spite of
+the fact that unless he knew it was the truth, he would not have spoken,
+Hemingway tried to urge himself to believe there had been some
+hideous, absurd error. But in answer came back to him snatches
+of talk or phrases the girl had last addressed to him: "You can
+command the future, but you cannot change the past. I cannot
+marry you, or any one! I am not free!"
+
+And then to comfort himself, he called up the look he had surprised
+in her eyes when he stood holding her hands in his. He clung to it,
+as a drowning man will clutch even at a piece of floating seaweed.
+
+When he tried to speak he found his voice choked and stifled, and
+that his distress was evident, he knew from the pity he read in the
+eyes of Harris.
+
+In a voice strange to him, he heard himself saying: "Why do you
+think that? You've got to tell me. I have a right to know. This
+morning I asked Mrs. Adair to marry me."
+
+The consul exclaimed with dismay and squirmed unhappily. "I
+didn't know," he protested. "I thought I was in time. I ought to
+have told you days ago, but--"
+
+"Tell me now," commanded Hemingway.
+
+"I know it in a thousand ways," began Harris.
+
+Hemingway raised his eyes hopefully.
+
+But the consul shook his head. "But to convince you," he went on,
+"I need tell you only one. The thousand other proofs are looks they
+have exchanged, sentences I have chanced to overhear, and that each
+of them unknown to the other has told me of little happenings and
+incidents which I found were common to both. Each has described
+the house in which he or she lived, and it was the same house. They
+claim to come from different cities in New England, they came from
+the same city. They claim--"
+
+"That is no proof," cried Hemingway, "either that they are married,
+or that the man is a criminal."
+
+For a moment Harris regarded the other in silence. Then he said:
+"You're making it very hard for me. I see I've got to show you.
+It's kindest, after all, to cut quick." He leaned farther forward,
+and his voice dropped. Speaking quickly, he said:
+
+"Last summer I lived outside the town in a bungalow on the Pearl
+Road. Fearing's house was next to mine. This was before Mrs.
+Adair went to live at the agency, and while she was alone in
+another bungalow farther down the road. I was ill that summer;
+my nerves went back on me. I couldn't sleep. I used to sit all night
+on my veranda and pray for the sun to rise. From where I sat it was
+dark and no one could see me, but I could see the veranda of Fearing's
+house and into his garden. And night after night I saw Mrs. Adair
+creep out of Fearing's house, saw him walk with her to the gate, saw
+him in the shadow of the bushes take her in his arms, and saw them
+kiss." The voice of the consul rose sharply. "No one knows that but
+you and I, and," he cried defiantly, "it is impossible for us to believe
+ill of Polly Adair. The easy explanation we refuse. It is intolerable.
+And so you must believe as I believe; that when she visited Fearing
+by night she went to him because she had the right to go to him,
+because already she was his wife. And now when every one here
+believes they met for the first time in Zanzibar, when no one will be
+surprised if they should marry, they will go through the ceremony
+again, and live as man and wife, as they are, as they were before he
+fled from America!"
+
+Hemingway was seated with his elbows on the table and his face in
+his hands. He was so long silent that Harris struck the table roughly
+with his palm.
+
+"Well," he demanded, "why don't you speak? Do you doubt her?
+Don't you believe she is his wife?"
+
+"I refuse to believe anything else!" said Hemingway. He rose, and
+slowly and heavily moved toward the door. "And I will not trouble
+them any more," he added. "I'll leave at sunrise on the Eitel."
+
+Harris exclaimed in dismay, but Hemingway did not hear him. In
+the doorway he halted and turned back. From his voice all trace
+of emotion had departed. "Why," he asked dully, "do you think
+Fearing is a fugitive? Not that it matters to her, since she loves
+him, or that it matters to me. Only I would like to think you were
+wrong. I want her to have only the best."
+
+Again the consul moved unhappily.
+
+"I oughtn't to tell you," he protested, "and if I do I ought to tell the
+State Department, and a detective agency first. They have the call.
+They want him, or a man damned like him." His voice dropped to a
+whisper. "The man wanted is Henry Brownell, a cashier of a bank in
+Waltham, Mass., thirty-five years of age, smooth-shaven, college-bred,
+speaking with a marked New England accent, and--and with other
+marks that fit Fearing like the cover on a book. The department and
+the Pinkertons have been devilling the life out of me about it for nine
+months. They are positive he is on the coast of Africa. I put them off.
+I wasn't sure."
+
+"You've been protecting them," said Hemingway.
+
+"I wasn't sure," reiterated Harris. "And if I were, the Pinkertons can do
+their own sleuthing. The man's living honestly now, anyway, isn't he?"
+he demanded; "and she loves him. At least she's stuck by him. Why
+should I punish her?"
+
+His tone seemed to challenge and upbraid.
+
+"Good God!" cried the other, "I'm not blaming you! I'd be proud of the
+chance to do as much. I asked because I'd like to go away thinking she's
+content, thinking she's happy with him."
+
+"Doesn't it look as though she were?" Harris protested. "She's followed
+him--followed him half around the globe. If she'd been happier away
+from him, she'd have stayed away from him."
+
+So intent had been the men upon their talk that neither had noted
+the passing of the minutes or, what at other times was an event
+of moment, that the mail steamer had distributed her mail and
+passengers; and when a servant entered bearing lamps, and from
+the office the consul's clerk appeared with a bundle of letters
+from the Eitel, both were taken by surprise.
+
+"So late?" exclaimed Hemingway. "I must go. If I'm to sail with
+the Eitel at daybreak, I've little time!"
+
+But he did not go.
+
+As he advanced toward Harris with his hand outstretched in adieu,
+the face of the consul halted him. With the letters, the clerk
+had placed upon the table a visiting-card, and as it lay in the
+circle of light from the lamp the consul, as though it were alive
+and menacing, stared at it in fascination. Moving stiffly, he
+turned it so that Hemingway could see. On it Hemingway read,
+"George S. Sheyer," and, on a lower line, "Representing William
+L. Pinkerton."
+
+To the woman he loved the calamity they dreaded had come, and
+Hemingway, with a groan of dismay, exclaimed aloud:
+
+"It is the end!"
+
+From the darkness of the outer office a man stepped softly into
+the circle of the lamp. They could see his figure only from the
+waist down; the rest of him was blurred in shadows.
+
+"'It is the end'?" he repeated inquiringly. He spoke the phrase
+with peculiar emphasis, as though to impress it upon the memory
+of the two others. His voice was cool, alert, authoritative. "The
+end of what?" he demanded sharply.
+
+The question was most difficult. In the silence the detective
+moved into the light. He was tall and strongly built, his face
+was shrewd and intelligent. He might have been a prosperous man
+of business.
+
+"Which of you is the consul?" he asked. But he did not take his
+eyes from Hemingway.
+
+"I am the consul," said Harris. But still the detective did not
+turn from Hemingway.
+
+"Why," he asked, "did this gentleman, when he read my card, say,
+'It is the end'? The end of what? Has anything been going on here
+that came to an end when he saw my card?"
+
+Disconcerted, in deep embarrassment, Harris struggled for a word.
+But his distress was not observed by the detective. His eyes,
+suspicious and accusing, still were fixed upon Hemingway, and
+under their scrutiny Harris saw his friend slowly retreat, slowly
+crumple up into a chair, slowly raise his hands to cover his
+face. As though in a nightmare, he heard him saying savagely:
+
+"It is the end of two years of hell, it is the end of two years
+of fear and agony! Now I shall have peace. Now I shall sleep!
+I thank God you've come! I thank God I can go back!"
+
+Harris broke the spell by leaping to his feet. He sprang between
+the two men.
+
+"What does this mean?" he commanded.
+
+Hemingway raised his eyes and surveyed him steadily.
+
+"It means," he said, "that I have deceived you, Harris--that I am
+the man you told me of, I am the man they want." He turned to the
+officer.
+
+"I fooled him for four months," he said. "I couldn't fool you for
+five minutes."
+
+The eyes of the detective danced with sudden excitement, joy, and
+triumph. He shot an eager glance from Hemingway to the consul.
+
+"This man," he demanded; "who is he?"
+
+With an impatient gesture Hemingway signified Harris.
+
+"He doesn't know who I am," he said. "He knows me as Hemingway.
+I am Henry Brownell, of Waltham, Mass." Again his face sank into
+the palms of his hands. "And I'm tired--tired," he moaned. "I am
+sick of not knowing, sick of running away. I give myself up."
+
+The detective breathed a sigh of relief that seemed to issue from
+his soul.
+
+"My God," he sighed, "you've given me a long chase! I've had
+eleven months of you, and I'm as sick of this as you are." He
+recovered himself sharply. As though reciting an incantation, he
+addressed Hemingway in crisp, emotionless notes.
+
+"Henry Brownell," he chanted, "I arrest you in the name of the
+commonwealth of Massachusetts for the robbery, on October the
+eleventh, nineteen hundred and nine, of the Waltham Title and
+Trust Company. I understand," he added, "you waive extradition
+and return with me of your own free will?"
+
+With his face still in his hands, Hemingway murmured assent. The
+detective stepped briskly and uninvited to the table and seated himself.
+He was beaming with triumph, with pleasurable excitement.
+
+"I want to send a message home, Mr. Consul," he said. "May I use
+your cable blanks?"
+
+Harris was still standing in the centre of the room looking down
+upon the bowed head and shoulders of Hemingway. Since, in
+amazement, he had sprung toward him, he had not spoken. And
+he was still silent.
+
+Inside the skull of Wilbur Harris, of Iowa, U. S. A., American
+consul to Zanzibar, East Africa, there was going forward a mighty
+struggle that was not fit to put into words. For Harris and his
+conscience had met and were at odds. One way or the other the
+fight must be settled at once, and whatever he decided must be
+for all time. This he understood, and as his sympathies and
+conscience struggled for the mastery the pen of the detective,
+scratching at racing speed across the paper, warned him that only
+a few seconds were left him in which to protest or else to forever
+after hold his peace.
+
+So realistic had been the acting of Hemingway that for an instant
+Harris himself had been deceived. But only for an instant. With
+his knowledge of the circumstances he saw that Hemingway was not
+confessing to a crime of his own, but drawing across the trail of the
+real criminal the convenient and useful red herring. He knew that
+already Hemingway had determined to sail the next morning. In
+leaving Zanzibar he was making no sacrifice. He merely was
+carrying out his original plan, and by taking away with him the
+detective was giving Brownell and his wife at least a month in
+which to again lose themselves.
+
+What was his own duty he could not determine. That of Hemingway
+he knew nothing, he could truthfully testify. And if now Hemingway
+claimed to be Henry Brownell, he had no certain knowledge to the
+contrary. That through his adventure Hemingway would come to
+harm did not greatly disturb him. He foresaw that his friend need
+only send a wireless from Nantucket and at the wharf witnesses
+would swarm to establish his identity and make it evident the
+detective had blundered. And in the meanwhile Brownell and
+his wife, in some settlement still further removed from observation,
+would for the second time have fortified themselves against pursuit
+and capture. He saw the eyes of Hemingway fixed upon him in appeal
+and warning.
+
+The brisk voice of the detective broke the silence.
+
+"You will testify, if need be, Mr. Consul," he said, "that you
+heard the prisoner admit he was Henry Brownell and that he
+surrendered himself of his own free will?"
+
+For an instant the consul hesitated, then he nodded stiffly.
+
+"I heard him," he said.
+
+Three hours later, at ten o' clock of the same evening, the detective
+and Hemingway leaned together on the rail of the Crown Prince
+Eitel. Forward, in the glare of her cargo lights, to the puffing and
+creaking of derricks and donkey engines, bundles of beeswax, of
+rawhides, and precious tusks of ivory were being hurled into the
+hold; from the shore-boats clinging to the ship's sides came the
+shrieks of the Zanzibar boys, from the smoking-room the blare of
+the steward's band and the clink of glasses. Those of the youth of
+Zanzibar who were on board, the German and English clerks and
+agents, saw in the presence of Hemingway only a purpose similar
+to their own; the desire of a homesick exile to gaze upon the mirrored
+glories of the Eitel's saloon, at the faces of white men and women, to
+listen to home-made music, to drink home-brewed beer. As he passed
+the smoking-room they called to him, and to the stranger at his elbow,
+but he only nodded smiling and, avoiding them, ascended to the shadow
+of the deserted boat-deck.
+
+"You are sure," he said, "you told no one?"
+
+"No one," the detective answered. "Of course your hotel proprietor
+knows you're sailing, but he doesn't know why. And, by sunrise,
+we'll be well out at sea."
+
+The words caught Hemingway by the throat. He turned his eyes to
+the town lying like a field of snow in the moonlight. Somewhere
+on one of its flat roofs a merry dinner-party was laughing, drinking,
+perhaps regretting his absence, wondering at his excuse of sudden
+illness. She was there, and he with the detective like a shadow at
+his elbow, was sailing out of her life forever. He had seen her for
+the last time: that morning for the last time had looked into her
+eyes, had held her hands in his. He saw the white beach, the white
+fortress-like walls, the hanging gardens, the courtesying palms,
+dimly. It was among those that he who had thought himself content,
+had found happiness, and had then seen it desert him and take out of
+his life pleasure in all other things. With a pain that seemed impossible
+to support, he turned his back upon Zanzibar and all it meant to him.
+And, as he turned, he faced, coming toward him, across the moonlit deck,
+Fearing.
+
+His instinct was to cry out to the man in warning, but his second
+thought showed him that through his very effort to protect the other,
+he might bring about his undoing. So, helpless to prevent, in agitation
+and alarm, he waited in silence. Of the two men, Fearing appeared the
+least disturbed. With a polite but authoritative gesture he turned to the
+detective. "I have something to say to this gentleman before he sails,"
+he said; "would you kindly stand over there?"
+
+He pointed across the empty deck at the other rail.
+
+In the alert, confident young man in the English mess-jacket,
+clean-shaven and bronzed by the suns of the equator, the detective
+saw no likeness to the pale, bearded bank clerk of the New England
+city. This, he guessed, must be some English official, some friend
+of Brownell's who generously had come to bid the unfortunate fugitive
+Godspeed.
+
+Assured of this, the detective also bowed politely, and, out of
+hearing, but with his prisoner in full view, took up a position
+against the rail opposite.
+
+Turning his back upon the detective, and facing Hemingway with
+his eyes close to his, Fearing began abruptly. His voice was sunk
+to a whisper, but he spoke without the slightest sign of trepidation,
+without the hesitation of an instant.
+
+"Two years ago, when I was indicted," he whispered, "and ran
+away, Polly paid back half of the sum I stole. That left her
+without a penny; that's why she took to this typewriting. Since
+then, I have paid back nearly all the rest. But Polly was not
+satisfied. She wanted me to take my punishment and start fresh.
+She knew they were watching her so she couldn't write this to me,
+but she came to me by a roundabout way, taking a year to get
+here. And all the time she's been here, she's been begging me to
+go back and give myself up. I couldn't see it. I knew in a few
+months I'd have paid back all I took, and I thought that was enough.
+I wanted to keep out of jail. But she said I must take my medicine
+in our own country, and start square with a clean slate. She's done
+a lot for me, and whether I'd have done that for her or not, I don't
+know. But now, I must! What you did to-night to save me, leaves
+me no choice. So, I'll sail--"
+
+With an exclamation of anger, Hemingway caught the other by the
+shoulder and dragged him closer.
+
+"To save you!" he whispered. "No one's thinking of you. I didn't
+do it for you. I did it, that you both could escape together, to
+give you time--"
+
+"But I tell you," protested Fearing, "she doesn't want me to escape.
+And maybe she's right. Anyway, we're sailing with you at--"
+
+"We?" echoed Hemingway.
+
+That again he was to see the woman he loved, that for six weeks
+through summer seas he would travel in her company, filled him
+with alarm, with distress, with a wonderful happiness.
+
+"We?" he whispered, steadying his voice. "Then--then your wife is
+going with you?"
+
+Fearing gazed at him as though the other had suddenly gone mad.
+
+"My wife!" he exclaimed. "I haven't got a wife!" If you mean
+Polly--Mrs. Adair, she is my sister! And she wants to thank you.
+She's below--"
+
+He was not allowed to finish. Hemingway had flung him to one
+side, and was racing down the deck.
+
+The detective sprang in pursuit.
+
+"One moment, there!" he shouted.
+
+But the man in the white mess-jacket barred his way.
+
+In the moonlight the detective saw that the alert, bronzed young man
+was smiling.
+
+"That's all right," said Fearing. "He'll be back in a minute. Besides,
+you don't want him. I'm the man you want."
+
+
+
+
+THE LONG ARM
+
+
+
+The safe was an old one that opened with a key. As adjutant,
+Captain Swanson had charge of certain funds of the regiment and
+kept in the safe about five thousand dollars. No one but himself
+and Rueff, his first sergeant, had access to it. And as Rueff proved
+an alibi, the money might have been removed by an outsider. The
+court-martial gave Swanson the benefit of the doubt, and a reprimand
+for not taking greater care of the keys, and Swanson made good the
+five thousand.
+
+Swanson did not think it was a burglar who had robbed the safe.
+He thought Rueff had robbed it, but he could not possibly prove
+that. At the time of the robbery Rueff was outside the Presidio,
+in uniform, at a moving-picture show in San Francisco. A dozen
+people saw him there. Besides, Rueff held an excellent record.
+He was a silent, clerk-like young man, better at "paper work" than
+campaigning, but even as a soldier he had never come upon the books.
+And he had seen service in two campaigns, and was supposed to
+cherish ambitions toward a commission. But, as he kept much to
+himself, his fellow non-coms could only guess that.
+
+On his captain's account he was loyally distressed over the
+court-martial, and in his testimony tried to shield Swanson, by
+agreeing heartily that through his own carelessness the keys
+might have fallen into the hands of some one outside the post.
+But his loyalty could not save his superior officer from what was
+a verdict virtually of "not proven."
+
+It was a most distressing affair, and, on account of the social
+prominence of Swanson's people, his own popularity, and the name
+he had made at Batangas and in the Boxer business, was much
+commented upon, not only in the services, but by the newspapers
+all over the United States.
+
+
+Every one who knew Swanson knew the court-martial was only a
+matter of form. Even his enemies ventured only to suggest that
+overnight he might have borrowed the money, meaning to replace it
+the next morning. And the only reason for considering this explanation
+was that Swanson was known to be in debt. For he was a persistent
+gambler. Just as at Pekin he had gambled with death for his number,
+in times of peace he gambled for money. It was always his own money.
+
+From the start Swanson's own attitude toward the affair was one
+of blind, unreasoning rage. In it he saw no necessary routine of
+discipline, only crass, ignorant stupidity. That any one should
+suspect him was so preposterous, so unintelligent, as to be nearly
+comic. And when, instantly, he demanded a court of inquiry, he
+could not believe it when he was summoned before a court-martial.
+It sickened, wounded, deeply affronted him; turned him quite savage.
+
+On his stand his attitude and answers were so insolent that his
+old friend and classmate, Captain Copley, who was acting as his
+counsel, would gladly have kicked him. The findings of the
+court-martial, that neither cleared nor condemned, and the
+reprimand, were an intolerable insult to his feelings, and, in a
+fit of bitter disgust with the service and every one in it, Swanson
+resigned. Of course, the moment he had done so he was sorry.
+Swanson's thought was that he could no longer associate with
+any one who could believe him capable of theft. It was his
+idea of showing his own opinion of himself and the army.
+
+But no one saw it in that light. On the contrary, people said:
+"Swanson has been allowed to resign." I n the army, voluntarily
+resigning and being "allowed to resign" lest greater evils befall,
+are two vastly different things. And when it was too late no one
+than Swanson saw that more clearly. His anger gave way to extreme
+morbidness. He believed that in resigning he had assured every one
+of his guilt. In every friend and stranger he saw a man who doubted
+him. He imagined snubs, rebuffs, and coldnesses. His morbidness
+fastened upon his mind like a parasite upon a tree, and the brain
+sickened. When men and women glanced at his alert, well-set-up
+figure and shoulders, that even when he wore "cits" seemed to support
+epaulets, and smiled approvingly, Swanson thought they sneered. In
+a week he longed to be back in the army with a homesickness that made
+every one who belonged to it his enemy.
+
+He left San Francisco, where he was known to all, and travelled
+south through Texas, and then to New Orleans and Florida. He
+never could recall this period with clearness. He remembered
+changing from one train to another, from one hotel to the next.
+Nothing impressed itself upon him. For what he had lost nothing
+could give consolation. Without honor life held no charm. And
+he believed that in the eyes of all men he was a thief, a pariah,
+and an outcast.
+
+He had been in Cuba with the Army of Occupation, and of that
+beautiful island had grown foolishly fond. He was familiar with
+every part of it, and he believed in one or another of its pretty
+ports he could so completely hide himself that no one could
+intrude upon his misery. In the States, in the newspapers he
+seemed to read only of those places where he had seen service, of
+those places and friends and associates he most loved. In the
+little Cuban village in which he would bury himself he would cut
+himself off from all newspapers, from all who knew him; from
+those who had been his friends, and those who knew his name only
+to connect it with a scandal.
+
+On his way from Port Tampa to Cuba the boat stopped at Key West,
+and for the hour in which she discharged cargo Swanson went
+ashore and wandered aimlessly. The little town, reared on a flat
+island of coral and limestone, did not long detain him. The main
+street of shops, eating-houses, and saloons, the pretty residences
+with overhanging balconies, set among gardens and magnolia-trees,
+were soon explored, and he was returning to the boat when the martial
+music of a band caused him to halt. A side street led to a great gateway
+surmounted by an anchor. Beyond it Swanson saw lawns of well-kept
+grass, regular paths, pretty cottages, the two-starred flag of an admiral,
+and, rising high above these, like four Eiffel towers, the gigantic masts
+of a wireless. He recognized that he was at the entrance to the Key
+West naval station, and turned quickly away.
+
+He walked a few feet, the music of the band still in his ears. In
+an hour he would be steaming toward Cuba, and, should he hold to
+his present purpose, in many years this would be the last time he
+would stand on American soil, would see the uniform of his country,
+would hear a military band lull the sun to sleep. It would hurt, but
+he wondered if it were not worth the hurt. A smart sergeant of marines,
+in passing, cast one glance at the man who seemed always to wear
+epaulets, and brought his hand sharply to salute. The act determined
+Swanson. He had obtained the salute under false pretenses, but it had
+pleased, not hurt him. He turned back and passed into the gate of the
+naval station.
+
+From the gate a grass-lined carriage drive led to the waters of
+the harbor and the wharfs. At its extreme end was the band-stand,
+flanked on one side by the cottage of the admiral, on the other
+by a sail-loft with iron-barred windows and whitewashed walls.
+Upon the turf were pyramids of cannon-balls and, laid out in rows
+as though awaiting burial, old-time muzzle-loading guns. Across
+the harbor the sun was sinking into the coral reefs, and the spring
+air, still warm from its caresses, was stirred by the music of the
+band into gentle, rhythmic waves. The scene was one of peace,
+order, and content.
+
+But as Swanson advanced, the measure of the music was instantly
+shattered by a fierce volley of explosions. They came so suddenly
+and sharply as to make him start. It was as though from his flank
+a quick-firing gun in ambush had opened upon him. Swanson smiled
+at having been taken unawares. For in San Francisco he often had
+heard the roar and rattle of the wireless. But never before had he
+listened to an attack like this.
+
+From a tiny white-and-green cottage, squatting among the four
+giant masts, came the roar of a forest fire. One could hear the
+crackle of the flames, the crash of the falling tree-trunks. The
+air about the cottage was torn into threads; beneath the shocks
+of the electricity the lawn seemed to heave and tremble. It was
+like some giant monster, bound and fettered, struggling to be
+free. Now it growled sullenly, now in impotent rage it spat and
+spluttered, now it lashed about with crashing, stunning blows. It
+seemed as though the wooden walls of the station could not
+contain it.
+
+From the road Swanson watched, through the open windows of the
+cottage, the electric bolts flash and flare and disappear. The thing
+appealed to his imagination. Its power, its capabilities fascinated
+him. In it he saw a hungry monster reaching out to every corner
+of the continent and devouring the news of the world; feeding
+upon tales of shipwreck and disaster, lingering over some dainty
+morsel of scandal, snatching from ships and cities two thousand
+miles away the thrice-told tale of a conflagration, the score of a
+baseball match, the fall of a cabinet, the assassination of a king.
+
+In a sudden access of fierceness, as though in an ecstasy over
+some fresh horror just received, it shrieked and chortled. And
+then, as suddenly as it had broken forth, it sank to silence, and
+from the end of the carriage drive again rose, undisturbed, the
+music of the band.
+
+The musicians were playing to a select audience. On benches
+around the band-stand sat a half dozen nurse-maids with knitting
+in their hands, the baby-carriages within arm's length. On the
+turf older children of the officers were at play, and up and down
+the paths bareheaded girls, and matrons, and officers in uniform
+strolled leisurely. From the vine-covered cottage of Admiral
+Preble, set in a garden of flowering plants and bending palmettos,
+came the tinkle of tea-cups and the ripple of laughter, and at a
+respectful distance, seated on the dismantled cannon, were
+marines in khaki and bluejackets in glistening white.
+
+It was a family group, and had not Swanson recognized among the
+little audience others of the passengers from the steamer and
+natives of the town who, like himself, had been attracted by the
+music, he would have felt that he intruded. He now wished to
+remain. He wanted to carry with him into his exile a memory of
+the men in uniform, of the music, and pretty women, of the gorgeous
+crimson sunset. But, though he wished to remain, he did not wish
+to be recognized.
+
+From the glances already turned toward him, he saw that in this
+little family gathering the presence of a stranger was an event,
+and he was aware that during the trial the newspapers had made
+his face conspicuous. Also it might be that stationed at the post
+was some officer or enlisted man who had served with him in Cuba,
+China, or the Philippines, and who might point him out to others.
+Fearing this, Swanson made a detour and approached the band-stand
+from the wharf, and with his back to a hawser-post seated himself
+upon the string-piece.
+
+He was overcome with an intolerable melancholy. From where he
+sat he could see, softened into shadows by the wire screens of the
+veranda, Admiral Preble and his wife and their guests at tea. A
+month before, he would have reported to the admiral as the
+commandant of the station, and paid his respects. Now he could
+not do that; at least not without inviting a rebuff. A month
+before, he need only have shown his card to the admiral's orderly,
+and the orderly and the guard and the officers' mess and the
+admiral himself would have turned the post upside down to do
+him honor. But of what avail now was his record in three
+campaigns? Of what avail now was his medal of honor? They
+now knew him as Swanson, who had been court-martialled, who
+had been allowed to resign, who had left the army for the army's
+good; they knew him as a civilian without rank or authority, as an
+ex-officer who had robbed his brother officers, as an outcast.
+
+His position, as his morbid mind thus distorted it, tempted
+Swanson no longer. For being in this plight he did not feel that
+in any way he was to blame. But with a flaming anger he still
+blamed his brother officers of the court-martial who had not
+cleared his name and with a clean bill of health restored him to
+duty. Those were the men he blamed; not Rueff, the sergeant, who
+he believed had robbed him, nor himself, who, in a passion of
+wounded pride, had resigned and so had given reason for gossip;
+but the men who had not in tones like a bugle-call proclaimed his
+innocence, who, when they had handed him back his sword, had
+given it grudgingly, not with congratulation.
+
+
+As he saw it, he stood in a perpetual pillory. When they had
+robbed him of his honor they had left him naked, and life without
+honor had lost its flavor. He could eat, he could drink, he could
+exist. He knew that in many corners of the world white arms would
+reach out to him and men would beckon him to a place at table.
+
+But he could not cross that little strip of turf between him and
+the chattering group on the veranda and hand his card to the
+admiral's orderly. Swanson loved life. He loved it so that
+without help, money, or affection he could each morning have
+greeted it with a smile. But life without honor! He felt a sudden
+hot nausea of disgust. Why was he still clinging to what had
+lost its purpose, to what lacked the one thing needful?
+
+
+"If life be an ill thing," he thought, "I can lay it down!"
+
+The thought was not new to him, and during the two past weeks of
+aimless wandering he had carried with him his service automatic.
+To reassure himself he laid his fingers on its cold smooth surface.
+He would wait, he determined, until the musicians had finished
+their concert and the women and children had departed, and then--
+
+Then the orderly would find him where he was now seated, sunken
+against the hawser-post with a hole through his heart. To his disordered
+brain his decision appeared quite sane. He was sure he never had been
+more calm. And as he prepared himself for death he assured himself
+that for one of his standard no other choice was possible. Thoughts
+of the active past, or of what distress in the future his act would bring
+to others, did not disturb him. The thing had to be, no one lost more
+heavily than himself, and regrets were cowardly.
+
+He counted the money he had on his person and was pleased to find
+there was enough to pay for what services others soon must render
+him. In his pockets were letters, cards, a cigarette-case, each of
+which would tell his identity. He had no wish to conceal it, for of
+what he was about to do he was not ashamed. It was not his act.
+He would not have died "by his own hand." To his unbalanced
+brain the officers of the court-martial were responsible. It was
+they who had killed him. As he saw it, they had made his death
+as inevitable as though they had sentenced him to be shot at
+sunrise.
+
+A line from "The Drums of the Fore and Aft" came back to him.
+Often he had quoted it, when some one in the service had suffered
+through the fault of others. It was the death-cry of the boy officer,
+Devlin. The knives of the Ghazi had cut him down, but it was his
+own people's abandoning him in terror that had killed him. And so,
+with a sob, he flung the line at the retreating backs of his comrades:
+"You've killed me, you cowards!"
+
+Swanson, nursing his anger, repeated this savagely. He wished he
+could bring it home to those men of the court-martial. He wished
+he could make them know that his death lay at their door. He
+determined that they should know. On one of his visiting-cards he
+pencilled:
+"To the Officers of my Court-Martial: 'You've killed me, you
+cowards!'"
+
+He placed the card in the pocket of his waistcoat. They would
+find it just above the place where the bullet would burn the cloth.
+
+The band was playing "Auf Wiedersehen," and the waltz carried
+with it the sadness that had made people call the man who wrote
+it the waltz king. Swanson listened gratefully. He was glad that
+before he went out, his last mood had been of regret and gentleness.
+The sting of his anger had departed, the music soothed and sobered
+him. It had been a very good world. Until he had broken the spine
+of things it had treated him well, far better, he admitted, than he
+deserved. There were many in it who had been kind, to whom he
+was grateful. He wished there was some way by which he could let
+them know that. As though in answer to his wish, from across the
+parade-ground the wireless again began to crash and crackle; but now
+Swanson was at a greater distance from it, and the sighing rhythm of
+the waltz was not interrupted.
+
+Swanson considered to whom he might send a farewell message, but
+as in his mind he passed from one friend to another, he saw that to
+each such a greeting could bring only distress. He decided it was
+the music that had led him astray. This was no moment for false
+sentiment. He let his hand close upon the pistol.
+
+The audience now was dispersing. The nurse-maids had collected
+their charges, the musicians were taking apart their music-racks,
+and from the steps of the vine-covered veranda Admiral Preble was
+bidding the friends of his wife adieu. At his side his aide, young,
+alert, confident, with ill-concealed impatience awaited their departure.
+Swanson found that he resented the aide. He resented the manner in
+which he speeded the parting guests. Even if there were matters of
+importance he was anxious to communicate to his chief, he need not
+make it plain to the women folk that they were in the way.
+
+When, a month before, he had been adjutant, in a like situation he
+would have shown more self-command. He disapproved of the aide
+entirely. He resented the fact that he was as young as himself,
+that he was in uniform, that he was an aide. Swanson certainly
+hoped that when he was in uniform he had not looked so much the
+conquering hero, so self-satisfied, so supercilious. With a smile
+he wondered why, at such a moment, a man he had never seen
+before, and never would see again, should so disturb him.
+
+In his heart he knew. The aide was going forward just where he
+was leaving off. The ribbons on the tunic of the aide, the straps
+on his shoulders, told Swanson that they had served in the same
+campaigns, that they were of the same relative rank, and that
+when he himself, had he remained in the service, would have been
+a brigadier-general the aide would command a battle-ship. The
+possible future of the young sailor filled Swanson with honorable
+envy and bitter regret. With all his soul he envied him the right
+to look his fellow man in the eye, his right to die for his country,
+to give his life, should it be required of him, for ninety million
+people, for a flag. Swanson saw the two officers dimly, with eyes
+of bitter self-pity. He was dying, but he was not dying gloriously
+for a flag. He had lost the right to die for it, and he was dying
+because he had lost that right.
+
+The sun had sunk and the evening had grown chill. At the wharf
+where the steamer lay on which he had arrived, but on which he
+was not to depart, the electric cargo lights were already burning.
+But for what Swanson had to do there still was light enough.
+From his breast-pocket he took the card on which he had
+written his message to his brother officers, read and reread it,
+and replaced it.
+
+Save for the admiral and his aide at the steps of the cottage,
+and a bareheaded bluejacket who was reporting to them, and the
+admiral's orderly, who was walking toward Swanson, no one was
+in sight. Still seated upon the stringpiece of the wharf, Swanson
+so moved that his back was toward the four men. The moment
+seemed propitious, almost as though it had been prearranged. For
+with such an audience, for his taking off no other person could be
+blamed. There would be no question but that death had been
+self-inflicted.
+
+Approaching from behind him Swanson heard the brisk steps of the
+orderly drawing rapidly nearer. He wondered if the wharf were
+government property, if he were trespassing, and if for that reason
+the man had been sent to order him away. He considered bitterly
+that the government grudged him a place even in which to die.
+Well, he would not for long be a trespasser. His hand slipped
+into his pocket, with his thumb he lowered the safety-catch of
+the pistol.
+
+But the hand with the pistol in it did not leave his pocket. The
+steps of the orderly had come to a sudden silence. Raising his
+head heavily, Swanson saw the man, with his eyes fixed upon him,
+standing at salute. They had first made his life unsupportable,
+Swanson thought, now they would not let him leave it.
+
+"Captain Swanson, sir?" asked the orderly.
+
+Swanson did not speak or move.
+
+"The admiral's compliments, sir," snapped the orderly, "and will
+the captain please speak with him?"
+
+Still Swanson did not move.
+
+
+He felt that the breaking-point of his self-control had come.
+This impertinent interruption, this thrusting into the last few
+seconds of his life of a reminder of all that he had lost, this
+futile postponement of his end, was cruel, unhuman, unthinkable.
+The pistol was still in his hand. He had but to draw it and
+press it close, and before the marine could leap upon him he
+would have escaped.
+
+From behind, approaching hurriedly, came the sound of
+impatient footsteps.
+
+The orderly stiffened to attention. "The admiral!" he warned.
+
+Twelve years of discipline, twelve years of recognition of authority,
+twelve years of deference to superior officers, dragged Swanson's
+hand from his pistol and lifted him to his feet. As he turned,
+Admiral Preble, the aide, and the bareheaded bluejacket were
+close upon him. The admiral's face beamed, his eyes were young
+with pleasurable excitement; with the eagerness of a boy he waved
+aside formal greetings.
+
+"My dear Swanson," he cried, "I assure you it's a most astonishing,
+most curious coincidence! See this man?" He flung out his arm at
+the bluejacket. "He's my wireless chief. He was wireless operator
+on the transport that took you to Manila. When you came in here
+this afternoon he recognized you. Half an hour later he picks up
+a message--picks it up two thousand miles from here--from San
+Francisco--Associated Press news--it concerns you; that is, not
+really concerns you, but I thought, we thought"-as though
+signalling for help, the admiral glanced unhappily at his aide-
+"we thought you'd like to know. Of course, to us," he added
+hastily, "it's quite superfluous--quite superfluous, but--"
+
+The aide coughed apologetically. "You might read, sir," he
+suggested.
+
+"What? Exactly! Quite so!" cried the admiral.
+
+In the fading light he held close to his eyes a piece of paper.
+
+"San Francisco, April 20," he read. "Rueff, first sergeant, shot
+himself here to-day, leaving written confession theft of regimental
+funds for which Swanson, captain, lately court-martialled. Money
+found intact in Rueff's mattress. Innocence of Swanson never
+questioned, but dissatisfied with findings of court-martial has
+left army. Brother officers making every effort to find him and
+persuade return."
+
+The admiral sighed happily. "And my wife," he added, with an
+impressiveness that was intended to show he had at last arrived
+at the important part of his message, "says you are to stay to
+dinner."
+
+Abruptly, rudely, Swanson swung upon his heel and turned his face
+from the admiral. His head was thrown back, his arms held rigid
+at his sides. In slow, deep breaths, like one who had been dragged
+from drowning, he drank in the salt, chill air. After one glance the
+four men also turned, and in the falling darkness stood staring at
+nothing, and no one spoke.
+
+The aide was the first to break the silence. In a polite tone, as
+though he were continuing a conversation which had not been
+interrupted, he addressed the admiral. "Of course, Rueff's written
+confession was not needed," he said.
+
+"His shooting himself proved that he was guilty."
+
+Swanson started as though across his naked shoulders the aide had
+drawn a whip.
+
+In penitence and gratitude he raised his eyes to the stars. High
+above his head the strands of the wireless, swinging from the
+towering masts like the strings of a giant Aeolian harp, were
+swept by the wind from the ocean. To Swanson the sighing and
+whispering wires sang in praise and thanksgiving.
+
+
+
+
+THE GOD OF COINCIDENCE
+
+
+
+The God of Coincidence is fortunate in possessing innumerable
+press agents. They have made the length of his arm a proverb. How
+at exactly the right moment he extends it across continents and
+drags two and two together, thus causing four to result where but
+for him sixes and sevens would have obtained, they have made
+known to the readers of all of our best magazines. For instance,
+Holworthy is leaving for the Congo to find a cure for the sleeping
+sickness, and for himself any sickness from which one is warranted
+never to wake up. This is his condition because the beautiful
+million-heiress who is wintering at the Alexander Young Hotel
+in Honolulu has refused to answer his letters, cables, and appeals.
+
+He is leaning upon the rail taking his last neck-breaking look at
+the Woolworth Building. The going-ashore bugle has sounded,
+pocket-handkerchiefs are waving; and Joe Hutton, the last visitor
+to leave the ship, is at the gangway.
+
+"Good-by, Holworthy!" he calls. "Where do you keep yourself?
+Haven't seen you at the club in a year!"
+
+"Haven't been there in a year--nor mean to!" is the ungracious
+reply of our hero.
+
+"Then, for Heaven's sake," exclaims Hutton, "send some one to
+take your mail out of the H box! Every time I look for letters
+I wade through yours."
+
+"Tear them up!" calls Holworthy. "They're bills."
+
+Hutton now is half-way down the gangplank.
+
+"Then your creditors," he shouts back, "must all live at the
+Alexander Young Hotel in Honolulu!"
+
+That night an express train shrieking through the darkness
+carried with it toward San Francisco--
+
+In this how evident is the fine Italian hand of the God of
+Coincidence!
+
+Had Hutton's name begun with an M; had the H in Hutton been
+silent; had he not carried to the Mauretania a steamer basket for
+his rich aunt; had he not resented the fact that since Holworthy's
+election to the Van Sturtevant Club he had ceased to visit the
+Grill Club--a cure for sleeping sickness might have been discovered;
+but two loving hearts never would have been reunited and that story
+would not have been written.
+
+Or, Mrs. Montclair, with a suit-case, is leaving her home forever
+to join handsome Harry Bellairs, who is at the corner with a
+racing-car and all the money of the bank of which he has been
+cashier. As the guilty woman places the farewell letter against
+the pin-cushion where her husband will be sure to find it, her
+infant son turns in his sleep and jabs himself with a pin. His
+howl of anguish resembles that of a puppy on a moonlight night.
+The mother recognizes her master's voice. She believes her child
+dying, flies to the bedside, tears up the letter, unpacks the suit-case.
+The next morning at breakfast her husband, reading the newspaper,
+exclaims aloud:
+
+"Harry Bellairs," he cries, "has skipped with the bank's money! I
+always told you he was not a man you ought to know."
+
+"His manner to me," she says severely, "always was that of a
+perfect gentleman."
+
+Again coincidence gets the credit. Had not the child tossed--had
+not at the critical moment the safety pin proved untrue to the man
+who invented it--that happy family reunion would have been
+impossible.
+
+Or, it might be told this way:
+
+Old Man McCurdy, the Pig-Iron King, forbids his daughter Gwendolyn
+even to think of marrying poor but honest Beef Walters, the baseball
+pitcher, and denies him his house. The lovers plan an elopement.
+At midnight Beef is to stand at the tradesman's entrance and whistle
+"Waiting at the Church"; and down the silent stairs Gwendolyn is to
+steal into his arms. At the very same hour the butler has planned with
+the policeman on fixed post to steal Mother McCurdy's diamonds
+and pass them to a brother of the policeman, who is to wait at the
+tradesman's entrance and whistle "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee."
+
+This sounds improbable--especially that the policeman would
+allow even his brother to get the diamonds before he did; but,
+with the God of Coincidence on the job, you shall see that it
+will all come out right. Beef is first at the door. He whistles.
+The butler--an English butler--with no ear for music, shoves into
+his hands tiaras and sunbursts. Honest Beef hands over the butler
+to the policeman and the tiaras to Mother McCurdy.
+
+"How can I reward you?" exclaims the grateful woman.
+
+"Your daughter's hand!"
+
+Again the God of Coincidence scores and Beef Walters is credited
+with an assist. And for preventing the robbery McCurdy has the
+peg-post cop made a captain; thus enabling him to wear diamonds
+of his own and raising him above the need of taking them from
+others.
+
+These examples of what the god can do are mere fiction; the story
+that comes now really happened. It also is a story of coincidence.
+It shows how this time the long arm was stretched out to make two
+young people happy; it again illustrates that, in the instruments he
+chooses, the God of Coincidence works in a mysterious way his
+wonders to perform. This time the tool he used was a hat of green felt.
+
+The story really should be called "The Man in the Green Hat."
+
+At St. James's Palace the plenipotentiaries of the Allies and of Turkey
+were trying to bring peace to Europe; in Russell Square, Bloomsbury,
+Sam Lowell was trying to arrange a peace with Mrs. Wroxton, his
+landlady. The ultimatum of the Allies was: "Adrianople or fight!"
+The last words of Mrs. Wroxton were: "Five pounds or move out!"
+
+Sam did not have five pounds. He was a stranger in London; he had
+lost his position in New York and that very morning had refused to
+marry the girl he loved--Polly Seward, the young woman the Sunday
+papers called "The Richest Girl in America."
+
+For any man--for one day--that would seem to be trouble enough; but
+to the Sultan of Turkey that day brought troubles far more serious.
+And, as his losses were Sam's gain, we must follow the troubles of
+the Sultan. Until, with the aid of a green felt hat, the God of
+Coincidence turns the misfortunes of the Sultan into a fortune
+for Sam, Sam must wait.
+
+From the first days of the peace conference it was evident there
+was a leak. The negotiations had been opened under a most solemn
+oath of secrecy. As to the progress of the conference, only such
+information or misinformation--if the diplomats considered it better-
+as was mutually agreed upon by the plenipotentiaries was given to
+a waiting world. But each morning, in addition to the official report
+of the proceedings of the day previous, one newspaper, the Times,
+published an account which differed from that in every other paper,
+and which undoubtedly came from the inside. In details it was far
+more generous than the official report; it gave names, speeches,
+arguments; it described the wordy battles of the diplomats, the
+concessions, bluffs, bargains.
+
+After three days the matter became public scandal. At first, the
+plenipotentiaries declared the events described in the Times were
+invented each evening in the office of the Times; but the proceedings
+of the day following showed the public this was not so.
+
+Some one actually present at the conference was telling tales out
+of school. These tales were cabled to Belgrade, Sofia, Athens,
+Constantinople; and hourly from those capitals the plenipotentiaries
+were assailed by advice, abuse, and threats. The whole world began
+to take part in their negotiations; from every side they were attacked;
+from home by the Young Turks, or the On to Constantinople Party;
+and from abroad by peace societies, religious bodies, and chambers
+of commerce. Even the armies in the field, instead of waiting for the
+result of their deliberations, told them what to do, and that unless
+they did it they would better remain in exile. To make matters worse,
+in every stock exchange gambling on the news furnished by the Times
+threatened the financial peace of Europe. To work under such
+conditions of publicity was impossible. The delegates appealed to
+their hosts of the British Foreign Office.
+
+Unless the chiel amang them takin' notes was discovered and the
+leak stopped, they declared the conference must end. Spurred on
+by questions in Parliament, by appeals from the great banking world,
+by criticisms not altogether unselfish from the other newspapers,
+the Foreign Office surrounded St. James's Palace and the office
+of the Times with an army of spies. Every secretary, stenographer,
+and attendant at the conference was under surveillance, his past
+record looked into, his present comings and goings noted. Even
+the plenipotentiaries themselves were watched; and employees of
+the Times were secretly urged to sell the government the man who
+was selling secrets to them. But those who were willing to be "urged"
+did not know the man; those who did know him refused to be bought.
+
+By a process of elimination suspicion finally rested upon one
+Adolf Hertz, a young Hungarian scholar who spoke and wrote all
+the mongrel languages of the Balkans; who for years, as a copying
+clerk and translator, had been employed by the Foreign Office,
+and who now by it had been lent to the conference. For the reason
+that when he lived in Budapest he was a correspondent of the
+Times, the police, in seeking for the leak, centred their attention
+upon Hertz. But, though every moment he was watched, and though
+Hertz knew he was watched, no present link between him and the
+Times had been established- and this in spite of the fact that the
+hours during which it was necessary to keep him under closest
+observation were few. Those were the hours between the closing
+of the conference, and midnight, when the provincial edition of the
+Times went to press. For the remainder of the day, so far as the
+police cared, Hertz could go to the devil! But for those hours,
+except when on his return from the conference he locked himself
+in his lodgings in Jermyn Street, detectives were always at his elbow.
+
+It was supposed that it was during this brief period when he was
+locked in his room that he wrote his report; but how, later, he
+conveyed it to the Times no one could discover. In his rooms there
+was no telephone; his doors and windows were openly watched;
+and after leaving his rooms his movements were--as they always
+had been--methodical, following a routine open to observation.
+His programme was invariably the same. Each night at seven from
+his front door he walked west. At Regent Street he stopped to buy
+an evening paper from the aged news-vender at the corner; he then
+crossed Piccadilly Circus into Coventry Street, skirted Leicester
+Square, and at the end of Green Street entered Pavoni's Italian
+restaurant. There he took his seat always at the same table, hung
+his hat always on the same brass peg, ordered the same Hungarian
+wine, and read the same evening paper. He spoke to no one; no one
+spoke to him.
+
+When he had finished his coffee and his cigarette he returned to
+his lodgings, and there he remained until he rang for breakfast.
+From the time at which he left his home until his return to it he
+spoke to only two persons--the news-vender to whom he handed
+a halfpenny; the waiter who served him the regular table d'hote
+dinner--between whom and Hertz nothing passed but three and six
+for the dinner and sixpence for the waiter himself.
+
+Each evening, the moment he moved into the street a plain-clothes
+man fell into step beside him; another followed at his heels; and
+from across the street more plain-clothes men kept their eyes on
+every one approaching him in front or from the rear. When he
+bought his evening paper six pairs of eyes watched him place a
+halfpenny in the hand of the news-vender, and during the entire
+time of his stay in Pavoni's every mouthful he ate was noted-
+-
+every direction he gave the waiter was overheard.
+
+Of this surveillance Hertz was well aware. To have been ignorant
+of it would have argued him blind and imbecile. But he showed no
+resentment. With eyes grave and untroubled, he steadily regarded
+his escort; but not by the hastening of a footstep or the acceleration
+of a gesture did he admit that by his audience he was either distressed
+or embarrassed. That was the situation on the morning when the
+Treaty of London was to be signed and sealed.
+
+In spite of the publicity given to the conference by the Times,
+however, what the terms of the treaty might be no one knew. If
+Adrianople were surrendered; if Salonika were given to Greece; if
+Servia obtained a right-of-way to the Adriatic--peace was assured;
+but, should the Young Turks refuse--should Austria prove obstinate-
+not only would the war continue, but the Powers would be involved,
+and that greater, more awful war--the war dreaded by all the Christian
+world--might turn Europe into a slaughter-house.
+
+Would Turkey and Austria consent and peace ensue? Would they
+refuse and war follow? That morning those were the questions on
+the lips of every man in London save one. He was Sam Lowell; and
+he was asking himself another and more personal question: "How
+can I find five pounds and pacify Mrs. Wroxton?"
+
+He had friends in New York who would cable him money to pay his
+passage home; but he did not want to go home. He preferred to
+starve in London than be vulgarly rich anywhere else. That was
+not because he loved London, but because above everything in life
+he loved Polly Seward--and Polly Seward was in London. He had
+begun to love her on class day of his senior year; and, after his
+father died and left him with no one else to care for, every day
+he had loved her more.
+
+Until a month before he had been in the office of Wetmore &
+Hastings, a smart brokers' firm in Wall Street. He had obtained
+the position not because he was of any use to Wetmore & Hastings,
+but because the firm was the one through which his father had
+gambled the money that would otherwise have gone to Sam. In
+giving Sam a job the firm thought it was making restitution. Sam
+thought it was making the punishment fit the crime; for he knew
+nothing of the ways of Wall Street, and having to learn them bored
+him extremely. He wanted to write stories for the magazines. He
+wanted to bind them in a book and dedicate them to Polly. And
+in this wish editors humored him--but not so many editors or with
+such enthusiasm as to warrant his turning his back on Wall Street.
+
+That he did later when, after a tour of the world that had begun
+from the San Francisco side, Polly Seward and her mother and
+Senator Seward reached Naples. There Senator Seward bought
+old Italian furniture for his office on the twenty-fifth floor of the
+perfectly new Seward building. Mrs. Seward tried to buy for Polly
+a prince nearly as old as the furniture, and Polly bought picture
+post-cards which she sent to Sam.
+
+Polly had been absent six months, and Sam's endurance had been so
+timed as just to last out the half-year. It was not guaranteed to
+withstand any change of schedule, and the two months' delay in
+Italy broke his heart. It could not run overtime on a starvation
+diet of post-cards; so when he received a cable reading, "Address
+London, Claridge's," his heart told him it could no longer wait-
+and he resigned his position and sailed.
+
+On her trip round the world Polly had learned many things. She
+was observant, alert, intent on asking questions, hungering for
+facts. And a charming young woman who seeks facts rather than
+attention will never lack either. But of all the facts Polly collected,
+the one of surpassing interest, and which gave her the greatest
+happiness, was that she could not live without Sam Lowell. She
+had suspected this, and it was partly to make sure that she had
+consented to the trip round the world. Now that she had made
+sure, she could not too soon make up for the days lost. Sam had
+spent his money, and he either must return to New York and earn
+more or remain near Polly and starve. It was an embarrassing
+choice. Polly herself made the choice even more difficult.
+
+One morning when they walked in St. James's Park to feed the
+ducks she said to him:
+
+"Sam, when are we to be married?"
+
+When for three years a man has been begging a girl to marry him,
+and she consents at the exact moment when, without capitulation
+to all that he holds honorable, he cannot marry anybody, his
+position deserves sympathy.
+
+"My dear one," exclaimed the unhappy youth, "you make me the
+most miserable of men! I can't marry! I'm in an awful place! If I
+married you now I'd be a crook! It isn't a question of love in a
+cottage, with bread and cheese. If cottages were renting for a
+dollar a year I couldn't rent one for ten minutes. I haven't cheese
+enough to bait a mouse-trap. It's terrible! But we have got to wait."
+
+"Wait!" cried Polly. "I thought you had been waiting! Have I been
+away too long? Do you love some one else?"
+
+"Don't be ridiculous!" said Sam crossly. "Look at me," he
+commanded, "and tell me whom I love!"
+
+Polly did not take time to look.
+
+"But I," she protested, "have so much money!"
+
+"It's not your money," explained Sam. "It's your mother's money
+or your father's, and both of them dislike me. They even have told
+me so. Your mother wants you to marry that Italian; and your
+father, having half the money in America, naturally wants to
+marry you to the other half. If I were selfish and married you
+I'd be all the things they think I am."
+
+"You are selfish!" cried Polly. "You're thinking of yourself and
+of what people will say, instead of how to make me happy. What's
+the use of money if you can't buy what you want?"
+
+"Are you suggesting you can buy me?" demanded Sam.
+
+"Surely," said Polly--"if I can't get you any other way. And you
+may name your own price, too."
+
+"When I am making enough to support myself without sponging on
+you," explained Sam, "you can have as many millions as you like;
+but I must first make enough to keep me alive. A man who can't do
+that isn't fit to marry."
+
+"How much," demanded Polly, "do you need to keep you alive? Maybe
+I could lend it to you."
+
+Sam was entirely serious.
+
+"Three thousand a year," he said.
+
+Polly exclaimed indignantly.
+
+"I call that extremely extravagant!" she cried. "If we wait until you
+earn three thousand a year we may be dead. Do you expect to earn
+that writing stories?"
+
+"I can try," said Sam--"or I will rob a bank."
+
+Polly smiled upon him appealingly.
+
+"You know how I love your stories," she said, "and I wouldn't
+hurt your feelings for the world; but, Sam dear, I think you had
+better rob a bank!"
+
+Addressing an imaginary audience, supposedly of men, Sam
+exclaimed:
+
+"Isn't that just like a woman? She wouldn't care," he protested,
+"how I got the money!"
+
+Polly smiled cheerfully.
+
+"Not if I got you!" she said. In extenuation, also, she addressed
+an imaginary audience, presumably of women. "That's how I love
+him!" she exclaimed. "And he asks me to wait! Isn't that just like
+a man? Seriously," she went on, "if we just go ahead and get married
+father would have to help us. He'd make you a vice-president or
+something."
+
+At this suggestion Sam expressed his extreme displeasure.
+
+"The last time I talked to your father," he said, "I was in a position
+to marry, and I told him I wanted to marry you. What he said to
+that was: 'Don't be an ass!' Then I told him he was unintelligent--
+and I told him why. First, because he could not see that a man
+might want to marry his daughter in spite of her money; and
+second, because he couldn't see that her money wouldn't make
+up to a man for having him for a father-in-law."
+
+"Did you have to tell him that?" asked Polly.
+
+"Some one had to tell him," said Sam gloomily. "Anyway, as a
+source of revenue father is eliminated. I have still one chance
+in London. If that fails I must go home. I've been promised a job
+in New York reporting for a Wall Street paper--and I'll write stories
+on the side. I've cabled for money, and if the London job falls
+through I shall sail Wednesday."
+
+"Wednesday!" cried Polly. "When you say things like 'Wednesday'
+you make the world so dark! You must stay here! It has been such
+a long six months; and before you earn three thousand dollars I
+shall be an old, old maid. But if you get work here we could see
+each other every day."
+
+They were in the Sewards' sitting-room at Claridge's. Sam took up
+the desk telephone.
+
+"In London," he said, "my one best and only bet is a man named
+Forsythe, who helps edit the Pall Mall. I'll telephone him now.
+If he can promise me even a shilling a day I'll stay on and starve--
+but I'll be near you. If Forsythe fails me I shall sail Wednesday."
+
+The telephone call found Forsythe at the Pall Mall office. He would
+be charmed to advise Mr. Lowell on a matter of business. Would he
+that night dine with Mr. Lowell? He would. And might he suggest
+that they dine at Pavoni's? He had a special reason for going there,
+and the dinner would cost only three and six.
+
+"That's reason enough!" Sam told him.
+
+"And don't forget," said Polly when, for the fifth time, Sam rose
+to go, "that after your dinner you are to look for me at the Duchess
+of Deptford's dance. I asked her for a card and you will find it at
+your lodgings. Everybody will be there; but it is a big place-full
+of dark corners where we can hide."
+
+"Don't hide until I arrive," said Sam. "I shall be very late, as
+I shall have to walk. After I pay for Forsythe's dinner and for
+white gloves for your dance I shall not be in a position to hire
+a taxi. But maybe I shall bring good news. Maybe Forsythe will
+give me the job. If he does we will celebrate in champagne.
+"
+
+"You will let me at least pay for the champagne?" begged Polly.
+
+"No," said Sam firmly--"the duchess will furnish that."
+
+When Sam reached his lodgings in Russell Square, which he
+approached with considerable trepidation, he found Mrs. Wroxton
+awaiting him. But her attitude no longer was hostile. On the
+contrary, as she handed him a large, square envelope, decorated
+with the strawberry leaves of a duke, her manner was humble.
+
+Sam opened the envelope and, with apparent carelessness, stuck it
+over the fireplace.
+
+"About that back rent," he said; "I have cabled for money, and as
+soon--"
+
+"I know," said Mrs. Wroxton. "I read the cable." She was reading
+the card of invitation also. "There's no hurry, sir," protested Mrs.
+Wroxton. "Any of my young gentlemen who is made welcome at
+Deptford House is made welcome here!"
+
+"Credit, Mrs. Wroxton," observed Sam, "is better than cash. If
+you have only cash you spend it and nothing remains. But with
+credit you can continue indefinitely to-to-"
+
+"So you can!" exclaimed Mrs. Wroxton enthusiastically. "Stay as
+long as you like, Mr. Lowell."
+
+At Pavoni's Sam found Forsythe already seated and, with evident
+interest, observing the scene of gayety before him. The place was
+new to Sam, and after the darkness and snow of the streets it
+appeared both cheerful and resplendent. It was brilliantly lighted;
+a ceiling of gay panels picked out with gold, and red plush sofas,
+backed against walls hung with mirrors and faced by rows of
+marble-topped tables, gave it an air of the Continent.
+
+Sam surrendered his hat and coat to the waiter. The hat was a
+soft Alpine one of green felt. The waiter hung it where Sam
+could see it, on one of many hooks that encircled a gilded pillar.
+
+After two courses had been served Forsythe said:
+
+"I hope you don't object to this place. I had a special reason
+for wishing to be here on this particular night. I wanted to be
+in at the death!"
+
+"Whose death?" asked Sam. "Is the dinner as bad as that?"
+
+Forsythe leaned back against the mirror behind them and, bringing
+his shoulder close to Sam's, spoke in a whisper.
+
+"As you know," he said, "to-day the delegates sign the Treaty of
+London. It still must receive the signatures of the Sultan and
+the three kings; and they will sign it. But until they do, what
+the terms of the treaty are no one can find out."
+
+"I'll bet the Times finds out!" said Sam.
+
+"That's it!" returned Forsythe. "Hertz, the man who is supposed to
+be selling the secrets of the conference to the Times, dines here.
+To-night is his last chance. If to-night he can slip the Times a
+copy of the Treaty of London without being caught, and the
+Times has the courage to publish it, it will be the biggest
+newspaper sensation of modern times; and it will either cause
+a financial panic all over Europe--or prevent one. The man they
+suspect is facing us. Don't look now, but in a minute you will
+see him sitting alone at a table on the right of the middle pillar.
+The people at the tables nearest him--even the women--are
+detectives. His waiter is in the employ of Scotland Yard. The
+maitre d'hotel, whom you will see always hovering round his
+table, is a police agent lent by Bulgaria. For the Allies are even
+more anxious to stop the leak than we are. We are interested
+only as their hosts; with them it is a matter of national life or
+death. A week ago one of our own inspectors tipped me off to
+what is going on, and every night since then I've dined here,
+hoping to see something suspicious."
+
+"Have you?" asked Sam.
+
+"Only this," whispered Forsythe--"on four different nights I've
+recognized men I know are on the staff of the Times, and on the
+other nights men I don't know may have been here. But after all
+that proves nothing, for this place is a resort of newspaper writers
+and editors--and the Times men's being here may have been only
+a coincidence."
+
+"And Hertz?" asked Sam--"what does he do?"
+
+The Englishman exclaimed with irritation.
+
+"Just what you see him doing now!" he protested. "He eats his
+dinner! Look at him!" he commanded. "Of all in the room he's the
+least concerned."
+
+Sam looked and saw the suspected Adolf Hertz dangling a mass
+of macaroni on the end of his fork. Sam watched him until it
+disappeared.
+
+"Maybe that's a signal!" suggested Sam. "Maybe everything he does
+is part of a cipher code! He gives the signals and the Times men
+read them and write them down."
+
+"A man would have a fine chance to write anything down in this
+room!" said Forsythe.
+
+"But maybe," persisted Sam, "when he makes those strange
+movements with his lips he is talking to a confederate who can
+read the lip language. The confederate writes it down at the
+office and--"
+
+"Fantastic and extremely improbable!" commented Forsythe. "But,
+nevertheless, the fact remains, the fellow does communicate with
+some one from the Times; and the police are positive he does it
+here and that he is doing it now!"
+
+The problem that so greatly disturbed his friend would have more
+deeply interested Sam had the solving of his own trouble been
+less imperative. That alone filled his mind. And when the coffee
+was served and the cigars lit, without beating about the bush Sam
+asked Forsythe bluntly if on his paper a rising and impecunious
+genius could find a place. With even less beating about the bush
+Forsythe assured him he could not. The answer was final, and the
+disappointment was so keen that Sam soon begged his friend to
+excuse him, paid his bill, and rose to depart.
+
+"Better wait!" urged Forsythe. "You'll find nothing so good out
+at a music-hall. This is Houdini getting out of his handcuffs
+before an audience entirely composed of policemen."
+
+Sam shook his head gloomily.
+
+"I have a few handcuffs of my own to get rid of," he said, "and
+it makes me poor company."
+
+He bade his friend good night and, picking his way among the
+tables, moved toward the pillar on which the waiter had hung his
+hat. The pillar was the one beside which Hertz was sitting, and
+as Sam approached the man he satisfied his curiosity by a long
+look. Under the glance Hertz lowered his eyes and fixed them
+upon his newspaper. Sam retrieved his hat and left the restaurant.
+
+His mind immediately was overcast. He remembered his disappointment
+and that the parting between himself and Polly was now inevitable.
+Without considering his direction he turned toward Charing Cross
+Road. But he was not long allowed to meditate undisturbed.
+
+He had only crossed the little street that runs beside the restaurant
+and passed into the shadow of the National Gallery when, at the
+base of the Irving Memorial, from each side he was fiercely attacked.
+A young man of eminently respectable appearance kicked his legs
+from under him, and another of equally impeccable exterior made
+an honest effort to knock off his head.
+
+Sam plunged heavily to the sidewalk. As he sprawled forward his
+hat fell under him and in his struggle to rise was hidden by the
+skirts of his greatcoat. That, also, he had fallen heavily upon his
+hat with both knees Sam did not know. The strange actions of
+his assailants enlightened him. To his surprise, instead of
+continuing their assault or attempting a raid upon his pockets,
+he found them engaged solely in tugging at the hat. And so
+preoccupied were they in this that, though still on his knees,
+Sam was able to land some lusty blows before a rush of feet
+caused the young men to leap to their own and, pursued by
+several burly forms, disappear in the heart of the traffic.
+
+Sam rose and stood unsteadily. He found himself surrounded by
+all of those who but a moment before he had left contentedly
+dining at Pavoni's. In an excited circle waiters and patrons of
+the restaurant, both men and women, stood in the falling snow,
+bareheaded, coatless, and cloakless, staring at him. Forsythe
+pushed them aside and took Sam by the arm.
+
+"What happened?" demanded Sam.
+
+"You ought to know," protested Forsythe. "You started it! The
+moment you left the restaurant two men grabbed their hats and
+jumped after you; a dozen other men, without waiting for hats,
+jumped after them. The rest of us got out just as the two men
+and the detectives dived into the traffic."
+
+A big man, with an air of authority, drew Sam to one side.
+
+"Did they take anything from you, sir?" he asked.
+
+"I've nothing they could take," said Sam. "And they didn't try to
+find out. They just knocked me down."
+
+Forsythe turned to the big man.
+
+"This gentleman is a friend of mine, inspector," he said. "He is
+a stranger in town and was at Pavoni's only by accident."
+
+"We might need his testimony," suggested the official.
+
+Sam gave his card to the inspector and then sought refuge in a
+taxicab. For the second time he bade his friend good night.
+
+"And when next we dine," he called to him in parting, "choose a
+restaurant where the detective service is quicker!"
+
+Three hours later, brushed and repaired by Mrs. Wroxton, and
+again resplendent, Sam sat in a secluded corner of Deptford House
+and bade Polly a long farewell. It was especially long, owing to
+the unusual number of interruptions; for it was evident that Polly
+had many friends in London, and that not to know the Richest One
+in America and her absurd mother, and the pompous, self-satisfied
+father, argued oneself nobody. But finally the duchess carried Polly
+off to sup with her; and as the duchess did not include Sam in her
+invitation--at least not in such a way that any one could notice it--
+Sam said good-night--but not before he had arranged a meeting
+with Polly for eleven that same morning. If it was clear, the
+meeting was to be at the duck pond in St. James's Park; if it
+snowed, at the National Gallery in front of the "Age of
+Innocence."
+
+After robbing the duchess of three suppers, Sam descended to
+the hall and from an attendant received his coat and hat, which
+latter the attendant offered him with the inside of the hat
+showing. Sam saw in it the trademark of a foreign maker.
+
+"That's not my hat," said Sam.
+
+The man expressed polite disbelief.
+
+"I found it rolled up in the pocket of your greatcoat, sir," he
+protested.
+
+The words reminded Sam that on arriving at Deptford House he had
+twisted the hat into a roll and stuffed it into his overcoat
+pocket.
+
+"Quite right," said Sam. But it was not his hat; and with some hope
+of still recovering his property he made way for other departing
+guests and at one side waited.
+
+For some clew to the person he believed was now wearing his hat,
+Sam examined the one in his hand. Just showing above the inside
+band was something white. Thinking it might be the card of the
+owner, Sam removed it. It was not a card, but a long sheet of thin
+paper, covered with typewriting, and many times folded. Sam
+read the opening paragraph. Then he backed suddenly toward a
+great chair of gold and velvet, and fell into it.
+
+He was conscious the attendants in pink stockings were regarding
+him askance; that, as they waited in the drafty hall for cars and taxis,
+the noble lords in stars and ribbons, the noble ladies in tiaras and
+showing much-fur-lined galoshes, were discussing his strange
+appearance. They might well believe the youth was ill; they might
+easily have considered him intoxicated. Outside rose the voices of
+servants and police calling the carriages. Inside other servants echoed
+them.
+
+"The Duchess of Sutherland's car!" they chanted. "Mrs. Trevor
+Hill's carriage! The French ambassador's carriage! Baron
+Haussmann's car!"
+
+Like one emerging from a trance, Sam sprang upright. A little fat
+man, with mild blue eyes and curly red hair, was shyly and with
+murmured apologies pushing toward the exit. Before he gained it
+Sam had wriggled a way to his elbow.
+
+"Baron Haussmann!" he stammered. "I must speak to you. It's a
+matter of gravest importance. Send away your car," he begged,
+"and give me five minutes."
+
+The eyes of the little fat man opened wide in surprise, almost in
+alarm. He stared at Sam reprovingly.
+
+"Impossible!" he murmured. "I--I do not know you."
+
+"This is a letter of introduction," said Sam. Into the unwilling
+fingers of the banker he thrust the folded paper. Bending over
+him, he whispered in his ear. "That," said Sam, "is the Treaty of
+London!"
+
+The alarm of Baron Haussmann increased to a panic.
+
+"Impossible!" he gasped. And, with reproach, he repeated: "I do
+not know you, sir! I do not know you!"
+
+At that moment, towering above the crush, appeared the tall figure
+of Senator Seward. The rich man of the New World and the rich
+man of Europe knew each other only by sight. But, upon seeing
+Sam in earnest converse with the great banker, the senator
+believed that without appearing to seek it he might through Sam
+effect a meeting. With a hearty slap on the shoulder he greeted
+his fellow countryman.
+
+"Halloo, Sam!" he cried genially. "You walking home with me?"
+
+Sam did not even turn his head.
+
+"No!" he snapped. "I'm busy. Go 'way!"
+
+Crimson, the senator disappeared. Baron Haussmann regarded the
+young stranger with amazed interest.
+
+"You know him!" he protested. "He called you Sam!"
+
+"Know him?" cried Sam impatiently. "I've got to know him! He's
+going to be my father-in-law."
+
+The fingers of the rich man clutched the folded paper as the
+claws of a parrot cling to the bars of his cage. He let his sable
+coat slip into the hands of a servant; he turned back toward the
+marble staircase.
+
+"Come!" he commanded.
+
+Sam led him to the secluded corner Polly and he had left vacant
+and told his story.
+
+"So, it is evident," concluded Sam, "that each night some one in
+the service of the Times dined at Pavoni's, and that his hat was
+the same sort of hat as the one worn by Hertz; and each night,
+inside the lining of his hat, Hertz hid the report of that day's
+proceedings. And when the Times man left the restaurant he
+exchanged hats with Hertz. But to-night--I got Hertz's hat and
+with it the treaty!"
+
+In perplexity the blue eyes of the little great man frowned.
+
+"It is a remarkable story," he said.
+
+"You mean you don't believe me!" retorted Sam. "If I had
+financial standing--if I had credit--if I were not a stranger-
+you would not hesitate."
+
+Baron Haussmann neither agreed nor contradicted. He made a polite
+and deprecatory gesture. Still in doubt, he stared at the piece of white
+paper. Still deep in thought, he twisted and creased between his fingers
+the Treaty of London!
+
+Returning with the duchess from supper, Polly caught sight of Sam
+and, with a happy laugh, ran toward him. Seeing he was not alone,
+she halted and waved her hand.
+
+"Don't forget!" she called. "At eleven!"
+
+She made a sweet and lovely picture. Sam rose and bowed.
+
+"I'll be there at ten," he answered.
+
+With his mild blue eyes the baron followed Polly until she had
+disappeared. Then he turned and smiled at Sam.
+
+"Permit me," he said, "to offer you my felicitations. Your young
+lady is very beautiful and very good." Sam bowed his head. "If
+she trusts you," murmured the baron, "I think I can trust you
+too."
+
+"How wonderful is credit!" exclaimed Sam. "I was just saying so
+to my landlady. If you have only cash you spend it and nothing
+remains. But with credit you can--"
+
+"How much," interrupted the banker, "do you want for this?"
+
+Sam returned briskly to the business of the moment.
+
+"To be your partner," he said--"to get half of what you make out
+of it."
+
+The astonished eyes of the baron were large with wonder. Again he
+reproved Sam.
+
+"What I shall make out of it?" he demanded incredulously. "Do you
+know how much I shall make out of it?"
+
+"I cannot even guess," said Sam; "but I want half."
+
+The baron smiled tolerantly.
+
+"And how," he asked, "could you possibly know what I give you is
+really half?"
+
+In his turn, Sam made a deprecatory gesture.
+
+"Your credit," said Sam, "is good!"
+
+That morning, after the walk in St. James's Park, when Sam returned
+with Polly to Claridge's, they encountered her father in the hall.
+Mindful of the affront of the night before, he greeted Sam only
+with a scowl.
+
+"Senator," cried Sam happily, "you must be the first to hear the news!
+Polly and I are going into partnership. We are to be married."
+
+This time Senator Seward did not trouble himself even to tell Sam
+he was an ass. He merely grinned cynically.
+
+"Is that all your news?" he demanded with sarcasm.
+
+"No," said Sam--"I am going into partnership with Baron Haussmann
+too!"
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BURIED TREASURE OF COBRE
+
+
+
+Young Everett at last was a minister plenipotentiary. In London
+as third secretary he had splashed around in the rain to find the
+ambassador's carriage. In Rome as a second secretary he had
+served as a clearing-house for the Embassy's visiting-cards; and
+in Madrid as first secretary he had acted as interpreter for a
+minister who, though valuable as a national chairman, had much
+to learn of even his own language. But although surrounded by
+all the wonders and delights of Europe, although he walked, talked,
+wined, and dined with statesmen and court beauties, Everett was
+not happy. He was never his own master. Always he answered the
+button pressed by the man higher up. Always over him loomed his
+chief; always, for his diligence and zeal, his chief received credit.
+
+As His Majesty's naval attache put it sympathetically, "Better be
+a top-side man on a sampan than First Luff on the Dreadnought.
+Don't be another man's right hand. Be your own right hand."
+Accordingly when the State Department offered to make him
+minister to the Republic of Amapala, Everett gladly deserted the
+flesh-pots of Europe, and, on mule-back over trails in the living
+rock, through mountain torrents that had never known the shadow
+of a bridge, through swamp and jungle, rode sunburnt and
+saddle-sore into his inheritance.
+
+When giving him his farewell instructions, the Secretary of State
+had not attempted to deceive him.
+
+"Of all the smaller republics of Central America," he frankly told
+him, "Amapala is the least desirable, least civilized, least acceptable.
+It offers an ambitious young diplomat no chance. But once a minister,
+always a minister. Having lifted you out of the secretary class we can't
+demote you. Your days of deciphering cablegrams are over, and if you
+don't die of fever, of boredom, or brandy, call us up in a year or two
+and we will see what we can do."
+
+Everett regarded the Secretary blankly.
+
+"Has the department no interest in Amapala?" he begged. "Is there
+nothing you want there?"
+
+"There is one thing we very much want," returned the Secretary,
+"but we can't get it. We want a treaty to extradite criminals."
+
+The young minister laughed confidently.
+
+"Why!" he exclaimed, "that should be easy."
+
+The Secretary smiled.
+
+"You have our full permission to get it," he said. "This department,"
+he explained, "under three administrations has instructed four
+ministers to arrange such a treaty. The Bankers' Association wants
+it; the Merchants' Protective Alliance wants it. Amapala is the only
+place within striking distance of our country where a fugitive is safe.
+It is the only place where a dishonest cashier, swindler, or felon can
+find refuge. Sometimes it seems almost as though when a man planned
+a crime he timed it exactly so as to catch the boat for Amapala. And,
+once there, we can't lay our hands on him; and, what's more, we can't
+lay our hands on the money he takes with him. I have no right to make
+a promise," said the great man, "but the day that treaty is signed you
+can sail for a legation in Europe. Do I make myself clear?"
+
+"So clear, sir," cried Everett, laughing, "that if I don't
+arrange that treaty I will remain in Amapala until I do."
+
+"Four of your predecessors," remarked the Secretary, "made
+exactly the same promise, but none of them got us the treaty."
+
+"Probably none of them remained in Amapala, either," retorted
+Everett.
+
+"Two did," corrected the Secretary; "as you ride into Camaguay
+you see their tombstones."
+
+Everett found the nine-day mule-ride from the coast to the capital
+arduous, but full of interest. After a week at his post he appreciated
+that until he left it and made the return journey nothing of equal
+interest was again likely to occur. For life in Camaguay, the capital
+of Amapala, proved to be one long, dreamless slumber. In the morning
+each of the inhabitants engaged in a struggle to get awake; after the
+second breakfast he ceased struggling, and for a siesta sank into his
+hammock. After dinner, at nine o'clock, he was prepared to sleep in
+earnest, and went to bed. The official life as explained to Everett by
+Garland, the American consul, was equally monotonous. When
+President Mendoza was not in the mountains deer-hunting, or
+suppressing a revolution, each Sunday he invited the American
+minister to dine at the palace. In return His Excellency expected
+once a week to be invited to breakfast with the minister. He preferred
+that the activities of that gentleman should go no further. Life in the
+diplomatic circle was even less strenuous. Everett was the doyen
+of the diplomatic corps because he was the only diplomat. All
+other countries were represented by consuls who were commission
+merchants and shopkeepers. They were delighted at having among
+them a minister plenipotentiary. When he took pity on them and
+invited them to tea, which invitations he delivered in person to
+each consul at the door of each shop, the entire diplomatic corps,
+as the consuls were pleased to describe themselves, put up the
+shutters, put on their official full-dress uniforms and arrived in
+a body.
+The first week at his post Everett spent in reading the archives of
+the legation. They were most discouraging. He found that for the
+sixteen years prior to his arrival the only events reported to the
+department by his predecessors were revolutions and the refusals
+of successive presidents to consent to a treaty of extradition. On
+that point all Amapalans were in accord. Though overnight the
+government changed hands, though presidents gave way to dictators,
+and dictators to military governors, the national policy of Amapala
+continued to be "No extradition!" The ill success of those who had
+preceded him appalled Everett. He had promised himself by a
+brilliant assault to secure the treaty and claim the legation in
+Europe. But the record of sixteen years of failure caused him
+to alter his strategy. Instead of an attack he prepared for a siege.
+He unpacked his books, placed the portrait of his own President
+over the office desk, and proceeded to make friends with his fellow
+exiles.
+
+Of the foreign colony in Camaguay some fifty were Americans, and
+from the rest of the world they were as hopelessly separated as the
+crew of a light-ship. From the Pacific they were cut off by the
+Cordilleras, from the Caribbean by a nine-day mule-ride. To the
+north and south, jungle, forests, swamp-lands, and mountains
+hemmed them in.
+
+Of the fifty Americans, one-half were constantly on the trail;
+riding to the coast to visit their plantations, or into the mountains
+to inspect their mines. When Everett arrived, of those absent
+the two most important were Chester Ward and Colonel Goddard.
+Indeed, so important were these gentlemen that Everett was made
+to understand that, until they approved, his recognition as the
+American minister was in a manner temporary.
+
+Chester Ward, or "Chet," as the exiles referred to him, was one of
+the richest men in Amapala, and was engaged in exploring the ruins
+of the lost city of Cobre, which was a one-hour ride from the capital.
+Ward possessed the exclusive right to excavate that buried city and
+had held it against all comers. The offers of American universities,
+of archaeological and geographical societies that also wished to dig
+up the ancient city and decipher the hieroglyphs on her walls, were
+met with a curt rebuff. That work, the government of Amapala would
+reply, was in the trained hands of Senor Chester Ward. In his chosen
+effort the government would not disturb him, nor would it permit others
+coming in at the eleventh hour to rob him of his glory. This Everett
+learned from the consul, Garland.
+
+"Ward and Colonel Goddard," the consul explained, "are two of
+five countrymen of ours who run the American colony, and, some
+say, run the government. The others are Mellen, who has the
+asphalt monopoly; Jackson, who is building the railroads, and
+Major Feiberger, of the San Jose silver-mines. They hold
+monopolies and pay President Mendoza ten per cent of the
+earnings, and, on the side, help him run the country. Of the
+five, the Amapalans love Goddard best, because he's not trying
+to rob them. Instead, he wants to boost Amapala. His ideas are
+perfectly impracticable, but he doesn't know that, and neither do
+they. He's a kind of Colonel Mulberry Sellers and a Southerner.
+Not the professional sort, that fight elevator-boys because they're
+colored, and let off rebel yells in rathskellers when a Hungarian
+band plays 'Dixie,' but the sort you read about and so seldom see.
+He was once State Treasurer of Alabama."
+
+"What's he doing down here?" asked the minister.
+
+"Never the same thing two months together," the consul told him;
+"railroads, mines, rubber. He says all Amapala needs is developing."
+
+As men who can see a joke even when it is against themselves, the
+two exiles smiled ruefully.
+
+"That's all it needs," said Everett.
+
+For a moment the consul regarded him thoughtfully.
+
+"I might as well tell you," he said, "you'll learn it soon enough
+anyway, that the men who will keep you from getting your treaty
+are these five, especially old man Goddard and Ward."
+
+Everett exclaimed indignantly:
+
+"Why should they interfere?"
+
+"Because," explained the consul, "they are fugitives from justice,
+and they don't want to go home. Ward is wanted for forgery or
+some polite crime, I don't know which. And Colonel Goddard
+for appropriating the State funds of Alabama. Ward knew what
+he was doing and made a lot out of it. He's still rich. No one's
+weeping over him. Goddard's case is different. He was imposed
+on and made a catspaw. When he was State treasurer the men
+who appointed him came to him one night and said they must
+have some of the State's funds to show a bank examiner in the
+morning. They appealed to him on the ground of friendship, as
+the men who'd given him his job. They would return the money
+the next evening. Goddard believed they would. They didn't,
+and when some one called for a show-down the colonel was shy
+about fifty thousand dollars of the State's money. He lost his head,
+took the boat out of Mobile to Porto Cortez, and hid here. He's
+been here twenty years and all the Amapalans love him. He's the
+adopted father of their country. They're so afraid he'll be taken
+back and punished that they'll never consent to an extradition
+treaty even if the other Americans, Mellen, Jackson, and Feiberger,
+weren't paying them big money not to consent. President Mendoza
+himself told me that as long as Colonel Goddard honored his
+country by remaining in it, he was his guest, and he would never
+agree to extradition. 'I could as soon,' he said, 'sign his
+death-warrant.'"
+
+Everett grinned dismally.
+
+"That's rather nice of them," he said, "but it's hard on me. But," he
+demanded, "why Ward? What has he done for Amapala? Is it because
+of Cobre, because of his services as an archaeologist?"
+
+The consul glanced around the patio and dragged his chair nearer
+to Everett.
+
+"This is my own dope," he whispered; "it may be wrong. Anyway,
+it's only for your private information."
+
+He waited until, with a smile, Everett agreed to secrecy.
+
+"Chet Ward," protested the consul, "is no more an archaeologist
+than I am! He talks well about Cobre, and he ought to, because
+every word he speaks is cribbed straight from Hauptmann's
+monograph, published in 1855. And he has dug up something at
+Cobre; something worth a darned sight more than stone monkeys
+and carved altars. But his explorations are a bluff. They're a blind
+to cover up what he's really after; what I think he's found!"
+
+As though wishing to be urged, the young man paused, and Everett
+nodded for him to continue. He was wondering whether life in
+Amapala might not turn out to be more interesting than at first
+it had appeared, or whether Garland was not a most charming liar.
+
+"Ward visits the ruins every month," continued Garland. "But he
+takes with him only two mule-drivers to cook and look after the
+pack-train, and he doesn't let even the drivers inside the ruins.
+He remains at Cobre three or four days and, to make a show, fills
+his saddle-bags with broken tiles and copper ornaments. He turns
+them over to the government, and it dumps them in the back yard
+of the palace. You can't persuade me that he holds his concession
+with that junk. He's found something else at Cobre and he shares
+it with Mendoza, and I believe it's gold."
+
+The minister smiled delightedly.
+
+"What kind of gold?
+
+"Maybe in the rough," said the consul. "But I prefer to think
+it's treasure. The place is full of secret chambers, tombs, and
+passage-ways cut through the rock, deep under the surface. I
+believe Ward has stumbled on some vault where the priests used
+to hide their loot. I believe he's getting it out bit by bit and
+going shares with Mendoza."
+
+"If that were so," ventured Everett, "why wouldn't Mendoza take
+it all?"
+
+"Because Ward," explained the consul, "is the only one who knows
+where it is. The ruins cover two square miles. You might search
+for years. They tried to follow and spy on him, but Ward was too
+clever for them. He turned back at once. If they don't take what
+he gives, they get nothing. So they protect him from real explorers
+and from extradition. The whole thing is unfair. A real archaeologist
+turned up here a month ago. He had letters from the Smithsonian
+Institute and several big officials at Washington, but do you suppose
+they would let him so much as smell of Cobre? Not they! Not even
+when I spoke for him as consul. Then he appealed to Ward, and Ward
+turned him down hard. You were arriving, so he's hung on here hoping
+you may have more influence. His name is Peabody; he's a professor,
+but he's young and full of 'get there,' and he knows more about the ruins
+of Cobre now than Ward does after having them all to himself for two
+years. He's good people and I hope you'll help him."
+
+Everett shook his head doubtfully.
+
+"If the government has given the concession to him," he pointed
+out, "no matter who Ward may be, or what its motives were for
+giving it to him, I can't ask it to break its promise. As an
+American citizen Ward is as much entitled to my help--
+officially--as Professor Peabody, whatever his standing."
+
+"Ward's a forger," protested Garland, "a fugitive from justice; and
+Peabody is a scholar and a gentleman. I'm not keen about dead
+cities myself--this one we're in now is dead enough for me--but if
+civilization is demanding to know what Cobre was like eight
+hundred years ago, civilization is entitled to find out, and
+Peabody seems the man for the job. It's a shame to turn him
+down for a gang of grafters."
+
+"Tell him to come and talk to me," said the minister.
+
+"He rode over to the ruins of Copan last week," explained Garland,
+"where the Harvard expedition is. But he's coming back to-morrow
+on purpose to see you."
+
+The consul had started toward the door when he suddenly returned.
+
+"And there's some one else coming to see you," he said. "Some
+one," he added anxiously, "you want to treat right. That's Monica
+Ward. She's Chester Ward's sister, and you mustn't get her mixed
+up with anything I told you about her brother. She's coming to
+ask you to help start a Red Cross Society. She was a volunteer
+nurse in the hospital in the last two revolutions, and what she
+saw makes her want to be sure she won't see it again. She's
+taught the native ladies the 'first aid' drill, and they expect
+you to be honorary president of the society. You'd better
+accept."
+
+Shaking his head, Garland smiled pityingly upon the new minister.
+
+"You've got a swell chance to get your treaty," he declared.
+"Monica is another one who will prevent it."
+
+Everett sighed patiently.
+
+"What," he demanded, "might her particular crime be; murder,
+shoplifting, treason--"
+
+"If her brother had to leave this country," interrupted Garland,
+"she'd leave with him. And the people don't want that. Her pull
+is the same as old man Goddard's. Everybody loves him and
+everybody loves her. I love her," exclaimed the consul
+cheerfully; "the President loves her, the sisters in the hospital,
+the chain-gang in the street, the washerwomen in the river,
+the palace guard, everybody in this flea-bitten, God-forsaken
+country loves Monica Ward--and when you meet her you
+will, too."
+
+Garland had again reached the door to the outer hall before
+Everett called him back.
+
+"If it is not a leading question," asked the minister, "what
+little indiscretion in your life brought you to Amapala?"
+
+Garland grinned appreciatively.
+
+"I know they sound a queer lot," he assented, "but when you get
+to know 'em, you like 'em. My own trouble," he added, "was a
+horse. I never could see why they made such a fuss about him. He
+was lame when I took him."
+
+Disregarding Garland's pleasantry, for some time His Excellency
+sat with his hands clasped behind his head, frowning up from the
+open patio into the hot, cloudless sky. On the ridge of his tiled
+roof a foul buzzard blinked at him from red-rimmed eyes, across
+the yellow wall a lizard ran for shelter, at his elbow a macaw
+compassing the circle of its tin prison muttered dreadful oaths.
+Outside, as the washerwomen beat their linen clubs upon the flat
+rocks of the river, the hot, stale air was spanked with sharp reports.
+In Camaguay theirs was the only industry, the only sign of
+cleanliness; and recognizing that another shirt had been thrashed
+into subjection and rags, Everett winced. No less visibly did his
+own thoughts cause him to wince. Garland he had forgotten,
+and he was sunk deep in self-pity. His thoughts were of London,
+with its world politics, its splendid traditions, its great and gracious
+ladies; of Paris in the spring sunshine, when he cantered through the
+Bois; of Madrid, with its pomp and royalty, and the gray walls of its
+galleries proclaiming Murillo and Velasquez. These things he had
+forsaken because he believed he was ambitious; and behold into
+what a cul-de-sac his ambition had led him! A comic-opera country
+that was not comic, but dead and buried from the world; a savage
+people, unread, unenlightened, unclean; and for society of his
+countrymen, pitiful derelicts in hiding from the law. In his soul
+he rebelled. In words he exploded bitterly.
+
+"This is one hell of a hole, Garland," cried the diplomat. His
+jaws and his eyes hardened. "I'm going back to Europe. And
+the only way I can go is to get that treaty. I was sent here to get
+it. Those were my orders. And I'll get it if I have to bribe them
+out of my own pocket; if I have to outbid Mr. Ward, and send
+him and your good Colonel Goddard and all the rest of the crew
+to the jails where they belong!"
+
+Garland heard him without emotion. From long residence near the
+equator he diagnosed the outbreak as a case of tropic choler,
+aggravated by nostalgia and fleas.
+
+"I'll bet you don't," he said.
+
+"I'll bet you your passage-money home," shouted Everett, "against
+my passage-money to Europe."
+
+"Done!" said Garland. "How much time do you want--two years?"
+
+The diplomat exclaimed mockingly:
+
+"Two months!"
+
+"I win now, "said the consul. "I'll go home and pack."
+
+The next morning his clerk told Everett that in the outer office
+Monica Ward awaited him.
+
+Overnight Everett had developed a prejudice against Miss Ward.
+What Garland had said in her favor had only driven him the wrong
+way. Her universal popularity he disliked. He argued that to gain
+popularity one must concede and capitulate. He felt that the sister
+of an acknowledged crook, no matter how innocent she might be,
+were she a sensitive woman, would wish to efface herself. And
+he had found that, as a rule, women who worked in hospitals and
+organized societies bored him. He did not admire the militant,
+executive sister. He pictured Miss Ward as probably pretty, but
+with the coquettish effrontery of the village belle and with the
+pushing, "good-fellow" manners of the new school. He was prepared
+either to have her slap him on the back or, from behind tilted
+eye-glasses, make eyes at him. He was sure she wore eye-glasses,
+and was large, plump, and Junoesque. With reluctance he entered
+the outer office. He saw, all in white, a girl so young that she
+was hardly more than a child, but with the tall, slim figure of a
+boy. Her face was lovely as the face of a violet, and her eyes
+were as shy. But shy not through lack of confidence in Everett,
+nor in any human being, but in herself. They seemed to say, "I am
+a very unworthy, somewhat frightened young person; but you, who
+are so big and generous, will overlook that, and you are going to
+be my friend. Indeed, I see you are my friend."
+
+Everett stood quite still. He nodded gloomily.
+
+"Garland was right," he exclaimed; "I do!"
+
+The young lady was plainly distressed.
+
+"Do what?" she stammered.
+
+"Some day I will tell you," said the young man. "Yes," he added,
+without shame, "I am afraid I will." He bowed her into the inner
+office.
+
+"I am sorry," apologized Monica, "but I am come to ask a favor--
+two favors; one of you and one of the American minister."
+
+Everett drew his armchair from his desk and waved Monica into it.
+
+"I was sent here," he said, "to do exactly what you want. The
+last words the President addressed to me were, 'On arriving at
+your post report to Miss Monica Ward."'
+
+Fearfully, Monica perched herself on the edge of the armchair; as
+though for protection she clasped the broad table before her.
+
+"The favor I want," she hastily assured him, "is not for myself."
+
+"I am sorry," said Everett, "for it is already granted."
+
+"You are very good," protested Monica.
+
+"No," replied Everett, "I am only powerful. I represent ninety-five
+million Americans, and they are all entirely at your service. So is
+the army and navy."
+
+Monica smiled and shook her head. The awe she felt was due an
+American minister was rapidly disappearing, and in Mr. Everett
+himself her confidence was increasing. The other ministers
+plenipotentiary she had seen at Camaguay had been old, with
+beards like mountain-goats, and had worn linen dusters. They
+always were very red in the face and very damp. Monica decided
+Mr. Everett also was old; she was sure he must be at least
+thirty-five; but in his silk pongee and pipe-clayed tennis-shoes
+he was a refreshing spectacle. Just to look at him turned one
+quite cool.
+
+"We have a very fine line of battle-ships this morning at
+Guantanamo," urged Everett; "if you want one I'll cable for it."
+
+Monica laughed softly. It was good to hear nonsense spoken. The
+Amapalans had never learned it, and her brother said just what he
+meant and no more.
+
+"Our sailors were here once," Monica volunteered. She wanted
+Mr. Everett to know he was not entirely cut off from the world.
+"During the revolution," she explained. "We were so glad to see
+them; they made us all feel nearer home. They set up our flag in
+the plaza, and the color-guard let me photograph it, with them
+guarding it. And when they marched away the archbishop stood
+on the cathedral steps and blessed them, and we rode out along the
+trail to where it comes to the jungle. And then we waved good-by,
+and they cheered us. We all cried."
+
+For a moment, quite unconsciously, Monica gave an imitation of
+how they all cried. It made the appeal of the violet eyes even more
+disturbing.
+"Don't you love our sailors?" begged Monica.
+
+Fearful of hurting the feelings of others, she added hastily,
+"And, of course, our marines, too."
+
+Everett assured her if there was one thing that meant more to him
+than all else, it was an American bluejacket, and next to him an
+American leatherneck.
+
+It took a long time to arrange the details of the Red Cross
+Society. In spite of his reputation for brilliancy, it seemed to
+Monica Mr. Everett had a mind that plodded. For his benefit it
+was necessary several times to repeat the most simple proposition.
+She was sure his inability to fasten his attention on her League
+of Mercy was because his brain was occupied with problems of
+state. It made her feel selfish and guilty. When his visitor
+decided that to explain further was but to waste his valuable
+time and had made her third effort to go, Everett went with her.
+He suggested that she take him to the hospital and introduce him
+to the sisters. He wanted to talk to them about the Red Cross
+League. It was a charming walk. Every one lifted his hat to
+Monica; the beggars, the cab-drivers, the barefooted policemen,
+and the social lights of Camaguay on the sidewalks in front of
+the cafes rose and bowed.
+
+"It is like walking with royalty!" exclaimed Everett.
+
+While at the hospital he talked to the Mother Superior--his eyes
+followed Monica. As she moved from cot to cot he noted how
+the younger sisters fluttered happily around her, like bridesmaids
+around a bride, and how as she passed, the eyes of those in the
+cots followed her jealously, and after she had spoken with them
+smiled in content.
+
+"She is good," the Mother Superior was saying, "and her brother,
+too, is very good."
+
+Everett had forgotten the brother. With a start he lifted his eyes
+and found the Mother Superior regarding him.
+
+"He is very good," she repeated. "For us, he built this wing of
+the hospital. It was his money. We should be very sorry if any
+harm came to Mr. Ward. Without his help we would starve." She
+smiled, and with a gesture signified the sick. "I mean they would
+starve; they would die of disease and fever." The woman fixed
+upon him grave, inscrutable eyes. "Will Your Excellency
+remember?" she said. It was less of a question than a command.
+"Where the church can forgive--" she paused.
+
+Like a real diplomat Everett sought refuge in mere words.
+
+"The church is all-powerful, Mother," he said. "Her power to
+forgive is her strongest weapon. I have no such power. It lies
+beyond my authority. I am just a messenger-boy carrying the
+wishes of the government of one country to the government of
+another."
+
+The face of the Mother Superior remained grave, but undisturbed.
+
+"Then, as regards our Mr. Ward," she said, "the wishes of your
+government are--"
+
+Again she paused; again it was less of a question than a command.
+With interest Everett gazed at the whitewashed ceiling.
+
+"I have not yet," he said, "communicated them to any one."
+
+That night, after dinner in the patio, he reported to Garland the
+words of the Mother Superior.
+
+"That was my dream, 0 Prophet," concluded Everett; "you who can
+read this land of lotus-eaters, interpret! What does it mean?"
+
+"It only means what I've been telling you," said the consul. "It means
+that if you're going after that treaty, you've only got to fight the
+Catholic Church. That's all it means!"
+
+Later in the evening Garland said: "I saw you this morning crossing
+the plaza with Monica. When I told you everybody in this town
+loved her, was I right?"
+
+"Absolutely!" assented Everett. "But why didn't you tell me she
+was a flapper?"
+
+"I don't know what a flapper is," promptly retorted Garland. "And
+if I did, I wouldn't call Monica one."
+
+"A flapper is a very charming person," protested Everett. "I used
+the term in its most complimentary sense. It means a girl between
+fourteen and eighteen. It's English slang, and in England at the
+present the flapper is very popular. She is driving her sophisticated
+elder sister, who has been out two or three seasons, and the predatory
+married woman to the wall. To men of my years the flapper is really
+at the dangerous age."
+
+In his bamboo chair Garland tossed violently and snorted.
+
+"I sized you up," he cried, "as a man of the finest perceptions. I was
+wrong. You don't appreciate Monica! Dangerous! You might as
+well say God's sunshine is dangerous, or a beautiful flower is
+dangerous."
+
+Everett shook his head at the other man reproachfully:
+
+"Did you ever hear of a sunstroke?" he demanded. "Don't you know
+if you smell certain beautiful flowers you die? Can't you grasp any
+other kind of danger than being run down by a trolley-car? Is the
+danger of losing one's peace of mind nothing, of being unfaithful
+to duty, nothing! Is--"
+
+Garland raised his arms.
+
+"Don't shoot!" he begged. "I apologize. You do appreciate Monica.
+You have your consul's permission to walk with her again."
+
+The next day young Professor Peabody called and presented his
+letters. He was a forceful young man to whom the delays of
+diplomacy did not appeal, and one apparently accustomed to riding
+off whatever came in his way. He seemed to consider any one who
+opposed him, or who even disagreed with his conclusions, as
+offering a personal affront. With indignation he launched into
+his grievance.
+
+"These people," he declared, "are dogs in the manger, and Ward is
+the worst of the lot. He knows no more of archaeology than a
+congressman. The man's a faker! He showed me a spear-head of
+obsidian and called it flint; and he said the Aztecs borrowed from
+the Mayas, and that the Toltecs were a myth. And he got the Aztec
+solar calendar mixed with the Ahau. He's as ignorant as that."
+
+"I can't believe it!" exclaimed Everett.
+
+"You may laugh," protested the professor, "but the ruins of Cobre
+hold secrets the students of two continents are trying to solve.
+They hide the history of a lost race, and I submit it's not proper
+one man should keep that knowledge from the world, certainly
+not for a few gold armlets!"
+
+Everett raised his eyes.
+
+"What makes you say that?"' he demanded.
+
+"I've been kicking my heels in this town for a month," Peabody
+told him, "and I've talked to the people here, and to the Harvard
+expedition at Copan, and everybody tells me this fellow has found
+treasure." The archaeologist exclaimed with indignation: "What's
+gold," he snorted, "compared to the discovery of a lost race?"
+
+"I applaud your point of view," Everett assured him. "I am to see the
+President tomorrow, and I will lay the matter before him. I'll ask him
+to give you a look in."
+
+To urge his treaty of extradition was the reason for the audience with
+the President, and with all the courtesy that a bad case demanded
+Mendoza protested against it. He pointed out that governments
+entered into treaties only when the ensuing benefits were mutual.
+For Amapala in a treaty of extradition he saw no benefit. Amapala
+was not so far "advanced" as to produce defaulting bank presidents,
+get-rich-quick promoters, counterfeiters, and thieving cashiers. Her
+fugitives were revolutionists who had fought and lost, and every one
+was glad to have them go, and no one wanted them back.
+
+"Or," suggested the President, "suppose I am turned out by a
+revolution, and I seek asylum in your country? My enemies desire
+my life. They would ask for my extradition--"
+
+"If the offense were political," Everett corrected, "my government
+would surrender no one."
+
+"But my enemies would charge me with murder," explained the
+President. "Remember Castro. And by the terms of the treaty your
+government would be forced to surrender me. And I am shot against
+the wall." The President shrugged his shoulders. "That treaty would
+not be nice for me!"
+
+"Consider the matter as a patriot," said the diplomat. "Is it good that
+the criminals of my country should make their home in yours? When
+you are so fortunate as to have no dishonest men of your own, why
+import ours? We don't seek the individual. We want to punish him
+only as a warning to others. And we want the money he takes with
+him. Often it is the savings of the very poor."
+
+The President frowned. It was apparent that both the subject and
+Everett bored him.
+
+"I name no names," exclaimed Mendoza, "but to those who come
+here we owe the little railroads we possess. They develop our mines
+and our coffee plantations. In time they will make this country very
+modern, very rich. And some you call criminals we have learned to
+love. Their past does not concern us. We shut our ears. We do not
+spy. They have come to us as to a sanctuary, and so long as they claim
+the right of sanctuary, I will not violate it."
+
+As Everett emerged from the cool, dark halls of the palace into
+the glare of the plaza he was scowling; and he acknowledged the
+salute of the palace guard as though those gentlemen had offered
+him an insult.
+
+Garland was waiting in front of a cafe and greeted him with a
+mocking grin.
+
+"Congratulations," he shouted.
+
+"I have still twenty-two days," said Everett
+.
+
+The aristocracy of Camaguay invited the new minister to formal
+dinners of eighteen courses, and to picnics less formal. These
+latter Everett greatly enjoyed, because while Monica Ward was too
+young to attend the state dinners, she was exactly the proper age
+for the all-day excursions to the waterfalls, the coffee plantations,
+and the asphalt lakes. The native belles of Camaguay took no
+pleasure in riding farther afield than the military parade-ground.
+Climbing a trail so steep that you viewed the sky between the ears
+of your pony, or where with both hands you forced a way through
+hanging vines and creepers, did not appeal. But to Monica, with
+the seat and balance of a cowboy, riding astride, with her leg straight
+and the ball of her foot just feeling the stirrup, these expeditions were
+the happiest moments in her exile. So were they to Everett; and that
+on the trail one could ride only in single file was a most poignant
+regret. In the column the place of honor was next to whoever rode
+at the head, but Everett relinquished this position in favor of Monica.
+By this manoeuvre she always was in his sight, and he could call
+upon her to act as his guide and to explain what lay on either hand.
+His delight and wonder in her grew daily. He found that her mind
+leaped instantly and with gratitude to whatever was most fair. Just
+out of reach of her pony's hoofs he pressed his own pony forward,
+and she pointed out to him what in the tropic abundance about them
+she found most beautiful. Sometimes it was the tumbling waters of
+a cataract; sometimes, high in the topmost branches of a ceiba-tree,
+a gorgeous orchid; sometimes a shaft of sunshine as rigid as a
+search-light, piercing the shadow of the jungle. At first she would
+turn in the saddle and call to him, but as each day they grew to know
+each other better she need only point with her whip-hand and he would
+answer, "Yes," and each knew the other understood.
+
+As a body, the exiles resented Everett. They knew his purpose in
+regard to the treaty, and for them he always must be the enemy.
+Even though as a man they might like him, they could not forget
+that his presence threatened their peace and safety. Chester Ward
+treated him with impeccable politeness; but, although his house
+was the show-place of Camaguay, he never invited the American
+minister to cross the threshold. On account of Monica, Everett
+regretted this and tried to keep the relations of her brother and
+himself outwardly pleasant. But Ward made it difficult. To no
+one was his manner effusive, and for Monica only he seemed to
+hold any real feeling. The two were alone in the world; he was
+her only relative, and to the orphan he had been father and mother.
+When she was a child he had bought her toys and dolls; now, had
+the sisters permitted, he would have dressed her in imported frocks,
+and with jewels killed her loveliness. He seemed to understand
+how to spend his money as little as did the gossips of Camaguay
+understand from whence it came.
+
+That Monica knew why her brother lived in Camaguay Everett was
+uncertain. She did not complain of living there, but she was not
+at rest, and constantly she was asking Everett of foreign lands.
+As Everett was homesick for them, he was most eloquent.
+
+"I should like to see them for myself," said Monica, "but until my
+brother's work here is finished we must wait. And I am young,
+and after a few years Europe will be just as old. When my brother
+leaves Amapala, he promises to take me wherever I ask to go: to
+London, to Paris, to Rome. So I read and read of them; books of
+history, books about painting, books about the cathedrals. But
+the more I read the more I want to go at once, and that is disloyal."
+
+"Disloyal?" asked Everett.
+
+"To my brother," explained Monica. "He does so much for me.
+I should think only of his work. That is all that really counts.
+For the world is waiting to learn what he has discovered. It is
+like having a brother go in search of the North Pole. You are
+proud of what he is doing, but you want him back to keep him
+to yourself. Is that selfish?"
+
+Everett was a trained diplomat, but with his opinion of Chester Ward
+he could not think of the answer. Instead, he was thinking of Monica
+in Europe; of taking her through the churches and galleries which she
+had seen only in black and white. He imagined himself at her side
+facing the altar of some great cathedral, or some painting in the Louvre,
+and watching her face lighten and the tears come to her eyes, as they
+did now, when things that were beautiful hurt her. Or he imagined her
+rid of her half-mourning and accompanying him through a cyclonic
+diplomatic career that carried them to Japan, China, Persia; to Berlin,
+Paris, and London. In these imaginings Monica appeared in pongee
+and a sun-hat riding an elephant, in pearls and satin receiving
+royalty, in tweed knickerbockers and a woollen jersey coasting
+around the hairpin curve at Saint Moritz.
+
+Of course he recognized that except as his wife Monica could not
+accompany him to all these strange lands and high diplomatic posts.
+And of course that was ridiculous. He had made up his mind for
+the success of what he called his career, that he was too young to
+marry; but he was sure, should he propose to marry Monica, every
+one would say he was too old. And there was another consideration.
+What of the brother? Would his government send him to a foreign
+post when his wife was the sister of a man they had just sent to the
+penitentiary?
+
+He could hear them say in London, "We know your first secretary,
+but who is Mrs. Everett?" And the American visitor would explain:
+"She is the sister of 'Inky Dink,' the forger. He is bookkeeping
+in Sing Sing."
+
+Certainly it would be a handicap. He tried to persuade himself
+that Monica so entirely filled his thoughts because in Camaguay
+there was no one else; it was a case of propinquity; her loneliness
+and the fact that she lay under a shadow for which she was not to
+blame appealed to his chivalry. So, he told himself, in thinking of
+Monica except as a charming companion, he was an ass. And then,
+arguing that in calling himself an ass he had shown his saneness
+and impartiality, he felt justified in seeing her daily.
+
+One morning Garland came to the legation to tell Everett that
+Peabody was in danger of bringing about international
+complications by having himself thrust into the cartel.
+
+"If he qualifies for this local jail," said Garland, "you will have
+a lot of trouble setting him free. You'd better warn him it's
+easier to keep out than to get out."
+
+"What has he been doing?" asked the minister.
+
+"Poaching on Ward's ruins," said the consul. "He certainly is a
+hustler. He pretends to go to Copan, but really goes to Cobre.
+Ward had him followed and threatened to have him arrested.
+Peabody claims any tourist has a right to visit the ruins so long
+as he does no excavating. Ward accused him of exploring the place
+by night and taking photographs by flash-light of the hieroglyphs.
+He's put an armed guard at the ruins, and he told Peabody they are
+to shoot on sight. So Peabody went to Mendoza and said if anybody
+took a shot at him he'd bring warships down here and blow Amapala
+off the map."
+
+"A militant archaeologist," said Everett, "is something new. Peabody
+is too enthusiastic. He and his hieroglyphs are becoming a bore."
+
+He sent for Peabody and told him unless he curbed his spirit his
+minister could not promise to keep him out of a very damp and
+dirty dungeon.
+
+"I am too enthusiastic," Peabody admitted, "but to me this fellow
+Ward is like a red flag to the bull. His private graft is holding
+up the whole scientific world. He won't let us learn the truth,
+and he's too ignorant to learn it himself. Why, he told me Cobre
+dated from 1578, when Palacio wrote of it to Philip the Second,
+not knowing that in that very letter Palacio states that he found
+Cobre in ruins. Is it right a man as ignorant--"
+
+Everett interrupted by levelling his finger.
+
+"You," he commanded, "keep out of those ruins! My dear professor,"
+he continued reproachfully, "you are a student, a man of peace.
+Don't try to wage war on these Amapalans. They're lawless, they're
+unscrupulous. So is Ward. Besides, you are in the wrong, and if
+they turn ugly, your minister cannot help you." He shook his head
+and smiled doubtfully. "I can't understand," he exclaimed, "why
+you're so keen. It's only a heap of broken pottery. Sometimes I
+wonder if your interest in Cobre is that only of the archaeologist."
+
+"What other interest--" demanded Peabody.
+
+"Doesn't Ward's buried treasure appeal at all?" asked the
+minister. "I mean, of course, to your imagination. It does to
+mine."
+
+The young professor laughed tolerantly.
+
+"Buried treasure!" he exclaimed. "If Ward has found treasure, and
+I think he has, he's welcome to it. What we want is what you call
+the broken pottery. It means nothing to you, but to men like
+myself, who live eight hundred years behind the times, it is much
+more precious than gold."
+
+A few moments later Professor Peabody took his leave, and it was
+not until he had turned the corner of the Calle Morazan that he
+halted and, like a man emerging from water, drew a deep breath.
+
+"Gee!" muttered the distinguished archeologist, "that was a close
+call!"
+
+One or two women had loved Everett, and after five weeks, in
+which almost daily he had seen Monica, he knew she cared for him.
+This discovery made him entirely happy and filled him with dismay.
+It was a complication he had not foreseen. It left him at the parting
+of two ways, one of which he must choose. For his career he was
+willing to renounce marriage, but now that Monica loved him, even
+though he had consciously not tried to make her love him, had he
+the right to renounce it for her also? He knew that the difference
+between Monica and his career lay in the fact that he loved Monica
+and was in love with his career. Which should he surrender? Of this
+he thought long and deeply, until one night, without thinking at all,
+he chose.
+
+Colonel Goddard had given a dance, and, as all invited were
+Americans, the etiquette was less formal than at the gatherings
+of the Amapalans. For one thing, the minister and Monica were
+able to sit on the veranda overlooking the garden without his
+having to fight a duel in the morning.
+
+It was not the moonlight, or the music, or the palms that made
+Everett speak. It was simply the knowledge that it was written,
+that it had to be. And he heard himself, without prelude or
+introduction, talking easily and assuredly of the life they would
+lead as man and wife. From this dream Monica woke him. The
+violet eyes were smiling at him through tears.
+
+"When you came," said the girl, "and I loved you, I thought that
+was the greatest happiness. Now that I know you love me I ask
+nothing more. And I can bear it."
+
+Everett felt as though an icy finger had moved swiftly down his
+spine. He pretended not to understand.
+
+"Bear what?" he demanded roughly.
+
+"That I cannot marry you," said the girl. "Even had you not asked
+me, in loving you I would have been happy. Now that I know you
+thought of me as your wife, I am proud. I am grateful. And the
+obstacle--"
+
+Everett laughed scornfully.
+
+"There is no obstacle."
+
+Monica shook her head. Unafraid, she looked into his eyes, her
+own filled with her love for him.
+
+"Don't make it harder," she said. "My brother is hiding from the
+law. What he did I don't know. When it happened I was at the
+convent, and he did not send for me until he had reached Amapala.
+I never asked why we came, but were I to marry you, with your name
+and your position, every one else would ask. And the scandal would
+follow you; wherever you went it would follow; it would put an end
+to your career."
+
+His career, now that Monica urged it as her rival, seemed to
+Everett particularly trivial.
+
+"I don't know what your brother did either," he said. "His sins
+are on his own head. They're not on yours, nor on mine. I don't
+judge him; neither do I intend to let him spoil my happiness. Now
+that I have found you I will never let you go."
+
+Sadly Monica shook her head and smiled.
+
+"When you leave here," she said, "for some new post, you won't
+forget me, but you'll be grateful that I let you go alone; that I was
+not a drag on you. When you go back to your great people and
+your proud and beautiful princesses, all this will seem a strange
+dream, and you will be glad you are awake--and free."
+
+"The idea of marrying you, Monica," said Everett, "is not new. It did
+not occur to me only since we moved out here into the moonlight.
+Since I first saw you I've thought of you, and only of you. I've
+thought of you with me in every corner of the globe, as my wife,
+my sweetheart, my partner, riding through jungles as we ride here,
+sitting opposite me at our own table, putting the proud and beautiful
+princesses at their ease. And in all places, at all moments, you make
+all other women tawdry and absurd. And I don't think you are the
+most wonderful person I ever met because I love you, but I love you
+because you are the most wonderful person I ever met."
+
+"I am young," said Monica, "but since I began to love you I am
+very old. And I see clearly that it cannot be."
+
+"Dear heart," cried Everett, "that is quite morbid. What the
+devil do I care what your brother has done! I am not marrying
+your brother."
+
+For a long time, leaning forward with her elbows on her knees and
+her face buried in her hands, the girl sat silent. It was as though she
+were praying. Everett knew it was not of him, but of her brother,
+she was thinking, and his heart ached for her. For him to cut the
+brother out of his life was not difficult; what it meant to her he
+could guess.
+
+When the girl raised her eyes they were eloquent with distress.
+
+"He has been so good to me," she said; "always so gentle. He has
+been mother and father to me. He is the first person I can remember.
+When I was a child he put me to bed, he dressed me, and comforted
+me. When we became rich there was nothing he did not wish to give
+me. I cannot leave him. He needs me more than ever I needed him. I
+am all he has. And there is this besides. Were I to marry, of all the
+men in the world it would be harder for him if I married you. For if
+you succeed in what you came here to do, the law will punish him,
+and he will know it was through you he was punished. And even
+between you and me there always would be that knowledge, that
+feeling."
+
+"That is not fair," cried Everett. "I am not an individual fighting
+less fortunate individuals. I am an insignificant wheel in a great
+machine. You must not blame me because I-"
+
+With an exclamation the girl reproached him.
+
+"Because you do your duty!" she protested. "Is that fair to me?
+If for my sake or my brother you failed in your duty, if you were
+less vigilant, less eager, even though we suffer, I could not
+love you."
+
+Everett sighed happily.
+
+"As long as you love me," he said, "neither your brother nor any
+one else can keep us apart."
+
+"My brother," said the girl, as though she were pronouncing a
+sentence, "always will keep us apart, and I will always love
+you."
+
+It was a week before he again saw her, and then the feeling he
+had read in her eyes was gone--or rigorously concealed. Now her
+manner was that of a friend, of a young girl addressing a man
+older than herself, one to whom she looked up with respect and
+liking, but with no sign of any feeling deeper or more intimate.
+
+It upset Everett completely. When he pleaded with her, she asked:
+
+"Do you think it is easy for me? But--" she protested, "I know I
+am doing right. I am doing it to make you happy."
+
+"You are succeeding," Everett assured her, "in making us both
+damned miserable."
+
+For Everett, in the second month of his stay in Amapala, events
+began to move quickly. Following the example of two of his
+predecessors, the Secretary of State of the United States was
+about to make a grand tour of Central America. He came on a
+mission of peace and brotherly love, to foster confidence and
+good-will, and it was secretly hoped that, in the wake of his
+escort of battle-ships, trade would follow fast. There would
+be salutes and visits of ceremony, speeches, banquets, reviews.
+But in these rejoicings Amapala would have no part.
+
+For, so Everett was informed by cable, unless, previous to the
+visit of the Secretary, Amapala fell into line with her sister
+republics and signed a treaty of extradition, from the itinerary
+of the great man Amapala would find herself pointedly excluded.
+It would be a humiliation. In the eyes of her sister republics it
+would place her outside the pale. Everett saw that in his hands
+his friend the Secretary had placed a powerful weapon; and lost
+no time in using it. He caught the President alone, sitting late at
+his dinner, surrounded by bottles, and read to him the Secretary's
+ultimatum. General Mendoza did not at once surrender. Before he
+threw over the men who fed him the golden eggs that made him rich,
+and for whom he had sworn never to violate the right of sanctuary,
+he first, for fully half an hour, raged and swore. During that time,
+while Everett sat anxiously expectant, the President paced and
+repaced the length of the dining-hall. When to relight his cigar,
+or to gulp brandy from a tumbler, he halted at the table, his great
+bulk loomed large in the flickering candle-flames, and when he
+continued his march, he would disappear into the shadows, and
+only his scabbard clanking on the stone floor told of his presence.
+At last he halted and shrugged his shoulders so that the tassels of
+his epaulets tossed like wheat.
+
+"You drive a hard bargain, sir," he said. "And I have no choice.
+To-morrow bring the treaty and I will sign."
+
+Everett at once produced it and a fountain pen.
+
+"I should like to cable to-night," he urged, "that you have signed.
+They are holding back the public announcement of the Secretary's
+route until hearing from Your Excellency. This is only tentative,"
+he pointed out; "the Senate must ratify. But our Senate will ratify
+it, and when you sign now, it is a thing accomplished."
+
+Over the place at which Everett pointed, the pen scratched harshly;
+and then, throwing it from him, the President sat in silence. With
+eyes inflamed by anger and brandy he regarded the treaty venomously.
+As though loath to let it go, his hands played with it, as a cat plays
+with the mouse between her paws. Watching him breathlessly,
+Everett feared the end was not yet. He felt a depressing premonition
+that if ever the treaty were to reach Washington he best had snatch it
+and run. Even as he waited, the end came. An orderly, appearing
+suddenly in the light of the candles, announced the arrival, in the
+room adjoining, of "the Colonel Goddard and Senor Mellen." They
+desired an immediate audience. Their business with the President
+was most urgent. Whether from Washington their agents had warned
+them, whether in Camaguay they had deciphered the cablegram from
+the State Department, Everett could only guess, but he was certain the
+cause of their visit was the treaty. That Mendoza also believed this
+was most evident.
+
+Into the darkness, from which the two exiles might emerge, he
+peered guiltily. With an oath he tore the treaty in half. Crushing
+the pieces of paper into a ball, he threw it at Everett's feet. His
+voice rose to a shriek. It was apparent he intended his words to
+carry to the men outside. Like an actor on a stage he waved his
+arms.
+
+"That is my answer!" he shouted. "Tell your Secretary the choice
+he offers is an insult! It is blackmail. We will not sign his treaty.
+We do not desire his visit to our country." Thrilled by his own
+bravado, his voice rose higher. "Nor," he shouted, "do we desire
+the presence of his representative. Your usefulness is at an end.
+You will receive your passports in the morning."
+
+As he might discharge a cook, he waved Everett away. His hand,
+trembling with excitement, closed around the neck of the brandy-
+bottle. Everett stooped and secured the treaty. On his return to
+Washington, torn and rumpled as it was, it would be his
+justification. It was his "Exhibit A."
+
+As he approached the legation he saw drawn up in front of it three
+ponies ready saddled. For an instant he wondered if Mendoza
+intended further to insult him, if he planned that night to send
+him under guard to the coast. He determined hotly sooner than
+submit to such an indignity he would fortify the legation, and
+defend himself. But no such heroics were required of him. As he
+reached the door, Garland, with an exclamation of relief, hailed
+him, and Monica, stepping from the shadow, laid an appealing
+hand upon his sleeve.
+
+"My brother!" she exclaimed. "The guard at Cobre has just sent
+word that they found Peabody prowling in the ruins and fired on
+him. He fired back, and he is still there hiding. My brother and
+others have gone to take him. I don't know what may happen if he
+resists. Chester is armed, and he is furious; he is beside himself;
+he would not listen to me. But he must listen to you. Will you
+go," the girl begged, "and speak to him; speak to him, I mean,"
+she added, "as the American minister?"
+
+Everett already had his foot in the stirrup. "I'm the American minister
+only until to-morrow," he said. "I've got my walking-papers. But I'll
+do all I can to stop this to-night. Garland," he asked, "will you take
+Miss Ward home, and then follow me?"
+
+"If I do not go with you," said Monica, "I will go alone."
+
+Her tone was final. With a clatter of hoofs that woke alarmed
+echoes in the sleeping streets the three horses galloped abreast
+toward Cobre. In an hour they left the main trail and at a walk
+picked their way to where the blocks of stone, broken columns,
+and crumbling temples of the half-buried city checked the jungle.
+
+The moon made it possible to move in safety, and at different
+distances the lights of torches told them the man-hunt still was
+in progress.
+
+"Thank God," breathed Monica, "we are in time."
+
+Everett gave the ponies in care of one of the guards. He turned
+to Garland.
+
+"Catch up with those lights ahead of us," he said, "and we will
+join this party to the right. If you find Ward, tell him I forbid
+him taking the law into his own hands; tell him I will protect
+his interests. If you meet Peabody, make him give up his gun,
+and see that the others don't harm him!"
+
+Everett and the girl did not overtake the lights they had seen
+flashing below them. Before they were within hailing distance,
+that searching party had disappeared, and still farther away
+other torches beckoned.
+
+Stumbling and falling, now in pursuit of one will-o'-the-wisp,
+now of another, they scrambled forward. But always the lights
+eluded them. From their exertions and the moist heat they were
+breathless, and their bodies dripped with water. Panting, they
+halted at the entrance of what once had been a tomb. From its
+black interior came a damp mist; above them, alarmed by their
+intrusion, the vampire bats whirled blindly in circles. Monica,
+who by day possessed some slight knowledge of the ruins, had,
+in the moonlight, lost all sense of direction.
+
+"We're lost," said Monica, in a low tone. Unconsciously both were
+speaking in whispers. "I thought we were following what used to
+be the main thoroughfare of the city; but I have never seen this place
+before. From what I have read I think we must be among the tombs
+of the kings."
+
+She was silenced by Everett placing one hand quickly on her arm,
+and with the other pointing. In the uncertain moonlight she saw
+moving cautiously away from them, and unconscious of their
+presence, a white, ghostlike figure.
+
+"Peabody," whispered Everett.
+
+"Call him," commanded Monica.
+
+"The others might hear," objected Everett. "We must overtake him.
+If we're with him when they meet, they wouldn't dare--"
+
+With a gasp of astonishment, his words ceased.
+
+Like a ghost, the ghostlike figure had vanished.
+
+"He walked through that rock!" cried Monica.
+
+Everett caught her by the wrist. "Come!" he commanded.
+
+Over the face of the rock, into which Peabody had dived as into
+water, hung a curtain of vines. Everett tore it apart. Concealed
+by the vines was the narrow mouth to a tunnel; and from it they
+heard, rapidly lessening in the distance, the patter of footsteps.
+
+"Will you wait," demanded Everett, "or come with me?"
+
+With a shudder of distaste, Monica answered by seizing his hand.
+
+With his free arm Everett swept aside the vines, and, Monica
+following, they entered the tunnel. It was a passageway cleanly
+cut through the solid rock and sufficiently wide to permit of their
+moving freely. At the farther end, at a distance of a hundred
+yards, it opened into a great vault, also hollowed from the rock
+and, as they saw to their surprise, brilliantly lighted.
+
+For an instant, in black silhouette, the figure of Peabody
+blocked the entrance to this vault, and then, turning to the
+right, again vanished. Monica felt an untimely desire to laugh.
+Now that they were on the track of Peabody she no longer feared
+the outcome of the adventure. In the presence of the American
+minister and of herself there would be no violence; and as they
+trailed the archaeologist through the tunnel she was reminded of
+Alice and her pursuit of the white rabbit. This thought, and her
+sense of relief that the danger was over, caused her to laugh aloud.
+
+They had gained the farther end of the tunnel and the entrance to
+the vault, when at once her amusement turned to wonder. For the
+vault showed every evidence of use and of recent occupation. In
+brackets, and burning brightly, were lamps of modern make; on
+the stone floor stood a canvas cot, saddle-bags, camp-chairs,
+and in the centre of the vault a collapsible table. On this were
+bottles filled with chemicals, trays, and presses such as are used
+in developing photographs, and apparently hung there to dry,
+
+swinging from strings, the proofs of many negatives.
+
+Loyal to her brother, Monica exclaimed indignantly. At the proofs
+she pointed an accusing finger.
+
+"Look!" she whispered. "This is Peabody's darkroom, where he
+develops the flash-lights he takes of the hieroglyphs! Chester has
+a right to be furious!"
+
+Impulsively she would have pushed past Everett; but with an
+exclamation he sprang in front of her.
+
+"No!" he commanded, "come away!"
+
+He had fallen into a sudden panic. His tone spoke of some
+catastrophe, imminent and overwhelming. Monica followed
+the direction of his eyes. They were staring in fear at the proofs.
+
+The girl leaned forward; and now saw them clearly.
+
+Each was a United States Treasury note for five hundred dollars.
+
+Around the turn of the tunnel, approaching the vault apparently
+from another passage, they heard hurrying footsteps; and then,
+close to them from the vault itself, the voice of Professor Peabody.
+
+It was harsh, sharp, peremptory.
+
+"Hands up!" it commanded. "Drop that gun!"
+
+As though halted by a precipice, the footsteps fell into instant
+silence. There was a pause, and then the ring of steel upon the
+stone floor. There was another pause, and Monica heard the
+voice of her brother. Broken, as though with running, it still
+retained its level accent, its note of insolence.
+
+"So," it said, "I have caught you?"
+
+Monica struggled toward the lighted vault, but around her Everett
+threw his arm.
+
+"Come away!" he begged.
+
+Monica fought against the terror of something unknown. She could
+not understand. They had come only to prevent a meeting between
+her brother and Peabody; and now that they had met, Everett was
+endeavoring to escape.
+
+It was incomprehensible.
+
+And the money in the vault, the yellow bills hanging from a
+cobweb of strings; why should they terrify her; what did they
+threaten? Dully, and from a distance, Monica heard the voice
+of Peabody.
+
+"No," he answered; "I have caught you! And I've had a hell of a
+time doing it!"
+
+Monica tried to call out, to assure her brother of her presence.
+But, as though in a nightmare, she could make no sound. Fingers
+of fear gripped at her throat. To struggle was no longer possible.
+
+The voice of Peabody continued:
+
+"Six months ago we traced these bills to New Orleans. So we guessed
+the plant was in Central America. We knew only one man who could
+make them. When I found you were in Amapala and they said you had
+struck 'buried treasure'--the rest was easy."
+
+Monica heard the voice of her brother answer with a laugh.
+
+"Easy?" he mocked. "There's no extradition. You can't touch me.
+You're lucky if you get out of here alive. I've only to raise my voice--"
+
+"And, I'll kill you!"
+
+This was danger Monica could understand.
+
+Freed from the nightmare of doubt, with a cry she ran forward.
+She saw Peabody, his back against a wall, a levelled automatic in
+his hand; her brother at the entrance to a tunnel like the one from
+which she had just appeared. His arms were raised above his head.
+At his feet lay a revolver. For an instant, with disbelief, he stared
+at Monica, and then, as though assured that it was she, his eyes
+dilated. In them were fear and horror. So genuine was the agony
+in the face of the counterfeiter that Everett, who had followed,
+turned his own away. But the eyes of the brother and sister
+remained fixed upon each other, hers, appealingly; his, with
+despair. He tried to speak, but the words did not come. When
+he did break the silence his tone was singularly wistful, most
+tenderly kind.
+
+"Did you hear?" he asked.
+
+Monica slowly bowed her head. With the same note of gentleness
+her brother persisted:
+
+"Did you understand?"
+
+Between them stretched the cobweb of strings hung with yellow
+certificates; each calling for five hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+Stirred by the night air from the open tunnels, they fluttered and
+flaunted.
+
+Against the sight of them, Monica closed her eyes. Heavily, as
+though with a great physical effort, again she bowed her head.
+
+The eyes of her brother searched about him wildly. They rested on
+the mouth of the tunnel.
+
+With his lowered arm he pointed.
+
+"Who is that?" he cried.
+
+Instinctively the others turned.
+
+It was for an instant. The instant sufficed.
+
+Monica saw her brother throw himself upon the floor, felt herself
+flung aside as Everett and the detective leaped upon him; saw her
+brother press his hands against his heart, the two men dragging
+at his arms.
+
+The cavelike room was shaken with a report, an acrid smoke
+assailed her nostrils. The men ceased struggling. Her brother lay
+still.
+
+Monica sprang toward the body, but a black wave rose and
+submerged her. As she fainted, to save herself she threw out her
+arms, and as she fell she dragged down with her the buried
+treasure of Cobre.
+
+Stretched upon the stone floor beside her brother, she lay motionless.
+Beneath her, and wrapped about and covering her, as the leaves
+covered the babes in the wood, was a vast cobweb of yellow bills,
+each for five hundred dollars, payable in gold.
+
+
+A month later the harbor of Porto Cortez in Honduras was shaken
+with the roar of cannon. In comparison, the roaring of all the cannon
+of all the revolutions that that distressful country ever had known,
+were like fire-crackers under a barrel.
+
+Faithful to his itinerary, the Secretary of State of the United States
+was paying his formal visit to Honduras, and the President of that
+republic, waiting upon the Fruit Company's wharf to greet him, was
+receiving the salute of the American battle-ships. Back of him, on
+the wharf, his own barefooted artillerymen in their turn were saluting,
+excitedly and spasmodically, the distinguished visitor. As an honor
+he had at last learned to accept without putting a finger in each ear,
+the Secretary of State smiled with gracious calm. Less calm was the
+President of Honduras. He knew something the Secretary did not
+know. He knew that at any moment a gun of his saluting battery
+might turn turtle, or blow into the harbor himself, his cabinet, and
+the larger part of his standing army.
+
+Made fast to the wharf on the side opposite to the one at which
+the Secretary had landed was one of the Fruit Company's steamers.
+She was on her way north, and Porto Cortez was a port of call.
+That her passengers might not intrude upon the ceremonies, her
+side of the wharf was roped off and guarded by the standing army.
+But from her decks and from behind the ropes the passengers, with
+a battery of cameras, were perpetuating the historic scene.
+
+Among them, close to the ropes, viewing the ceremony with the
+cynical eye of one who in Europe had seen kings and emperors
+meet upon the Field of the Cloth of Gold, was Everett. He made
+no effort to bring himself to the attention of his former chief. But
+when the introductions were over, the Secretary of State turned
+his eyes to his fellow countrymen crowding the rails of the
+American steamer. They greeted him with cheers. The great
+man raised his hat, and his eyes fell upon Everett. The Secretary
+advanced quickly, his hand extended, brushing to one side the
+standing army.
+
+"What are you doing here?" he demanded.
+
+"On my way home, sir," said Everett. "I couldn't leave sooner; there
+were--personal reasons. But I cabled the department my resignation
+the day Mendoza gave me my walking-papers. You may remember,"
+Everett added dryly, "the department accepted by cable."
+
+The great man showed embarrassment.
+
+"It was most unfortunate," he sympathized. "We wanted that treaty,
+and while, no doubt, you made every effort--"
+
+He became aware of the fact that Everett's attention was not
+exclusively his own. Following the direction of the young man's
+eyes the Secretary saw on the deck just above them, leaning upon
+the rail, a girl in deep mourning.
+
+She was very beautiful. Her face was as lovely as a violet and as shy.
+To the Secretary a beautiful woman was always a beautiful woman.
+But he had read the papers. Who had not? He was sure there must
+be some mistake. This could not be the sister of a criminal; the
+woman for whom Everett had smashed his career.
+
+The Secretary masked his astonishment, but not his admiration.
+
+"Mrs. Everett?" he asked. His very tone conveyed congratulations.
+
+"Yes," said the ex-diplomat. "Some day I shall be glad to present
+you."
+
+The Secretary did not wait for an introduction. Raising his eyes
+to the ship's rail, he made a deep and courtly bow. With a gesture
+worthy of d'Artagnan, his high hat swept the wharf. The members
+of his staff, the officers from the war-ships, the President of
+Honduras and the members of his staff endeavored to imitate his
+act of homage, and in confusion Mrs. Everett blushed becomingly.
+
+"When I return to Washington," said the Secretary hastily, "come
+and see me. You are too valuable to lose. Your career--"
+
+Again Everett was looking at his wife. Her distress at having been
+so suddenly drawn into the lime-light amused him, and he was
+smiling. Then, as though aware of the Secretary's meaning, he
+laughed.
+
+"My dear sir!" he protested. His tone suggested he was about to
+add "mind your own business," or "go to the devil."
+
+Instead he said: "I'm not worrying about my career. My career has
+just begun."
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BOY SCOUT
+
+
+
+
+A rule of the Boy Scouts is every day to do some one a good turn.
+Not because the copybooks tell you it deserves another, but in
+spite of that pleasing possibility. If you are a true scout, until
+you have performed your act of kindness your day is dark. You
+are as unhappy as is the grown-up who has begun his day without
+shaving or reading the New York Sun. But as soon as you have
+proved yourself you may, with a clear conscience, look the world
+in the face and untie the knot in your kerchief.
+
+Jimmie Reeder untied the accusing knot in his scarf at just ten
+minutes past eight on a hot August morning after he had given one
+dime to his sister Sadie. With that she could either witness the
+first-run films at the Palace, or by dividing her fortune patronize
+two of the nickel shows on Lenox Avenue. The choice Jimmie
+left to her. He was setting out for the annual encampment of
+the Boy Scouts at Hunter's Island, and in the excitement of that
+adventure even the movies ceased to thrill. But Sadie also could
+be unselfish. With a heroism of a camp-fire maiden she made
+a gesture which might have been interpreted to mean she was
+returning the money.
+
+"I can't, Jimmie!" she gasped. "I can't take it off you. You
+saved it, and you ought to get the fun of it."
+
+"I haven't saved it yet," said Jimmie. "I'm going to cut it out
+of the railroad fare. I'm going to get off at City Island instead
+of at Pelham Manor and walk the difference. That's ten cents
+cheaper."
+
+Sadie exclaimed with admiration:
+
+"An' you carryin' that heavy grip!"
+
+"Aw, that's nothin'," said the man of the family.
+
+"Good-by, mother. So long, Sadie."
+
+To ward off further expressions of gratitude he hurriedly advised
+Sadie to take in "The Curse of Cain" rather than "The Mohawk's
+Last Stand," and fled down the front steps.
+
+He wore his khaki uniform. On his shoulders was his knapsack,
+from his hands swung his suit-case, and between his heavy stockings
+and his "shorts" his kneecaps, unkissed by the sun, as yet unscathed
+by blackberry vines, showed as white and fragile as the wrists of a girl.
+As he moved toward the "L" station at the corner, Sadie and his mother
+waved to him; in the street, boys too small to be scouts hailed him
+enviously; even the policeman glancing over the newspapers on the
+news-stand nodded approval.
+
+"You a scout, Jimmie?" he asked.
+
+"No," retorted Jimmie, for was not he also in uniform? "I'm Santa
+Claus out filling Christmas stockings."
+
+The patrolman also possessed a ready wit.
+
+"Then get yourself a pair," he advised. "If a dog was to see your
+legs--"
+
+Jimmie escaped the insult by fleeing up the steps of the
+Elevated.
+
+
+An hour later, with his valise in one hand and staff in the other,
+he was tramping up the Boston Post Road and breathing heavily.
+The day was cruelly hot. Before his eyes, over an interminable
+stretch of asphalt, the heat waves danced and flickered. Already
+the knapsack on his shoulders pressed upon him like an Old Man
+of the Sea; the linen in the valise had turned to pig iron, his pipe-
+stem legs were wabbling, his eyes smarted with salt sweat, and the
+fingers supporting the valise belonged to some other boy, and were
+giving that boy much pain. But as the motor-cars flashed past with
+raucous warnings, or, that those who rode might better see the boy
+with bare knees, passed at "half speed," Jimmie stiffened his shoulders
+and stepped jauntily forward. Even when the joy-riders mocked with
+"Oh, you scout!" he smiled at them. He was willing to admit to those
+who rode that the laugh was on the one who walked. And he regretted--
+oh, so bitterly--having left the train. He was indignant that for his
+"one good turn a day" he had not selected one less strenuous--that,
+for instance, he had not assisted a frightened old lady through the
+traffic. To refuse the dime she might have offered, as all true scouts
+refuse all tips, would have been easier than to earn it by walking five
+miles, with the sun at ninety-nine degrees, and carrying excess baggage.
+Twenty times James shifted the valise to the other hand, twenty times
+he let it drop and sat upon it.
+
+And then, as again he took up his burden, the good Samaritan drew
+near. He drew near in a low gray racing-car at the rate of forty miles
+an hour, and within a hundred feet of Jimmie suddenly stopped and
+backed toward him. The good Samaritan was a young man with white
+hair. He wore a suit of blue, a golf cap; the hands that held the wheel
+were disguised in large yellow gloves. He brought the car to a halt and
+surveyed the dripping figure in the road with tired and uncurious eyes.
+
+"You a Boy Scout?" he asked.
+
+With alacrity for the twenty-first time Jimmie dropped the valise,
+forced his cramped fingers into straight lines, and saluted.
+
+The young man in the car nodded toward the seat beside him.
+
+"Get in," he commanded.
+
+When James sat panting happily at his elbow the old young man, to
+Jimmie's disappointment, did not continue to shatter the speed limit.
+Instead, he seemed inclined for conversation, and the car, growling
+indignantly, crawled.
+
+"I never saw a Boy Scout before," announced the old young man.
+"Tell me about it. First, tell me what you do when you're not
+scouting."
+
+Jimmie explained volubly. When not in uniform he was an office
+boy, and from peddlers and beggars guarded the gates of Carroll
+and Hastings, stock-brokers. He spoke the names of his employers
+with awe. It was a firm distinguished, conservative, and long
+established. The white-haired young man seemed to nod in assent.
+
+"Do you know them?" demanded Jimmie suspiciously. "Are you a
+customer of ours?"
+
+"I know them," said the young man. "They are customers of mine."
+
+Jimmie wondered in what way Carroll and Hastings were customers
+of the white-haired young man. Judging him by his outer garments,
+Jimmie guessed he was a Fifth Avenue tailor; he might be even a
+haberdasher. Jimmie continued. He lived, he explained, with his
+mother at One Hundred and Forty-sixth Street; Sadie, his sister,
+attended the public school; he helped support them both, and he
+now was about to enjoy a well-earned vacation camping out on
+Hunter's Island, where he would cook his own meals, and, if the
+mosquitoes permitted, sleep in a tent.
+
+"And you like that?" demanded the young man. "You call that fun?"
+
+"Sure!" protested Jimmie. "Don't you go camping out?"
+
+"I go camping out," said the good Samaritan, "whenever I leave
+New York."
+
+Jimmie had not for three years lived in Wall Street not to
+understand that the young man spoke in metaphor.
+
+"You don't look," objected the young man critically, "as though
+you were built for the strenuous life."
+
+Jimmie glanced guiltily at his white knees.
+
+"You ought ter see me two weeks from now," he protested. "I get all
+sunburnt and hard-
+-hard as anything!"
+
+The young man was incredulous.
+
+"You were near getting sunstruck when I picked you up," he
+laughed. "If you're going to Hunter's Island, why didn't you go
+to Pelham Manor?"
+
+"That's right!" assented Jimmie eagerly. "But I wanted to save
+the ten cents so's to send Sadie to the movies. So I walked."
+
+The young man looked his embarrassment.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he murmured.
+
+But Jimmie did not hear him. From the back of the car he was
+dragging excitedly at the hated suit-case.
+
+"Stop!" he commanded. "I got ter get out. I got ter walk."
+
+The young man showed his surprise.
+
+"Walk!" he exclaimed. "What is it--a bet?"
+
+Jimmie dropped the valise and followed it into the roadway. It
+took some time to explain to the young man. First, he had to be
+told about the scout law and the one good turn a day, and that it
+must involve some personal sacrifice. And, as Jimmie pointed out,
+changing from a slow suburban train to a racing-car could not be
+listed as a sacrifice. He had not earned the money, Jimmie argued;
+he had only avoided paying it to the railroad. If he did not walk
+he would be obtaining the gratitude of Sadie by a falsehood.
+Therefore, he must walk.
+
+"Not at all," protested the young man. "You've got it wrong. What
+good will it do your sister to have you sunstruck? I think you are
+sunstruck. You're crazy with the heat. You get in here, and we'll
+talk it over as we go along."
+
+Hastily Jimmie backed away. "I'd rather walk," he said.
+
+The young man shifted his legs irritably.
+
+"Then how'll this suit you?" he called. "We'll declare that first 'one
+good turn' a failure and start afresh. Do me a good turn."
+
+Jimmie halted in his tracks and looked back suspiciously.
+
+"I'm going to Hunter's Island Inn," called the young man, "and I've
+lost my way. You get in here and guide me. That'll be doing me
+a good turn."
+
+On either side of the road, blotting out the landscape, giant
+hands picked out in electric-light bulbs pointed the way to
+Hunter's Island Inn. Jimmie grinned and nodded toward them.
+
+"Much obliged," he called. "I got ter walk." Turning his back
+upon temptation, he waddled forward into the flickering heat
+waves.
+
+
+The young man did not attempt to pursue. At the side of the road,
+under the shade of a giant elm, he had brought the car to a halt and
+with his arms crossed upon the wheel sat motionless, following with
+frowning eyes the retreating figure of Jimmie. But the narrow-chested
+and knock-kneed boy staggering over the sun-baked asphalt no longer
+concerned him. It was not Jimmie, but the code preached by Jimmie,
+and not only preached but before his eyes put into practice, that
+interested him. The young man with white hair had been running
+away from temptation. At forty miles an hour he had been running
+away from the temptation to do a fellow mortal "a good turn." That
+morning, to the appeal of a drowning Caesar to "Help me, Cassius,
+or I sink," he had answered: "Sink!" That answer he had no wish to
+reconsider. That he might not reconsider he had sought to escape.
+It was his experience that a sixty-horse-power racing-machine is a
+jealous mistress. For retrospective, sentimental, or philanthropic
+thoughts she grants no leave of absence. But he had not escaped.
+Jimmie had halted him, tripped him by the heels, and set him again
+to thinking. Within the half-hour that followed those who rolled
+past saw at the side of the road a car with her engine running, and
+leaning upon the wheel, as unconscious of his surroundings as
+though he sat at his own fireplace, a young man who frowned and
+stared at nothing. The half-hour passed and the young man swung
+his car back toward the city. But at the first road-house that showed
+a blue-and-white telephone sign he left it, and into the iron box at
+the end of the bar dropped a nickel. He wished to communicate with
+Mr. Carroll, of Carroll and Hastings; and when he learned Mr. Carroll
+had just issued orders that he must not be disturbed, the young man
+gave his name.
+
+The effect upon the barkeeper was instantaneous. With the aggrieved
+air of one who feels he is the victim of a jest he laughed scornfully.
+
+"What are you putting over?" he demanded.
+
+The young man smiled reassuringly. He had begun to speak and,
+though apparently engaged with the beer-glass he was polishing,
+the barkeeper listened.
+
+Down in Wall Street the senior member of Carroll and Hastings
+also listened. He was alone in the most private of all his private
+offices, and when interrupted had been engaged in what, of all
+undertakings, is the most momentous. On the desk before him
+lay letters to his lawyer, to the coroner, to his wife; and hidden
+by a mass of papers, but within reach of his hand, was an
+automatic pistol. The promise it offered of swift release had
+made the writing of the letters simple, had given him a feeling
+of complete detachment, had released him, at least in thought,
+from all responsibilities. And when at his elbow the telephone
+coughed discreetly, it was as though some one had called him
+from a world from which already he had made his exit.
+
+Mechanically, through mere habit, he lifted the receiver.
+
+The voice over the telephone came in brisk, staccato sentences.
+
+"That letter I sent this morning? Forget it. Tear it up. I've been
+thinking and I'm going to take a chance. I've decided to back you
+boys, and I know you'll make good. I'm speaking from a road-house
+in the Bronx; going straight from here to the bank. So you can begin
+to draw against us within an hour. And--hello!--will three millions
+see you through?"
+
+From Wall Street there came no answer, but from the hands of the
+barkeeper a glass crashed to the floor.
+
+The young man regarded the barkeeper with puzzled eyes.
+
+"He doesn't answer," he exclaimed. "He must have hung up."
+
+"He must have fainted!" said the barkeeper.
+
+The white-haired one pushed a bill across the counter. "To pay
+for breakage," he said, and disappeared down Pelham Parkway.
+
+Throughout the day, with the bill, for evidence, pasted against
+the mirror, the barkeeper told and retold the wondrous tale.
+
+"He stood just where you're standing now," he related, "blowing
+in million-dollar bills like you'd blow suds off a beer. If I'd
+knowed it was him, I'd have hit him once and hid him in the
+cellar for the reward. Who'd I think he was? I thought he was
+a wire-tapper, working a con game!"
+
+Mr. Carroll had not "hung up," but when in the Bronx the
+beer-glass crashed, in Wall Street the receiver had slipped from
+the hand of the man who held it, and the man himself had fallen
+forward. His desk hit him in the face and woke him--woke him
+to the wonderful fact that he still lived; that at forty he had been
+born again; that before him stretched many more years in which,
+as the young man with the white hair had pointed out, he still
+could make good.
+
+The afternoon was far advanced when the staff of Carroll and
+Hastings were allowed to depart, and, even late as was the hour,
+two of them were asked to remain. Into the most private of the
+private offices Carroll invited Gaskell, the head clerk; in the
+main office Hastings had asked young Thorne, the bond clerk,
+to be seated.
+
+
+Until the senior partner has finished with Gaskell young Thorne
+must remain seated.
+
+"Gaskell," said Mr. Carroll, "if we had listened to you, if we'd run
+this place as it was when father was alive, this never would have
+happened. It hasn't happened, but we've had our lesson. And
+after this we're going slow and going straight. And we don't need
+you to tell us how to do that. We want you to go away--on a month's
+vacation. When I thought we were going under I planned to send the
+children on a sea voyage with the governess--so they wouldn't see the
+newspapers. But now that I can look them in the eye again, I need
+them, I can't let them go. So, if you'd like to take your wife on an
+ocean trip to Nova Scotia and Quebec, here are the cabins I reserved
+for the kids. They call it the royal suite--whatever that is--and the trip
+lasts a month. The boat sails to-morrow morning. Don't sleep too late
+or you may miss her."
+
+The head clerk was secreting the tickets in the inside pocket of
+his waistcoat. His fingers trembled, and when he laughed his
+voice trembled.
+
+"Miss the boat!" the head clerk exclaimed. "If she gets away from
+Millie and me she's got to start now. We'll go on board to-night!"
+
+A half-hour later Millie was on her knees packing a trunk, and
+her husband was telephoning to the drug-store for a sponge-bag
+and a cure for seasickness.
+
+Owing to the joy in her heart and to the fact that she was on her
+knees, Millie was alternately weeping into the trunk-tray and
+offering up incoherent prayers of thanksgiving. Suddenly she
+sank back upon the floor.
+
+"John!" she cried, "doesn't it seem sinful to sail away in a
+'royal suite' and leave this beautiful flat empty?"
+
+Over the telephone John was having trouble with the drug clerk.
+
+"No!" he explained, "I'm not seasick now. The medicine I want is
+to be taken later. I know I'm speaking from the Pavonia; but the
+Pavonia isn't a ship; it's an apartment-house."
+
+He turned to Millie. "We can't be in two places at the same
+time," he suggested.
+
+"But, think," insisted Millie, "of all the poor people stifling
+to-night in this heat, trying to sleep on the roofs and fire-escapes;
+and our flat so cool and big and pretty--and no one in it."
+
+John nodded his head proudly.
+
+"I know it's big," he said, "but it isn't big enough to hold all
+the people who are sleeping to-night on the roofs and in the
+parks."
+
+"I was thinking of your brother--and Grace," said Millie. "They've
+been married only two weeks now, and they're in a stuffy hall
+bedroom and eating with all the other boarders. Think what our
+flat would mean to them; to be by themselves, with eight rooms
+and their own kitchen and bath, and our new refrigerator and the
+gramophone! It would be heaven! It would be a real honeymoon!"
+
+Abandoning the drug clerk, John lifted Millie in his arms and
+kissed her, for, next to his wife, nearest his heart was the
+younger brother.
+
+
+The younger brother and Grace were sitting on the stoop of the
+boarding-house. On the upper steps, in their shirt-sleeves, were
+the other boarders; so the bride and bridegroom spoke in whispers.
+The air of the cross street was stale and stagnant; from it rose
+exhalations of rotting fruit, the gases of an open subway, the
+smoke of passing taxicabs. But between the street and the hall
+bedroom, with its odors of a gas-stove and a kitchen, the choice
+was difficult.
+
+"We've got to cool off somehow," the young husband was saying,
+"or you won't sleep. Shall we treat ourselves to ice-cream sodas
+or a trip on the Weehawken ferry-boat?"
+
+"The ferry-boat!" begged the girl, "where we can get away from
+all these people."
+
+A taxicab with a trunk in front whirled into the street, kicked
+itself to a stop, and the head clerk and Millie spilled out upon
+the pavement. They talked so fast, and the younger brother and
+Grace talked so fast, that the boarders, although they listened
+intently, could make nothing of it.
+
+They distinguished only the concluding sentences:
+
+"Why don't you drive down to the wharf with us," they heard the
+elder brother ask, "and see our royal suite?"
+
+But the younger brother laughed him to scorn.
+
+"What's your royal suite," he mocked, "to our royal palace?"
+
+An hour later, had the boarders listened outside the flat of the
+head clerk, they would have heard issuing from his bathroom the
+cooling murmur of running water and from his gramophone the
+jubilant notes of "Alexander's Rag-time Band."
+
+When in his private office Carroll was making a present of the
+royal suite to the head clerk, in the main office Hastings, the
+junior partner, was addressing "Champ" Thorne, the bond clerk.
+He addressed him familiarly and affectionately as "Champ." This
+was due partly to the fact that twenty-six years before Thorne had
+been christened Champneys and to the coincidence that he had
+captained the football eleven of one of the Big Three to the
+championship.
+
+"Champ," said Mr. Hastings, "last month, when you asked me to
+raise your salary, the reason I didn't do it was not because you
+didn't deserve it, but because I believed if we gave you a raise
+you'd immediately get married."
+
+The shoulders of the ex-football captain rose aggressively; he
+snorted with indignation.
+
+"And why should I not get married?" he demanded. "You're a fine
+one to talk! You're the most offensively happy married man I ever
+met."
+
+"Perhaps I know I am happy better than you do," reproved the
+junior partner; "but I know also that it takes money to support a
+wife."
+
+"You raise me to a hundred a week," urged Champ, "and I'll make
+it support a wife whether it supports me or not."
+
+"A month ago," continued Hastings, "we could have promised you a
+hundred, but we didn't know how long we could pay it. We didn't
+want you to rush off and marry some fine girl--"
+
+"Some fine girl!" muttered Mr. Thorne. "The finest girl!"
+
+"The finer the girl," Hastings pointed out, "the harder it would
+have been for you if we had failed and you had lost your job."
+
+The eyes of the young man opened with sympathy and concern.
+
+"Is it as bad as that?" he murmured.
+
+Hastings sighed happily.
+
+"It was," he said, "but this morning the Young Man of Wall Street
+did us a good turn--saved us--saved our creditors, saved our homes,
+saved our honor. We're going to start fresh and pay our debts, and
+we agreed the first debt we paid would be the small one we owe you.
+You've brought us more than we've given, and if you'll stay with us
+we're going to 'see' your fifty and raise it a hundred. What do you
+say?"
+
+Young Mr. Thorne leaped to his feet. What he said was: "Where'n
+hell's my hat?"
+
+But by the time he had found the hat and the door he mended his
+manners.
+
+"I say, 'Thank you a thousand times,"' he shouted over his
+shoulder. "Excuse me, but I've got to go. I've got to break the
+news to--"
+
+He did not explain to whom he was going to break the news; but
+Hastings must have guessed, for again he sighed happily and then,
+a little hysterically laughed aloud. Several months had passed
+since he had laughed aloud.
+
+In his anxiety to break the news Champ Thorne almost broke his
+neck. In his excitement he could not remember whether the red
+flash meant the elevator was going down or coming up, and sooner
+than wait to find out he started to race down eighteen flights of
+stairs when fortunately the elevator-door swung open.
+
+"You get five dollars," he announced to the elevator man, "if you
+drop to the street without a stop. Beat the speed limit! Act like
+the building is on fire and you're trying to save me before the
+roof falls."
+
+Senator Barnes and his entire family, which was his daughter
+Barbara, were at the Ritz-Carlton. They were in town in August
+because there was a meeting of the directors of the Brazil and
+Cuyaba Rubber Company, of which company Senator Barnes was
+president. It was a secret meeting. Those directors who were
+keeping cool at the edge of the ocean had been summoned by
+telegraph; those who were steaming across the ocean, by wireless.
+
+Up from the equator had drifted the threat of a scandal, sickening,
+grim, terrible. As yet it burned beneath the surface, giving out only
+an odor, but an odor as rank as burning rubber itself. At any moment
+it might break into flame. For the directors, was it the better wisdom
+to let the scandal smoulder, and take a chance, or to be the first to give
+the alarm, the first to lead the way to the horror and stamp it out?
+
+It was to decide this that, in the heat of August, the directors and the
+president had foregathered.
+
+Champ Thorne knew nothing of this; he knew only that by a miracle
+Barbara Barnes was in town; that at last he was in a position to ask
+her to marry him; that she would certainly say she would. That was
+all he cared to know.
+
+A year before he had issued his declaration of independence.
+Before he could marry, he told her, he must be able to support a
+wife on what he earned, without her having to accept money from
+her father, and until he received "a minimum wage" of five thousand
+dollars they must wait.
+
+"What is the matter with my father's money?" Barbara had demanded.
+
+Thorne had evaded the direct question.
+
+"There is too much of it," he said.
+
+"Do you object to the way he makes it?" insisted Barbara. "Because
+rubber is most useful. You put it in golf balls and auto tires and
+galoshes. There is nothing so perfectly respectable as galoshes.
+And what is there 'tainted' about a raincoat?"
+
+Thorne shook his head unhappily.
+
+"It's not the finished product to which I refer," he stammered; "it's
+the way they get the raw material."
+
+"They get it out of trees," said Barbara. Then she exclaimed with
+enlightenment--"Oh!" she cried, "you are thinking of the Congo.
+There it is terrible! That is slavery. But there are no slaves on the
+Amazon. The natives are free and the work is easy. They just tap
+the trees the way the farmers gather sugar in Vermont. Father has
+told me about it often."
+
+Thorne had made no comment. He could abuse a friend, if the
+friend were among those present, but denouncing any one he
+disliked as heartily as he disliked Senator Barnes was a public
+service he preferred to leave to others. And he knew besides that
+if the father she loved and the man she loved distrusted each
+other, Barbara would not rest until she learned the reason why.
+
+One day, in a newspaper, Barbara read of the Puju Mayo atrocities,
+of the Indian slaves in the jungles and backwaters of the Amazon,
+who are offered up as sacrifices to "red rubber." She carried the
+paper to her father. What it said, her father told her, was untrue,
+and if it were true it was the first he had heard of it.
+
+Senator Barnes loved the good things of life, but the thing he
+loved most was his daughter; the thing he valued the highest was
+her good opinion. So when for the first time she looked at him in
+doubt, he assured her he at once would order an investigation.
+
+"But, of course," he added, "it will be many months before our
+agents can report. On the Amazon news travels very slowly."
+
+In the eyes of his daughter the doubt still lingered.
+
+"I am afraid," she said, "that that is true."
+
+That was six months before the directors of the Brazil and Cuyaba
+Rubber Company were summoned to meet their president at his
+rooms in the Ritz-Carlton. They were due to arrive in half an hour,
+and while Senator Barnes awaited their coming Barbara came to
+him. In her eyes was a light that helped to tell the great news. It
+gave him a sharp, jealous pang. He wanted at once to play a part
+in her happiness, to make her grateful to him, not alone to this
+stranger who was taking her away. So fearful was he that she
+would shut him out of her life that had she asked for half his
+kingdom he would have parted with it.
+
+"And besides giving my consent," said the rubber king, "for which
+no one seems to have asked, what can I give my little girl to make
+her remember her old father? Some diamonds to put on her head,
+or pearls to hang around her neck, or does she want a vacant lot
+on Fifth Avenue?"
+
+The lovely hands of Barbara rested upon his shoulders; her lovely
+face was raised to his; her lovely eyes were appealing, and a little
+frightened.
+
+"What would one of those things cost?" asked Barbara.
+
+The question was eminently practical. It came within the scope of
+the senator's understanding. After all, he was not to be cast into
+outer darkness. His smile was complacent. He answered airily:
+
+"Anything you like," he said; "a million dollars?"
+
+The fingers closed upon his shoulders. The eyes, still frightened,
+still searched his in appeal.
+
+"Then, for my wedding-present," said the girl, "I want you to take
+that million dollars and send an expedition to the Amazon. And I
+will choose the men. Men unafraid; men not afraid of fever or
+sudden death; not afraid to tell the truth--even to you. And all the
+world will know. And they--I mean you--will set those people free!"
+
+Senator Barnes received the directors with an embarrassment which
+he concealed under a manner of just indignation.
+
+"My mind is made up," he told them. "Existing conditions cannot
+continue. And to that end, at my own expense, I am sending an
+expedition across South America. It will investigate, punish, and
+establish reforms. I suggest, on account of this damned heat, we
+do now adjourn."
+
+That night, over on Long Island, Carroll told his wife all, or
+nearly all. He did not tell her about the automatic pistol. And
+together on tiptoe they crept to the nursery and looked down at
+their sleeping children. When she rose from her knees the mother
+said: "But how can I thank him?"
+
+By "him" she meant the Young Man of Wall Street.
+
+"You never can thank him," said Carroll; "that's the worst of it."
+
+But after a long silence the mother said: "I will send him a
+photograph of the children. Do you think he will understand?"
+
+Down at Seabright, Hastings and his wife walked in the sunken
+garden. The moon was so bright that the roses still held their
+color.
+
+"I would like to thank him," said the young wife. She meant the
+Young Man of Wall Street. "But for him we would have lost this."
+
+Her eyes caressed the garden, the fruit-trees, the house with wide,
+hospitable verandas. "To-morrow I will send him some of these
+roses," said the young wife. "Will he understand that they mean
+our home?"
+
+At a scandalously late hour, in a scandalous spirit of independence,
+Champ Thorne and Barbara were driving around Central Park in a
+taxicab.
+
+"How strangely the Lord moves, his wonders to perform," misquoted
+Barbara. "Had not the Young Man of Wall Street saved Mr. Hastings,
+Mr. Hastings could not have raised your salary; you would not have
+asked me to marry you, and had you not asked me to marry you,
+father would not have given me a wedding-present, and--"
+
+"And," said Champ, taking up the tale, "thousands of slaves would
+still be buried in the jungles, hidden away from their wives and
+children and the light of the sun and their fellow men. They
+still would be dying of fever, starvation, tortures."
+
+He took her hand in both of his and held her finger-tips against
+his lips.
+
+"And they will never know," he whispered, "when their freedom
+comes, that they owe it all to you."
+
+
+On Hunter's Island, Jimmie Reeder and his bunkie, Sam Sturges,
+each on his canvas cot, tossed and twisted. The heat, the moonlight,
+and the mosquitoes would not let them even think of sleep.
+
+"That was bully," said Jimmie, "what you did to-day about saving
+that dog. If it hadn't been for you he'd ha' drownded."
+
+"He would not!" said Sammy with punctilious regard for the truth;
+"it wasn't deep enough."
+
+"Well, the scout-master ought to know," argued Jimmie; "he said
+it was the best 'one good turn' of the day!"
+
+Modestly Sam shifted the lime-light so that it fell upon his
+bunkie.
+
+"I'll bet," he declared loyally, "your 'one good turn' was a
+better one!"
+
+Jimmie yawned, and then laughed scornfully.
+
+"Me!" he scoffed. "I didn't do nothing. I sent my sister to the
+movies."
+
+
+
+
+
+"SOMEWHERE IN FRANCE"
+
+
+
+
+Marie Gessler, known as Marie Chaumontel, Jeanne d'Avrechy,
+the Countess d'Aurillac, was German. Her father, who served
+through the Franco-Prussian War, was a German spy. It was
+from her mother she learned to speak French sufficiently well
+to satisfy even an Academician and, among Parisians, to pass
+as one. Both her parents were dead. Before they departed,
+knowing they could leave their daughter nothing save their
+debts, they had had her trained as a nurse. But when they
+were gone, Marie in the Berlin hospitals played politics,
+intrigued, indiscriminately misused the appealing, violet
+eyes. There was a scandal; several scandals. At the age of
+twenty-five she was dismissed from the Municipal Hospital,
+and as now-save for the violet eyes--she was without resources,
+as a compagnon de voyage with a German doctor she travelled
+to Monte Carlo. There she abandoned the doctor for Henri
+Ravignac, a captain in the French Aviation Corps, who,
+when his leave ended, escorted her to Paris.
+
+The duties of Captain Ravignac kept him in barracks near the
+aviation field, but Marie he established in his apartments on the
+Boulevard Haussmann. One day he brought from the barracks a
+roll of blue-prints, and as he was locking them in a drawer, said:
+"The Germans would pay through the nose for those!" The remark
+was indiscreet, but then Marie had told him she was French, and
+any one would have believed her.
+
+The next morning the same spirit of adventure that had exiled her
+from the Berlin hospitals carried her with the blue-prints to the
+German embassy. There, greatly shocked, they first wrote down her
+name and address, and then, indignant at her proposition, ordered
+her out. But the day following a strange young German who was
+not at all indignant, but, on the contrary, quite charming, called
+upon Marie. For the blue-prints he offered her a very large sum,
+and that same hour with them and Marie departed for Berlin. Marie
+did not need the money. Nor did the argument that she was serving
+her country greatly impress her. It was rather that she loved intrigue.
+And so she became a spy.
+
+Henri Ravignac, the man she had robbed of the blue-prints, was tried
+by court-martial. The charge was treason, but Charles Ravignac, his
+younger brother, promised to prove that the guilty one was the girl,
+and to that end obtained leave of absence and spent much time and
+money. At the trial he was able to show the record of Marie in
+Berlin and Monte Carlo; that she was the daughter of a German
+secret agent; that on the afternoon the prints disappeared Marie,
+with an agent of the German embassy, had left Paris for Berlin.
+In consequence of this the charge of selling military secrets was
+altered to one of "gross neglect," and Henri Ravignac was sentenced
+to two years in the military prison at Tours. But he was of an ancient
+and noble family, and when they came to take him from his cell in the
+Cherche-Midi, he was dead. Charles, his brother, disappeared. It was
+said he also had killed himself; that he had been appointed a military
+attache in South America; that to revenge his brother he had entered
+the secret service; but whatever became of him no one knew. All that
+was certain was that, thanks to the act of Marie Gessler, on the rolls
+of the French army the ancient and noble name of Ravignac no longer
+appeared.
+
+In her chosen profession Marie Gessler found nothing discreditable.
+Of herself her opinion was not high, and her opinion of men was
+lower. For her smiles she had watched several sacrifice honor, duty,
+loyalty; and she held them and their kind in contempt. To lie, to
+cajole, to rob men of secrets they thought important, and of secrets
+the importance of which they did not even guess, was to her merely
+an intricate and exciting game.
+
+She played it very well. So well that in the service her advance
+was rapid. On important missions she was sent to Russia, through
+the Balkans; even to the United States. There, with credentials
+as an army nurse, she inspected our military hospitals and
+unobtrusively asked many innocent questions.
+
+When she begged to be allowed to work in her beloved Paris,
+"they" told her when war came "they" intended to plant her
+inside that city, and that, until then, the less Paris knew of
+her the better.
+
+But just before the great war broke, to report on which way Italy
+might jump, she was sent to Rome, and it was not until September
+she was recalled. The telegram informed her that her Aunt
+Elizabeth was ill, and that at once she must return to Berlin.
+This, she learned from the code book wrapped under the cover
+of her thermos bottle, meant that she was to report to the general
+commanding the German forces at Soissons.
+
+From Italy she passed through Switzerland, and, after leaving Basle,
+on military trains was rushed north to Luxemburg, and then west to
+Laon. She was accompanied by her companion, Bertha, an elderly
+and respectable, even distinguished-looking female. In the secret
+service her number was 528. Their passes from the war office
+described them as nurses of the German Red Cross. Only the
+Intelligence Department knew their real mission. With her, also,
+as her chauffeur, was a young Italian soldier of fortune, Paul
+Anfossi. He had served in the Belgian Congo, in the French
+Foreign Legion in Algiers, and spoke all the European languages.
+In Rome, where as a wireless operator he was serving a commercial
+company, in selling Marie copies of messages he had memorized,
+Marie had found him useful, and when war came she obtained
+for him, from the Wilhelmstrasse, the number 292. From Laon,
+in one of the automobiles of the General Staff, the three spies
+were driven first to Soissons, and then along the road to Meaux
+and Paris, to the village of Neufchelles. They arrived at midnight,
+and in a chateau of one of the Champagne princes, found the
+colonel commanding the Intelligence Bureau. He accepted their
+credentials, destroyed them, and replaced them with a laissez-
+passer signed by the mayor of Laon. That dignitary, the colonel
+explained, to citizens of Laon fleeing to Paris and the coast had
+issued many passes. But as now between Laon and Paris there were
+three German armies, the refugees had been turned back and their
+passes confiscated.
+
+"From among them," said the officer, "we have selected one for
+you. It is issued to the wife of Count d'Aurillac, a captain of
+reserves, and her aunt, Madame Benet. It asks for those ladies
+and their chauffeur, Briand, a safe-conduct through the French
+military lines. If it gets you into Paris you will destroy it and
+assume another name. The Count d'Aurillac is now with his
+regiment in that city. If he learned of the presence there of his
+wife, he would seek her, and that would not be good for you. So,
+if you reach Paris, you will become a Belgian refugee. You are
+high-born and rich. Your chateau has been destroyed. But you
+have money. You will give liberally to the Red Cross. You will
+volunteer to nurse in the hospitals. With your sad story of ill
+treatment by us, with your high birth, and your knowledge of
+nursing, which you acquired, of course, only as an amateur, you
+should not find it difficult to join the Ladies of France, or the
+American Ambulance. What you learn from the wounded English
+and French officers and the French doctors you will send us through
+the usual channels."
+
+"When do I start?" asked the woman.
+
+"For a few days," explained the officer, "you remain in this chateau.
+You will keep us informed of what is going forward after we
+withdraw."
+
+"Withdraw?" It was more of an exclamation than a question. Marie
+was too well trained to ask questions.
+
+"We are taking up a new position," said the officer, "on the
+Aisne."
+
+The woman, incredulous, stared.
+
+"And we do not enter Paris?"
+
+"You do," returned the officer. "That is all that concerns you.
+We will join you later--in the spring. Meanwhile, for the winter
+we intrench ourselves along the Aisne. In a chimney of this
+chateau we have set up a wireless outfit. We are leaving it intact.
+The chauffeur Briand--who, you must explain to the French, you
+brought with you from Laon, and who has been long in your
+service--will transmit whatever you discover. We wish especially
+to know of any movement toward our left. If they attack in front
+from Soissons, we are prepared; but of any attempt to cross the
+Oise and take us in flank you must warn us."
+
+The officer rose and hung upon himself his field-glasses,
+map-cases, and side-arms.
+
+"We leave you now," he said. "When the French arrive you will
+tell them your reason for halting at this chateau was that the owner,
+Monsieur Iverney, and his family are friends of your husband. You
+found us here, and we detained you. And so long as you can use the
+wireless, make excuses to remain. If they offer to send you on to Paris,
+tell them your aunt is too ill to travel."
+
+"But they will find the wireless," said the woman. "They are sure to
+use the towers for observation, and they will find it."
+
+"In that case," said the officer, "you will suggest to them that
+we fled in such haste we had no time to dismantle it. Of course,
+you had no knowledge that it existed, or, as a loyal French woman,
+you would have at once told them." To emphasize his next words
+the officer pointed at her: "Under no circumstances," he continued,
+"must you be suspected. If they should take Briand in the act,
+should they have even the least doubt concerning him, you must
+repudiate him entirely. If necessary, to keep your own skirts clear,
+it would be your duty yourself to denounce him as a spy."
+
+"Your first orders," said the woman, "were to tell them Briand had
+been long in my service; that I brought him from my home in Laon."
+
+"He might be in your service for years," returned the colonel,
+"and you not know he was a German agent."
+
+"If to save myself I inform upon him," said Marie, "of course you
+know you will lose him."
+
+The officer shrugged his shoulders. "A wireless operator," he
+retorted, "we can replace. But for you, and for the service you
+are to render in Paris, we have no substitute. You must not be
+found out. You are invaluable."
+
+The spy inclined her head. "I thank you," she said.
+
+The officer sputtered indignantly.
+
+"It is not a compliment," he exclaimed; "it is an order. You must
+not be found out!"
+
+Withdrawn some two hundred yards from the Paris road, the
+chateau stood upon a wooded hill. Except directly in front,
+trees of great height surrounded it. The tips of their branches
+brushed the windows; interlacing, they continued until they
+overhung the wall of the estate. Where it ran with the road the
+wall gave way to a lofty gate and iron fence, through which those
+passing could see a stretch of noble turf, as wide as a polo-field,
+borders of flowers disappearing under the shadows of the trees;
+and the chateau itself, with its terrace, its many windows, its
+high-pitched, sloping roof, broken by towers and turrets.
+
+Through the remainder of the night there came from the road to
+those in the chateau the roar and rumbling of the army in retreat.
+It moved without panic, disorder, or haste, but unceasingly. Not
+for an instant was there a breathing-spell. And when the sun rose,
+the three spies--the two women and the chauffeur--who in the great
+chateau were now alone, could see as well as hear the gray column
+of steel rolling past below them.
+
+The spies knew that the gray column had reached Claye, had stood
+within fifteen miles of Paris, and then upon Paris had turned its
+back. They knew also that the reverberations from the direction
+of Meaux, that each moment grew more loud and savage, were the
+French "seventy-fives" whipping the gray column forward. Of what
+they felt the Germans did not speak. In silence they looked at each
+other, and in the eyes of Marie was bitterness and resolve.
+
+Toward noon Marie met Anfossi in the great drawing-room that
+stretched the length of the terrace and from the windows of which,
+through the park gates, they could see the Paris road.
+
+"This, that is passing now," said Marie, "is the last of our rear-guard.
+Go to your tower," she ordered, "and send word that except for
+stragglers and the wounded our column has just passed through
+NeufchelIes, and that any moment we expect the French." She
+raised her hand impressively. "From now," she warned, "we
+speak French, we think French, we are French!"
+
+Anfossi, or Briand, as now he called himself, addressed her in
+that language. His tone was bitter. "Pardon my lese-majesty," he
+said, "but this chief of your Intelligence Department is a dummer
+Mensch. He is throwing away a valuable life."
+
+Marie exclaimed in dismay. She placed her hand upon his arm, and
+the violet eyes filled with concern.
+
+"Not yours!" she protested.
+
+"Absolutely!" returned the Italian. "I can send nothing by this
+knapsack wireless that they will not learn from others; from airmen,
+Uhlans, the peasants in the fields. And certainly I will be caught.
+Dead I am dead, but alive and in Paris the opportunities are unending.
+From the French Legion Etranger I have my honorable discharge. I
+am an expert wireless operator and in their Signal Corps I can easily
+find a place. Imagine me, then, on the Eiffel Tower. From the air I
+snatch news from all of France, from the Channel, the North Sea.
+You and I could work together, as in Rome. But here, between the
+lines, with a pass from a village sous-prefet, it is ridiculous. I am
+not afraid to die. But to die because some one else is stupid, that is
+hard."
+
+Marie clasped his hand in both of hers.
+
+"You must not speak of death," she cried; "you know I must carry out
+my orders, that I must force you to take this risk. And you know that
+thought of harm to you tortures me!"
+
+Quickly the young man disengaged his hand. The woman exclaimed
+with anger.
+
+"Why do you doubt me?" she cried.
+
+Briand protested vehemently.
+
+"I do not doubt you."
+
+"My affection, then?" In a whisper that carried with it the
+feeling of a caress Marie added softly: "My love?"
+
+The young man protested miserably. "You make it very hard,
+mademoiselle," he cried. "You are my superior officer, I am your
+servant. Who am I that I should share with others--"
+
+The woman interrupted eagerly.
+
+"Ah, you are jealous!" she cried. "Is that why you are so cruel?
+But when I tell you I love you, and only you, can you not feel it
+is the truth?"
+
+The young man frowned unhappily.
+
+"My duty, mademoiselle!" he stammered.
+
+With an exclamation of anger Marie left him. As the door slammed
+behind her, the young man drew a deep breath. On his face was the
+expression of ineffable relief.
+
+In the hall Marie met her elderly companion, Bertha, now her
+aunt, Madame Benet.
+
+"I heard you quarrelling," Bertha protested. "It is most indiscreet.
+It is not in the part of the Countess d'Aurillac that she makes love
+to her chauffeur."
+
+Marie laughed noiselessly and drew her farther down the hall. "He
+is imbecile!" she exclaimed. "He will kill me with his solemn face
+and his conceit. I make love to him--yes--that he may work the
+more willingly. But he will have none of it. He is jealous of the
+others."
+
+Madame Benet frowned.
+
+"He resents the others," she corrected. "I do not blame him. He is
+a gentleman!"
+
+"And the others," demanded Marie; "were they not of the most
+noble families of Rome?"
+
+"I am old and I am ugly," said Bertha, "but to me Anfossi is
+always as considerate as he is to you who are so beautiful."
+
+"An Italian gentleman," returned Marie, "does not serve in
+Belgian Congo unless it is--the choice of that or the marble
+quarries."
+
+"I do not know what his past may be," sighed Madame Benet,
+"nor do I ask. He is only a number, as you and I are only numbers.
+And I beg you to let us work in harmony. At such a time your
+love-affairs threaten our safety. You must wait."
+
+Marie laughed insolently. "With the Du Barry," she protested, "I
+can boast that I wait for no man."
+
+"No," replied the older woman; "you pursue him!"
+
+Marie would have answered sharply, but on the instant her
+interest was diverted. For one week, by day and night, she had
+lived in a world peopled only by German soldiers. Beside her
+in the railroad carriage, on the station platforms, at the windows
+of the trains that passed the one in which she rode, at the grade
+crossings, on the bridges, in the roads that paralleled the tracks,
+choking the streets of the villages and spread over the fields of
+grain, she had seen only the gray-green uniforms. Even her
+professional eye no longer distinguished regiment from regiment,
+dragoon from grenadier, Uhlan from Hussar or Landsturm.
+Stripes, insignia, numerals, badges of rank, had lost their meaning.
+Those who wore them no longer were individuals. They were not
+even human. During the three last days the automobile, like a
+motor-boat fighting the tide, had crept through a gray-green
+river of men, stained, as though from the banks, by mud and
+yellow clay. And for hours, while the car was blocked, and in
+fury the engine raced and purred, the gray-green river had rolled
+past her, slowly but as inevitably as lava down the slope of a
+volcano, bearing on its surface faces with staring eyes, thousands
+and thousands of eyes, some fierce and bloodshot, others filled
+with weariness, homesickness, pain. At night she still saw them:
+the white faces under the sweat and dust, the eyes dumb, inarticulate,
+asking the answer. She had been suffocated by German soldiers, by
+the mass of them, engulfed and smothered; she had stifled in a land
+inhabited only by gray-green ghosts.
+
+And suddenly, as though a miracle had been wrought, she saw upon
+the lawn, riding toward her, a man in scarlet, blue, and silver. One
+man riding alone.
+
+Approaching with confidence, but alert; his reins fallen, his hands
+nursing his carbine, his eyes searched the shadows of the trees, the
+empty windows, even the sun-swept sky. His was the new face at
+the door, the new step on the floor. And the spy knew had she
+beheld an army corps it would have been no more significant,
+no more menacing, than the solitary chasseur a cheval scouting
+in advance of the enemy.
+
+"We are saved!" exclaimed Marie, with irony. "Go quickly," she
+commanded, "to the bedroom on the second floor that opens upon
+the staircase, so that you can see all who pass. You are too ill
+to travel. They must find you in bed."
+
+"And you?" said Bertha.
+
+"I," cried Marie rapturously, "hasten to welcome our preserver!"
+
+The preserver was a peasant lad. Under the white dust his cheeks
+were burned a brown-red, his eyes, honest and blue, through much
+staring at the skies and at horizon lines, were puckered and
+encircled with tiny wrinkles. Responsibility had made him older
+than his years, and in speech brief. With the beautiful lady who
+with tears of joy ran to greet him, and who in an ecstasy of
+happiness pressed her cheek against the nose of his horse, he was
+unimpressed. He returned to her her papers and gravely echoed her
+answers to his questions. "This chateau," he repeated, "was
+occupied by their General Staff; they have left no wounded here;
+you saw the last of them pass a half-hour since." He gathered up
+his reins.
+
+Marie shrieked in alarm. "You will not leave us?" she cried.
+
+For the first time the young man permitted himself to smile.
+"Others arrive soon," he said.
+
+He touched his shako, wheeled his horse in the direction from
+which he had come, and a minute later Marie heard the hoofs
+echoing through the empty village.
+
+When they came, the others were more sympathetic. Even in
+times of war a beautiful woman is still a beautiful woman. And
+the staff officers who moved into the quarters so lately occupied
+by
+the enemy found in the presence of the Countess d'Aurillac
+nothing to distress them. In the absence of her dear friend,
+Madame Iverney, the chatelaine of the chateau, she acted as their
+hostess. Her chauffeur showed the company cooks the way to the
+kitchen, the larder, and the charcoal-box. She, herself, in the
+hands of General Andre placed the keys of the famous wine-cellar,
+and to the surgeon, that the wounded might be freshly bandaged,
+intrusted those of the linen-closet. After the indignities she had
+suffered while "detained" by les Boches, her delight and relief at
+again finding herself under the protection of her own people would
+have touched a heart of stone. And the hearts of the staff were not
+of stone. It was with regret they gave the countess permission to
+continue on her way. At this she exclaimed with gratitude. She
+assured them, were her aunt able to travel, she would immediately
+depart.
+
+"In Paris she will be more comfortable than here," said the kind
+surgeon. He was a reservist, and in times of peace a fashionable
+physician and as much at his ease in a boudoir as in a field
+hospital. "Perhaps if I saw Madam Benet?"
+
+At the suggestion the countess was overjoyed. But they found
+Madame Benet in a state of complete collapse. The conduct of
+the Germans had brought about a nervous breakdown.
+
+"Though the bridges are destroyed at Meaux," urged the surgeon,
+"even with a detour, you can be in Paris in four hours. I think it is
+worth the effort."
+
+But the mere thought of the journey threw Madame Benet into
+hysterics. She asked only to rest, she begged for an opiate to
+make her sleep. She begged also that they would leave the door
+open, so that when she dreamed she was still in the hands of the
+Germans, and woke in terror, the sound of the dear French voices
+and the sight of the beloved French uniforms might reassure her.
+She played her part well. Concerning her Marie felt not the least
+anxiety. But toward Briand, the chauffeur, the new arrivals were
+less easily satisfied.
+
+The general sent his adjutant for the countess. When the adjutant
+had closed the door General Andre began abruptly:
+
+"The chauffeur Briand," he asked, "you know him; you can vouch
+for him?"
+
+"But, certainly!" protested Marie. "He is an Italian."
+
+As though with sudden enlightenment, Marie laughed. It was
+as if now in the suspicion of the officer she saw a certain
+reasonableness. "Briand was so long in the Foreign Legion
+in Algiers," she explained, "where my husband found him,
+that we have come to think of him as French. As much French
+as ourselves, I assure you."
+
+The general and his adjutant were regarding each other
+questioningly.
+
+"Perhaps I should tell the countess," began the general, "that we
+have learned--"
+
+The signal from the adjutant was so slight, so swift, that Marie
+barely intercepted it.
+
+The lips of the general shut together like the leaves of a book.
+To show the interview was at an end, he reached for a pen.
+
+"I thank you," he said.
+
+"Of course," prompted the adjutant, "Madame d'Aurillac understands
+the man must not know we inquired concerning him."
+
+General Andre frowned at Marie.
+
+"Certainly not!" he commanded. "The honest fellow must not know
+that even for a moment he was doubted."
+
+Marie raised the violet eyes reprovingly.
+
+"I trust," she said with reproach, "I too well understand the
+feelings of a French soldier to let him know his loyalty is
+questioned."
+
+With a murmur of appreciation the officers bowed and with a
+gesture of gracious pardon Marie left them.
+
+Outside in the hall, with none but orderlies to observe, like a cloak
+the graciousness fell from her. She was drawn two ways. In her
+work Anfossi was valuable. But Anfossi suspected was less than
+of no value; he became a menace, a death-warrant.
+
+General Andre had said, "We have learned--" and the adjutant
+had halted him. What had he learned? To know that, Marie
+would have given much. Still, one important fact comforted her.
+Anfossi alone was suspected. Had there been concerning herself
+the slightest doubt, they certainly would not have allowed her to
+guess her companion was under surveillance; they would not have
+asked one who was herself suspected to vouch for the innocence of
+a fellow conspirator. Marie found the course to follow difficult.
+With Anfossi under suspicion his usefulness was for the moment
+at an end; and to accept the chance offered her to continue on to
+Paris seemed most wise. On the other hand, if, concerning
+Anfossi, she had succeeded in allaying their doubts, the results
+most to be desired could be attained only by remaining where they
+were.
+
+Their position inside the lines was of the greatest strategic
+value. The rooms of the servants were under the roof, and that
+Briand should sleep in one of them was natural. That to reach or
+leave his room he should constantly be ascending or descending
+the stairs also was natural. The field-wireless outfit, or, as he
+had disdainfully described it, the "knapsack" wireless, was
+situated not in the bedroom he had selected for himself, but in
+one adjoining. At other times this was occupied by the maid of
+Madame Iverney. To summon her maid Madame Iverney, from her
+apartment on the second floor, had but to press a button. And it
+was in the apartment of Madame Iverney, and on the bed of that
+lady, that Madame Benet now reclined. When through the open
+door she saw an officer or soldier mount the stairs, she pressed
+the button that rang a bell in the room of the maid. In this way,
+long before whoever was ascending the stairs could reach the top
+floor, warning of his approach came to Anfossi. It gave him time
+to replace the dustboard over the fireplace in which the wireless
+was concealed and to escape into his own bedroom. The arrangement
+was ideal. And already information picked up in the halls below
+by Marie had been conveyed to Anfossi to relay in a French cipher
+to the German General Staff at Rheims.
+
+Marie made an alert and charming hostess. To all who saw her
+it was evident that her mind was intent only upon the comfort of
+her guests. Throughout the day many came and went, but each
+she made welcome; to each as he departed she called "bonne
+chance."
+Efficient, tireless, tactful, she was everywhere: in the
+dining-room, in the kitchen, in the bedrooms, for the wounded
+finding mattresses to spread in the gorgeous salons of the
+Champagne prince; for the soldier-chauffeurs carrying wine into
+the courtyard, where the automobiles panted and growled, and the
+arriving and departing shrieked for right of way. At all times an
+alluring person, now the one woman in a tumult of men, her smart
+frock covered by an apron, her head and arms bare, undismayed
+by the sight of the wounded or by the distant rumble of the guns,
+the Countess d'Aurillac was an inspiring and beautiful picture.
+The eyes of the officers, young and old, informed her of that
+fact, one of which already she was well aware. By the morning
+of the next day she was accepted as the owner of the chateau.
+
+And though continually she reminded the staff she was present
+only as the friend of her schoolmate, Madame Iverney, they
+deferred to her as to a hostess. Many of them she already
+saluted by name, and to those who with messages were
+constantly motoring to and from the front at Soissons she
+was particularly kind. Overnight the legend of her charm,
+of her devotion to the soldiers of all ranks, had spread from
+Soissons to Meaux, and from Meaux to Paris. It was noon of
+that day when from the window of the second story Marie saw
+an armored automobile sweep into the courtyard. It was driven
+by an officer, young and appallingly good-looking, and, as was
+obvious by the way he spun his car, one who held in contempt
+both the law of gravity and death. That he was some one of
+importance seemed evident. Before he could alight the adjutant
+had raced to meet him. With her eye for detail Marie observed
+that the young officer, instead of imparting information, received
+it. He must, she guessed, have just arrived from Paris, and his
+brother officer either was telling him the news or giving him his
+orders. Whichever it might be, in what was told him the new
+arrival was greatly interested. One instant in indignation his
+gauntleted fist beat upon the steering-wheel, the next he smiled
+with pleasure. To interpret this pantomime was difficult; and,
+the better to inform herself, Marie descended the stairs.
+
+As she reached the lower hall the two officers entered. To the
+spy the man last to arrive was always the one of greatest
+importance; and Marie assured herself that through her friend,
+the adjutant, to meet with this one would prove easy.
+
+But the chauffeur-commander of the armored car made it most
+difficult. At sight of Marie, much to her alarm, as though
+greeting a dear friend, he snatched his kepi from his head and
+sprang toward her.
+
+"The major," he cried, "told me you were here, that you are Madame
+d'Aurillac." His eyes spoke his admiration. In delight he beamed
+upon her. "I might have known it!" he murmured. With the
+confidence of one who is sure he brings good news, he laughed
+happily. "And I," he cried, "am 'Pierrot'!"
+
+Who the devil "Pierrot" might be the spy could not guess. She
+knew only that she wished by a German shell "Pierrot" and his
+car had been blown to tiny fragments. Was it a trap, she asked
+herself, or was the handsome youth really some one the Countess
+d'Aurillac should know. But, as from his introducing himself it
+was evident he could not know that lady very well, Marie took
+courage and smiled.
+
+"Which 'Pierrot'?" she parried.
+
+"Pierre Thierry!" cried the youth.
+
+To the relief of Marie he turned upon the adjutant and to him
+explained who Pierre Thierry might be.
+
+"Paul d'Aurillac," he said, "is my dearest friend. When he married
+this charming lady I was stationed in Algiers, and but for the war
+I might never have met her."
+
+To Marie, with his hand on his heart in a most charming manner,
+he bowed. His admiration he made no effort to conceal.
+
+"And so," he said, "I know why there is war!"
+
+The adjutant smiled indulgently, and departed on his duties, leaving
+them alone. The handsome eyes of Captain Thierry were raised to
+the violet eyes of Marie. They appraised her boldly and as boldly
+expressed their approval.
+
+In burlesque the young man exclaimed indignantly: "Paul deceived
+me!" he cried. "He told me he had married the most beautiful woman
+in Laon. He has married the most beautiful woman in France!"
+
+To Marie this was not impertinence, but gallantry.
+
+This was a language she understood, and this was the type of man,
+because he was the least difficult to manage, she held most in
+contempt.
+
+"But about you Paul did not deceive me," she retorted. In
+apparent confusion her eyes refused to meet his. "He told me
+'Pierrot' was a most dangerous man!"
+
+She continued hurriedly. With wifely solicitude she asked
+concerning Paul. She explained that for a week she had been
+a prisoner in the chateau, and, since the mobilization, of her
+husband save that he was with his regiment in Paris she had heard
+nothing. Captain Thierry was able to give her later news. Only
+the day previous, on the boulevards, he had met Count d'Aurillac.
+He was at the Grand Hotel, and as Thierry was at once motoring
+back to Paris he would give Paul news of their meeting. He hoped
+he might tell him that soon his wife also would be in Paris. Marie
+explained that only the illness of her aunt prevented her from that
+same day joining her husband. Her manner became serious.
+
+"And what other news have you?" she asked. "Here on the
+firing-line we know less of what is going forward than you in
+Paris."
+
+So Pierre Thierry told her all he knew. They were preparing
+despatches he was at once to carry back to the General Staff,
+and, for the moment, his time was his own. How could he
+better employ it than in talking of the war with a patriotic
+and charming French woman?
+
+In consequence Marie acquired a mass of facts, gossip, and
+guesses. From these she mentally selected such information as,
+to her employers across the Aisne, would be of vital interest.
+
+And to rid herself of Thierry and on the fourth floor seek
+Anfossi was now her only wish. But, in attempting this, by
+the return of the adjutant she was delayed. To Thierry the
+adjutant gave a sealed envelope.
+
+"Thirty-one, Boulevard des Invalides," he said. With a smile he
+turned to Marie. "And you will accompany him!"
+
+"I!" exclaimed Marie. She was sick with sudden terror.
+
+But the tolerant smile of the adjutant reassured her.
+
+"The count, your husband," he explained, "has learned of your
+detention here by the enemy, and he has besieged the General
+Staff to have you convoyed safely to Paris." The adjutant glanced
+at a field telegram he held open in his hand. "He asks," he continued,
+"that you be permitted to return in the car of his friend, Captain
+Thierry, and that on arriving you join him at the Grand Hotel."
+
+Thierry exclaimed with delight.
+
+"But how charming!" he cried. "To-night you must both dine with
+me at La Rue's." He saluted his superior officer. "Some petrol,
+sir," he said. "And I am ready." To Marie he added: "The car will
+be at the steps in five minutes." He turned and left them.
+
+The thoughts of Marie, snatching at an excuse for delay, raced
+madly. The danger of meeting the Count d'Aurillac, her supposed
+husband, did not alarm her. The Grand Hotel has many exits, and,
+even before they reached it, for leaving the car she could invent
+an excuse that the gallant Thierry would not suspect. But what
+now concerned her was how, before she was whisked away to Paris,
+she could convey to Anfossi the information she had gathered from
+Thierry. First, of a woman overcome with delight at being reunited
+with her husband she gave an excellent imitation; then she exclaimed
+in distress: "But my aunt, Madame Benet!" she cried. "I cannot leave
+her!"
+
+"The Sisters of St. Francis," said the adjutant, "arrive within an hour
+to nurse the wounded. They will care also for your aunt."
+
+Marie concealed her chagrin. "Then I will at once prepare to go,"
+she said.
+
+The adjutant handed her a slip of paper. "Your laissez-passer to
+Paris," he said. "You leave in five minutes, madame!"
+
+As temporary hostess of the chateau Marie was free to visit
+any part of it, and as she passed her door a signal from Madame
+Benet told her that Anfossi was on the fourth floor, that he was
+at work, and that the coast was clear. Softly, in the felt slippers
+she always wore, as she explained, in order not to disturb the
+wounded, she mounted the staircase. In her hand she carried
+the housekeeper's keys, and as an excuse it was her plan to return
+with an armful of linen for the arriving Sisters. But Marie never
+reached the top of the stairs. When her eyes rose to the level
+of the fourth floor she came to a sudden halt. At what she saw
+terror gripped her, bound her hand and foot, and turned her blood
+to ice.
+
+At her post for an instant Madame Benet had slept, and an officer
+of the staff, led by curiosity, chance, or suspicion, had, unobserved
+and unannounced, mounted to the fourth floor. When Marie saw
+him he was in front of the room that held the wireless. His back
+was toward her, but she saw that he was holding the door to the
+room ajar, that his eye was pressed to the opening, and that
+through it he had pushed the muzzle of his automatic. What
+would be the fate of Anfossi Marie knew. Nor did she for an
+instant consider it. Her thoughts were of her own safety; that
+she might live.
+
+Not that she might still serve the Wilhelmstrasse, the Kaiser, or
+the Fatherland; but that she might live. In a moment Anfossi
+would be denounced, the chateau would ring with the alarm, and,
+though she knew Anfossi would not betray her, by others she might
+be accused. To avert suspicion from herself she saw only one way
+open. She must be the first to denounce Anfossi.
+
+Like a deer, she leaped down the marble stairs and, in a panic
+she had no need to assume, burst into the presence of the staff.
+
+"Gentlemen!" she gasped, "my servant--the chauffeur--Briand is a
+spy! There is a German wireless in the chateau. He is using it!
+I have seen him." With exclamations, the officers rose to their
+feet. General Andre alone remained seated. General Andre was
+a veteran of many Colonial wars: Cochin-China, Algiers, Morocco.
+The great war, when it came, found him on duty in the Intelligence
+Department. His aquiline nose, bristling white eyebrows, and
+flashing, restless eyes gave him his nickname of l'Aigle.
+
+In amazement, the flashing eyes were now turned upon Marie. He
+glared at her as though he thought she suddenly had flown mad.
+
+"A German wireless!" he protested. "It is impossible!"
+
+"I was on the fourth floor," panted Marie, "collecting linen for
+the Sisters. In the room next to the linen-closet I heard a strange
+buzzing sound. I opened the door softly. I saw Briand with his
+back to me seated by an instrument. There were receivers clamped
+to his ears! My God! The disgrace! The disgrace to my husband and
+to me, who vouched for him to you!" Apparently in an agony of
+remorse, the fingers of the woman laced and interlaced. "I cannot
+forgive myself!"
+
+The officers moved toward the door, but General Andre halted
+them. Still in a tone of incredulity, he demanded: "When did you
+see this?"
+
+Marie knew the question was coming, knew she must explain how
+she saw Briand, and yet did not see the staff officer who, with his
+prisoner, might now at any instant appear. She must make it plain
+she had discovered the spy and left the upper part of the house
+before the officer had visited it. When that was she could not
+know, but the chance was that he had preceded her by only a
+few minutes.
+
+"When did you see this?" repeated the general.
+
+"But just now," cried Marie; "not ten minutes since."
+
+"Why did you not come to me at once?"
+
+"I was afraid," replied Marie. "If I moved I was afraid he might hear
+me, and he, knowing I would expose him, would kill me-and so
+escape you!" There was an eager whisper of approval. For silence,
+General Andre slapped his hand upon the table.
+
+"Then," continued Marie, "I understood with the receivers on his
+ears he could not have heard me open the door, nor could he hear
+me leave, and I ran to my aunt. The thought that we had harbored
+such an animal sickened me, and I was weak enough to feel faint.
+But only for an instant. Then I came here." She moved swiftly to
+the door. "Let me show you the room," she begged; "you can take
+him in the act." Her eyes, wild with the excitement of the chase,
+swept the circle. "Will you come?" she begged.
+
+Unconscious of the crisis he interrupted, the orderly on duty
+opened the door.
+
+"Captain Thierry's compliments," he recited mechanically, "and is
+he to delay longer for Madame d'Aurillac?"
+
+With a sharp gesture General Andre waved Marie toward the door.
+Without rising, he inclined his head. "Adieu, madame," he said.
+"We act at once upon your information. I thank you!"
+
+As she crossed from the hall to the terrace, the ears of the spy were
+assaulted by a sudden tumult of voices. They were raised in threats
+and curses. Looking back, she saw Anfossi descending the stairs.
+His hands were held above his head; behind him, with his automatic,
+the staff officer she had surprised on the fourth floor was driving him
+forward. Above the clinched fists of the soldiers that ran to meet him,
+the eyes of Anfossi were turned toward her. His face was expressionless.
+His eyes neither accused nor reproached. And with the joy of one who
+has looked upon and then escaped the guillotine, Marie ran down the
+steps to the waiting automobile. With a pretty cry of pleasure she leaped
+into the seat beside Thierry. Gayly she threw out her arms. "To Paris!"
+she commanded. The handsome eyes of Thierry, eloquent with
+admiration, looked back into hers. He stooped, threw in the clutch,
+and the great gray car, with the machine gun and its crew of privates
+guarding the rear, plunged through the park.
+
+"To Paris!" echoed Thierry.
+
+In the order in which Marie had last seen them, Anfossi and the
+staff officer entered the room of General Andre, and upon the
+soldiers in the hall the door was shut. The face of the staff
+officer was grave, but his voice could not conceal his elation.
+
+"My general," he reported, "I found this man in the act of giving
+information to the enemy. There is a wireless-"
+
+General Andre rose slowly. He looked neither at the officer nor
+at his prisoner. With frowning eyes he stared down at the maps
+upon his table.
+
+"I know," he interrupted. "Some one has already told me." He
+paused, and then, as though recalling his manners, but still
+without raising his eyes, he added: "You have done well, sir."
+
+In silence the officers of the staff stood motionless. With surprise
+they noted that, as yet, neither in anger nor curiosity had General
+Andre glanced at the prisoner. But of the presence of the general
+the spy was most acutely conscious. He stood erect, his arms still
+raised, but his body strained forward, and on the averted eyes of the
+general his own were fixed.
+
+In an agony of supplication they asked a question.
+
+At last, as though against his wish, toward the spy the general
+turned his head, and their eyes met. And still General Andre was
+silent. Then the arms of the spy, like those of a runner who has
+finished his race and breasts the tape exhausted, fell to his sides.
+In a voice low and vibrant he spoke his question.
+
+"It has been so long, sir," he pleaded. "May I not come home?"
+
+General Andre turned to the astonished group surrounding him. His
+voice was hushed like that of one who speaks across an open grave.
+
+"Gentlemen," he began, "my children," he added. "A German spy, a
+woman, involved in a scandal your brother in arms, Henri Ravignac.
+His honor, he thought, was concerned, and without honor he refused
+to live. To prove him guiltless his younger brother Charles asked
+leave to seek out the woman who had betrayed Henri, and by us was
+detailed on secret service. He gave up home, family, friends. He lived
+in exile, in poverty, at all times in danger of a swift and ignoble death.
+In the War Office we know him as one who has given to his country
+services she cannot hope to reward. For she cannot return to him the
+years he has lost. She cannot return to him his brother. But she can
+and will clear the name of Henri Ravignac, and upon his brother
+Charles bestow promotion and honors."
+
+The general turned and embraced the spy. "My children," he said,
+"welcome your brother. He has come home."
+
+Before the car had reached the fortifications, Marie Gessler had
+arranged her plan of escape. She had departed from the chateau
+without even a hand-bag, and she would say that before the shops
+closed she must make purchases.
+
+Le Printemps lay in their way, and she asked that, when they
+reached it, for a moment she might alight. Captain Thierry
+readily gave permission.
+
+From the department store it would be most easy to disappear,
+and in anticipation Marie smiled covertly. Nor was the picture
+of Captain Thierry impatiently waiting outside unamusing.
+
+But before Le Printemps was approached, the car turned sharply
+down a narrow street. On one side, along its entire length, ran a
+high gray wall, grim and forbidding. In it was a green gate studded
+with iron bolts. Before this the automobile drew suddenly to a halt.
+The crew of the armored car tumbled off the rear seat, and one of
+them beat upon the green gate. Marie felt a hand of ice clutch at her
+throat. But she controlled herself.
+
+"And what is this?" she cried gayly.
+
+At her side Captain Thierry was smiling down at her, but his
+smile was hateful.
+
+"It is the prison of St. Lazare," he said. "It is not becoming,"
+he added sternly, "that the name of the Countess d'Aurillac
+should be made common as the Paris road!"
+
+Fighting for her life, Marie thrust herself against him; her
+arm that throughout the journey had rested on the back of the
+driving-seat caressed his shoulders; her lips and the violet eyes
+were close to his.
+
+"Why should you care?" she whispered fiercely. "You have me! Let
+the Count d'Aurillac look after the honor of his wife himself."
+
+The charming Thierry laughed at her mockingly.
+
+"He means to," he said. "I am the Count d'Aurillac!"
+
+
+
+THE DESERTER
+
+In Salonika, the American consul, the Standard Oil man, and
+the war correspondents formed the American colony. The
+correspondents were waiting to go to the front. Incidentally,
+as we waited, the front was coming rapidly toward us. There
+was "Uncle" Jim, the veteran of many wars, and of all the
+correspondents, in experience the oldest and in spirit the
+youngest, and there was the Kid, and the Artist. The Kid
+jeered at us, and proudly described himself as the only Boy
+Reporter who jumped from a City Hall assignment to cover a
+European War. "I don't know strategy," he would boast; "neither
+does the Man at Home. He wants 'human interest' stuff, and I give
+him what he wants. I write exclusively for the subway guard and
+the farmers in the wheat belt. When you fellows write about the
+'Situation,' they don't understand it. Neither do you. Neither does
+Venizelos or the King. I don't understand it myself. So, I write my
+people heart-to-heart talks about refugees and wounded, and what
+kind of ploughs the Servian peasants use, and that St. Paul wrote
+his letters to the Thessalonians from the same hotel where I write
+mine; and I tell 'em to pronounce Salonika 'eeka,' and not put
+the accent on the 'on.' This morning at the refugee camp I found
+all the little Servians of the Frothingham unit in American Boy
+Scout uniforms. That's my meat. That's 'home week' stuff. You
+fellows write for the editorial page; and nobody reads it. I write
+for the man that turns first to Mutt and Jeff, and then looks to see
+where they are running the new Charlie Chaplin release. When
+that man has to choose between 'our military correspondent' and
+the City Hall Reporter, he chooses me!"
+
+The third man was John, "Our Special Artist." John could write
+a news story, too, but it was the cartoons that had made him
+famous. They were not comic page, but front page cartoons, and
+before making up their minds what they thought, people waited to
+see what their Artist thought. So, it was fortunate his thoughts
+were as brave and clean as they were clever. He was the original
+Little Brother to the Poor. He was always giving away money.
+When we caught him, he would prevaricate. He would say the man
+was a college chum, that he had borrowed the money from him,
+and that this was the first chance he had had to pay it back. The Kid
+suggested it was strange that so many of his college chums should
+at the same moment turn up, dead broke, in Salonika, and that
+half of them should be women.
+
+John smiled disarmingly. "It was a large college," he explained,
+"and coeducational." There were other Americans; Red Cross
+doctors and nurses just escaped through the snow from the
+Bulgars, and hyphenated Americans who said they had taken
+out their first papers. They thought hyphenated citizens were
+so popular with us, that we would pay their passage to New York.
+In Salonika they were transients. They had no local standing. They
+had no local lying-down place, either, or place to eat, or to wash,
+although they did not look as though that worried them, or place
+to change their clothes. Or clothes to change. It was because we
+had clothes to change, and a hotel bedroom, instead of a bench in
+a cafe, that we were ranked as residents and from the Greek police
+held a "permission to sojourn." Our American colony was a very
+close corporation. We were only six Americans against 300,000
+British, French, Greek, and Servian soldiers, and 120,000 civilian
+Turks, Spanish Jews, Armenians, Persians, Egyptians, Albanians,
+and Arabs, and some twenty more other races that are not listed.
+We had arrived in Salonika before the rush, and at the Hotel Hermes
+on the water-front had secured a vast room. The edge of the stone
+quay was not forty feet from us, the only landing steps directly
+opposite our balcony. Everybody who arrived on the Greek
+passenger boats from Naples or the Piraeus, or who had shore
+leave from a man-of-war, transport, or hospital ship, was raked
+by our cameras. There were four windows--one for each of us
+and his work table. It was not easy to work. What was the use?
+The pictures and stories outside the windows fascinated us, but
+when we sketched them or wrote about them, they only proved
+us inadequate. All day long the pinnaces, cutters, gigs, steam
+launches shoved and bumped against the stone steps, marines
+came ashore for the mail, stewards for fruit and fish, Red Cross
+nurses to shop, tiny midshipmen to visit the movies, and the
+sailors and officers of the Russian, French, British, Italian,
+and Greek war-ships to stretch their legs in the park of the Tour
+Blanche, or to cramp them under a cafe table. Sometimes the
+ambulances blocked the quay and the wounded and frost-bitten
+were lifted into the motor-boats, and sometimes a squad of marines
+lined the landing stage, and as a coffin under a French or English
+flag was borne up the stone steps stood at salute. So crowded
+was the harbor that the oars of the boatmen interlocked.
+
+Close to the stone quay, stretched along the three-mile circle,
+were the fishing smacks, beyond them, so near that the anchor
+chains fouled, were the passenger ships with gigantic Greek flags
+painted on their sides, and beyond them transports from Marseilles,
+Malta, and Suvla Bay, black colliers, white hospital ships, burning
+green electric lights, red-bellied tramps and freighters, and, hemming
+them in, the grim, mouse-colored destroyers, submarines, cruisers,
+dreadnaughts. At times, like a wall, the cold fog rose between us
+and the harbor, and again the curtain would suddenly be ripped
+asunder, and the sun would flash on the brass work of the fleet,
+on the white wings of the aeroplanes, on the snow-draped
+shoulders of Mount Olympus. We often speculated as to how
+in the early days the gods and goddesses, dressed as they were,
+or as they were not, survived the snows of Mount Olympus. Or
+was it only their resort for the summer?
+
+It got about that we had a vast room to ourselves, where one
+might obtain a drink, or a sofa for the night, or even money to
+cable for money. So, we had many strange visitors, some half
+starved, half frozen, with terrible tales of the Albanian trail,
+of the Austrian prisoners fallen by the wayside, of the mountain
+passes heaped with dead, of the doctors and nurses wading
+waist-high in snow-drifts and for food killing the ponies. Some
+of our visitors wanted to get their names in the American papers
+so that the folks at home would know they were still alive,
+others wanted us to keep their names out of the papers, hoping
+the police would think them dead; another, convinced it was of
+pressing news value, desired us to advertise the fact that he had
+invented a poisonous gas for use in the trenches. With difficulty
+we prevented him from casting it adrift in our room. Or, he had
+for sale a second-hand motor-cycle, or he would accept a position
+as barkeeper, or for five francs would sell a state secret that, once
+made public, in a month would end the war. It seemed cheap at
+the price.
+
+Each of us had his "scouts" to bring him the bazaar rumor, the
+Turkish bath rumor, the cafe rumor. Some of our scouts journeyed
+as far afield as Monastir and Doiran, returning to drip snow on
+the floor, and to tell us tales, one-half of which we refused to
+believe, and the other half the censor refused to pass. With each
+other's visitors it was etiquette not to interfere. It would have
+been like tapping a private wire. When we found John sketching
+a giant stranger in a cap and coat of wolf skin we did not seek
+to know if he were an Albanian brigand, or a Servian prince
+incognito, and when a dark Levantine sat close to the Kid,
+whispering, and the Kid banged on his typewriter, we did not
+listen.
+
+So, when I came in one afternoon and found a strange American
+youth writing at John's table, and no one introduced us, I took
+it for granted he had sold the Artist an "exclusive" story, and
+asked no questions. But I could not help hearing what they said.
+Even though I tried to drown their voices by beating on the Kid's
+typewriter. I was taking my third lesson, and I had printed, "I
+Amm 5w writjng This, 5wjth my own lilly w?ite handS," when I
+heard the Kid saying:
+
+"You can beat the game this way. Let John buy you a ticket to the
+Piraeus. If you go from one Greek port to another you don't need
+a vise. But, if you book from here to Italy, you must get a permit
+from the Italian consul, and our consul, and the police. The plot
+is to get out of the war zone, isn't it? Well, then, my dope is to get
+out quick, and map the rest of your trip when you're safe in Athens."
+
+It was no business of mine, but I had to look up. The stranger
+was now pacing the floor. I noticed that while his face was
+almost black with tan, his upper lip was quite white. I noticed
+also that he had his hands in the pockets of one of John's blue
+serge suits, and that the pink silk shirt he wore was one that
+once had belonged to the Kid. Except for the pink shirt, in the
+appearance of the young man there was nothing unusual. He was
+of a familiar type. He looked like a young business man from our
+Middle West, matter-of-fact and unimaginative, but capable and
+self-reliant. If he had had a fountain pen in his upper waistcoat
+pocket, I would have guessed he was an insurance agent, or the
+publicity man for a new automobile. John picked up his hat,
+and said, "That's good advice. Give me your steamer ticket, Fred,
+and I'll have them change it." He went out; but he did not ask
+Fred to go with him.
+
+Uncle Jim rose, and murmured something about the Cafe Roma,
+and tea. But neither did he invite Fred to go with him. Instead,
+he told him to make himself at home, and if he wanted anything
+the waiter would bring it from the cafe downstairs. Then the Kid,
+as though he also was uncomfortable at being left alone with us,
+hurried to the door. "Going to get you a suit-case," he explained.
+"Back in five minutes."
+
+The stranger made no answer. Probably he did not hear him. Not a
+hundred feet from our windows three Greek steamers were huddled
+together, and the eyes of the American were fixed on them. The
+one for which John had gone to buy him a new ticket lay nearest.
+She was to sail in two hours. Impatiently, in short quick steps,
+the stranger paced the length of the room, but when he turned and
+so could see the harbor, he walked slowly, devouring it with his
+eyes. For some time, in silence, he repeated this manoeuvre; and
+then the complaints of the typewriter disturbed him. He halted
+and observed my struggles. Under his scornful eye, in my
+embarrassment I frequently hit the right letter. "You a
+newspaper man, too?" he asked. I boasted I was, but
+begged not to be judged by my typewriting.
+
+"I got some great stories to write when I get back to God's country,"
+he announced. "I was a reporter for two years in Kansas City before
+the war, and now I'm going back to lecture and write. I got enough
+material to keep me at work for five years. All kinds of stuff--
+specials, fiction, stories, personal experiences, maybe a novel."
+
+I regarded him with envy. For the correspondents in the
+greatest of all wars the pickings had been meagre. "You
+are to be congratulated," I said. He brushed aside my
+congratulations. "For what?" he demanded. "I didn't go
+after the stories; they came to me. The things I saw I had
+to see. Couldn't get away from them. I've been with the
+British, serving in the R. A. M. C. Been hospital steward,
+stretcher bearer, ambulance driver. I've been sixteen months
+at the front, and all the time on the firing-line. I was in the
+retreat from Mons, with French on the Marne, at Ypres, all
+through the winter fighting along the Canal, on the Gallipoli
+Peninsula, and, just lately, in Servia. I've seen more of this
+war than any soldier. Because, sometimes, they give the soldier
+a rest; they never give the medical corps a rest. The only rest I
+got was when I was wounded."
+
+He seemed no worse for his wounds, so again I tendered
+congratulations. This time he accepted them. The recollection
+of the things he had seen, things incredible, terrible, unique in
+human experience, had stirred him. He talked on, not boastfully,
+but in a tone, rather, of awe and disbelief, as though assuring
+himself that it was really he to whom such things had happened.
+
+"I don't believe there's any kind of fighting I haven't seen," he
+declared; "hand-to-hand fighting with bayonets, grenades, gun
+butts. I've seen 'em on their knees in the mud choking each
+other, beating each other with their bare fists. I've seen every
+kind of airship, bomb, shell, poison gas, every kind of wound.
+Seen whole villages turned into a brickyard in twenty minutes;
+in Servia seen bodies of women frozen to death, bodies of babies
+starved to death, seen men in Belgium swinging from trees; along
+the Yzer for three months I saw the bodies of men I'd known
+sticking out of the mud, or hung up on the barb wire, with the
+crows picking them.
+
+"I've seen some of the nerviest stunts that ever were pulled off
+in history. I've seen real heroes. Time and time again I've seen
+a man throw away his life for his officer, or for a chap he didn't
+know, just as though it was a cigarette butt. I've seen the women
+nurses of our corps steer a car into a village and yank out a wounded
+man while shells were breaking under the wheels and the houses
+were pitching into the streets." He stopped and laughed consciously.
+
+"Understand," he warned me, "I'm not talking about myself, only of
+things I've seen. The things I'm going to put in my book. It ought
+to be a pretty good book-what?"
+
+My envy had been washed clean in admiration.
+
+"It will make a wonderful book," I agreed. "Are you going to
+syndicate it first?"
+
+Young Mr. Hamlin frowned importantly.
+
+"I was thinking," he said, "of asking John for letters to the magazine
+editors. So, they'll know I'm not faking, that I've really been through
+it all. Letters from John would help a lot." Then he asked anxiously:
+"They would, wouldn't they?"
+
+I reassured him. Remembering the Kid's gibes at John and his
+numerous dependents, I said: "You another college chum of John's?"
+The young man answered my question quite seriously. "No," he said;
+"John graduated before I entered; but we belong to the same fraternity.
+It was the luckiest chance in the world my finding him here. There was
+a month-old copy of the Balkan News blowing around camp, and his
+name was in the list of arrivals. The moment I found he was in Salonika,
+I asked for twelve hours leave, and came down in an ambulance. I made
+straight for John; gave him the grip, and put it up to him to help me."
+
+"I don't understand," I said. "I thought you were sailing on the
+Adriaticus?"
+
+The young man was again pacing the floor. He halted and faced the
+harbor.
+
+"You bet I'm sailing on the Adriaticus," he said. He looked out at
+that vessel, at the Blue Peter flying from her foremast, and grinned.
+"In just two hours!"
+
+It was stupid of me, but I still was unenlightened. "But your twelve
+hours' leave?" I asked.
+
+The young man laughed. "They can take my twelve hours' leave,"
+he said deliberately, "and feed it to the chickens. I'm beating it."
+
+"What d'you mean, you're beating it?"
+
+"What do you suppose I mean?" he demanded. "What do you
+suppose I'm doing out of uniform, what do you suppose I'm lying
+low in the room for? So's I won't catch cold?"
+
+"If you're leaving the army without a discharge, and without
+permission," I said, "I suppose you know it's desertion."
+
+Mr. Hamlin laughed easily. "It's not my army," he said. "I'm an
+American."
+
+"It's your desertion," I suggested.
+
+The door opened and closed noiselessly, and Billy, entering,
+placed a new travelling bag on the floor. He must have heard my
+last words, for he looked inquiringly at each of us. But he did
+not speak and, walking to the window, stood with his hands in his
+pockets, staring out at the harbor. His presence seemed to encourage
+the young man. "Who knows I'm deserting?" he demanded. "No
+one's ever seen me in Salonika before, and in these 'cits' I can get on
+board all right. And then they can't touch me. What do the folks at
+home care how I left the British army? They'll be so darned glad to
+get me back alive that they won't ask if I walked out or was kicked
+out. I should worry!"
+
+"It's none of my business," I began, but I was interrupted. In
+his restless pacings the young man turned quickly.
+
+"As you say," he remarked icily, "it is none of your business.
+It's none of your business whether I get shot as a deserter, or
+go home, or--"
+
+"You can go to the devil for all I care," I assured him. "I
+wasn't considering you at all. I was only sorry that I'll never
+be able to read your book."
+
+For a moment Mr. Hamlin remained silent, then he burst forth
+with a jeer.
+
+"No British firing squad," he boasted, "will ever stand me up."
+
+"Maybe not," I agreed, "but you will never write that book."
+
+Again there was silence, and this time it was broken by the Kid.
+He turned from the window and looked toward Hamlin. "That's
+right!" he said.
+
+He sat down on the edge of the table, and at the deserter pointed
+his forefinger.
+
+"Son," he said, "this war is some war. It's the biggest war in
+history, and folks will be talking about nothing else for the next
+ninety years; folks that never were nearer it than Bay City, Mich.
+But you won't talk about it. And you've been all through it.
+You've been to hell and back again. Compared with what you
+know about hell, Dante is in the same class with Dr. Cook. But
+you won't be able to talk about this war, or lecture, or write a
+book about it."
+
+"I won't?" demanded Hamlin. "And why won't I?"
+
+"Because of what you're doing now," said Billy. "Because
+you're queering yourself. Now, you've got everything." The
+Kid was very much in earnest. His tone was intimate, kind, and
+friendly. "You've seen everything, done everything. We'd give
+our eye-teeth to see what you've seen, and to write the things you
+can write. You've got a record now that'll last you until you're
+dead, and your grandchildren are dead-and then some. When
+you talk the table will have to sit up and listen. You can say 'I
+was there.' 'I was in it.' 'I saw.' 'I know.' When this war is
+over you'll have everything out of it that's worth getting-all
+the experiences, all the inside knowledge, all the 'nosebag'
+news; you'll have wounds, honors, medals, money, reputation.
+And you're throwing all that away!"
+
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted savagely.
+
+"To hell with their medals," he said. "They can take their medals
+and hang 'em on Christmas trees. I don't owe the British army
+anything. It owes me. I've done my bit. I've earned what I've
+got, and there's no one can take it away from me."
+
+"You can," said the Kid. Before Hamlin could reply the door
+opened and John came in, followed by Uncle Jim. The older
+man was looking very grave, and John very unhappy. Hamlin
+turned quickly to John.
+
+"I thought these men were friends of yours," he began, "and
+Americans. They're fine Americans. They're as full of human
+kindness and red blood as a kippered herring!"
+
+John looked inquiringly at the Kid.
+
+"He wants to hang himself," explained Billy, "and because we
+tried to cut him down, he's sore."
+
+"They talked to me," protested Hamlin, "as though I was a
+yellow dog. As though I was a quitter. I'm no quitter! But,
+if I'm ready to quit, who's got a better right? I'm not an
+Englishman, but there are several million Englishmen haven't
+done as much for England in this was as I have. What do you
+fellows know about it? You write about it, about the 'brave
+lads in the trenches'; but what do you know about the trenches?
+What you've seen from automobiles. That's all. That's where
+you get off! I've lived in the trenches for fifteen months, froze
+in 'em, starved in 'em, risked my life in 'em, and I've saved other
+lives, too, by hauling men out of the trenches. And that's no airy
+persiflage, either!"
+
+He ran to the wardrobe where John's clothes hung, and from the
+bottom of it dragged a khaki uniform. It was still so caked with
+mud and snow that when he flung it on the floor it splashed like
+a wet bathing suit. "How would you like to wear one of those?" he
+Demanded. "Stinking with lice and sweat and blood; the blood of
+other men, the men you've helped off the field, and your own
+blood."
+
+As though committing hara-kiri, he slashed his hand across his
+stomach, and then drew it up from his waist to his chin. "I'm
+scraped with shrapnel from there to there," said Mr. Hamlin.
+"And another time I got a ball in the shoulder. That would have
+been a 'blighty' for a fighting man--they're always giving them
+leave--but all I got was six weeks at Havre in hospital. Then it
+was the Dardanelles, and sunstroke and sand; sleeping in sand,
+eating sand, sand in your boots, sand in your teeth; hiding in
+holes in the sand like a dirty prairie dog. And then, 'Off to
+Servia!' And the next act opens in the snow and the mud!
+Cold? God, how cold it was! And most of us in sun helmets."
+
+As though the cold still gnawed at his bones, he shivered.
+
+"It isn't the danger," he protested. "It isn't that I'm getting
+away from. To hell with the danger! It's just the plain
+discomfort of it! It's the never being your own master, never
+being clean, never being warm." Again he shivered and
+rubbed one hand against the other. "There were no bridges
+over the streams," he went on, "and we had to break the ice
+and wade in, and then sleep in the open with the khaki frozen
+to us. There was no firewood; not enough to warm a pot of tea.
+There were no wounded; all our casualties were frost bite and
+Pneumonia. When we take them out of the blankets their toes
+fall off. We've been in camp for a month now near Doiran, and
+it's worse there than on the march. It's a frozen swamp. You can't
+sleep for the cold; can't eat; the only ration we get is bully beef,
+and our insides are frozen so damn tight we can't digest it. The
+cold gets into your blood, gets into your brains. It won't let you
+think; or else, you think crazy things. It makes you afraid." He
+shook himself like a man coming out of a bad dream.
+
+So, I'm through," he said. In turn he scowled at each of us, as
+though defying us to contradict him. "That's why I'm quitting,"
+he added. "Because I've done my bit. Because I'm damn well fed
+up on it." He kicked viciously at the water-logged uniform on the
+floor. "Any one who wants my job can have it!" He walked to the
+window, turned his back on us, and fixed his eyes hungrily on the
+Adriaticus. There was a long pause. For guidance we looked at
+John, but he was staring down at the desk blotter, scratching on it
+marks that he did not see.
+
+Finally, where angels feared to tread, the Kid rushed in. "That's
+certainly a hard luck story," he said; "but," he added cheerfully,
+"it's nothing to the hard luck you'll strike when you can't tell
+why you left the army." Hamlin turned with an exclamation,
+but Billy held up his hand. "Now wait," he begged, "we haven't
+time to get mussy. At six o'clock your leave is up, and the troop
+train starts back to camp, and--"
+
+Mr. Hamlin interrupted sharply. "And the Adriaticus starts at
+five."
+
+Billy did not heed him. "You've got two hours to change your
+mind," he said. "That's better than being sorry you didn't the
+rest of your life."
+
+Mr. Hamlin threw back his head and laughed. It was a most
+unpleasant laugh. "You're a fine body of men," he jeered.
+"America must be proud of you!"
+
+"If we weren't Americans," explained Billy patiently, "we
+wouldn't give a damn whether you deserted or not. You're
+drowning and you don't know it, and we're throwing you a
+rope. Try to see it that way. We'll cut out the fact that you
+took an oath, and that you're breaking it. That's up to you.
+We'll get down to results. When you reach home, if you can't
+tell why you left the army, the folks will darned soon guess.
+And that will queer everything you've done. When you come
+to sell your stuff, it will queer you with the editors, queer you
+with the publishers. If they know you broke your word to the
+British army, how can they know you're keeping faith with them?
+How can they believe anything you tell them? Every 'story' you
+write, every statement of yours will make a noise like a fake.
+You won't come into court with clean hands. You'll be licked
+before you start.
+
+"Of course, you're for the Allies. Well, all the Germans at home
+will fear that; and when you want to lecture on your 'Fifteen
+Months at the British Front,' they'll look up your record; and
+what will they do to you? This is what they'll do to you. When
+you've shown 'em your moving pictures and say, 'Does any
+gentleman in the audience want to ask a question?' a German
+agent will get up and say, 'Yes, I want to ask a question. Is it
+true that you deserted from the British army, and that if you
+return to it, they will shoot you?'"
+
+I was scared. I expected the lean and muscular Mr. Hamlin to
+fall on Billy, and fling him where he had flung the soggy uniform.
+But instead he remained motionless, his arms pressed across his
+chest. His eyes, filled with anger and distress, returned to the
+Adriaticus.
+
+"I'm sorry," muttered the Kid.
+
+John rose and motioned to the door, and guiltily and only too
+gladly we escaped. John followed us into the hall. "Let me talk
+to him," he whispered. "The boat sails in an hour. Please don't
+come back until she's gone."
+
+We went to the moving picture palace next door, but I doubt if
+the thoughts of any of us were on the pictures. For after an
+hour, when from across the quay there came the long-drawn
+warning of a steamer's whistle, we nudged each other and rose
+and went out.
+
+Not a hundred yards from us the propeller blades of the
+Adriaticus were slowly churning, and the rowboats were falling
+away from her sides.
+
+"Good-bye, Mr. Hamlin," called Billy. "You had everything and
+you chucked it away. I can spell your finish. It's 'check' for yours."
+
+But when we entered our room, in the centre of it, under the
+bunch of electric lights, stood the deserter. He wore the
+water-logged uniform. The sun helmet was on his head.
+
+"Good man!" shouted Billy.
+
+He advanced, eagerly holding out his hand.
+
+Mr. Hamlin brushed past him. At the door he turned and glared
+at us, even at John. He was not a good loser. "I hope you're
+satisfied," he snarled. He pointed at the four beds in a row. I
+felt guiltily conscious of them. At the moment they appeared so
+unnecessarily clean and warm and soft. The silk coverlets at the
+foot of each struck me as being disgracefully effeminate. They
+made me ashamed.
+
+"I hope," said Mr. Hamlin, speaking slowly and picking his words,
+"when you turn into those beds to-night you'll think of me in the
+mud. I hope when you're having your five-course dinner and your
+champagne you'll remember my bully beef. I hope when a shell or
+Mr. Pneumonia gets me, you'll write a nice little sob story about
+the 'brave lads in the trenches.' "
+
+He looked at us, standing like schoolboys, sheepish, embarrassed,
+and silent, and then threw open the door. "I hope," he added,
+"you all choke!"
+
+With an unconvincing imitation of the college chum manner,
+John cleared his throat and said: "Don't forget, Fred, if there's
+anything I can do--"
+
+Hamlin stood in the doorway smiling at us.
+
+"There's something you can all do," he said.
+
+"Yes?" asked John heartily.
+
+"You can all go to hell!" said Mr. Hamlin.
+
+We heard the door slam, and his hobnailed boots pounding down
+the stairs. No one spoke. Instead, in unhappy silence, we stood
+staring at the floor. Where the uniform had lain was a pool of
+mud and melted snow and the darker stains of stale blood.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of The Lost Road, etc, by Davis
+
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