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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-14 20:08:11 -0700
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quick Action, by Robert W. Chambers
+
+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: Quick Action
+
+Author: Robert W. Chambers
+
+Illustrator: Edmund Frederick
+
+Release Date: September 25, 2011 [EBook #37528]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUICK ACTION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ QUICK ACTION
+
+ [Illustration: "'Are you preaching?' asked Athalie, raising her eyes
+ from the Green God."]
+
+
+
+
+ QUICK ACTION
+
+ _By_
+
+ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS
+
+
+ ILLUSTRATED BY
+
+ EDMUND FREDERICK
+
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ NEW YORK AND LONDON: MCMXIV
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY
+
+ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS
+
+ Copyright, 1913, by Harper's Bazaar, Inc.
+ Copyright, 1914, by The Star Co.
+
+ Printed in the United States of America
+
+
+ TO
+ PENELOPE SEARS
+ DEBUTANTE
+
+ _To rhyme your name
+ With something lovely, fresh and young,
+ And sing the same
+ In measures heretofore unsung,
+ Is far beyond me, I'm afraid;
+ I'll not attempt it, dearest maid._
+
+ _No, not in verse,
+ Synthetic, stately, classic, chaste,
+ Shall I rehearse--
+ Although in perfectly good taste--
+ A catalogue of every grace
+ That you inherit from your race._
+
+ _Gracious and kind,
+ The gods your beauty gave to you,
+ And with a mind
+ These same kind gods endowed you, too;
+ That charming union is, I fear,
+ Somewhat uncommon on this sphere._
+
+ _I have no doubt
+ That scores of poets chant your fame;
+ No doubt, about
+ A million suitors press their claim;
+ And fashion, elegance and wit
+ Are at your feet inclined to sit._
+
+ _Penelope,
+ The fire-light flickers to and fro:
+ In you I see
+ The winsome child I used to know--
+ My little Maiden of Romance
+ Still whirling in your Shadow Dance._
+
+ _Though woman-grown,
+ To my unreconciled surprise
+ I gladly own
+ The same light lies within your eyes--
+ The same sweet candour which beguiled
+ Your rhymster when you were a child._
+
+ _And so I come,
+ With limping verse to you again,
+ Amid the hum
+ Of that young world wherein you reign--
+ Only a moment to appear
+ And say: "Your rhymster loves you, dear."_
+
+ _R. W. C._
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Always animated by a desire to contribute in a small way toward
+scientific investigation, the author offers this humble volume to a more
+serious audience than he has so far ventured to address.
+
+For all those who have outgrown the superficial amusement of mere
+fiction this volume, replete with purpose, is written in hopes that it
+may stimulate students to original research in certain obscure realms of
+science, the borderlands of which, hitherto, have been scarcely crossed.
+
+There is perhaps no division of science as important, none so little
+understood, as the science of Crystal Gazing.
+
+A vast field of individual research opens before the earnest, patient,
+and sober minded investigator who shall study the subject and discover
+those occult laws which govern the intimate relations between crystals,
+playing cards, cigarettes, soiled pink wrappers, and the Police.
+
+
+ Amor nihil est celerius!
+
+
+
+
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "'Are you preaching?' asked Athalie, raising her eyes from the
+ green god"
+
+ "They inspected each other, apparently bereft of the power of
+ speech"
+
+ "The magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady Alene"
+
+ "'I am in possession of the dog and you merely claim
+ possession'"
+
+
+
+
+QUICK ACTION
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+There was a new crescent moon in the west which, with the star above it,
+made an agreeable oriental combination.
+
+In the haze over bay and river enough rose and purple remained to veil
+the awakening glitter of the monstrous city sprawling supine between
+river, sound, and sea. And its incessant monotone pulsated, groaning,
+dying, ceaseless, interminable in the light-shot depths of its darkening
+streets.
+
+The sky-drawing-room windows of the Countess Athalie were all wide open,
+but the only light in the room came from a crystal sphere poised on a
+tripod. It had the quality and lustre of moon-light, and we had never
+been able to find out its source, for no electric wires were visible,
+and one could move the tripod about the room.
+
+The crystal sphere itself appeared to be luminous, yet it remained
+perfectly transparent, whatever the source of its silvery
+phosphorescence.
+
+At any rate, it was the only light in the room except the dulled glimmer
+of our cigarettes, and its mild, mysterious light enabled us to see one
+another as through a glass darkly.
+
+There were a number of men there that evening. I don't remember, now,
+who they all were. Some had dined early; others, during the evening,
+strolled away into the city to dine somewhere or other, drifting back
+afterward for coffee and sweetmeats and cigarettes in the
+sky-drawing-room of the Countess Athalie.
+
+As usual the girl was curled up by the open window among her silken
+cushions, one smooth little gem-laden hand playing with the green jade
+god, her still dark eyes, which slanted a little, fixed dreamily upon
+infinite distance--or so it always seemed to us.
+
+Through the rusty and corrugated arabesques of the iron balcony she
+could see, if she chose, the yellow flare where Sixth Avenue crossed
+the shabby street to the eastward. Beyond that, and parallel, a brighter
+glow marked Broadway. Further east street lamps stretched away into
+converging perspective, which vanished to a point in the faint nebular
+radiance above the East River.
+
+All this the Countess Athalie could see if she chose. Perhaps she did
+see it. We never seemed to know just what she was looking at even when
+she turned her dark eyes on us or on her crystal sphere cradled upon its
+slender tripod.
+
+But the sphere seemed to understand, for sometimes, under her still
+gaze, it clouded magnificently like a black opal--another thing we never
+understood, and therefore made light of.
+
+"They have placed policemen before several houses on this street,"
+remarked the Countess Athalie.
+
+Stafford, tall and slim in his evening dress, relieved her of her coffee
+cup.
+
+"Has anybody bothered you?" he asked.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+Young Duane picked up a pack of cards at his elbow and shuffled them,
+languidly.
+
+"Where is the Ace of Diamonds, Athalie?" he asked.
+
+"Any card you try to draw will be the Ace of Diamonds," replied the girl
+indifferently.
+
+"Can't I escape drawing it?"
+
+"No."
+
+We all turned and looked at Duane. He quickly spread the pack,
+fan-shaped, backs up. After a moment's choosing he drew a card, looked
+at it, held it up for us to see. It was the Ace of Diamonds.
+
+"Would you mind trying that again, Athalie?" I asked. And Duane replaced
+the card and shuffled the pack.
+
+"But it's gone, now," said the girl.
+
+"I replaced it in the pack," explained Duane.
+
+"No, you gave it to me," she said.
+
+We all smiled. Duane searched through the pack in his hands, once,
+twice; then he laughed. The girl held up one empty hand. Then, somehow
+or other, there was the Ace of Diamonds between her delicate little
+thumb and forefinger.
+
+She held it a moment or two for our inspection; then, curving her wrist,
+sent it scaling out into the darkness. It soared away above the street,
+tipped up, and describing an aerial ellipse, returned straight to the
+balcony where she caught it in her fingers.
+
+Twice she did this; but the third time, high in the air, the card burst
+into violet flame and vanished.
+
+"That," remarked Stafford, "is one thing which I wish to learn how to
+do."
+
+"Two hundred dollars," said the Countess Athalie, "--in two lessons;
+also, your word of honour."
+
+"Monday," nodded Stafford, taking out a note-book and making a
+memorandum, "--at five in the afternoon."
+
+"Monday and Wednesday at five," said the girl, lighting a cigarette and
+gazing dreamily at nothing.
+
+From somewhere in the room came a voice.
+
+"Did they ever catch that crook, Athalie?"
+
+"Which?"
+
+"The Fifty-ninth Street safe-blower?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Did _you_ find him?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"How? In your crystal?" I asked.
+
+"Yes, he was there."
+
+"It's odd," mused Duane, "that you can never do anything of advantage to
+yourself by gazing into your crystal."
+
+"It's the invariable limit to clairvoyance," she remarked.
+
+"A sort of penalty for being super-gifted," added Stafford.
+
+"Perhaps.... We can't help ourselves."
+
+"It's too bad," I volunteered.
+
+"Oh, I don't care," she said, with a slight shrug of her pretty
+shoulders.
+
+"Come," said somebody, teasingly, "wouldn't you like to know how soon
+you are going to fall in love, and with whom?"
+
+She laughed, dropped her cigarette into a silver bowl, stretched her
+arms above her head, straightened her slender figure, turned her head
+and looked at us.
+
+"No," she said, "I do not wish to know. Light is swift; Thought is
+swifter; but Love is the swiftest thing in Life, and if it is now
+travelling toward me, it will strike me soon enough to suit me."
+
+Stafford leaned forward and arranged the cushions for her; she sank back
+among them, her dark eyes still on us.
+
+"Hours are slow," she said; "years are slower, but the slowest thing in
+Life is Love. If it is now travelling toward me, it will reach me soon
+enough to suit me."
+
+"I," said Duane, "prefer quick action, O Athalie, the Beautiful!"
+
+"Athalie, lovely and incomparable," said Stafford, "I, also, prefer
+quick action."
+
+"Play _Scheherazade_ for us, Athalie," I said, "else we slay you with
+our compliments."
+
+A voice or two from distant corners repeated the menace. A match flared
+and a fresh cigarette glowed faintly.
+
+Somebody brought the tripod with its crystal sphere and set it down in
+the middle of the room. Its mild rays fell on the marble basin of the
+tiny fountain,--Duane's offering. The goldfish which I had given her
+were floating there fast asleep.
+
+When we had placed sweetmeats and cigarettes convenient for her, we all,
+in turn, with circumstance and ceremony, bent over her left hand where
+it rested listlessly among the cushions, saluting the emerald on her
+third finger with our lips.
+
+Then the dim circle closed around her, nearer.
+
+"Of all the visions which have passed before your eyes within the depths
+of that crystal globe," said Duane, "--of all the histories of men and
+women which, unsuspected by them, you have witnessed, seated here in
+this silent, silk-hung place, we desire to hear only those in which Fate
+has been swiftest, Opportunity a loosened arrow, Destiny a flash of
+lightning."
+
+"But the victims of quick action must be nameless, except as I choose to
+mask them," she said, looking dreamily into her crystal.
+
+After a moment's silence Duane said in a low voice:
+
+"Does anybody notice the odour of orange blossoms?"
+
+We all noticed the fragrance.
+
+"I seem to catch a whiff of the sea, also," ventured Stafford. "Am I
+right?"
+
+"Yes," she nodded, "you will notice the odour of the semi-tropics, even
+if you miss the point of everything I tell you."
+
+"In other words," said I, "we are but a material bunch, Athalie, and may
+be addressed and amused only through our physical senses. Very well:
+transpose from the spiritual for us if you please a little story of
+quick action which has happened here in the crystal under your matchless
+eyes!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+With her silver tongs she selected a sweetmeat. When it had melted in
+her sweeter mouth, she lighted a cigarette, saluted us with a gay little
+gesture and smilingly began:
+
+"Don't ask me how I know what these people said; that is _my_ concern,
+not yours. Don't ask me how I know what unspoken thoughts animated these
+people; that is _my_ affair. Nor how I seem to be perfectly acquainted
+with their past histories; for _that_ is part of my profession."
+
+"And still the wonder grew," commented the novelist tritely, "that one
+small head could carry all she knew!"
+
+"Why," asked Stafford, "do you refuse to reveal your secret? Do you no
+longer trust us, Athalie?"
+
+She answered: "_Comment prétendons-nous qu'un autre garde notre secret,
+si nous n'avons pas pu le garder nous-même?_"
+
+Nobody replied.
+
+"Now," she said, laughingly, "I will tell you all that I know about the
+_Orange Puppy_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Plans for her first debut began before her birth. When it became
+reasonably certain that she was destined to decorate the earth, she was
+entered on the waiting lists of two schools--The Dinglenook School for
+Boys, and The Idlebrook Institute for Young Ladies--her parents taking
+no chances, but playing both ends coming and going.
+
+When ultimately she made her first earthly appearance, and it was
+apparent that she was destined to embellish the planet in the guise of a
+girl, the process of grooming her for her second debut, some eighteen
+years in the future, began. She lived in sanitary and sterilized
+seclusion, eating by the ounce, sleeping through accurately measured
+minutes, every atom of her anatomy inspected daily, every pore of her
+skin explored, every garment she wore weighed, every respiration, pulse
+beat, and fluctuation of bodily temperature carefully noted and
+discussed.
+
+When she appeared her hair was black. After she shed this, it came in
+red; when she was eight her hair was coppery, lashes black, eyes blue,
+and her skin snow and wild-strawberry tints in agreeably delicate
+nuances. Several millions were set aside to grow up with her and for
+her. Also, the list of foreign and aristocratic babyhood was scanned and
+several dozen possibilities checked off--the list running from the
+progeny of down-and-out monarchs with a sporting chance for a crown, to
+the more solid infant aristocracy of Britain.
+
+At the age of nine, the only symptom of intellect that had yet appeared
+in her was a superbly developed temper. That year she eluded a governess
+and two trained nurses in the park, and was discovered playing with some
+unsterilized children near the duck-pond, both hands full of slime and
+pollywogs.
+
+It was the only crack in the routine through which she ever crawled.
+Lessons daily in riding, driving, dancing, fencing, gymnastics, squash,
+tennis, skating, plugged every avenue of escape between morning school
+and evening sleep, after a mental bath in sterilized literature. Once,
+out of the window she saw a fire. This event, with several runaways on
+the bridle-path, included the sensations of her life up to her release
+from special instructors, and her entry into Idlebrook Institute.
+
+Here she did all she could to misbehave in a blind and instinctive
+fashion, but opportunities were pitiably few; and by the time she had
+graduated, honest deviltry seemed to have been starved out of her; and a
+half year's finishing abroad apparently eliminated it, leaving only a
+half-confused desire to be let alone. But solitude was the luxury always
+denied her.
+
+Unlike the usual debutante, who is a social veteran two years before her
+presentation, and who at eighteen lacks no experience except
+intellectual, Miss Cassillis had become neither a judge of champagne nor
+an expert in the various cabaret steps popular at country houses and the
+more exclusive dives.
+
+"Mother," she said calmly, on her eighteenth birthday, "do you know that
+I am known among my associates as a dead one?" At which that fat and
+hard-eyed matron laughed, surveying her symmetrical daughter with grim
+content.
+
+"Let me tell you something," she said. "America, socially, is only one
+vast cabaret, mostly consisting of performers. The spectators are few.
+You're one. Conditions are reversed across the water; the audience is
+in the majority.... How do you like young Willowmere?"
+
+The girl replied that she liked Lord Willowmere. She might have added
+that she was prepared to like anything in trousers that would give her a
+few hours off.
+
+"Do you think," said her mother, "you can be trusted to play in the
+social cabaret all next winter, and then marry Willowmere?"
+
+Said Cecil: "I am perfectly ready to marry anybody before luncheon, if
+you will let me."
+
+"I do not wish you to feel _that_ way."
+
+"Mother, I _do_! All I want is to be let alone long enough to learn
+something for myself."
+
+"What do you not know? What have you _not_ learned? What accomplishment
+do you lack, little daughter? What is it you wish?"
+
+The girl glanced out of the window. A young and extremely well-built man
+went striding down the avenue about his business. He looked a little
+like a man she had seen playing ball on the Harvard team a year ago. She
+sighed unconsciously.
+
+"I've learned about everything there is to learn, I suppose....
+Except--where do men go when they walk so busily about their business?"
+
+"Down town," said her mother, laughing.
+
+"What do they do there?"
+
+"A million things concerning millions."
+
+"But I don't see how there's anything left for them to do after their
+education is completed. What is there left for me to do, except to marry
+and have a few children?"
+
+"What do you want to do?"
+
+"Nothing.... I'd like to have something to do which would make me look
+busy and make me walk rather fast--like that young man who was hurrying
+down town all by himself. Then I'd like to be let alone while I'm busy
+with my own affairs."
+
+"When you marry Willowmere you'll be busy enough." She might have added:
+"And lonely enough."
+
+"I'll be occupied in telling others how to busy themselves with my
+affairs. But there won't be anything for _me_ to do, will there?"
+
+"Yes, dear child; it will be one steady fight to better a good position.
+It will afford you constant exercise."
+
+The tall young girl bit her lip and shook her pretty head in silence.
+She felt instinctively that she knew how to do that. But that was not
+the exercise she wanted. She looked out into the February sunshine and
+saw the blue shadows on the snow and the sidewalks dark and wet, and
+the little gutter arabs throwing snow-balls, and a yellow pup barking
+blissfully. And, apropos of nothing at all, she suddenly remembered how
+she had run away when she was nine; and a rush of blind desire surged
+within her. What it meant she did not know, did not trouble to consider,
+but it stirred her until the soft fire burned in her cheeks, and left
+her twisting her white fingers, lips parted, staring across the wintry
+park into the blue tracery of trees. To Miss Cassillis adolescence came
+late.
+
+They sang _Le Donne Curiose_ at the opera that evening; she sat in her
+father's box; numbers of youthful, sleek-headed, white-shirted young men
+came between the acts. She talked to all with the ardor of the young and
+unsatisfied; and, mentally and spiritually still unsatisfied, buried in
+fur, she was whirled back through snowy streets to the great grey
+mansion of her nativity, and the silence of her white-hung chamber.
+
+All through February the preparatory régime continued, with preliminary
+canters at theatre and opera, informal party practice, and trial
+dinners. Always she gave herself completely to every moment with a
+wistful and unquenched faith, eager novice in her quest of what was
+lacking in her life; ardent enthusiast in her restless searching for
+the remedy. And, unsatisfied, lingering mentally by the door of Chance,
+lest she miss somewhere the magic that satisfies and quiets--lest the
+gates of Opportunity swing open after she had turned away--reluctantly
+she returned to the companionship of her own solitary mind and
+undeveloped soul, and sat down to starve with them in spirit, wondering
+wherein might lie the reason for this new hunger that assailed her, mind
+and body.
+
+She ran up her private flag the next winter, amid a thousand other gay
+and flaunting colours breaking out all over town. The newspapers roared
+a salute to the wealthiest debutante; and an enthusiastic press, not yet
+housebroken but agile with much exercise in leaping and fawning, leaped
+now about the debutante's slippers, grinning, slavering and panting.
+Later, led by instinct and its Celebrated Nose, it bounded toward young
+Lord Willowmere, jumped and fawned about him, slightly soiling him,
+until in midwinter the engagement it had announced was corroborated, and
+a million shop-girls and old women were in a furor.
+
+He was a ruddy-faced young man who wore his bowler hat toward the back
+of his head, a small, pointed moustache, and who walked always as
+though he were shod in riding boots.
+
+He would have made a healthy studgroom for any gentleman's stable.
+Person and intellect were always thoroughly scrubbed as with
+saddle-soap. Had he been able to afford it, his stables would have been
+second to none in England.
+
+Soon he would be able to afford it.
+
+To his intimates, including his fiancée, he was known as "Stirrups." All
+day long he was in the saddle or on the box, every evening at the
+Cataract Club or at a cabaret. Between times he called upon Miss
+Cassillis--usually finding her out. When he found her not at home, he
+called elsewhere, very casually.
+
+Two continents were deeply stirred over the impending alliance.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Young Jones, in wildest Florida, had never heard of it or of her, or of
+her income. His own fortune amounted to six hundred dollars, and he had
+been born in Brooklyn, and what his salary might be only he and the
+Smithsonian Institution knew.
+
+He was an industrious young man, no better than you or I, accepting
+thankfully every opportunity for mischief which the Dead Lake region
+afforded. No opportunities of that kind ever presenting themselves in
+that region, he went once a month to Miami in the _Orange Puppy_, and
+drank too many swizzles and so forth, et cetera.
+
+Having accomplished this, he returned to the wharf, put the _Orange
+Puppy_ into commission, hoisted sail, and squared away for Matanzas
+Inlet, finding himself too weak-minded to go home by a more direct
+route.
+
+He had been on his monthly pilgrimage to Miami, and was homeward bound
+noisily, using his auxiliary power so that silence should not descend
+upon him too abruptly. He had been, for half an hour now, immersed in a
+species of solitaire known as The Idiot's Delight, when he caught
+himself cheating himself, and indignantly scattered the pack to the four
+winds--three of which, however, were not blowing. One card, the deuce of
+hearts, fluttered seaward like a white butterfly. Beyond it he caught
+sight of another white speck, shining like a gull's breast.
+
+It was a big yacht steaming in from the open sea; and her bill of lading
+included Miss Cassillis and Willowmere. But Jones could not know that.
+So he merely blinked at the distant _Chihuahua_, yawned, flipped the
+last card overboard, and swung the _Orange Puppy_ into the inlet, which
+brimmed rather peacefully, the tide being nearly at flood.
+
+Far away on the deck of the _Chihuahua_ the quick-fire racket of Jones's
+auxiliary was amazingly audible. Miss Cassillis, from her deck-chair,
+could see the _Orange Puppy_, a fleck of glimmering white across a
+sapphire sea. How was she to divine that one Delancy Jones was aboard of
+her? All she saw when the two boats came near each other was a noisy
+little craft progressing toward the lagoon, emitting an earsplitting
+racket; and a tall, lank young man clad in flannels lounging at the
+tiller and smoking a cigarette.
+
+Around her on the snowy deck were disposed the guests of her parents,
+mostly corpulent, swizzles at every elbow, gracefully relaxing after a
+morning devoted to arduous idleness. The Victor on deck, which had
+furnished the incentive to her turkey-trotting with Lord Willowmere, was
+still exuding a syncopated melody. Across the water, Jones heard it and
+stood looking at the great yacht as the _Orange Puppy_ kicked her way
+through the intensely blue water under an azure sky.
+
+Willowmere lounged over to the rail and gazed wearily at the sand dunes
+and palmettos. Presently Miss Cassillis slipped from her deck-chair to
+her white-shod feet, and walked over to where he stood. He said
+something about the possibilities of "havin' a bit of shootin'," with a
+vague wave of his highly-coloured hand toward the palmetto forests
+beyond the lagoon.
+
+If the girl heard him she made no comment. After a while, as the
+distance between the _Chihuahua_ and the _Orange Puppy_ lengthened, she
+levelled her sea glasses at the latter craft, and found that the young
+man at the helm was also examining her through his binoculars.
+
+While she inspected him, several unrelated ideas passed through her
+head; she thought he was very much sunburned and that his hatless head
+was attractive, with its short yellow hair crisped by the sun. Without
+any particular reason, apparently, she recollected a young man she had
+seen the winter before, striding down the wintry avenue about his
+business. He might have been this young man for all she knew. Like the
+other, this one wore yellow hair. Then, with no logic in the sequence of
+her thoughts, suddenly the memory of how she had run away when she was
+nine years old set her pulses beating, filling her heart with the
+strange, wistful, thrilling, overwhelming longing which she had supposed
+would never again assail her, now that she was engaged to be married.
+And once more the soft fire burned in her cheeks.
+
+"Stirrups," she said, scarcely knowing what she was saying, "I don't
+think I'll marry you after all. It's just occurred to me."
+
+"Oh, I say!" protested Willowmere languidly, never for a moment
+mistrusting that the point of her remark was buried in some species of
+American humour. He always submitted to American humour. There was
+nothing else to do, except to understand it.
+
+"Stirrups, dear?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"You're very pink and healthy, aren't you?"
+
+He shrugged his accustomed shrug of resignation.
+
+"Oh, I say--come, now----" he murmured, lighting a cigarette.
+
+"What a horrid smash there would be if I didn't make good, wouldn't
+there, Stirrups?" She mused, her blue eyes resting on him, too coldly.
+
+"Rather," he replied, comfortably settling his arms on the rail.
+
+"It might happen, you know. Suppose I fell overboard?"
+
+"Fish you out, ducky."
+
+"Suppose I--ran away?"
+
+"Ow."
+
+"What would you do, Stirrups? Why, you'd go back to town and try to
+pick another winner. Wouldn't you?"
+
+He laughed.
+
+"Naturally that is what you would do, isn't it?" She considered him
+curiously for a moment, then smiled. "How funny!" she said, almost
+breathlessly.
+
+"Rather," he murmured, and flicked his cigarette overboard.
+
+The _Orange Puppy_ had disappeared beyond the thicket of palmettos
+across the point. The air was very warm and still.
+
+Her father waddled forward presently, wearing the impressive summer
+regalia of a commodore in the Siwanois Yacht Club. His daughter's blue
+eyes rested on the portly waistline of her parent--then on his fluffy
+chop-whiskers. A vacant, hunted look came into her eyes.
+
+"Father," she said almost listlessly, "I'm going to run away again."
+
+"When do you start?" inquired that facetious man.
+
+"Now, I think. What is there over there?"--turning her face again toward
+the distant lagoon, with its endless forests of water-oak, cedar, and
+palmetto.
+
+"Over there," said her father, "reside several species of snakes and
+alligators. Also other reptiles, a number of birds, and animals, and
+much microbic mud."
+
+She bit her lip. "I see," she said, nodding.
+
+Willowmere said: "We should find some shootin' along the lagoon. Look at
+the ducks."
+
+Mr. Cassillis yawned; he had eaten too heavily of duck to be interested.
+Very thoughtfully he presented himself with a cigar, turned it over and
+over between his soft fingers, and yawned again. Then, nodding solemnly
+as though in emphasis of a profound idea of which he had just been
+happily delivered, he waddled slowly back along the deck.
+
+His daughter looked after him until he disappeared; gazed around her at
+the dawdling assortment of guests aboard, then lifted her quiet eyes to
+Willowmere.
+
+"Ducky," she said, "I can't stand it. I'm going to run away."
+
+"Come on, then," he said, linking his arm in hers.
+
+The Victor still exuded the Tango.
+
+She hesitated. Then freeing herself:
+
+"Oh, not with you, Stirrups! I wish to go away somewhere entirely alone.
+Could you understand?" she added wistfully.
+
+He stifled a yawn. American humour bored him excessively.
+
+"You'll be back in a day or two?" he inquired. And laughed violently
+when the subtlety of his own wit struck him.
+
+"In a day or two or not at all. Good-bye, Stirrups."
+
+"Bye."
+
+The sun blazed on her coppery hair and on the white skin that never
+burned, as she walked slowly across the yacht's deck and disappeared
+below.
+
+While she was writing in her cabin, the _Chihuahua_ dropped her anchors.
+Miss Cassillis listened to the piping, the thud of feet on deck, the
+rattle and distant sound of voices. Then she continued her note:
+
+ I merely desire to run away. I don't know why, Mother, dear.
+ But the longing to bolt has been incubating for many years. And
+ now it's too strong to resist. I don't quite understand how it
+ came to a crisis on deck just now, but I looked at Stirrups,
+ whose skin is too pink, and at Father, who had lunched too
+ sumptuously, and at the people on deck, all digesting in a
+ row--and then at the green woods on shore, and the strip of
+ white where a fairy surf was piling up foam into magic castles
+ and snowy battlements, ephemeral, exquisite. And all at once
+ it came over me that I must go.
+
+ Don't be alarmed. I shall provision a deck canoe, take a tent,
+ some rugs and books, and paddle into that lagoon. If you will
+ just let me alone for two or three days, I promise I'll return
+ safe and sound, and satisfied. For something has got to be done
+ in regard to that longing of mine. But really, I think that if
+ you and Father _won't_ understand, and if you send snooping
+ people after me, I won't come back at all, and I'll never marry
+ Stirrups. Please understand me, Mother, dear.
+
+ CECIL.
+
+This effusion she pinned to her pillow, then rang for the steward and
+ordered the canoe to be brought alongside, provisioned for a three days'
+shooting trip.
+
+So open, frank, and guileless were her orders that nobody who took them
+suspected anything unusual; and in the full heat and glare of the
+afternoon siesta, when parents, fiancé, and assorted guests were all
+asleep and in full process of digestion and the crew of the _Chihuahua_
+was drowsing from stem to stern, a brace of sailors innocently connived
+at her escape, aided her into the canoe, and, doubting nothing, watched
+her paddle away through the inlet, and into the distant lagoon, which
+lay sparkling in golden and turquoise tints, set with palms like a
+stupid picture in a child's geography.
+
+Later, the _Chihuahua_ fired a frantic gun. Later still, two boats left
+the yacht, commanded respectively by one angry parent and one fiancé,
+profoundly bored.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+When Miss Cassillis heard the gun, it sounded very far away. But it
+irritated as well as scared her. She pushed the canoe energetically
+through a screen of foliage overhanging the bank of the lagoon, it being
+merely her immediate instinct to hide herself.
+
+To her surprise and pleasure, she discovered herself in a narrow, deep
+lead, which had been entirely concealed by the leaves, and which wound
+away through an illimitable vista of reeds, widening as she paddled
+forward, until it seemed like a glassy river bordered by live-oak,
+water-oak, pine, and palmetto, curving out into a flat and endless land
+of forests.
+
+Here was liberty at last! No pursuit need now be feared, for the
+entrance to this paradise which she had forced by a chance impulse
+could never be suspected by parent or fiancé.
+
+A little breeze blew her hair and loosened it; silently her paddle
+dipped, swept astern in a swirl of bubbles, flashed dripping, and dipped
+again.
+
+Ahead of her a snake-bird slipped from a dead branch into the water; a
+cormorant perched on the whitened skeleton of a mango, made hideous
+efforts to swallow a mullet before her approach disorganized his
+manoeuvres.
+
+So silently the canoe stole along that the fat alligators, dozing in the
+saw-grass, dozed on until she stirred them purposely with a low tap of
+her paddle against the thwarts; then they rose, great lumbering bodies
+propped high on squatty legs, waddled swiftly to the bank's edge, and
+slid headlong into the water.
+
+Everywhere dragon-flies glittered over the saw-grass; wild ducks with
+golden eyes and heads like balls of brown plush swam leisurely out of
+the way; a few mallard, pretending to be frightened, splashed and
+clattered into flight, the sunlight jewelling the emerald heads of the
+drakes.
+
+"Wonderful, wonderful," her heart was singing to itself, while her
+enchanted eyes missed nothing--neither the feebly flying and strangely
+shaped, velvety black butterflies, the narrow wings of which were
+striped with violent yellow; nor the metallic blue and crestless jays
+that sat on saplings, watching her; nor the pelicans fishing with
+nature's orange and iridescent net in the shallows; nor the tall,
+slate-blue birds that marched in dignified retreat through the sedge,
+picking up their stilt-like legs with the precision of German
+foot-soldiers on parade.
+
+These and other phenomena made her drop her paddle at intervals and clap
+her hands softly in an ecstasy beyond mere exclamation. How restfully
+green was the world; how limpid the water; how royally blue the heavens!
+Listening, she could hear the soft stirring of palmetto fronds in the
+forests; the celestial song of a little bird that sat on a sparkle-berry
+bush, its delicate long-curved bill tilted skyward. Then the deep note
+of splendour flashed across the scheme of sound and colour as a crimson
+cardinal alighted near her, crest erect.
+
+But more wonderful than all was that at last, after eighteen years, she
+was utterly alone; and liberty was showering its inestimable gifts upon
+her in breathless prodigality--liberty to see with her own eyes and
+judge with her own senses; liberty to linger capriciously amid mental
+fancies, to move on impulsively to others; liberty to reflect unurged
+and unrestricted; liberty to choose, to reject, to ignore.
+
+[Illustration: "They inspected each other, apparently bereft of the
+power of speech."]
+
+Now and then a brilliant swimming snake filled her with interest and
+curiosity. Once, on a flat, low bush, she saw a dull, heavy,
+blunt-bodied serpent lying asleep in the sun like an old and swollen
+section of rubber hose. But when she ventured to touch the bush with her
+paddle, the snake reared high and yawned at her with jaws which seemed
+to be lined in white satin. Which fortunately made her uneasy, and she
+meddled no more with the Little Death of the southern swamps.
+
+She was now passing very close to the edge of the "hammock," where
+palmettos overhung the water; and as the cool, dim woodlands seemed to
+invite her, she looked about her leisurely for an agreeable landing
+place. There were plenty to choose from; and she selected a little sandy
+point under a red cedar tree, drove her canoe upon it, and calmly
+stepped ashore. And found herself looking into the countenance of Jones.
+
+For a full minute they inspected each other, apparently bereft of the
+power of speech.
+
+She said, finally: "About a year ago last February, did you happen to
+walk down Fifth Avenue--very busily? Did you?"
+
+It took him an appreciable time to concentrate for mental retrospection.
+
+"Yes," he said, "I did."
+
+"You were going down town, weren't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"On business?"
+
+"Yes," he said, bewildered.
+
+"I wonder," she said timidly, "if you would tell me what that business
+was? Do you mind? Because, really, I don't mean to be impertinent."
+
+He made an effort to reflect. It was difficult to reflect and to keep
+his eyes on her but also it is impolite to converse with anybody and
+look elsewhere. This he had been taught at his mother's knee--and
+sometimes over it.
+
+"My business down town," he said very slowly, "was with an officer of
+the Smithsonian Institution who had come on from Washington to see
+something which I had brought with me from Florida."
+
+"Would you mind telling me what it was you brought with you from
+Florida?" she asked wistfully.
+
+"No. It was malaria."
+
+"What!"
+
+"It was malaria," he repeated politely.
+
+"I--I don't see how you could--could show it to him," she murmured,
+perplexed.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you how I showed it to him. I made a little incision in
+my skin with a lancet; he made a smear or two----"
+
+"A--what?"
+
+"A smear--he put a few drops of my blood on some glass plates."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"To examine them under the microscope."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"So that he might determine what particular kind of malaria I had
+brought back with me."
+
+"Did he find out?" she asked, deeply interested.
+
+"Yes," said Jones, displaying mild symptoms of enthusiasm, "he
+discovered that I was fairly swarming with a perfectly new and
+undescribed species of bacillus. That bacillus," he added, with modest
+diffidence, "is now named after me."
+
+She looked at him very earnestly, dropped her blue eyes, raised them
+again after a moment:
+
+"It must be--pleasant--to give one's name to a bacillus."
+
+"It is an agreeable and exciting privilege. When I look into the culture
+tubes I feel an intimate relationship with those bacilli which I have
+never felt for any human being."
+
+"You--you are a----" she hesitated, with a slight but charming colour in
+her cheeks, "a naturalist, I presume?" And she added hastily, "No doubt
+you are a famous one, and my question must sound ignorant and absurd to
+you. But as I do not know your name----"
+
+"It is Jones," he said gloomily, "--and I am not famous."
+
+"Mine is Cecil Cassillis; and neither am I," she said. "But I thought
+when naturalists gave their names to butterflies and microbes that
+everything concerned immediately became celebrated."
+
+Jones smiled; and she thought his expression very attractive.
+
+"No," he said, "fame crowns the man who, celebrated only for his wealth,
+names hotels, tug-boats, and art galleries after himself. Thus are
+Immortals made."
+
+She laughed, standing there gracefully as a boy, her hands resting on
+her narrow hips. She laughed again. A tug-boat, a hotel, and a cigar
+were named after her father.
+
+"Fame is an extraordinary thing," she said. "But liberty is still more
+wonderful, isn't it?"
+
+"Liberty is only comparative," he said, smiling. "There is really no
+such thing as absolute freedom."
+
+"_You_ have all the freedom you desire, haven't you?"
+
+"Well--I enjoy the only approach to absolute liberty I ever heard of."
+
+"What kind of liberty is that?"
+
+"Freedom to think as I please, no matter what I'm obliged to do."
+
+"But you do what you please, too, don't you?"
+
+"Oh, no!" he said smiling. "The man was never born who did what he
+pleased."
+
+"Why not? You choose your own work, don't you?"
+
+"Yes. But once the liberty of choice is exercised, freedom ends. I
+choose my profession. There my liberty ends, because instantly I am
+enslaved by the conditions which make my choice a profession."
+
+She was deeply interested. A mossy log lay near them; she seated herself
+to listen, her elbow on her knee, and her chin cupped in her hand. But
+Jones became silent.
+
+"Were you not in that funny little boat that passed the inlet about
+three hours ago?" she asked.
+
+"The _Orange Puppy_? Yes."
+
+"What an odd name for a boat--the _Orange Puppy_!"
+
+"An orange puppy," he explained, "is the name given in the Florida
+orange groves to the caterpillar of a large swallow-tail butterfly,
+which feeds on orange leaves. The butterfly it turns into is known to
+entomologists as _Papilio cresphontes_ and _Papilio thoas_. The latter
+is a misnomer."
+
+She gazed upon this young man in undisguised admiration.
+
+"Once," she said, "when I was nine years old, I ran away from a
+governess and two trained nurses. They found me with both hands full of
+muddy pollywogs. It has nothing to do with what you are saying, but I
+thought I'd tell you."
+
+He insisted that the episode she recalled was most interesting and
+unusual, considered purely as a human document.
+
+"Would you tell me what you are doing down here in these forests?" she
+asked, "--as we are discussing human documents."
+
+"Yes," he said. "I am investigating several thousand small caterpillars
+which are feeding on the scrub-palmetto."
+
+"Is that your _business_?"
+
+"Exactly. If you will remain very still for a moment and listen very
+intently you can hear the noise which these caterpillars make while
+they are eating."
+
+She thought of the _Chihuahua_, and it occurred to her that she had
+rather tired of seeing things eat. However, except in Europe, she had
+never _heard_ things eat. So she listened.
+
+He said: "These caterpillars are in their third moult--that is, they
+have changed their skin three times since emerging from the egg--and are
+now busily chewing the immature fruit of the scrub-palmetto. You can
+hear them very plainly."
+
+She sat silent, spellbound; and presently in the woodland stillness, all
+around her she heard the delicate and continuous sound--the steady,
+sustained noise of thousands of tiny jaws, all crunching, all busily
+working together. And when she realized what the elfin rustle really
+meant, she turned her delighted and grateful eyes on Jones. And the
+beauty of them made him exceedingly thoughtful.
+
+"Will you explain to me," she whispered, "why you are studying these
+caterpillars, Mr. Jones?"
+
+"Because they are spreading out over the forests. Until recently this
+particular species of caterpillar, and the pretty little moth into which
+it ultimately turns, were entirely confined to a narrow strip of
+jungle, only a few miles long, lying on the Halifax River. Nowhere else
+in all the world could these little creatures be found. But recently
+they have been reported from the Dead Lake country. So the Smithsonian
+Institution sent me down here to study them, and find out whither they
+were spreading, and whether any natural parasitic enemies had yet
+appeared to check them."
+
+She gazed at him, fascinated.
+
+"Have any appeared?" she asked, under her breath.
+
+"I have not yet found a single creature that preys upon them."
+
+"Isn't it a very arduous and difficult task to watch these thousands of
+little caterpillars all day long?"
+
+"It is quite impossible for me to do it thoroughly all alone."
+
+"Would you like to have me help you?" she asked innocently.
+
+Which rather bowled him over, but he said:
+
+"I'd b-b-be d-d-delighted--only you haven't time, have you?"
+
+"I have three days. I've brought a tent, you see, and everything
+necessary--rugs, magazines, blankets, toilet articles, bon-bons,
+books--everything, in fact, to last three days.... I wonder how that
+tent is put up. Do you know?"
+
+He went over to the canoe and gazed at the tent.
+
+"I think I could pitch it for you," he said.
+
+"Oh, thanks so much! May I help you? I think I'll put it here on this
+pretty stretch of white sand by the water's edge."
+
+"I'm afraid that wouldn't do," he said, gravely.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because the lagoon is tidal. You'd be awash sooner or later."
+
+"I see. Well, then, anywhere in the woods will do----"
+
+"Not _anywhere_," he said, smiling. "High water leaves few dry places in
+this forest; in fact--I'm afraid that my shack is perched on the only
+spot which is absolutely dry at all times. It is a shell mound--the only
+one in the Dead Lake region."
+
+"Isn't there room for my tent beside yours?" she asked, a trifle
+anxiously.
+
+"Y-es," he said, in a voice as matter of fact as her own. "How many will
+there be in your party?"
+
+"In my _party_! Why, only myself," she said, with smiling animation.
+
+"Oh, I see!" But he didn't.
+
+They lugged the tent back among the trees to the low shell mound, where
+in the centre of a ring of pines and evergreen oaks his open-faced shack
+stood, thatched with palmetto fans. She gazed upon the wash drying on
+the line, upon a brace of dead ducks hanging from the eaves, upon the
+smoky kettle and the ashes of the fire. Purest delight sparkled in her
+blue eyes.
+
+Erecting her silk tent with practiced hands, he said carelessly:
+
+"In case you cared to send any word to the yacht----"
+
+"Did I say that I came from the yacht?" she asked; and her straight
+eyebrows bent a trifle inward.
+
+"Didn't you?"
+
+"Will you promise me something, Mr. Jones?"
+
+The things he was prepared to promise her choked him for a second, but
+when he regained control of his vocal powers he said, very pleasantly,
+that he would gladly promise her anything.
+
+"Then don't ask me where I came from. Let me stay three days. Then I'll
+go very quietly away, and never trouble you again. Is it a promise?"
+
+"Yes," he said, not looking at her. His face had become very serious;
+she noticed it--and how well his head was set on his shoulders, and how
+his clipped hair was burned to the color of crisp hay.
+
+"You were Harvard, of course," she said, unthinkingly.
+
+"Yes." He mentioned the year.
+
+"Not crew?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Baseball?"
+
+"'Varsity pitcher," he nodded, surprised.
+
+"Then this is the third time I've seen you.... I wonder what it is about
+you----" She remained silent, watching him burying her water bottles in
+the cool marl.
+
+When all was in order, he smiled, made her a little formal bow, and
+evinced a disposition to retire and leave her in possession.
+
+"I thought we were going to work at once!" she said uneasily. "I am
+quite ready." And, as he did not seem to comprehend, "I was going to
+help you to examine the little caterpillars, one by one; and the minute
+I saw anything trying to bite them I was going to call you. Didn't you
+understand?" she added wistfully.
+
+"That will be fine!" he said, with an enthusiasm very poorly
+controlled.
+
+"You will show me where the little creatures are hiding, won't you?"
+
+"Indeed I will! Here they are, all about us!" He made a sweeping gesture
+over the low undergrowth of scrub-palmetto; and the next moment:
+
+"I see them!" she exclaimed, delighted. "Oh, what funny, scrubby, busy
+little creatures! They are everywhere--_everywhere_! Why, there seem to
+be thousands and thousands of them! And all are eating the tiny green
+bunches of fruit!"
+
+They bent together over a group of feeding larvæ; he handed her a pocket
+microscope like his own; and, enchanted, she studied the tiny things
+while he briefly described their various stages of development from the
+little eggs to the pretty, pearl-tinted moth so charmingly striped with
+delicate, brown lines--a rare prize in the cabinet of any collector.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+Through the golden forest light of afternoon, they moved from shrub to
+shrub; and he taught her to be on the watch for any possible foes of the
+neat and busy little caterpillars, warning her to watch for birds,
+spiders, beetles, ichneumon flies, possibly squirrels or even hornets.
+She nodded her comprehension; he went one way, she the other. For nearly
+ten minutes they remained separated, and it seemed ages to one of them
+anyway.
+
+But the caterpillars appeared to be immune. Nothing whatever interfered
+with them; wandering beetles left them unmolested; no birds even noticed
+them; no gauzy-winged and parasitic flies investigated them.
+
+"Mr. Jones!" she called.
+
+He was at her side in an instant.
+
+"I only wanted to know where you were," she said happily.
+
+The sun hung red over the lagoon when they sauntered back to camp. She
+went into her tent with a cheerful nod to him, which said:
+
+"I've had a splendid time, and I'll rejoin you in a few moments."
+
+When she emerged in fresh white flannels, she found him writing in a
+blank-book.
+
+"I wonder if I might see?" she said. "If it's scientific, I mean."
+
+"It is, entirely."
+
+So she seated herself on the ground beside him, and read over his
+shoulder the entries he was making in his field book concerning the
+day's doings. When he had finished his entry, she said:
+
+"You have not mentioned my coming to you, and how we looked for
+ichneumon flies together."
+
+"I----" He was silent.
+
+She added timidly: "I know I count for absolutely nothing in the
+important experiences of a naturalist, but--I did look very hard for
+ichneumon flies. Couldn't you write in your field book that I tried very
+hard to help you?"
+
+He wrote gravely:
+
+"Miss Cassillis most generously volunteered her invaluable aid, and
+spared no effort to discover any possible foe that might prove to be
+parasitic upon these larvæ. But so far without success."
+
+"Thank you," she said, in a very low voice. And after a short silence:
+"It was not mere vanity, Mr. Jones. Do you understand?"
+
+"I know it was not vanity, even if I do not entirely understand."
+
+"Shall I tell you?"
+
+"Please."
+
+"It was the first thing that I have ever been permitted to do all by
+myself. It meant so much to me.... And I wished to have a little record
+of it--even if you think it is of no scientific importance."
+
+"It is of more importance than----" But he managed to stop himself,
+slightly startled. She had lifted her head from the pages of the field
+book to look at him. When his voice failed, and while the red burned
+brilliantly in his ears, she resumed her perusal of his journal,
+gravely. After a while, though she turned the pages as if she were
+really reading, he concluded that her mind was elsewhere. It was.
+
+Presently he rose, mended the fire, filled the kettle, and unhooked the
+brace of wild ducks from the eaves where they swung, and marched off
+with them toward the water.
+
+When he returned, the ducks were plucked and split for broiling. He
+found her seated as he had left her, dreaming awake, idle hands folded
+on the pages of his open field book.
+
+For dinner they had broiled mallard, coffee, ash-cakes, and bon-bons.
+After it she smoked a cigarette with him.
+
+Later she informed him that it was her first, and that she liked it, and
+requested another.
+
+"Don't," he said, smiling.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It spoils a girl's voice, ultimately."
+
+"But it's very agreeable."
+
+"Will you promise not to?" he asked, lightly.
+
+Suddenly her blue eyes became serious.
+
+"Yes," she said, "if you wish."
+
+The woods grew darker. Far across the lagoon a tiger-owl woke up and
+began to yelp like a half-strangled hobgoblin.
+
+She sat silent for a little while, then very quietly and frankly put her
+hand on Jones's. It was shaking.
+
+"I am afraid of that sound," she said calmly.
+
+"It is only a big owl," he reassured her, retaining her hand.
+
+"Is that what it is? How _very_ dark the woods are! I had no idea that
+there could be such utter darkness. I am not sure that I care for it."
+
+"There is nothing to harm you in these woods."
+
+"No bears and wolves and panthers?"
+
+"There are a few--and all very anxious to keep away from anything
+human."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Absolutely."
+
+"Do you mind if I leave my hand where it is?"
+
+It appeared that he had no insurmountable objections.
+
+After the seventh tiger-owl had awakened and the inky blackness quivered
+with the witch-like shouting and hellish tumult, he felt her shoulder
+pressing against his. And bending to look into her face saw that all the
+colour in it had fled.
+
+"You mustn't be frightened," he said earnestly.
+
+"But I am. I'm sorry.... I'll try to accustom myself to it.... The
+darkness is a--a trifle terrifying--isn't it?"
+
+"It's beautiful, too," he said, looking up at the firelit foliage
+overhead. She looked up also, her slender throat glimmering rosy in the
+embers' glare. After a moment she nodded:
+
+"It _is_ wonderful.... If I only had a little time to accustom myself to
+it I am sure I should love it.... Oh! What was that very loud splash
+out there in the dark?"
+
+"A big fish playing in the lagoon; or perhaps wild ducks feeding."
+
+After a few minutes he felt her soft hand tighten within his.
+
+"It sounds as though some great creature were prowling around our fire,"
+she whispered. "Do you hear its stealthy tread?"
+
+"Noises in the forest are exaggerated," he said carelessly. "It may be a
+squirrel or some little furry creature out hunting for his supper.
+Please don't be afraid."
+
+"Then it _isn't_ a bear?"
+
+"No, dear," he said, so naturally and unthinkingly that for a full
+second neither realised the awful break of Delancy Jones.
+
+When they did they said nothing about it. But it was some time before
+speech was resumed. She was the first to recover. Perhaps the
+demoralisation was largely his. It usually is that way.
+
+She said: "This has been the most perfect day of my entire life. I'm
+even glad I am a little scared. It is delicious to be a trifle afraid.
+But I'm not, now--very much.... Is there any established hour for
+bedtime in the woods?"
+
+"Inclination sounds the hour."
+
+"Isn't that wonderful!" she sighed, her eyes on the fire. "Inclination
+rules in the forest.... And here I am."
+
+The firelight on her copper-tinted hair masked her lovely eyes in a soft
+shadow. Her shoulder stirred rhythmically as she breathed.
+
+"And here you live all alone," she mused, half to herself.... "I once
+saw you pitch a game against Yale.... And the next time I saw you
+walking very busily down Fifth Avenue.... And now--you are--here....
+That is wonderful.... Everything seems to be wonderful in this place....
+Wh-what _is_ that flapping noise, please?"
+
+"Two herons fighting in the sedge."
+
+"You know everything.... That is the most wonderful of all. And yet you
+say you are not famous?"
+
+"Nobody ever heard of me outside the Smithsonian."
+
+"But--you _must_ become famous. To-morrow I shall look very hard for an
+ichneumon fly for you----"
+
+"But your discovery will make _you_ famous, Miss Cassillis----"
+
+"Why--why, it's for _you_ that I am going to search so hard! Did you
+suppose I would dream of claiming any of the glory!"
+
+He said, striving to speak coolly:
+
+"It is very generous and sweet of you.... And, after all, I hardly
+suppose that you need any added lustre or any additional happiness in a
+life which must be so full, so complete, and so care-free."
+
+She was silent for a while, then:
+
+"Is _your_ life then so full of care, Mr. Jones?"
+
+"Oh, no," he said; "I get on somehow."
+
+"Tell me," she insisted.
+
+"What am I to tell you?"
+
+"Why it is that your life is care-ridden."
+
+"But it isn't----"
+
+"Tell me!"
+
+He said, gaily enough: "To labour for others is sometimes a little
+irksome.... I am not discontented.... Only, if I had means--if I had
+barely sufficient--there are so many fascinating and exciting lines of
+independent research to follow--to make a name in----" He broke off with
+a light laugh, leaned forward and laid another log on the fire.
+
+"You can not afford it?" she asked, in a low voice; and for the moment
+astonishment ruled her to discover that this very perfect specimen of
+intelligent and gifted manhood was struggling under such an amazingly
+trifling disadvantage. Only from reading and from hearsay had she been
+even vaguely acquainted with the existence of poverty.
+
+"No," he said pleasantly, "I can not yet afford myself the happiness of
+independent research."
+
+"When will you be able to afford it?"
+
+Neither were embarrassed; he looked thoughtfully into the fire; and for
+a while she watched him in his brown study.
+
+"Will it be soon?" she asked, under her breath.
+
+"No, dear."
+
+That time a full minute intervened before either realised how he had
+answered. And both remained exceedingly still until she said calmly:
+
+"I thought you were the very ideal embodiment of personal liberty. And
+now I find that wretched and petty and ignoble circumstances fetter even
+such a man as you are. It--it is--is heartbreaking."
+
+"It won't last forever," he said, controlling his voice.
+
+"But the years are going--the best years, Mr. Jones. And your life's
+work beckons you. And you are equipped for it, and you can not take it!"
+
+"Some day----" But he could say no more then, with her hand tightening
+in his.
+
+"To--to rise superior to circumstances--that is god-like, isn't it?" she
+said.
+
+"Yes." He laughed. "But on six hundred dollars a year a man can't rise
+very high above circumstances."
+
+The shock left her silent. Any gown of hers cost more than that. Then
+the awfulness of it all rose before her in its true and hideous
+proportions. And there was nothing for her to do about it, nothing,
+absolutely nothing, except to endure the degradation of her wealth and
+remember that the merest tithe of it could have made this man beside her
+immortally famous--if, perhaps, no more wonderful than he already was in
+her eyes.
+
+Was there no way to aid him? She could look for ichneumon flies in the
+morning. And on the morning after that. And the next morning she would
+say good-bye and go away forever--out of this enchanted forest, out of
+his life, back to the _Chihuahua_, and to her guests who ate often and
+digested all day long--back to her father, her mother--back to
+Stirrups----
+
+He felt her hand close on his convulsively, and turned to encounter her
+flushed and determined face.
+
+"You like me, don't you?" she said.
+
+"Yes." After a moment he said: "Yes--absolutely."
+
+"Do you like me enough to--to let me help you in your research work--to
+be patient enough to teach me a little until I catch up with you?... So
+we can go on together?... I know I am presumptuous--perhaps
+importunate--but I thought--somehow--if you did like me well enough--it
+would be--very agreeable----"
+
+"It would be!... And I--like you enough for--anything. But you could not
+remain here----"
+
+"I don't mean here."
+
+"Where, then?"
+
+"Where?" She looked vaguely about her in the firelight. "Why,
+everywhere. Wherever you go to make your researches."
+
+"Dear, I would go to Ceylon if I could."
+
+"I also," she said.
+
+He turned a little pale, looking at her in silence. She said calmly:
+"What would you do in Ceylon?"
+
+"Study the unknown life-histories of the rarer Ornithoptera."
+
+She knew no more than a kitten what he meant. But she wanted to know,
+and, moreover, was perfectly capable of comprehending.
+
+"Whatever you desire to study," she said, "would prove delightful to
+me.... If you want me. Do you?"
+
+"Want you!" Then he bit his lip.
+
+"Don't you? Tell me frankly if you don't. But I think, somehow, you
+would not make a mistake if you did want me. I really am intelligent. I
+didn't know it until I talked with you. Now, I know it. But I have never
+been able to give expression to it or cultivate it.... And, somehow, I
+know I would not be a drag on you--if you would teach me a little in the
+beginning."
+
+He said: "What can I teach _you_, Cecil? Not the heavenly frankness that
+you already use so sweetly. Not the smiling and serene nobility which
+carries your head so daintily and so fearlessly. Not the calm purity of
+thought, nor the serene goodness of mind that has graciously included a
+poor devil like me in your broad and generous sympathies----"
+
+"Please!" she faltered, flushing. "I am not what you say--though to hear
+you say such things is a great happiness--a pleasure--very intense--and
+wonderful--and new. But I am nothing, _nothing_--unless I should become
+useful to you. I _could_ amount to something--with--you----" She checked
+herself; looked at him as though a trifle frightened. "Unless," she
+added with an effort, "you are in love with somebody else. I didn't
+think of that. _Are_ you?"
+
+"No," he said. "Are you?"
+
+"No.... I have never been in love.... This is the nearest I have come to
+it."
+
+"And I."
+
+She smiled faintly.
+
+"If we----"
+
+"Oh, yes," he said, calmly, "if we are to pass the balance of our
+existence in combined research, it would be rather necessary for us to
+marry."
+
+"Do you mind?"
+
+"On the contrary. Do you?"
+
+"Not in the least. Do you really mean it? It wouldn't be disagreeable,
+would it? You are above marrying for mere sentiment, aren't you?
+Because, somehow, I seem to know you like me.... And it would be death
+for me--a mental death--to go back now to--to Stirrups----"
+
+"Where?"
+
+"To--why do you ask? Couldn't you take me on faith?"
+
+He said, unsteadily: "If you rose up out of the silvery lagoon, just
+born from the starlight and the mist, I would take you."
+
+"You--you are a poet, too," she faltered. "You seem to be about
+everything desirable."
+
+"I'm only a man very, very deep in--love."
+
+"In love!... I thought----"
+
+"Ah, but you need think no more. You _know_ now, Cecil."
+
+She remained silent, thinking for a long while. Then, very quietly:
+
+"Yes, I know.... It is that way with me also. For I no sooner find my
+liberty than I lose it--in the same moment--to you. We must never again
+be separated.... Do you feel as I do?"
+
+"Absolutely.... But it must be so."
+
+"Why?" she asked, troubled.
+
+"For one thing, I shall have to work harder now."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Don't you know we can not marry on what I have?"
+
+"Oh! Is _that_ the reason?" She laughed, sprang lightly to her feet,
+stood looking down at him. He got up, slowly.
+
+"I bring you," she said, "six hundred dollars a year. And a _little_
+more. Which sweeps away that obstacle. Doesn't it?"
+
+"I could not ask you to live on that----"
+
+"I can live on what you live on! I should wish to. It would make me
+utterly and supremely happy."
+
+Her flushed, young face confronted his as she took a short, eager step
+toward him.
+
+"I am not making love to you," she said, "--at least, I don't think I
+am. All I desire is to help--to give you myself--my youth, energy,
+ambition, intelligence--and what I have--which is of no use to me unless
+it is useful to you. Won't you take these things from me?"
+
+"Do you give me your heart, too, Cecil?"
+
+She smiled faintly, knowing now that she had already given it. She did
+not answer, but her under lip trembled, and she caught it between her
+teeth as he took her hands and kissed them in silence.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"Miami is not very far, is it?" she asked, as she sprang aboard the
+_Orange Puppy_.
+
+"Not very, dear."
+
+"We could get a license immediately, couldn't we?"
+
+"I think so."
+
+"And then it will not take us very long to get married, will it?"
+
+"Not very."
+
+"What a wonderful night!" she murmured, looking up at the stars. She
+turned toward the shore. "What a wonderful place for a honeymoon!...
+And we can continue business, too, and watch our caterpillars all day
+long! Oh, it is all too wonderful, wonderful!" She kissed her hand to
+the unseen camp. "We will be back to-morrow!" she called softly. Then a
+sudden thought struck her. "You never can get the _Orange Puppy_ through
+that narrow lead, can you?"
+
+"Oh, there is an easier way out," he said, taking the tiller as the sail
+filled.
+
+Her head dropped back against his knees. Now and then her lips moved,
+murmuring in sheerest happiness the thoughts that drifted through her
+enchanted mind.
+
+"I wonder when it began," she whispered, "--at the ball-game--or on
+Fifth Avenue--or when I saw you here? It seems to me as if I always had
+been in love with you."
+
+Outside in the ocean, the breeze stiffened and the perfume was tinged
+with salt.
+
+Lying back against his knees, her eyes fixed dreamily on the stars, she
+murmured:
+
+"Stirrups _will_ be surprised."
+
+"What are you talking about down there all by yourself?" he whispered,
+bending over her.
+
+She looked up into his eyes. Suddenly her own filled; and she put up
+both arms, linking them around his neck.
+
+And so the _Orange Puppy_ sailed away into the viewless, formless,
+starry mystery of all romance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After a silence the young novelist, who had been poking the goldfish,
+said slowly: "That's pretty poor fiction, Athalie, but, as a matter of
+simple fact and inartistic truth, recording sentimental celerity, it
+stands unequalled."
+
+"Straight facts make poor fiction," remarked Duane.
+
+"It all depends on who makes the fiction out of them," I ventured.
+
+"Not always," said Athalie. "There are facts which when straightly told
+are far stranger than fiction. I noticed a case of that sort in my
+crystal last winter." And to the youthful novelist she said: "Don't try
+to guess who the people were if I tell it, will you?"
+
+"No," he promised.
+
+"Please fix my cushions," she said to nobody in particular. And after
+the stampede was over she selected another cigarette, thoughtfully, but
+did not light it.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+"You are queer folk, you writers of fiction," she mused aloud. "No
+monarch ordained of God takes himself more seriously; no actor lives
+more absolutely in a world made out of his imagination."
+
+She lighted her cigarette: "You often speak of your most 'important'
+book,--as though any fiction ever written were important. Painters speak
+of their most important pictures; sculptors, composers, creative
+creatures of every species employ the adjective. And it is all very
+silly. Facts only can be characterised as important; figments of the
+creative imagination are as unimportant----" she blew a dainty ring of
+smoke toward the crystal globe--"as that! '_Tout ce qu'ont fait les
+hommes, les hommes peuvent le détruire. Il n'y a de caractères
+inéffaçables que ceux qu' imprime la nature._' There has never been but
+one important author."
+
+I said smilingly: "To quote the gentleman you think important enough to
+quote, Athalie, '_Tout est bien sortant des mains de l'Auteur des
+choses: tout dégénere entre les mains de l'homme_.'"
+
+Said the novelist simply: "Imagination alone makes facts important.
+'_Cette superbe puissance, ennemie de la raison!_'"
+
+"O Athalie," whispered Duane, "night-blooming, exquisite blossom of the
+arid municipal desert, recount for us these facts which you possess and
+which, in your delightful opinion, are stranger than fiction, and more
+important."
+
+And Athalie, choosing another sweetmeat, looked at us until it had
+dissolved in her fragrant mouth. Then she spoke very gravely, while her
+dark eyes laughed at us:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When young Lord Willowmere's fiancée ran away from him and married
+Delancy Jones, that bereaved nobleman experienced a certain portion of
+the universal shock which this social seismic disturbance spread far and
+wide over two hemispheres.
+
+That such a girl should marry beneath her naturally disgusted everybody.
+So both Jones and his wife were properly damned.
+
+England read its morning paper, shrugged its derision, and remarked that
+nobody ought to be surprised at anything that happened in the States.
+"The States" swallowed the rebuke and squirmed.
+
+Now, among the sturdy yeomanry, gentry, and nobility of those same
+British and impressive Isles there was an earnest gentleman whose ample
+waist and means and scholarly tastes inclined him to a sedentary life of
+research. The study of human nature in its various native and exotic
+phases had for forty years obsessed his insular intellect. Philologist,
+anthropologist, calm philosopher, and benignant observer, this
+gentleman, who had never visited the United States, determined to do so
+now. For, he reasoned--and very properly--a country where such a thing
+could happen to a British nobleman and a Peer of the Realm must be worth
+exploring, and its curious inhabitants merited, perhaps, the
+impersonally judicial inspection of an F. R. B. A. whose gigantic work
+on the folk manners of the world had now reached its twentieth volume,
+without as yet including the United States. So he determined to devote
+several chapters in the forthcoming and twenty-first volume to the
+recent colonies of Great Britain.
+
+Now, when the Duke of Pillchester concluded to do anything, that thing
+was invariably and thoroughly done. And so, before it entirely realised
+the honour in store for it, the United States was buttoning its collar,
+tying its white tie, and rushing down stairs to open its front door to
+the Duke of Pillchester, the Duchess of Pillchester, and the Lady Alene
+Innesly, their youthful and ornamental daughter.
+
+For a number of months after its arrival, the Ducal party inspected the
+Yankee continent through a lens made for purposes of scientific
+investigation only. The massed wealth of the nation met their Graces in
+solid divisions of social worth. The shock was mutual.
+
+Then the massed poverty of the continent was exhibited, leaving the
+poverty indifferent and slightly bored, and the Ducal party taking
+notes.
+
+It was his Grace's determination to study the folk-ways of Americans;
+and what the Duke wished the Duchess dutifully desired. The Lady Alene
+Innesly, however, was dragged most reluctantly from function to
+function, from palace to purlieu, from theatre to cathedral, from Coney
+Island to Newport. She was "havin' a rotten time."
+
+All day long she had nothing to look at but an overdressed and alien
+race whose voices distressed her; day after day she had nothing to say
+except, "How d'y do," and "Mother, shall we have tea?" Week after week
+she had nothing to think of except the bare, unkempt ugliness of the
+cities she saw; the raw waste and sordid uglification of what once had
+been matchless natural resources; dirty rivers, ruined woodlands, flimsy
+buildings, ignorant architecture. The ostentatious and wretched hotels
+depressed her; the poor railroads and bad manners disgusted her.
+
+Listless, uninterested, Britishly enduring what she could not escape,
+the little Lady Alene had made not the slightest effort to mitigate the
+circumstances of her temporary fate. She was civilly incurious
+concerning the people she met; their social customs, amusements,
+pastimes, duties, various species of business or of leisure interested
+her not a whit. All the men looked alike to her; all the women were
+over-gowned, tiresomely pretty, and might learn one day how to behave
+themselves after they had found out how to make their voices behave.
+
+Meanwhile, requiring summer clothing--tweeds and shooting boots being
+not what the climate seemed to require in July--she discovered with
+languid surprise that for the first time in her limited life she was
+well gowned. A few moments afterward another surprise faintly thrilled
+her, for, chancing to glance at herself after a Yankee hairdresser had
+finished her hair, she discovered to her astonishment that she was
+pretty.
+
+For several days this fact preyed upon her mind, alternately troubling
+and fascinating her. There were several men at home who would certainly
+sit up; Willowmere among others.
+
+As for considering her newly discovered beauty any advantage in America,
+the idea had not entered her mind. Why should it? All the men looked
+alike; all wore sleek hair, hats on the backs of their heads, clothing
+that fitted like a coster's trousers. She had absolutely no use for
+them, and properly.
+
+However, she continued to cultivate her beauty and to adorn it with
+Yankee clothing and headgear befitting; which filled up considerable
+time during the day, leaving her fewer empty hours to fill with tea and
+three-volumed novels from the British Isles.
+
+Now, it had never occurred to the Lady Alene Innesly to read anything
+except British fact and fiction. She had never been sufficiently
+interested even to open an American book. Why should she, as long as the
+three props of her national literature endured intact--curates, tea, and
+thoroughbred horses?
+
+But there came a time during the ensuing winter when the last of the
+three-volumed novels had been assimilated, the last serious tome
+digested; and there stretched out before her a bookless prospect which
+presently began to dismay her with the aridness of its perspective.
+
+The catastrophe occurred while the Ducal party was investigating the
+strange folk-customs of those Americans who gathered during the winter
+in gigantic Florida hotels and lived there, uncomfortably lodged, vilely
+fed, and shamelessly robbed, while third-rate orchestras play cabaret
+music and enervating breezes stir the cabbage-palmettos till they rustle
+like bath-room rubber plants.
+
+It was a bad place and a bad time of year for a young and British girl
+to be deprived of her native and soporific fiction; for the livelier and
+Frenchier of British novelists were self-denied her, because somebody
+had said they were not unlike Americans.
+
+Now she was, in the uncouth vernacular of the country, up against it
+for fair! She didn't know what it was called, but she realised how it
+felt to be against something.
+
+Three days she endured it, dozing in her room, half awake when the
+sea-breeze rattled the Venetian blinds, or the niggers were noisy at
+baseball.
+
+On the fourth day she arose, went to the window, gazed disgustedly out
+over the tawdry villas of Verbena Inlet, then rang for her maid.
+
+"Bunn," she said, "here are three sovereigns. You will please buy for me
+one specimen of every book on sale in the corridor of this hotel. And,
+Bunn!----"
+
+"Yes, my lady."
+
+"What was it you were eating the other day?"
+
+"Chewing-gum, my lady."
+
+"Is it--agreeable?"
+
+"Yes, my lady."
+
+"Is it nourishing?"
+
+"No, my lady. It is not intended to be eaten; it is to be chewed."
+
+"Then one does not swallow it when one supposes it to be sufficiently
+masticated?"
+
+"No, my lady."
+
+"What does one do with it?"
+
+"Beg pardon, my lady--one spits it out."
+
+"Ow," said the girl.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+She was lying on the bed when a relay of servants staggered in bearing
+gaudy piles of the most recent and popular novels, and placed them in
+tottering profusion upon the adjacent furniture.
+
+The Lady Alene turned her head where it lay lazily pillowed on her left
+arm, and glanced indifferently at the multi-coloured battlement of
+books. The majority of the covers were embellished with the heads of
+young women, all endowed with vaudeville-like beauty--it having been
+discovered by intelligent publishers that a girl's head on any book
+sells it.
+
+On some covers were displayed coloured pictures of handsome and athletic
+American young men, usually kissing beautiful young ladies who wore
+crowns, ermines, and foreign orders over dinner dresses. Sometimes,
+however, they were kicking Kings. That seemed rather odd to the Lady
+Alene, and she sat up on the bed and reached out her hand. It
+encountered a book on which rested a small, oblong package. She took
+book and package. On the pink wrapper of the latter she read this verse:
+
+ Why are my teeth so white and bright?
+ Because I chew with all my might
+ The gum that fills me with delight
+ And keeps me healthy day and night.
+ Five cents.
+
+The Lady Alene's unaccustomed fingers became occupied with the pink
+wrapper. Presently she withdrew from it a thin and brittle object,
+examined it, and gravely placed it in her mouth.
+
+For a while the perplexed and apprehensive expression remained upon her
+face, but it faded gradually, and after a few minutes her lovely
+features settled into an expression resembling contentment. And,
+delicately, discreetly, at leisurely intervals, her fresh, sweet lips
+moved as though she were murmuring a prayer.
+
+All that afternoon she perused the first American novel she had ever
+read. And the cumulative effect of the fiction upon her literal mind was
+amazing as she turned page after page, and, gradually gathering mental
+and nervous speed, dashed from one chapter, bang! into another, only to
+be occultly adjured to "take the car ahead"--which she now did quite
+naturally, and on the run.
+
+Never, never had she imagined such things could be! Always heretofore,
+to her, fiction had been a strict reflection of actuality in which a
+dull imagination was licensed to walk about if it kept off the grass.
+And it always did in the only novels to which she had been accustomed.
+
+But good heavens! Here was a realism at work in these pages so
+astonishing yet so convincing, so subtle yet so natural, so matter of
+fact yet so astoundingly new to her that the book she was reading was
+already changing the entire complexion of the Yankee continent for her.
+
+It had to do with a young, penniless, and athletic American who went to
+Europe, tipped a king off his throne, pushed a few dukes, counts, and
+barons out of the way, reorganized the army, and went home taking with
+him a beautiful and exclusive princess with honest intentions.
+
+The inhabitants of several villages wept at his departure; the abashed
+nobility made unsuccessful attempts to shoot him; otherwise the trip to
+the Cunard Line pier was uneventful, and diplomatic circles paid no
+attention to the incident.
+
+When the Lady Alene finished the story her oval face ached; but this was
+no time to consider aches. So with a charming abandon she relieved her
+pretty teeth of the morceau, replaced it with another, helped herself to
+a second novel, settled back on her pillow, and opened the enchanted
+pages.
+
+And zip! Instantly she became acquainted with another athletic and
+penniless American who was raising the devil in the Balkans.
+
+Never in her life had she dreamed that any nation contained such
+fearless, fascinating, resourceful, epigrammatic, and desirable young
+men! And here she was in the very midst of them, and never had realised
+it until now.
+
+Where were they? All around her, no doubt. When, a few days later, she
+had read some baker's dozen novels, and in each one of them had
+discovered similar athletic, penniless, and omniscient American young
+men, her opinion was confirmed, and she could no longer doubt that, like
+the fiction of her own country, the romances of American novelists must
+have a substantial foundation in solid fact.
+
+There could be no use in quibbling. The situation had become exciting.
+Her youthful imagination was now fired; her Saxon blood thoroughly
+stirred. She knew perfectly well that there were in her own country no
+young men like these she had read about--not a man-jack among them who
+would ever dream of dashing about the world cuffing the ears of
+reprehensible monarchs, meting out condign punishment to refractory
+nobility, reconstructing governments and states and armies, and escaping
+with a princess every time.
+
+Not that she actually believed that such episodes were of common
+occurrence. Young as she was she knew better. But somehow it seemed very
+clear to her that a race of writers who were so unanimous on the subject
+and a nation which so complacently read of these events without denying
+their plausibility, must within itself harbour germs and seeds of
+romance and reckless deeds which no doubt had produced a number of young
+men thoroughly capable of doing a few of the exciting things she had
+read about.
+
+Now she regretted she had not noticed the men she had met; now she was
+indeed sorry she had not at least taken pains to learn to distinguish
+them one from the other. She wished that she had investigated this
+reckless, chivalrous, energetic, and distinguishing trait of the
+American young man.
+
+It seemed odd, too, that Pa-_pa_ had never investigated it; that
+Ma-_ma_ had never appeared to notice it.
+
+She mentioned it at dinner carelessly, in the midst of a natural and
+British silence. Neither parent enlightened her. One said, "Fancy!" And
+the other said, "Ow."
+
+And so, as both parents departed the following morning to investigate
+the tarpon fishing at Miami, the little Lady Alene made private
+preparations to investigate and closely observe the astonishing,
+reckless, and romantic tendencies of the American young man. Her tour of
+discovery she scheduled for five o'clock that afternoon.
+
+Just how these investigations were to be accomplished she did not see
+very clearly. She had carefully refrained from knowing anybody in the
+hotel. So how to go about it she did not know; but she knew enough after
+luncheon to have her hair done by somebody besides her maid, selected
+the most American gown in her repertoire, took a sunshade hitherto
+disdained, and glanced in the mirror at a picture in white, with gold
+hair, violet eyes, and a skin of snow and roses.
+
+Further she did not know how to equip herself, except by going out doors
+at five o'clock. And at five o'clock she went.
+
+From the tennis courts young men and girls looked at her. On the golf
+links youth turned to observe her slim and dainty progress. She was
+stared at from porch and veranda, from dock and deck, from garden and
+walk and orange grove and hedge of scarlet hibiscus.
+
+From every shop window in the village, folk looked out at her; from
+automobile, wheeled chair, bicycle, and horse-drawn vehicle she was
+inspected. But she knew nobody; not one bright nod greeted her; not one
+straw hat was lifted; not one nigger grinned. She knew nobody. And,
+alas! everybody knew her. A cold wave seemed to have settled over
+Verbena Inlet.
+
+Yet her father was not unpopular, nor was her mother either; and
+although they asked too many questions, their perfectly impersonal and
+scientific mission in Verbena Inlet was understood.
+
+But the Lady Alene Innesly was not understood, although her indifference
+was noted and her exclusiveness amusedly resented. However, nobody
+interfered with her or her seclusion. The fact that she desired to know
+nobody had been very quickly accepted. Youth and the world at Verbena
+Inlet went on without her; the sun continued to rise and set as usual;
+and the nigger waiters played baseball.
+
+She stood watching them now for a few minutes, her parasol tilted over
+her lovely shoulders. Tiring of this, she sauntered on, having not the
+slightest idea where she was going, but very calmly she made up her mind
+to speak to the first agreeable looking young man she encountered, as
+none of them seemed at all inclined to speak to her.
+
+Under her arm she had tucked a novel written by one Smith. She had read
+it half through. The story concerned a young and athletic and penniless
+man from Michigan and a Balkan Princess. She had read as far as the
+first love scene. The young man from Michigan was still kissing the
+Princess when she left off reading. And her imagination was still on
+fire.
+
+She had wandered down to the lagoon without finding anybody sufficiently
+attractive to speak to. The water was blue and pretty and very inviting.
+So she hired a motor-boat, seated herself in the stern, and dabbled her
+fingers in the water as the engineer took her whizzing across the lagoon
+and out into the azure waste, headed straight for the distant silvery
+inlet.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+She read, gazed at the gulls and wild ducks, placed a bit of gum between
+her rose-leaf lips, read a little, glanced up to mark the majestic
+flight of eight pelicans, sighed discreetly, savoured the gum, deposited
+it in a cunning corner adjacent to her left and snowy cheek, and spoke
+to the boatman.
+
+"Did you ever read this book?" she asked.
+
+"Me! No, ma'am."
+
+"It is very interesting. Do you read much?"
+
+"No, ma'am."
+
+"This is a very extraordinary book," she said. "I strongly advise you to
+read it."
+
+The boatman glanced ironically at the scarlet bound volume which bore
+the portrait of a pretty girl on its covers.
+
+"Is it that book by John Smith they're sellin' so many of down to the
+hotel?" he inquired slowly.
+
+"I believe it was written by one Smith," she said, turning over the
+volume to look. "Yes, John Smith is the author's name. No doubt he is
+very famous in America."
+
+"He lives down here in winter."
+
+"Really!" she exclaimed with considerable animation.
+
+"Oh, yes. I take him shooting and fishing. He has a shack on the Inlet
+Point."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Over there, where them gulls is flying."
+
+The girl looked earnestly at the point. All she saw were snowy dunes and
+wild grasses and seabirds whirling.
+
+"He writes them books over there," remarked the boatman.
+
+"How extremely interesting!"
+
+"They say he makes a world o' money by it. He's rich as mud."
+
+"Really!"
+
+"Yaas'm. I often seen him a settin' onto a camp chair out beyond them
+dunes a-writing pieces like billy-bedam. Yes'm."
+
+"Do you think he is there now?" she asked with a slight catch in her
+breath.
+
+"Well, we kin soon find out----" He swung the tiller; the little boat
+rushed in a seething circle toward the point, veered westward, then
+south.
+
+"Yaas'm," said the boatman presently. "Mr. Smith he's reclinin' out
+there onto his stummick. I guess he's just a thinkin'. He thinks more'n
+five million niggers, he does. Gor-a-mighty! _I_ never see such a man
+for thinkin'! He jest lies onto his stummick an' studies an' ruminates
+like billy-bedam. Yaas'm. Would you want I should land you so's you can
+take a peek at him?"
+
+"Might I?"
+
+"Sure, Miss. Go up over them dunes and take a peek at him. He won't
+mind. Ten to nothin' he won't even see ye."
+
+There was a little dock built of coquina. A power boat, a sloop, several
+row-boats, and a canoe lay there, riding the little, limpid,
+azure-tinted wavelets. Under their keels swam gar-pike, their fins and
+backs also shimmering with blue and turquoise green.
+
+Lady Alene rose; her boatman aided her, and she sprang lightly to the
+coquina dock and walked straight over the low dune in front of her.
+
+There was nothing whatever in sight except beach-grapes and scrubby
+tufts of palmetto, and flocks of grey, long-legged, long-billed birds
+running to avoid her. But they did not run very fast or very far, and
+she saw them at a little distance loitering, with many a bright and
+apparently friendly glance at her.
+
+There was another dune in front. She mounted it. Straight ahead of her,
+perhaps half a mile distant, stood a whitewashed bungalow under a
+cluster of palms and palmettos.
+
+From where she stood she could see a cove--merely a tiny crescent of
+sand edged by a thin blade of cobalt water, and curtained by the
+palmetto forest. And on this little crescent beach, in the shade of the
+palms, a young man lay at full length, very intent upon his occupation,
+which was, apparently, to dig holes in the sand with a child's toy
+shovel.
+
+He was clad in white flannels; beside him she noticed a red tin pail,
+such as children use for gathering shells. Near this stood two
+camp-chairs, one of which was piled with pads of yellow paper and a few
+books. She thought his legs very eloquent. Sometimes they lay in
+picturesque repose, crossed behind him; at other moments they waved in
+the air or sprawled widely, appearing to express the varying emotions
+which possessed his deep absorption in the occult task under his nose.
+
+"Now, what in the world can he be doing?" thought Lady Alene Innesly,
+watching him. And she remained motionless on top of the dune for ten
+minutes to find out. He continued to sprawl and dig holes in the sand.
+
+Learning nothing, and her interest increasing inversely, she began to
+walk toward him. It was her disposition to investigate whatever
+interested her. Already she was conscious of a deep interest in his
+legs.
+
+From time to time low dunes intervened to hide the little cove, but
+always when she crossed them, pushing her way through fragrant thickets
+of sweet bay and sparkle-berry shrub, cove and occupant came into view
+again. And his legs continued to wave. The nearer she drew the less she
+comprehended the nature of his occupation, and the more she decided to
+find out what he could be about, lying there flat on his stomach and
+digging and patting the sand.
+
+Also her naturally calm and British heart was beating irregularly and
+fast, because she realised the fact that she was approaching the
+vicinity of one of those American young men who did things in books that
+she never dreamed could be done anywhere. Nay--under her arm was a novel
+written by this very man, in which the hero was still kissing a Balkan
+Princess, page 169. And it occurred to her vaguely that her own good
+taste and modesty ought to make an end of such a situation; and that she
+ought to finish the page quickly and turn to the next chapter to relieve
+the pressure on the Princess.
+
+Confused a trifle by a haunting sense of her own responsibility, by the
+actual imminence of such an author, and by her intense curiosity
+concerning what he was now doing, she walked across the dunes down
+through little valleys all golden with the flowers of a flat, spreading
+vine. The blossoms were larger and lovelier than the largest golden
+portulacca, but she scarcely noticed their beauty as she resolutely
+approached the cove, moving forward under the cool shadow of the border
+forest.
+
+He did not seem to be aware of her approach, even when she came up and
+stood by the camp-chairs, parasol tilted, looking down at him with
+grave, lilac-blue eyes.
+
+But she did not look at him as much as she gazed at what he was doing.
+And what he was doing appeared perfectly clear to her now.
+
+With the aid of his toy shovel, his little red pail, and several
+assorted shells, he had constructed out of sand a walled city. Houses,
+streets, squares, market place, covered ways, curtain, keep, tower,
+turret, crenelated battlement, all were there. A driftwood drawbridge
+bridged the moat, guarded by lead soldiers in Boznovian uniform.
+
+And lead soldiers were everywhere in the miniature city; the keep
+bristled with their bayonets; squads of them marched through street and
+square; they sat at dinner in the market place; their cannon winked and
+blinked in the westering sun on every battlement.
+
+And after a little while she discovered two lead figures which were not
+military; a civilian wearing a bowler hat; a feminine figure wearing a
+crown and ermines. The one stood on the edge of the moat outside the
+drawbridge: the other, in crown and ermines, was apparently observing
+him of the bowler hat from the top of a soldier-infested tower.
+
+It was plain enough to her now. This amazing young man was working out
+in concrete detail some incident of an unwritten novel. And the
+magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady Alene. Genius only
+possesses such a capacity for detail.
+
+Without even arousing young Smith from his absorbed preoccupation, she
+seated herself on the unincumbered camp-chair, laid her book on her
+knees, rested both elbows on it, propped her chin on both clasped hands,
+and watched the proceedings.
+
+The lead figure in the bowler hat seemed to be in a bad way. Several
+dozen Boznovian soldiers were aiming an assortment of firearms at him;
+cavalry were coming at a gallop, too, not to mention a three-gun battery
+on a dead run.
+
+The problem seemed to be how, in the face of such a situation, was the
+lead gentleman in the bowler hat to get away, much less penetrate the
+city?
+
+Flight seemed hopeless, but presently Smith picked him up, marched him
+along the edge of the moat, and gave him a shove into it.
+
+"He's swimming," said Smith, aloud to himself. "Bang! Bang! But they
+don't hit him.... Yes, they do; they graze his shoulder. It is the only
+wound possible to polite fiction. There is consequently a streak of red
+in the water. Bang--bang--bang! Crack--crack! The cavalry empty their
+pistols. Boom! A field piece opens---- Where the devil is that
+battery----"
+
+[Illustration: "The magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady
+Alene."]
+
+Smith reached over, drew horses, cannoniers, gun and caisson over the
+drawbridge, galloped them along the moat, halted, unlimbered, trained
+the guns on the bowler hatted swimmer, and remarked, "Boom!"
+
+"The shell," he murmured with satisfaction, "missed him and blew up in
+the casemates. Did it kill anybody? No; that interferes with the
+action.... He dives, swims under water to an ancient drain." Smith stuck
+a peg where the supposed drain emptied into the moat.
+
+"That drain," continued Smith thoughtfully, "connects with the royal
+residence.... Where's that Princess? Can she see him dive into it? Or
+does she merely suspect he is making for it? Or--or--doesn't she know
+anything about it?"
+
+"She doesn't know anything about it!" exclaimed Lady Alene Innesly. The
+tint of excitement glowed in her cheeks. Her lilac-tinted eyes burned
+with a soft, blue fire.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+Slowly as a partly paralysed crab, Smith raised himself to a sitting
+posture and looked over his shoulder into the loveliest face that he had
+ever beheld, except on the paper wrappers of his own books.
+
+"I'm sorry," said the Lady Alene. "Shouldn't I have spoken?"
+
+The smoke and turmoil of battle still confused Smith's brain;
+visualisation of wall and tower and crowns and ermines made the Lady
+Alene's fresh, wholesome beauty very unreal to him for a moment or two.
+
+When his eyes found their focus and his mind returned to actuality, he
+climbed to his feet, hat in hand, and made his manners to her. Then,
+tumbling books and pads from the other camp-chair, he reseated himself
+with a half smiling, half shamed glance at her, and a "May I?" to which
+she responded, "Please! And might I talk to you for a few moments?"
+
+Smith shot a keen glance at the book on her knees. Resignation and pride
+altered his features, but when again he looked at the Lady Alene he
+experienced a pleasure in his resignation which hitherto no curious
+tourist, no enterprising reporter had ever aroused. Smilingly he
+composed himself for the impending interview.
+
+"Until now," said the girl earnestly, "I think I have not been entirely
+convinced by your novels. Somehow or other I could not bring myself to
+comprehend the amazing realism of your plots. But now I understand the
+basis of great and fundamental truth on which you build so plausibly
+your splendid novels of love and life."
+
+"What?" said Smith.
+
+"To see you," she continued, "constructing the scenes of which later you
+are to write, has been a wonderful revelation to me. It has been a
+privilege the importance of which I can scarcely estimate. Your devotion
+to the details of your art, your endless patience, your almost austere
+absorption in truth and realism, have not only astounded me but have
+entirely convinced me. The greatest thing in the world is Truth. _Now_ I
+realise it!"
+
+She made a pretty gesture of enthusiasm:
+
+"What a wonderful nation of young men is yours, Mr. Smith! What
+qualities! What fearlessness--initiative--idealism--daring--! What
+invention, what recklessness, what romance----"
+
+Her voice failed her; she sat with lips parted, a soft glow in her
+cheeks, gazing upon Smith with fascinated eyes. And Smith gazed back at
+her without a word.
+
+"I don't believe," she said, "that in all England there exists a single
+man capable even of conceiving the career for which so many young
+Americans seem to be equipped."
+
+After a moment Smith said very quietly:
+
+"I am sorry, but do you know I don't quite understand you?"
+
+"I mean," she said, "that you Americans have a capacity for conceiving,
+understanding, and performing everything you write about."
+
+"Why do you think so?" asked Smith, a trifle red.
+
+"Because if Englishmen could understand and do such things, our
+novelists would write about them. They never write about them. But you
+Americans do. You write thousands of most delightful novels about young
+men who do things unheard of, undreamed of, in England. Therefore, it is
+very clear to me that you Americans are quite capable of doing what you
+write about, and what your readers so ardently admire."
+
+"I see," said Smith calmly. His ear-tips still burned.
+
+"No doubt," said the girl, "many of the astonishing things you Americans
+write about are really done. Many astounding episodes in fiction are of
+not uncommon occurrence in real life."
+
+"What kind of episodes?" asked Smith gravely.
+
+"Why, any of them you write about. They all are astonishing enough. For
+example, your young men do not seem to know what fear is."
+
+"No," said Smith, "they don't."
+
+"And when they love," said the girl, "nothing can stop them."
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"Nothing!" she repeated, the soft glow coming into her cheeks again.
+"--Nothing! Neither rank nor wealth nor political considerations nor
+family prejudices, nor even the military!"
+
+Smith bit his lip in silence. He had heard of irony; never had he
+dreamed it could be so crushing: he had heard of sarcasm; but the quiet
+sarcasm of this unknown young girl was annihilating him. Critics had
+carved him in his time; but the fine mincemeat which this pretty
+stranger was making of him promised to leave nothing more either to
+carve or to roast.
+
+"Do you mind my talking to you?" she asked, noting the strained
+expression of his features.
+
+"No," he said, "go ahead."
+
+"Because if I am tiring you----"
+
+He said he was not tired.
+
+"--or if it bores you to discuss your art with a foreigner who so truly
+admires it----"
+
+He shot a glance at her, then forced a laugh.
+
+"I am not offended," he said. "What paper do you represent?"
+
+"I?" she said, bewildered.
+
+"Yes. You are a newspaper woman, are you not?"
+
+"Do you mean a reporter?"
+
+"Naturally."
+
+"No," she said very seriously, "I am not a reporter. What an odd idea!"
+
+"Do you think it odd?"
+
+"Why, yes. Do not many admirers of your works express their pleasure in
+them to you?"
+
+He studied her lovely face coolly and in detail--the dainty arch of the
+questioning eyebrows, the sensitive curve of the mouth, the clear, sweet
+eyes. Could it be possible that such candour masked irony? Could all
+this be the very essence of the art of acting, concealing the most
+murderous sarcasm ever dreamed of by a terrified author?
+
+And suddenly his face went red all over, and he understood that the
+essence of this young girl was a candour so utterly free of
+self-consciousness--a frankness so absolutely truthful, that the
+simplicity of her had been a miracle too exquisite for him to
+comprehend.
+
+"You _do_ like what I write!" he exclaimed.
+
+Her blue eyes widened: "Of course I do," she said, amazed. "Didn't you
+understand me?"
+
+"No," he said, cooling his burning face in the rising sea-wind. "I
+thought you were laughing at me."
+
+"I'm sorry if I was stupid," she said.
+
+"_I_ was stupid."
+
+"You!" She laughed a little.
+
+The sinking sun peered through the palm forest behind them and flung a
+beam of blinding light at her.
+
+"Am I interrupting your work, Mr. Smith? I mean, I know I am, but----"
+
+"Please don't go away."
+
+"Thank you.... I have noticed what agreeable manners you Americans have
+in novels. Naturally you are even more kindly and polite in real life."
+
+"Have you met many Americans?"
+
+"No, only you. In the beginning I did not feel interested in Americans."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"The young men all seemed to resemble one another," she said frankly,
+"like Chinese. But now that I really know an American I am intensely
+interested."
+
+"You notice no Mongolian monotony in me?" he inquired gravely.
+
+"Oh, no----" She coloured; then discovering that he was laughing, she
+laughed, too, rather faintly.
+
+"That was a joke, wasn't it?" she said.
+
+"Yes, that was a joke."
+
+"Because," she said, "there is no Mongolian uniformity about _you_. On
+the contrary, you remind me in every way of one of your own heroes."
+
+"Oh, really now!" he protested; but she insisted with serious
+enthusiasm.
+
+"You are the counterpart of the hero in this book," she repeated,
+resting one hand lightly on the volume under her elbow. "You wear white
+flannels, you are tall, well built, straight, with very regular
+features and a fasci---- a smile," she corrected herself calmly, "which
+one naturally associates with your features."
+
+"Also," she continued, "your voice is cultivated and modulated with just
+enough of the American accent to make it piquantly agreeable. And what
+you say is fasci---- is well expressed and interesting. Therefore, as I
+have said, to me you resemble one of your own heroes."
+
+There was enough hot colour in his face to make it boyishly bashful.
+
+"And you appear to be as modest as one of your own heroes," she added,
+studying him. "That is truly delightful."
+
+"But really, I am nothing like any of my heroes," he explained, terribly
+embarrassed.
+
+"Why do you say that, Mr. Smith?"
+
+"Because it's true. I don't even resemble 'em superficially."
+
+She made a quick, graceful gesture: "Why do you say that, when here you
+are before me, the exact and exciting counterpart of the reckless and
+fasci---- the reckless and interesting men you write about?"
+
+He said nothing. She closed the parasol and considered him in silence
+for a moment or two. Then:
+
+"And I have no doubt that you are capable of doing the very things that
+your heroes do so adroitly and so charmingly."
+
+"What, for example?" he asked, reddening to his temples.
+
+"Reconstructing armies, for instance."
+
+"Filibustering?"
+
+"Is that what it is called?"
+
+"It's called that in the countries south of the United States."
+
+"Well, would you not be capable of overturning a government and of
+reconstructing the army, Mr. Smith?"
+
+"Capable?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well," he said cautiously, "if it was the thing I wanted to do, perhaps
+I might have a try at it."
+
+"I knew it," she exclaimed triumphantly.
+
+"But," he explained, "I never desired to overturn any government."
+
+"You probably have never seen any that you thought worth while
+overturning."
+
+Her confident rejoinder perplexed him and he remained silent.
+
+"Also," she continued, still more confidently, "I am certain that if you
+were in love, no obstacles would prove too great for you to surmount.
+Would they?"
+
+"Really," he said, "I don't know. I'm not very enterprising."
+
+"That is the answer of a delightfully modest man. Your own hero would
+return me such an answer, Mr. Smith. But I--and your heroine
+also--understand you--I mean your hero."
+
+"Do you?" he asked gravely.
+
+"Certainly. I, as well as your heroine, understand that no obstacles
+could check you if you loved her--neither political considerations,
+diplomatic exigencies, family prejudices, nor her own rank, no matter
+what it might be. Is not that true?"
+
+Eager, enthusiastic, impersonally but warmly interested, she leaned a
+little toward him, intent on his reply.
+
+He looked into the lovely, flushed face in silence for a while. Then:
+
+"Yes," he said, "it is true. If I loved, nothing could check me
+except----" he shrugged.
+
+"Death?" She nodded, fascinated.
+
+He nodded. He had meant to say the police.
+
+She said exultantly: "I knew it, Mr. Smith! I was certain that you are
+the living embodiment of your own heroes! The moment I set eyes on you
+playing in the sand with your lead soldiers, I was sure of it!"
+
+Thrilled, she considered him, her soft eyes brilliant with undisguised
+admiration.
+
+"I wish I could actually _see_ it!" she said under her breath.
+
+"See what?"
+
+"See you, in real life, as one of your own heroes--doing some of the
+things they do so cleverly, so winningly--careless of convention,
+reckless of consequences, oblivious to all considerations except only
+the affair in hand. That," she said excitedly, "would be glorious, and
+well worth a trip to the States!"
+
+"How far," he asked, "have you read in that book of mine?"
+
+"In this book?" She opened it, impulsively, ran over the pages,
+hesitated, stopped.
+
+"He was--was kissing the Balkan Princess," she said. "I left them--_in
+statu quo_."
+
+"I see.... Did he do _that_ well?"
+
+"I--suppose so."
+
+"Have you no opinion?"
+
+"I think he did it--very--thoroughly, Mr. Smith."
+
+"It ought to be done thoroughly if done at all," he said reflectively.
+
+"Otherwise," she nodded, "it would be offensive."
+
+"To the reader?"
+
+"To her, too. Wouldn't it?"
+
+"You know better than I."
+
+"No, I don't know. A nice girl can not imagine herself being
+kissed--except under very extraordinary circumstances, and by a very
+extraordinary man.... Such a man as you have drawn in this book."
+
+"Had you been that Balkan Princess, what would you have done?" he asked,
+rather pale.
+
+"I?" she said, startled.
+
+"Yes, you."
+
+She sat considering, blue eyes lost in candid reverie. Then the faintest
+smile curved her lips; she looked up at Smith with winning simplicity.
+
+"In your story, Mr. Smith, does the Balkan Princess return his kiss?"
+
+"Not in that chapter."
+
+"I think I would have returned it--in that--chapter." Then, for the
+first time, she blushed.
+
+The naïve avowal set the heart and intellect of Mr. Smith afire. But he
+only dropped his well-shaped head and didn't look at her. Which was
+rather nice of him.
+
+"Romance," he said after a moment or two, "is all well enough. But real
+life is stranger than fiction."
+
+"Not in the British Isles," she said with decision. "It _is_ tea and
+curates and kennels and stables--as our writers depict it."
+
+"No, you are mistaken! Everywhere it is stranger than fiction," he
+insisted--"more surprising, more charming, more wonderful. Even here in
+America--here in Florida--here on this tiny point of sand jutting into
+the Atlantic, life is more beautiful, more miraculous than any fiction
+ever written."
+
+"Why do you say that?" she asked.
+
+"I am afraid I can't tell you why I say it."
+
+"Why can't you tell me?"
+
+"Only in books could what I might have to tell you be logically
+told--and listened to----"
+
+"Only in books? But books in America reflect actual life," she said.
+"Therefore, you can tell me what you have to tell. Can't you?"
+
+"Can I?" he asked.
+
+"Yes...." Far in the inmost recesses of her calm and maiden heart
+something stirred, and her breath ceased for a second.... Innocent, not
+comprehending why her breath missed, she looked at him with the
+question still in her blue eyes.
+
+"Shall I tell you why real life is stranger than fiction?" he asked
+unsteadily.
+
+"Tell me--yes--if----"
+
+"It is stranger," he said, "because it is often more headlong and
+romantic. Shall we take ourselves, for example?"
+
+"You and me?"
+
+"Yes. To illustrate what I mean."
+
+She inclined her head, her eyes fixed on his.
+
+"Very well," he said. "Even in the most skillfully constructed
+story--supposing that you and I were hero and heroine--no author would
+have the impudence to make us avow our love within a few minutes of our
+first meeting."
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"In the first chapter," he continued, "certain known methods of
+construction are usually followed. Time is essential--the lapse of time.
+How to handle it cleverly is a novelist's business. But even the most
+skillful novelist would scarcely dare make me, for example, tell you
+that I am in love with you. Would he?"
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"And in real life, even if a man does fall in love so suddenly, he does
+not usually say so, does he?" he asked.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"But he _does_ fall in love sometimes more suddenly than in fiction. And
+occasionally he declares himself. In real life this actually happens.
+And _that_ is stranger than any fiction. Isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," she said.
+
+"One kind of fiction," he continued very unsteadily, "is that in which,
+when he falls in love--he doesn't say so--I mean in such a case as
+ours--supposing I had already fallen in love with you. I could not say
+so to you. No man could say it to any girl. He remains mute. He observes
+very formally every convention. He smiles, hat in hand, as the girl
+passes out of his life forever.... Doesn't he? And that is one kind of
+fiction--the tragic kind."
+
+She had been looking down at the book in her lap. After a moment she
+lifted her troubled eyes to his.
+
+"I do--not know what men do--in real life," she said. "What would they
+do in the--_other_ kind of fiction?"
+
+"In the other kind of fiction there would be another chapter."
+
+"Yes.... You mean that for us there is only this one chapter."
+
+"Only one chapter."
+
+"Or--might it not be called a short story, Mr. Smith?"
+
+"Yes--one kind of short story."
+
+"Which kind?"
+
+"The kind that ends unhappily."
+
+"But this one is not going to end unhappily, is it?"
+
+"You are about to walk out of the story when it ends."
+
+"Yes--but----" She bit her lip, flushed and perplexed, already
+dreadfully confused between the personal and the impersonal--between
+fact and fancy.
+
+"You see," he said, "the short story which deals with--love--can end
+only as ours is going to end--or the contrary."
+
+"How is ours going to end?" she asked with candid curiosity.
+
+"It must be constructed very carefully," he said, "because this is
+realism."
+
+"You must be very skillful, too," she said. "I do not see how you are to
+avoid----"
+
+"What?"
+
+"A--an--unhappy--ending."
+
+He looked gravely at his sand castle. "No," he said, "I don't see how it
+can be avoided."
+
+After a long silence she murmured, half to herself:
+
+"Still, this is America--after all."
+
+He shrugged, still studying his sand castle.
+
+"I wish I had somebody to help me work it out," he said, half to
+himself.
+
+"A collaborator?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I'm so sorry that I could not be useful."
+
+"Would you try?"
+
+"What is the use? I am utterly unskilled and inexperienced."
+
+"I'd be very glad to have you try," he repeated.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+After a moment she rose, went over and knelt down in the sand before the
+miniature city, studying the situation. All she could see of the lead
+hero in the bowler hat were his legs protruding from the drain.
+
+"Is this battery of artillery still shelling him?" she inquired, looking
+over her shoulder at Smith.
+
+He went over and dropped on his knees beside her.
+
+"You see," he explained, "our hero is still under water."
+
+"All this time!" she exclaimed in consternation. "He'll drown, won't
+he?"
+
+"He'll drown unless he can crawl into that drain."
+
+"Then he must crawl into it immediately," she said with decision.
+
+So he of the bowler was marched along a series of pegs indicating the
+subterranean drain, and set down in the court of the castle.
+
+"Good heavens!" exclaimed the Lady Alene. "We can't leave him here! They
+will know him by his bowler hat!"
+
+"No," said Smith gloomily, "we can't leave him here. But what can we do?
+If he runs out they'll fire at him by platoons."
+
+"_Couldn't_ they miss him?" pleaded the girl.
+
+"I'm afraid not. He has already lived through several showers of
+bullets."
+
+"But he can't die _here_!--here under the very eyes of the Princess!"
+she insisted.
+
+"Then," said Smith, "the Princess will have to pull him through. It's up
+to her now."
+
+The girl knelt there in excited silence, studying the problem intently.
+
+It was bad business. The battlements bristled with bayonets; outside,
+cavalry, infantry, artillery were massed to destroy the gentleman in the
+bowler hat.
+
+Presently the flush deepened on the girl's cheeks; she took the bowler
+hat between her gloved fingers and set its owner in the middle of the
+moat again.
+
+"Doesn't he crawl into the drain?" asked Smith anxiously.
+
+"No. But the soldiers in the castle think he does. So," she continued
+with animation, "the brutal commander rushes downstairs, seizes a
+candle, and enters the drain from the castle court with about a thousand
+soldiers!"
+
+"But----"
+
+"With about ten thousand soldiers!" she repeated firmly. "And no
+sooner--_no sooner_--does their brutal and cowardly commander enter that
+drain with his lighted candle than the Princess runs downstairs, seizes
+a hatchet, severs the gas main with a single blow, and pokes the end of
+the pipe into the drain!"
+
+"B-but----" stammered Smith, "I think----"
+
+"Oh, _please_ wait! You don't understand what is coming."
+
+"_What_ is coming?" ventured Smith timidly, instinctively closing both
+ears with his fingers.
+
+"Bang!" said Lady Alene triumphantly. And struck the city of sand with
+her small, gloved hand.
+
+After a silence, still kneeling there, they turned and looked at each
+other through the red sunset light.
+
+"The explosion of gas killed them both," said Smith, in an awed voice.
+
+"No."
+
+"What?"
+
+"No. The explosion killed everybody in the city except those two young
+lovers," she said.
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Because!"
+
+"By what logic----"
+
+"I desire it to be so, Mr. Smith." And she picked up the bowler hat and
+the Princess and calmly set them side by side amid the ruins.
+
+After a moment Smith reached over and turned the two lead figures so
+that they faced each other.
+
+There was a long silence. The red sunset light faded from the sand.
+
+Then, very slowly, the girl reached out, took the bowler hat between her
+small thumb and forefinger, and gently inclined the gentleman forward at
+the slightest of perceptible angles.
+
+After a moment Smith inclined him still farther forward. Then, with
+infinite precaution, he tipped forward the Princess, so that between her
+lips and the lips of the bowler hat only the width of a grass blade
+remained.
+
+The Lady Alene looked up at him over her left shoulder, hesitated,
+looked at bowler hat and at the Princess. Then, supporting her weight on
+one hand, with the other she merely touched the Princess--delicately--so
+that not even a blade of grass could have been slipped between their
+painted lips.
+
+She was a trifle pale as she sank back on her knees in the sand. Smith
+was paler.
+
+After both her gloved hands had rested across his palm for five full
+minutes, his fingers closed over them, tightly, and he leaned forward a
+little. She, too, swayed forward a trifle. Her eyes were closed when he
+kissed her.
+
+Now, whatever misgivings and afterthoughts the Lady Alene Innesly may
+have had, she was nevertheless certain that to resist Smith was to fight
+against the stars in their courses. For not only was she in the toils of
+an American, but more hopeless still, an American who chronicled the
+most daring and headlong idiosyncrasies of the sort of young men of whom
+he was very certainly an irresistible example.
+
+To her there was something Shakespearean about the relentless sequence
+of events since the moment when she had first succumbed to the small,
+oblong pink package, and her first American novel.
+
+And, thinking Shakespeareanly as she stood in the purple evening light,
+with his arm clasping her waist, she looked up at him from her charming
+abstraction:
+
+"'If 'twere done,'" she murmured, "'when 'tis done, then 'twere well it
+were done quickly.'" And then, gazing deep into his eyes, a noble idiom
+of her adopted country fell from her lips:
+
+"Dearest," she said, "my father won't do a thing to you."
+
+And so she ran away with him to Miami where the authorities, civil and
+religious, are accustomed to quick action.
+
+It was only fifty miles by train, and preliminary telephoning did the
+rest.
+
+The big chartered launch that left for Verbena Inlet next morning poked
+its nose out of the rainbow mist into the full glory of the rising sun.
+Her golden head lay on his shoulder.
+
+Sideways, with delicious indolence, she glanced at a small boat which
+they were passing close aboard. A fat gentleman, a fat lady, and a
+boatman occupied the boat. The fat gentleman was fast to a tarpon.
+
+Up out of the dazzling Atlantic shot three hundred pounds of quivering
+silver. Splash!
+
+"Why, Dad!" exclaimed the girl.
+
+Her father and mother looked over their shoulders at her in wooden
+amazement.
+
+"We are married----" called out their pretty daughter across the sunlit
+water. "I will tell you all about it when you land your fish. Look
+sharp, Dad! Mind your reel!"
+
+"Who is that damned rascal?" demanded the Duke.
+
+"My husband, Dad! Don't let him get away!--the fish, I mean. Put the
+drag on! Check!"
+
+Said his Grace of Pillchester in a voice of mellow thunder:
+
+"If I were not fast to my first tarpon----"
+
+"Reel in!" cried Smith sharply, "reel or you lose him!"
+
+The Duke reeled with all the abandon of a squirrel in a wheel.
+
+"Dearest," said Mrs. John Smith to her petrified mother, "we will see
+you soon at Verbena. And _don't_ let Dad over-play that fish. He always
+over-plays a salmon, you know."
+
+The Duchess folded her fat hands and watched her departing offspring
+until the chartered launch was a speck on the horizon. Then she looked
+at her husband.
+
+"Fancy!" she said.
+
+"Nevertheless," remarked the youthful novelist, coldly, "there is
+nothing on earth as ignoble as a best-seller."
+
+"I wonder," ventured Duane, "whether you know which books actually do
+sell the best."
+
+"Or which books of bygone days were the best-sellers?"
+
+"Some among them are still best-sellers," added Athalie.
+
+"A truly important book----" began the novelist, but Athalie interrupted
+him:
+
+"O solemn child," she said, "write on!--and thank the gods for their
+important gifts to you of hand and mind! So that you keep tired eyes
+awake that otherwise would droop to brood on pain or sorrow you have
+done well; and what you have written to this end will come nearer being
+important than anything you ever write."
+
+"True, by the nine muses!" exclaimed Stafford with emphasis. Athalie
+glanced at him out of sweetly humourous eyes.
+
+"There is a tenth muse," she said. "Did you never hear of her?"
+
+"Never! Where did you discover her, Athalie?"
+
+"Where I discover many, many things, my friend."
+
+"In your crystal?" I said. She nodded slowly while the sweetmeat was
+dissolving in her mouth.
+
+Through the summer silence a bell here and there in the dusky city
+sounded the hour.
+
+"The tenth muse," she repeated, "and I believe there are other sisters,
+also. Many a star is suspected before its unseen existence is proven....
+Please--a glass of water?"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+She sipped the water pensively as we all returned to our places. Then,
+placing the partly empty glass beside her jar of sweetmeats, she opened
+her incomparable lips.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is a fine thing when a young man, born to travel the speedway of
+luxury, voluntarily leaves it to hew out a pathway for himself through
+life. Brown thought so, too. And at twenty-four he resolutely graduated
+from Harvard, stepped out into the world, and looked about him very
+sternly.
+
+All was not well with the world. Brown knew it. He was there to correct
+whatever was wrong. And he had chosen Good Literature as the vehicle for
+self expression.
+
+Now, the nine sister goddesses are born flirts; and every one of them
+immediately glanced sideways at Brown, who was a nice young man with
+modesty, principles, and a deep and reverent belief in Good Literature.
+
+The nine daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne seemed very attractive to him
+until the tenth and most recent addition to the Olympian family
+sauntered by with a flirt of her narrow skirt--the jade!
+
+One glance into the starry blue wells of her baby eyes bowled him over.
+Henceforth she was to be his steady--Thalomene, a casual daughter of
+Zeus, and muse of all that is sacredly obvious in the literature of
+modern realism.
+
+From early infancy Brown's had been a career of richest promise. His
+mother's desk was full of his earlier impressions of life. He had, in
+course of time, edited his school paper, his college paper; and, as an
+undergraduate, he had appeared in the contributor's columns of various
+periodicals.
+
+His was not only a wealthy but a cultivated lineage as well. The love of
+literature was born in him.
+
+To love literature is all right in its way; to love it too well is to
+mistake the appreciative for the creative genius. Reverence and devotion
+are no equipment for creative authorship. It is not enough to have
+something to say about what other people have said. And the inspiration
+which comes from what others have done is never the true one. But Brown
+didn't know these things. They were not revealed unto him at Harvard; no
+inward instinct made them plain to him.
+
+He began by foregathering with authors. Many, many authors foregather,
+from various causes--tradition, inclination, general shiftlessness. When
+they do that they produce a sort of serum called literary atmosphere,
+which is said to be delightful. And so Brown found it. However, there
+are authors who seem to be too busy with their profession to foregather
+and exhale atmosphere. But these are doubtless either literary hacks or
+the degraded producers of best-sellers. They are not authors, either;
+they are merely writers.
+
+Now, in all the world there is only one thing funnier than an author;
+and that is a number of them. But Brown didn't know that, either.
+
+All authors are reformers. Said one of them to Brown in the Empyrean
+Club:
+
+"When an author in his own heart ceases to be a reformer he begins to be
+a menace!"
+
+It was a fine sentiment, and Brown wrote it in his note-book.
+Afterward, the more he analyzed it the less it seemed to mean.
+
+Another author informed him that the proper study for man is man. He'd
+heard that before, but the repetition steeled his resolve. And his
+resolve was to reproduce in literature exactly what he observed about
+him; nothing more, nothing less.
+
+There was to be no concession to imagination, none to convention, none
+to that insidious form of human weakness known as good taste. As for
+art, Brown already knew what Art really was.
+
+There was art enough for anybody in sheer truth, enough in the realism
+made up of photographic detail, recorded uncompromisingly in ordered
+processional sequence. After all, there was really no beauty in the
+world except the beauty of absolute truth. All other alleged beauty was
+only some form of weakness. Thus Brown, after inhaling literary
+atmosphere.
+
+Like the majority of young men, Brown realised that only a man, and a
+perfectly fearless, honest, and unprejudiced one, was properly equipped
+to study woman and tell the entire truth about her in literature.
+
+So he began his first great novel--"The Unquiet Sex"--and he made heavy
+weather of it that autumn--what with contributing to the literary
+atmosphere every afternoon and evening at various clubs and cafés--not
+to mention the social purlieus into which he ventured with the immortal
+lustre already phosphorescent on his brow. Which left him little time
+for mere writing. It is hard to be an author and a writer, too.
+
+The proper study for man being woman, Brown studied her solemnly and
+earnestly. He studied his mother and his sisters, boring them to the
+verge of distraction; he attempted to dissect the motives which governed
+the behaviour of assorted feminine relatives, scaring several of the
+more aged and timorous, agitating others, and infuriating one or
+two--until his father ordered him to desist.
+
+House-maids, parlour-maids, ladies'-maids, waitresses, all fought very
+shy of him; for true to his art, he had cast convention aside and had
+striven to fathom the souls and discover the hidden motives imbedded in
+Milesian, Scandinavian and Briton.
+
+"The thing for me to do," said Brown rather bitterly to his father, "is
+to go out into the world and investigate far and wide."
+
+"Investigate what?" asked his father.
+
+"Woman!" said Brown sturdily.
+
+"There's only one trouble about that."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"Woman," said his father, "is likely to do the investigating. This
+household knows more about you than you do about it."
+
+Brown smiled. So did his father.
+
+"Son," said the latter, "what have you learned about women without
+knowing anything about them?"
+
+"Nothing, naturally," said Brown.
+
+"Then you will never have anything more than _that_ to say about them,"
+remarked Brown senior.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because the only thing possible for a man to say about them is what his
+imagination dictates. He'll never learn any more concerning women than
+that."
+
+"Imagination is not literature," said Brown junior, with polite
+toleration.
+
+"Imagination is often the truer truth," said the old gentleman.
+
+"Father, that is rot."
+
+"Yes, my son--and it is almost Good Literature, too. Go ahead, shake us
+if you like. But, if you do, you'll come back married."
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+So Brown, who was nourishing a theory, shook his family and, requiring
+mental solitude to develop his idea, he went to Verbena Inlet. Not to
+the enormous and expensive caravansary swarming with wealth, ennui,
+envy, and fashion; not even to its sister hotel similarly infested. But
+to West Verbena, where for a mile along the white shell road modest
+hotels, boarding houses, and cottages nestled behind mosquito screens
+under the dingy cabbage-palmettos.
+
+Here was stranded the winter driftwood from the North--that peculiar
+flotsam and jetsam which summered in similar resorts in the North,
+rocked in rocking chairs on dreary rural verandas, congregated at the
+village post-office, awaited its men folk every week-end from the filthy
+and sweltering metropolis.
+
+It was at a shabby but pretentious hostelry called the Villa Hibiscus
+that Brown took up his quarters. Several rusty cabbage-palmettos waved
+above the whitish, sandy soil surrounding it; one or two discouraged
+orange trees fruited despondently near the veranda. And the place
+swarmed with human beings from all over the United States, lured from
+inclement climes, into the land of the orange and the palm--wistfully
+seeking in the land of advertised perpetual sunshine what the restless
+world has never yet discovered anywhere--surcease from care, from
+longing, from the unkindliness of its fellow seekers.
+
+Dowdiness filled the veranda rocking chairs; unlovely hands were folded;
+faded eyes gazed vacantly at the white road, at the oranges; enviously
+at the flashing wheels and fluttering lingerie from the great Hotel
+Verbena.
+
+Womanhood was there in all its ages and average phases; infancy, youth,
+middle age, age--all were there in the rusty villas and hotels ranged
+for a mile along the smooth shell road.
+
+The region, thought Brown to himself, was rich in material. And the
+reflection helped him somewhat with his dinner, which needed a fillip or
+two.
+
+In his faultless dinner jacket he sauntered out after the evening meal;
+and the idea which possessed and even thrilled him aided him to forget
+what he had eaten.
+
+The lagoon glimmered mysteriously in the starlight; the royal palms
+bordering it rustled high in the night breeze from the sea. Perfume from
+oleander hedges smote softly the olfactories of Brown; the southern
+whip-poor-wills' hurried whisper thrilled the darkness with a deeper
+mystery.
+
+Here was the place to study woman. There could be no doubt about that.
+Here, untrammelled, uninterrupted, unvexed by the jarring of the world,
+he could place his model, turn her loose, and observe her.
+
+To concentrate all his powers of analytical observation upon a single
+specimen of woman was his plan. Painters and sculptors used models. He
+meant to use one, too.
+
+It would be simple. First, he must discover what he wanted. This
+accomplished, he had decided to make a plain business proposition to
+her. She was to go about her own affairs and her pleasure without
+embarrassment or self-consciousness--behave naturally; do whatever it
+pleased her to do. But he was to be permitted to observe her, follow
+her, make what notes he chose; and, as a resumé of each day, they were
+to meet in some quiet spot in order that he might question her as he
+chose, concerning whatever interested him, or whatever in her movements
+or behaviour had seemed to him involved or inexplicable.
+
+Thus and thus only, he had decided, could light be shed upon the
+mysterious twilight veiling the inner woman! Thus only might carefully
+concealed motives be detected, cause and effect co-ordinated, the very
+source of all feminine logic, reason, and emotion be laid bare and
+dissected at leisure.
+
+Never had anybody written such a novel as he would be equipped to write.
+The ultimate word concerning woman was about to be written.
+
+Inwardly excited, outwardly calm, he had seated himself on the coquina
+wall which ran along the lagoon under the Royal Palms. He was about to
+study his subject as the great masters studied, coolly, impersonally,
+with clear and merciless intelligence, setting down with calm simplicity
+nothing except facts.
+
+All that was worthy and unworthy should be recorded--the good with the
+evil--nothing should be too ephemeral, too minute, to escape his
+searching analysis.
+
+And all the while, though Brown was not aware of it, the memory of a
+face he had seen in the dining-room grew vaguely and faded, waxing and
+waning alternately, like a phantom illustration accompanying his
+thoughts.
+
+As for the model he should choose to study, she ought to be thoroughly
+feminine, he thought; young, probably blonde, well formed, not very
+deeply experienced, and with every human capacity for good and bad
+alike.
+
+He would approach her frankly, tell her what he required, offer her the
+pay of an artist's model, three dollars a day; and, if she accepted, she
+could have her head and do what she liked. All that concerned him was to
+make his observations and record them.
+
+In the blue starlight people passed and re-passed like ghosts along the
+shell-road--the white summer gowns of young girls were constantly
+appearing in the dusk, taking vague shape, vanishing. On the lagoon, a
+guitar sounded very far away. The suave scent of oleander grew sweeter.
+
+Spectral groups passed in clinging lingerie; here and there a ghost
+lingered to lean over the coquina wall, her lost gaze faintly accented
+by some level star. One of these, a slender young thing, paused near to
+Brown, resting gracefully against the wall.
+
+All around her the whip-poor-wills were calling breathlessly; the
+perfume of oleander grew sweeter.
+
+As for the girl herself, she resembled the tenth muse. Brown had never
+attempted to visualise his mistress; it had been enough for him that she
+was Thalomene, daughter of Zeus, and divinely fair.
+
+But now, as he recognised the face he had noticed that evening in the
+dining-room, somehow he thought of his muse for the first time,
+concretely. Perhaps because the girl by the coquina wall was young,
+slim, golden haired, and Greek.
+
+His impulse, without bothering to reason, was to hop from the wall and
+go over to where she was standing.
+
+She looked around calmly as he approached, gave him a little nod in
+recognition of his lifted hat.
+
+"I'm John Brown, 4th," he said. "I'm stopping at the Villa Hibiscus. Do
+you mind my saying so?"
+
+"No, I don't mind," she said.
+
+"There is a vast amount of nonsense in formality and convention," said
+Brown. "If you don't mind ignoring such details, I have something
+important to say to you."
+
+She looked at him unsmilingly. Probably it was the starlight in her
+eyes that made them glimmer as though with hidden laughter.
+
+"I am," said Brown, pleasantly, "an author."
+
+"Really," she said.
+
+"When I say that I am an author," continued Brown seriously, "I mean in
+the higher sense."
+
+"Oh. What is the higher sense, Mr. Brown?" she asked.
+
+"The higher sense does not necessarily imply authorship. I do not mean
+that I am a mere writer. I have written very little."
+
+"Oh," she said.
+
+"Very little," repeated Brown combatively. "You will look in vain among
+the crowded counters piled high with contemporary fiction for anything
+from my pen."
+
+"Then perhaps I had better not look," she said so simply that Brown was
+a trifle disappointed in her.
+
+"Some day, however," he said, "you may search, and, perhaps, not wholly
+in vain."
+
+"Oh, you are writing a book!"
+
+"Yes," he said, "I am, so to speak, at work on a novel."
+
+"Might one, with discretion, make further inquiry concerning your novel,
+Mr. Brown?"
+
+"_You_ may."
+
+"Thank you," she said, apparently a trifle disconcerted by the privilege
+so promptly granted.
+
+"_You_ may," repeated Brown. "Shall I explain why?"
+
+"Please."
+
+"You will not mistake me, I am sure. Will you?"
+
+She turned her pretty face toward him.
+
+"I don't think so," she said after a moment. The starlight was meddling
+with her eyes again.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+So Brown told her about his theory; how he desired to employ a model,
+how he desired to study her; what were his ideas of the terms suitable.
+
+He talked fluently, earnestly, and agreeably; and his pretty audience
+listened with so much apparent intelligence and good taste that her very
+attitude subtly exhilarated Brown, until he became slightly aware that
+he was expressing himself eloquently.
+
+He had, it seemed, much to say concerning the profession and practice of
+good literature. It seemed, too, that he knew a great deal about it,
+both theoretically and practically. His esteem and reverence for it were
+unmistakable; his enthusiasm worthy of his courage.
+
+He talked for a long while, partly about literature, partly about
+himself. And he was at intervals a trifle surprised that he had so much
+to say, and wondered at the valuable accumulations of which he was
+unburdening himself with such vast content.
+
+The girl had turned her back to the lagoon and stood leaning against the
+coquina wall, facing him, her slender hands resting on the coping.
+
+Never had he had such a listener. At the clubs and cafés other literary
+men always wanted to talk. But here under the great southern stars
+nobody interrupted the limpid flow of his long dammed eloquence. And he
+ended leisurely, as he had begun, yet auto-intoxicated, thrillingly
+conscious of the spell which he had laid upon himself, upon his young
+listener--conscious, too, of the spell that the soft air and the perfume
+and the stars had spun over a world grown suddenly and incredibly lovely
+and young.
+
+She said in a low voice: "I need the money very much.... And I don't
+mind your studying me."
+
+"Do you really mean it?" he exclaimed, enchanted.
+
+"Yes. But there is one trouble."
+
+"What is it?" he asked apprehensively.
+
+"I _must_ have my mornings to myself."
+
+He said: "Under the terms I must be permitted to ask you any questions I
+choose. You understand that, don't you?"
+
+"Yes," she said.
+
+"Then--why must you have your mornings to yourself?"
+
+"I have work to do."
+
+"What work? What are you?"
+
+She flushed a trifle, then, accepting the rules of the game, smiled at
+Brown.
+
+"I am a school-teacher," she said. "Ill health from overwork drove me
+South to convalesce. I am trying to support myself here by working in
+the mornings."
+
+"I am sorry," he said gently. Then, aware of his concession to a very
+human weakness, he added with businesslike decision: "What is the nature
+of your morning's work?"
+
+"I--write," she admitted.
+
+"Stories?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Fiction?"
+
+"Anything, Mr. Brown. I send notes to fashion papers, concerning the
+costumes at the Hotel Verbena; I write for various household papers
+special articles which would not interest you at all. I write little
+stories for the women's and children's columns in various newspapers.
+You see what I do is not literature, and could not interest you."
+
+"If you are to act for me in the capacity of a model," he said firmly,
+"I am absolutely bound to study every phase of you, every minutest
+detail."
+
+"Oh."
+
+"Not one minute of the day must pass without my observing you," he said.
+"Unless you are broad-minded enough to comprehend me you may think my
+close and unremitting observation impertinent."
+
+"You don't mean to be impertinent, I am sure," she faltered, already
+surprised, apprehensive, and abashed by the prospect.
+
+"Of course I don't mean to be impertinent," he said smilingly, "but all
+great observers pursue their studies unremittingly day and night----"
+
+"_You_ couldn't do _that_!" she exclaimed.
+
+"No," he admitted, troubled, "that would not be feasible. You require,
+of course, a certain amount of slumber."
+
+"Naturally," she said.
+
+"I ought," he said thoughtfully, "to study that phase of you, also."
+
+"What phase, Mr. Brown?"
+
+"When you are sleeping."
+
+"But that is impossible!"
+
+"Convention," he said disdainfully, "makes it so. A literary student is
+fettered.
+
+"But it is perfectly possible for you to imagine what I look like when
+I'm asleep, Mr. Brown."
+
+"Imagination is to play no part in my literary work," he said coldly.
+"What I set down are facts."
+
+"But is that art?"
+
+"There is more art in facts than there are facts in art," he said.
+
+"I don't quite know what you mean."
+
+He didn't, either, when he came to analyse what he had said; and he
+turned very red and admitted it.
+
+"I mean to be honest and truthful," he said. "What I just said sounded
+clever, but meant nothing. I admit it. I mean to be perfectly pitiless
+with myself. Anything tainted with imagination; anything hinting of
+romance; any weak concession to prejudice, convention, good taste, I
+refuse to be guilty of. Realism is what I aim at; raw facts, however
+unpleasant!"
+
+"I don't believe you will find anything very unpleasant about me," she
+said.
+
+"No, I don't think I shall. But I mean to detect every imperfection,
+every weakness, every secret vanity, every unworthy impulse. That is why
+I desire to study you so implacably. Are you willing to submit?"
+
+She bit her lip and looked thoughtfully at the stars.
+
+"You know," she said, "that while it may be all very well for you to say
+'anything for art's sake,' _I_ can't say it. I can't _do_ it, either."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because I can't. You know perfectly well that you can't follow me about
+taking notes _every_ minute of the twenty-four hours."
+
+He said very earnestly: "Sir John Lubbock sat up day and night, never
+taking his eyes off the little colony of ants which he had under
+observation in a glass box!"
+
+"Do you propose to sit up day and night to keep me under observation?"
+she asked, flushed and astounded.
+
+"Not at first. But as my studies advance, and you become accustomed to
+the perfectly respectful but coldly impersonal nature of my
+observations, your mind, I trust, will become so broadened that you will
+find nothing objectionable in what at first might scare you. An artist's
+model, for example----"
+
+"But I am not an artist's model!" she exclaimed, with a slight shiver.
+
+"To be a proper model at all," he said, "you must concede all for art,
+and remain sublimely unconscious of self. _You_ do not matter. _I_ do
+not matter. Only my work counts. And that must be honest, truthful,
+accurate, minute, exact--a perfect record of a woman's mind and
+personality."
+
+For a few moments they both remained silent. And after a little the
+starlight began to play tricks with her eyes again, so that they seemed
+sparkling with hidden laughter. But her face was grave.
+
+She said: "I really do need the money. I will do what I can.... And if
+in spite of my courage I ever shrink--our contract shall terminate at
+once."
+
+"And what shall I do then?" inquired Brown.
+
+The starlight glimmered in her eyes. She said very gravely:
+
+"In case the demands of your realism and your art are too much for my
+courage, Mr. Brown--you will have to find another model to study."
+
+"But another model might prove as conventional as you!"
+
+"In that case," she said, while her sensitive lower lip trembled, and
+the starlight in her eyes grew softly brilliant, "in that case, Mr.
+Brown, I am afraid that there would be only one course to pursue with
+that _other_ model."
+
+"What course is that?" he asked, deeply interested.
+
+"I'm afraid you'd have to marry her."
+
+"Good Lord!" he said. "I can't marry every girl I mean to study!"
+
+"Oh! Do you mean to study very many?"
+
+"I have my entire life and career before me."
+
+"Yes. That is true. But--women are much alike. One model, thoroughly
+studied, might serve for them all--with a little imagination."
+
+"I have no use for imagination in fiction," said Brown firmly. After a
+moment's silence, he added: "Is it settled, then?"
+
+"About our--contract?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+She considered for a long while, then, looking up, she nodded.
+
+"That's fine!" exclaimed Brown, with enthusiasm.
+
+They walked back to the Villa Hibiscus together, slowly, through the
+blue starlight. Brown asked her name, and she told him.
+
+"No," he said gaily, "your name is Thalomene, and you are the tenth
+muse. For truly I think I have never before been so thoroughly inspired
+by a talk with anyone."
+
+She laughed. He had done almost all the talking. And he continued it,
+very happily, as by common consent they seated themselves on the
+veranda.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+The inhabitants of the Villa Hibiscus retired. But Brown talked on,
+quite unconscious that the low-voiced questions and softly modulated
+replies were magic which incited him to a perfect ecstasy of
+self-revelation.
+
+Perhaps he thought he was studying her--for the compact by mutual
+consent was already in force--and certainly his eyes were constantly
+upon her, taking, as no doubt he supposed, a cold and impersonal measure
+of her symmetry. Calmly, and with utter detachment, he measured her
+slender waist, her soft little hands; noting the fresh, sweet lips, the
+clear, prettily shaped eyes, the delicate throat, the perfect little
+Greek head with its thick, golden hair.
+
+And all the while he held forth about literature and its true purpose;
+about what art really is; about his own art, his own literature, and
+his own self.
+
+And the girl was really fascinated.
+
+She had seen, at a distance, such men. When Brown had named himself to
+her, she had recognised the name with awe, as a fashionable and wealthy
+name known to Gotham.
+
+Yet, had Brown known it, neither his eloquence nor his theories, nor his
+aims, were what fascinated her. But it was his boyish enthusiasm, his
+boyish intolerance, his immaturity, his happy certainty of the
+importance of what concerned himself.
+
+He was so much a boy, so much a man, such a candid, unreasonable, eager,
+selfish, impulsive, portentous, and delightfully illogical mixture of
+boy and man that the combination fascinated every atom of womanhood in
+her--and at moments as the night wore on, she found herself listening
+perilously close to the very point of sympathy.
+
+He appeared to pay no heed to the flight of time. The big stars frosted
+Heaven; the lagoon was silvered by them; night winds stirred the orange
+bloom; oleanders exhaled a bewitching perfume.
+
+As he lay there in his rocking chair beside her, it seemed to him that
+he had known her intimately for years--so wonderfully does the charm of
+self-revelation act upon human reason. For she had said almost nothing
+about herself. Yet, it was becoming plainer to him every moment that
+never in all his life had he known any woman as he already knew this
+young girl.
+
+"It is wonderful," he said, lying back in his chair and looking up at
+the stars, "how subtle is sympathy, and how I recognise yours. I think I
+understand you perfectly already."
+
+"Do you?" she said.
+
+"Yes, I feel sure I do. Somehow, I know that secretly and in your own
+heart you are in full tide of sympathy with me and with my life's work."
+
+"I thought you had no imagination," she said.
+
+"I haven't. Do you mean that I only imagine that you are in sympathy
+with me?"
+
+"No," she said. "I am."
+
+After a few moments she laughed deliciously. He never knew why. Nor was
+she ever perfectly sure why she had laughed, though they discussed the
+matter very gravely.
+
+A new youth seemed to have invaded her, an exquisite sense of lightness,
+of power. Vaguely she was conscious of ability, of a wonderful and
+undreamed of capacity. Within her heart she seemed to feel the subtle
+stir of a new courage, a certainty of the future, of indefinable but
+splendid things.
+
+The manuscript of the novel which she had sent North two weeks ago
+seemed to her a winged thing soaring to certain victory in the empyrean.
+Suddenly, by some magic, doubt, fear, distress, were allayed--and it was
+like surcease from a steady pain, with all the blessed and heavenly
+languor relaxing her mind and body.
+
+And all the while Brown talked on.
+
+Lying there in her chair she listened to him while the thoughts in her
+eased mind moved in delicate accompaniment.
+
+Somehow she understood that never in her life had she been so
+happy--with this boy babbling beside her, and her own thoughts
+responding almost tenderly to his youth, his inconsistencies, to the
+arrogance typical of his sex. He was _so_ wrong!--so far from the track,
+so utterly astray, so pitiably confident! Who but she should know, who
+had worked and studied and failed and searched, always _writing_,
+however--which is the only way in the world to learn how to write--or to
+learn that there is no use in writing.
+
+Her hand lay along the flat arm of her rocking-chair; and once, when he
+had earnestly sustained a perfectly untenable theory concerning success
+in literature, unconsciously she laid her fresh, smooth hand on his arm
+in impulsive protest.
+
+"No," she said, "don't think that way. You are quite wrong. That is the
+road to failure!"
+
+It was her first expression of disagreement, and he looked at her
+amazed.
+
+"I am afraid you think I don't know anything about real literature and
+realism," she said, "but I do know a little."
+
+"Every man must work out his salvation in his own way," he insisted,
+still surprised at her dissent.
+
+"Yes, but one should be equipped by long practice in the art before
+definitely choosing one's final course."
+
+"I am practiced."
+
+"I don't mean theoretically," she murmured.
+
+He laughed: "Oh, you mean mere writing," he said, gaily confident.
+"That, according to my theory, is not necessary to real experience.
+Literature is something loftier."
+
+In her feminine heart every instinct of womanhood was aroused--pity for
+the youth of him, sympathy for his obtuseness, solicitude for his
+obstinacy, tenderness for the fascinating combination of boy and man,
+which might call itself by any name it chose--even "author"--and go
+blundering along without a helping hand amid shrugs and smiles to a goal
+marked "Failure."
+
+"I wonder," she said almost timidly, "whether you could ever listen to
+me."
+
+"Always," he said, bending nearer to see her expression. Which having
+seen, he perhaps forgot to note in his little booklet, for he continued
+to look at her.
+
+"I haven't very much to say," she said. "Only--to learn any art or trade
+or profession it is necessary to work at it unremittingly. But to
+discuss it never helped anybody."
+
+"My dear child," he said, "I know that what you say was the old idea.
+But," he shrugged, "I do not agree with it."
+
+"I am so sorry," she said.
+
+"Sorry? Why are you sorry?"
+
+"I don't know.... Perhaps because I like you."
+
+It was not very much to say--not a very significant declaration; but the
+simplicity and sweetness of it--her voice--the head bent a little in the
+starlight--all fixed Brown's attention. He sat very still there in the
+luminous dusk of the white veranda; the dew dripped steadily like rain;
+the lagoon glittered.
+
+Then, subtly, taking Brown unawares, his most treacherous enemy crept
+upon him with a stealth incredible, and, before Brown knew it, was in
+full possession of his brain. The enemy was Imagination.
+
+Minute after minute slipped away in the scented dusk, and found Brown's
+position unchanged, where he lay in his chair looking at her.
+
+The girl also was very silent.
+
+With what wonderful attributes his enemy, Imagination, was busily
+endowing the girl beside him in the starlight, there is no knowing. His
+muse was Thalomene, slim daughter of Zeus; and whether she was really
+still on Olympus or here beside him he scarcely knew, so perfectly did
+this young girl inspire him, so exquisitely did she fill the bill.
+
+"It is odd," he said, after a long while, "that merely a few hours with
+you should inspire me more than I have ever been inspired in all my
+life."
+
+"That," she said unsteadily, "is your imagination."
+
+At the hateful word, imagination, Brown seemed to awake from the spell.
+Then he sat up straight, rather abruptly.
+
+"The thing to do," he said, still confused by his awakening, "is to
+consider you impersonally and make notes of everything." And he fumbled
+for pencil and note-book, and, rising, stepped across to the front door,
+where a light was burning.
+
+Standing under it he resolutely composed his thoughts; but to save his
+life he could remember nothing of which to make a memorandum.
+
+This worried him, and finally alarmed him. And so long did he stand
+there, note-book open, pencil poised, and a sickly expression of dismay
+imprinted upon his otherwise agreeable features, that the girl rose at
+last from her chair, glanced in through the door at him, and then came
+forward.
+
+"What is the matter?" she asked.
+
+"The matter is," said Brown, "that I don't seem to have anything to
+write about."
+
+"You are tired," she said. "I think we both are a little tired."
+
+"_I_ am not. Anyway, I have something to write about now. Wait a moment
+till I make a note of how you walk--the easy, graceful, flowing motion,
+so exquisitely light and----"
+
+"But _I_ don't walk like that!" she said, laughing.
+
+"--Graciously as a youthful goddess," muttered Brown, scribbling away
+busily in his note-book. "Tell me; what motive had you just now in
+rising and coming to ask me what was the matter--with such a sweetly
+apprehensive expression in your eyes?"
+
+"My--my motive?" she repeated, astonished.
+
+"Yes. You had one, hadn't you?"
+
+"Why--I don't know. You looked worried; so I came."
+
+"The motive," said Brown, "was feminine solicitude--an emotion natural
+to nice women. Thank you." And he made a note of it.
+
+"But motives and emotions are different things," she said timidly. "I
+had no motive for coming to ask you why you seemed troubled."
+
+"Wasn't your motive to learn why?"
+
+"Y-yes, I suppose so."
+
+He laid his head on one side and inspected her critically.
+
+"And if anything had been amiss with me you would have been sorry,
+wouldn't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Why? Because--one is sorry when a friend--when anyone----"
+
+"I _am_ your friend," he said. "So why not say it?"
+
+"And I am yours--if you wish," she said.
+
+"Yes, I do." He began to write: "It's rather odd how friendship begins.
+We both seem to want to be friends." And to her he said: "How does it
+make you feel--the idea of our being friends? What emotions does it
+arouse in you?"
+
+She looked at him in sorrowful surprise. "I thought it was real
+friendship you meant," she murmured, "not the sort to make a note
+about."
+
+"But I've got to make notes of everything. Don't you see? Certainly our
+friendship is real enough--but I've got to study it minutely and make
+notes concerning it. It's necessary to make records of everything--how
+you walk, stand, speak, look, how you go upstairs----"
+
+"I am going now," she said.
+
+He followed, scribbling furiously; and it is difficult to go upstairs,
+watch a lady go upstairs, and write about the way she does it all at the
+same time.
+
+"Good-night," she said, opening her door.
+
+"Good-night," he said, absently, and so intent on his scribbling that he
+followed her through the door into her room.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+"She goes upstairs as though she were floating up," he wrote, with
+enthusiasm; "her lovely figure, poised on tip-toe, seems to soar upward,
+ascending as naturally and gracefully as the immortals ascended the
+golden stairs of Jacob----"
+
+In full flood of his treacherous imagination he seated himself on a
+chair beside her bed, rested the note-book on his knees, and scribbled
+madly, utterly oblivious to her. And it was only when he had finished,
+for sheer lack of material, that he recollected himself, looked up, saw
+how she had shrunk away from him against the wall--how the scarlet had
+dyed her face to her temples.
+
+"Why--why do you come--into my bedroom?" she faltered. "Does our
+friendship count for no more than that with you?"
+
+"What?" he said, bewildered.
+
+"That you do what you have no right to do. Art--art is _not_ enough
+to--to--excuse--disrespect----"
+
+Suddenly the tears sprang to her eyes, and she covered her flushed face
+with both hands.
+
+For a moment Brown stood petrified. Then a deeper flush than hers
+settled heavily over his features.
+
+"I'm sorry," he said.
+
+She made no response.
+
+"I didn't mean to hurt you. I _do_ respect you," he said.
+
+No response.
+
+Brown gazed at her, gazed at his note-book.
+
+Then he hurled the note-book across the room and walked over to her as
+she lifted her lovely head, startled and tearful.
+
+"You are right," he said, swallowing nothing very desperately. "You can
+not be studied this way. Will you--marry me?"
+
+"What!"
+
+"Will you marry me?"
+
+"Why?" she gasped.
+
+"Because I--want to study you."
+
+"No!" she said, looking him straight in the eyes.
+
+Brown thought hard for a full minute.
+
+"Would you marry me because I love you?" he asked timidly.
+
+The question seemed to be more than she could answer. Besides, the tears
+sprang to her blue eyes again, and her under lip began to tremble, and
+she covered her face with both hands. Which made it impossible for him
+to kiss her.
+
+"Isn't it wonderful?" he said earnestly, trembling from head to foot.
+"Isn't it wonderful, dear?"
+
+"Yes," she whispered. The word, uttered against his shoulder, was
+stifled. He bent his head nearer, murmuring:
+
+"Thalomene--Thalomene--embodiment of Truth! How wonderful it is to me
+that at last I find in you that absolute Truth I worship."
+
+"I am--the embodiment--of your--imagination," she said. "But you will
+never, never believe it--most adorable of boys--dearest--dearest of
+men."
+
+And, lifting her stately and divine young head, she looked innocently at
+Brown while he imprinted his first and most chaste kiss upon the fresh,
+sweet lips of the tenth muse, Thalomene, daughter of Zeus.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Athalie," said the youthful novelist more in sorrow than in anger,
+"you are making game of everything I hold most important."
+
+"Provide yourself with newer and truer gods, dear child," said the girl,
+laughing. "After you've worshipped them long enough somebody will also
+poke fun at them. Whereupon, if you are fortunate enough to be one of
+those who continues to mature until he matures himself into the
+Ewigkeit, you will instantly quit those same over-mauled and worn out
+gods for newer and truer ones."
+
+"And so on indefinitely," I added.
+
+"In literature," began the novelist, "the great masters must stand as
+parents for us in our first infantile steps----"
+
+"No," said the girl, "all worthy aspirants enter the field of literature
+as orphans. Opportunity and Fates alone stand for them _in loco
+parentis_. And the child of these is known as Destiny."
+
+"No cubist could beat that, Athalie," remarked Duane. "I'm ashamed of
+you--or proud--I don't know which."
+
+"Dear child," she said, "you will never know the true inwardness of any
+sentiment you entertain concerning me until I explain it to you."
+
+"Smitten again hip and thigh," said Stafford. "Fair lady, I am far too
+wary to tell you what I think of the art of incoherence as practised
+occasionally by the prettiest Priestess in the Temple."
+
+Athalie looked at me as the sweetmeat melted on her tongue.
+
+"You promised me a dog," she remarked.
+
+"I've picked him out. He'll be weaned in another week."
+
+"What species of pup is he?" inquired Duane.
+
+"An Iceland terrier," I answered. "They use them for digging out walrus
+and seals."
+
+"Thank you," said Duane pleasantly.
+
+"After all," observed the girl, lifting her glass of water, "it does not
+concern Mr. Duane what sort of a dog you have chosen for me."
+
+She sipped it leisurely, looking over the delicate crystal rim at Duane.
+
+"You are young," she said. "'_L'enfance est le sommeil de la raison._'"
+
+"How would you like to have an Angora kitten?" he asked, reddening
+slightly.
+
+"But infancy," she added, "is always adorable.... I think I might like a
+white one with blue eyes."
+
+"Puppies, kittens, children," remarked Stafford--"they're all tolerable
+while they're young."
+
+"All of these," said the girl softly, "I should like to have."
+
+And she gazed inquiringly at the crystal. But it could tell her nothing
+of herself or of her hopes. She turned and looked out into the dark
+city, a trifle wearily, it seemed to me.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+After a silence, she lay back among her cushions and glanced at us with
+a faint smile.
+
+"One day last winter," she said, "after the last client had gone and
+office hours were over, I sat here thinking, wondering what in the world
+could be worse for a girl than to have no parents.... And I happened to
+glance into my crystal, and saw there an incident beginning to evolve
+that cheered me up, because it was a parody on my more morbid train of
+thought. After all, the same Chance that gives a child to its parents
+gives the parents to that child. You may think this is Tupper," she
+added, "but it is Athalie. And that being the case, nobody will laugh."
+
+Nobody did laugh.
+
+"Thank you," she said sweetly. "Now I will tell you what I saw in my
+crystal when I happened to be feeling unusually alone in the world." And
+with a pretty nod to us, collectively, she began.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The bulk of the cargo and a few bodies were coming ashore at the eastern
+end of the island, and that is where the throngs were--people from the
+Light House, fishermen from the inlet, and hundreds of winter tourists
+from St. Augustine, in white flannels and summer gowns, all attracted to
+Ibis Island by the grewsome spectacle of the wreck.
+
+The West Indian hurricane had done its terrific business and had gone,
+leaving a turquoise sky untroubled by a cloud, and a sea of snow and
+cobalt.
+
+Nothing living had been washed ashore from the wreck. As for the brig,
+she had vanished--if there had been anything left of her to disappear
+except the wreckage, human and otherwise, that had come tumbling ashore
+through the surf all night long.
+
+So young Gray, seeing that there was nothing for him to do, and not
+caring for the spectacle at the eastern end of the island, turned on his
+heel and walked west through thickets of sweet bay, palmetto, and
+beach-grape.
+
+He wore the lightest weight solaro, with a helmet and close-fitting
+puttees of the same. Two straps crossed his breast, the one supporting a
+well filled haversack, the other a water bottle. Except for fire arms he
+was equipped for darkest Africa, or for anything else on earth--at least
+he supposed so. He was wrong; he was not equipped for what he was about
+to encounter on Ibis Island.
+
+It happened in this manner: traversing the seaward dunes, because the
+beach no longer afforded him even a narrow margin for a footing,
+shoulder deep in a tangle of beach-grapes, he chanced to glance at the
+little sandy cove which he was skirting, and saw there an empty fruit
+crate tumbling in the smother of foam, and a very small setter puppy
+clinging to it frantically, with every claw clutching, and his drenched
+tail between his legs.
+
+Even while Gray was forcing his eager way through the tangle, he was
+aware of somebody else moving forward through the high scrub just west
+of him; and as he sprang out onto the beach and laid his hand on the
+stranded fruit crate, another hand, slimmer and whiter than his, fell
+on the crate as he dragged it out of the foamy shallows and up across
+the dry sand, just as a tremendous roller smashed into clouds of foam
+behind it.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said a breathless voice at his elbow, "but I think
+I saw this little dog first."
+
+Gray already was reaching for the shivering little thing, but two other
+hands deprived him of the puppy; and he looked up, impatient and
+annoyed, into the excited brown eyes of a young girl.
+
+She had taken the dripping, clawing little creature to her breast, where
+it shivered and moaned and whined, shoving its cold nose up under her
+chin.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Gray, firmly, "but I am really very certain
+that I first discovered that dog."
+
+"I am sorry you think so," she said, clasping the creature all the
+tighter.
+
+"I _do_ think so," insisted Gray. "I _know_ it!"
+
+"I am very sorry," she repeated. Over the puppy's shivering back her
+brown eyes gazed upon Gray. They were very pretty, but hostile.
+
+"There can be no question about the ownership of this pup," persisted
+Gray. "Of course, I am sorry if you really think you discovered the
+dog. Because you didn't."
+
+"I _did_ discover him," she said, calmly.
+
+"I beg your pardon. I was walking through the beach-grapes----"
+
+"I beg yours! I also was crossing the sweet-bay scrub when I happened to
+glance down at the cove and saw this poor little dog in the water."
+
+"That is exactly what _I_ did! I happened to glance down, and there I
+saw this little dog. Instantly I sprang----"
+
+"So did I!--I _beg_ your pardon for interrupting you!"
+
+"I was merely explaining that I first saw the dog, and next I noticed
+you. But first of all I saw the dog."
+
+"That is the exact sequence in my own observations," she rejoined
+calmly. "First of all I saw the dog in the water, then I heard a crash
+in the bush, and saw something floundering about in the tangle."
+
+"And," continued Gray, much annoyed by her persistency, "no sooner had I
+caught hold of the crate than _you_ came up and laid _your_ hand on it,
+also. You surely must remember that I had my hand on the crate before
+you did!"
+
+"I am very sorry you think so. The contrary was the case. _I_ took firm
+hold of the crate, and then you aided me to draw it up out of the
+water."
+
+"It is extraordinary," he said, "how mistaken you are concerning the
+actual sequence of events. Not that I doubt for a moment that you really
+suppose you discovered the dog. Probably you were a little excited----"
+
+"I was perfectly cool. Possibly _you_ were a trifle excited."
+
+"Not in the least," he retorted with calm exasperation. "I never become
+agitated."
+
+The puppy continued to shiver and drive its nose up under the girl's
+chin.
+
+"Poor little thing! Poor little shipwrecked baby!" she crooned. And, to
+Gray: "I don't know why this puppy should be so cold. The water is warm
+enough."
+
+"Put it in the hot sand," he said. "We can rub it dry."
+
+She hesitated, flushing perhaps at her own suspicions; but nevertheless
+she said:
+
+"You would not attempt to take it if I put it down, would you?"
+
+"I don't intend to snatch it," he said with dignity. "_Men_ don't
+snatch."
+
+So they went inland a few paces where the sand was hot and loose and
+deep; and there they knelt down and put the puppy on the sand.
+
+[Illustration: "'I am in possession of the dog and you merely claim
+possession.'"]
+
+"Scrub him thoroughly," she suggested, pouring heaping handfuls of hot,
+silvery sand over the little creature.
+
+Gray did likewise, and together they rubbed and scrubbed and rolled the
+puppy about until the dog began to roll on his back all by himself,
+twisting and wriggling and waving his big, padded paws.
+
+"What he wants is water," asserted Gray, unstrapping his haversack and
+bottle. From the one he produced an aluminum pannikin; from the other he
+filled it with water. The puppy drank it all while Gray and the
+brown-eyed girl looked on intently.
+
+Then Gray produced some beef sandwiches, and the famished little
+creature leaped and whirled and danced as Gray fed him cautiously, bit
+by bit.
+
+"Do you think that is perfectly fair?" asked the girl gravely.
+
+"Fair?" repeated Gray guiltily.
+
+"Yes. Who first feeds a strange dog is recognised as the reigning
+authority."
+
+"Very well, you may feed him, too. But that does not alter the facts in
+the case."
+
+"The facts," said the girl, taking a sandwich from Gray, "are that I am
+in possession of the dog and you merely claim possession."
+
+They fed him alternately and in silence--until their opinion became
+unanimous that it was dangerous, for the present, to feed him any more.
+
+The puppy begged and pleaded and cajoled and danced--a most appealing
+and bewitching little creature, silvery white and blue-ticked, with a
+tiny tan point over each eye and a black and tan saddle.
+
+"Lavarack," observed Gray.
+
+"English," she nodded.
+
+It wagged not only its little, whippy tail, but in doing so wriggled its
+entire hind quarters, showing no preference for either of its rescuers,
+but bestowing winning and engaging favours impartially.
+
+The girl could endure it no longer, but snatched the puppy to her with a
+soft little cry, and cuddled it tight. Gray looked on gloomily. Then,
+when she released it, he took it and caressed it in masculine fashion.
+There was no discernible difference in its affectionate responses.
+
+After the dog had lavished enthusiasm and affection on its saviours to
+the point of physical exhaustion, it curled up on the hot sand between
+them. At first, when they moved or spoke, the little, silky head was
+quickly lifted, and the brown eyes turned alertly from one to the other
+of the two beings most beloved on earth. But presently only the whippy
+tail stirred in recognition of their voices. And finally the little dog
+slept in the hot sunshine.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+For a long while, seated on either side of the slumbering puppy, they
+remained silent, in fascinated contemplation of what they had rescued.
+
+Finally Gray said slowly: "It may seem odd to you that I should be so
+firm and uncompromising concerning my right to a very small dog which
+may be duplicated in the North for a few dollars."
+
+She lifted her brown eyes to his, then let them fall again on the dog.
+
+"The reason is this," said Gray. "The native dogs I dislike intensely.
+Dogs imported from the North soon die in this region. But this little
+pup was evidently born on shipboard and on tropical seas. I think he's
+very likely to survive the climate. And as I am obliged to reside here
+for a while, and as I am to live all alone, this pup is a godsend to
+me."
+
+The girl, still resting her eyes on the sleeping puppy, said very
+quietly:
+
+"I do not desire to appear selfish, but a girl is twice as lonely as a
+man. And as I fortunately first discovered the dog it seems to me
+absolutely right and just that I should keep him."
+
+Gray sat pouring sand through his fingers and casting an occasional
+oblique glance at the girl. She was not sunburned, so she must be a
+recent arrival. She spoke with a northern accent, which determined her
+origin.
+
+_What_ was she doing down here on this absurd island? Why didn't she go
+back to St. Augustine where she belonged?
+
+"You know," he said craftily, "I can buy a very nice little dog indeed
+for you in St. Augustine."
+
+"I am not stopping in St. Augustine. Besides, there are only horrid
+little lap-dogs there."
+
+"Don't you like lap-dogs--Pomms, Pekinese, Maltese?" he inquired
+persuasively.
+
+"No."
+
+"You are unlike the majority of girls then. What sort of dog do you
+like?"
+
+"Setters," she explained with decision.
+
+And as he bit his lip in annoyed silence she added:
+
+"Setter puppies are what I adore."
+
+"I'm sorry," he said bluntly.
+
+She added, not heeding his observation: "I am mad about setter puppies,
+particularly English setter puppies. And when I try to realise that I
+discovered a shipwrecked one all by myself, and rescued it, I can
+scarcely believe in such an adorable miracle."
+
+It was on the tip of his tongue to offer to purchase the pup, but a
+quick glance at the girl checked him. She was evidently perfectly
+sincere, and the quality of her was unmistakable.
+
+Already, within these few minutes, her skin had begun to burn a delicate
+rose tint from the sun's fierce reflection on the white sands. Her hair
+was a splendid golden brown, her eyes darker, or perhaps the long, dark
+lashes made them seem so. She was daintily and prettily made, head,
+throat, shoulders, and limbs; she wore a summer gown so waistless and
+limp that it conformed to the corsetless fashions in vogue, making
+evident here and there the contours of her slim and supple figure.
+
+From the tip of her white shoe to the tip of her hat she was the futile
+and exquisite essence of Gotham.
+
+Gray realised it because he lived there himself. But he could not
+understand where all her determination and obstinacy came from, for she
+seemed so young and inexperienced, and there was about her a childish
+dewiness of eye and lip that suggested a blossom's fragrance.
+
+She was very lovely; and that was all very well in its way, but Gray had
+come down there on stern business, and how long his business might last,
+and how long he was to inhabit a palmetto bungalow above the coquina
+quarry he did not know. The coquina quarry was as hot as the infernal
+pit. Also, snakes frequented it.
+
+No black servant--promised him faithfully in St. Augustine the day
+before--had yet arrived. A few supplies had been sent over from St.
+Augustine, and he was camping in his little house of logs, along with
+wood-ticks, blue lizards, white ants, gophers, hornets, and several
+chestnut-colored scorpions.
+
+"I wouldn't mind yielding the dog to you," he admitted, "if I were not
+so horribly lonely on this miserable island. When evening comes, _you_
+will go back to luxury and comfort somewhere or other, with dinner
+awaiting you and servants to do everything, and a nice bed to retire to.
+That's a pleasant picture, isn't it?"
+
+"Very," she replied, with a slight shrug.
+
+"Now," he said, "please gaze mentally upon this other picture. _I_ am
+obliged to go back to a shack haunted by every species of creature that
+this wretched island harbours.
+
+"There will be no dinner for me except what I can scoop out of a tin; no
+servants to do one bally thing for me; no bed.
+
+"Listen attentively," he continued, becoming slightly dramatic as he
+remembered more clearly the horrors of the preceding night--his first on
+Ibis Island. "I shall go into that devilish bungalow and look around
+like a scared dog, standing very carefully in the exact centre of the
+room. And what will be the first object that my unwilling eyes
+encounter? A scorpion! Perhaps two, crawling out from the Spanish moss
+with which the chinks of that miserable abode are stuffed. I shall slay
+it--or _them_--as the case may be. Then a blue-tailed lizard will frisk
+over the ceiling--or perhaps one of those big, heavy ones with blunt,
+red heads. Doubtless at that same instant I shall discover a wood-tick
+advancing up one of my trousers' legs. Spiders will begin to move across
+the walls. Perhaps a snake or two will then develop from some shadowy
+corner."
+
+He waved his arm impressively and pointed at the sleeping puppy.
+
+"Under such circumstances," he said pathetically, "would you care to
+deprive me of this little companion sent by Providence for me to rescue
+out of the sea?"
+
+She, too, had been steadily pouring sand between her white fingers
+during the moving recital of his woes. Now she looked up, controlling a
+shudder.
+
+"Your circumstances, with all their attendant horrors, are my own," she
+began. "I, also, since last night, inhabit a picturesque but most horrid
+bungalow not very far from here; and every one of the creatures you
+describe, and several others also, inhabit it with me. Do you wonder I
+want _some_ companionship? Do you wonder that I am inclined to cling to
+this little dog--whether or not it may seem ill bred and selfish to
+you?"
+
+He said: "I suppose all the houses in this latitude harbour tarantulas,
+centipedes, and similar things, but you must remember that you do not
+live alone as I do----"
+
+"Yes, I do!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Certainly. I engaged two black servants in St. Augustine, but they have
+not arrived, and I was obliged to remain all alone in that frightful
+place last night."
+
+"That's very odd," he said uneasily. "Where _is_ this bungalow of
+yours?"
+
+She started to speak, checked herself as at a sudden and unpleasant
+thought, looked up at him searchingly; and found his steel-grey eyes as
+searchingly fixed on her.
+
+"Where is _your_ bungalow?" she asked, watching him intently.
+
+"Mine is situated at the west end of a coquina quarry. Where is yours?"
+
+"Mine," she answered unsteadily but defiantly, "is situated on the
+eastern edge of a coquina quarry."
+
+"Why did _you_ choose a quarry bungalow?"
+
+"Why did _you_ choose one?"
+
+"Because the coquina quarry happens to belong to me."
+
+"The quarry," she retorted, "belongs to _me_."
+
+He was almost too disgusted to speak, but he contrived to say, quietly
+and civilly:
+
+"You are Constance Leslie, are you not?"
+
+"Yes.... You are Johnson Gray?"
+
+"Yes, I am," he answered, checking his exasperation and forcing a smile.
+"It's rather odd, isn't it--rather unfortunate, I'm afraid."
+
+"It _is_ unfortunate for you, Mr. Gray," she returned firmly. "I'm
+sorry--really sorry that this long journey is in vain."
+
+"So am I," he said, with lips compressed.
+
+For a few moments they sat very still, not looking at each other.
+
+Presently he said: "It was a fool of a will. He was a most disagreeable
+old man."
+
+"_I_ never saw him."
+
+"Nor I. They say he was a terror. But he had a sense of humour--a grim
+and acrid one--the cynic's idea of wit. No doubt he enjoyed it. No doubt
+he is enjoying this very scene between you and me--if he's anywhere
+within sight or hearing----"
+
+"Don't say that!" she exclaimed, almost violently. "It is horrible
+enough on this island without hinting of ghosts."
+
+"Ghosts? Of course there are ghosts. But I'd rather have my bungalow
+full of 'em than full of scorpions."
+
+"We differ," she said coldly.
+
+Silence fell again, and again was broken by Gray.
+
+"Certainly the old fellow had a sense of humour," he insisted; "the will
+he left was one huge joke on every relative who had expectations.
+Imagine all that buzzard family of his who got nothing to amount to
+anything; and all those distant relatives who expected nothing and got
+almost everything!"
+
+"Do you think that was humourous?"
+
+"Yes; don't you? And I think what he did about you and me was really
+very funny. Don't you?"
+
+"Why is it funny for a very horrid old man to make a will full of grim
+jokes and jests, and take that occasion to tell everybody exactly what
+he thinks of everybody?"
+
+"He said nothing disagreeable about _us_ that I recollect," remarked
+Gray, laughing.
+
+Pouring sand between her fingers, she said:
+
+"I remember very well how he mentioned us. He said that he had never
+seen either one of us, and was glad of it. He said that as I was an
+orphan with no money, and that as you were similarly situated, and that
+as neither you nor I had brains enough to ever make any, he would leave
+his coquina quarry to that one of us who had brains enough to get here
+first and stake the claim. Do you call that an agreeable manner of
+making a bequest?"
+
+Gray laughed easily: "_I_ don't care what he thought about my
+intellectual capacity."
+
+"I suppose that I don't either. And anyway the bequest may be valuable."
+
+"There is no doubt about that," said Gray.
+
+She let her brown eyes rest thoughtfully on the ocean.
+
+"I think," she said, "that I shall dispose of it at once."
+
+"The dog?" he asked politely.
+
+Her pretty, hostile eyes met his:
+
+"The quarry," she replied calmly.
+
+"Good Lord!" he exclaimed. "Do you think also that _you_ arrived at the
+quarry before I arrived?"
+
+"You will find my stake with its written notice sticking in the sand on
+the eastern edge of the quarry, about a hundred yards south of my
+bungalow!"
+
+"_My_ notice is very carefully staked on the western edge of the quarry
+about the same distance from my bungalow," he said. "I placed it there
+yesterday evening."
+
+"I also placed my notice there yesterday evening!"
+
+"By what train did you come?"
+
+"By the Verbena Special. It arrived at St. Augustine yesterday at four
+o'clock in the afternoon."
+
+"_I_ also came on that train."
+
+"I," she said, "waited in St. Augustine only long enough to telephone
+for servants, and then I jumped into a victoria and drove over the
+causeway to the eastern end of the quarry."
+
+"I did exactly the same," he insisted, "only I drove to the western end
+of the quarry. What time did you set your notice?"
+
+"I don't know exactly. It was just about dusk."
+
+"It was just about dusk when I drove in _my_ stake!"
+
+After a moment's idling in the sand with her slim fingers, she looked up
+at him a trifle pale.
+
+"I suppose this means a lawsuit."
+
+"I'm afraid it does."
+
+"I'm sorry. If I wasn't in such desperate need of money----" But she
+said no more, and he also remained silent for a while. Then:
+
+"I shall write to my attorney to come down," he said soberly. "You had
+better do the same this evening."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"It's got to be settled, of course," he continued; "because I'm too poor
+to concede the quarry to you."
+
+"It is that way with me also. I do not like to appear so selfish to
+you, but what am I to do, Mr. Gray?"
+
+"What am _I_ to do? I honestly believe that I staked the quarry before
+you did.... And my financial situation does not permit me to relinquish
+my claim on the quarry."
+
+"What a horrid will that was!" she exclaimed, the quick tears of
+vexation springing into her brown eyes. "If you knew how hard I've
+worked, Mr. Gray--all these years having nothing that other girls
+have--being obliged to work my way through college, and then take a
+position as governess--and just as it seemed that relief was in
+sight--_you_ come into sight!--you!--and you even try to take away my
+little dog--the only thing I--I ever really cared for since I have--have
+been alone in the world----"
+
+Gray sprang up nervously: "I'm sorry--terribly sorry for you! You may
+keep the dog anyway."
+
+She had turned away her face sharply as the quick tears started. Now she
+looked around at him in unfeigned surprise.
+
+"But--what will _you_ do?"
+
+"Oh, I can stand being alone. I don't mind. There's no doubt about it;
+you must have the dog----" He glanced down at the little creature and
+caught his breath sharply as the puppy opened one eye and wagged its
+absurd tail feebly.
+
+The girl rose lightly and gracefully from the sand, refusing his
+assistance, and stood looking down at the puppy. The little thing was on
+its clumsy feet, wagging and wriggling with happiness, and gazing up
+adoringly from Gray to Constance Leslie.
+
+The girl looked at the dog, then at Gray.
+
+"It--it seems too cruel," she said. "I can't bear to take him away from
+you."
+
+"Oh, that's all right. I'll get on very well alone."
+
+"You are generous. You are very generous. But after the way you
+expressed yourself concerning the dog, I don't feel that I can possibly
+take him."
+
+"You really must. I don't blame you at all for falling in love with him.
+Besides, one adores what one rescues, above everything in the world."
+
+"But--but I thought that you thought _you_ had rescued him?" she
+faltered.
+
+"It was a close call. I think perhaps that you arrived just a fraction
+of a second sooner than I did."
+
+"Do you really? Or do you say that to be kind? Besides, I am not at all
+sure. It is perfectly possible--even, perhaps, probable that you saw
+him before I did."
+
+"No, I don't think so. I think he's your dog, Miss Leslie. I surrender
+all claim to him----"
+
+"No! I can not permit you to do such a thing! Forgive me. I was excited
+and a little vexed.... I know you would be very unhappy if I took the
+little thing----"
+
+"Please take him. I do love him already, but that is why it gives me a
+p-p-peculiar pleasure to relinquish all claims in y-your favour."
+
+"Thank you. It is--is charming of you--exceedingly nice of you--but how
+can I accept such a real sacrifice?... You would be perfectly wretched
+to-night without him."
+
+"So would you, Miss Leslie."
+
+"I shall be wretched anyway. So it doesn't really matter."
+
+"It _does_ matter! If this little dog can alleviate your unhappiness in
+the slightest degree, I insist most firmly that you take him!"
+
+The girl stood irresolute, lifted her brown eyes to his, lowered them,
+and gazed longingly at the puppy.
+
+"Do you suppose he will follow me?"
+
+"Try!"
+
+So she walked one way and Gray started in the opposite direction, and
+the bewildered puppy, who at first supposed it was all in play, dashed
+from one back to the other, until the widening distance between them
+perplexed and finally began to trouble him.
+
+Nevertheless, he continued to run back and forth from Gray to Constance
+Leslie as long as his rather wavering legs held out. Then, unable to
+decide, he stood panting midway between them, whining at moments, until,
+unable to understand or endure the spectacle of his two best beloveds
+vanishing in opposite directions, he put up his nose and howled.
+
+Then both best beloveds came back running, and Constance snatched him to
+her breast and covered him with caresses.
+
+"What on earth are we to do?" she said in consternation. "We nearly
+broke his heart that time."
+
+"_I_ don't know what to do," he admitted, much perplexed. "This pup
+seems to be impartial in his new-born affections."
+
+"I thought," she said, with an admirable effort at self-denial, "that he
+rather showed a preference for _you_!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because when he was sitting there howling his little heart out, he
+seemed to look toward you a little oftener than he gazed in my
+direction."
+
+Gray rose nobly to the self-effacing level of his generous adversary:
+
+"No, the balance was, if anything, in your favour. I'm very certain that
+he will be happier with you. T-take him!"
+
+The girl buried her pretty face in the puppy's coat as though it had
+been a fluffy muff.
+
+"What a pity," she said, in a muffled voice, "that he is compelled to
+make a choice. It will break his heart; I know it will. He is too
+young."
+
+"He'll very soon forget me, once he is alone with you in your bungalow."
+
+The girl shook her head and stood caressing the puppy. The soft, white
+hand, resting on the dog's head, fascinated Gray.
+
+"Perhaps," he ventured, "I had better walk as far as your bungalow with
+you.... It may spare the dog a certain amount of superficial anguish."
+
+She nodded, dreamy-eyed there in the sunshine. And of what she might be
+thinking he could form no idea.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+He fell into step beside her, and they walked up from the little cover
+through the beach-grapes and out among the scrubby dunes, where in the
+heated silence the perfume of sweet-bay and pines mingled with the odour
+of the sea.
+
+Everywhere the great sulphur-coloured butterflies were flying, making
+gorgeous combinations with the smaller, orange butterflies and the
+great, velvet-winged Palamedes swallow-tail.
+
+Lizards frisked and raced away before them, emerald tinted, green with
+sky-blue tails, grey and red; the little gophers scurried into their
+burrows along the tangled hammock's edges. Over the palm-trees' feathery
+crests sailed a black vulture, its palmated wing-tips spread like inky
+fingers against the blue. Somewhere in the saw-grass a bittern boomed
+and boomed; and the seagulls' clamour rang incessantly above the thunder
+of the surf.
+
+"I wonder," she murmured, "whether my sunburn makes me drowsy."
+
+"It's the climate. You'll feel sleepy for a week before you are
+acclimated," he said.... "Why don't you put down the puppy and let him
+follow?"
+
+She did so; and the little creature frisked and leaped and padded
+joyously about among the bayberry bushes, already possessed with the
+canine determination to investigate all the alluring smells in the
+world, and miss none of them.
+
+After a little while they arrived at the bungalow which Constance had
+chosen. The girl pushed open the unlocked door; the puppy pranced in
+like a diminutive hobby-horse, flushed a big lizard, and went into fits
+of excitement till the solitary cabin rang with his treble barking.
+
+They watched him through the doorway, laughingly; then Gray looked at
+the claim notice stuck upright in the sand. Presently he walked to the
+edge of the coquina quarry and looked down into it.
+
+Thousands of dollars' worth of the shell deposit lay already exposed.
+There were great strata of it; ledges, shelves, vast masses in every
+direction. The quarry had been worked very little, and that little had
+been accomplished stupidly. Either in the rough, or merely as lumps of
+conglomerate for crushing, the coquina in sight alone was very, very
+valuable. There could be no doubt of that.
+
+Also, he understood that the strata deposited there continued at least
+for half a mile to the westward, where his own bungalow marked its
+probable termination.
+
+He turned after a few minutes' inspection, and walked slowly back to
+where Constance was standing by the open door. A slight constraint,
+amounting almost to embarrassment, ensued for a few minutes, but the
+puppy dissipated it when he leaped at a butterfly, fell on his nose with
+a thump, and howled dismally until reassured by his anxious
+foster-parents, who caught him up and generously passed him to each
+other, petting him vigourously.
+
+Twice Gray said good-bye to Constance Leslie and started to go on toward
+his own bungalow, but the puppy invariably began a frantic series of
+circles embracing them both, and he had to come back to keep the dog
+from the demoralisation of utter exhaustion.
+
+"You know," he said, "this is going to be awkward. I believe that dog
+thinks we are mar--thinks we are sister and brother. Don't you?"
+
+She replied with a slight flush on her fair face, that the dog
+undoubtedly cherished some such idea.
+
+"Take him inside," said Gray firmly. "Then I'll beat it."
+
+So she took the puppy inside and closed the door, with a smiling nod of
+adieu to Gray. But he had not gone very far when he heard her clear, far
+call; and, turning, saw her beckon frantically.
+
+Back he came at top speed.
+
+"Oh, dear," she exclaimed. "Oh, dear! He's tearing 'round and 'round the
+room moaning and whining and barking. I'm very certain he will have fits
+if you don't speak to him."
+
+Gray opened the door cautiously, and the little dog came out, projected
+like a bolt from a catapult, fairly flinging his quivering little body
+into Gray's arms.
+
+The reunion was elaborate and mutually satisfying. Constance furtively
+touched her brown eyes with a corner of her handkerchief.
+
+"What on earth are we to do?" she asked, unfeignedly affected. "I would
+give him to you in a minute if you think he would be contented without
+me."
+
+"We can try it."
+
+So Constance started westward, across the dunes, and Gray went into the
+bungalow with the dog. But it required only a second or two to convince
+him that it wouldn't do, and he opened the door and called frantically
+to Constance.
+
+"There is no use in trying that sort of thing," he admitted, when
+Constance hastened back to a touching reunion with the imprisoned dog.
+"Strategy is our only hope. I'll sit here on the threshold with you, and
+as soon as he goes to sleep I'll slink away."
+
+So side by side they seated themselves on the sandy threshold of the
+bungalow, and the little dog, happy and contented, curled up on the
+floor of the room, tucked his blunt muzzle into his flank, and took a
+series of naps with one eye always open. He was young, but suspicion had
+already done its demoralising work with him, and he intended to keep at
+least one eye on his best beloveds.
+
+She in her fresh and clinging gown, with the first delicate sunmask
+tinting her unaccustomed skin, sat silent and distrait, her idle fingers
+linked in her lap. And, glancing askance at her now and then, the droop
+of her under lip seemed to him pathetic, like that of a tired child in
+trouble.
+
+When he was not looking at her he was immersed in perplexed cogitation.
+The ownership of the dog he had already settled in his mind; the
+ownership of the quarry he had supposed he had settled.
+
+Therefore, why was he so troubled about it? Why was he so worried about
+her, wondering what she would do in the matter?
+
+The only solution left seemed to lie in a recourse to the
+law--unless--unless----
+
+But he couldn't--he simply couldn't, merely for a sentimental impulse,
+give up to a stranger what he honestly considered an inheritance. That
+would be carrying sentimentalism too far.
+
+And yet--and yet! He needed the inheritance desperately. Matters
+financial had gone all wrong with him. How _could_ he turn his back on
+offered salvation just because a youthful and pretty girl also required
+a financial lift in a cold-blooded and calculating world?
+
+And yet--and yet! He would sleep over it, of course. But he honestly saw
+no prospect of changing his opinion concerning the ownership of the
+quarry.
+
+As he sat there biting a stem of sweet-bay and listening to the
+cardinals piping from the forest, he looked down into the heated coquina
+pit.
+
+A snake was coiled up on one of the ledges, basking.
+
+"Miss Leslie!"
+
+She lifted her head and straightened her drooping shoulders, looking at
+him from eyes made drowsy and beautiful by the tropic heat.
+
+"I only wanted to say," he began gravely, "that it is not safe for you
+to go into the quarry alone--in case you had any such intention."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"There are snakes there. Do you see that one? Well, he's harmless, I
+think--a king-snake, if I am not mistaken. But it's a good place for
+rattlers."
+
+"Then you should be careful, too."
+
+"Oh, I'm careful enough, but you might not know when to be on your
+guard. This island is a snaky one. It's famous for its diamond-back
+rattlers and the size of them. Their fangs are an inch long, and it
+usually means death to be struck by one of them."
+
+The girl nodded thoughtfully.
+
+He said with a new anxiety: "As a matter of fact, you really ought not
+to be down here all alone."
+
+"I know it. But it meant a race for ownership, and I had to come at a
+minute's notice."
+
+"You should have brought a maid."
+
+"My dear Mr. Gray, I have no maid."
+
+"Oh, I forgot," he muttered--"but, somehow, you _look_ as though you
+had been born to several."
+
+"I am the daughter of a very poor professor."
+
+He fidgetted with his sweet-bay twig, considering the aromatic leaves
+with a troubled and concentrated scowl.
+
+"You know," he said, "this wretched island is celebrated for its
+unpleasant fauna. Scorpions and wood-ticks are numerous. The sting of
+the one is horribly painful, and might be dangerous; the villainous
+habits of the other might throw you into a fever."
+
+"But what can I do?" she inquired calmly.
+
+"There are other kinds of snakes, too," he went on with increasing
+solicitude for this girl for whom, suddenly, he began to consider
+himself responsible. "There's a vicious snake called a moccasin; and he
+won't get out of your way or warn you. And there's a wicked little
+serpent with rings of black, scarlet, and yellow around his body. He
+pretends to be harmless, but if he gets your finger into his mouth he'll
+chew it full of a venom which is precisely the same sort of venom as
+that of the deadly East Indian cobra."
+
+"But--what can I do?" she repeated pitifully. "If I go to St. Augustine
+and leave you here in possession, it might invalidate my claim."
+
+He was silent, knowing no more about the law than did she, and afraid to
+deny her tentative assertion.
+
+"If it lay with me," he said, "I'd call a truce until you could go to
+St. Augustine and return again with the proper people to look out for
+you."
+
+"Even if you were kind enough to do that, I could not afford even a
+servant under present--and unexpected--conditions."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because it has suddenly developed that I shall be obliged to engage a
+lawyer. And I had not expected that."
+
+He reddened to his hair but said nothing. After a while the girl looked
+over her shoulder. The puppy slept, this time with both eyes closed.
+
+When she turned again to Gray, he nodded his comprehension and rose to
+his feet cautiously.
+
+"I'm going to take a walk on the beach and think this thing all out," he
+whispered, taking the slim, half-offered hand in adieu. "Don't go out in
+the scrub after sun-down. Rattlers move then. Don't go near any swamp;
+moccasins are the colour of sun-baked mud, and you can't see them. Don't
+touch any pretty little snake marked scarlet, black, and yellow----"
+
+"How absurd!" she whispered. "As though I were likely to fondle snakes!"
+
+"I'm terribly worried about you," he insisted, retaining her hand.
+
+"Please don't be."
+
+"How can I help it--what with these bungalows full of scorpions and----"
+
+"Yours is, too," she said anxiously. "You will be very careful, won't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, of course.... I'm--I'm uncertain about you. That's what is
+troubling me----"
+
+"Please don't bother about me. I've had to look out for myself for
+years."
+
+"Have you?" he said, almost tenderly. Then he drew a quick, determined
+breath.
+
+"You'll be careful, won't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you armed?"
+
+"I have a shot-gun inside."
+
+"That's all right. Don't open your door to any stranger.... You know I
+simply hate to leave you alone this way----"
+
+"But I have the dog," she reminded him, with a pretty flush of
+gratitude.
+
+He had retained her hand longer than the easiest convention required or
+permitted. So he released it, hesitated, then with a visible effort he
+turned on his heel and strode away westward across the scrub.
+
+The sun hung low behind the tall, parti-coloured shaft of the Light
+House, towering smooth and round high above the forest.
+
+He looked up at Ibis Light, at the circling buzzards above it, then
+walked on, scarcely knowing where he was going, until he walked into the
+door of his own bungalow, and several large spiders scattered into
+flight across the floor.
+
+"There's no use," he said aloud to an audience of lizards clinging to
+the silvery bark of the log-room. "I can't take that quarry. I can't do
+it--whether it belongs to me or not. _How_ can a big, strong, lumbering
+young man do a thing like that? No. No. _No!_"
+
+He picked up a pencil and a sheet of paper:
+
+"Oh, Lord! I really do need the money, but I can't do it."
+
+And he wrote:
+
+ DEAR MISS LESLIE:
+
+ You arrived on the scene before I did. I am now convinced of
+ this. I shall not dispute the ownership of the quarry. It is
+ yours. This statement over my signature is your guarantee that
+ I shall never interfere with your title to the coquina quarry
+ on Ibis Island.
+
+ So now I've got to return to New York and go to work. I'm going
+ across to Augustine in a few moments; and while I'm there I'll
+ engage a white woman as companion for you, and a white servant,
+ and have them drive over at once so they will reach your
+ bungalow before evening. With undisputed title to the quarry,
+ you can easily afford their wages.
+
+ Good-bye. I wish you every happiness and success. Please give
+ my love to the dog.
+
+ Yours very truly,
+ JOHNSON GRAY.
+
+"It's the only way out of it," he muttered. "I'll leave it with her and
+bolt before she reads it. There is nothing else to do, absolutely
+nothing."
+
+As he came out of his cabin, the sun hung low and red above the palm
+forest, and a few bats were already flying like tiny black devils above
+the scrub.
+
+There was a strip of beach near his cabin, and he went down to it and
+began to tramp up and down with a vague idea of composing himself so
+that he might accomplish what he had to do gracefully, gaily, and with
+no suspicion of striking an attitude for gods and men to admire his
+moral resignation and his heroic renunciation.
+
+No; he'd do the thing lightly, smilingly, determined that she should not
+think that it was a sacrifice. No; she must believe that a sense of
+fairness alone moved him to an honest recognition of her claims. He must
+make it plain to her that he really believed she had arrived at the
+quarry before he had.
+
+And so he meant to leave her the letter, say good-bye, and go.
+
+When this was all settled in his mind he looked at the ocean very
+soberly, then turned his back on the Atlantic and walked back to his
+cabin to gather up his effects.
+
+As he approached the closed door a desolate howl from the interior
+greeted him: he sprang to the door and flung it open; and the puppy
+rushed into his arms.
+
+Then, pinned to the scorpion-infested wall, he saw a sheet of writing,
+and he read:
+
+ DEAR MR. GRAY:
+
+ He woke up and howled for you. It was too tragic for me. I love
+ him but I give him to you. I give the quarry to you, also.
+ Under the circumstances it would be impossible for me to enjoy
+ it, even if the law awarded it to me. Nobody could ever really
+ know which one of us first arrived and staked the claim. No
+ doubt you did.
+
+ I am sorry I came into your life and made trouble for you and
+ for the puppy.
+
+ So I leave you in peaceful possession. It really is a happiness
+ for me to do it.
+
+ I am going North at once. Good-bye; and please give my love to
+ the dog. Poor little darling, he thought we both stood _in loco
+ parentis_. But he'll get over his grief for me.
+
+ Yours truly,
+ CONSTANCE LESLIE.
+
+The puppy at his feet was howling uncomforted for the best beloved who
+was so strangely missing from the delightful combination which he had so
+joyously accepted _in loco parentis_.
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+Gray gathered the dog into his arms and strode swiftly out into the
+sunshot, purple light of early evening.
+
+"What a girl!" he muttered to himself. "What a girl! What a corking
+specimen of her sex!"
+
+Presently he came in sight of her, and the puppy scrambled violently
+until set down. Then he bolted for Constance Leslie, and it was only
+when the little thing leaped frantically upon her that she turned with a
+soft, breathless little cry. And saw Gray coming toward her out of the
+rose and golden sunset.
+
+Neither spoke as he came up and looked into her brown eyes and saw the
+traces of tears there still. The puppy leaped deliriously about them.
+And for a long while her slim hands lay limply in his. He looked at the
+ocean; she at the darkening forest.
+
+And after a little while he drew the note from his pocket.
+
+"I had written this when I found yours," he said. And he held it for her
+while she read it, bending nearer in the dim, rosy light.
+
+After she read it she took it from him gently, folded it, and slipped it
+into the bosom of her gown.
+
+Neither said anything. One of her hands still remained in his,
+listlessly at first--then the fingers crisped as his other arm encircled
+her.
+
+They were both gazing vaguely at the ocean now. Presently they moved
+slowly toward it through the fragrant dusk. Her hair, loosened a little,
+brushed his sunburned cheek.
+
+And around them gambolled the wise little dog, no longer apprehensive,
+but unutterably content with what the God of all good little doggies had
+so mercifully sent to him _in loco parentis_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"That," said the novelist, "is another slice of fact which would never
+do for fiction. Besides I once read a story somewhere or other about a
+dog bringing two people together."
+
+"The theme," I observed, "is thousands of years old."
+
+"That's the trouble with all truth," nodded Duane. "It's old as Time
+itself, and needs a new suit of clothes every time it is exhibited to
+instruct people."
+
+"What with new manners, new fashions, new dances, and the moral
+levelling itself gradually to the level of the unmoral," said Stafford,
+"nobody on the street would turn around to look at the naked truth in
+these days."
+
+"Truth must be fashionably gowned to attract," I admitted.
+
+"We of the eccentric nobility understand that," said the little Countess
+Athalie, glancing out of the window; and to me she added: "Lean over and
+see whether they have stationed a policeman in front of the Princess
+Zimbamzim's residence."
+
+I went out on the balcony and glanced down the block. "Yes," I said.
+
+"Poor old Princess," murmured the girl. "She detests moving."
+
+"All frauds do," remarked Duane.
+
+"She isn't a fraud," said Athalie quietly.
+
+Our silence indicated our surprise. After a few moments the girl added:
+
+"Whatever else she may be she is not a fraud in her profession. I think
+I had better give you an example of her professional probity. It
+interested me considerably as I followed it in my crystal. She knew all
+the while that I was watching her as well as the very people she herself
+was watching; and once or twice she looked up at me out of my crystal
+and grinned."
+
+"Can she see us now?" I inquired uneasily.
+
+"No."
+
+"Why not?" asked Duane.
+
+"I shall not tell you why."
+
+"Not that I care whether she sees me or not," he added.
+
+"Do you care, Harry, whether I see you occasionally in my crystal?"
+smiled Athalie.
+
+Duane flushed brightly and reminded her that she was too honourable to
+follow the movements of her personal friends unless requested to do so
+by them.
+
+"That is quite true," rejoined the girl, simply. "But once I saw you
+when I did not mean to."
+
+"Well?" he demanded, redder still.
+
+"You were merely asleep in your own bed," she said, laughing and
+accepting a lighted match from me. Then as the fragrant thread of smoke
+twisted in ghostly ringlets across her smooth young cheeks she settled
+back among her cushions.
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+"This," she said, "will acquaint you in a measure with the
+trustworthiness of the Princess Zimbamzim. And, if the policeman in
+front of her house could hear what I am going to tell you, he'd never
+remain there while his legs had power to run away with him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They met by accident on Madison Square, and shook hands for the first
+time in many years. High in the Metropolitan Tower the chimes celebrated
+the occasion by sounding the half hour.
+
+"It seems incredible," exclaimed George Z. Green, "that you could have
+become so famous! You never displayed any remarkable ability in school."
+
+"I never displayed any ability at all. But you did," said Williams
+admiringly. "How beautifully you used to write your name on the
+blackboard! How neat and scholarly you were in everything."
+
+"I know it," said Green gloomily. "And _you_ flunked in almost
+everything."
+
+"In everything," admitted Williams, deeply mortified.
+
+"And yet," said Green, "here we are at thirty odd; and I'm merely a
+broker, and--_look_ what _you_ are! Why, I can't go anywhere but I find
+one of your novels staring me in the face. I've been in Borneo: they're
+there! They're in Australia and China and Patagonia. Why the devil do
+you suppose people buy the stories you write?"
+
+"I'm sure I don't know," said Williams modestly.
+
+"I don't know either, though I read them myself sometimes--I don't know
+why. They're all very well in their way--if you care for that sort of
+book--but the things you tell about, Williams, never could have
+happened. I'm not knocking you; I'm a realist, that's all. And when I
+read a short story by you in which a young man sees a pretty girl, and
+begins to talk to her without being introduced to her, and then
+marries her before luncheon--and finds he's married a Balkan
+Princess--good-night! I just wonder why people stand for your books;
+that's all."
+
+"So do I," said Williams, much embarrassed. "I wouldn't stand for them
+myself."
+
+"Why," continued Green warmly, "I read a story of yours in some magazine
+the other day, in which a young man sees a pretty girl for the first
+time in his life and is married to her inside of three quarters of an
+hour! And I ask _you_, Williams, how you would feel after spending
+fifteen cents on such a story?"
+
+"I'm terribly sorry, old man," murmured Williams. "Here's your
+fifteen--if you like----"
+
+"Dammit," said Green indignantly, "it isn't that they're not readable
+stories! I had fifteen cents' worth all right. But it makes a man sore
+to see what happens to the young men in your stories--and all the queens
+they collect--and then to go about town and never see anything of that
+sort!"
+
+"There are millions of pretty girls in town," ventured Williams. "I
+don't think I exaggerate in that respect."
+
+"But they'd call an officer if young men in real life behaved as they
+do in your stories. As a matter of fact and record, there's no more
+romance in New York than there is in the annual meeting of the British
+Academy of Ancient Assyrian Inscriptions. And you know it, Williams!"
+
+"I think it depends on the individual man," said Williams timidly.
+
+"How?"
+
+"If there's any romance in a man himself, he's apt to find the world
+rather full of it."
+
+"Do you mean to say there isn't any romance in me?" demanded George Z.
+Green hotly.
+
+"I don't know, George. Is there?"
+
+"Plenty. Pl-en-ty! I'm always looking for romance. I look for it when I
+go down town to business; I look for it when I go home. Do I find it?
+No! Nothing ever happens to me. Nothing beautiful and wealthy beyond the
+dreams of avarice ever tries to pick me up. Explain _that_!"
+
+Williams, much abashed, ventured no explanation.
+
+"And to think," continued Green, "that you, my old school friend, should
+become a celebrity merely by writing such stories! Why, you're as
+celebrated as any brand of breakfast food!"
+
+"You don't have to read my books, you know," protested Williams mildly.
+
+"I don't have to--I know it. But I do. Everybody does. And nobody knows
+why. So, meeting you again after all these unromantic years, I thought
+I'd just ask you whether by any chance you happen to know of any
+particular section of the city where a plain, everyday broker might make
+a hit with the sort of girl you write about. Do you?"
+
+"Any section of this city is romantic enough--if you only approach it in
+the proper spirit," asserted Williams.
+
+"You mean if my attitude toward romance is correct I'm likely to
+encounter it almost anywhere?"
+
+"That is my theory," admitted Williams bashfully.
+
+"Oh! Well, what _is_ the proper attitude? Take me, for example. I've
+just been to the bank. I carry, at this moment, rather a large sum of
+money in my inside overcoat pocket. My purpose in drawing it was to blow
+it. Now, tell me how to blow it romantically."
+
+"How can I tell you such a thing, George----"
+
+"It's your business. You tell people such things in books. Now, tell me,
+face to face, man to man, how to get thoroughly mixed up in the sort of
+romance you write--the kind of romance that has made William McWilliam
+Williams famous!"
+
+"I'm sorry----"
+
+"What! You won't! You admit that what you write is bunk? You confess
+that you don't know where there are any stray queens with whom I might
+become happily entangled within the next fifteen minutes?"
+
+"I admit no such thing," said Williams with dignity. "If your attitude
+is correct, in ten minutes you can be up against anything on earth!"
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Anywhere!"
+
+"Very well! Here we are on Madison Square. There's Admiral Farragut;
+there's the Marble Tower. Do you mean that if I walk from this spot for
+ten minutes--no matter in what direction--I'll walk straight into
+Romance up to my neck?"
+
+"If your attitude is correct, yes. But you've got to know the elements
+of Romance when you see them."
+
+"What are the elements of Romance? What do they resemble?" demanded
+George Z. Green.
+
+Williams said, in a low, impressive voice:
+
+"Anything that seems to you unusual is very likely to be an element in a
+possible romance. If you see anything extraordinary during the next ten
+minutes, follow it up. And ninety-nine chances in a hundred it will lead
+you into complications. Interfering with other people's business usually
+does," he added pleasantly.
+
+"But," said Green, "suppose during the next ten minutes, or twenty
+minutes, or the next twenty-four hours I _don't_ see anything unusual."
+
+"It will be your own fault if you don't. The Unusual is occurring all
+about us, every second. A trained eye can always see it."
+
+"But suppose the Unusual doesn't occur for the next ten minutes,"
+insisted Green, exasperated. "Suppose the Unusual is taking a vacation?
+It would be just my luck."
+
+"Then," said Williams, "you will have to imagine that everything you see
+is unusual. Or else," he added blandly, "you yourself will have to start
+something. _That_ is where the creative mind comes in. When there's
+nothing doing it starts something."
+
+"Does it ever get arrested?" inquired Green ironically. "The creative
+mind! Sure! _That's_ where all this bally romance is!--in the creative
+mind. I knew it. Good-bye."
+
+They shook hands; Williams went down town.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+This picture is not concerned with his destination. Or even whether he
+ever got there.
+
+But it is very directly concerned with George Z. Green, and the
+direction he took when he parted from his old school friend.
+
+As he walked up town he said to himself, "Bunk!" several times. After a
+few moments he fished out his watch.
+
+"I know I'm an ass," he said to himself, "but I'll take a chance. I'll
+give myself exactly ten minutes to continue making an ass of myself. And
+if I see the faintest symptom of Romance--if I notice anything at all
+peculiar and unusual in any person or any thing during the next ten
+minutes, I won't let it get away--believe _me_!"
+
+He walked up Broadway instead of Fifth Avenue. After a block or two he
+turned west at hazard, crossed Sixth Avenue and continued.
+
+He was walking in one of the upper Twenties--he had not particularly
+noticed which. Commercial houses nearly filled the street, although a
+few old-time residences of brownstone still remained. Once well-to-do
+and comfortable homes, they had degenerated into chop sueys, boarding
+houses, the abodes of music publishers, artificial flower makers, and
+mediums.
+
+It was now a shabby, unkempt street, and Green already was considering
+it a hopeless hunting ground, and had even turned to retrace his steps
+toward Sixth Avenue, when the door of a neighbouring house opened and
+down the shabby, brownstone stoop came hurrying an exceedingly pretty
+girl.
+
+Now, the unusual part of the incident lay in the incongruity of the
+street and the girl. For the street and the house out of which she
+emerged so hastily were mean and ignoble; but the girl herself fairly
+radiated upper Fifth Avenue from the perfectly appointed and expensive
+simplicity of hat and gown to the obviously aristocratic and dainty
+face and figure.
+
+"Is _she_ a symptom?" thought Green to himself. "Is _she_ an element?
+That is sure a rotten looking joint she came out of."
+
+Moved by a sudden and unusual impulse of intelligence, he ran up the
+brownstone stoop and read the dirty white card pasted on the façade
+above the door bell.
+
+ THE PRINCESS ZIMBAMZIM
+ TRANCE MEDIUM. FORTUNES.
+
+Taken aback, he looked after the pretty girl who was now hurrying up the
+street as though the devil were at her dainty heels.
+
+Could _she_ be the Princess Zimbamzim? Common sense rejected the idea,
+as did the sudden jerk of soiled lace curtains at the parlour window,
+and the apparition of a fat lady in a dingy, pink tea-gown. _That_ must
+be the Princess Zimbamzim and the pretty girl had ventured into these
+purlieus to consult her. Why?
+
+"This _is_ certainly a symptom of romance!" thought the young man
+excitedly. And he started after the pretty girl at a Fifth Avenue amble.
+
+He overtook and passed her at Sixth Avenue, and managed to glance at her
+without being offensive. To his consternation, she was touching her
+tear-stained eyes with her handkerchief. She did not notice him.
+
+What could be the matter? With what mystery was he already in touch?
+
+Tremendously interested he fell back a few paces and lighted a
+cigarette, allowing her to pass him; then he followed her. Never before
+in his life had he done such a scandalous thing.
+
+On Broadway she hailed a taxi, got into it, and sped uptown. There was
+another taxi available; Green took it and gave the driver a five dollar
+tip to keep the first taxi in view.
+
+Which was very easy, for it soon stopped at a handsome apartment house
+on Park Avenue; the girl sprang out, and entered the building almost
+running.
+
+For a moment George Z. Green thought that all was lost. But the taxi she
+had taken remained, evidently waiting for her; and sure enough, in a few
+minutes out she came, hurrying, enveloped in a rough tweed travelling
+coat and carrying a little satchel. Slam! went the door of her taxi; and
+away she sped, and Green after her in his taxi.
+
+Again the chase proved to be very short. Her taxi stopped at the
+Pennsylvania Station; out she sprang, paid the driver, and hurried
+straight for the station restaurant, Green following at a fashionable
+lope.
+
+She took a small table by a window; Green took the next one. It was not
+because she noticed him and found his gaze offensive, but because she
+felt a draught that she rose and took the table behind Green, exactly
+where he could not see her unless he twisted his neck into attitudes
+unseemly.
+
+He wouldn't do such things, being really a rather nice young man; and it
+was too late for him to change his table without attracting her
+attention, because the waiter already had brought him whatever he had
+ordered for tea--muffins, buns, crumpets--he neither knew nor cared.
+
+So he ate them with jam, which he detested; and drank his tea and
+listened with all his ears for the slightest movement behind him which
+might indicate that she was leaving.
+
+Only once did he permit himself to turn around, under pretense of
+looking for a waiter; and he saw two blue eyes still brilliant with
+unshed tears and a very lovely but unhappy mouth all ready to quiver
+over its toast and marmalade.
+
+What on earth could be the matter with that girl? What terrible tragedy
+could it be that was still continuing to mar her eyes and twitch her
+sensitive, red lips?
+
+Green, sipping his tea, trembled pleasantly all over as he realised that
+at last he was setting his foot upon the very threshold of Romance. And
+he determined to cross that threshold if neither good manners, good
+taste, nor the police interfered.
+
+And what a wonderful girl for his leading lady! What eyes! What hair!
+What lovely little hands, with the gloves hastily rolled up from the
+wrist! Why should she be unhappy? He'd like to knock the block off any
+man who----
+
+Green came to himself with a thrill of happiness: her pretty voice was
+sounding in exquisite modulations behind him as she asked the waiter for
+m-more m-marmalade.
+
+In a sort of trance, Green demolished bun after bun. Normally, he
+loathed the indigestible. After what had seemed to him an interminable
+length of time, he ventured to turn around again in pretense of calling
+a waiter.
+
+Her chair was empty!
+
+At first he thought she had disappeared past all hope of recovery; but
+the next instant he caught sight of her hastening out toward the ticket
+boxes.
+
+Flinging a five-dollar bill on the table, he hastily invited the waiter
+to keep the change; sprang to his feet, and turned to seize his
+overcoat. It was gone from the hook where he had hung it just behind
+him.
+
+Astonished, he glanced at the disappearing girl, and saw his overcoat
+over her arm. For a moment he supposed that she had mistaken it for her
+own ulster, but no! She was wearing her own coat, too.
+
+A cold and sickening sensation assailed the pit of Green's stomach. Was
+it not a mistake, after all? Was this lovely young girl a professional
+criminal? Had she or some of her band observed Green coming out of the
+bank and thrusting a fat wallet into the inside pocket of his overcoat?
+
+He was walking now, as fast as he was thinking, keeping the girl in view
+amid the throngs passing through the vast rotunda.
+
+When she stopped at a ticket booth he entered the brass railed space
+behind her.
+
+She did not appear to know exactly where she was going, for she seemed
+by turns distrait and agitated; and he heard her ask the ticket agent
+when the next train left for the extreme South.
+
+Learning that it left in a few minutes, and finding that she could
+secure a stateroom, she took it, paid for it, and hastily left without a
+glance behind her at Green.
+
+Meanwhile Green had very calmly slipped one hand into the breast pocket
+of his own overcoat, where it trailed loosely over her left arm, meaning
+to extract his wallet without anybody observing him. The wallet was not
+there. He was greatly inclined to run after her, but he didn't. He
+watched her depart, then:
+
+"Is there another stateroom left on the Verbena Special?" he inquired of
+the ticket agent, coolly enough.
+
+"One. Do you wish it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The ticket agent made out the coupons and shoved the loose change under
+the grille, saying:
+
+"Better hurry, sir. You've less than a minute."
+
+He ran for his train and managed to swing aboard just as the coloured
+porters were closing the vestibules and the train was in motion.
+
+A trifle bewildered at what he had done, and by the rapidity with which
+he had done it, he sank down in the vacant observation car to collect
+his thoughts.
+
+He was on board the Verbena Special--the southern train-de-luxe--bound
+for Jacksonville, St. Augustine, Palm Beach, Verbena Inlet, or Miami--or
+for Nassau, Cuba, and the remainder of the West Indies--just as he
+chose.
+
+He had no other luggage than a walking-stick. Even his overcoat was in
+possession of somebody else. That was the situation that now faced
+George Z. Green.
+
+But as the train emerged from the river tube, and he realised all this,
+he grew calmer; and the calmer he grew the happier he grew.
+
+He was no longer on the threshold of Romance; he had crossed it, and
+already he was being whirled away blindly into the Unusual and the
+Unknown!
+
+Exultingly he gazed out of the windows upon the uninspiring scenery of
+New Jersey. A wonderful sense of physical lightness and mental freedom
+took delightful possession of him. Opportunity had not beckoned him in
+vain. Chance had glanced sideways at him, and he had recognised the
+pretty flirt. His was certainly some brain!
+
+And now, still clinging to the skirts of Chance, he was being whisked
+away, pell mell, headlong toward Destiny, in the trail of a slender,
+strange young girl who had swiped his overcoat and who seemed
+continually inclined to tears.
+
+The incident of the overcoat no longer troubled him. That garment of his
+was not unlike the rough travelling coat she herself wore. And it might
+have been natural to her, in her distress of mind and very evident
+emotion, to have seized it by mistake and made off with it, forgetting
+that she still wore her own.
+
+Of course it was a mistake pure and simple. He had only to look at the
+girl and understand that. One glance at her sweet, highbred features was
+sufficient to exonerate her as a purloiner of gentlemen's garments.
+
+Green crossed his legs, folded his arms, and reflected. The overcoat was
+another and most important element in this nascent Romance.
+
+The difficulty lay in knowing how to use the overcoat to advantage in
+furthering and further complicating a situation already delightful.
+
+Of course he could do the obvious: he could approach her and take off
+his hat and do the well-bred and civil and explain to her the mistake.
+
+But suppose she merely said: "I'm sorry," handed over his coat, and
+continued to read her magazine. That would end it. And it mustn't end
+until he found out why she had emerged with tears in her beautiful eyes
+from the abode of the Princess Zimbamzim.
+
+Besides, he was sure of getting his coat, his wallet, and its contents.
+His name and address were in the wallet; also both were sewed inside the
+inner pocket of the overcoat.
+
+What would ultimately happen would be this: sooner or later she'd come
+to, wake up, dry her pretty eyes, look about, and find that she had
+_two_ overcoats in her possession.
+
+It would probably distress her dreadfully, particularly when she
+discovered the wallet and the money. But, wherever she was going, as
+soon as she reached there she'd send overcoat and money back to his
+address--doubtless with a pretty and contrite note of regret.
+
+Yes, but that wouldn't do! What good would the overcoat and the money be
+to him, if he were South and she shipped them North? And yet he was
+afraid to risk an abrupt ending to his Romance by explaining to her the
+mistake.
+
+No; he'd merely follow her for the present. He couldn't help it very
+well, being aboard the same train. So it would not be difficult to keep
+his eye on her as well as his overcoat, and think out at his leisure how
+best to tend, guard, cherish, and nourish the delicate and unopened bud
+of Romance.
+
+Meanwhile, there were other matters he must consider; so he wrote out a
+telegram to Washington ordering certain necessary articles to be brought
+aboard the Verbena Special on its arrival there. The porter took charge
+of it.
+
+That night at dinner he looked for the girl in vain. She did not enter
+the dining-car while he was there. Haunting the corridors afterward he
+saw no sign of her anywhere until, having received his necessaries in a
+brand new travelling satchel, and on his way to his stateroom, he caught
+a glimpse of her, pale and agitated, in conversation with the porter at
+her partly opened door.
+
+She did not even glance at him as he entered his stateroom, but he could
+not avoid hearing what she was saying because her enunciation was so
+exquisitely distinct.
+
+"Porter," she said in her low, sweet voice, "I have, somehow, made a
+very dreadful mistake somewhere. I have a man's overcoat here which does
+not belong to me. The cloth is exactly like the cloth of my own
+travelling ulster, and I must have forgotten that I had mine on when I
+took this."
+
+"Ain't de gemman abohd de Speshul, Miss?" inquired the porter.
+
+"I'm afraid not. I'm certain that I must have taken it in the station
+restaurant and brought it aboard the train."
+
+"Ain't nuff'n in de pockets, is dey?" asked the porter.
+
+"Yes; there's a wallet strapped with a rubber band. I didn't feel at
+liberty to open it. But I suppose I ought to in order to find out the
+owner's name if possible."
+
+"De gemman's name ain't sewed inside de pocket, is it, Miss?"
+
+"I didn't look," she said.
+
+So the porter took the coat, turned it inside out, explored the inside
+pocket, found the label, and read:
+
+ "Snipps Brothers: December, 1913. George Z. Green."
+
+A stifled exclamation from the girl checked him. Green also protruded
+his head cautiously from his own doorway.
+
+The girl, standing partly in the aisle, was now leaning limply against
+the door-sill, her hand pressed convulsively to her breast, her face
+white and frightened.
+
+"Is you ill, Miss?" asked the porter anxiously.
+
+"I--no. Z--what name was that you read?"
+
+"George Z. Green, Miss----"
+
+"It--it _can't_ be! Look again! It can't be!"
+
+Her face was ashen to the lips; she closed her eyes for a second,
+swayed; then her hand clutched the door-sill; she straightened up with
+an effort and opened her eyes, which now seemed dilated by some powerful
+emotion.
+
+"Let me see that name!" she said, controlling her voice with an obvious
+effort.
+
+The porter turned the pocket inside out for her inspection. There it
+was:
+
+ "George Z. Green: 1008-1/2 Fifth Avenue, New York."
+
+"If you knows de gemman, Miss," suggested the porter, "you all kin take
+dishere garmint back yo'se'f when you comes No'th."
+
+"Thank you.... Then--I won't trouble you.... I'll--I'll ta-t-take it
+back myself--when I go North."
+
+"I kin ship it if you wishes, Miss."
+
+She said excitedly: "If you ship it from somewhere South, he--Mr.
+Green--would see where it came from by the parcels postmark on the
+express tag--wouldn't he?"
+
+"Yaas, Miss."
+
+"Then I don't want you to ship it! I'll do it myself.... _How_ can I
+ship it without giving Mr. Green a clue--" she shuddered, "--a clue to
+my whereabouts?"
+
+"Does you know de gemman, Miss?"
+
+"No!" she said, with another shudder,--"and I do not wish to. I--I
+particularly do not wish ever to know him--or even to see him. And above
+all I do not wish Mr. Green to come South and investigate the
+circumstances concerning this overcoat. He might take it into his head
+to do such a thing. It--it's horrible enough that I have--that I
+actually have in my possession the overcoat of the very man on whose
+account I left New York at ten minutes' notice----"
+
+Her pretty voice broke and her eyes filled.
+
+"You--you don't understand, porter," she added, almost hysterically,
+"but my possession of this overcoat--of all the billions and billions of
+overcoats in all the world--is a t-terrible and astounding b-blow to
+me!"
+
+"Is--is you afeard o' dishere overcoat, Miss?" inquired the astonished
+darkey.
+
+"Yes!" she said. "Yes, I am! I'm horribly afraid of that overcoat!
+I--I'd like to throw it from the train window, but I--I can't do that,
+of course! It would be stealing----"
+
+Her voice broke again with nervous tears:
+
+"I d-don't want the coat! And I can't throw it away! And if it's shipped
+to him from the South he may come down here and investigate. He's in New
+York now. That's why I am on my way South! I--I want him to remain in
+New York until--until all--d-danger is over. And by the first of April
+it will be over. And then I'll come North--and bring him his coat----"
+
+The bewildered darkey stared at her and at the coat which she had
+unconsciously clutched to her breast.
+
+"Do you think," she said, "that M-Mr. Green will _need_ the coat this
+winter? Do you suppose anything would happen to him if he doesn't have
+it for a while--pneumonia or anything? Oh!" she exclaimed in a quivering
+voice, "I wish he and his overcoat were at the South Pole!"
+
+Green withdrew his head and pressed both palms to his temples. Could he
+trust his ears? Was he going mad? Holding his dizzy head in both hands
+he heard the girl say that she herself would attend to shipping the
+coat; heard the perplexed darkey take his leave and go; heard her
+stateroom door close.
+
+Seated in his stateroom he gazed vacantly at the couch opposite, so
+completely bewildered with his first over-dose of Romance that his brain
+seemed to spin like a frantic squirrel in a wheel, and his thoughts
+knocked and jumbled against each other until it truly seemed to him that
+all his senses were fizzling out like wet firecrackers.
+
+What on earth had he ever done to inspire such horror in the mind of
+this young girl?
+
+What terrible injury had he committed against her or hers that the very
+sound of his name terrified her--the mere sight of his overcoat left
+her almost hysterical?
+
+Helplessly, half stupefied, he cast about in his wrecked mind to
+discover any memory or record of any injury done to anybody during his
+particularly blameless career on earth.
+
+In school he had punched the noses of several schoolmates, and had been
+similarly smitten in return. That was the extent of physical injury ever
+done to anybody.
+
+Of grave moral wrong he knew he was guiltless. True, he had frequently
+skinned the assembly at convivial poker parties. But also he had often
+opened jacks only to be mercilessly deprived of them amid the unfeeling
+and brutal laughter of his companions. No, he was not guilty of criminal
+gambling.
+
+Had he ever done a wrong to anybody in business? Never. His firm's name
+was the symbol for probity.
+
+He dashed his hands to his brow distractedly. What in Heaven's name
+_had_ he done to fill the very soul of this young girl with fear and
+loathing? What in the name of a merciful Providence had he, George Z.
+Green, banker and broker, ever done to drive this young and innocent
+girl out of the City of New York!
+
+To collect and marshal his disordered thoughts was difficult but he
+accomplished it with the aid of cigarettes. To a commonplace intellect
+there is no aid like a cigarette.
+
+At first he was inclined to believe that the girl had merely mistaken
+him for another man with a similar name. George Z. Green was not an
+unusual name.
+
+But his address in town was also written inside his coat pocket; and she
+had read it. Therefore, it was painfully evident to him that her
+detestation and fear was for him.
+
+What on earth had inspired such an attitude of mind toward himself in a
+girl he had seen for the first time that afternoon? He could not
+imagine. And another strange feature of the affair was that she had not
+particularly noticed him. Therefore, if she entertained such a horror of
+him, why had she not exhibited some trace of it when he was in her
+vicinity?
+
+Certainly she had not exhibited it by crying. He exonerated himself on
+that score, for she had been on the verge of tears when he first beheld
+her hurrying out of the parlours of the Princess Zimbamzim.
+
+It gradually became plain to him that, although there could be no doubt
+that this girl was afraid of him, and cordially disliked him, yet
+strangely enough, she did not know him by sight.
+
+Consequently, her attitude must be inspired by something she had heard
+concerning him. What?
+
+He puffed his cigarette and groaned. As far as he could remember, he had
+never harmed a fly.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+That night he turned in, greatly depressed. Bad dreams assailed his
+slumbers--menacing ones like the visions that annoyed _Eugene Aram_.
+
+And every time he awoke and sat up in his bunk, shaken by the swaying
+car, he realised that Romance had also its tragic phases--a sample of
+which he was now enduring. And yet, miserable as he was, a horrid sort
+of joy neutralised the misery when he recollected that it _was_ Romance,
+after all, and that he, George Z. Green, was in it up to his neck.
+
+A grey morning--a wet and pallid sky lowering over the brown North
+Carolina fields--this was his waking view from his tumbled bunk.
+
+Neither his toilet nor his breakfast dispelled the gloom; certainly the
+speeding landscape did not.
+
+He sat grimly in the observation car, reviewing a dispiriting landscape
+set with swamps, razorbacks, buzzards, and niggers.
+
+Luncheon aided him very little. _She_ had not appeared at all. Either
+her own misery and fright were starving her to death or she preferred to
+take her meals in her stateroom. He hoped fervently the latter might be
+the case; that murder might not be added to whatever else he evidently
+was suspected of committing.
+
+Like the ticket he had seen her purchase, his own ticket took him as far
+as Ormond. Of course he could go on if she did. She could go to the West
+Indies and ultimately to Brazil. So could he. They were on the main
+travelled road to almost anywhere.
+
+Nevertheless, he was on the watch at St. Augustine; and when he saw her
+come forth hastily and get into a bus emblazoned with the name and
+escutcheon of the Hotel Royal Orchid, he got in also.
+
+The bus was full. Glancing at the other occupants of the bus, she
+included him in her brief review, and to his great relief he saw her
+incurious blue eyes pass calmly to the next countenance.
+
+A dreadful, almost hysterical impulse assailed him to suddenly rise and
+say: "I am George Z. Green!"--merely to observe the cataclysmic effect
+on her.
+
+But it did not seem so funny to him on after thoughts, for the chances
+appeared to be that she could not survive the shock. Which scared him;
+and he looked about nervously for fear somebody who knew him might be
+among the passengers, and might address him by name.
+
+In due time the contents of the bus trooped into the vast corridors of
+the Hotel Royal Orchid. One by one they registered; and on the ledger
+Green read her name with palpitating heart--Miss Marie Wiltz and Maid.
+And heard her say to the clerk that her maid had been delayed and would
+arrive on the next train.
+
+It never occurred to this unimaginative man to sign any name but his own
+to the register that was shoved toward him. Which perfectly proves his
+guilelessness and goodness.
+
+He went to his room, cleansed from his person the stains of travel, and,
+having no outer clothes to change to, smoked a cigarette and gazed
+moodily from the window.
+
+Now, his window gave on the drive-encircled fountain before the front
+entrance to the hotel; and, as he was standing there immersed in tobacco
+smoke and gloom, he was astonished to see the girl herself come out
+hastily, travelling satchel in hand, and spring lightly into a cab. It
+was one of those victorias which are stationed for hire in front of such
+southern hotels; he could see her perfectly plainly; saw the darkey
+coachman flourish his whip; saw the vehicle roll away.
+
+The next instant he seized his new satchel, swept his brand new toilet
+articles into it, snapped it, picked up hat and cane, and dashed down
+stairs to the desk.
+
+Here he paid his bill, ran out, and leaped into a waiting victoria.
+
+"Where did that other cab drive?" he demanded breathlessly to his negro
+coachman. "Didn't you hear what the young lady said to her driver?"
+
+"Yaas, suh. De young lady done say she's in a pow'ful hurry, suh. She
+'low she gotta git to Ormond."
+
+"Ormond! There's no train!"
+
+"Milk-train, suh."
+
+"What! Is she going to Ormond on a milk-train?"
+
+"Yaas, suh."
+
+"All right, then. Drive me to the station."
+
+It was not very far. She was standing alone on the deserted platform,
+her bag at her feet, his overcoat lying across it. Her head was bent,
+and she did not notice him at first. Never had he seen a youthful figure
+so exquisitely eloquent of despair.
+
+The milk-train was about an hour overdue, which would make it about due
+in the South. Green seated himself on a wooden bench and folded his
+hands over the silver crook of his walking-stick. The situation was now
+perfectly clear to him. She had come down from her room, and had seen
+his name on the register, had been seized by a terrible panic, and had
+fled.
+
+Had he been alone and unobserved, he might have attempted to knock his
+brains out with his walking-stick. He desired to, earnestly, when he
+realised what an ass he had been to sign the register.
+
+She had begun to pace the platform, nervously, halting and leaning
+forward from time to time to scan impatiently the long, glittering
+perspective of the metals.
+
+It had begun to grow dusk. Lanterns on switches and semaphores flashed
+out red, green, blue, white, stringing their jewelled sparks far away
+into the distance.
+
+To and fro she paced the empty platform, passing and repassing him. And
+he began to notice presently that she looked at him rather intently each
+time.
+
+He wondered whether she suspected his identity. Guiltless of anything
+that he could remember having done, nevertheless he shivered guiltily
+every time she glanced at him.
+
+Then the unexpected happened; and he fairly shook in his shoes as she
+marched deliberately up to him.
+
+"I beg your pardon," she said in a very sweet and anxious voice, "but
+might I ask if you happen to be going to Ormond?"
+
+He was on his feet, hat in hand, by this time; his heart and pulses
+badly stampeded; but he managed to answer calmly that he was going to
+Ormond.
+
+"There is only a milk-train, I understand," she said.
+
+"So I understand."
+
+"Do you think there will be any difficulty in my obtaining permission to
+travel on it? The station-master says that permission is not given to
+ladies unaccompanied."
+
+She looked at him almost imploringly.
+
+"I really must go on that train," she said in a low voice. "It is
+desperately necessary. Could you--could you manage to arrange it for me?
+I would be so grateful!--so deeply grateful!"
+
+"I'll do what I can," said that unimaginative man. "Probably bribery can
+fix it----"
+
+"There might be--if--if--you would be willing--if you didn't object--I
+know it sounds very strange--but my case is so desperate----" She
+checked herself, flushing a delicate pink. And he waited.
+
+Then, very resolutely she looked up at him:
+
+"Would you--could you p-pretend that I am--am--your sister?"
+
+"Certainly," he said. An immense happiness seized him. He was not only
+up to his neck in Romance. It was already over his head, and he was out
+of his depth, and swimming.
+
+"Certainly," he repeated quietly, controlling his joy by a supreme
+effort. "That would be the simplest way out of it, after all."
+
+She said earnestly, almost solemnly: "If you will do this generous thing
+for--for a stranger--in very deep perplexity and trouble--that stranger
+will remain in your debt while life lasts!"
+
+She had not intended to be dramatic; she may not have thought she was;
+but the tears again glimmered in her lovely eyes, and the situation
+seemed tense enough to George Z. Green.
+
+Moreover, he felt that complications already were arising--complications
+which he had often read of and sometimes dreamed of. Because, as he
+stood there in the southern dusk, looking at this slim, young girl, he
+began to realise that never before in all his life had he gazed upon
+anything half as beautiful.
+
+Very far away a locomotive whistled: they both turned, and saw the
+distant headlight glittering on the horizon like a tiny star.
+
+"W-would it be best for us to t-take your name or mine--in case they ask
+us?" she stammered, flushing deeply.
+
+"Perhaps," he said pleasantly, "you might be more likely to remember
+yours in an emergency."
+
+"I think so," she said naïvely; "it is rather difficult for me to
+deceive anybody. My name is Marie Wiltz."
+
+"Then I am Mr. Wiltz, your brother, for an hour or two."
+
+"If you please," she murmured.
+
+It had been on the tip of his tongue to add, "Mr. George Z. Wiltz," but
+he managed to check himself.
+
+The great, lumbering train came rolling in; the station agent looked
+very sharply through his spectacles at Miss Wiltz when he saw her with
+Green, but being a Southerner, he gallantly assumed that it was all
+right.
+
+One of the train crew placed two wooden chairs for them in the partly
+empty baggage car; and there they sat, side by side, while the big,
+heavy milk cans were loaded aboard, and a few parcels shoved into their
+car. Then the locomotive tooted leisurely; there came a jolt, a resonant
+clash; and the train was under way.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+For a while the baggage master fussed about the car, sorting out
+packages for Ormond; then, courteously inquiring whether he could do
+anything for them, and learning that he could not, he went forward into
+his own den, leaving Marie Wiltz and George Z. Green alone in a baggage
+car dimly illumined by a small and smoky lamp.
+
+Being well-bred young people, they broke the tension of the situation
+gracefully and naturally, pretending to find it amusing to travel in a
+milk train to a fashionable southern resort.
+
+And now that the train was actually under way and speeding southward
+through the night, her relief from anxiety was very plain to him. He
+could see her relax; see the frightened and hunted look in her eyes die
+out, the natural and delicious colour return to her cheeks.
+
+As they conversed with amiable circumspection and pleasant formality, he
+looked at her whenever he dared without seeming to be impertinent; and
+he discovered that the face she had worn since he had first seen her was
+not her natural expression; that her features in repose or in fearless
+animation were winning and almost gay.
+
+She had a delightful mouth, sweet and humourous; a delicate nose and
+chin, and two very blue and beautiful eyes that looked at him at moments
+so confidently, so engagingly, that the knowledge of what her expression
+would be if she knew who he was smote him at moments, chilling his very
+marrow.
+
+What an astonishing situation! How he would have scorned a short story
+with such a situation in it! And he thought of Williams--poor old
+Williams!--and mentally begged his pardon.
+
+For he understood now that real life was far stranger than fiction. He
+realised at last that Romance loitered ever around the corner; that
+Opportunity was always gently nudging one's elbow.
+
+There lay his overcoat on the floor, trailing over her satchel. He
+looked at it so fixedly that she noticed the direction of his gaze,
+glanced down, blushed furiously.
+
+"It may seem odd to you that I am travelling with a man's overcoat," she
+said, "but it will seem odder yet when I tell you that I don't know how
+I came by it."
+
+"That _is_ odd," he admitted smilingly. "To whom does it belong?"
+
+Her features betrayed the complicated emotions that successively
+possessed her--perplexity, anxiety, bashfulness.
+
+After a moment she said in a low voice: "You have done so much for me
+already--you have been so exceedingly nice to me--that I hesitate to ask
+of you anything more----"
+
+"Please ask!" he urged. "It will be really a happiness for me to serve
+you."
+
+Surprised at his earnestness and the unembarrassed warmth of his reply,
+she looked up at him gratefully after a moment.
+
+"Would you," she said, "take charge of that overcoat for me and send it
+back to its owner?"
+
+He laughed nervously: "Is _that_ all? Why, of course I shall! I'll
+guarantee that it is restored to its rightful owner if you wish."
+
+"Will you? If you do _that_----" she drew a long, sighing breath, "it
+will be a relief to me--such a wonderful relief!" She clasped her gloved
+hands tightly on her knee, smiled at him breathlessly.
+
+"I don't suppose you will ever know what you have done for me. I could
+never adequately express my deep, deep gratitude to you----"
+
+"But--I am doing nothing except shipping back an overcoat----"
+
+"Ah--if you only knew what you really are doing for me! You are helping
+me in the direst hour of need I ever knew. You are aiding me to regain
+control over my own destiny! You are standing by me in the nick of time,
+sheltering me, encouraging me, giving me a moment's respite until I can
+become mistress of my own fate once more."
+
+The girl had ended with a warmth, earnestness and emotion which she
+seemed to be unable to control. Evidently she had been very much shaken,
+and in the blessed relief from the strain the reaction was gathering
+intensity.
+
+They sat in silence for a few moments; then she looked up, nervously
+twisting her gloved fingers.
+
+"I am sorry," she said in a low voice, "not to exhibit reticence and
+proper self-control before a--a stranger.... But I--I have been--rather
+badly--frightened."
+
+"Nothing need frighten you now," he said.
+
+"I thought so, too. I thought that as soon as I left New York it would
+be all right. But--but the first thing I saw in my stateroom was _that_
+overcoat! And the next thing that occurred was--was almost--stupefying.
+Until I boarded this milk-train, I think I must have been almost
+irresponsible from sheer fright."
+
+"What frightened you?" he asked, trembling internally.
+
+"I--I can't tell you. It would do no good. You could not help me."
+
+"Yet you say I have already aided you."
+
+"Yes.... That is true.... And you _will_ send that overcoat back, won't
+you?"
+
+"Yes," he said. "To remember it, I'd better put it on, I think."
+
+The southern night had turned chilly, and he was glad to bundle into his
+own overcoat again.
+
+"From where will you ship it?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"From Ormond----"
+
+"Please don't!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because," she said desperately, "the owner of that coat might trace it
+to Ormond and--and come down there."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+She paled and clasped her hands tighter:
+
+"I--I thought--I had every reason to believe that he was in New York.
+B-but he isn't. He is in St. Augustine!"
+
+"You evidently don't wish to meet him."
+
+"No--oh, no, I don't wish to meet him--ever!"
+
+"Oh. Am I to understand that this--this _fellow_," he said fiercely, "is
+_following_ you?"
+
+"I don't know--oh, I really don't know," she said, her blue eyes wide
+with apprehension. "All I know is that I do not desire to see him--or to
+have him see me.... He _must_ not see me; it must not be--it _shall_ not
+be! I--it's a very terrible thing;--I don't know exactly what I'm--I'm
+fighting against--because it's--it's simply too dreadful----"
+
+Emotion checked her, and for a moment she covered her eyes with her
+gloved hands, sitting in silence.
+
+"Can't I help you?" he asked gently.
+
+She dropped her hands and stared at him.
+
+"I don't know. Do you think you could? It all seems so--like a bad
+dream. I'll have to tell you about it if you are to help me--won't I?"
+
+"If you think it best," he said with an inward quiver.
+
+"That's it. I don't know whether it _is_ best to ask your advice. Yet, I
+don't know exactly what else to do," she added in a bewildered way,
+passing one hand slowly over her eyes. "Shall I tell you?"
+
+"Perhaps you'd better."
+
+"I think I will!... I--I left New York in a panic at a few moments'
+notice. I thought I'd go to Ormond and hide there for a while, and then,
+if--if matters looked threatening, I could go to Miami and take a
+steamer for the West Indies, and from there--if necessary--I could go to
+Brazil----"
+
+"But _why_?" he demanded, secretly terrified at his own question.
+
+She looked at him blankly a moment: "Oh; I forgot. It--it all began
+without any warning; and instantly I began to run away."
+
+"From what?"
+
+"From--from the owner of that overcoat!"
+
+"Who is he?"
+
+"His name," she said resolutely, "is George Z. Green. And I am running
+away from him.... And I am afraid you'll think it very odd when I tell
+you that although I am running away from him I do not know him, and I
+have never seen him."
+
+"Wh-what is the matter with him?" inquired Green, with a sickly attempt
+at smiling.
+
+"He wants to marry me!" she exclaimed indignantly. "_That_ is what is
+the matter with him."
+
+"Are you sure?" he asked, astounded.
+
+"Perfectly. And the oddest thing of all is that I do not think he has
+ever seen me--or ever even heard of me."
+
+"But how can----"
+
+"I'll tell you. I must tell you now, anyway. It began the evening before
+I left New York. I--I live alone--with a companion--having no parents. I
+gave a dinner dance the evening before I--I ran away;--there was music,
+too; professional dancers;--a crystal-gazing fortune teller--and a lot
+of people--loads of them."
+
+She drew a short, quick breath, and shook her pretty head.
+
+"Everybody's been talking about the Princess Zimbamzim this winter. So I
+had her there.... She--she is uncanny--positively terrifying. A dozen
+women were scared almost ill when they came out of her curtained corner.
+
+"And--and then she demanded me.... I had no belief in such things.... I
+went into that curtained corner, never for one moment dreaming that what
+she might say would matter anything to me.... In ten minutes she had me
+scared and trembling like a leaf.... I didn't want to stay; I wanted to
+go. I--couldn't, somehow. My limbs were stiff--I couldn't control
+them--I couldn't get up! All my will power--was--was paralysed!"
+
+The girl's colour had fled; she looked at Green with wide eyes dark with
+the memory of fear.
+
+"She told me to come to her for an hour's crystal gazing the following
+afternoon. I--I didn't _want_ to go. But I couldn't seem to keep away.
+
+"Then a terrible thing happened. I--I looked into that crystal and I saw
+there--saw with my own eyes--_myself_ being married to a--a perfectly
+strange man! I saw myself as clearly as in a looking glass;--but I could
+see only his back. He--he wore an overcoat--like that one I gave to you
+to send back. Think of it! Married to a man who was wearing an
+_overcoat_!
+
+"And there was a clergyman who looked sleepy, and--and two strangers as
+witnesses--and there was I--_I!_--getting married to this man.... And
+the terrible thing about it was that I looked at him as though I--I
+l-loved him----"
+
+Her emotions overcame her for a moment, but she swallowed desperately,
+lifted her head, and forced herself to continue:
+
+"Then the Princess Zimbamzim began to laugh, very horridly: and I asked
+her, furiously, who that man was. And she said: 'His name seems to be
+George Z. Green; he is a banker and broker; and he lives at 1008-1/2
+Fifth Avenue.'
+
+"'Am _I_ marrying him?' I cried. 'Am _I_ marrying a strange broker who
+wears an overcoat at the ceremony?'
+
+"And she laughed her horrid laugh again and said: 'You certainly are,
+Miss Wiltz. You can not escape it. It is your destiny.'
+
+"'When am I to do it?' I demanded, trembling with fright and
+indignation. And she told me that it was certain to occur within either
+three months or three days.... And--can you imagine my n-natural
+feelings of horror--and repugnance? Can you not now understand the panic
+that seized me--when there, all the time in the crystal, I could
+actually see myself doing what that dreadful woman prophesied?"
+
+"I don't blame you for running," he said, stunned.
+
+"I do not blame myself. I ran. I fled, distracted, from that terrible
+house! I left word for my maid to pack and follow me to Ormond. I caught
+the first train I could catch. For the next three months I propose to
+continue my flight if--if necessary. And I fear it will be necessary."
+
+"Finding his overcoat in your stateroom must have been a dreadful shock
+to you," he said, pityingly.
+
+"Imagine! But when, not an hour ago, I saw his name on the register at
+the Hotel Royal Orchid--_directly under my name!_--can you--oh, can you
+imagine my utter terror?"
+
+Her voice broke and she leaned up against the side of the car, so white,
+so quivering, so utterly demoralised by fear, that, alarmed, he took her
+trembling hands firmly in his.
+
+"You mustn't give way," he said. "This won't do. You must show courage."
+
+"How can I show courage when I'm f-frightened?"
+
+"You must not be frightened, because--because I am going to stand by
+you. I am going to stand by you very firmly. I am going to see this
+matter through."
+
+"Are you? It is so--so kind of you--so good--so generous.... Because
+it's uncanny enough to frighten even a man. You see we don't know what
+we're fighting. We're threatened by--by the occult! By unseen
+f-forces.... _How_ could that man be in St. Augustine?"
+
+He drew a long breath. "I am going to tell you something.... May I?"
+
+She turned in silence to look at him. Something in his eyes disturbed
+her, and he felt her little, gloved hands tighten spasmodically within
+his own.
+
+"It isn't anything to frighten you," he said. "It may even relieve you.
+Shall I tell you?"
+
+Her lips formed a voiceless word of consent.
+
+"Then I'll tell you.... I know George Z. Green."
+
+"W-what?"
+
+"I know him very well. He is--is an exceedingly--er--nice fellow."
+
+"But I don't care! I'm not going to marry him!... Am I? Do you think I
+am?"
+
+And she fell a-trembling so violently that, alarmed, he drew her to his
+shoulder, soothing her like a child, explaining that in the twentieth
+century no girl was going to marry anybody against her will.
+
+Like a child she cowered against him, her hands tightening within his.
+The car swayed and rattled on its clanging trucks; the feeble lamp
+glimmered.
+
+"If I thought," she said, "that George Z. Green was destined to marry me
+under such outrageous and humiliating circumstances, I--I believe I
+would marry the first decent man I encountered--merely to confound the
+Princess Zimbamzim--and every wicked crystal-gazer in the world! I--I
+simply hate them!"
+
+He said: "Then you believe in them."
+
+"How can I help it? Look at me! Look at me here, in full light--asking
+protection of you!... And I don't care! I--think I am becoming more
+angry than--than frightened. I think it is your kindness that has given
+me courage. Somehow, I feel safe with you. I am sure that I can rely on
+you; can't I?"
+
+"Yes," he said miserably.
+
+"I was very sure I could when I saw you sitting there on the platform
+before the milk-train came in.... I don't know how it was--I was not
+afraid to speak to you.... Something about you made me confident.... I
+said to myself, 'He is _good_! I _know_ it!' And so I spoke to you."
+
+Conscience was tearing him inwardly to shreds, as the fox tore the
+Spartan. How could he pose as the sort of man she believed him to be,
+and endure the self-contempt now almost overwhelming him?
+
+"I--I'm not good," he blurted out, miserably.
+
+She turned and looked at him seriously for a moment. Then, for the first
+time aware of his arm encircling her, and her hands in his, she
+flushed brightly and freed herself, straightening up in her little
+wooden chair.
+
+"You need not tell me that," she said. "I _know_ you _are_ good."
+
+"As a m-matter of f-fact," he stammered. "I'm a scoundrel!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"I can't bear to have you know it--b-but I am!"
+
+"_How_ can you say that?--when you've been so perfectly sweet to me?"
+she exclaimed.
+
+And after a moment's silence she laughed deliciously.
+
+"Only to look at you is enough," she said, "for a girl to feel absolute
+confidence in you."
+
+"Do you feel that?"
+
+"I?... Yes.... Yes, I do. I would trust you without hesitation. I have
+trusted you, have I not? And after all, it is not so strange. You are
+the sort of man to whom I am accustomed. We are both of the same sort."
+
+"No," he said gloomily, "I'm really a pariah."
+
+"You! Why do you say such things, after you have been so--perfectly
+charming to a frightened girl?"
+
+"I'm a pariah," he repeated. "I'm a social outcast! I--I know it, now."
+And he leaned his head wearily on both palms.
+
+The girl looked at him in consternation.
+
+"Are _you_ unhappy?" she asked.
+
+"Wretched."
+
+"Oh," she said softly, "I didn't know that.... I am so sorry.... And to
+think that you took all _my_ troubles on your shoulders, too,--burdened
+with your own! I--I _knew_ you were that kind of man," she added warmly.
+
+He only shook his head, face buried in his hands.
+
+"I am _so_ sorry," she repeated gently. "Would it help you if you told
+me?"
+
+He did not answer.
+
+"Because," she said sweetly, "it would make me very happy if I could be
+of even the very slightest use to you!"
+
+No response.
+
+"Because you have been so kind."
+
+No response.
+
+"--And so p-pleasant and c-cordial and----"
+
+No response.
+
+She looked at the young fellow who sat there with head bowed in his
+hands; and her blue eyes grew wistful.
+
+"Are you in physical pain?"
+
+"Mental," he said in a muffled voice.
+
+"I am sorry. Don't you believe that I am?" she asked pitifully.
+
+"You would not be sorry if you knew why I am suffering," he muttered.
+
+"How _can_ you say that?" she exclaimed warmly. "Do you think I am
+ungrateful? Do you think I am insensible to delicate and generous
+emotions? Do you suppose I could ever forget what you have done for me?"
+
+"Suppose," he said in a muffled voice, "I turned out to be a--a
+villain?"
+
+"You couldn't!"
+
+"Suppose it were true that I am one?"
+
+She said, with the warmth of total inexperience with villains, "What you
+have been to me is only what concerns me. You have been good, generous,
+noble! And I--like you."
+
+"You must not like me."
+
+"I _do_! I do like you! I shall continue to do so--always----"
+
+"You can not!"
+
+"What? Indeed I can! I like you very much. I defy you to prevent me!"
+
+"I don't want to prevent you--but you mustn't do it."
+
+She sat silent for a moment. Then her lip trembled.
+
+"Why may I not like you?" she asked unsteadily.
+
+"I am not worth it."
+
+He didn't know it, but he had given her the most fascinating answer that
+a man can give a young girl.
+
+"If you are not worth it," she said tremulously, "you can become so."
+
+"No, I never can."
+
+"Why do you say that? No matter what a man has done--a young man--such
+as you--he can become worthy again of a girl's friendship--if he wishes
+to."
+
+"I never could become worthy of yours."
+
+"Why? What have you done? I don't care anyway. If you--if you want
+my--my friendship you can have it."
+
+"No," he groaned, "I am sunk too low to even dream of it! You don't
+know--you don't know what you're saying. I am beyond the pale!"
+
+He clutched his temples and shuddered. For a moment she gazed at him
+piteously, then her timid hand touched his arm.
+
+"I can't bear to see you in despair," she faltered, "--you who have been
+so good to me. Please don't be unhappy--because--I want you to be
+happy----"
+
+"I can never be that."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because--I am in love!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"With a girl who--hates me."
+
+"Oh," she said faintly. Then the surprise in her eyes faded vaguely into
+wistfulness, and into something almost tender as she gazed at his bowed
+head.
+
+"Any girl," she said, scarcely knowing what she was saying, "who could
+not love such a man as you is an absolutely negligible quantity."
+
+His hands fell from his face and he sat up.
+
+"Could _you_?"
+
+"What?" she said, not understanding.
+
+"Could you do what--what I--mentioned just now?"
+
+She looked curiously at him for a moment, not comprehending. Suddenly a
+rose flush stained her face.
+
+"I don't think you mean to say that to me," she said quietly.
+
+"Yes," he said, "I do mean to say it.... Because, since I first saw you,
+I have--have dared to--to be in love with you."
+
+"With _me_! We--you have not known me an hour!"
+
+"I have known you three days."
+
+"What?"
+
+"_I_ am George Z. Green!"
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+Minute after minute throbbed in silence, timed by the loud rhythm of the
+roaring wheels. He did not dare lift his head to look at her, though her
+stillness scared him. Awful and grotesque thoughts assailed him. He
+wondered whether she had survived the blow--and like an assassin he
+dared not look to see what he had done, but crouched there, overwhelmed
+with misery such as he never dreamed that a human heart could endure.
+
+A century seemed to have passed before, far ahead, the locomotive
+whistled warningly for the Ormond station.
+
+He understood what it meant, and clutched his temples, striving to
+gather courage sufficient to lift his head and face her blazing
+contempt--or her insensible and inanimate but beautiful young form lying
+in a merciful faint on the floor of the baggage car.
+
+And at last he lifted his head.
+
+She had risen and was standing by the locked side doors, touching her
+eye-lashes with her handkerchief.
+
+When he rose, the train was slowing down. Presently the baggage master
+came in, yawning; the side doors were unbolted and flung back as the car
+glided along a high, wooden platform.
+
+They were standing side by side now; she did not look at him, but when
+the car stopped she laid her hand lightly on his arm.
+
+Trembling in every fibre, he drew the little, gloved hand through his
+arm and aided her to descend.
+
+"Are you unhappy?" he whispered tremulously.
+
+"No.... What are we to do?"
+
+"Am I to say?"
+
+"Yes," she said faintly.
+
+"Shall I register as your brother?"
+
+She blushed and looked at him in a lovely and distressed way.
+
+"What _are_ we to do?" she faltered.
+
+They entered the main hall of the great hotel at that moment, and she
+turned to look around her.
+
+"Oh!" she exclaimed, clutching his arm. "Do you see that man? Do you
+_see_ him?"
+
+"Which man--dearest?----"
+
+"_That_ one over there! That is the clergyman I saw in the crystal. Oh,
+dear! Oh, dear! Is it going to come true right away?"
+
+"I think it is," he said. "Are you afraid?"
+
+She drew a deep, shuddering breath, lifted her eyes to his:
+
+"N-no," she said.
+
+Ten minutes later it was being done around the corner of the great
+veranda, where nobody was. The moon glimmered on the Halifax; the
+palmettos sighed in the chilly sea-wind; the still, night air was
+scented with orange bloom and the odour of the sea.
+
+He wore his overcoat, and he used the plain, gold band which had
+decorated his little finger. The clergyman was brief and businesslike;
+the two clerks made dignified witnesses.
+
+When it was done, and they were left alone, standing on the moonlit
+veranda, he said:
+
+"Shall we send a present to the Princess Zimbamzim?"
+
+"Yes.... A beautiful one."
+
+He drew her to him; she laid both hands on his shoulders. When he
+kissed her, her face was cold and white as marble.
+
+"Are you afraid?" he whispered.
+
+The marble flushed pink.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"That," said Stafford, "was certainly quick action. Ten minutes is a
+pretty short time for Fate to begin business."
+
+"Fate," remarked Duane, "once got busy with me inside of ten seconds."
+He looked at Athalie.
+
+"_Ut solent poetae_," she rejoined, calmly.
+
+I said: "_Verba placent et vox, et quod corrumpere non est; Quoque minor
+spes est, hoc magis ille cupit_."
+
+In a low voice Duane replied to me, looking at her: "_Vera incessu
+patuit Dea_."
+
+Slowly the girl blushed, lowering her dark eyes to the green jade god
+resting in the rosy palm of her left hand.
+
+"Physician, cure thyself," muttered Stafford, slowly twisting a
+cigarette to shreds in his nervous hands.
+
+I rose, walked over to the small marble fountain and looked down at the
+sleeping goldfish. Here and there from the dusky magnificence of their
+colour a single scale glittered like a living spark under water.
+
+"Are you preaching to them?" asked Athalie, raising her eyes from the
+green god in her palm.
+
+"No matter where a man turns his eyes," said I, "they may not long
+remain undisturbed by the vision of gold. I was not preaching, Athalie;
+I was reflecting upon my poverty."
+
+"It is an incurable ailment," said somebody; "the millionaire knows it;
+the gods themselves suffered from it. From the bleaching carcass of the
+peon to the mausoleum of the emperor, the world's highway winds through
+its victims' graves."
+
+"Athalie," said I, "is it possible for you to look into your crystal and
+discover hidden treasure?"
+
+"Not for my own benefit."
+
+"For others?"
+
+"I have done it."
+
+"Could you locate a few millions for us?" inquired the novelist.
+
+"Yes, widely distributed among you. Your right hand is heavy as gold;
+your brain jingles with it."
+
+"I do not write for money," he said bluntly.
+
+"That is why," she said, smiling and placing a sweetmeat between her
+lips.
+
+I had the privilege of lighting a match for her.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+When the tip of her cigarette glowed rosy in the pearl-tinted gloom, the
+shadowy circle at her feet drew a little nearer.
+
+"This is the story of Valdez," she said. "Listen attentively, you who
+hunger!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the first day it rained torrents; the light was very dull in the
+galleries; fashion kept away. Only a few monomaniacs braved the weather,
+left dripping mackintoshes and umbrellas in the coat room, and spent the
+dull March morning in mousing about among the priceless treasures on
+view to those who had cards of admission. The sale was to take place
+three days later. Heikem was the auctioneer.
+
+The collection to be disposed of was the celebrated library of Professor
+Octavo de Folio--a small one; but it was composed almost exclusively of
+rarities. A million and a half had been refused by the heirs, who
+preferred to take chances at auction.
+
+And there were Caxtons, first edition Shakespeares, illuminated
+manuscripts, volumes printed privately for various kings and queens,
+bound sketch books containing exquisite aquarelles and chalk drawings by
+Bargue, Fortuny, Drouais, Boucher, John Downman; there were autographed
+monographs in manuscript; priceless order books of revolutionary
+generals, private diaries kept by men and women celebrated and notorious
+the world over.
+
+But the heirs apparently preferred yachts and automobiles.
+
+The library was displayed in locked glass cases, an attendant seated by
+each case, armed with a key and discretionary powers.
+
+From where James White sat beside his particular case, he had a view of
+the next case and of the young girl seated beside it.
+
+She was very pretty. No doubt, being out of a job, like himself, she
+was glad to take this temporary position. She was so pretty she made his
+head ache. Or it might have been the ventilation.
+
+It rained furiously; a steady roar on the glass roof overhead filled the
+long and almost empty gallery of Mr. Heikem, the celebrated auctioneer,
+with a monotone as dull and incessant as the business voice of that
+great man.
+
+Here and there a spectacled old gentleman nosed his way from case to
+case, making at intervals cabalistic pencil marks on the margin of his
+catalogue--which specimen of compiled literature alone cost five
+dollars.
+
+It was a very dull day for James White, and also, apparently, for the
+pretty girl in charge of the adjoining case. Nobody even asked either of
+them to unlock the cases; and it began to appear to young White that the
+books and manuscripts confided to his charge were not by any means the
+_chefs-d'oeuvre_ of the collection.
+
+They were a dingy looking lot of books, anyway. He glanced over the
+private list furnished him, read the titles, histories and pedigrees of
+the volumes, stifled a yawn, fidgetted in his chair, stared at the
+rain-battered glass roof overhead, mused lightly upon his misfortunes,
+shrugged his broad shoulders, and glanced at the girl across the aisle.
+
+She also was reading her private list. It seemed to bore her.
+
+He looked at her as long as decency permitted, then gazed elsewhere. She
+was exceedingly pretty in her way, red haired, white skinned; and her
+eyes seemed to be a very lovely Sevres blue. Except in porcelain he
+thought he had never seen anything as dainty. He knew perfectly well
+that he could very easily fall in love with her. Also he knew he'd never
+have the opportunity.
+
+Duller and duller grew the light; louder roared the March rain. Even
+monomaniacs no longer came into the galleries, and the half dozen who
+had arrived left by luncheon time.
+
+When it was White's turn to go out to lunch, he went to Childs' and
+returned in half an hour. Then the girl across the aisle went
+out--probably to a similar and sumptuous banquet. She came back very
+shortly, reseated herself, and glanced around the empty galleries.
+
+There seemed to be absolutely nothing for anybody to do, except to sit
+there and listen to the rain.
+
+White pondered on his late failure in affairs. Recently out of Yale, and
+more recently still established in business, he had gone down in the
+general slump, lacking sufficient capital to tide him over. His
+settlement with his creditors left him with fifteen hundred dollars. He
+was now waiting for an opportunity to invest it in an enterprise. He
+believed in enterprises. Also, he was firmly convinced that Opportunity
+knocked no more than once in a lifetime, and he was always cocking his
+ear to catch the first timid rap. It was knocking then but he did not
+hear it, for it was no louder than the gentle beating of his red-haired
+neighbour's heart.
+
+But Opportunity is a jolly jade. She knocks every little while--but one
+must possess good hearing.
+
+Having nothing better to do as he sat there, White drifted into mental
+speculation--that being the only sort available.
+
+He dreamed of buying a lot in New York for fifteen hundred dollars and
+selling it a few years later for fifty thousand. He had a well developed
+imagination; wonderful were the lucky strikes he made in these day
+dreams; marvellous the financial returns. He was a very Napoleon of
+finance when he was dozing. Many are.
+
+The girl across the aisle also seemed to be immersed in day dreams. Her
+Sevres blue eyes had become vague; her listless little hands lay in her
+lap unstirring. She was pleasant to look at.
+
+After an hour or so it was plain to White that she had had enough of her
+dreams. She sighed very gently, straightened up in her chair, looked at
+the rain-swept roof, patted a yawn into modest suppression, and gazed
+about her with speculative and engaging eyes.
+
+Then, as though driven to desperation, she turned, looked into the glass
+case beside her for a few minutes, and then, fitting her key to the
+door, opened it, selected a volume at hazard, and composed herself to
+read.
+
+For a while White watched her lazily, but presently with more interest,
+as her features gradually grew more animated and her attention seemed to
+be concentrated on the book.
+
+As the minutes passed it became plain to White that the girl found the
+dingy little volume exceedingly interesting. And after a while she
+appeared to be completely absorbed in it; her blue eyes were rivetted on
+the pages; her face was flushed, her sensitive lips expressive of the
+emotion that seemed to be possessing her more and more.
+
+White wondered what this book might be which she found so breathlessly
+interesting. It was small, dingy, bound in warped covers of old
+leather, and anything but beautiful. And by and by he caught a glimpse
+of the title--"The Journal of Pedro Valdez."
+
+The title, somehow, seemed to be familiar to him; he glanced into his
+own case, and after a few minutes' searching he caught sight of another
+copy of the same book, dingy, soiled, leather-bound, unlovely.
+
+He looked over his private list until he found it. And this is what he
+read concerning it:
+
+ _Valdez, Pedro--Journal of. Translated by Thomas Bangs, of
+ Philadelphia, in 1760. With map. Two copies, much worn and
+ damaged by water. Several pages missing from each book._
+
+ Pedro Valdez was a soldier of fortune serving with Cortez in
+ Mexico and with De Soto in Florida. Nothing more is known of
+ him, except that he perished somewhere in the semi-tropical
+ forests of America.
+
+ Thomas Bangs, an Englishman, pretended to have discovered and
+ translated the journal kept by Valdez. After the journal had
+ been translated--if, indeed, such a document ever really
+ existed--Bangs pretended that it was accidentally destroyed.
+
+ Bangs' translation and map are considered to be works of pure
+ imagination. They were published from manuscript after the
+ death of the author.
+
+ Bangs died in St. Augustine of yellow fever, about 1760-61,
+ while preparing for an exploring expedition into the Florida
+ wilderness.
+
+Mildly edified, White glanced again at the girl across the aisle, and
+was surprised to see how her interest in the volume had altered her
+features. Tense, breathless, utterly absorbed in the book, she bent over
+the faded print, leaning close, for the sickly light that filtered
+through the glass roof scarcely illumined the yellow pages at all.
+
+The curiosity of White was now aroused; he opened the glass case beside
+him, fished out his copy of the book, opened it, and began to read.
+
+For the first few minutes his interest was anything but deep: he read
+the well-known pages where Bangs recounts how he discovered the journal
+of Valdez--and it sounded exceedingly fishy--a rather poorly written
+fairy-tale done by a man with little invention and less imagination, so
+worn out, hackneyed and trite were the incidents, so obvious the
+coincidences.
+
+White shrugged his shoulders and turned from the preface to what
+purported to be the translation.
+
+Almost immediately it struck him that this part of the book was not
+written by the same man. Here was fluency, elegance of expression,
+ease, the simplicity of a soldier who had something to say and but a
+short time in which to say it. Even the apparent clumsiness of the
+translation had not deformed the work.
+
+Little by little the young man became intensely interested, then
+absorbed. And after a while the colour came into his face; he glanced
+nervously around him; suppressed excitement made his hands unsteady as
+he unfolded the enclosed map.
+
+From time to time he referred to the map as he read; the rain roared on
+the glass roof; the light grew dimmer and dimmer.
+
+At five o'clock the galleries closed for the day. And that evening,
+sitting in his hall-bedroom, White made up his mind that he must buy
+"The Journal of Valdez" if it took every penny that remained to him.
+
+The next day was fair and cold; fashion graced the Octavo de Folio
+exhibition; White had no time to re-read any passages or to re-examine
+the map, because people were continually asking to see and handle the
+books in his case.
+
+Across the aisle he noticed that his pretty neighbour was similarly
+occupied. And he was rather glad, because he felt, vaguely, that it was
+just as well she did not occupy her time in reading "The Journal of
+Valdez." Girls usually have imagination. The book might stir her up as
+it had stirred him. And to no purpose.
+
+Also, he was glad that nobody asked to look at the Valdez copy in his
+own case. He didn't want people to look at it. There were reasons--among
+others, he wanted to buy it himself. He meant to if fifteen hundred
+dollars would buy it.
+
+White had not the remotest idea what the book might bring at auction. He
+dared not inquire whether the volume was a rare one, dreading even to
+call the attention of his fellow employees to it. A word _might_ arouse
+their curiosity.
+
+All day long he attended to his duties there, and at five he went home,
+highly excited, determined to arrive at the galleries next morning in
+time enough to read the book a little before the first of the public
+came.
+
+And he did get there very early. The only other employee who had arrived
+before him was the red-haired girl. She sat by her case reading "The
+Journal of Valdez." Once she looked up at him with calm, clear,
+intelligent eyes. He did not see her; he hastily unlocked his case and
+drew out the coveted book. Then he sat down and began to devour it. And
+so utterly and instantly was he lost amid those yellow, time-faded
+pages that he did not even glance across the aisle at his ornamental
+neighbour. If he had looked he would have noticed that she also was
+buried in "The Journal of Valdez." And it might have made him a trifle
+uneasy to see her look from her book to him and from him to the volume
+he was perusing so excitedly.
+
+It being the last day that the library was to be on view before the
+sale, fashion and monomania rubbed elbows in the Heikem Galleries,
+crowding the well known salons morning and afternoon. And all day long
+White and his neighbour across the aisle were busy taking out books and
+manuscripts for inspection, so that they had no time for luncheon, and
+less for Valdez.
+
+And that night they were paid off and dismissed; and the auctioneer and
+his corps of assistants took charge.
+
+The sale took place the following morning and afternoon. White drew from
+the bank his fifteen hundred dollars, breakfasted on bread and milk, and
+went to the galleries more excited than he had ever been before in his
+long life of twenty-three years. And that is some time.
+
+It was a long shot at Fortune he meant to take--a really desperate
+chance. One throw would settle it--win or lose. And the idea scared him
+badly, and he was trembling a little when he took his seat amid the
+perfumed gowns of fashion and the white whiskers of high finance, and
+the shabby vestments of monomania.
+
+Once or twice he wondered whether he was crazy. Yet, every throb of his
+fast-beating heart seemed to summon him to do and dare; and he felt,
+without even attempting to explain the feeling to himself, that now at
+last Opportunity was loudly rapping at his door, and that if he did not
+let her in he would regret it as long as he lived.
+
+As he glanced fearfully about him he caught sight of his pretty
+neighbour who had held sway across the aisle. So she, too, had come to
+watch the sale! Probably for the excitement of hearing an auctioneer
+talk in thousands.
+
+He was a little surprised, nevertheless, for she did not look
+bookish--nor even intellectual enough to mar her prettiness. Yet,
+wherever she went she would look adorable. He understood that, now.
+
+It was a day of alarms for him, of fears, shocks, and frights
+innumerable. With terror he heard the auctioneer talking in terms of
+thousands; with horror he witnessed the bids on certain books advance by
+thousands at a clip. Five thousand, ten thousand, twenty thousand were
+bid, seen, raised, called, hiked, until his head spun and despair
+seized him.
+
+What did he know about Valdez? Either volume might bring fifty thousand
+dollars for all he knew. Had he fifty thousand he felt, somehow, that he
+would have bid it to the last penny for the book. And he came to the
+conclusion that he was really crazy. Yet there he sat, glued to his
+chair, listening, shuddering, teeth alternately chattering or grimly
+locked, while the very air seemed to reek of millions, and the incessant
+gabble of the auctioneer drove him almost out of his wits.
+
+Nearer and nearer approached the catalogued numbers of the two copies of
+Valdez; pale and desperate he sat there, his heart almost suffocating
+him as the moment drew near. And now the time had come; now the
+celebrated Mr. Heikem began his suave preliminary chatter; now he was
+asking confidently for a bid.
+
+A silence ensued--and whether it was the silence of awe at the priceless
+treasure or the silence of indifference White did not know. But after
+the auctioneer had again asked for a bid he found his voice and offered
+ten dollars. His ears were scarlet when he did it.
+
+"Fifteen," said a sweet but tremulous voice not far from White, and he
+looked around in astonishment. It was his red-haired vis-a-vis.
+
+"Twenty!" he retorted, still labouring under his astonishment.
+
+"Twenty-five!" came the same sweet voice.
+
+There was a silence. No other voices said anything. Evidently nobody
+wanted Valdez except himself and his red-haired neighbour.
+
+"Thirty!" he called out at the psychological moment.
+
+The girl turned in her chair and looked at him. She seemed to be
+unusually pale.
+
+"Thirty-five!" she said, still gazing at White in a frightened sort of
+way.
+
+"Forty," he said; rose at the same moment and walked over to where the
+girl was sitting.
+
+She looked up at him as he bent over her chair; both were very serious.
+
+"You and I are the only two people bidding," he said. "There are two
+copies of the book. Don't bid against me and you can buy in the other
+one for next to nothing--judging from the course this one is taking."
+
+"Very well," she said quietly.
+
+A moment later the first copy of Valdez was knocked down to James White.
+An indifferent audience paid little attention to the transaction.
+
+Two minutes later the second copy fell to Miss Jean Sandys for five
+dollars--there being no other bidder.
+
+White had already left the galleries. Lingering at the entrance he saw
+Miss Sandys pass him, and he lifted his hat. The slightest inclination
+of her pretty head acknowledged it. The next moment they were lost to
+each other's view in the crowded street.
+
+Clutching his battered book to his chest, not even daring to drop it
+into his overcoat for fear of pickpockets, the young fellow started up
+Broadway at a swinging pace which presently brought him to the offices
+of the Florida Spanish Grants Company; and here, at his request, he was
+ushered into a private room; a map of Seminole County spread on the
+highly polished table before him, and a suave gentleman placed at his
+disposal.
+
+"Florida," volunteered the suave gentleman, "is the land of perpetual
+sunshine--the land of milk and honey, as it were, the land of the
+orange----"
+
+"One moment, please," said White.
+
+"Sir?"
+
+They looked at each other for a second or two, then White smiled:
+
+"I don't want dope," he said pleasantly, "I merely want a few facts--if
+your company deals in them."
+
+"Florida," began the suave gentleman, watching the effect of his words,
+"is the garden of the world." Then he stopped, discouraged, for White
+was grinning at him.
+
+"It won't do," said White amiably.
+
+"No?" queried the suave gentleman, the ghost of a grin on his own smooth
+countenance.
+
+"No, it won't do. Now, if you will restrain your very natural enthusiasm
+and let me ask a few questions----"
+
+"Go ahead," said the suave gentleman, whose name was Munsell. "But I
+don't believe we have anything to suit you in Seminole County."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," returned White coolly, "is it _all_ under water?"
+
+"There are a few shell mounds. The highest is nearly ten inches above
+water. We call them hills."
+
+"I might wish to acquire one of those mountain ranges," remarked White
+seriously.
+
+After a moment they both laughed.
+
+"Are you in the game yourself?" inquired Mr. Munsell.
+
+"Well, my game is a trifle different."
+
+"Oh. Do you care to be more explicit?"
+
+White shook his head:
+
+"No; what's the use? But I'll say this: it isn't the 'Perpetual Sunshine
+and Orange Grove' game, or how to become a millionaire in three years."
+
+"No?" grinned Munsell, lifting his expressive eyebrows.
+
+White bent over the map for a few moments.
+
+"Here," he said carelessly, "is the Spanish Causeway and the Coakachee
+River. It's all swamp and jungle, I suppose--although I see you have it
+plotted into orange groves, truck gardens, pineapple plantations, and
+villas."
+
+Munsell made a last but hopeless effort. "Some day," he began, with
+dignity--but White's calm wink discouraged further attempts. Then the
+young man tapped with his pencil lots numbered from 200 to 210, slowly,
+going over them again for emphasis.
+
+"Are those what you want?" asked Munsell.
+
+"Those are what I want."
+
+"All right. Only I can't give you 210."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Yesterday a party took a strip along the Causeway including half of 210
+up to 220."
+
+"Can't I get all of 210?"
+
+"I'll ask the party. Where can I address you?"
+
+White stood up. "Have everything ready Tuesday. I'll be in with the
+cash."
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+
+And on Tuesday he kept his word and the land was his for a few hundred
+dollars--all except the half of Lot No. 210, which it appeared the
+"party" declined to sell, refusing to consider any profit whatever.
+
+"It's like a woman," remarked Munsell.
+
+"Is your 'party' a woman?"
+
+"Yes. I guess she's into some game or other, too. Say, what is this
+Seminole County game, Mr. White?--if you don't mind my asking, now that
+you have taken title to your--h'm!--orange grove."
+
+"Why do you think there is any particular game afoot?" inquired the
+young man curiously.
+
+"Oh, come! _You_ know what you're buying. And that young lady knew, too.
+You've both bought a few acres of cypress swamp and you know it. What do
+you think is in it?"
+
+"Snakes," said White coolly.
+
+"Oh, _I_ know," said Munsell. "You think there's marl and phosphoric
+rock."
+
+"And isn't there?" asked White innocently.
+
+"How should _I_ know?" replied Munsell as innocently; the inference
+being that he knew perfectly well that there was nothing worth
+purchasing in the Causeway swamp.
+
+But when White went away he was a trifle worried, and he wondered
+uneasily why anybody else at that particular time should happen to
+invest in swampy real estate along the Spanish Causeway.
+
+He knew the Spanish Causeway. In youthful and prosperous days, when his
+parents were alive, they had once wintered at Verbena Inlet.
+
+And on several occasions he had been taken on excursions to the
+so-called Spanish Causeway--a dike-shaped path, partly ruined, made of
+marl and shell, which traversed the endless swamps of Seminole County,
+and was supposed to have been built by De Soto and his Spaniards.
+
+But whoever built it, Spaniard, Seminole, or the prehistoric people
+antedating both, there it still was, a ruined remnant of highway
+penetrating the otherwise impassable swamps.
+
+For miles across the wilderness of cypress, palmetto, oak, and depthless
+mud it stretched--a crumbling but dry runway for deer, panther, bear,
+black wolf, and Seminole. And excursion parties from the great hotels at
+Verbena often picnicked at its intersection with the forest road, but
+ventured no farther along the dismal, forbidding, and snake-infested
+ridge which ran anywhere between six inches and six feet above the level
+of the evil-looking marsh flanking it on either side.
+
+In the care-free days of school, of affluence, and of youth, White had
+been taken to gaze upon this alleged relic of Spanish glory. He now
+remembered it very clearly.
+
+And that night, aboard the luxurious Verbena Special, he lay in his bunk
+and dreamed dreams awake, which almost overwhelmed him with their
+magnificence. But when he slept his dreams were uneasy, interspersed
+with vague visions of women who came in regiments through flowering
+jungles to drive him out of his own property. It was a horrid sort of
+nightmare, for they pelted him with iron-bound copies of Valdez,
+knocking him almost senseless into the mud. And it seemed to him that he
+might have perished there had not his little red-haired neighbour
+extended a slender, helping hand in the nick of time.
+
+Dreaming of her he awoke, still shaking with the experience. And all
+that day he read in his book and pored over the map attached to it,
+until the locomotive whistled for St. Augustine, and he was obliged to
+disembark for the night.
+
+However, next morning he was on his way to Verbena, the train flying
+through a steady whirlwind of driving sand. And everywhere in the
+sunshine stretched the flat-woods, magnificently green--endless miles of
+pine and oak and palmetto, set with brilliant glades of vast, flat
+fields of wild phlox over which butterflies hovered.
+
+At Verbena Station he disembarked with his luggage, which consisted of a
+complete tropical camping outfit, tinned food, shot-gun, rifle, rods,
+spade, shovel, pick, crow. In his hand he carried an innocent looking
+satchel, gingerly. It contained dynamite in sticks, and the means to
+explode it safely.
+
+To a hackman he said: "I'm not going to any hotel. What I want is a
+wagon, a team of mules, and a driver to take me and my outfit to
+Coakachee Creek on the Spanish Causeway. Can you fix it for me?"
+
+The hackman said he could. And in half an hour he drove up in his mule
+wagon to the deserted station, where White sat all alone amid his
+mountainous paraphernalia.
+
+When the wagon had been loaded, and they had been driving through the
+woods for nearly half an hour in silence, the driver's curiosity got the
+better of him, and he ventured to enquire of White why everybody was
+going to the Spanish Causeway.
+
+Which question startled the young man very disagreeably until he learned
+that "everybody" merely meant himself and one other person taken thither
+by the same driver the day before.
+
+Further, he learned that this person was a woman from the North,
+completely equipped for camping as was he. Which made him more uneasy
+than ever, for he of course identified her with Mr. Munsell's client,
+whose land, including half of Lot 210, adjoined his own. Who she might
+be and why she had come down here to Seminole County he could not
+imagine, because Munsell had intimated that she knew what she was
+buying.
+
+No doubt she meant to play a similar game to Munsell's, and had come
+down to take a look at her villainous property before advertising
+possibilities of perpetual sunshine.
+
+Yet, why had she brought a camping outfit? Ordinary land swindlers
+remained comfortably aloof from the worthless property they advertised.
+What was she intending to do there?
+
+Instead of a swindler was she, perhaps, the swindlee? Had she bought
+the property in good faith? Didn't she know it was under water? Had she
+come down here with her pitiful camping equipment prepared to rough it
+and set out orange trees? Poor thing!
+
+"Was she all alone?" he inquired of his cracker driver.
+
+"Yaas, suh."
+
+"Poor thing. Did she seem young and inexperienced?"
+
+"Yaas, suh--'scusin she all has right smart o' red ha'r."
+
+"What?" exclaimed White excitedly. "You say she is young, and that she
+seemed inexperienced, except for her red hair!"
+
+"Yaas, suh. She all has a right smart hank of red ha'r on her haid. I
+ain't never knowed nobody with red ha'r what ain't had a heap mo'
+'sperience than the mostest."
+
+"D-d-did you say that you drove her over to the Spanish Causeway
+yesterday?" stammered the dismayed young man.
+
+"Yaas, suh."
+
+Horrified thoughts filled his mind. For there could be scarcely any
+doubt that this intruder was his red-haired neighbour across the aisle
+at the library sale.
+
+No doubt at all that he already crossed her trail at Munsell's agency.
+Also, she had bid in one of the only two copies of Valdez.
+
+First he had seen her reading it with every symptom of profound
+interest. Then she had gone to the sale and bid in one of the copies.
+Then he had heard from Munsell about a woman who had bought land along
+the Causeway the day before he had made his own purchase.
+
+And now once more he had struck her swift, direct trail, only to learn
+that she was still one day in advance of him!
+
+In his mental panic he remembered that his title was secure. That
+thought comforted him for a few moments, until he began to wonder
+whether the land he had acquired was really sufficient to cover a
+certain section of perhaps half an acre along the Causeway.
+
+According to his calculations he had given himself ample margin in every
+direction, for the spot he desired to control ought to lie somewhere
+about midway between Lot 200 and Lot 210.
+
+Had he miscalculated? Had _she_ miscalculated? Why had she purchased
+that strip from half of Lot 210 to Lot 220?
+
+There could be only one answer: this clever and astoundingly
+enterprising young girl had read Valdez, had decided to take a chance,
+had proved her sporting spirit by backing her judgment, and had started
+straight as an arrow for the terrifying territory in question.
+
+Hers had been first choice of Mr. Munsell's lots; she had deliberately
+chosen the numbers from half of 210 to 220. She was perfectly ignorant
+that he, White, had any serious intentions in Seminole County.
+Therefore, it had been her judgment, based on calculations from the
+Valdez map, that half of Lot 210 and the intervening territory including
+Lot 220, would be ample for her to control a certain spot--the very spot
+which he himself expected to control.
+
+Either he or she had miscalculated. Which?
+
+Dreadfully worried, he sat in silence beside his taciturn driver, gazing
+at the flanking forest through which the white road wound.
+
+The only habitation they passed was fruit-drying ranch No. 7, in the
+wilderness--just this one sunny oasis in the solemn half-light of the
+woods.
+
+White did not remember the road, although when a child he must have
+traversed it to the Causeway. Nor when he came in sight of the Causeway
+did he recognise it, where it ran through a glade of high, silvery
+grass set sparsely with tall palmettos.
+
+But here it was, and the cracker turned his mules into it, swinging
+sharply to the left along Coakachee Creek and proceeding for about two
+miles, where a shell mound enabled him to turn his team.
+
+A wagon could proceed no farther because the crumbling Causeway narrowed
+to a foot-path beyond. So here they unloaded; the cracker rested his
+mules for a while, then said a brief good-bye to White and shook the
+reins.
+
+When he had driven out of sight, White started to drag his tent and
+tent-poles along the dike top toward his own property, which ought to
+lie just ahead--somewhere near the curve that the Causeway made a
+hundred yards beyond. For he had discovered a weather-beaten shingle
+nailed to a water-oak, where he had disembarked his luggage; and on it
+were the remains of the painted number 198.
+
+Lugging tent and poles, he started along the Causeway, keeping a
+respectful eye out for snakes. So intent was he on avoiding the playful
+attentions of rattler or moccasin that it was only when he almost ran
+into it that he discovered another tent pitched directly in his path.
+
+Of course he had expected to find her encamped there on the Causeway,
+but he was surprised, nevertheless, and his tent-poles fell, clattering.
+
+A second later the flap of her tent was pushed aside, and his red-haired
+neighbour of the galleries stepped out, plainly startled.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+
+She seemed to be still more startled when she saw him: her blue eyes
+dilated; the colour which had ebbed came back, suffusing her pretty
+features. But when she recognised him, fear, dismay, astonishment, and
+anxiety blended in swift confusion, leaving her silent, crimson, rooted
+to the spot.
+
+White took off his hat and walked up to where she stood.
+
+"I'm sorry, Miss Sandys," he said. "Only a few hours ago did I learn who
+it was camping here on the Causeway. And--I'm afraid I know why you are
+here.... Because the same reason that brought you started me the next
+day."
+
+She had recovered her composure. She said very gravely:
+
+"I wondered when I saw you reading Valdez whether, by any possibility,
+you might think of coming here. And when you bought the other copy I was
+still more afraid.... But I had already secured an option on my lots."
+
+"I know it," he said, chagrined.
+
+"Were you," she inquired, "the client of Mr. Munsell who tried to buy
+from me the other half of Lot 210?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I wondered. But of course I would not sell it. What lots have you
+bought?"
+
+"I took No. 200 to the northern half of No. 210."
+
+"Why?" she asked, surprised.
+
+"Because," he said, reddening, "my calculations tell me that this gives
+me ample margin."
+
+She looked at him in calm disapproval, shaking her head; but her blue
+eyes softened.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said. "You have miscalculated, Mr. White. The spot lies
+somewhere within the plot numbered from half of 210 to 220."
+
+"I am very much afraid that _you_ have miscalculated, Miss Sandys. I did
+not even attempt to purchase your plot--except half of 210."
+
+"Nor did I even consider _your_ plot, Mr. White," she said sorrowfully,
+"and I had my choice. Really I am very sorry for you, but you have made
+a complete miscalculation."
+
+"I don't see how I could. I worked it out from the Valdez map."
+
+"So did I."
+
+She had the volume under her arm; he had his in his pocket.
+
+"Let me show you," he began, drawing it out and opening it. "Would you
+mind looking at the map for a moment?"
+
+Her dainty head a trifle on one side, she looked over his shoulder as he
+unfolded the map for her.
+
+"Here," he said, plucking a dead grass stem and tracing the Causeway on
+the map, "here lie my lots--including, as you see, the spot marked by
+Valdez with a Maltese cross.... I'm sorry; but how in the world could
+you have made your mistake?"
+
+He turned to glance at the girl and saw her amazement and misunderstood
+it.
+
+"It's too bad," he added, feeling profoundly sorry for her.
+
+"Do you know," she said in a voice quivering with emotion, "that a very
+terrible thing has happened to us?"
+
+"To _us_?"
+
+"To _both_ of us. I--we--oh, please look at my map! It is--it is
+different from yours!"
+
+With nervous fingers she opened the book, spread out the map, and held
+it under his horrified eyes.
+
+"Do you see!" she exclaimed. "According to _this_ map, my lots include
+the Maltese cross of Valdez! I--I--p-please excuse me----" She turned
+abruptly and entered her tent; but he had caught the glimmer of sudden
+tears in her eyes and had seen the pitiful lips trembling.
+
+On his own account he was sufficiently scared; now it flashed upon him
+that this plucky young thing had probably spent her last penny on the
+chance that Bangs had told the truth about "The Journal of Pedro
+Valdez."
+
+That the two maps differed was a staggering blow to him; and his knees
+seemed rather weak at the moment, so he sat down on his unpacked tent
+and dropped his face in his palms.
+
+Lord, what a mess! His last cent was invested; hers, too, no doubt. He
+hadn't even railroad fare North. Probably she hadn't either.
+
+He had gambled and lost. There was scarcely a chance that he had not
+lost. And the same fearful odds were against her.
+
+"The poor little thing!" he muttered, staring at her tent. And after a
+moment he sprang to his feet and walked over to it. The flap was open;
+she sat inside on a camp-chair, her red head in her arms, doubled over
+in an attitude of tragic despair.
+
+"Miss Sandys?"
+
+She looked up hastily, the quick colour dyeing her pale cheeks, her
+long, black lashes glimmering with tears.
+
+"Do you mind talking it over with me?" he asked.
+
+"N-no."
+
+"May I come in?"
+
+"P-please."
+
+He seated himself cross-legged on the threshold.
+
+"There's only one thing to do," he said, "and that is to go ahead. We
+must go ahead. Of course the hazard is against us. Let us face the
+chance that Bangs was only a clever romancer. Well, we've already
+discounted that. Then let us face the discrepancy in our two maps. It's
+bad, I'll admit. It almost knocks the last atom of confidence out of me.
+It has floored you. But you must not take the count. You must get up."
+
+He paused, looking around him with troubled eyes; then somehow the sight
+of her pathetic figure--the soft, helpless youth of her--suddenly
+seemed to prop up his back-bone.
+
+"Miss Sandys, I am going to stand by you anyway! I suppose, like myself,
+you have invested your last dollar in this business?"
+
+"Y-yes."
+
+He glanced at the pick, shovel and spade in the corner of her tent, then
+at her hands.
+
+"Who," he asked politely, "was going to wield these?"
+
+She let her eyes rest on the massive implements of honest toil, then
+looked confusedly at him.
+
+"I was."
+
+"Did you ever try to dig with any of these things?"
+
+"N-no. But if I _had_ to do it I knew I could."
+
+He said, pleasantly: "You have all kinds of courage. Did you bring a
+shot-gun?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you know how to load and fire it?"
+
+"The clerk in the shop instructed me."
+
+"You are the pluckiest girl I ever laid eyes on.... You camped here all
+alone last night, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How about it?" he asked, smilingly. "Were you afraid?"
+
+She coloured, cast a swift glance at him, saw that his attitude was
+perfectly respectful and sympathetic, and said:
+
+"Yes, I was horribly afraid."
+
+"Did anything annoy you?"
+
+"S-something bellowed out there in the swamp----" She shuddered
+unaffectedly at the recollection.
+
+"A bull-alligator," he remarked.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Yes," he nodded, "it is terrifying, but they let you alone. I once
+heard one bellow on the Tomoka when I was a boy."
+
+After a while she said with tremulous lips:
+
+"There seem to be snakes here, too."
+
+"Didn't you expect any?"
+
+"Mr. Munsell said there were not any."
+
+"Did he?"
+
+"Not," she explained resolutely, "that the presence of snakes would have
+deterred me. They frighten me terribly, but--I would have come just the
+same."
+
+"You are sheer pluck," he said.
+
+"I don't know.... I am very poor.... There seemed to be a chance.... I
+took it----" Tears sprang to her eyes again, and she brushed them away
+impatiently.
+
+"Yes," she said, "the only way is to go on, as you say, Mr. White.
+Everything in the world that I have is invested here."
+
+"It is the same with me," he admitted dejectedly.
+
+They looked at each other curiously for a moment.
+
+"Isn't it strange?" she murmured.
+
+"Strange as 'The Journal of Valdez.'... I have an idea. I wonder what
+you might think of it."
+
+She waited; he reflected for another moment, then, smiling:
+
+"This is a perfectly rotten place for you," he said. "You could not do
+manual labour here in this swamp under a nearly vertical sun and keep
+your health for twenty-four hours. I've been in Trinidad. I know a
+little about the tropics and semi-tropics. Suppose you and I form a
+company?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Call it the Valdez Company, or the Association of the Maltese Cross,"
+he continued cheerfully. "You will do the cooking, washing, housekeeping
+for two tents, and the mending. I will do the digging and the
+dynamiting. And we'll go ahead doggedly, and face this thing and see it
+through to the last ditch. What do you think of it? Your claim as
+plotted out is no more, no less, valuable than mine. Both claims may be
+worthless. The chances are that they are absolutely valueless. But there
+_is_ a chance, too, that we might win out. Shall we try it together?"
+
+She did not answer.
+
+"And," he continued, "if the Maltese cross happens to be included within
+my claim, I share equally with you. If it chances to lie within your
+claim, perhaps I might ask a third----"
+
+"Mr. White!"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"You will take _two_ thirds!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"_Two_ thirds," she repeated firmly, "because your heavier labour
+entitles you to that proportion!"
+
+"My dear Miss Sandys, you are unworldly and inexperienced in your
+generosity----"
+
+"So are you! The idea of your modestly venturing to ask a _third_! And
+offering me a _half_ if the Maltese cross lie inside your own territory!
+That is not the way to do business, Mr. White!"
+
+She had become so earnest in her admonition, so charmingly emphatic,
+that he smiled in spite of himself.
+
+She flushed, noticing this, and said: "Altruism is a luxury in business
+matters; selfishness of the justifiable sort a necessity. Who will look
+out for your interests if you do not?"
+
+"_You_ seem to be doing it."
+
+Her colour deepened: "I am only suggesting that you do not make a
+foolish bargain with me."
+
+"Which proves," he said, "that you are not much better at business than
+am I. Otherwise you'd have taken me up."
+
+"I'm a very good business woman," she insisted, warmly, "but I'm too
+much of the other kind of woman to be unfair!"
+
+"Commercially," he said, "we both are sadly behind the times. To-day the
+world is eliminating its appendix; to-morrow it will be operated on for
+another obsolete and annoying appendage. I mean its conscience," he
+added, so seriously that for a moment her own gravity remained
+unaltered. Then, like a faint ray of sunlight, across her face the smile
+glimmered. It was a winning smile, fresh and unspoiled as the lips it
+touched.
+
+"You _will_ take half--won't you?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, I will. Is it a bargain?"
+
+"If you care to make it so, Mr. White."
+
+He said he did, and they shook hands very formally. Then he went out
+and pitched his tent beside hers, set it in order, lugged up the
+remainder of his equipment, buried the jars of spring water, and,
+entering his tent, changed to flannel shirt, sun-helmet, and khaki.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+
+A little later he called to her: she emerged from her tent, and together
+they sat down on the edge of the Causeway, with the two maps spread over
+their knees.
+
+That both maps very accurately represented the topography of the
+immediate vicinity there could be no doubt; the only discrepancy seemed
+to lie in the situation of the Maltese cross. On White's map the cross
+fell well within his half of Lot 210; in Jean Sandys' map it was
+situated between her half of 210 and 220.
+
+Plot it out as they might, using Mr. Munsell's diagram, the result was
+always the same; and after a while they gave up the useless attempt to
+reconcile the differences in the two maps.
+
+From where they were sitting together on the Causeway's edge, they were
+facing due west. At their feet rippled the clear, deep waters of the
+swamp, lapping against the base of the Causeway like transparent little
+waves in a northern lake. A slight current disclosed the channel where
+it flowed out of the north western edges of the swamp, which was set
+with tall cypress trees, their flaring bases like silvery pyramids deep
+set in the shining ooze.
+
+East of them the Coakachee flowed through thickets of saw-grass and
+green brier, between a forest of oak, pine, and cedar, bordered on the
+western side by palm and palmetto--all exactly as drawn in the map of
+Pedro Valdez.
+
+The afternoon was cloudless and warm; an exquisite scent of blossoms
+came from the forest when a light breeze rippled the water. Somewhere in
+those green and tangled depths jasmine hung its fairy gold from arching
+branches, and wild oranges were in bloom. At intervals, when the breeze
+set from the east, the heavenly fragrance of magnolia grew more
+pronounced.
+
+After a little searching he discovered the huge tree, far towering above
+oak and pine and palm, set with lustrous clusters, ivory and palest
+gold, exhaling incense.
+
+"Wonderful," she said under her breath, when he pointed it out to her.
+"This enchanted land is one endless miracle to me."
+
+"You have never before been in the South?"
+
+"I have been nowhere."
+
+"Oh. I thought perhaps when you were a child----"
+
+"We were too poor. My mother taught piano."
+
+"I see," he said gravely.
+
+"I had no childhood," she said. "After the public school, it was the
+book section in department stores.... They let me go last week. That is
+how I came to be in the Heikem galleries."
+
+He clasped his hands around one knee and looked out across the
+semi-tropical landscape.
+
+Orange-coloured butterflies with wings like lighted lanterns fluttered
+along the edges of the flowering shrubs; a lovely purplish-black one
+with four large, white polka dots on his wings flitted persistently
+about them.
+
+Over the sun-baked Causeway blue-tailed lizards raced and chased each
+other, frisking up tree trunks, flashing across branches: a snowy heron
+rose like some winged thing from Heaven, and floated away into the
+silvery light. And like living jewels the gorgeous wood-ducks glided in
+and out where the water sparkled among the cypress trees.
+
+"Think," he said, "of those men in armour toiling through these swamps
+under a vertical sun! Think of them, starved, haggard, fever racked,
+staggering toward their El Dorado!--their steel mail scorching their
+bodies, the briers and poison-grass festering their flesh; moccasin,
+rattler, and copperhead menacing them with death at every step; the
+poisoned arrows of the Indians whizzing from every glade!"
+
+"Blood and gold," she nodded, "and the deathless bravery of avarice!
+That was Spain. And it inflamed the sunset of Spanish glory."
+
+He mused for a while: "To think of De Soto being here--_here_ on this
+very spot!--here on this ancient Causeway, amid these forests!--towering
+in his armour! His plated mail must have made a burning hell for his
+body!"
+
+She looked down at the cool, blue water at her feet. He, too, gazed at
+it, curiously. For a few feet the depths were visible, then a
+translucent gloom, glimmering with emerald lights, obscured further
+penetration of his vision. Deep down in that water was what they
+sought--if it truly existed at all.
+
+After a few moments' silence he rose, drew the hunting-knife at his
+belt, severed a tall, swamp-maple sapling, trimmed it, and, returning to
+the water's edge, deliberately sounded the channel. He could not touch
+bottom there, or even at the base of the Causeway.
+
+"Miss Sandys," he said, "there is plenty of room for such a structure as
+the Maltese cross is supposed to mark."
+
+"I wonder," she murmured.
+
+"Oh, there's room enough," he repeated, with an uneasy laugh. "Suppose
+we begin operations!"
+
+"When?"
+
+"Now!"
+
+She looked up at him, flushed and smiling:
+
+"It is going to take weeks and weeks, isn't it?"
+
+"I thought so before I came down here. But--I don't see why we shouldn't
+blow a hole through this Causeway in a few minutes."
+
+"What!"
+
+She rose to her feet, slightly excited, not understanding.
+
+"I could set off enough dynamite right here," he said, stamping his heel
+into the white dust, "--enough dynamite to open up that channel into the
+Coakachee. Why don't I do it?"
+
+Pink with excitement she said breathlessly: "Did you bring _dynamite_?"
+
+"Didn't _you_?"
+
+"I--I never even thought of it. F-fire crackers frighten me. I thought
+it would be all I could do to fire off my shot-gun." And she bit her lip
+with vexation.
+
+"Why," he said, "it would take a gang of men a week to cut through this
+Causeway, besides building a coffer-dam." He looked at her curiously.
+"How did _you_ expect to begin operations all alone?"
+
+"I--I expected to dig."
+
+He looked at her delicate little hands:
+
+"You meant to dig your way through with pick and shovel?"
+
+"Yes--if it took a year."
+
+"And how did you expect to construct your coffer-dam?"
+
+"I didn't know about a coffer-dam," she admitted, blushing. After a
+moment she lifted her pretty, distressed eyes to his: "I--I had no
+knowledge--only courage," she said.... "And I needed money."
+
+A responsive flush of sympathy and pity passed over him; she was so
+plucky, so adorably helpless. Even now he knew she was unconscious of
+the peril into which her confidence and folly had led her--a peril
+averted only by the mere accident of his own arrival.
+
+He said lightly: "Shall we try to solve this thing now? Shall we take a
+chance, set our charges, and blow a hole in this Causeway big enough to
+drain that water off in an hour?"
+
+"Could you do _that_?" she exclaimed, delighted.
+
+"I think so."
+
+"Then tell me what to do to help you."
+
+He turned toward her, hesitated, controlling the impulsive reply.
+
+"To help me," he said, smilingly, "please keep away from the dynamite."
+
+"Oh, I will," she nodded seriously. "What else am I to do?"
+
+"Would you mind preparing dinner?"
+
+She looked up at him a little shyly: "No.... And I am very glad that I
+am not to dine alone."
+
+"So am I," he said. "And I am very glad that it is with _you_ I am to
+dine."
+
+"You never even looked at me in the galleries," she said.
+
+"Then--how could I know you were reading Valdez if I never looked at
+you?"
+
+"Oh, you may have looked at the _book_ I was reading."
+
+"I did," he said, "--and at the hands that held it."
+
+"Never dreaming that they meant to wield a pick-axe," she laughed, "and
+encompass your discomfiture. But after all they did neither the one nor
+the other; did they?"
+
+He looked at the smooth little hands cupped in the shallow pockets of
+her white flannel Norfolk. They fascinated him.
+
+"To think," he said, half to himself, "--to think of those hands
+wielding a pick-axe!"
+
+She smiled, head slightly on one side, and bent, contemplating her right
+hand.
+
+"You know," she said, "I certainly would have done it."
+
+"You would have been crippled in an hour."
+
+Her head went up, but she was still smiling as she said: "I'd have gone
+through with it--somehow."
+
+"Yes," he said slowly. "I believe you would."
+
+"Not," she added, blushing, "that I mean to vaunt myself or my
+courage----"
+
+"No: I understand. You are not that kind.... It's rather extraordinary
+how well I--I _think_ I know you already."
+
+"Perhaps you _do_ know me--already."
+
+"I really believe I do."
+
+"It's very likely. I am just what I seem to be. There is no mystery
+about me. I am what I appear to be."
+
+"You are also very direct."
+
+"Yes. It's my nature to be direct. I am not a bit politic or diplomatic
+or circuitous."
+
+"So I noticed," he said smilingly, "when you discussed finance with me.
+You were not a bit politic."
+
+She smiled, too, a little embarrassed: "How could I be anything but
+frank in return for your very unworldly generosity?" she said. "Because
+what you offered _was_ unworldly. Anyway, I should have been direct with
+you; I knew what I wanted; I knew what you wanted. All I had to do was
+to make up my mind. And I did so."
+
+"Did you make up your mind about me, also?"
+
+"Yes, about you, also."
+
+They both smiled.
+
+She was so straight and slender and pretty in her white flannels and
+white outing hat--her attitude so confident, so charmingly determined,
+that she seemed to him even younger than she really was--a delightful,
+illogical, fresh and fearless school-girl, translated by some flash of
+magic from her school hither, and set down unruffled and unstartled upon
+her light, white-shod feet.
+
+Even now it amazed him to realise that she really understood nothing of
+the lonely perils lately confronting her in this desolate place.
+
+For if there were nothing actually to fear from the wild beasts of the
+region, _that which the beasts themselves feared_ might have confronted
+her at any moment. He shuddered as he thought of it.
+
+And what would she have done if suddenly clutched by fever? What would
+she have done if a white-mouthed moccasin had struck her ankle--or if it
+had been the diamond-set Death himself?
+
+"You don't mind my speaking plainly, do you?" he said bluntly.
+
+"Why, no, of course not." She looked at him inquiringly.
+
+"Don't stray far away from me, will you?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Don't wander away by yourself, out of sight, while we are engaged in
+this business."
+
+She looked serious and perplexed for a moment, then turned a delicate
+pink and began to laugh in a pretty, embarrassed way.
+
+"Are you afraid I'll get into mischief? Do you know it is very kind of
+you to feel that way?... And rather unexpected--in a man who--sat for
+three days across the aisle from me--and never even looked in my
+direction. Tell me, what am I to be afraid of in this place?"
+
+"There are snakes about," he said with emphasis.
+
+"Oh, yes; I've seen some swimming."
+
+"There are four poisonous species among them," he continued. "That's one
+of the reasons for your keeping near me."
+
+She nodded, a trifle awed.
+
+"So you will, won't you?"
+
+"Yes," she said, taking his words so literally that, when they turned to
+walk toward the tents, she came up close beside him, naïvely as a child,
+and laid one hand on his sleeve as they started back across the
+Causeway.
+
+"Suppose either one of us is bitten?" she asked after a silence.
+
+"I have lancets, tourniquets, and anti-venom in my tent."
+
+Her smooth hand tightened a little on his arm. She had not realised that
+the danger was more than a vague possibility.
+
+"You have spring water, of course," he said.
+
+"No.... I boiled a little from the swamp before I drank it."
+
+He turned to her sternly and drew her arm through his with an
+unconscious movement of protection.
+
+"Are you sure that water was properly boiled--_thoroughly_ boiled?" he
+demanded.
+
+"It bubbled."
+
+"Listen to me! Hereafter when you are thirsty you will use my spring
+water. Is that understood?"
+
+"Yes.... And thank you."
+
+"You don't want to get break-bone fever, do you?"
+
+"No-o!" she said hastily. "I will do everything you wish."
+
+"I'll hang your hammock for you," he said. "Always look in your shoes
+for scorpions and spiders before you put them on. Never step over a
+fallen log before you first look on the other side. Rattlers lie there.
+Never go near a swamp without looking for moccasins.
+
+"Don't let the direct sunlight fall on your bare head; don't eat fruit
+for a week; don't ever go to sleep unless you have a blanket on. You
+won't do any of these things, will you?" he inquired anxiously, almost
+tenderly.
+
+"I promise. And I never dreamed that there was anything to apprehend
+except alligators!" she said, tightening her arm around his own.
+
+"Alligators won't bother you--unless you run across a big one in the
+woods. Then keep clear of him."
+
+"I will!" she said earnestly.
+
+"And don't sit about on old logs or lean against trees."
+
+"Why? Lizards?"
+
+"Oh, they're not harmful. But wood-ticks might give you a miserable week
+or two."
+
+"Oh, dear, oh, dear," she murmured, "I am so glad you came here!" And
+quite innocently she pressed his arm. She did it because she was
+grateful. She had a very direct way with her.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+
+When they came to their tents he went into hers, slung her hammock
+properly, shook a scorpion out of her slippers, and set his heel on it;
+drove a non-poisonous but noisy puff-adder from under her foot-rug, the
+creature hissing like a boiling kettle and distending its grey and black
+neck.
+
+Terrified but outwardly calm, she stood beside him, now clutching his
+arm very closely; and at last her tent was in order, the last spider and
+lizard hustled out, the oil cook-stove burning, the tinned goods ready,
+the aluminum batterie-de-cuisine ranged at her elbow.
+
+"I wonder," he said, hesitating, "whether I dare leave you long enough
+to go and dig some holes with a crow-bar."
+
+"Why, of course!" she said. "You can't have me tagging at your heels
+every minute, you know."
+
+He laughed: "It's _I_ who do the tagging."
+
+"It isn't disagreeable," she said shyly.
+
+"I don't mean to dog every step you take," he continued, "but now, when
+you are out of my sight, I--I can't help feeling a trifle anxious."
+
+"But you mustn't feel responsible for me. I came down here on my own
+initiative. I certainly deserve whatever happens to me. Don't I?"
+
+"What comfort would that be to me if anything unpleasant did happen to
+you?"
+
+"Why," she asked frankly, "should you feel as responsible for my welfare
+as that? After all, I am only a stranger, you know."
+
+He said: "Do you really feel like a stranger? Do you really feel that I
+am one?"
+
+She considered the proposition for a few moments.
+
+"No," she said, "I don't. And perhaps it is natural for us to take a
+friendly interest in each other."
+
+"It comes perfectly natural to me to take a v-very v-vivid interest in
+you," he said. "What with snakes and scorpions and wood-ticks and
+unboiled water and the actinic rays of the sun, I can't very well help
+worrying about you. After all," he added lucidly, "you're a girl, you
+know."
+
+She admitted the accusation with a smile so sweet that there could be no
+doubt of her sex.
+
+"However," she said, "you should entertain no apprehensions concerning
+me. I have none concerning you. I think you know your business."
+
+"Of course," he said, going into his tent and returning loaded with
+crow-bar, pick-axe, dynamite, battery, and wires.
+
+She laid aside the aluminum cooking-utensils with which she had been
+fussing and rose from her knees as he passed her with a pleasant nod of
+_au revoir_.
+
+"You'll be careful with that dynamite, won't you?" she said anxiously.
+"You know it goes off at all sorts of unexpected moments."
+
+"I think I understand how to handle it," he reassured her.
+
+"Are you quite certain?"
+
+"Oh, yes. But perhaps you'd better not come any nearer----"
+
+"Mr. White!"
+
+"What!"
+
+"It _is_ dangerous! I don't like to have you go away alone with that
+dynamite. You make me very anxious."
+
+"You needn't be. If--in the very remote event of anything going
+wrong--now don't forget what I say!--but in case of an accident to me,
+you'll be all right if you start back to Verbena at once--instantly--and
+take the right-hand road----"
+
+"Mr. _White_!"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"I was _not_ thinking of myself! I was concerned about _you_!"
+
+"Me?--_personally_?"
+
+"Of course! You say you have me on your mind. Do you think I am devoid
+of human feeling?"
+
+"Were you--really--thinking about _me_?" he repeated slowly. "That was
+very nice of you.... I didn't quite understand.... I'll be careful with
+the dynamite."
+
+"Perhaps I'd better go with you," she suggested irresolutely.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I could hold a green umbrella over you while you are digging holes. You
+yourself say that the sun is dangerous."
+
+"My sun-helmet makes it all right," he said, deeply touched.
+
+"You won't take it off, will you?"
+
+"No."
+
+"And you'll look all around you for snakes before you take the next
+step, won't you?" she insisted.
+
+He promised, thrilled by her frank solicitude.
+
+A little way up the path he paused, looked around, and saw her standing
+there looking after him.
+
+"You're sure you'll be all right?" he called back to her.
+
+"Yes. Are you sure _you_ will be?"
+
+"Oh, yes!"
+
+They made two quick gestures of adieu, and he resumed the path.
+Presently he turned again. She was still standing there looking after
+him. They made two gestures of farewell and he resumed the path. After a
+while he looked back. She--but what's the use!
+
+When he came to the spot marked for destruction, he laid down his
+paraphernalia, seized the crow-bar, and began to dig, scarcely conscious
+of what he was about because he had become so deeply absorbed in other
+things--in _an_-other thing--a human one with red hair and otherwise
+divinely endowed.
+
+The swift onset of this heavenly emotion was making him giddy--or
+perhaps it was unaccustomed manual labor under a semi-tropical sun.
+
+Anyway he went about his work blindly but vigorously, seeing nothing of
+the surrounding landscape or of the immediate ground into which he
+rammed his crow-bar, so constantly did the charming vision of her
+piquant features shut out all else.
+
+And all the time he was worrying, too. He thought of snakes biting her
+distractingly pretty ankles; he thought of wood-ticks and of her snowy
+neck; of scorpions and of the delicate little hands.
+
+How on earth was he ever going to endure the strain if already, in these
+few hours, his anxiety about her welfare was assuming such deep and
+portentous proportions! How was he going to stand the worry until she
+was safe in the snakeless, tickless North again!
+
+She couldn't remain here! She must go North. His mind seemed already
+tottering under its new and constantly increasing load of
+responsibility; and he dug away fiercely with his bar, making twice as
+many holes as he had meant to.
+
+For he had suddenly determined to be done with the job and get her into
+some safe place, and he meant to set off a charge of dynamite that
+would do the business without fail.
+
+Charging and tamping the holes, he used caution, even in spite of his
+increasing impatience to return and see how she was; arguing very justly
+with himself that if he blew himself up he couldn't very well learn how
+she was.
+
+So he attached the wires very carefully, made his connections, picked up
+the big reel and the remainder of his tools, and walked toward the
+distant tents, unreeling his wire as he moved along.
+
+She was making soup, but she heard the jangle of his equipment, sprang
+to her feet, and ran out to meet him.
+
+He let fall everything and held out both hands. In them she laid her
+own.
+
+"I'm so glad to see you!" he said warmly. "I'm so thankful that you're
+all right!"
+
+"I'm so glad you came back," she said frankly. "I have been most uneasy
+about you."
+
+"I've been very anxious, too," he said. Then, drawing an unfeigned sigh
+of relief: "It does seem good to get back again!" He had been away
+nearly half an hour.
+
+She examined the wire and the battery gingerly, asking him innumerable
+questions about it.
+
+"Do you suppose," she ended, "that it will be safe for you to set off
+the charge from this camp?"
+
+"Oh, perfectly," he nodded.
+
+"Of course," she said, half to herself, "we'll both be blown up if it
+isn't safe. And that is _something_!"
+
+And she came up very close when he said he was ready to fire, and laid
+her hand on his arm. The hand was steady enough. But when he glanced at
+her he saw how white she had become.
+
+"Why, Jean!" he said gently. "Are you frightened?"
+
+"No.... I won't mind it if I may stand rather near you." And she closed
+her eyes and placed both hands over her ears.
+
+"Do you think I'd fire this charge," he demanded warmly, "if there was
+the slightest possible danger to _you_? Take down your hands and
+listen."
+
+Her closed eyelids quivered: "We'll both--there won't be anything left
+of either of us if anything does happen," she said tremulously. "I am
+not afraid.... Only tell me when to close my ears."
+
+"Do you really think there is danger?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+He looked at her standing there, pale, plucky, eyes tightly shut, her
+pretty fingers resting lightly on her ears.
+
+He said: "Would you think me crazy if I tell you something?"
+
+"W-What?"
+
+"Would you think me insane, Jean?"
+
+"I don't think I would."
+
+"You wouldn't consider me utterly mad?"
+
+"N-no."
+
+"No--_what_?"
+
+"No, I wouldn't consider you mad----"
+
+"No--_what_?" he persisted.
+
+And after a moment her pallor was tinted with a delicate rose.
+
+"No--_what_?" he insisted again.
+
+"No--Jim," she answered under breath.
+
+"Then--close your ears, Jean, dear."
+
+She closed them; his arm encircled her waist. She bore it nobly.
+
+"You may fire when you are ready--James!" she said faintly.
+
+A thunder-clap answered her; the Causeway seemed to spring up under
+their feet; the world reeled.
+
+Presently she heard his voice sounding calmly: "Are you all right,
+Jean?"
+
+"Yes.... I was thinking of you--as long as I could think at all. I was
+ready to go--anywhere--with you."
+
+"I have been ready for that," he said unsteadily, "from the moment I
+heard your voice. But it is--is wonderful of _you_!"
+
+She opened her blue eyes, dreamily looking up into his. Then the colour
+surged into her face.
+
+"If--if you had spoken to me across the aisle," she said, "it would have
+begun even sooner, I think.... Because I can't imagine myself
+not--caring for you."
+
+He took her into his arms:
+
+"Don't worry," he said, "I'll make a place for you in the world, even if
+that Maltese cross means nothing."
+
+She looked into his eyes fearlessly: "I know you will," she said.
+
+Then he kissed her and she put both arms around his neck and offered her
+fresh, young lips again.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+
+Toward sunset he came to, partially, passed his hand across his
+enchanted eyes, and rose from the hammock beside her.
+
+"Dearest," he said, "that swamp ought to be partly drained by this time.
+Suppose we walk over before dinner and take a look?"
+
+Still confused by the sweetness of her dream, she sat up, and he drew
+her to her feet, where she stood twisting up her beautiful hair, half
+smiling, shy, adorable.
+
+Then together they walked slowly out along the Causeway, so absorbed in
+each other that already they had forgotten the explosion, and even the
+Maltese cross itself.
+
+It was only when they were halted by the great gap in the Causeway that
+Jean Sandys glanced to the left, over a vast bed of shining mud, where
+before blue wavelets had lapped the base of the Causeway.
+
+Then her vaguely smiling eyes flew wide open; she caught her lover's arm
+in an excited clasp.
+
+"O Jim!" she exclaimed. "Look! Look! It is true! It is true! _Look_ at
+the bed of the lake!"
+
+They stood trembling and staring at the low, squat, windowless coquina
+house, reeking with the silt of centuries, crawling with stranded water
+creatures.
+
+The stones that had blocked the door had fallen before the shock of the
+dynamite.
+
+"Good God!" he whispered. "_Do you see what is inside?_"
+
+But Jean Sandys, calmly looking untold wealth in its glittering face,
+sighed, smiled, and turned her blue gaze on her lover, finding in his
+eyes the only miracle that now had power to hold her undivided
+attention.
+
+For it is that way with some girls.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the novelist, unable to endure a dose of his own technique, could no
+longer control his impatience:
+
+"What in God's name was there in that stone house!" he burst out.
+
+"Oh, Lord!" muttered Stafford, "it is two hours after midnight."
+
+He rose, bent over the girl's hand, and kissed the emerald on the third
+finger.
+
+Figure after figure, tall, shadowy, leisurely followed his example,
+while her little hand lay listlessly on the silken cushions and her
+dreaming eyes seemed to see nobody.
+
+Duane and I remained for a while seated, then in silence,--which Athalie
+finally broke for us:
+
+"Patience," she said, "is the art of hoping.... Good-night."
+
+I rose; she looked up at me, lifted her slim arm and placed the palm of
+her hand against my lips.
+
+And so I took my leave; thinking.
+
+
+ +-------------------------------------------------+
+ | Novels by Robert W. Chambers |
+ | |
+ | Quick Action The Business of Life |
+ | Blue-Bird Weather The Gay Rebellion |
+ | Japonette The Streets of Ascalon |
+ | The Adventures of a The Common Law |
+ | Modest Man Ailsa Paige |
+ | The Danger Mark The Green Mouse |
+ | Special Messenger Iole |
+ | The Firing Line The Reckoning |
+ | The Younger Set The Maid-at-Arms |
+ | The Fighting Chance Cardigan |
+ | Some Ladies in Haste The Haunts of Men |
+ | The Tree of Heaven The Mystery of Choice |
+ | The Tracer of Lost The Cambric Mask |
+ | Persons The Maker of Moons |
+ | A Young Man in a The King in Yellow |
+ | Hurry In Search of the Unknown |
+ | Lorraine |
+ | Maids of Paradise The Conspirators |
+ | Ashes of Empire A King and a Few |
+ | The Red Republic Dukes |
+ | Outsiders In the Quarter |
+ +-------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Quick Action, by Robert W. Chambers
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUICK ACTION ***
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quick Action, by Robert W. Chambers
+
+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: Quick Action
+
+Author: Robert W. Chambers
+
+Illustrator: Edmund Frederick
+
+Release Date: September 25, 2011 [EBook #37528]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUICK ACTION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div>
+
+<br>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" width="400" height="603" alt="Cover" title="">
+</div>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h1">QUICK ACTION</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<a name="gs01" id="gs01"></a>
+<img src="images/gs01.jpg" width="400" height="672" alt="&quot;&#39;Are you preaching?&#39; asked Athalie, raising her eyes
+from the Green God.&quot;" title="">
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption">&quot;&#39;Are you preaching?&#39; asked Athalie, raising her eyes
+from the Green God.&quot; <a href="#Page_252">[Page 252]</a></p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter topbox" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/tp.png" width="400" height="649" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h1 id="booktitle">QUICK ACTION</h1>
+
+<p class="h3"><i>By</i></p>
+
+<p class="h2">ROBERT W. CHAMBERS</p>
+
+<p class="h5">ILLUSTRATED BY</p>
+
+<p class="h4">EDMUND FREDERICK</p>
+<br>
+<p class="h3">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br>
+NEW YORK AND LONDON: MCMXIV</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h5 smcap">Copyright, 1914, by</p>
+
+<p class="h4">ROBERT W. CHAMBERS</p>
+
+<p class="h5">Copyright, 1913, by Harper's Bazaar, Inc.<br>
+Copyright, 1914, by The Star Co.</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h5">Printed in the United States of America</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="poem">
+
+<p class="h4 poem">TO</p>
+<p class="h4 poem">PENELOPE SEARS</p>
+<p class="h4 poem">DEBUTANTE</p>
+
+<div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2"><i>To rhyme your name</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>With something lovely, fresh and young,</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>And sing the same</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>In measures heretofore unsung,</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Is far beyond me, I'm afraid;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>I'll not attempt it, dearest maid.</i></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2"><i>No, not in verse,</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Synthetic, stately, classic, chaste,</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Shall I rehearse&mdash;</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Although in perfectly good taste&mdash;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>A catalogue of every grace</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>That you inherit from your race.</i></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2"><i>Gracious and kind,</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>The gods your beauty gave to you,</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>And with a mind</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>These same kind gods endowed you, too;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>That charming union is, I fear,</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Somewhat uncommon on this sphere.</i></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2"><i>I have no doubt</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>That scores of poets chant your fame;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>No doubt, about</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>A million suitors press their claim;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>And fashion, elegance and wit</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Are at your feet inclined to sit.</i></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2"><i>Penelope,</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>The fire-light flickers to and fro:</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>In you I see</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>The winsome child I used to know&mdash;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>My little Maiden of Romance</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Still whirling in your Shadow Dance.</i></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2"><i>Though woman-grown,</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>To my unreconciled surprise</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>I gladly own</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>The same light lies within your eyes&mdash;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>The same sweet candour which beguiled</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Your rhymster when you were a child.</i></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2"><i>And so I come,</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>With limping verse to you again,</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Amid the hum</i></span>
+<span class="i0"><i>Of that young world wherein you reign&mdash;</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>Only a moment to appear</i></span>
+<span class="i2"><i>And say: "Your rhymster loves you, dear."</i></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i8"><i>R. W. C.</i></span>
+</div></div>
+</div>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<h2>PREFACE</h2>
+
+<p>Always animated by a desire to contribute in a
+small way toward scientific investigation, the
+author offers this humble volume to a more serious
+audience than he has so far ventured to address.</p>
+
+<p>For all those who have outgrown the superficial
+amusement of mere fiction this volume, replete
+with purpose, is written in hopes that it may
+stimulate students to original research in certain
+obscure realms of science, the borderlands of
+which, hitherto, have been scarcely crossed.</p>
+
+<p>There is perhaps no division of science as important,
+none so little understood, as the science
+of Crystal Gazing.</p>
+
+<p>A vast field of individual research opens before
+the earnest, patient, and sober minded investigator
+who shall study the subject and discover those
+occult laws which govern the intimate relations
+between crystals, playing cards, cigarettes, soiled
+pink wrappers, and the Police.</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p class="h4">Amor nihil est celerius!</p>
+
+<p class="spacer">&nbsp;</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<p class="h3">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</p>
+
+<div class="centered">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td class="tdl">&nbsp;</td><td class="tdrfirst">FACING PAGE</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">"'Are you preaching?' asked Athalie, raising her eyes from the green god"</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#gs01"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">"They inspected each other, apparently bereft of the power of speech"</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#gs02">31</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">"The magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady Alene"</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#gs03">84</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">"'I am in possession of the dog and you merely claim possession'"</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#gs04">157</a></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<p><span class="pagenum">[1]</span></p>
+
+<p class="h1">QUICK ACTION</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/ch01.jpg" width="550" height="417" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<div class="bigfont">
+
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+<p>There was a new crescent moon in the west
+which, with the star above it, made an
+agreeable oriental combination.</p>
+
+<p>In the haze over bay and river enough rose and
+purple remained to veil the awakening glitter of
+the monstrous city sprawling supine between river,
+sound, and sea. And its incessant monotone pulsated,
+groaning, dying, ceaseless, interminable
+in the light-shot depths of its darkening streets.</p>
+
+<p>The sky-drawing-room windows of the Countess
+Athalie were all wide open, but the only light in<span class="pagenumsmall">[2]</span>
+the room came from a crystal sphere poised on
+a tripod. It had the quality and lustre of moon-light,
+and we had never been able to find out its
+source, for no electric wires were visible, and one
+could move the tripod about the room.</p>
+
+<p>The crystal sphere itself appeared to be luminous,
+yet it remained perfectly transparent, whatever
+the source of its silvery phosphorescence.</p>
+
+<p>At any rate, it was the only light in the room
+except the dulled glimmer of our cigarettes, and
+its mild, mysterious light enabled us to see one
+another as through a glass darkly.</p>
+
+<p>There were a number of men there that evening.
+I don't remember, now, who they all were.
+Some had dined early; others, during the evening,
+strolled away into the city to dine somewhere or
+other, drifting back afterward for coffee and
+sweetmeats and cigarettes in the sky-drawing-room
+of the Countess Athalie.</p>
+
+<p>As usual the girl was curled up by the open
+window among her silken cushions, one smooth
+little gem-laden hand playing with the green jade
+god, her still dark eyes, which slanted a little,
+fixed dreamily upon infinite distance&mdash;or so it always
+seemed to us.</p>
+
+<p>Through the rusty and corrugated arabesques
+of the iron balcony she could see, if she chose,<span class="pagenumsmall">[3]</span>
+the yellow flare where Sixth Avenue crossed the
+shabby street to the eastward. Beyond that,
+and parallel, a brighter glow marked Broadway.
+Further east street lamps stretched away into
+converging perspective, which vanished to a point
+in the faint nebular radiance above the East
+River.</p>
+
+<p>All this the Countess Athalie could see if she
+chose. Perhaps she did see it. We never seemed
+to know just what she was looking at even when
+she turned her dark eyes on us or on her crystal
+sphere cradled upon its slender tripod.</p>
+
+<p>But the sphere seemed to understand, for sometimes,
+under her still gaze, it clouded magnificently
+like a black opal&mdash;another thing we never understood,
+and therefore made light of.</p>
+
+<p>"They have placed policemen before several
+houses on this street," remarked the Countess
+Athalie.</p>
+
+<p>Stafford, tall and slim in his evening dress, relieved
+her of her coffee cup.</p>
+
+<p>"Has anybody bothered you?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not yet."</p>
+
+<p>Young Duane picked up a pack of cards at his
+elbow and shuffled them, languidly.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is the Ace of Diamonds, Athalie?" he
+asked.<span class="pagenumsmall">[4]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Any card you try to draw will be the Ace of
+Diamonds," replied the girl indifferently.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't I escape drawing it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>We all turned and looked at Duane. He quickly
+spread the pack, fan-shaped, backs up. After
+a moment's choosing he drew a card, looked at it,
+held it up for us to see. It was the Ace of
+Diamonds.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you mind trying that again, Athalie?"
+I asked. And Duane replaced the card and shuffled
+the pack.</p>
+
+<p>"But it's gone, now," said the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"I replaced it in the pack," explained Duane.</p>
+
+<p>"No, you gave it to me," she said.</p>
+
+<p>We all smiled. Duane searched through the
+pack in his hands, once, twice; then he laughed.
+The girl held up one empty hand. Then, somehow
+or other, there was the Ace of Diamonds between
+her delicate little thumb and forefinger.</p>
+
+<p>She held it a moment or two for our inspection;
+then, curving her wrist, sent it scaling out into
+the darkness. It soared away above the street,
+tipped up, and describing an aerial ellipse, returned
+straight to the balcony where she caught
+it in her fingers.</p>
+
+<p>Twice she did this; but the third time, high in<span class="pagenumsmall">[5]</span>
+the air, the card burst into violet flame and
+vanished.</p>
+
+<p>"That," remarked Stafford, "is one thing which
+I wish to learn how to do."</p>
+
+<p>"Two hundred dollars," said the Countess
+Athalie, "&mdash;in two lessons; also, your word of
+honour."</p>
+
+<p>"Monday," nodded Stafford, taking out a note-book
+and making a memorandum, "&mdash;at five in
+the afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>"Monday and Wednesday at five," said the girl,
+lighting a cigarette and gazing dreamily at
+nothing.</p>
+
+<p>From somewhere in the room came a voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Did they ever catch that crook, Athalie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Which?"</p>
+
+<p>"The Fifty-ninth Street safe-blower?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Did <i>you</i> find him?"</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"How? In your crystal?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, he was there."</p>
+
+<p>"It's odd," mused Duane, "that you can never
+do anything of advantage to yourself by gazing
+into your crystal."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the invariable limit to clairvoyance," she
+remarked.<span class="pagenumsmall">[6]</span></p>
+
+<p>"A sort of penalty for being super-gifted,"
+added Stafford.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps.... We can't help ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>"It's too bad," I volunteered.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't care," she said, with a slight shrug
+of her pretty shoulders.</p>
+
+<p>"Come," said somebody, teasingly, "wouldn't
+you like to know how soon you are going to fall
+in love, and with whom?"</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, dropped her cigarette into a silver
+bowl, stretched her arms above her head, straightened
+her slender figure, turned her head and looked
+at us.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said, "I do not wish to know. Light
+is swift; Thought is swifter; but Love is the
+swiftest thing in Life, and if it is now travelling
+toward me, it will strike me soon enough to suit
+me."</p>
+
+<p>Stafford leaned forward and arranged the cushions
+for her; she sank back among them, her dark
+eyes still on us.</p>
+
+<p>"Hours are slow," she said; "years are slower,
+but the slowest thing in Life is Love. If it is now
+travelling toward me, it will reach me soon enough
+to suit me."</p>
+
+<p>"I," said Duane, "prefer quick action, O
+Athalie, the Beautiful!"<span class="pagenumsmall">[7]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Athalie, lovely and incomparable," said Stafford,
+"I, also, prefer quick action."</p>
+
+<p>"Play <i>Scheherazade</i> for us, Athalie," I said,
+"else we slay you with our compliments."</p>
+
+<p>A voice or two from distant corners repeated
+the menace. A match flared and a fresh cigarette
+glowed faintly.</p>
+
+<p>Somebody brought the tripod with its crystal
+sphere and set it down in the middle of the room.
+Its mild rays fell on the marble basin of the tiny
+fountain,&mdash;Duane's offering. The goldfish which
+I had given her were floating there fast asleep.</p>
+
+<p>When we had placed sweetmeats and cigarettes
+convenient for her, we all, in turn, with
+circumstance and ceremony, bent over her left
+hand where it rested listlessly among the cushions,
+saluting the emerald on her third finger with
+our lips.</p>
+
+<p>Then the dim circle closed around her, nearer.</p>
+
+<p>"Of all the visions which have passed before
+your eyes within the depths of that crystal
+globe," said Duane, "&mdash;of all the histories of men
+and women which, unsuspected by them, you have
+witnessed, seated here in this silent, silk-hung
+place, we desire to hear only those in which Fate
+has been swiftest, Opportunity a loosened arrow,
+Destiny a flash of lightning."<span class="pagenumsmall">[8]</span></p>
+
+<p>"But the victims of quick action must be nameless,
+except as I choose to mask them," she said,
+looking dreamily into her crystal.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment's silence Duane said in a low
+voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Does anybody notice the odour of orange
+blossoms?"</p>
+
+<p>We all noticed the fragrance.</p>
+
+<p>"I seem to catch a whiff of the sea, also," ventured
+Stafford. "Am I right?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she nodded, "you will notice the odour
+of the semi-tropics, even if you miss the point of
+everything I tell you."</p>
+
+<p>"In other words," said I, "we are but a material
+bunch, Athalie, and may be addressed and
+amused only through our physical senses. Very
+well: transpose from the spiritual for us if you
+please a little story of quick action which has
+happened here in the crystal under your matchless
+eyes!"<span class="pagenumsmall">[9]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;">
+<img src="images/ch02.jpg" width="450" height="325" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+<p>With her silver tongs she selected a
+sweetmeat. When it had melted in
+her sweeter mouth, she lighted a cigarette,
+saluted us with a gay little gesture and
+smilingly began:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't ask me how I know what these people
+said; that is <i>my</i> concern, not yours. Don't ask
+me how I know what unspoken thoughts animated
+these people; that is <i>my</i> affair. Nor how I seem
+to be perfectly acquainted with their past histories;
+for <i>that</i> is part of my profession."</p>
+
+<p>"And still the wonder grew," commented the
+novelist tritely, "that one small head could
+carry all she knew!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why," asked Stafford, "do you refuse to
+reveal your secret? Do you no longer trust us,
+Athalie?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[10]</span></p>
+
+<p>She answered: "<i>Comment pr&eacute;tendons-nous qu'un
+autre garde notre secret, si nous n'avons pas
+pu le garder nous-m&ecirc;me?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Nobody replied.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," she said, laughingly, "I will tell you
+all that I know about the <i>Orange Puppy</i>."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Plans for her first debut began before her birth.
+When it became reasonably certain that she was
+destined to decorate the earth, she was entered
+on the waiting lists of two schools&mdash;The Dinglenook
+School for Boys, and The Idlebrook Institute
+for Young Ladies&mdash;her parents taking no
+chances, but playing both ends coming and going.</p>
+
+<p>When ultimately she made her first earthly appearance,
+and it was apparent that she was destined
+to embellish the planet in the guise of a
+girl, the process of grooming her for her second
+debut, some eighteen years in the future, began.
+She lived in sanitary and sterilized seclusion, eating
+by the ounce, sleeping through accurately
+measured minutes, every atom of her anatomy
+inspected daily, every pore of her skin explored,
+every garment she wore weighed, every respiration,
+pulse beat, and fluctuation of bodily temperature
+carefully noted and discussed.<span class="pagenumsmall">[11]</span></p>
+
+<p>When she appeared her hair was black. After
+she shed this, it came in red; when she was eight
+her hair was coppery, lashes black, eyes blue, and
+her skin snow and wild-strawberry tints in agreeably
+delicate nuances. Several millions were set
+aside to grow up with her and for her. Also,
+the list of foreign and aristocratic babyhood was
+scanned and several dozen possibilities checked
+off&mdash;the list running from the progeny of down-and-out
+monarchs with a sporting chance for a
+crown, to the more solid infant aristocracy of
+Britain.</p>
+
+<p>At the age of nine, the only symptom of intellect
+that had yet appeared in her was a superbly
+developed temper. That year she eluded a governess
+and two trained nurses in the park, and
+was discovered playing with some unsterilized children
+near the duck-pond, both hands full of slime
+and pollywogs.</p>
+
+<p>It was the only crack in the routine through
+which she ever crawled. Lessons daily in riding,
+driving, dancing, fencing, gymnastics, squash,
+tennis, skating, plugged every avenue of escape
+between morning school and evening sleep, after
+a mental bath in sterilized literature. Once, out
+of the window she saw a fire. This event, with
+several runaways on the bridle-path, included the<span class="pagenumsmall">[12]</span>
+sensations of her life up to her release from special
+instructors, and her entry into Idlebrook Institute.</p>
+
+<p>Here she did all she could to misbehave in a
+blind and instinctive fashion, but opportunities
+were pitiably few; and by the time she had graduated,
+honest deviltry seemed to have been
+starved out of her; and a half year's finishing
+abroad apparently eliminated it, leaving only a
+half-confused desire to be let alone. But solitude
+was the luxury always denied her.</p>
+
+<p>Unlike the usual debutante, who is a social
+veteran two years before her presentation, and
+who at eighteen lacks no experience except intellectual,
+Miss Cassillis had become neither a judge
+of champagne nor an expert in the various cabaret
+steps popular at country houses and the more
+exclusive dives.</p>
+
+<p>"Mother," she said calmly, on her eighteenth
+birthday, "do you know that I am known among
+my associates as a dead one?" At which that fat
+and hard-eyed matron laughed, surveying her
+symmetrical daughter with grim content.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me tell you something," she said. "America,
+socially, is only one vast cabaret, mostly consisting
+of performers. The spectators are few.
+You're one. Conditions are reversed across the<span class="pagenumsmall">[13]</span>
+water; the audience is in the majority.... How
+do you like young Willowmere?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl replied that she liked Lord Willowmere.
+She might have added that she was prepared
+to like anything in trousers that would
+give her a few hours off.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think," said her mother, "you can
+be trusted to play in the social cabaret all next
+winter, and then marry Willowmere?"</p>
+
+<p>Said Cecil: "I am perfectly ready to marry
+anybody before luncheon, if you will let me."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not wish you to feel <i>that</i> way."</p>
+
+<p>"Mother, I <i>do</i>! All I want is to be let alone
+long enough to learn something for myself."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you not know? What have you <i>not</i>
+learned? What accomplishment do you lack,
+little daughter? What is it you wish?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl glanced out of the window. A young
+and extremely well-built man went striding down
+the avenue about his business. He looked a little
+like a man she had seen playing ball on the Harvard
+team a year ago. She sighed unconsciously.</p>
+
+<p>"I've learned about everything there is to
+learn, I suppose.... Except&mdash;where do men
+go when they walk so busily about their business?"</p>
+
+<p>"Down town," said her mother, laughing.<span class="pagenumsmall">[14]</span></p>
+
+<p>"What do they do there?"</p>
+
+<p>"A million things concerning millions."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't see how there's anything left for
+them to do after their education is completed.
+What is there left for me to do, except to marry
+and have a few children?"</p>
+
+<p>"What do you want to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing.... I'd like to have something to
+do which would make me look busy and make me
+walk rather fast&mdash;like that young man who was
+hurrying down town all by himself. Then I'd like
+to be let alone while I'm busy with my own
+affairs."</p>
+
+<p>"When you marry Willowmere you'll be busy
+enough." She might have added: "And lonely
+enough."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll be occupied in telling others how to busy
+themselves with my affairs. But there won't be
+anything for <i>me</i> to do, will there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, dear child; it will be one steady fight to
+better a good position. It will afford you constant
+exercise."</p>
+
+<p>The tall young girl bit her lip and shook her
+pretty head in silence. She felt instinctively that
+she knew how to do that. But that was not the
+exercise she wanted. She looked out into the
+February sunshine and saw the blue shadows on<span class="pagenumsmall">[15]</span>
+the snow and the sidewalks dark and wet, and the
+little gutter arabs throwing snow-balls, and a
+yellow pup barking blissfully. And, apropos of
+nothing at all, she suddenly remembered how she
+had run away when she was nine; and a rush of
+blind desire surged within her. What it meant
+she did not know, did not trouble to consider, but
+it stirred her until the soft fire burned in her
+cheeks, and left her twisting her white fingers,
+lips parted, staring across the wintry park into
+the blue tracery of trees. To Miss Cassillis
+adolescence came late.</p>
+
+<p>They sang <i>Le Donne Curiose</i> at the opera that
+evening; she sat in her father's box; numbers of
+youthful, sleek-headed, white-shirted young men
+came between the acts. She talked to all with
+the ardor of the young and unsatisfied; and, mentally
+and spiritually still unsatisfied, buried in
+fur, she was whirled back through snowy streets
+to the great grey mansion of her nativity, and
+the silence of her white-hung chamber.</p>
+
+<p>All through February the preparatory r&eacute;gime
+continued, with preliminary canters at theatre
+and opera, informal party practice, and trial
+dinners. Always she gave herself completely to
+every moment with a wistful and unquenched
+faith, eager novice in her quest of what was lacking<span class="pagenumsmall">[16]</span>
+in her life; ardent enthusiast in her restless
+searching for the remedy. And, unsatisfied, lingering
+mentally by the door of Chance, lest she
+miss somewhere the magic that satisfies and quiets&mdash;lest
+the gates of Opportunity swing open after
+she had turned away&mdash;reluctantly she returned
+to the companionship of her own solitary mind
+and undeveloped soul, and sat down to starve
+with them in spirit, wondering wherein might lie
+the reason for this new hunger that assailed her,
+mind and body.</p>
+
+<p>She ran up her private flag the next winter,
+amid a thousand other gay and flaunting colours
+breaking out all over town. The newspapers
+roared a salute to the wealthiest debutante; and
+an enthusiastic press, not yet housebroken but
+agile with much exercise in leaping and fawning,
+leaped now about the debutante's slippers, grinning,
+slavering and panting. Later, led by instinct
+and its Celebrated Nose, it bounded toward
+young Lord Willowmere, jumped and fawned
+about him, slightly soiling him, until in midwinter
+the engagement it had announced was corroborated,
+and a million shop-girls and old women were
+in a furor.</p>
+
+<p>He was a ruddy-faced young man who wore his
+bowler hat toward the back of his head, a small,<span class="pagenumsmall">[17]</span>
+pointed moustache, and who walked always as
+though he were shod in riding boots.</p>
+
+<p>He would have made a healthy studgroom for
+any gentleman's stable. Person and intellect
+were always thoroughly scrubbed as with saddle-soap.
+Had he been able to afford it, his stables
+would have been second to none in England.</p>
+
+<p>Soon he would be able to afford it.</p>
+
+<p>To his intimates, including his fianc&eacute;e, he was
+known as "Stirrups." All day long he was in the
+saddle or on the box, every evening at the Cataract
+Club or at a cabaret. Between times he
+called upon Miss Cassillis&mdash;usually finding her
+out. When he found her not at home, he called
+elsewhere, very casually.</p>
+
+<p>Two continents were deeply stirred over the
+impending alliance.<span class="pagenumsmall">[18]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 270px;">
+<img src="images/ch03.jpg" width="270" height="486" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+<p>Young Jones, in wildest Florida, had never
+heard of it or of her, or of her income.
+His own fortune amounted to six hundred
+dollars, and he had been born in Brooklyn,
+and what his salary might be only he and the
+Smithsonian Institution knew.</p>
+
+<p>He was an industrious young man, no better
+than you or I, accepting thankfully every opportunity
+for mischief which the Dead Lake region
+afforded. No opportunities of that kind ever
+presenting themselves in that region, he went once
+a month to Miami in the <i>Orange Puppy</i>, and
+drank too many swizzles and so forth, et cetera.<span class="pagenumsmall">[19]</span></p>
+
+<p>Having accomplished this, he returned to the
+wharf, put the <i>Orange Puppy</i> into commission,
+hoisted sail, and squared away for Matanzas Inlet,
+finding himself too weak-minded to go home
+by a more direct route.</p>
+
+<p>He had been on his monthly pilgrimage to Miami,
+and was homeward bound noisily, using his
+auxiliary power so that silence should not descend
+upon him too abruptly. He had been, for half
+an hour now, immersed in a species of solitaire
+known as The Idiot's Delight, when he caught
+himself cheating himself, and indignantly scattered
+the pack to the four winds&mdash;three of which,
+however, were not blowing. One card, the deuce
+of hearts, fluttered seaward like a white butterfly.
+Beyond it he caught sight of another white
+speck, shining like a gull's breast.</p>
+
+<p>It was a big yacht steaming in from the open
+sea; and her bill of lading included Miss Cassillis
+and Willowmere. But Jones could not know that.
+So he merely blinked at the distant <i>Chihuahua</i>,
+yawned, flipped the last card overboard, and
+swung the <i>Orange Puppy</i> into the inlet, which
+brimmed rather peacefully, the tide being nearly
+at flood.</p>
+
+<p>Far away on the deck of the <i>Chihuahua</i> the
+quick-fire racket of Jones's auxiliary was amazingly<span class="pagenumsmall">[20]</span>
+audible. Miss Cassillis, from her deck-chair,
+could see the <i>Orange Puppy</i>, a fleck of glimmering
+white across a sapphire sea. How was she
+to divine that one Delancy Jones was aboard of
+her? All she saw when the two boats came near
+each other was a noisy little craft progressing
+toward the lagoon, emitting an earsplitting
+racket; and a tall, lank young man clad in flannels
+lounging at the tiller and smoking a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>Around her on the snowy deck were disposed
+the guests of her parents, mostly corpulent, swizzles
+at every elbow, gracefully relaxing after a
+morning devoted to arduous idleness. The Victor
+on deck, which had furnished the incentive to
+her turkey-trotting with Lord Willowmere, was
+still exuding a syncopated melody. Across the
+water, Jones heard it and stood looking at the
+great yacht as the <i>Orange Puppy</i> kicked her way
+through the intensely blue water under an azure
+sky.</p>
+
+<p>Willowmere lounged over to the rail and gazed
+wearily at the sand dunes and palmettos. Presently
+Miss Cassillis slipped from her deck-chair
+to her white-shod feet, and walked over to where
+he stood. He said something about the possibilities
+of "havin' a bit of shootin'," with a vague<span class="pagenumsmall">[21]</span>
+wave of his highly-coloured hand toward the palmetto
+forests beyond the lagoon.</p>
+
+<p>If the girl heard him she made no comment.
+After a while, as the distance between the <i>Chihuahua</i>
+and the <i>Orange Puppy</i> lengthened, she levelled
+her sea glasses at the latter craft, and found
+that the young man at the helm was also examining
+her through his binoculars.</p>
+
+<p>While she inspected him, several unrelated ideas
+passed through her head; she thought he was
+very much sunburned and that his hatless head
+was attractive, with its short yellow hair crisped
+by the sun. Without any particular reason, apparently,
+she recollected a young man she had
+seen the winter before, striding down the wintry
+avenue about his business. He might have been
+this young man for all she knew. Like the other,
+this one wore yellow hair. Then, with no logic in
+the sequence of her thoughts, suddenly the memory
+of how she had run away when she was nine
+years old set her pulses beating, filling her heart
+with the strange, wistful, thrilling, overwhelming
+longing which she had supposed would never again
+assail her, now that she was engaged to be married.
+And once more the soft fire burned in her
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Stirrups," she said, scarcely knowing what she<span class="pagenumsmall">[22]</span>
+was saying, "I don't think I'll marry you after
+all. It's just occurred to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I say!" protested Willowmere languidly,
+never for a moment mistrusting that the point
+of her remark was buried in some species of
+American humour. He always submitted to
+American humour. There was nothing else to do,
+except to understand it.</p>
+
+<p>"Stirrups, dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're very pink and healthy, aren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his accustomed shrug of resignation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I say&mdash;come, now&mdash;&mdash;" he murmured,
+lighting a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>"What a horrid smash there would be if I
+didn't make good, wouldn't there, Stirrups?"
+She mused, her blue eyes resting on him, too
+coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"Rather," he replied, comfortably settling his
+arms on the rail.</p>
+
+<p>"It might happen, you know. Suppose I fell
+overboard?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fish you out, ducky."</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose I&mdash;ran away?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ow."</p>
+
+<p>"What would you do, Stirrups? Why, you'd<span class="pagenumsmall">[23]</span>
+go back to town and try to pick another winner.
+Wouldn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally that is what you would do, isn't
+it?" She considered him curiously for a moment,
+then smiled. "How funny!" she said, almost
+breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Rather," he murmured, and flicked his cigarette
+overboard.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>Orange Puppy</i> had disappeared beyond the
+thicket of palmettos across the point. The air
+was very warm and still.</p>
+
+<p>Her father waddled forward presently, wearing
+the impressive summer regalia of a commodore in
+the Siwanois Yacht Club. His daughter's blue
+eyes rested on the portly waistline of her parent&mdash;then
+on his fluffy chop-whiskers. A vacant,
+hunted look came into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Father," she said almost listlessly, "I'm going
+to run away again."</p>
+
+<p>"When do you start?" inquired that facetious
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, I think. What is there over there?"&mdash;turning
+her face again toward the distant lagoon,
+with its endless forests of water-oak, cedar, and
+palmetto.</p>
+
+<p>"Over there," said her father, "reside several<span class="pagenumsmall">[24]</span>
+species of snakes and alligators. Also other reptiles,
+a number of birds, and animals, and much
+microbic mud."</p>
+
+<p>She bit her lip. "I see," she said, nodding.</p>
+
+<p>Willowmere said: "We should find some shootin'
+along the lagoon. Look at the ducks."</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Cassillis yawned; he had eaten too heavily
+of duck to be interested. Very thoughtfully
+he presented himself with a cigar, turned it over
+and over between his soft fingers, and yawned
+again. Then, nodding solemnly as though in emphasis
+of a profound idea of which he had just
+been happily delivered, he waddled slowly back
+along the deck.</p>
+
+<p>His daughter looked after him until he disappeared;
+gazed around her at the dawdling assortment
+of guests aboard, then lifted her quiet eyes
+to Willowmere.</p>
+
+<p>"Ducky," she said, "I can't stand it. I'm going
+to run away."</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, then," he said, linking his arm in
+hers.</p>
+
+<p>The Victor still exuded the Tango.</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated. Then freeing herself:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, not with you, Stirrups! I wish to go
+away somewhere entirely alone. Could you understand?"
+she added wistfully.<span class="pagenumsmall">[25]</span></p>
+
+<p>He stifled a yawn. American humour bored him
+excessively.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll be back in a day or two?" he inquired.
+And laughed violently when the subtlety of his
+own wit struck him.</p>
+
+<p>"In a day or two or not at all. Good-bye, Stirrups."</p>
+
+<p>"Bye."</p>
+
+<p>The sun blazed on her coppery hair and on
+the white skin that never burned, as she walked
+slowly across the yacht's deck and disappeared
+below.</p>
+
+<p>While she was writing in her cabin, the <i>Chihuahua</i>
+dropped her anchors. Miss Cassillis listened
+to the piping, the thud of feet on deck, the rattle
+and distant sound of voices. Then she continued
+her note:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>I merely desire to run away. I don't know why,
+Mother, dear. But the longing to bolt has been incubating
+for many years. And now it's too strong to
+resist. I don't quite understand how it came to a
+crisis on deck just now, but I looked at Stirrups,
+whose skin is too pink, and at Father, who had
+lunched too sumptuously, and at the people on deck,
+all digesting in a row&mdash;and then at the green woods
+on shore, and the strip of white where a fairy surf
+was piling up foam into magic castles and snowy bat<span class="pagenumsmall">[26]</span>tlements,
+ephemeral, exquisite. And all at once it
+came over me that I must go.</p>
+
+<p>Don't be alarmed. I shall provision a deck canoe,
+take a tent, some rugs and books, and paddle into
+that lagoon. If you will just let me alone for two
+or three days, I promise I'll return safe and sound,
+and satisfied. For something has got to be done in
+regard to that longing of mine. But really, I think
+that if you and Father <i>won't</i> understand, and if you
+send snooping people after me, I won't come back at
+all, and I'll never marry Stirrups. Please understand
+me, Mother, dear.</p>
+
+<p class="author smcap">Cecil.</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>This effusion she pinned to her pillow, then
+rang for the steward and ordered the canoe to
+be brought alongside, provisioned for a three
+days' shooting trip.</p>
+
+<p>So open, frank, and guileless were her orders
+that nobody who took them suspected anything
+unusual; and in the full heat and glare of the
+afternoon siesta, when parents, fianc&eacute;, and assorted
+guests were all asleep and in full process of
+digestion and the crew of the <i>Chihuahua</i> was
+drowsing from stem to stern, a brace of sailors
+innocently connived at her escape, aided her into
+the canoe, and, doubting nothing, watched her
+paddle away through the inlet, and into the<span class="pagenumsmall">[27]</span>
+distant lagoon, which lay sparkling in golden
+and turquoise tints, set with palms like a stupid
+picture in a child's geography.</p>
+
+<p>Later, the <i>Chihuahua</i> fired a frantic gun.
+Later still, two boats left the yacht, commanded
+respectively by one angry parent and one fianc&eacute;,
+profoundly bored.<span class="pagenumsmall">[28]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
+<img src="images/ch04.jpg" width="580" height="292" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>IV</h2>
+
+<p>When Miss Cassillis heard the gun, it
+sounded very far away. But it irritated
+as well as scared her. She
+pushed the canoe energetically through a screen
+of foliage overhanging the bank of the lagoon,
+it being merely her immediate instinct to hide herself.</p>
+
+<p>To her surprise and pleasure, she discovered
+herself in a narrow, deep lead, which had been entirely
+concealed by the leaves, and which wound
+away through an illimitable vista of reeds, widening
+as she paddled forward, until it seemed like
+a glassy river bordered by live-oak, water-oak,
+pine, and palmetto, curving out into a flat and
+endless land of forests.</p>
+
+<p>Here was liberty at last! No pursuit need
+now be feared, for the entrance to this paradise<span class="pagenumsmall">[29]</span>
+which she had forced by a chance impulse could
+never be suspected by parent or fianc&eacute;.</p>
+
+<p>A little breeze blew her hair and loosened it;
+silently her paddle dipped, swept astern in a
+swirl of bubbles, flashed dripping, and dipped
+again.</p>
+
+<p>Ahead of her a snake-bird slipped from a dead
+branch into the water; a cormorant perched on
+the whitened skeleton of a mango, made hideous
+efforts to swallow a mullet before her approach
+disorganized his man&oelig;uvres.</p>
+
+<p>So silently the canoe stole along that the fat
+alligators, dozing in the saw-grass, dozed on until
+she stirred them purposely with a low tap of her
+paddle against the thwarts; then they rose, great
+lumbering bodies propped high on squatty legs,
+waddled swiftly to the bank's edge, and slid headlong
+into the water.</p>
+
+<p>Everywhere dragon-flies glittered over the saw-grass;
+wild ducks with golden eyes and heads like
+balls of brown plush swam leisurely out of the
+way; a few mallard, pretending to be frightened,
+splashed and clattered into flight, the sunlight
+jewelling the emerald heads of the drakes.</p>
+
+<p>"Wonderful, wonderful," her heart was singing
+to itself, while her enchanted eyes missed nothing&mdash;neither
+the feebly flying and strangely<span class="pagenumsmall">[30]</span>
+shaped, velvety black butterflies, the narrow wings
+of which were striped with violent yellow; nor the
+metallic blue and crestless jays that sat on saplings,
+watching her; nor the pelicans fishing with
+nature's orange and iridescent net in the shallows;
+nor the tall, slate-blue birds that marched in dignified
+retreat through the sedge, picking up their
+stilt-like legs with the precision of German foot-soldiers
+on parade.</p>
+
+<p>These and other phenomena made her drop
+her paddle at intervals and clap her hands softly
+in an ecstasy beyond mere exclamation. How
+restfully green was the world; how limpid the
+water; how royally blue the heavens! Listening,
+she could hear the soft stirring of palmetto fronds
+in the forests; the celestial song of a little bird
+that sat on a sparkle-berry bush, its delicate long-curved
+bill tilted skyward. Then the deep note
+of splendour flashed across the scheme of sound
+and colour as a crimson cardinal alighted near
+her, crest erect.</p>
+
+<p>But more wonderful than all was that at last,
+after eighteen years, she was utterly alone; and
+liberty was showering its inestimable gifts upon
+her in breathless prodigality&mdash;liberty to see with
+her own eyes and judge with her own senses; liberty
+to linger capriciously amid mental fancies, to
+<span class="pagenumsmall">[31]</span>move on impulsively to others; liberty to reflect
+unurged and unrestricted; liberty to choose, to
+reject, to ignore.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<a name="gs02" id="gs02"></a>
+<img src="images/gs02.jpg" width="400" height="615" alt="&quot;They inspected each other, apparently bereft of
+the power of speech.&quot;" title="">
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption">&quot;They inspected each other, apparently bereft of
+the power of speech.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Now and then a brilliant swimming snake filled
+her with interest and curiosity. Once, on a flat,
+low bush, she saw a dull, heavy, blunt-bodied serpent
+lying asleep in the sun like an old and swollen
+section of rubber hose. But when she ventured
+to touch the bush with her paddle, the snake
+reared high and yawned at her with jaws which
+seemed to be lined in white satin. Which fortunately
+made her uneasy, and she meddled no more
+with the Little Death of the southern swamps.</p>
+
+<p>She was now passing very close to the edge of
+the "hammock," where palmettos overhung the
+water; and as the cool, dim woodlands seemed to
+invite her, she looked about her leisurely for an
+agreeable landing place. There were plenty to
+choose from; and she selected a little sandy point
+under a red cedar tree, drove her canoe upon it,
+and calmly stepped ashore. And found herself
+looking into the countenance of Jones.</p>
+
+<p>For a full minute they inspected each other, apparently
+bereft of the power of speech.</p>
+
+<p>She said, finally: "About a year ago last February,
+did you happen to walk down Fifth Avenue&mdash;very
+busily? Did you?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[32]</span></p>
+
+<p>It took him an appreciable time to concentrate
+for mental retrospection.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "I did."</p>
+
+<p>"You were going down town, weren't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"On business?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," she said timidly, "if you would tell
+me what that business was? Do you mind? Because,
+really, I don't mean to be impertinent."</p>
+
+<p>He made an effort to reflect. It was difficult
+to reflect and to keep his eyes on her but also it
+is impolite to converse with anybody and look
+elsewhere. This he had been taught at his mother's
+knee&mdash;and sometimes over it.</p>
+
+<p>"My business down town," he said very slowly,
+"was with an officer of the Smithsonian Institution
+who had come on from Washington to see
+something which I had brought with me from
+Florida."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you mind telling me what it was you
+brought with you from Florida?" she asked wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"No. It was malaria."</p>
+
+<p>"What!"</p>
+
+<p>"It was malaria," he repeated politely.<span class="pagenumsmall">[33]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I don't see how you could&mdash;could show it
+to him," she murmured, perplexed.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, I'll tell you how I showed it to him. I
+made a little incision in my skin with a lancet;
+he made a smear or two&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A&mdash;what?"</p>
+
+<p>"A smear&mdash;he put a few drops of my blood
+on some glass plates."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"To examine them under the microscope."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"So that he might determine what particular
+kind of malaria I had brought back with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he find out?" she asked, deeply interested.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Jones, displaying mild symptoms
+of enthusiasm, "he discovered that I was fairly
+swarming with a perfectly new and undescribed
+species of bacillus. That bacillus," he added,
+with modest diffidence, "is now named after me."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him very earnestly, dropped her
+blue eyes, raised them again after a moment:</p>
+
+<p>"It must be&mdash;pleasant&mdash;to give one's name to
+a bacillus."</p>
+
+<p>"It is an agreeable and exciting privilege.
+When I look into the culture tubes I feel an intimate
+relationship with those bacilli which I have
+never felt for any human being."<span class="pagenumsmall">[34]</span></p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you are a&mdash;&mdash;" she hesitated, with a
+slight but charming colour in her cheeks, "a naturalist,
+I presume?" And she added hastily, "No
+doubt you are a famous one, and my question
+must sound ignorant and absurd to you. But as
+I do not know your name&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is Jones," he said gloomily, "&mdash;and I am
+not famous."</p>
+
+<p>"Mine is Cecil Cassillis; and neither am I," she
+said. "But I thought when naturalists gave their
+names to butterflies and microbes that everything
+concerned immediately became celebrated."</p>
+
+<p>Jones smiled; and she thought his expression
+very attractive.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, "fame crowns the man who, celebrated
+only for his wealth, names hotels, tug-boats,
+and art galleries after himself. Thus are
+Immortals made."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, standing there gracefully as a
+boy, her hands resting on her narrow hips. She
+laughed again. A tug-boat, a hotel, and a cigar
+were named after her father.</p>
+
+<p>"Fame is an extraordinary thing," she said.
+"But liberty is still more wonderful, isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Liberty is only comparative," he said, smiling.
+"There is really no such thing as absolute
+freedom."<span class="pagenumsmall">[35]</span></p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> have all the freedom you desire, haven't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well&mdash;I enjoy the only approach to absolute
+liberty I ever heard of."</p>
+
+<p>"What kind of liberty is that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Freedom to think as I please, no matter what
+I'm obliged to do."</p>
+
+<p>"But you do what you please, too, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no!" he said smiling. "The man was never
+born who did what he pleased."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not? You choose your own work, don't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. But once the liberty of choice is exercised,
+freedom ends. I choose my profession.
+There my liberty ends, because instantly I am
+enslaved by the conditions which make my choice
+a profession."</p>
+
+<p>She was deeply interested. A mossy log lay
+near them; she seated herself to listen, her elbow
+on her knee, and her chin cupped in her hand.
+But Jones became silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Were you not in that funny little boat that
+passed the inlet about three hours ago?" she
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"The <i>Orange Puppy</i>? Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"What an odd name for a boat&mdash;the <i>Orange
+Puppy</i>!"<span class="pagenumsmall">[36]</span></p>
+
+<p>"An orange puppy," he explained, "is the name
+given in the Florida orange groves to the caterpillar
+of a large swallow-tail butterfly, which
+feeds on orange leaves. The butterfly it turns
+into is known to entomologists as <i>Papilio cresphontes</i>
+and <i>Papilio thoas</i>. The latter is a misnomer."</p>
+
+<p>She gazed upon this young man in undisguised
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"Once," she said, "when I was nine years old, I
+ran away from a governess and two trained
+nurses. They found me with both hands full of
+muddy pollywogs. It has nothing to do with
+what you are saying, but I thought I'd tell
+you."</p>
+
+<p>He insisted that the episode she recalled was
+most interesting and unusual, considered purely
+as a human document.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you tell me what you are doing down
+here in these forests?" she asked, "&mdash;as we are
+discussing human documents."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said. "I am investigating several
+thousand small caterpillars which are feeding on
+the scrub-palmetto."</p>
+
+<p>"Is that your <i>business</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Exactly. If you will remain very still for a
+moment and listen very intently you can hear the<span class="pagenumsmall">[37]</span>
+noise which these caterpillars make while they are
+eating."</p>
+
+<p>She thought of the <i>Chihuahua</i>, and it occurred
+to her that she had rather tired of seeing things
+eat. However, except in Europe, she had never
+<i>heard</i> things eat. So she listened.</p>
+
+<p>He said: "These caterpillars are in their third
+moult&mdash;that is, they have changed their skin
+three times since emerging from the egg&mdash;and are
+now busily chewing the immature fruit of the
+scrub-palmetto. You can hear them very
+plainly."</p>
+
+<p>She sat silent, spellbound; and presently in the
+woodland stillness, all around her she heard the
+delicate and continuous sound&mdash;the steady, sustained
+noise of thousands of tiny jaws, all crunching,
+all busily working together. And when she
+realized what the elfin rustle really meant, she
+turned her delighted and grateful eyes on Jones.
+And the beauty of them made him exceedingly
+thoughtful.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you explain to me," she whispered, "why
+you are studying these caterpillars, Mr. Jones?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because they are spreading out over the forests.
+Until recently this particular species of
+caterpillar, and the pretty little moth into which
+it ultimately turns, were entirely confined to a<span class="pagenumsmall">[38]</span>
+narrow strip of jungle, only a few miles long,
+lying on the Halifax River. Nowhere else in all
+the world could these little creatures be found.
+But recently they have been reported from the
+Dead Lake country. So the Smithsonian Institution
+sent me down here to study them, and find
+out whither they were spreading, and whether any
+natural parasitic enemies had yet appeared to
+check them."</p>
+
+<p>She gazed at him, fascinated.</p>
+
+<p>"Have any appeared?" she asked, under her
+breath.</p>
+
+<p>"I have not yet found a single creature that
+preys upon them."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it a very arduous and difficult task to
+watch these thousands of little caterpillars all day
+long?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is quite impossible for me to do it thoroughly
+all alone."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you like to have me help you?" she
+asked innocently.</p>
+
+<p>Which rather bowled him over, but he said:</p>
+
+<p>"I'd b-b-be d-d-delighted&mdash;only you haven't
+time, have you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have three days. I've brought a tent, you
+see, and everything necessary&mdash;rugs, magazines,
+blankets, toilet articles, bon-bons, books&mdash;everything,<span class="pagenumsmall">[39]</span>
+in fact, to last three days.... I wonder
+how that tent is put up. Do you know?"</p>
+
+<p>He went over to the canoe and gazed at the
+tent.</p>
+
+<p>"I think I could pitch it for you," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, thanks so much! May I help you? I think
+I'll put it here on this pretty stretch of white
+sand by the water's edge."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid that wouldn't do," he said, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because the lagoon is tidal. You'd be awash
+sooner or later."</p>
+
+<p>"I see. Well, then, anywhere in the woods will
+do&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Not <i>anywhere</i>," he said, smiling. "High water
+leaves few dry places in this forest; in fact&mdash;I'm
+afraid that my shack is perched on the only spot
+which is absolutely dry at all times. It is a shell
+mound&mdash;the only one in the Dead Lake region."</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't there room for my tent beside yours?"
+she asked, a trifle anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Y-es," he said, in a voice as matter of fact
+as her own. "How many will there be in your
+party?"</p>
+
+<p>"In my <i>party</i>! Why, only myself," she said,
+with smiling animation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I see!" But he didn't.<span class="pagenumsmall">[40]</span></p>
+
+<p>They lugged the tent back among the trees to
+the low shell mound, where in the centre of a
+ring of pines and evergreen oaks his open-faced
+shack stood, thatched with palmetto fans. She
+gazed upon the wash drying on the line, upon a
+brace of dead ducks hanging from the eaves, upon
+the smoky kettle and the ashes of the fire. Purest
+delight sparkled in her blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Erecting her silk tent with practiced hands,
+he said carelessly:</p>
+
+<p>"In case you cared to send any word to the
+yacht&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Did I say that I came from the yacht?" she
+asked; and her straight eyebrows bent a trifle
+inward.</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you promise me something, Mr. Jones?"</p>
+
+<p>The things he was prepared to promise her
+choked him for a second, but when he regained
+control of his vocal powers he said, very pleasantly,
+that he would gladly promise her anything.</p>
+
+<p>"Then don't ask me where I came from. Let
+me stay three days. Then I'll go very quietly
+away, and never trouble you again. Is it a promise?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, not looking at her. His face<span class="pagenumsmall">[41]</span>
+had become very serious; she noticed it&mdash;and how
+well his head was set on his shoulders, and how
+his clipped hair was burned to the color of crisp
+hay.</p>
+
+<p>"You were Harvard, of course," she said, unthinkingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." He mentioned the year.</p>
+
+<p>"Not crew?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Baseball?"</p>
+
+<p>"'Varsity pitcher," he nodded, surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Then this is the third time I've seen you....
+I wonder what it is about you&mdash;&mdash;" She remained
+silent, watching him burying her water bottles
+in the cool marl.</p>
+
+<p>When all was in order, he smiled, made her a
+little formal bow, and evinced a disposition to
+retire and leave her in possession.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought we were going to work at once!"
+she said uneasily. "I am quite ready." And,
+as he did not seem to comprehend, "I was going
+to help you to examine the little caterpillars, one
+by one; and the minute I saw anything trying to
+bite them I was going to call you. Didn't you
+understand?" she added wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>"That will be fine!" he said, with an enthusiasm
+very poorly controlled.<span class="pagenumsmall">[42]</span></p>
+
+<p>"You will show me where the little creatures
+are hiding, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I will! Here they are, all about us!"
+He made a sweeping gesture over the low undergrowth
+of scrub-palmetto; and the next moment:</p>
+
+<p>"I see them!" she exclaimed, delighted. "Oh,
+what funny, scrubby, busy little creatures! They
+are everywhere&mdash;<i>everywhere</i>! Why, there seem
+to be thousands and thousands of them! And
+all are eating the tiny green bunches of fruit!"</p>
+
+<p>They bent together over a group of feeding
+larv&aelig;; he handed her a pocket microscope like
+his own; and, enchanted, she studied the tiny
+things while he briefly described their various
+stages of development from the little eggs to the
+pretty, pearl-tinted moth so charmingly striped
+with delicate, brown lines&mdash;a rare prize in the
+cabinet of any collector.<span class="pagenumsmall">[43]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 280px;">
+<img src="images/ch05.jpg" width="280" height="231" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>V</h2>
+
+<p>Through the golden forest light of afternoon,
+they moved from shrub to shrub;
+and he taught her to be on the watch for
+any possible foes of the neat and busy little caterpillars,
+warning her to watch for birds, spiders,
+beetles, ichneumon flies, possibly squirrels or even
+hornets. She nodded her comprehension; he went
+one way, she the other. For nearly ten minutes
+they remained separated, and it seemed ages to
+one of them anyway.</p>
+
+<p>But the caterpillars appeared to be immune.
+Nothing whatever interfered with them; wandering
+beetles left them unmolested; no birds even
+noticed them; no gauzy-winged and parasitic flies
+investigated them.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Jones!" she called.<span class="pagenumsmall">[44]</span></p>
+
+<p>He was at her side in an instant.</p>
+
+<p>"I only wanted to know where you were," she
+said happily.</p>
+
+<p>The sun hung red over the lagoon when they
+sauntered back to camp. She went into her tent
+with a cheerful nod to him, which said:</p>
+
+<p>"I've had a splendid time, and I'll rejoin you in
+a few moments."</p>
+
+<p>When she emerged in fresh white flannels, she
+found him writing in a blank-book.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if I might see?" she said. "If it's
+scientific, I mean."</p>
+
+<p>"It is, entirely."</p>
+
+<p>So she seated herself on the ground beside him,
+and read over his shoulder the entries he was
+making in his field book concerning the day's
+doings. When he had finished his entry, she said:</p>
+
+<p>"You have not mentioned my coming to you,
+and how we looked for ichneumon flies together."</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;&mdash;" He was silent.</p>
+
+<p>She added timidly: "I know I count for absolutely
+nothing in the important experiences of a
+naturalist, but&mdash;I did look very hard for ichneumon
+flies. Couldn't you write in your field book
+that I tried very hard to help you?"</p>
+
+<p>He wrote gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Cassillis most generously volunteered her<span class="pagenumsmall">[45]</span>
+invaluable aid, and spared no effort to discover
+any possible foe that might prove to be parasitic
+upon these larv&aelig;. But so far without success."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she said, in a very low voice.
+And after a short silence: "It was not mere vanity,
+Mr. Jones. Do you understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it was not vanity, even if I do not
+entirely understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I tell you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Please."</p>
+
+<p>"It was the first thing that I have ever been
+permitted to do all by myself. It meant so much
+to me.... And I wished to have a little record of
+it&mdash;even if you think it is of no scientific importance."</p>
+
+<p>"It is of more importance than&mdash;&mdash;" But he
+managed to stop himself, slightly startled. She
+had lifted her head from the pages of the field
+book to look at him. When his voice failed, and
+while the red burned brilliantly in his ears, she
+resumed her perusal of his journal, gravely.
+After a while, though she turned the pages as if
+she were really reading, he concluded that her
+mind was elsewhere. It was.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he rose, mended the fire, filled the kettle,
+and unhooked the brace of wild ducks from<span class="pagenumsmall">[46]</span>
+the eaves where they swung, and marched off with
+them toward the water.</p>
+
+<p>When he returned, the ducks were plucked and
+split for broiling. He found her seated as he
+had left her, dreaming awake, idle hands folded
+on the pages of his open field book.</p>
+
+<p>For dinner they had broiled mallard, coffee,
+ash-cakes, and bon-bons. After it she smoked a
+cigarette with him.</p>
+
+<p>Later she informed him that it was her first,
+and that she liked it, and requested another.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't," he said, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"It spoils a girl's voice, ultimately."</p>
+
+<p>"But it's very agreeable."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you promise not to?" he asked, lightly.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly her blue eyes became serious.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, "if you wish."</p>
+
+<p>The woods grew darker. Far across the lagoon
+a tiger-owl woke up and began to yelp like a
+half-strangled hobgoblin.</p>
+
+<p>She sat silent for a little while, then very
+quietly and frankly put her hand on Jones's. It
+was shaking.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid of that sound," she said calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is only a big owl," he reassured her, retaining
+her hand.<span class="pagenumsmall">[47]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Is that what it is? How <i>very</i> dark the woods
+are! I had no idea that there could be such utter
+darkness. I am not sure that I care for it."</p>
+
+<p>"There is nothing to harm you in these woods."</p>
+
+<p>"No bears and wolves and panthers?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are a few&mdash;and all very anxious to keep
+away from anything human."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mind if I leave my hand where it is?"</p>
+
+<p>It appeared that he had no insurmountable objections.</p>
+
+<p>After the seventh tiger-owl had awakened and
+the inky blackness quivered with the witch-like
+shouting and hellish tumult, he felt her shoulder
+pressing against his. And bending to look into
+her face saw that all the colour in it had fled.</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't be frightened," he said earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"But I am. I'm sorry.... I'll try to accustom
+myself to it.... The darkness is a&mdash;a trifle terrifying&mdash;isn't
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's beautiful, too," he said, looking up at the
+firelit foliage overhead. She looked up also, her
+slender throat glimmering rosy in the embers'
+glare. After a moment she nodded:</p>
+
+<p>"It <i>is</i> wonderful.... If I only had a little time
+to accustom myself to it I am sure I should love<span class="pagenumsmall">[48]</span>
+it.... Oh! What was that very loud splash out
+there in the dark?"</p>
+
+<p>"A big fish playing in the lagoon; or perhaps
+wild ducks feeding."</p>
+
+<p>After a few minutes he felt her soft hand
+tighten within his.</p>
+
+<p>"It sounds as though some great creature were
+prowling around our fire," she whispered. "Do
+you hear its stealthy tread?"</p>
+
+<p>"Noises in the forest are exaggerated," he said
+carelessly. "It may be a squirrel or some little
+furry creature out hunting for his supper. Please
+don't be afraid."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it <i>isn't</i> a bear?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear," he said, so naturally and unthinkingly
+that for a full second neither realised the
+awful break of Delancy Jones.</p>
+
+<p>When they did they said nothing about it. But
+it was some time before speech was resumed. She
+was the first to recover. Perhaps the demoralisation
+was largely his. It usually is that way.</p>
+
+<p>She said: "This has been the most perfect day
+of my entire life. I'm even glad I am a little
+scared. It is delicious to be a trifle afraid. But
+I'm not, now&mdash;very much.... Is there any established<br>
+<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">hour for bedtime in the woods?"</span><br>
+
+<p>"Inclination sounds the hour."<span class="pagenumsmall">[49]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Isn't that wonderful!" she sighed, her eyes
+on the fire. "Inclination rules in the forest....
+And here I am."</p>
+
+<p>The firelight on her copper-tinted hair masked
+her lovely eyes in a soft shadow. Her shoulder
+stirred rhythmically as she breathed.</p>
+
+<p>"And here you live all alone," she mused, half
+to herself.... "I once saw you pitch a game
+against Yale.... And the next time I saw you
+walking very busily down Fifth Avenue.... And
+now&mdash;you are&mdash;here.... That is wonderful....
+Everything seems to be wonderful in this place....
+Wh-what <i>is</i> that flapping noise, please?"</p>
+
+<p>"Two herons fighting in the sedge."</p>
+
+<p>"You know everything.... That is the most
+wonderful of all. And yet you say you are not
+famous?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody ever heard of me outside the Smithsonian."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;you <i>must</i> become famous. To-morrow I
+shall look very hard for an ichneumon fly for
+you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But your discovery will make <i>you</i> famous,
+Miss Cassillis&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;why, it's for <i>you</i> that I am going to
+search so hard! Did you suppose I would dream
+of claiming any of the glory!"<span class="pagenumsmall">[50]</span></p>
+
+<p>He said, striving to speak coolly:</p>
+
+<p>"It is very generous and sweet of you.... And,
+after all, I hardly suppose that you need any
+added lustre or any additional happiness in a life
+which must be so full, so complete, and so care-free."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent for a while, then:</p>
+
+<p>"Is <i>your</i> life then so full of care, Mr. Jones?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no," he said; "I get on somehow."</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me," she insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"What am I to tell you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why it is that your life is care-ridden."</p>
+
+<p>"But it isn't&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me!"</p>
+
+<p>He said, gaily enough: "To labour for others
+is sometimes a little irksome.... I am not discontented....
+Only, if I had means&mdash;if I had
+barely sufficient&mdash;there are so many fascinating
+and exciting lines of independent research to follow&mdash;to
+make a name in&mdash;&mdash;" He broke off with
+a light laugh, leaned forward and laid another
+log on the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"You can not afford it?" she asked, in a low
+voice; and for the moment astonishment ruled her
+to discover that this very perfect specimen of
+intelligent and gifted manhood was struggling
+under such an amazingly trifling disadvantage.<span class="pagenumsmall">[51]</span>
+Only from reading and from hearsay had she
+been even vaguely acquainted with the existence of
+poverty.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said pleasantly, "I can not yet afford
+myself the happiness of independent research."</p>
+
+<p>"When will you be able to afford it?"</p>
+
+<p>Neither were embarrassed; he looked thoughtfully
+into the fire; and for a while she watched
+him in his brown study.</p>
+
+<p>"Will it be soon?" she asked, under her breath.</p>
+
+<p>"No, dear."</p>
+
+<p>That time a full minute intervened before either
+realised how he had answered. And both remained
+exceedingly still until she said calmly:</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you were the very ideal embodiment
+of personal liberty. And now I find that wretched
+and petty and ignoble circumstances fetter even
+such a man as you are. It&mdash;it is&mdash;is heartbreaking."</p>
+
+<p>"It won't last forever," he said, controlling his
+voice.</p>
+
+<p>"But the years are going&mdash;the best years, Mr.
+Jones. And your life's work beckons you. And
+you are equipped for it, and you can not take
+it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Some day&mdash;&mdash;" But he could say no more
+then, with her hand tightening in his.<span class="pagenumsmall">[52]</span></p>
+
+<p>"To&mdash;to rise superior to circumstances&mdash;that
+is god-like, isn't it?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." He laughed. "But on six hundred dollars
+a year a man can't rise very high above circumstances."</p>
+
+<p>The shock left her silent. Any gown of hers
+cost more than that. Then the awfulness of it
+all rose before her in its true and hideous proportions.
+And there was nothing for her to do
+about it, nothing, absolutely nothing, except to
+endure the degradation of her wealth and remember
+that the merest tithe of it could have made
+this man beside her immortally famous&mdash;if, perhaps,
+no more wonderful than he already was in
+her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Was there no way to aid him? She could look
+for ichneumon flies in the morning. And on the
+morning after that. And the next morning she
+would say good-bye and go away forever&mdash;out of
+this enchanted forest, out of his life, back to the
+<i>Chihuahua</i>, and to her guests who ate often and
+digested all day long&mdash;back to her father, her
+mother&mdash;back to Stirrups&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>He felt her hand close on his convulsively, and
+turned to encounter her flushed and determined
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"You like me, don't you?" she said.<span class="pagenumsmall">[53]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes." After a moment he said: "Yes&mdash;absolutely."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you like me enough to&mdash;to let me help you
+in your research work&mdash;to be patient enough to
+teach me a little until I catch up with you?...
+So we can go on together?... I know I am presumptuous&mdash;perhaps
+importunate&mdash;but I thought&mdash;somehow&mdash;if
+you did like me well enough&mdash;it
+would be&mdash;very agreeable&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It would be!... And I&mdash;like you enough for&mdash;anything.
+But you could not remain here&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean here."</p>
+
+<p>"Where, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where?" She looked vaguely about her in
+the firelight. "Why, everywhere. Wherever you
+go to make your researches."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear, I would go to Ceylon if I could."</p>
+
+<p>"I also," she said.</p>
+
+<p>He turned a little pale, looking at her in silence.
+She said calmly: "What would you do in Ceylon?"</p>
+
+<p>"Study the unknown life-histories of the rarer
+Ornithoptera."</p>
+
+<p>She knew no more than a kitten what he meant.
+But she wanted to know, and, moreover, was perfectly
+capable of comprehending.</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever you desire to study," she said,<span class="pagenumsmall">[54]</span>
+"would prove delightful to me.... If you want
+me. Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Want you!" Then he bit his lip.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you? Tell me frankly if you don't.
+But I think, somehow, you would not make a mistake
+if you did want me. I really am intelligent.
+I didn't know it until I talked with you. Now,
+I know it. But I have never been able to give
+expression to it or cultivate it.... And, somehow,
+I know I would not be a drag on you&mdash;if you
+would teach me a little in the beginning."</p>
+
+<p>He said: "What can I teach <i>you</i>, Cecil? Not
+the heavenly frankness that you already use so
+sweetly. Not the smiling and serene nobility
+which carries your head so daintily and so fearlessly.
+Not the calm purity of thought, nor the
+serene goodness of mind that has graciously included
+a poor devil like me in your broad and generous sympathies&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please!" she faltered, flushing. "I am not
+what you say&mdash;though to hear you say such
+things is a great happiness&mdash;a pleasure&mdash;very intense&mdash;and
+wonderful&mdash;and new. But I am nothing,
+<i>nothing</i>&mdash;unless I should become useful to
+you. I <i>could</i> amount to something&mdash;with&mdash;you&mdash;&mdash;"
+She checked herself; looked at him as
+though a trifle frightened. "Unless," she added<span class="pagenumsmall">[55]</span>
+with an effort, "you are in love with somebody
+else. I didn't think of that. <i>Are</i> you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said. "Are you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No.... I have never been in love.... This is
+the nearest I have come to it."</p>
+
+<p>"And I."</p>
+
+<p>She smiled faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"If we&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes," he said, calmly, "if we are to pass
+the balance of our existence in combined research,
+it would be rather necessary for us to marry."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mind?"</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary. Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least. Do you really mean it? It
+wouldn't be disagreeable, would it? You are
+above marrying for mere sentiment, aren't you?
+Because, somehow, I seem to know you like me....
+And it would be death for me&mdash;a mental death&mdash;to
+go back now to&mdash;to Stirrups&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"To&mdash;why do you ask? Couldn't you take me
+on faith?"</p>
+
+<p>He said, unsteadily: "If you rose up out of the
+silvery lagoon, just born from the starlight and
+the mist, I would take you."</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you are a poet, too," she faltered.
+"You seem to be about everything desirable."<span class="pagenumsmall">[56]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I'm only a man very, very deep in&mdash;love."</p>
+
+<p>"In love!... I thought&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, but you need think no more. You <i>know</i>
+now, Cecil."</p>
+
+<p>She remained silent, thinking for a long while.
+Then, very quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know.... It is that way with me also.
+For I no sooner find my liberty than I lose it&mdash;in
+the same moment&mdash;to you. We must never
+again be separated.... Do you feel as I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely.... But it must be so."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" she asked, troubled.</p>
+
+<p>"For one thing, I shall have to work harder
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know we can not marry on what
+I have?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Is <i>that</i> the reason?" She laughed,
+sprang lightly to her feet, stood looking down
+at him. He got up, slowly.</p>
+
+<p>"I bring you," she said, "six hundred dollars
+a year. And a <i>little</i> more. Which sweeps away
+that obstacle. Doesn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I could not ask you to live on that&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I can live on what you live on! I should wish
+to. It would make me utterly and supremely
+happy."<span class="pagenumsmall">[57]</span></p>
+
+<p>Her flushed, young face confronted his as she
+took a short, eager step toward him.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not making love to you," she said, "&mdash;at
+least, I don't think I am. All I desire is to help&mdash;to
+give you myself&mdash;my youth, energy, ambition,
+intelligence&mdash;and what I have&mdash;which is of
+no use to me unless it is useful to you. Won't
+you take these things from me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you give me your heart, too, Cecil?"</p>
+
+<p>She smiled faintly, knowing now that she had
+already given it. She did not answer, but her
+under lip trembled, and she caught it between her
+teeth as he took her hands and kissed them in
+silence.<span class="pagenumsmall">[58]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/ch06.jpg" width="600" height="536" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>VI</h2>
+
+<p>"Miami is not very far, is it?" she asked, as
+she sprang aboard the <i>Orange Puppy</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Not very, dear."</p>
+
+<p>"We could get a license immediately, couldn't
+we?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think so."</p>
+
+<p>"And then it will not take us very long to get
+married, will it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not very."</p>
+
+<p>"What a wonderful night!" she murmured,
+looking up at the stars. She turned toward the<span class="pagenumsmall">[59]</span>
+shore. "What a wonderful place for a honeymoon!...
+And we can continue business, too,
+and watch our caterpillars all day long! Oh, it
+is all too wonderful, wonderful!" She kissed her
+hand to the unseen camp. "We will be back to-morrow!"
+she called softly. Then a sudden
+thought struck her. "You never can get the
+<i>Orange Puppy</i> through that narrow lead, can
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there is an easier way out," he said, taking
+the tiller as the sail filled.</p>
+
+<p>Her head dropped back against his knees. Now
+and then her lips moved, murmuring in sheerest
+happiness the thoughts that drifted through her
+enchanted mind.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder when it began," she whispered, "&mdash;at
+the ball-game&mdash;or on Fifth Avenue&mdash;or when I
+saw you here? It seems to me as if I always had
+been in love with you."</p>
+
+<p>Outside in the ocean, the breeze stiffened and
+the perfume was tinged with salt.</p>
+
+<p>Lying back against his knees, her eyes fixed
+dreamily on the stars, she murmured:</p>
+
+<p>"Stirrups <i>will</i> be surprised."</p>
+
+<p>"What are you talking about down there all by
+yourself?" he whispered, bending over her.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up into his eyes. Suddenly her own<span class="pagenumsmall">[60]</span>
+filled; and she put up both arms, linking them
+around his neck.</p>
+
+<p>And so the <i>Orange Puppy</i> sailed away into
+the viewless, formless, starry mystery of all romance.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>After a silence the young novelist, who had
+been poking the goldfish, said slowly: "That's
+pretty poor fiction, Athalie, but, as a matter of
+simple fact and inartistic truth, recording sentimental
+celerity, it stands unequalled."</p>
+
+<p>"Straight facts make poor fiction," remarked
+Duane.</p>
+
+<p>"It all depends on who makes the fiction out of
+them," I ventured.</p>
+
+<p>"Not always," said Athalie. "There are facts
+which when straightly told are far stranger than
+fiction. I noticed a case of that sort in my crystal
+last winter." And to the youthful novelist
+she said: "Don't try to guess who the people
+were if I tell it, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," he promised.</p>
+
+<p>"Please fix my cushions," she said to nobody
+in particular. And after the stampede was over
+she selected another cigarette, thoughtfully, but
+did not light it.<span class="pagenumsmall">[61]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/ch07.jpg" width="400" height="382" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>VII</h2>
+
+<p>"You are queer folk, you writers of fiction,"
+she mused aloud. "No monarch ordained
+of God takes himself more seriously; no
+actor lives more absolutely in a world made out
+of his imagination."</p>
+
+<p>She lighted her cigarette: "You often speak
+of your most 'important' book,&mdash;as though any
+fiction ever written were important. Painters
+speak of their most important pictures; sculptors,
+composers, creative creatures of every species
+employ the adjective. And it is all very
+silly. Facts only can be characterised as important;
+figments of the creative imagination are
+as unimportant&mdash;&mdash;" she blew a dainty ring of
+smoke toward the crystal globe&mdash;"as that! '<i>Tout
+ce qu'ont fait les hommes, les hommes peuvent le</i><span class="pagenumsmall">[62]</span>
+<i>d&eacute;truire. Il n'y a de caract&egrave;res in&eacute;ffa&ccedil;ables que
+ceux qu' imprime la nature.</i>' There has never
+been but one important author."</p>
+
+<p>I said smilingly: "To quote the gentleman you
+think important enough to quote, Athalie, '<i>Tout
+est bien sortant des mains de l'Auteur des choses:
+tout d&eacute;g&eacute;nere entre les mains de l'homme</i>.'"</p>
+
+<p>Said the novelist simply: "Imagination alone
+makes facts important. '<i>Cette superbe puissance,
+ennemie de la raison!</i>'"</p>
+
+<p>"O Athalie," whispered Duane, "night-blooming,
+exquisite blossom of the arid municipal desert,
+recount for us these facts which you possess
+and which, in your delightful opinion, are
+stranger than fiction, and more important."</p>
+
+<p>And Athalie, choosing another sweetmeat,
+looked at us until it had dissolved in her fragrant
+mouth. Then she spoke very gravely, while her
+dark eyes laughed at us:</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>When young Lord Willowmere's fianc&eacute;e ran
+away from him and married Delancy Jones, that
+bereaved nobleman experienced a certain portion
+of the universal shock which this social seismic
+disturbance spread far and wide over two hemispheres.<span class="pagenumsmall">[63]</span></p>
+
+<p>That such a girl should marry beneath her
+naturally disgusted everybody. So both Jones
+and his wife were properly damned.</p>
+
+<p>England read its morning paper, shrugged its
+derision, and remarked that nobody ought to be
+surprised at anything that happened in the
+States. "The States" swallowed the rebuke and
+squirmed.</p>
+
+<p>Now, among the sturdy yeomanry, gentry, and
+nobility of those same British and impressive Isles
+there was an earnest gentleman whose ample waist
+and means and scholarly tastes inclined him to a
+sedentary life of research. The study of human
+nature in its various native and exotic phases had
+for forty years obsessed his insular intellect.
+Philologist, anthropologist, calm philosopher, and
+benignant observer, this gentleman, who had never
+visited the United States, determined to do so
+now. For, he reasoned&mdash;and very properly&mdash;a
+country where such a thing could happen to a
+British nobleman and a Peer of the Realm must
+be worth exploring, and its curious inhabitants
+merited, perhaps, the impersonally judicial inspection
+of an F. R. B. A. whose gigantic work
+on the folk manners of the world had now reached
+its twentieth volume, without as yet including the
+United States. So he determined to devote several<span class="pagenumsmall">[64]</span>
+chapters in the forthcoming and twenty-first
+volume to the recent colonies of Great Britain.</p>
+
+<p>Now, when the Duke of Pillchester concluded
+to do anything, that thing was invariably and
+thoroughly done. And so, before it entirely realised
+the honour in store for it, the United States
+was buttoning its collar, tying its white tie, and
+rushing down stairs to open its front door to the
+Duke of Pillchester, the Duchess of Pillchester,
+and the Lady Alene Innesly, their youthful and
+ornamental daughter.</p>
+
+<p>For a number of months after its arrival, the
+Ducal party inspected the Yankee continent
+through a lens made for purposes of scientific
+investigation only. The massed wealth of the
+nation met their Graces in solid divisions of social
+worth. The shock was mutual.</p>
+
+<p>Then the massed poverty of the continent was
+exhibited, leaving the poverty indifferent and
+slightly bored, and the Ducal party taking
+notes.</p>
+
+<p>It was his Grace's determination to study the
+folk-ways of Americans; and what the Duke
+wished the Duchess dutifully desired. The Lady
+Alene Innesly, however, was dragged most reluctantly
+from function to function, from palace
+to purlieu, from theatre to cathedral, from Coney<span class="pagenumsmall">[65]</span>
+Island to Newport. She was "havin' a rotten
+time."</p>
+
+<p>All day long she had nothing to look at but
+an overdressed and alien race whose voices distressed
+her; day after day she had nothing to say
+except, "How d'y do," and "Mother, shall we have
+tea?" Week after week she had nothing to think
+of except the bare, unkempt ugliness of the cities
+she saw; the raw waste and sordid uglification
+of what once had been matchless natural resources;
+dirty rivers, ruined woodlands, flimsy
+buildings, ignorant architecture. The ostentatious
+and wretched hotels depressed her; the poor
+railroads and bad manners disgusted her.</p>
+
+<p>Listless, uninterested, Britishly enduring what
+she could not escape, the little Lady Alene had
+made not the slightest effort to mitigate the circumstances
+of her temporary fate. She was civilly
+incurious concerning the people she met; their
+social customs, amusements, pastimes, duties, various
+species of business or of leisure interested her
+not a whit. All the men looked alike to her; all
+the women were over-gowned, tiresomely pretty,
+and might learn one day how to behave themselves
+after they had found out how to make their
+voices behave.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, requiring summer clothing&mdash;tweeds<span class="pagenumsmall">[66]</span>
+and shooting boots being not what the climate
+seemed to require in July&mdash;she discovered with
+languid surprise that for the first time in her
+limited life she was well gowned. A few moments
+afterward another surprise faintly thrilled her,
+for, chancing to glance at herself after a Yankee
+hairdresser had finished her hair, she discovered
+to her astonishment that she was pretty.</p>
+
+<p>For several days this fact preyed upon her
+mind, alternately troubling and fascinating her.
+There were several men at home who would certainly
+sit up; Willowmere among others.</p>
+
+<p>As for considering her newly discovered beauty
+any advantage in America, the idea had not entered
+her mind. Why should it? All the men
+looked alike; all wore sleek hair, hats on the backs
+of their heads, clothing that fitted like a coster's
+trousers. She had absolutely no use for them,
+and properly.</p>
+
+<p>However, she continued to cultivate her beauty
+and to adorn it with Yankee clothing and headgear
+befitting; which filled up considerable time
+during the day, leaving her fewer empty hours
+to fill with tea and three-volumed novels from
+the British Isles.</p>
+
+<p>Now, it had never occurred to the Lady Alene
+Innesly to read anything except British fact and<span class="pagenumsmall">[67]</span>
+fiction. She had never been sufficiently interested
+even to open an American book. Why should
+she, as long as the three props of her national
+literature endured intact&mdash;curates, tea, and
+thoroughbred horses?</p>
+
+<p>But there came a time during the ensuing
+winter when the last of the three-volumed novels
+had been assimilated, the last serious tome digested;
+and there stretched out before her a bookless
+prospect which presently began to dismay
+her with the aridness of its perspective.</p>
+
+<p>The catastrophe occurred while the Ducal
+party was investigating the strange folk-customs
+of those Americans who gathered during the
+winter in gigantic Florida hotels and lived there,
+uncomfortably lodged, vilely fed, and shamelessly
+robbed, while third-rate orchestras play cabaret
+music and enervating breezes stir the cabbage-palmettos
+till they rustle like bath-room rubber
+plants.</p>
+
+<p>It was a bad place and a bad time of year for
+a young and British girl to be deprived of her
+native and soporific fiction; for the livelier and
+Frenchier of British novelists were self-denied
+her, because somebody had said they were not
+unlike Americans.</p>
+
+<p>Now she was, in the uncouth vernacular of the<span class="pagenumsmall">[68]</span>
+country, up against it for fair! She didn't know
+what it was called, but she realised how it felt
+to be against something.</p>
+
+<p>Three days she endured it, dozing in her room,
+half awake when the sea-breeze rattled the Venetian
+blinds, or the niggers were noisy at baseball.</p>
+
+<p>On the fourth day she arose, went to the window,
+gazed disgustedly out over the tawdry villas
+of Verbena Inlet, then rang for her maid.</p>
+
+<p>"Bunn," she said, "here are three sovereigns.
+You will please buy for me one specimen of every
+book on sale in the corridor of this hotel. And,
+Bunn!&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"What was it you were eating the other day?"</p>
+
+<p>"Chewing-gum, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it&mdash;agreeable?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it nourishing?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady. It is not intended to be eaten;
+it is to be chewed."</p>
+
+<p>"Then one does not swallow it when one supposes
+it to be sufficiently masticated?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, my lady."</p>
+
+<p>"What does one do with it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Beg pardon, my lady&mdash;one spits it out."</p>
+
+<p>"Ow," said the girl.<span class="pagenumsmall">[69]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/ch08.jpg" width="600" height="206" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+
+<p>She was lying on the bed when a relay of
+servants staggered in bearing gaudy piles
+of the most recent and popular novels, and
+placed them in tottering profusion upon the adjacent
+furniture.</p>
+
+<p>The Lady Alene turned her head where it lay
+lazily pillowed on her left arm, and glanced indifferently
+at the multi-coloured battlement of
+books. The majority of the covers were embellished
+with the heads of young women, all endowed
+with vaudeville-like beauty&mdash;it having been
+discovered by intelligent publishers that a girl's
+head on any book sells it.</p>
+
+<p>On some covers were displayed coloured pictures
+of handsome and athletic American young
+men, usually kissing beautiful young ladies who
+wore crowns, ermines, and foreign orders over dinner
+dresses. Sometimes, however, they were kicking
+Kings. That seemed rather odd to the Lady<span class="pagenumsmall">[70]</span>
+Alene, and she sat up on the bed and reached out
+her hand. It encountered a book on which rested
+a small, oblong package. She took book and
+package. On the pink wrapper of the latter she
+read this verse:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Why are my teeth so white and bright?<br></span>
+<span class="i0">Because I chew with all my might<br></span>
+<span class="i0">The gum that fills me with delight<br></span>
+<span class="i0">And keeps me healthy day and night.<br></span>
+<span class="i4">Five cents.<br></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The Lady Alene's unaccustomed fingers became
+occupied with the pink wrapper. Presently
+she withdrew from it a thin and brittle object,
+examined it, and gravely placed it in her mouth.</p>
+
+<p>For a while the perplexed and apprehensive expression
+remained upon her face, but it faded
+gradually, and after a few minutes her lovely features
+settled into an expression resembling contentment.
+And, delicately, discreetly, at leisurely
+intervals, her fresh, sweet lips moved as though
+she were murmuring a prayer.</p>
+
+<p>All that afternoon she perused the first American
+novel she had ever read. And the cumulative
+effect of the fiction upon her literal mind was
+amazing as she turned page after page, and, gradually
+gathering mental and nervous speed,<span class="pagenumsmall">[71]</span>
+dashed from one chapter, bang! into another,
+only to be occultly adjured to "take the car
+ahead"&mdash;which she now did quite naturally, and
+on the run.</p>
+
+<p>Never, never had she imagined such things
+could be! Always heretofore, to her, fiction had
+been a strict reflection of actuality in which a
+dull imagination was licensed to walk about if it
+kept off the grass. And it always did in the only
+novels to which she had been accustomed.</p>
+
+<p>But good heavens! Here was a realism at work
+in these pages so astonishing yet so convincing,
+so subtle yet so natural, so matter of fact yet
+so astoundingly new to her that the book she was
+reading was already changing the entire complexion
+of the Yankee continent for her.</p>
+
+<p>It had to do with a young, penniless, and athletic
+American who went to Europe, tipped a king
+off his throne, pushed a few dukes, counts, and
+barons out of the way, reorganized the army, and
+went home taking with him a beautiful and exclusive
+princess with honest intentions.</p>
+
+<p>The inhabitants of several villages wept at his
+departure; the abashed nobility made unsuccessful
+attempts to shoot him; otherwise the trip to
+the Cunard Line pier was uneventful, and diplomatic
+circles paid no attention to the incident.<span class="pagenumsmall">[72]</span></p>
+
+<p>When the Lady Alene finished the story her
+oval face ached; but this was no time to consider
+aches. So with a charming abandon she relieved
+her pretty teeth of the morceau, replaced it with
+another, helped herself to a second novel, settled
+back on her pillow, and opened the enchanted
+pages.</p>
+
+<p>And zip! Instantly she became acquainted with
+another athletic and penniless American who was
+raising the devil in the Balkans.</p>
+
+<p>Never in her life had she dreamed that any nation
+contained such fearless, fascinating, resourceful,
+epigrammatic, and desirable young
+men! And here she was in the very midst of
+them, and never had realised it until now.</p>
+
+<p>Where were they? All around her, no doubt.
+When, a few days later, she had read some baker's
+dozen novels, and in each one of them had discovered
+similar athletic, penniless, and omniscient
+American young men, her opinion was confirmed,
+and she could no longer doubt that, like the fiction
+of her own country, the romances of American
+novelists must have a substantial foundation
+in solid fact.</p>
+
+<p>There could be no use in quibbling. The situation
+had become exciting. Her youthful imagination
+was now fired; her Saxon blood thoroughly<span class="pagenumsmall">[73]</span>
+stirred. She knew perfectly well that there were
+in her own country no young men like these she
+had read about&mdash;not a man-jack among them who
+would ever dream of dashing about the world cuffing
+the ears of reprehensible monarchs, meting
+out condign punishment to refractory nobility,
+reconstructing governments and states and armies,
+and escaping with a princess every time.</p>
+
+<p>Not that she actually believed that such episodes
+were of common occurrence. Young as she
+was she knew better. But somehow it seemed very
+clear to her that a race of writers who were so
+unanimous on the subject and a nation which so
+complacently read of these events without denying
+their plausibility, must within itself harbour
+germs and seeds of romance and reckless deeds
+which no doubt had produced a number of young
+men thoroughly capable of doing a few of the exciting
+things she had read about.</p>
+
+<p>Now she regretted she had not noticed the men
+she had met; now she was indeed sorry she had
+not at least taken pains to learn to distinguish
+them one from the other. She wished that she had
+investigated this reckless, chivalrous, energetic,
+and distinguishing trait of the American young
+man.</p>
+
+<p>It seemed odd, too, that Pa-<i>pa</i> had never investigated<span class="pagenumsmall">[74]</span>
+it; that Ma-<i>ma</i> had never appeared to
+notice it.</p>
+
+<p>She mentioned it at dinner carelessly, in the
+midst of a natural and British silence. Neither
+parent enlightened her. One said, "Fancy!"
+And the other said, "Ow."</p>
+
+<p>And so, as both parents departed the following
+morning to investigate the tarpon fishing at Miami,
+the little Lady Alene made private preparations
+to investigate and closely observe the astonishing,
+reckless, and romantic tendencies of the
+American young man. Her tour of discovery she
+scheduled for five o'clock that afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>Just how these investigations were to be accomplished
+she did not see very clearly. She had
+carefully refrained from knowing anybody in the
+hotel. So how to go about it she did not know;
+but she knew enough after luncheon to have her
+hair done by somebody besides her maid, selected
+the most American gown in her repertoire, took a
+sunshade hitherto disdained, and glanced in the
+mirror at a picture in white, with gold hair, violet
+eyes, and a skin of snow and roses.</p>
+
+<p>Further she did not know how to equip herself,
+except by going out doors at five o'clock. And
+at five o'clock she went.</p>
+
+<p>From the tennis courts young men and girls<span class="pagenumsmall">[75]</span>
+looked at her. On the golf links youth turned to
+observe her slim and dainty progress. She was
+stared at from porch and veranda, from dock and
+deck, from garden and walk and orange grove
+and hedge of scarlet hibiscus.</p>
+
+<p>From every shop window in the village, folk
+looked out at her; from automobile, wheeled chair,
+bicycle, and horse-drawn vehicle she was inspected.
+But she knew nobody; not one bright
+nod greeted her; not one straw hat was lifted;
+not one nigger grinned. She knew nobody. And,
+alas! everybody knew her. A cold wave seemed
+to have settled over Verbena Inlet.</p>
+
+<p>Yet her father was not unpopular, nor was
+her mother either; and although they asked too
+many questions, their perfectly impersonal and
+scientific mission in Verbena Inlet was understood.</p>
+
+<p>But the Lady Alene Innesly was not understood,
+although her indifference was noted and
+her exclusiveness amusedly resented. However,
+nobody interfered with her or her seclusion. The
+fact that she desired to know nobody had been
+very quickly accepted. Youth and the world at
+Verbena Inlet went on without her; the sun continued
+to rise and set as usual; and the nigger
+waiters played baseball.</p>
+
+<p>She stood watching them now for a few minutes,<span class="pagenumsmall">[76]</span>
+her parasol tilted over her lovely shoulders. Tiring
+of this, she sauntered on, having not the
+slightest idea where she was going, but very
+calmly she made up her mind to speak to the first
+agreeable looking young man she encountered, as
+none of them seemed at all inclined to speak to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>Under her arm she had tucked a novel written
+by one Smith. She had read it half through.
+The story concerned a young and athletic and
+penniless man from Michigan and a Balkan
+Princess. She had read as far as the first love
+scene. The young man from Michigan was still
+kissing the Princess when she left off reading.
+And her imagination was still on fire.</p>
+
+<p>She had wandered down to the lagoon without
+finding anybody sufficiently attractive to speak
+to. The water was blue and pretty and very inviting.
+So she hired a motor-boat, seated herself
+in the stern, and dabbled her fingers in the water
+as the engineer took her whizzing across the lagoon
+and out into the azure waste, headed
+straight for the distant silvery inlet.<span class="pagenumsmall">[77]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 200px;">
+<img src="images/ch09.jpg" width="200" height="497" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>IX</h2>
+
+<p>She read, gazed at the gulls and wild ducks,
+placed a bit of gum between her rose-leaf
+lips, read a little, glanced up to mark the
+majestic flight of eight pelicans, sighed discreetly,
+savoured the gum, deposited it in a cunning corner
+adjacent to her left and snowy cheek, and
+spoke to the boatman.</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever read this book?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Me! No, ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>"It is very interesting. Do you read much?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, ma'am."</p>
+
+<p>"This is a very extraordinary book," she said.
+"I strongly advise you to read it."<span class="pagenumsmall">[78]</span></p>
+
+<p>The boatman glanced ironically at the scarlet
+bound volume which bore the portrait of a pretty
+girl on its covers.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it that book by John Smith they're sellin'
+so many of down to the hotel?" he inquired
+slowly.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it was written by one Smith," she
+said, turning over the volume to look. "Yes, John
+Smith is the author's name. No doubt he is very
+famous in America."</p>
+
+<p>"He lives down here in winter."</p>
+
+<p>"Really!" she exclaimed with considerable animation.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. I take him shooting and fishing. He
+has a shack on the Inlet Point."</p>
+
+<p>"Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"Over there, where them gulls is flying."</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked earnestly at the point. All she
+saw were snowy dunes and wild grasses and seabirds
+whirling.</p>
+
+<p>"He writes them books over there," remarked
+the boatman.</p>
+
+<p>"How extremely interesting!"</p>
+
+<p>"They say he makes a world o' money by it.
+He's rich as mud."</p>
+
+<p>"Really!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas'm. I often seen him a settin' onto a<span class="pagenumsmall">[79]</span>
+camp chair out beyond them dunes a-writing
+pieces like billy-bedam. Yes'm."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think he is there now?" she asked with
+a slight catch in her breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we kin soon find out&mdash;&mdash;" He swung
+the tiller; the little boat rushed in a seething
+circle toward the point, veered westward, then
+south.</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas'm," said the boatman presently. "Mr.
+Smith he's reclinin' out there onto his stummick.
+I guess he's just a thinkin'. He thinks more'n
+five million niggers, he does. Gor-a-mighty! <i>I</i>
+never see such a man for thinkin'! He jest lies
+onto his stummick an' studies an' ruminates like
+billy-bedam. Yaas'm. Would you want I should
+land you so's you can take a peek at him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Might I?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, Miss. Go up over them dunes and take
+a peek at him. He won't mind. Ten to nothin'
+he won't even see ye."</p>
+
+<p>There was a little dock built of coquina. A
+power boat, a sloop, several row-boats, and a canoe
+lay there, riding the little, limpid, azure-tinted
+wavelets. Under their keels swam gar-pike,
+their fins and backs also shimmering with blue
+and turquoise green.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Alene rose; her boatman aided her, and<span class="pagenumsmall">[80]</span>
+she sprang lightly to the coquina dock and walked
+straight over the low dune in front of her.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing whatever in sight except
+beach-grapes and scrubby tufts of palmetto, and
+flocks of grey, long-legged, long-billed birds running
+to avoid her. But they did not run very
+fast or very far, and she saw them at a little distance
+loitering, with many a bright and apparently
+friendly glance at her.</p>
+
+<p>There was another dune in front. She mounted
+it. Straight ahead of her, perhaps half a mile
+distant, stood a whitewashed bungalow under a
+cluster of palms and palmettos.</p>
+
+<p>From where she stood she could see a cove&mdash;merely
+a tiny crescent of sand edged by a thin
+blade of cobalt water, and curtained by the palmetto
+forest. And on this little crescent beach,
+in the shade of the palms, a young man lay at full
+length, very intent upon his occupation, which
+was, apparently, to dig holes in the sand with a
+child's toy shovel.</p>
+
+<p>He was clad in white flannels; beside him she
+noticed a red tin pail, such as children use for
+gathering shells. Near this stood two camp-chairs,
+one of which was piled with pads of yellow
+paper and a few books. She thought his
+legs very eloquent. Sometimes they lay in picturesque<span class="pagenumsmall">[81]</span>
+repose, crossed behind him; at other moments
+they waved in the air or sprawled widely,
+appearing to express the varying emotions which
+possessed his deep absorption in the occult task
+under his nose.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, what in the world can he be doing?"
+thought Lady Alene Innesly, watching him. And
+she remained motionless on top of the dune for
+ten minutes to find out. He continued to sprawl
+and dig holes in the sand.</p>
+
+<p>Learning nothing, and her interest increasing
+inversely, she began to walk toward him. It was
+her disposition to investigate whatever interested
+her. Already she was conscious of a deep interest
+in his legs.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time low dunes intervened to hide
+the little cove, but always when she crossed them,
+pushing her way through fragrant thickets of
+sweet bay and sparkle-berry shrub, cove and occupant
+came into view again. And his legs continued
+to wave. The nearer she drew the less she
+comprehended the nature of his occupation, and
+the more she decided to find out what he could be
+about, lying there flat on his stomach and digging
+and patting the sand.</p>
+
+<p>Also her naturally calm and British heart was
+beating irregularly and fast, because she realised<span class="pagenumsmall">[82]</span>
+the fact that she was approaching the vicinity of
+one of those American young men who did things
+in books that she never dreamed could be done
+anywhere. Nay&mdash;under her arm was a novel
+written by this very man, in which the hero was
+still kissing a Balkan Princess, page 169. And
+it occurred to her vaguely that her own good
+taste and modesty ought to make an end of such
+a situation; and that she ought to finish the page
+quickly and turn to the next chapter to relieve
+the pressure on the Princess.</p>
+
+<p>Confused a trifle by a haunting sense of her own
+responsibility, by the actual imminence of such
+an author, and by her intense curiosity concerning
+what he was now doing, she walked across the
+dunes down through little valleys all golden with
+the flowers of a flat, spreading vine. The blossoms
+were larger and lovelier than the largest golden
+portulacca, but she scarcely noticed their
+beauty as she resolutely approached the cove,
+moving forward under the cool shadow of the border
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>He did not seem to be aware of her approach,
+even when she came up and stood by the camp-chairs,
+parasol tilted, looking down at him with
+grave, lilac-blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>But she did not look at him as much as she<span class="pagenumsmall">[83]</span>
+gazed at what he was doing. And what he was
+doing appeared perfectly clear to her now.</p>
+
+<p>With the aid of his toy shovel, his little red
+pail, and several assorted shells, he had constructed
+out of sand a walled city. Houses,
+streets, squares, market place, covered ways, curtain,
+keep, tower, turret, crenelated battlement,
+all were there. A driftwood drawbridge bridged
+the moat, guarded by lead soldiers in Boznovian
+uniform.</p>
+
+<p>And lead soldiers were everywhere in the miniature
+city; the keep bristled with their bayonets;
+squads of them marched through street and
+square; they sat at dinner in the market place;
+their cannon winked and blinked in the westering
+sun on every battlement.</p>
+
+<p>And after a little while she discovered two lead
+figures which were not military; a civilian wearing
+a bowler hat; a feminine figure wearing a crown
+and ermines. The one stood on the edge of the
+moat outside the drawbridge: the other, in crown
+and ermines, was apparently observing him of the
+bowler hat from the top of a soldier-infested
+tower.</p>
+
+<p>It was plain enough to her now. This amazing
+young man was working out in concrete detail
+some incident of an unwritten novel. And the<span class="pagenumsmall">[84]</span>
+magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady
+Alene. Genius only possesses such a capacity for
+detail.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<a name="gs03" id="gs03"></a>
+<img src="images/gs03.jpg" width="400" height="607" alt="&quot;The magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady Alene.&quot;" title="">
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption">&quot;The magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady Alene.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Without even arousing young Smith from his
+absorbed preoccupation, she seated herself on the
+unincumbered camp-chair, laid her book on her
+knees, rested both elbows on it, propped her chin
+on both clasped hands, and watched the proceedings.</p>
+
+<p>The lead figure in the bowler hat seemed to be
+in a bad way. Several dozen Boznovian soldiers
+were aiming an assortment of firearms at him;
+cavalry were coming at a gallop, too, not to mention
+a three-gun battery on a dead run.</p>
+
+<p>The problem seemed to be how, in the face of
+such a situation, was the lead gentleman in the
+bowler hat to get away, much less penetrate the
+city?</p>
+
+<p>Flight seemed hopeless, but presently Smith
+picked him up, marched him along the edge of
+the moat, and gave him a shove into it.</p>
+
+<p>"He's swimming," said Smith, aloud to himself.
+"Bang! Bang! But they don't hit him....
+Yes, they do; they graze his shoulder. It is the
+only wound possible to polite fiction. There is
+consequently a streak of red in the water. Bang&mdash;bang&mdash;bang!
+Crack&mdash;crack! The cavalry
+<span class="pagenumsmall">[85]</span>empty their pistols. Boom! A field piece
+opens&mdash;&mdash; Where the devil is that battery&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Smith reached over, drew horses, cannoniers,
+gun and caisson over the drawbridge, galloped
+them along the moat, halted, unlimbered, trained
+the guns on the bowler hatted swimmer, and remarked,
+"Boom!"</p>
+
+<p>"The shell," he murmured with satisfaction,
+"missed him and blew up in the casemates. Did
+it kill anybody? No; that interferes with the
+action.... He dives, swims under water to an
+ancient drain." Smith stuck a peg where the supposed
+drain emptied into the moat.</p>
+
+<p>"That drain," continued Smith thoughtfully,
+"connects with the royal residence.... Where's
+that Princess? Can she see him dive into it? Or
+does she merely suspect he is making for it? Or&mdash;or&mdash;doesn't
+she know anything about it?"</p>
+
+<p>"She doesn't know anything about it!" exclaimed
+Lady Alene Innesly. The tint of excitement
+glowed in her cheeks. Her lilac-tinted eyes
+burned with a soft, blue fire.<span class="pagenumsmall">[86]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/ch10.jpg" width="550" height="186" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>X</h2>
+
+<p>Slowly as a partly paralysed crab, Smith
+raised himself to a sitting posture and
+looked over his shoulder into the loveliest
+face that he had ever beheld, except on the paper
+wrappers of his own books.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry," said the Lady Alene. "Shouldn't
+I have spoken?"</p>
+
+<p>The smoke and turmoil of battle still confused
+Smith's brain; visualisation of wall and tower and
+crowns and ermines made the Lady Alene's fresh,
+wholesome beauty very unreal to him for a moment
+or two.</p>
+
+<p>When his eyes found their focus and his mind
+returned to actuality, he climbed to his feet, hat
+in hand, and made his manners to her. Then,
+tumbling books and pads from the other camp-chair,
+he reseated himself with a half smiling, half
+shamed glance at her, and a "May I?" to which
+she responded, "Please! And might I talk to you
+for a few moments?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[87]</span></p>
+
+<p>Smith shot a keen glance at the book on her
+knees. Resignation and pride altered his features,
+but when again he looked at the Lady
+Alene he experienced a pleasure in his resignation
+which hitherto no curious tourist, no enterprising
+reporter had ever aroused. Smilingly he
+composed himself for the impending interview.</p>
+
+<p>"Until now," said the girl earnestly, "I think I
+have not been entirely convinced by your novels.
+Somehow or other I could not bring myself to
+comprehend the amazing realism of your plots.
+But now I understand the basis of great and fundamental
+truth on which you build so plausibly
+your splendid novels of love and life."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" said Smith.</p>
+
+<p>"To see you," she continued, "constructing the
+scenes of which later you are to write, has been
+a wonderful revelation to me. It has been a privilege
+the importance of which I can scarcely estimate.
+Your devotion to the details of your art,
+your endless patience, your almost austere absorption
+in truth and realism, have not only astounded
+me but have entirely convinced me. The
+greatest thing in the world is Truth. <i>Now</i> I realise
+it!"</p>
+
+<p>She made a pretty gesture of enthusiasm:</p>
+
+<p>"What a wonderful nation of young men is<span class="pagenumsmall">[88]</span>
+yours, Mr. Smith! What qualities! What fearlessness&mdash;initiative&mdash;idealism&mdash;daring&mdash;!
+What
+invention, what recklessness, what romance&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice failed her; she sat with lips parted, a
+soft glow in her cheeks, gazing upon Smith with
+fascinated eyes. And Smith gazed back at her
+without a word.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe," she said, "that in all England
+there exists a single man capable even of
+conceiving the career for which so many young
+Americans seem to be equipped."</p>
+
+<p>After a moment Smith said very quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry, but do you know I don't quite understand
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean," she said, "that you Americans have
+a capacity for conceiving, understanding, and
+performing everything you write about."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you think so?" asked Smith, a trifle
+red.</p>
+
+<p>"Because if Englishmen could understand and
+do such things, our novelists would write about
+them. They never write about them. But you
+Americans do. You write thousands of most delightful
+novels about young men who do things
+unheard of, undreamed of, in England. Therefore,
+it is very clear to me that you Americans
+are quite capable of doing what you write<span class="pagenumsmall">[89]</span>
+about, and what your readers so ardently admire."</p>
+
+<p>"I see," said Smith calmly. His ear-tips still
+burned.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt," said the girl, "many of the astonishing
+things you Americans write about are
+really done. Many astounding episodes in fiction
+are of not uncommon occurrence in real life."</p>
+
+<p>"What kind of episodes?" asked Smith gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, any of them you write about. They
+all are astonishing enough. For example, your
+young men do not seem to know what fear
+is."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Smith, "they don't."</p>
+
+<p>"And when they love," said the girl, "nothing
+can stop them."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing!" she repeated, the soft glow coming
+into her cheeks again. "&mdash;Nothing! Neither
+rank nor wealth nor political considerations nor
+family prejudices, nor even the military!"</p>
+
+<p>Smith bit his lip in silence. He had heard of
+irony; never had he dreamed it could be so crushing:
+he had heard of sarcasm; but the quiet sarcasm
+of this unknown young girl was annihilating
+him. Critics had carved him in his time; but the
+fine mincemeat which this pretty stranger was<span class="pagenumsmall">[90]</span>
+making of him promised to leave nothing more
+either to carve or to roast.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mind my talking to you?" she asked,
+noting the strained expression of his features.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, "go ahead."</p>
+
+<p>"Because if I am tiring you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He said he was not tired.</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;or if it bores you to discuss your art with a
+foreigner who so truly admires it&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He shot a glance at her, then forced a laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not offended," he said. "What paper
+do you represent?"</p>
+
+<p>"I?" she said, bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. You are a newspaper woman, are you
+not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean a reporter?"</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally."</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said very seriously, "I am not a reporter.
+What an odd idea!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think it odd?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, yes. Do not many admirers of your
+works express their pleasure in them to you?"</p>
+
+<p>He studied her lovely face coolly and in detail&mdash;the
+dainty arch of the questioning eyebrows,
+the sensitive curve of the mouth, the clear, sweet
+eyes. Could it be possible that such candour
+masked irony? Could all this be the very essence<span class="pagenumsmall">[91]</span>
+of the art of acting, concealing the most murderous
+sarcasm ever dreamed of by a terrified
+author?</p>
+
+<p>And suddenly his face went red all over, and
+he understood that the essence of this young girl
+was a candour so utterly free of self-consciousness&mdash;a
+frankness so absolutely truthful, that the
+simplicity of her had been a miracle too exquisite
+for him to comprehend.</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>do</i> like what I write!" he exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>Her blue eyes widened: "Of course I do,"
+she said, amazed. "Didn't you understand
+me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said, cooling his burning face in the
+rising sea-wind. "I thought you were laughing at
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry if I was stupid," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> was stupid."</p>
+
+<p>"You!" She laughed a little.</p>
+
+<p>The sinking sun peered through the palm forest
+behind them and flung a beam of blinding
+light at her.</p>
+
+<p>"Am I interrupting your work, Mr. Smith? I
+mean, I know I am, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't go away."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you.... I have noticed what agreeable
+manners you Americans have in novels.<span class="pagenumsmall">[92]</span>
+Naturally you are even more kindly and polite in
+real life."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you met many Americans?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, only you. In the beginning I did not feel
+interested in Americans."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"The young men all seemed to resemble one
+another," she said frankly, "like Chinese. But
+now that I really know an American I am intensely
+interested."</p>
+
+<p>"You notice no Mongolian monotony in me?"
+he inquired gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, no&mdash;&mdash;" She coloured; then discovering
+that he was laughing, she laughed, too, rather
+faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"That was a joke, wasn't it?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that was a joke."</p>
+
+<p>"Because," she said, "there is no Mongolian
+uniformity about <i>you</i>. On the contrary, you
+remind me in every way of one of your own
+heroes."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, really now!" he protested; but she insisted
+with serious enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>"You are the counterpart of the hero in this
+book," she repeated, resting one hand lightly on
+the volume under her elbow. "You wear white
+flannels, you are tall, well built, straight, with<span class="pagenumsmall">[93]</span>
+very regular features and a fasci&mdash;&mdash; a smile,"
+she corrected herself calmly, "which one naturally
+associates with your features."</p>
+
+<p>"Also," she continued, "your voice is cultivated
+and modulated with just enough of the American
+accent to make it piquantly agreeable. And
+what you say is fasci&mdash;&mdash; is well expressed and interesting.
+Therefore, as I have said, to me you
+resemble one of your own heroes."</p>
+
+<p>There was enough hot colour in his face to make
+it boyishly bashful.</p>
+
+<p>"And you appear to be as modest as one of
+your own heroes," she added, studying him.
+"That is truly delightful."</p>
+
+<p>"But really, I am nothing like any of my
+heroes," he explained, terribly embarrassed.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you say that, Mr. Smith?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because it's true. I don't even resemble 'em
+superficially."</p>
+
+<p>She made a quick, graceful gesture: "Why do
+you say that, when here you are before me, the
+exact and exciting counterpart of the reckless
+and fasci&mdash;&mdash; the reckless and interesting men you
+write about?"</p>
+
+<p>He said nothing. She closed the parasol and
+considered him in silence for a moment or two.
+Then:<span class="pagenumsmall">[94]</span></p>
+
+<p>"And I have no doubt that you are capable of
+doing the very things that your heroes do so
+adroitly and so charmingly."</p>
+
+<p>"What, for example?" he asked, reddening to
+his temples.</p>
+
+<p>"Reconstructing armies, for instance."</p>
+
+<p>"Filibustering?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is that what it is called?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's called that in the countries south of the
+United States."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, would you not be capable of overturning
+a government and of reconstructing the army,
+Mr. Smith?"</p>
+
+<p>"Capable?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said cautiously, "if it was the thing
+I wanted to do, perhaps I might have a try at
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"I knew it," she exclaimed triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>"But," he explained, "I never desired to overturn
+any government."</p>
+
+<p>"You probably have never seen any that you
+thought worth while overturning."</p>
+
+<p>Her confident rejoinder perplexed him and he
+remained silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Also," she continued, still more confidently, "I
+am certain that if you were in love, no obstacles<span class="pagenumsmall">[95]</span>
+would prove too great for you to surmount.
+Would they?"</p>
+
+<p>"Really," he said, "I don't know. I'm not
+very enterprising."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the answer of a delightfully modest
+man. Your own hero would return me such an
+answer, Mr. Smith. But I&mdash;and your heroine
+also&mdash;understand you&mdash;I mean your hero."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you?" he asked gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. I, as well as your heroine, understand
+that no obstacles could check you if you
+loved her&mdash;neither political considerations, diplomatic
+exigencies, family prejudices, nor her own
+rank, no matter what it might be. Is not that
+true?"</p>
+
+<p>Eager, enthusiastic, impersonally but warmly
+interested, she leaned a little toward him, intent
+on his reply.</p>
+
+<p>He looked into the lovely, flushed face in silence
+for a while. Then:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "it is true. If I loved, nothing
+could check me except&mdash;&mdash;" he shrugged.</p>
+
+<p>"Death?" She nodded, fascinated.</p>
+
+<p>He nodded. He had meant to say the police.</p>
+
+<p>She said exultantly: "I knew it, Mr. Smith!
+I was certain that you are the living embodiment
+of your own heroes! The moment I set eyes on<span class="pagenumsmall">[96]</span>
+you playing in the sand with your lead soldiers, I
+was sure of it!"</p>
+
+<p>Thrilled, she considered him, her soft eyes brilliant
+with undisguised admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could actually <i>see</i> it!" she said under
+her breath.</p>
+
+<p>"See what?"</p>
+
+<p>"See you, in real life, as one of your own heroes&mdash;doing
+some of the things they do so cleverly, so
+winningly&mdash;careless of convention, reckless of
+consequences, oblivious to all considerations except
+only the affair in hand. That," she said
+excitedly, "would be glorious, and well worth a
+trip to the States!"</p>
+
+<p>"How far," he asked, "have you read in that
+book of mine?"</p>
+
+<p>"In this book?" She opened it, impulsively,
+ran over the pages, hesitated, stopped.</p>
+
+<p>"He was&mdash;was kissing the Balkan Princess,"
+she said. "I left them&mdash;<i>in statu quo</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"I see.... Did he do <i>that</i> well?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;suppose so."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you no opinion?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think he did it&mdash;very&mdash;thoroughly, Mr.
+Smith."</p>
+
+<p>"It ought to be done thoroughly if done at
+all," he said reflectively.<span class="pagenumsmall">[97]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Otherwise," she nodded, "it would be offensive."</p>
+
+<p>"To the reader?"</p>
+
+<p>"To her, too. Wouldn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know better than I."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't know. A nice girl can not imagine
+herself being kissed&mdash;except under very extraordinary
+circumstances, and by a very extraordinary man....
+Such a man as you have
+drawn in this book."</p>
+
+<p>"Had you been that Balkan Princess, what
+would you have done?" he asked, rather pale.</p>
+
+<p>"I?" she said, startled.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, you."</p>
+
+<p>She sat considering, blue eyes lost in candid
+reverie. Then the faintest smile curved her
+lips; she looked up at Smith with winning simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>"In your story, Mr. Smith, does the Balkan
+Princess return his kiss?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not in that chapter."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I would have returned it&mdash;in that&mdash;chapter."
+Then, for the first time, she blushed.</p>
+
+<p>The na&iuml;ve avowal set the heart and intellect of
+Mr. Smith afire. But he only dropped his well-shaped
+head and didn't look at her. Which was
+rather nice of him.<span class="pagenumsmall">[98]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Romance," he said after a moment or two, "is
+all well enough. But real life is stranger than
+fiction."</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the British Isles," she said with decision.
+"It <i>is</i> tea and curates and kennels and
+stables&mdash;as our writers depict it."</p>
+
+<p>"No, you are mistaken! Everywhere it is
+stranger than fiction," he insisted&mdash;"more surprising,
+more charming, more wonderful. Even
+here in America&mdash;here in Florida&mdash;here on this
+tiny point of sand jutting into the Atlantic, life
+is more beautiful, more miraculous than any fiction
+ever written."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you say that?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid I can't tell you why I say
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Why can't you tell me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Only in books could what I might have to tell
+you be logically told&mdash;and listened to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Only in books? But books in America reflect
+actual life," she said. "Therefore, you can tell
+me what you have to tell. Can't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can I?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes...." Far in the inmost recesses of
+her calm and maiden heart something stirred, and
+her breath ceased for a second.... Innocent,
+not comprehending why her breath missed, she<span class="pagenumsmall">[99]</span>
+looked at him with the question still in her blue
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I tell you why real life is stranger than
+fiction?" he asked unsteadily.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell me&mdash;yes&mdash;if&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is stranger," he said, "because it is often
+more headlong and romantic. Shall we take ourselves,
+for example?"</p>
+
+<p>"You and me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. To illustrate what I mean."</p>
+
+<p>She inclined her head, her eyes fixed on
+his.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," he said. "Even in the most skillfully
+constructed story&mdash;supposing that you and
+I were hero and heroine&mdash;no author would have
+the impudence to make us avow our love within a
+few minutes of our first meeting."</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"In the first chapter," he continued, "certain
+known methods of construction are usually followed.
+Time is essential&mdash;the lapse of time. How
+to handle it cleverly is a novelist's business. But
+even the most skillful novelist would scarcely dare
+make me, for example, tell you that I am in love
+with you. Would he?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"And in real life, even if a man does fall in<span class="pagenumsmall">[100]</span>
+love so suddenly, he does not usually say so, does
+he?" he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"But he <i>does</i> fall in love sometimes more suddenly
+than in fiction. And occasionally he declares
+himself. In real life this actually happens.
+And <i>that</i> is stranger than any fiction.
+Isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"One kind of fiction," he continued very unsteadily,
+"is that in which, when he falls in love&mdash;he
+doesn't say so&mdash;I mean in such a case as ours&mdash;supposing
+I had already fallen in love with
+you. I could not say so to you. No man could
+say it to any girl. He remains mute. He observes
+very formally every convention. He smiles,
+hat in hand, as the girl passes out of his life forever....
+Doesn't he? And that is one kind of
+fiction&mdash;the tragic kind."</p>
+
+<p>She had been looking down at the book in her
+lap. After a moment she lifted her troubled eyes
+to his.</p>
+
+<p>"I do&mdash;not know what men do&mdash;in real life,"
+she said. "What would they do in the&mdash;<i>other</i>
+kind of fiction?"</p>
+
+<p>"In the other kind of fiction there would be
+another chapter."<span class="pagenumsmall">[101]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes.... You mean that for us there is
+only this one chapter."</p>
+
+<p>"Only one chapter."</p>
+
+<p>"Or&mdash;might it not be called a short story, Mr.
+Smith?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;one kind of short story."</p>
+
+<p>"Which kind?"</p>
+
+<p>"The kind that ends unhappily."</p>
+
+<p>"But this one is not going to end unhappily,
+is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are about to walk out of the story when
+it ends."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;but&mdash;&mdash;" She bit her lip, flushed and
+perplexed, already dreadfully confused between
+the personal and the impersonal&mdash;between fact
+and fancy.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," he said, "the short story which
+deals with&mdash;love&mdash;can end only as ours is going
+to end&mdash;or the contrary."</p>
+
+<p>"How is ours going to end?" she asked with
+candid curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>"It must be constructed very carefully," he
+said, "because this is realism."</p>
+
+<p>"You must be very skillful, too," she said.
+"I do not see how you are to avoid&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"A&mdash;an&mdash;unhappy&mdash;ending."<span class="pagenumsmall">[102]</span></p>
+
+<p>He looked gravely at his sand castle. "No,"
+he said, "I don't see how it can be avoided."</p>
+
+<p>After a long silence she murmured, half to herself:</p>
+
+<p>"Still, this is America&mdash;after all."</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged, still studying his sand castle.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I had somebody to help me work it
+out," he said, half to himself.</p>
+
+<p>"A collaborator?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so sorry that I could not be useful."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you try?"</p>
+
+<p>"What is the use? I am utterly unskilled and
+inexperienced."</p>
+
+<p>"I'd be very glad to have you try," he repeated.<span class="pagenumsmall">[103]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 375px;">
+<img src="images/ch11.jpg" width="375" height="464" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XI</h2>
+
+<p>After a moment she rose, went over and
+knelt down in the sand before the miniature
+city, studying the situation. All
+she could see of the lead hero in the bowler hat
+were his legs protruding from the drain.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this battery of artillery still shelling him?"
+she inquired, looking over her shoulder at Smith.</p>
+
+<p>He went over and dropped on his knees beside
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"You see," he explained, "our hero is still under
+water."</p>
+
+<p>"All this time!" she exclaimed in consternation.
+"He'll drown, won't he?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[104]</span></p>
+
+<p>"He'll drown unless he can crawl into that
+drain."</p>
+
+<p>"Then he must crawl into it immediately," she
+said with decision.</p>
+
+<p>So he of the bowler was marched along a series
+of pegs indicating the subterranean drain, and
+set down in the court of the castle.</p>
+
+<p>"Good heavens!" exclaimed the Lady Alene.
+"We can't leave him here! They will know him
+by his bowler hat!"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Smith gloomily, "we can't leave him
+here. But what can we do? If he runs out
+they'll fire at him by platoons."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Couldn't</i> they miss him?" pleaded the girl.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid not. He has already lived through
+several showers of bullets."</p>
+
+<p>"But he can't die <i>here</i>!&mdash;here under the very
+eyes of the Princess!" she insisted.</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said Smith, "the Princess will have to
+pull him through. It's up to her now."</p>
+
+<p>The girl knelt there in excited silence, studying
+the problem intently.</p>
+
+<p>It was bad business. The battlements bristled
+with bayonets; outside, cavalry, infantry, artillery
+were massed to destroy the gentleman in the
+bowler hat.</p>
+
+<p>Presently the flush deepened on the girl's<span class="pagenumsmall">[105]</span>
+cheeks; she took the bowler hat between her gloved
+fingers and set its owner in the middle of the
+moat again.</p>
+
+<p>"Doesn't he crawl into the drain?" asked Smith
+anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"No. But the soldiers in the castle think he
+does. So," she continued with animation, "the
+brutal commander rushes downstairs, seizes a
+candle, and enters the drain from the castle court
+with about a thousand soldiers!"</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"With about ten thousand soldiers!" she repeated
+firmly. "And no sooner&mdash;<i>no sooner</i>&mdash;does
+their brutal and cowardly commander enter that
+drain with his lighted candle than the Princess
+runs downstairs, seizes a hatchet, severs the gas
+main with a single blow, and pokes the end of the
+pipe into the drain!"</p>
+
+<p>"B-but&mdash;&mdash;" stammered Smith, "I think&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, <i>please</i> wait! You don't understand what
+is coming."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>What</i> is coming?" ventured Smith timidly, instinctively
+closing both ears with his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"Bang!" said Lady Alene triumphantly. And
+struck the city of sand with her small, gloved
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>After a silence, still kneeling there, they turned<span class="pagenumsmall">[106]</span>
+and looked at each other through the red sunset
+light.</p>
+
+<p>"The explosion of gas killed them both," said
+Smith, in an awed voice.</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. The explosion killed everybody in the
+city except those two young lovers," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"But why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because!"</p>
+
+<p>"By what logic&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I desire it to be so, Mr. Smith." And she
+picked up the bowler hat and the Princess and
+calmly set them side by side amid the ruins.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment Smith reached over and turned
+the two lead figures so that they faced each other.</p>
+
+<p>There was a long silence. The red sunset light
+faded from the sand.</p>
+
+<p>Then, very slowly, the girl reached out, took
+the bowler hat between her small thumb and forefinger,
+and gently inclined the gentleman forward
+at the slightest of perceptible angles.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment Smith inclined him still farther
+forward. Then, with infinite precaution, he
+tipped forward the Princess, so that between her
+lips and the lips of the bowler hat only the width
+of a grass blade remained.<span class="pagenumsmall">[107]</span></p>
+
+<p>The Lady Alene looked up at him over her left
+shoulder, hesitated, looked at bowler hat and at
+the Princess. Then, supporting her weight on one
+hand, with the other she merely touched the Princess&mdash;delicately&mdash;so
+that not even a blade of
+grass could have been slipped between their
+painted lips.</p>
+
+<p>She was a trifle pale as she sank back on her
+knees in the sand. Smith was paler.</p>
+
+<p>After both her gloved hands had rested across
+his palm for five full minutes, his fingers closed
+over them, tightly, and he leaned forward a little.
+She, too, swayed forward a trifle. Her eyes were
+closed when he kissed her.</p>
+
+<p>Now, whatever misgivings and afterthoughts
+the Lady Alene Innesly may have had, she was
+nevertheless certain that to resist Smith was to
+fight against the stars in their courses. For not
+only was she in the toils of an American, but more
+hopeless still, an American who chronicled the
+most daring and headlong idiosyncrasies of the
+sort of young men of whom he was very certainly
+an irresistible example.</p>
+
+<p>To her there was something Shakespearean
+about the relentless sequence of events since the
+moment when she had first succumbed to the small,
+oblong pink package, and her first American novel.<span class="pagenumsmall">[108]</span></p>
+
+<p>And, thinking Shakespeareanly as she stood in
+the purple evening light, with his arm clasping
+her waist, she looked up at him from her charming
+abstraction:</p>
+
+<p>"'If 'twere done,'" she murmured, "'when 'tis
+done, then 'twere well it were done quickly.'"
+And then, gazing deep into his eyes, a noble idiom
+of her adopted country fell from her lips:</p>
+
+<p>"Dearest," she said, "my father won't do a
+thing to you."</p>
+
+<p>And so she ran away with him to Miami where
+the authorities, civil and religious, are accustomed
+to quick action.</p>
+
+<p>It was only fifty miles by train, and preliminary
+telephoning did the rest.</p>
+
+<p>The big chartered launch that left for Verbena
+Inlet next morning poked its nose out of the rainbow
+mist into the full glory of the rising sun.
+Her golden head lay on his shoulder.</p>
+
+<p>Sideways, with delicious indolence, she glanced
+at a small boat which they were passing close
+aboard. A fat gentleman, a fat lady, and a boatman
+occupied the boat. The fat gentleman was
+fast to a tarpon.</p>
+
+<p>Up out of the dazzling Atlantic shot three hundred
+pounds of quivering silver. Splash!</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Dad!" exclaimed the girl.<span class="pagenumsmall">[109]</span></p>
+
+<p>Her father and mother looked over their shoulders
+at her in wooden amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"We are married&mdash;&mdash;" called out their pretty
+daughter across the sunlit water. "I will tell you
+all about it when you land your fish. Look sharp,
+Dad! Mind your reel!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who is that damned rascal?" demanded the
+Duke.</p>
+
+<p>"My husband, Dad! Don't let him get away!&mdash;the
+fish, I mean. Put the drag on! Check!"</p>
+
+<p>Said his Grace of Pillchester in a voice of mellow
+thunder:</p>
+
+<p>"If I were not fast to my first tarpon&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Reel in!" cried Smith sharply, "reel or you
+lose him!"</p>
+
+<p>The Duke reeled with all the abandon of a
+squirrel in a wheel.</p>
+
+<p>"Dearest," said Mrs. John Smith to her petrified
+mother, "we will see you soon at Verbena.
+And <i>don't</i> let Dad over-play that fish. He always
+over-plays a salmon, you know."</p>
+
+<p>The Duchess folded her fat hands and watched
+her departing offspring until the chartered
+launch was a speck on the horizon. Then she
+looked at her husband.</p>
+
+<p>"Fancy!" she said.<span class="pagenumsmall">[110]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Nevertheless," remarked the youthful novelist,
+coldly, "there is nothing on earth as ignoble as a
+best-seller."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," ventured Duane, "whether you
+know which books actually do sell the best."</p>
+
+<p>"Or which books of bygone days were the best-sellers?"</p>
+
+<p>"Some among them are still best-sellers," added
+Athalie.</p>
+
+<p>"A truly important book&mdash;&mdash;" began the novelist,
+but Athalie interrupted him:</p>
+
+<p>"O solemn child," she said, "write on!&mdash;and
+thank the gods for their important gifts to you
+of hand and mind! So that you keep tired eyes
+awake that otherwise would droop to brood on
+pain or sorrow you have done well; and what you
+have written to this end will come nearer being
+important than anything you ever write."</p>
+
+<p>"True, by the nine muses!" exclaimed Stafford
+with emphasis. Athalie glanced at him out
+of sweetly humourous eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a tenth muse," she said. "Did you
+never hear of her?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never! Where did you discover her, Athalie?"</p>
+
+<p>"Where I discover many, many things, my
+friend."</p>
+
+<p>"In your crystal?" I said. She nodded slowly<span class="pagenumsmall">[111]</span>
+while the sweetmeat was dissolving in her mouth.</p>
+
+<p>Through the summer silence a bell here and
+there in the dusky city sounded the hour.</p>
+
+<p>"The tenth muse," she repeated, "and I believe
+there are other sisters, also. Many a star is suspected
+before its unseen existence is proven....
+Please&mdash;a glass of water?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[112]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 525px;">
+<img src="images/ch12.jpg" width="525" height="319" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XII</h2>
+
+<p>She sipped the water pensively as we all returned
+to our places. Then, placing the
+partly empty glass beside her jar of sweetmeats,
+she opened her incomparable lips.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>It is a fine thing when a young man, born to
+travel the speedway of luxury, voluntarily leaves
+it to hew out a pathway for himself through life.
+Brown thought so, too. And at twenty-four he
+resolutely graduated from Harvard, stepped out
+into the world, and looked about him very sternly.</p>
+
+<p>All was not well with the world. Brown knew
+it. He was there to correct whatever was wrong.
+And he had chosen Good Literature as the vehicle
+for self expression.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the nine sister goddesses are born flirts;<span class="pagenumsmall">[113]</span>
+and every one of them immediately glanced sideways
+at Brown, who was a nice young man with
+modesty, principles, and a deep and reverent belief
+in Good Literature.</p>
+
+<p>The nine daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne
+seemed very attractive to him until the tenth and
+most recent addition to the Olympian family
+sauntered by with a flirt of her narrow skirt&mdash;the
+jade!</p>
+
+<p>One glance into the starry blue wells of her
+baby eyes bowled him over. Henceforth she was
+to be his steady&mdash;Thalomene, a casual daughter of
+Zeus, and muse of all that is sacredly obvious in
+the literature of modern realism.</p>
+
+<p>From early infancy Brown's had been a career
+of richest promise. His mother's desk was full
+of his earlier impressions of life. He had, in
+course of time, edited his school paper, his college
+paper; and, as an undergraduate, he had appeared
+in the contributor's columns of various
+periodicals.</p>
+
+<p>His was not only a wealthy but a cultivated
+lineage as well. The love of literature was born
+in him.</p>
+
+<p>To love literature is all right in its way; to
+love it too well is to mistake the appreciative for
+the creative genius. Reverence and devotion are<span class="pagenumsmall">[114]</span>
+no equipment for creative authorship. It is not
+enough to have something to say about what other
+people have said. And the inspiration which
+comes from what others have done is never the
+true one. But Brown didn't know these things.
+They were not revealed unto him at Harvard; no
+inward instinct made them plain to him.</p>
+
+<p>He began by foregathering with authors.
+Many, many authors foregather, from various
+causes&mdash;tradition, inclination, general shiftlessness.
+When they do that they produce a sort of
+serum called literary atmosphere, which is said to
+be delightful. And so Brown found it. However,
+there are authors who seem to be too busy with
+their profession to foregather and exhale atmosphere.
+But these are doubtless either literary
+hacks or the degraded producers of best-sellers.
+They are not authors, either; they are merely
+writers.</p>
+
+<p>Now, in all the world there is only one thing
+funnier than an author; and that is a number of
+them. But Brown didn't know that, either.</p>
+
+<p>All authors are reformers. Said one of them
+to Brown in the Empyrean Club:</p>
+
+<p>"When an author in his own heart ceases to be
+a reformer he begins to be a menace!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a fine sentiment, and Brown wrote it in<span class="pagenumsmall">[115]</span>
+his note-book. Afterward, the more he analyzed
+it the less it seemed to mean.</p>
+
+<p>Another author informed him that the proper
+study for man is man. He'd heard that before,
+but the repetition steeled his resolve. And his
+resolve was to reproduce in literature exactly
+what he observed about him; nothing more, nothing
+less.</p>
+
+<p>There was to be no concession to imagination,
+none to convention, none to that insidious form
+of human weakness known as good taste. As for
+art, Brown already knew what Art really was.</p>
+
+<p>There was art enough for anybody in sheer
+truth, enough in the realism made up of photographic
+detail, recorded uncompromisingly in ordered
+processional sequence. After all, there was
+really no beauty in the world except the beauty
+of absolute truth. All other alleged beauty was
+only some form of weakness. Thus Brown, after
+inhaling literary atmosphere.</p>
+
+<p>Like the majority of young men, Brown realised
+that only a man, and a perfectly fearless,
+honest, and unprejudiced one, was properly equipped
+to study woman and tell the entire
+truth about her in literature.</p>
+
+<p>So he began his first great novel&mdash;"The Unquiet
+Sex"&mdash;and he made heavy weather of it that autumn&mdash;what<span class="pagenumsmall">[116]</span>
+with contributing to the literary atmosphere
+every afternoon and evening at various
+clubs and caf&eacute;s&mdash;not to mention the social purlieus
+into which he ventured with the immortal
+lustre already phosphorescent on his brow.
+Which left him little time for mere writing. It
+is hard to be an author and a writer, too.</p>
+
+<p>The proper study for man being woman, Brown
+studied her solemnly and earnestly. He studied
+his mother and his sisters, boring them to the
+verge of distraction; he attempted to dissect the
+motives which governed the behaviour of assorted
+feminine relatives, scaring several of the more
+aged and timorous, agitating others, and infuriating
+one or two&mdash;until his father ordered him to
+desist.</p>
+
+<p>House-maids, parlour-maids, ladies'-maids, waitresses,
+all fought very shy of him; for true to his
+art, he had cast convention aside and had striven
+to fathom the souls and discover the hidden motives
+imbedded in Milesian, Scandinavian and
+Briton.</p>
+
+<p>"The thing for me to do," said Brown rather
+bitterly to his father, "is to go out into the world
+and investigate far and wide."</p>
+
+<p>"Investigate what?" asked his father.</p>
+
+<p>"Woman!" said Brown sturdily.<span class="pagenumsmall">[117]</span></p>
+
+<p>"There's only one trouble about that."</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Woman," said his father, "is likely to do the
+investigating. This household knows more about
+you than you do about it."</p>
+
+<p>Brown smiled. So did his father.</p>
+
+<p>"Son," said the latter, "what have you learned
+about women without knowing anything about
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing, naturally," said Brown.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you will never have anything more than
+<i>that</i> to say about them," remarked Brown senior.</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because the only thing possible for a man to
+say about them is what his imagination dictates.
+He'll never learn any more concerning women
+than that."</p>
+
+<p>"Imagination is not literature," said Brown
+junior, with polite toleration.</p>
+
+<p>"Imagination is often the truer truth," said the
+old gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"Father, that is rot."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, my son&mdash;and it is almost Good Literature,
+too. Go ahead, shake us if you like. But,
+if you do, you'll come back married."<span class="pagenumsmall">[118]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/ch13.jpg" width="600" height="309" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XIII</h2>
+
+<p>So Brown, who was nourishing a theory, shook
+his family and, requiring mental solitude to
+develop his idea, he went to Verbena Inlet.
+Not to the enormous and expensive caravansary
+swarming with wealth, ennui, envy, and fashion;
+not even to its sister hotel similarly infested. But
+to West Verbena, where for a mile along the white
+shell road modest hotels, boarding houses, and cottages
+nestled behind mosquito screens under the
+dingy cabbage-palmettos.</p>
+
+<p>Here was stranded the winter driftwood from
+the North&mdash;that peculiar flotsam and jetsam
+which summered in similar resorts in the North,
+rocked in rocking chairs on dreary rural verandas,
+congregated at the village post-office,
+awaited its men folk every week-end from the
+filthy and sweltering metropolis.</p>
+
+<p>It was at a shabby but pretentious hostelry<span class="pagenumsmall">[119]</span>
+called the Villa Hibiscus that Brown took up his
+quarters. Several rusty cabbage-palmettos waved
+above the whitish, sandy soil surrounding it; one
+or two discouraged orange trees fruited despondently
+near the veranda. And the place swarmed
+with human beings from all over the United
+States, lured from inclement climes, into the land
+of the orange and the palm&mdash;wistfully seeking in
+the land of advertised perpetual sunshine what
+the restless world has never yet discovered anywhere&mdash;surcease
+from care, from longing, from
+the unkindliness of its fellow seekers.</p>
+
+<p>Dowdiness filled the veranda rocking chairs;
+unlovely hands were folded; faded eyes gazed vacantly
+at the white road, at the oranges; enviously
+at the flashing wheels and fluttering lingerie from
+the great Hotel Verbena.</p>
+
+<p>Womanhood was there in all its ages and average
+phases; infancy, youth, middle age, age&mdash;all
+were there in the rusty villas and hotels ranged
+for a mile along the smooth shell road.</p>
+
+<p>The region, thought Brown to himself, was
+rich in material. And the reflection helped him
+somewhat with his dinner, which needed a fillip
+or two.</p>
+
+<p>In his faultless dinner jacket he sauntered out
+after the evening meal; and the idea which possessed<span class="pagenumsmall">[120]</span>
+and even thrilled him aided him to forget
+what he had eaten.</p>
+
+<p>The lagoon glimmered mysteriously in the starlight;
+the royal palms bordering it rustled high
+in the night breeze from the sea. Perfume from
+oleander hedges smote softly the olfactories of
+Brown; the southern whip-poor-wills' hurried
+whisper thrilled the darkness with a deeper mystery.</p>
+
+<p>Here was the place to study woman. There
+could be no doubt about that. Here, untrammelled,
+uninterrupted, unvexed by the jarring of
+the world, he could place his model, turn her
+loose, and observe her.</p>
+
+<p>To concentrate all his powers of analytical observation
+upon a single specimen of woman was
+his plan. Painters and sculptors used models.
+He meant to use one, too.</p>
+
+<p>It would be simple. First, he must discover
+what he wanted. This accomplished, he had decided
+to make a plain business proposition to her.
+She was to go about her own affairs and her pleasure
+without embarrassment or self-consciousness&mdash;behave
+naturally; do whatever it pleased her to
+do. But he was to be permitted to observe her,
+follow her, make what notes he chose; and, as a
+resum&eacute; of each day, they were to meet in some<span class="pagenumsmall">[121]</span>
+quiet spot in order that he might question her as
+he chose, concerning whatever interested him, or
+whatever in her movements or behaviour had
+seemed to him involved or inexplicable.</p>
+
+<p>Thus and thus only, he had decided, could
+light be shed upon the mysterious twilight veiling
+the inner woman! Thus only might carefully concealed
+motives be detected, cause and effect co-ordinated,
+the very source of all feminine logic,
+reason, and emotion be laid bare and dissected at
+leisure.</p>
+
+<p>Never had anybody written such a novel as he
+would be equipped to write. The ultimate word
+concerning woman was about to be written.</p>
+
+<p>Inwardly excited, outwardly calm, he had
+seated himself on the coquina wall which ran along
+the lagoon under the Royal Palms. He was about
+to study his subject as the great masters studied,
+coolly, impersonally, with clear and merciless intelligence,
+setting down with calm simplicity nothing
+except facts.</p>
+
+<p>All that was worthy and unworthy should be
+recorded&mdash;the good with the evil&mdash;nothing should
+be too ephemeral, too minute, to escape his searching
+analysis.</p>
+
+<p>And all the while, though Brown was not aware
+of it, the memory of a face he had seen in the<span class="pagenumsmall">[122]</span>
+dining-room grew vaguely and faded, waxing and
+waning alternately, like a phantom illustration accompanying
+his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>As for the model he should choose to study, she
+ought to be thoroughly feminine, he thought;
+young, probably blonde, well formed, not very
+deeply experienced, and with every human capacity
+for good and bad alike.</p>
+
+<p>He would approach her frankly, tell her what
+he required, offer her the pay of an artist's model,
+three dollars a day; and, if she accepted, she
+could have her head and do what she liked. All
+that concerned him was to make his observations
+and record them.</p>
+
+<p>In the blue starlight people passed and re-passed
+like ghosts along the shell-road&mdash;the white
+summer gowns of young girls were constantly appearing
+in the dusk, taking vague shape, vanishing.
+On the lagoon, a guitar sounded very far
+away. The suave scent of oleander grew sweeter.</p>
+
+<p>Spectral groups passed in clinging lingerie;
+here and there a ghost lingered to lean over the
+coquina wall, her lost gaze faintly accented by
+some level star. One of these, a slender young
+thing, paused near to Brown, resting gracefully
+against the wall.</p>
+
+<p>All around her the whip-poor-wills were calling<span class="pagenumsmall">[123]</span>
+breathlessly; the perfume of oleander grew
+sweeter.</p>
+
+<p>As for the girl herself, she resembled the tenth
+muse. Brown had never attempted to visualise
+his mistress; it had been enough for him that she
+was Thalomene, daughter of Zeus, and divinely
+fair.</p>
+
+<p>But now, as he recognised the face he had noticed
+that evening in the dining-room, somehow
+he thought of his muse for the first time, concretely.
+Perhaps because the girl by the coquina
+wall was young, slim, golden haired, and Greek.</p>
+
+<p>His impulse, without bothering to reason, was
+to hop from the wall and go over to where she
+was standing.</p>
+
+<p>She looked around calmly as he approached,
+gave him a little nod in recognition of his lifted
+hat.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm John Brown, 4th," he said. "I'm stopping
+at the Villa Hibiscus. Do you mind my saying
+so?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't mind," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a vast amount of nonsense in formality
+and convention," said Brown. "If you
+don't mind ignoring such details, I have something
+important to say to you."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him unsmilingly. Probably it<span class="pagenumsmall">[124]</span>
+was the starlight in her eyes that made them
+glimmer as though with hidden laughter.</p>
+
+<p>"I am," said Brown, pleasantly, "an author."</p>
+
+<p>"Really," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"When I say that I am an author," continued
+Brown seriously, "I mean in the higher sense."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh. What is the higher sense, Mr. Brown?"
+she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"The higher sense does not necessarily imply
+authorship. I do not mean that I am a mere
+writer. I have written very little."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Very little," repeated Brown combatively.
+"You will look in vain among the crowded counters
+piled high with contemporary fiction for anything
+from my pen."</p>
+
+<p>"Then perhaps I had better not look," she said
+so simply that Brown was a trifle disappointed
+in her.</p>
+
+<p>"Some day, however," he said, "you may search,
+and, perhaps, not wholly in vain."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you are writing a book!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "I am, so to speak, at work on
+a novel."</p>
+
+<p>"Might one, with discretion, make further inquiry
+concerning your novel, Mr. Brown?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> may."<span class="pagenumsmall">[125]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she said, apparently a trifle disconcerted
+by the privilege so promptly granted.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> may," repeated Brown. "Shall I explain
+why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Please."</p>
+
+<p>"You will not mistake me, I am sure. Will
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>She turned her pretty face toward him.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think so," she said after a moment.
+The starlight was meddling with her eyes again.<span class="pagenumsmall">[126]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/ch14.jpg" width="550" height="259" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XIV</h2>
+
+<p>So Brown told her about his theory; how he
+desired to employ a model, how he desired
+to study her; what were his ideas of the
+terms suitable.</p>
+
+<p>He talked fluently, earnestly, and agreeably; and
+his pretty audience listened with so much apparent
+intelligence and good taste that her very attitude
+subtly exhilarated Brown, until he became
+slightly aware that he was expressing himself eloquently.</p>
+
+<p>He had, it seemed, much to say concerning the
+profession and practice of good literature. It
+seemed, too, that he knew a great deal about it,
+both theoretically and practically. His esteem
+and reverence for it were unmistakable; his enthusiasm
+worthy of his courage.</p>
+
+<p>He talked for a long while, partly about literature,<span class="pagenumsmall">[127]</span>
+partly about himself. And he was at intervals
+a trifle surprised that he had so much to
+say, and wondered at the valuable accumulations
+of which he was unburdening himself with such
+vast content.</p>
+
+<p>The girl had turned her back to the lagoon and
+stood leaning against the coquina wall, facing
+him, her slender hands resting on the coping.</p>
+
+<p>Never had he had such a listener. At the
+clubs and caf&eacute;s other literary men always wanted
+to talk. But here under the great southern stars
+nobody interrupted the limpid flow of his long
+dammed eloquence. And he ended leisurely, as
+he had begun, yet auto-intoxicated, thrillingly
+conscious of the spell which he had laid upon
+himself, upon his young listener&mdash;conscious, too,
+of the spell that the soft air and the perfume and
+the stars had spun over a world grown suddenly
+and incredibly lovely and young.</p>
+
+<p>She said in a low voice: "I need the money
+very much.... And I don't mind your studying
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you really mean it?" he exclaimed, enchanted.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. But there is one trouble."</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" he asked apprehensively.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>must</i> have my mornings to myself."<span class="pagenumsmall">[128]</span></p>
+
+<p>He said: "Under the terms I must be permitted
+to ask you any questions I choose. You understand
+that, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Then&mdash;why must you have your mornings to
+yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have work to do."</p>
+
+<p>"What work? What are you?"</p>
+
+<p>She flushed a trifle, then, accepting the rules of
+the game, smiled at Brown.</p>
+
+<p>"I am a school-teacher," she said. "Ill health
+from overwork drove me South to convalesce. I
+am trying to support myself here by working in
+the mornings."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," he said gently. Then, aware of
+his concession to a very human weakness, he
+added with businesslike decision: "What is the
+nature of your morning's work?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;write," she admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"Stories?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Fiction?"</p>
+
+<p>"Anything, Mr. Brown. I send notes to fashion
+papers, concerning the costumes at the Hotel Verbena;
+I write for various household papers special
+articles which would not interest you at all.
+I write little stories for the women's and children's<span class="pagenumsmall">[129]</span>
+columns in various newspapers. You see
+what I do is not literature, and could not interest
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"If you are to act for me in the capacity of a
+model," he said firmly, "I am absolutely bound to
+study every phase of you, every minutest detail."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh."</p>
+
+<p>"Not one minute of the day must pass without
+my observing you," he said. "Unless you are
+broad-minded enough to comprehend me you may
+think my close and unremitting observation impertinent."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean to be impertinent, I am sure,"
+she faltered, already surprised, apprehensive, and
+abashed by the prospect.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I don't mean to be impertinent," he
+said smilingly, "but all great observers pursue
+their studies unremittingly day and night&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> couldn't do <i>that</i>!" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he admitted, troubled, "that would not
+be feasible. You require, of course, a certain
+amount of slumber."</p>
+
+<p>"Naturally," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"I ought," he said thoughtfully, "to study that
+phase of you, also."</p>
+
+<p>"What phase, Mr. Brown?"</p>
+
+<p>"When you are sleeping."<span class="pagenumsmall">[130]</span></p>
+
+<p>"But that is impossible!"</p>
+
+<p>"Convention," he said disdainfully, "makes it
+so. A literary student is fettered.</p>
+
+<p>"But it is perfectly possible for you to imagine
+what I look like when I'm asleep, Mr.
+Brown."</p>
+
+<p>"Imagination is to play no part in my literary
+work," he said coldly. "What I set down are
+facts."</p>
+
+<p>"But is that art?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is more art in facts than there are facts
+in art," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't quite know what you mean."</p>
+
+<p>He didn't, either, when he came to analyse
+what he had said; and he turned very red and
+admitted it.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean to be honest and truthful," he said.
+"What I just said sounded clever, but meant nothing.
+I admit it. I mean to be perfectly pitiless
+with myself. Anything tainted with imagination;
+anything hinting of romance; any weak concession
+to prejudice, convention, good taste, I refuse
+to be guilty of. Realism is what I aim at;
+raw facts, however unpleasant!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't believe you will find anything very
+unpleasant about me," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't think I shall. But I mean to<span class="pagenumsmall">[131]</span>
+detect every imperfection, every weakness, every
+secret vanity, every unworthy impulse. That is
+why I desire to study you so implacably. Are
+you willing to submit?"</p>
+
+<p>She bit her lip and looked thoughtfully at the
+stars.</p>
+
+<p>"You know," she said, "that while it may be
+all very well for you to say 'anything for art's
+sake,' <i>I</i> can't say it. I can't <i>do</i> it, either."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I can't. You know perfectly well
+that you can't follow me about taking notes <i>every</i>
+minute of the twenty-four hours."</p>
+
+<p>He said very earnestly: "Sir John Lubbock sat
+up day and night, never taking his eyes off the
+little colony of ants which he had under observation
+in a glass box!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you propose to sit up day and night to
+keep me under observation?" she asked, flushed
+and astounded.</p>
+
+<p>"Not at first. But as my studies advance, and
+you become accustomed to the perfectly respectful
+but coldly impersonal nature of my observations,
+your mind, I trust, will become so broadened
+that you will find nothing objectionable in
+what at first might scare you. An artist's model,
+for example&mdash;&mdash;"<span class="pagenumsmall">[132]</span></p>
+
+<p>"But I am not an artist's model!" she exclaimed,
+with a slight shiver.</p>
+
+<p>"To be a proper model at all," he said, "you
+must concede all for art, and remain sublimely
+unconscious of self. <i>You</i> do not matter. <i>I</i> do
+not matter. Only my work counts. And that
+must be honest, truthful, accurate, minute, exact&mdash;a
+perfect record of a woman's mind and personality."</p>
+
+<p>For a few moments they both remained silent.
+And after a little the starlight began to play
+tricks with her eyes again, so that they seemed
+sparkling with hidden laughter. But her face
+was grave.</p>
+
+<p>She said: "I really do need the money. I will
+do what I can.... And if in spite of my courage
+I ever shrink&mdash;our contract shall terminate
+at once."</p>
+
+<p>"And what shall I do then?" inquired Brown.</p>
+
+<p>The starlight glimmered in her eyes. She said
+very gravely:</p>
+
+<p>"In case the demands of your realism and your
+art are too much for my courage, Mr. Brown&mdash;you
+will have to find another model to study."</p>
+
+<p>"But another model might prove as conventional
+as you!"</p>
+
+<p>"In that case," she said, while her sensitive<span class="pagenumsmall">[133]</span>
+lower lip trembled, and the starlight in her eyes
+grew softly brilliant, "in that case, Mr. Brown, I
+am afraid that there would be only one course to
+pursue with that <i>other</i> model."</p>
+
+<p>"What course is that?" he asked, deeply interested.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid you'd have to marry her."</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord!" he said. "I can't marry every
+girl I mean to study!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Do you mean to study very many?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have my entire life and career before me."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. That is true. But&mdash;women are much
+alike. One model, thoroughly studied, might serve
+for them all&mdash;with a little imagination."</p>
+
+<p>"I have no use for imagination in fiction," said
+Brown firmly. After a moment's silence, he added:
+"Is it settled, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"About our&mdash;contract?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>She considered for a long while, then, looking
+up, she nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"That's fine!" exclaimed Brown, with enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>They walked back to the Villa Hibiscus together,
+slowly, through the blue starlight. Brown
+asked her name, and she told him.</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said gaily, "your name is Thalomene,<span class="pagenumsmall">[134]</span>
+and you are the tenth muse. For truly I think I
+have never before been so thoroughly inspired by
+a talk with anyone."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed. He had done almost all the talking.
+And he continued it, very happily, as by
+common consent they seated themselves on the
+veranda.<span class="pagenumsmall">[135]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/ch15.jpg" width="600" height="311" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XV</h2>
+
+<p>The inhabitants of the Villa Hibiscus retired.
+But Brown talked on, quite unconscious
+that the low-voiced questions
+and softly modulated replies were magic which
+incited him to a perfect ecstasy of self-revelation.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps he thought he was studying her&mdash;for
+the compact by mutual consent was already in
+force&mdash;and certainly his eyes were constantly
+upon her, taking, as no doubt he supposed, a cold
+and impersonal measure of her symmetry.
+Calmly, and with utter detachment, he measured
+her slender waist, her soft little hands; noting the
+fresh, sweet lips, the clear, prettily shaped eyes,
+the delicate throat, the perfect little Greek head
+with its thick, golden hair.</p>
+
+<p>And all the while he held forth about literature
+and its true purpose; about what art really is;<span class="pagenumsmall">[136]</span>
+about his own art, his own literature, and his own
+self.</p>
+
+<p>And the girl was really fascinated.</p>
+
+<p>She had seen, at a distance, such men. When
+Brown had named himself to her, she had recognised
+the name with awe, as a fashionable and
+wealthy name known to Gotham.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, had Brown known it, neither his eloquence
+nor his theories, nor his aims, were what fascinated
+her. But it was his boyish enthusiasm, his
+boyish intolerance, his immaturity, his happy certainty
+of the importance of what concerned himself.</p>
+
+<p>He was so much a boy, so much a man, such a
+candid, unreasonable, eager, selfish, impulsive, portentous,
+and delightfully illogical mixture of boy
+and man that the combination fascinated every
+atom of womanhood in her&mdash;and at moments as
+the night wore on, she found herself listening
+perilously close to the very point of sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>He appeared to pay no heed to the flight of
+time. The big stars frosted Heaven; the lagoon
+was silvered by them; night winds stirred the
+orange bloom; oleanders exhaled a bewitching perfume.</p>
+
+<p>As he lay there in his rocking chair beside her,
+it seemed to him that he had known her intimately<span class="pagenumsmall">[137]</span>
+for years&mdash;so wonderfully does the charm of self-revelation
+act upon human reason. For she had
+said almost nothing about herself. Yet, it was
+becoming plainer to him every moment that never
+in all his life had he known any woman as he
+already knew this young girl.</p>
+
+<p>"It is wonderful," he said, lying back in his
+chair and looking up at the stars, "how subtle is
+sympathy, and how I recognise yours. I think I
+understand you perfectly already."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you?" she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I feel sure I do. Somehow, I know that
+secretly and in your own heart you are in full
+tide of sympathy with me and with my life's
+work."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought you had no imagination," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't. Do you mean that I only imagine
+that you are in sympathy with me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said. "I am."</p>
+
+<p>After a few moments she laughed deliciously.
+He never knew why. Nor was she ever perfectly
+sure why she had laughed, though they discussed
+the matter very gravely.</p>
+
+<p>A new youth seemed to have invaded her, an exquisite
+sense of lightness, of power. Vaguely she
+was conscious of ability, of a wonderful and undreamed
+of capacity. Within her heart she seemed<span class="pagenumsmall">[138]</span>
+to feel the subtle stir of a new courage, a certainty
+of the future, of indefinable but splendid things.</p>
+
+<p>The manuscript of the novel which she had
+sent North two weeks ago seemed to her a winged
+thing soaring to certain victory in the empyrean.
+Suddenly, by some magic, doubt, fear, distress,
+were allayed&mdash;and it was like surcease from a
+steady pain, with all the blessed and heavenly
+languor relaxing her mind and body.</p>
+
+<p>And all the while Brown talked on.</p>
+
+<p>Lying there in her chair she listened to him
+while the thoughts in her eased mind moved in
+delicate accompaniment.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow she understood that never in her life
+had she been so happy&mdash;with this boy babbling
+beside her, and her own thoughts responding almost
+tenderly to his youth, his inconsistencies, to
+the arrogance typical of his sex. He was <i>so</i>
+wrong!&mdash;so far from the track, so utterly astray,
+so pitiably confident! Who but she should know,
+who had worked and studied and failed and
+searched, always <i>writing</i>, however&mdash;which is the
+only way in the world to learn how to write&mdash;or
+to learn that there is no use in writing.</p>
+
+<p>Her hand lay along the flat arm of her rocking-chair;
+and once, when he had earnestly sustained
+a perfectly untenable theory concerning<span class="pagenumsmall">[139]</span>
+success in literature, unconsciously she laid her
+fresh, smooth hand on his arm in impulsive protest.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said, "don't think that way. You are
+quite wrong. That is the road to failure!"</p>
+
+<p>It was her first expression of disagreement, and
+he looked at her amazed.</p>
+
+<p>"I am afraid you think I don't know anything
+about real literature and realism," she said, "but
+I do know a little."</p>
+
+<p>"Every man must work out his salvation in
+his own way," he insisted, still surprised at her
+dissent.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, but one should be equipped by long practice
+in the art before definitely choosing one's
+final course."</p>
+
+<p>"I am practiced."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean theoretically," she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed: "Oh, you mean mere writing," he
+said, gaily confident. "That, according to my
+theory, is not necessary to real experience. Literature
+is something loftier."</p>
+
+<p>In her feminine heart every instinct of womanhood
+was aroused&mdash;pity for the youth of him,
+sympathy for his obtuseness, solicitude for his
+obstinacy, tenderness for the fascinating combination
+of boy and man, which might call itself<span class="pagenumsmall">[140]</span>
+by any name it chose&mdash;even "author"&mdash;and go
+blundering along without a helping hand amid
+shrugs and smiles to a goal marked "Failure."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," she said almost timidly, "whether
+you could ever listen to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Always," he said, bending nearer to see her
+expression. Which having seen, he perhaps forgot
+to note in his little booklet, for he continued
+to look at her.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't very much to say," she said. "Only&mdash;to
+learn any art or trade or profession it is
+necessary to work at it unremittingly. But to
+discuss it never helped anybody."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child," he said, "I know that what
+you say was the old idea. But," he shrugged,
+"I do not agree with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am so sorry," she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry? Why are you sorry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know.... Perhaps because I like
+you."</p>
+
+<p>It was not very much to say&mdash;not a very significant
+declaration; but the simplicity and sweetness
+of it&mdash;her voice&mdash;the head bent a little in
+the starlight&mdash;all fixed Brown's attention. He
+sat very still there in the luminous dusk of the
+white veranda; the dew dripped steadily like rain;
+the lagoon glittered.<span class="pagenumsmall">[141]</span></p>
+
+<p>Then, subtly, taking Brown unawares, his most
+treacherous enemy crept upon him with a stealth
+incredible, and, before Brown knew it, was in full
+possession of his brain. The enemy was Imagination.</p>
+
+<p>Minute after minute slipped away in the scented
+dusk, and found Brown's position unchanged,
+where he lay in his chair looking at her.</p>
+
+<p>The girl also was very silent.</p>
+
+<p>With what wonderful attributes his enemy, Imagination,
+was busily endowing the girl beside
+him in the starlight, there is no knowing. His
+muse was Thalomene, slim daughter of Zeus; and
+whether she was really still on Olympus or here
+beside him he scarcely knew, so perfectly did this
+young girl inspire him, so exquisitely did she fill
+the bill.</p>
+
+<p>"It is odd," he said, after a long while, "that
+merely a few hours with you should inspire me
+more than I have ever been inspired in all my
+life."</p>
+
+<p>"That," she said unsteadily, "is your imagination."</p>
+
+<p>At the hateful word, imagination, Brown
+seemed to awake from the spell. Then he sat up
+straight, rather abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"The thing to do," he said, still confused by<span class="pagenumsmall">[142]</span>
+his awakening, "is to consider you impersonally
+and make notes of everything." And he fumbled
+for pencil and note-book, and, rising, stepped
+across to the front door, where a light was
+burning.</p>
+
+<p>Standing under it he resolutely composed his
+thoughts; but to save his life he could remember
+nothing of which to make a memorandum.</p>
+
+<p>This worried him, and finally alarmed him.
+And so long did he stand there, note-book open,
+pencil poised, and a sickly expression of dismay
+imprinted upon his otherwise agreeable features,
+that the girl rose at last from her chair, glanced
+in through the door at him, and then came forward.</p>
+
+<p>"What is the matter?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"The matter is," said Brown, "that I don't
+seem to have anything to write about."</p>
+
+<p>"You are tired," she said. "I think we both
+are a little tired."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> am not. Anyway, I have something to
+write about now. Wait a moment till I make a
+note of how you walk&mdash;the easy, graceful, flowing
+motion, so exquisitely light and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>I</i> don't walk like that!" she said, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;Graciously as a youthful goddess," muttered
+Brown, scribbling away busily in his note-book.<span class="pagenumsmall">[143]</span>
+"Tell me; what motive had you just now
+in rising and coming to ask me what was the matter&mdash;with
+such a sweetly apprehensive expression
+in your eyes?"</p>
+
+<p>"My&mdash;my motive?" she repeated, astonished.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. You had one, hadn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;I don't know. You looked worried; so
+I came."</p>
+
+<p>"The motive," said Brown, "was feminine solicitude&mdash;an
+emotion natural to nice women. Thank
+you." And he made a note of it.</p>
+
+<p>"But motives and emotions are different things,"
+she said timidly. "I had no motive for coming
+to ask you why you seemed troubled."</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't your motive to learn why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Y-yes, I suppose so."</p>
+
+<p>He laid his head on one side and inspected her
+critically.</p>
+
+<p>"And if anything had been amiss with me you
+would have been sorry, wouldn't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why? Because&mdash;one is sorry when a friend&mdash;when
+anyone&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>am</i> your friend," he said. "So why not say
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"And I am yours&mdash;if you wish," she said.<span class="pagenumsmall">[144]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do." He began to write: "It's
+rather odd how friendship begins. We both seem
+to want to be friends." And to her he said: "How
+does it make you feel&mdash;the idea of our being
+friends? What emotions does it arouse in you?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him in sorrowful surprise. "I
+thought it was real friendship you meant," she
+murmured, "not the sort to make a note about."</p>
+
+<p>"But I've got to make notes of everything.
+Don't you see? Certainly our friendship is real
+enough&mdash;but I've got to study it minutely and
+make notes concerning it. It's necessary to make
+records of everything&mdash;how you walk, stand,
+speak, look, how you go upstairs&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I am going now," she said.</p>
+
+<p>He followed, scribbling furiously; and it is
+difficult to go upstairs, watch a lady go upstairs,
+and write about the way she does it all at the
+same time.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night," she said, opening her door.</p>
+
+<p>"Good-night," he said, absently, and so intent
+on his scribbling that he followed her through
+the door into her room.<span class="pagenumsmall">[145]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 325px;">
+<img src="images/ch16.jpg" width="325" height="321" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XVI</h2>
+
+<p>"She goes upstairs as though she were floating
+up," he wrote, with enthusiasm; "her
+lovely figure, poised on tip-toe, seems to
+soar upward, ascending as naturally and gracefully
+as the immortals ascended the golden stairs
+of Jacob&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>In full flood of his treacherous imagination he
+seated himself on a chair beside her bed, rested
+the note-book on his knees, and scribbled madly,
+utterly oblivious to her. And it was only when
+he had finished, for sheer lack of material, that he
+recollected himself, looked up, saw how she had
+shrunk away from him against the wall&mdash;how the
+scarlet had dyed her face to her temples.</p>
+
+<p>"Why&mdash;why do you come&mdash;into my bedroom?"
+she faltered. "Does our friendship count for no
+more than that with you?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?" he said, bewildered.<span class="pagenumsmall">[146]</span></p>
+
+<p>"That you do what you have no right to do.
+Art&mdash;art is <i>not</i> enough to&mdash;to&mdash;excuse&mdash;disrespect&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the tears sprang to her eyes, and she
+covered her flushed face with both hands.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Brown stood petrified. Then a
+deeper flush than hers settled heavily over his
+features.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry," he said.</p>
+
+<p>She made no response.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't mean to hurt you. I <i>do</i> respect you,"
+he said.</p>
+
+<p>No response.</p>
+
+<p>Brown gazed at her, gazed at his note-book.</p>
+
+<p>Then he hurled the note-book across the room
+and walked over to her as she lifted her lovely
+head, startled and tearful.</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," he said, swallowing nothing
+very desperately. "You can not be studied this
+way. Will you&mdash;marry me?"</p>
+
+<p>"What!"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you marry me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" she gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I&mdash;want to study you."</p>
+
+<p>"No!" she said, looking him straight in the
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Brown thought hard for a full minute.<span class="pagenumsmall">[147]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Would you marry me because I love you?" he
+asked timidly.</p>
+
+<p>The question seemed to be more than she could
+answer. Besides, the tears sprang to her blue
+eyes again, and her under lip began to tremble,
+and she covered her face with both hands. Which
+made it impossible for him to kiss her.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it wonderful?" he said earnestly, trembling
+from head to foot. "Isn't it wonderful,
+dear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she whispered. The word, uttered
+against his shoulder, was stifled. He bent his
+head nearer, murmuring:</p>
+
+<p>"Thalomene&mdash;Thalomene&mdash;embodiment of
+Truth! How wonderful it is to me that at last I
+find in you that absolute Truth I worship."</p>
+
+<p>"I am&mdash;the embodiment&mdash;of your&mdash;imagination,"
+she said. "But you will never, never believe
+it&mdash;most adorable of boys&mdash;dearest&mdash;dearest
+of men."</p>
+
+<p>And, lifting her stately and divine young head,
+she looked innocently at Brown while he imprinted
+his first and most chaste kiss upon the fresh, sweet
+lips of the tenth muse, Thalomene, daughter of Zeus.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>"Athalie," said the youthful novelist more in<span class="pagenumsmall">[148]</span>
+sorrow than in anger, "you are making game of
+everything I hold most important."</p>
+
+<p>"Provide yourself with newer and truer gods,
+dear child," said the girl, laughing. "After
+you've worshipped them long enough somebody will
+also poke fun at them. Whereupon, if you are
+fortunate enough to be one of those who continues
+to mature until he matures himself into the
+Ewigkeit, you will instantly quit those same over-mauled
+and worn out gods for newer and truer
+ones."</p>
+
+<p>"And so on indefinitely," I added.</p>
+
+<p>"In literature," began the novelist, "the great
+masters must stand as parents for us in our first
+infantile steps&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the girl, "all worthy aspirants enter
+the field of literature as orphans. Opportunity
+and Fates alone stand for them <i>in loco parentis</i>.
+And the child of these is known as Destiny."</p>
+
+<p>"No cubist could beat that, Athalie," remarked
+Duane. "I'm ashamed of you&mdash;or proud&mdash;I don't
+know which."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear child," she said, "you will never know
+the true inwardness of any sentiment you entertain
+concerning me until I explain it to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Smitten again hip and thigh," said Stafford.<span class="pagenumsmall">[149]</span>
+"Fair lady, I am far too wary to tell you what I
+think of the art of incoherence as practised
+occasionally by the prettiest Priestess in the
+Temple."</p>
+
+<p>Athalie looked at me as the sweetmeat melted
+on her tongue.</p>
+
+<p>"You promised me a dog," she remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"I've picked him out. He'll be weaned in another
+week."</p>
+
+<p>"What species of pup is he?" inquired Duane.</p>
+
+<p>"An Iceland terrier," I answered. "They use
+them for digging out walrus and seals."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said Duane pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"After all," observed the girl, lifting her glass
+of water, "it does not concern Mr. Duane what
+sort of a dog you have chosen for me."</p>
+
+<p>She sipped it leisurely, looking over the delicate
+crystal rim at Duane.</p>
+
+<p>"You are young," she said. "'<i>L'enfance est
+le sommeil de la raison.</i>'"</p>
+
+<p>"How would you like to have an Angora kitten?"
+he asked, reddening slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"But infancy," she added, "is always adorable....
+I think I might like a white one with
+blue eyes."</p>
+
+<p>"Puppies, kittens, children," remarked Stafford&mdash;"they're
+all tolerable while they're young."<span class="pagenumsmall">[150]</span></p>
+
+<p>"All of these," said the girl softly, "I should
+like to have."</p>
+
+<p>And she gazed inquiringly at the crystal. But
+it could tell her nothing of herself or of her hopes.
+She turned and looked out into the dark city, a
+trifle wearily, it seemed to me.<span class="pagenumsmall">[151]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/ch17.jpg" width="600" height="287" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XVII</h2>
+
+<p>After a silence, she lay back among her
+cushions and glanced at us with a faint
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>"One day last winter," she said, "after the last
+client had gone and office hours were over, I sat
+here thinking, wondering what in the world
+could be worse for a girl than to have no parents....
+And I happened to glance into my
+crystal, and saw there an incident beginning to
+evolve that cheered me up, because it was a parody
+on my more morbid train of thought. After
+all, the same Chance that gives a child to its
+parents gives the parents to that child. You
+may think this is Tupper," she added, "but it is
+Athalie. And that being the case, nobody will
+laugh."<span class="pagenumsmall">[152]</span></p>
+
+<p>Nobody did laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," she said sweetly. "Now I will
+tell you what I saw in my crystal when I happened
+to be feeling unusually alone in the world."
+And with a pretty nod to us, collectively, she began.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>The bulk of the cargo and a few bodies were
+coming ashore at the eastern end of the island,
+and that is where the throngs were&mdash;people from
+the Light House, fishermen from the inlet, and
+hundreds of winter tourists from St. Augustine,
+in white flannels and summer gowns, all attracted
+to Ibis Island by the grewsome spectacle of the
+wreck.</p>
+
+<p>The West Indian hurricane had done its terrific
+business and had gone, leaving a turquoise sky
+untroubled by a cloud, and a sea of snow and
+cobalt.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing living had been washed ashore from
+the wreck. As for the brig, she had vanished&mdash;if
+there had been anything left of her to disappear
+except the wreckage, human and otherwise,
+that had come tumbling ashore through the surf
+all night long.</p>
+
+<p>So young Gray, seeing that there was nothing<span class="pagenumsmall">[153]</span>
+for him to do, and not caring for the spectacle at
+the eastern end of the island, turned on his heel
+and walked west through thickets of sweet bay,
+palmetto, and beach-grape.</p>
+
+<p>He wore the lightest weight solaro, with a helmet
+and close-fitting puttees of the same. Two
+straps crossed his breast, the one supporting a
+well filled haversack, the other a water bottle.
+Except for fire arms he was equipped for darkest
+Africa, or for anything else on earth&mdash;at least
+he supposed so. He was wrong; he was not
+equipped for what he was about to encounter on
+Ibis Island.</p>
+
+<p>It happened in this manner: traversing the seaward
+dunes, because the beach no longer afforded
+him even a narrow margin for a footing, shoulder
+deep in a tangle of beach-grapes, he chanced to
+glance at the little sandy cove which he was skirting,
+and saw there an empty fruit crate tumbling
+in the smother of foam, and a very small setter
+puppy clinging to it frantically, with every claw
+clutching, and his drenched tail between his legs.</p>
+
+<p>Even while Gray was forcing his eager way
+through the tangle, he was aware of somebody else
+moving forward through the high scrub just west
+of him; and as he sprang out onto the beach and
+laid his hand on the stranded fruit crate, another<span class="pagenumsmall">[154]</span>
+hand, slimmer and whiter than his, fell on the
+crate as he dragged it out of the foamy shallows
+and up across the dry sand, just as a tremendous
+roller smashed into clouds of foam behind it.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," said a breathless voice
+at his elbow, "but I think I saw this little dog
+first."</p>
+
+<p>Gray already was reaching for the shivering
+little thing, but two other hands deprived him of
+the puppy; and he looked up, impatient and annoyed,
+into the excited brown eyes of a young
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>She had taken the dripping, clawing little creature
+to her breast, where it shivered and moaned
+and whined, shoving its cold nose up under her
+chin.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," said Gray, firmly, "but I
+am really very certain that I first discovered that
+dog."</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry you think so," she said, clasping
+the creature all the tighter.</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>do</i> think so," insisted Gray. "I <i>know</i> it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry," she repeated. Over the
+puppy's shivering back her brown eyes gazed upon
+Gray. They were very pretty, but hostile.</p>
+
+<p>"There can be no question about the ownership
+of this pup," persisted Gray. "Of course, I am<span class="pagenumsmall">[155]</span>
+sorry if you really think you discovered the dog.
+Because you didn't."</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>did</i> discover him," she said, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon. I was walking through
+the beach-grapes&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I beg yours! I also was crossing the sweet-bay
+scrub when I happened to glance down at
+the cove and saw this poor little dog in the water."</p>
+
+<p>"That is exactly what <i>I</i> did! I happened to
+glance down, and there I saw this little dog. Instantly
+I sprang&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"So did I!&mdash;I <i>beg</i> your pardon for interrupting
+you!"</p>
+
+<p>"I was merely explaining that I first saw the
+dog, and next I noticed you. But first of all I
+saw the dog."</p>
+
+<p>"That is the exact sequence in my own observations,"
+she rejoined calmly. "First of all I saw
+the dog in the water, then I heard a crash in the
+bush, and saw something floundering about in the
+tangle."</p>
+
+<p>"And," continued Gray, much annoyed by her
+persistency, "no sooner had I caught hold of the
+crate than <i>you</i> came up and laid <i>your</i> hand on it,
+also. You surely must remember that I had my
+hand on the crate before you did!"</p>
+
+<p>"I am very sorry you think so. The contrary<span class="pagenumsmall">[156]</span>
+was the case. <i>I</i> took firm hold of the crate, and
+then you aided me to draw it up out of the
+water."</p>
+
+<p>"It is extraordinary," he said, "how mistaken
+you are concerning the actual sequence of events.
+Not that I doubt for a moment that you really
+suppose you discovered the dog. Probably you
+were a little excited&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I was perfectly cool. Possibly <i>you</i> were a
+trifle excited."</p>
+
+<p>"Not in the least," he retorted with calm exasperation.
+"I never become agitated."</p>
+
+<p>The puppy continued to shiver and drive its
+nose up under the girl's chin.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little thing! Poor little shipwrecked
+baby!" she crooned. And, to Gray: "I don't
+know why this puppy should be so cold. The
+water is warm enough."</p>
+
+<p>"Put it in the hot sand," he said. "We can
+rub it dry."</p>
+
+<p>She hesitated, flushing perhaps at her own suspicions;
+but nevertheless she said:</p>
+
+<p>"You would not attempt to take it if I put it
+down, would you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't intend to snatch it," he said with dignity.
+"<i>Men</i> don't snatch."</p>
+
+<p>So they went inland a few paces where the sand
+<span class="pagenumsmall">[157]</span>was hot and loose and deep; and there they knelt
+down and put the puppy on the sand.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<a name="gs04" id="gs04"></a>
+<img src="images/gs04.jpg" width="400" height="554" alt="&quot;&#39;I am in possession of the dog and you merely
+claim possession.&#39;&quot;" title="">
+</div>
+
+<p class="caption">&quot;&#39;I am in possession of the dog and you merely
+claim possession.&#39;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>"Scrub him thoroughly," she suggested, pouring
+heaping handfuls of hot, silvery sand over the
+little creature.</p>
+
+<p>Gray did likewise, and together they rubbed and
+scrubbed and rolled the puppy about until the
+dog began to roll on his back all by himself, twisting
+and wriggling and waving his big, padded
+paws.</p>
+
+<p>"What he wants is water," asserted Gray, unstrapping
+his haversack and bottle. From the
+one he produced an aluminum pannikin; from the
+other he filled it with water. The puppy drank
+it all while Gray and the brown-eyed girl looked
+on intently.</p>
+
+<p>Then Gray produced some beef sandwiches, and
+the famished little creature leaped and whirled
+and danced as Gray fed him cautiously, bit by bit.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that is perfectly fair?" asked
+the girl gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Fair?" repeated Gray guiltily.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Who first feeds a strange dog is recognised
+as the reigning authority."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, you may feed him, too. But that
+does not alter the facts in the case."</p>
+
+<p>"The facts," said the girl, taking a sandwich<span class="pagenumsmall">[158]</span>
+from Gray, "are that I am in possession of the
+dog and you merely claim possession."</p>
+
+<p>They fed him alternately and in silence&mdash;until
+their opinion became unanimous that it was dangerous,
+for the present, to feed him any more.</p>
+
+<p>The puppy begged and pleaded and cajoled and
+danced&mdash;a most appealing and bewitching little
+creature, silvery white and blue-ticked, with a tiny
+tan point over each eye and a black and tan
+saddle.</p>
+
+<p>"Lavarack," observed Gray.</p>
+
+<p>"English," she nodded.</p>
+
+<p>It wagged not only its little, whippy tail, but
+in doing so wriggled its entire hind quarters, showing
+no preference for either of its rescuers, but
+bestowing winning and engaging favours impartially.</p>
+
+<p>The girl could endure it no longer, but snatched
+the puppy to her with a soft little cry, and
+cuddled it tight. Gray looked on gloomily. Then,
+when she released it, he took it and caressed it in
+masculine fashion. There was no discernible difference
+in its affectionate responses.</p>
+
+<p>After the dog had lavished enthusiasm and affection
+on its saviours to the point of physical
+exhaustion, it curled up on the hot sand between
+them. At first, when they moved or spoke, the<span class="pagenumsmall">[159]</span>
+little, silky head was quickly lifted, and the brown
+eyes turned alertly from one to the other of the
+two beings most beloved on earth. But presently
+only the whippy tail stirred in recognition of their
+voices. And finally the little dog slept in the hot
+sunshine.<span class="pagenumsmall">[160]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 375px;">
+<img src="images/ch18.jpg" width="375" height="286" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XVIII</h2>
+
+<p>For a long while, seated on either side of
+the slumbering puppy, they remained
+silent, in fascinated contemplation of
+what they had rescued.</p>
+
+<p>Finally Gray said slowly: "It may seem odd
+to you that I should be so firm and uncompromising
+concerning my right to a very small dog
+which may be duplicated in the North for a few
+dollars."</p>
+
+<p>She lifted her brown eyes to his, then let them
+fall again on the dog.</p>
+
+<p>"The reason is this," said Gray. "The native
+dogs I dislike intensely. Dogs imported from the
+North soon die in this region. But this little pup
+was evidently born on shipboard and on tropical
+seas. I think he's very likely to survive the climate.
+And as I am obliged to reside here for a<span class="pagenumsmall">[161]</span>
+while, and as I am to live all alone, this pup is a
+godsend to me."</p>
+
+<p>The girl, still resting her eyes on the sleeping
+puppy, said very quietly:</p>
+
+<p>"I do not desire to appear selfish, but a girl is
+twice as lonely as a man. And as I fortunately
+first discovered the dog it seems to me absolutely
+right and just that I should keep him."</p>
+
+<p>Gray sat pouring sand through his fingers and
+casting an occasional oblique glance at the girl.
+She was not sunburned, so she must be a recent
+arrival. She spoke with a northern accent, which
+determined her origin.</p>
+
+<p><i>What</i> was she doing down here on this absurd
+island? Why didn't she go back to St. Augustine
+where she belonged?</p>
+
+<p>"You know," he said craftily, "I can buy a
+very nice little dog indeed for you in St. Augustine."</p>
+
+<p>"I am not stopping in St. Augustine. Besides,
+there are only horrid little lap-dogs there."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you like lap-dogs&mdash;Pomms, Pekinese,
+Maltese?" he inquired persuasively.</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"You are unlike the majority of girls then.
+What sort of dog do you like?"</p>
+
+<p>"Setters," she explained with decision.<span class="pagenumsmall">[162]</span></p>
+
+<p>And as he bit his lip in annoyed silence she
+added:</p>
+
+<p>"Setter puppies are what I adore."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry," he said bluntly.</p>
+
+<p>She added, not heeding his observation: "I am
+mad about setter puppies, particularly English
+setter puppies. And when I try to realise that I
+discovered a shipwrecked one all by myself, and
+rescued it, I can scarcely believe in such an adorable
+miracle."</p>
+
+<p>It was on the tip of his tongue to offer to purchase
+the pup, but a quick glance at the girl
+checked him. She was evidently perfectly sincere,
+and the quality of her was unmistakable.</p>
+
+<p>Already, within these few minutes, her skin had
+begun to burn a delicate rose tint from the sun's
+fierce reflection on the white sands. Her hair was
+a splendid golden brown, her eyes darker, or perhaps
+the long, dark lashes made them seem so.
+She was daintily and prettily made, head, throat,
+shoulders, and limbs; she wore a summer gown so
+waistless and limp that it conformed to the corsetless
+fashions in vogue, making evident here and
+there the contours of her slim and supple figure.</p>
+
+<p>From the tip of her white shoe to the tip of her
+hat she was the futile and exquisite essence of
+Gotham.<span class="pagenumsmall">[163]</span></p>
+
+<p>Gray realised it because he lived there himself.
+But he could not understand where all her
+determination and obstinacy came from, for she
+seemed so young and inexperienced, and there was
+about her a childish dewiness of eye and lip that
+suggested a blossom's fragrance.</p>
+
+<p>She was very lovely; and that was all very
+well in its way, but Gray had come down there on
+stern business, and how long his business might
+last, and how long he was to inhabit a palmetto
+bungalow above the coquina quarry he did not
+know. The coquina quarry was as hot as the infernal
+pit. Also, snakes frequented it.</p>
+
+<p>No black servant&mdash;promised him faithfully in
+St. Augustine the day before&mdash;had yet arrived.
+A few supplies had been sent over from St. Augustine,
+and he was camping in his little house
+of logs, along with wood-ticks, blue lizards, white
+ants, gophers, hornets, and several chestnut-colored
+scorpions.</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't mind yielding the dog to you," he
+admitted, "if I were not so horribly lonely on this
+miserable island. When evening comes, <i>you</i> will
+go back to luxury and comfort somewhere or
+other, with dinner awaiting you and servants to do
+everything, and a nice bed to retire to. That's
+a pleasant picture, isn't it?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[164]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Very," she replied, with a slight shrug.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," he said, "please gaze mentally upon
+this other picture. <i>I</i> am obliged to go back to a
+shack haunted by every species of creature that
+this wretched island harbours.</p>
+
+<p>"There will be no dinner for me except what
+I can scoop out of a tin; no servants to do one
+bally thing for me; no bed.</p>
+
+<p>"Listen attentively," he continued, becoming
+slightly dramatic as he remembered more clearly
+the horrors of the preceding night&mdash;his first on
+Ibis Island. "I shall go into that devilish bungalow
+and look around like a scared dog, standing
+very carefully in the exact centre of the room.
+And what will be the first object that my unwilling
+eyes encounter? A scorpion! Perhaps
+two, crawling out from the Spanish moss with
+which the chinks of that miserable abode are
+stuffed. I shall slay it&mdash;or <i>them</i>&mdash;as the case
+may be. Then a blue-tailed lizard will frisk over
+the ceiling&mdash;or perhaps one of those big, heavy
+ones with blunt, red heads. Doubtless at that
+same instant I shall discover a wood-tick advancing
+up one of my trousers' legs. Spiders will begin
+to move across the walls. Perhaps a snake
+or two will then develop from some shadowy
+corner."<span class="pagenumsmall">[165]</span></p>
+
+<p>He waved his arm impressively and pointed at
+the sleeping puppy.</p>
+
+<p>"Under such circumstances," he said pathetically,
+"would you care to deprive me of this little
+companion sent by Providence for me to rescue
+out of the sea?"</p>
+
+<p>She, too, had been steadily pouring sand between
+her white fingers during the moving recital
+of his woes. Now she looked up, controlling a
+shudder.</p>
+
+<p>"Your circumstances, with all their attendant
+horrors, are my own," she began. "I, also, since
+last night, inhabit a picturesque but most horrid
+bungalow not very far from here; and every one
+of the creatures you describe, and several others
+also, inhabit it with me. Do you wonder I want
+<i>some</i> companionship? Do you wonder that I am
+inclined to cling to this little dog&mdash;whether or
+not it may seem ill bred and selfish to you?"</p>
+
+<p>He said: "I suppose all the houses in this
+latitude harbour tarantulas, centipedes, and similar
+things, but you must remember that you do
+not live alone as I do&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I do!"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. I engaged two black servants in St.
+Augustine, but they have not arrived, and I was<span class="pagenumsmall">[166]</span>
+obliged to remain all alone in that frightful place
+last night."</p>
+
+<p>"That's very odd," he said uneasily. "Where <i>is</i>
+this bungalow of yours?"</p>
+
+<p>She started to speak, checked herself as at a
+sudden and unpleasant thought, looked up at him
+searchingly; and found his steel-grey eyes as
+searchingly fixed on her.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is <i>your</i> bungalow?" she asked, watching
+him intently.</p>
+
+<p>"Mine is situated at the west end of a coquina
+quarry. Where is yours?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mine," she answered unsteadily but defiantly,
+"is situated on the eastern edge of a coquina
+quarry."</p>
+
+<p>"Why did <i>you</i> choose a quarry bungalow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why did <i>you</i> choose one?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because the coquina quarry happens to belong
+to me."</p>
+
+<p>"The quarry," she retorted, "belongs to <i>me</i>."</p>
+
+<p>He was almost too disgusted to speak, but he
+contrived to say, quietly and civilly:</p>
+
+<p>"You are Constance Leslie, are you not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes.... You are Johnson Gray?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am," he answered, checking his exasperation
+and forcing a smile. "It's rather odd,
+isn't it&mdash;rather unfortunate, I'm afraid."<span class="pagenumsmall">[167]</span></p>
+
+<p>"It <i>is</i> unfortunate for you, Mr. Gray," she returned
+firmly. "I'm sorry&mdash;really sorry that this
+long journey is in vain."</p>
+
+<p>"So am I," he said, with lips compressed.</p>
+
+<p>For a few moments they sat very still, not looking
+at each other.</p>
+
+<p>Presently he said: "It was a fool of a will.
+He was a most disagreeable old man."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> never saw him."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I. They say he was a terror. But he
+had a sense of humour&mdash;a grim and acrid one&mdash;the
+cynic's idea of wit. No doubt he enjoyed
+it. No doubt he is enjoying this very scene between
+you and me&mdash;if he's anywhere within sight
+or hearing&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't say that!" she exclaimed, almost violently.
+"It is horrible enough on this island without
+hinting of ghosts."</p>
+
+<p>"Ghosts? Of course there are ghosts. But
+I'd rather have my bungalow full of 'em than full
+of scorpions."</p>
+
+<p>"We differ," she said coldly.</p>
+
+<p>Silence fell again, and again was broken by
+Gray.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly the old fellow had a sense of humour,"
+he insisted; "the will he left was one huge
+joke on every relative who had expectations.<span class="pagenumsmall">[168]</span>
+Imagine all that buzzard family of his who got
+nothing to amount to anything; and all those distant
+relatives who expected nothing and got almost
+everything!"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think that was humourous?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; don't you? And I think what he did
+about you and me was really very funny. Don't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why is it funny for a very horrid old man to
+make a will full of grim jokes and jests, and take
+that occasion to tell everybody exactly what he
+thinks of everybody?"</p>
+
+<p>"He said nothing disagreeable about <i>us</i> that
+I recollect," remarked Gray, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>Pouring sand between her fingers, she said:</p>
+
+<p>"I remember very well how he mentioned us.
+He said that he had never seen either one of us,
+and was glad of it. He said that as I was an orphan
+with no money, and that as you were similarly
+situated, and that as neither you nor I had
+brains enough to ever make any, he would leave
+his coquina quarry to that one of us who had
+brains enough to get here first and stake the claim.
+Do you call that an agreeable manner of making
+a bequest?"</p>
+
+<p>Gray laughed easily: "<i>I</i> don't care what he
+thought about my intellectual capacity."<span class="pagenumsmall">[169]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that I don't either. And anyway
+the bequest may be valuable."</p>
+
+<p>"There is no doubt about that," said Gray.</p>
+
+<p>She let her brown eyes rest thoughtfully on
+the ocean.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," she said, "that I shall dispose of
+it at once."</p>
+
+<p>"The dog?" he asked politely.</p>
+
+<p>Her pretty, hostile eyes met his:</p>
+
+<p>"The quarry," she replied calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Lord!" he exclaimed. "Do you think
+also that <i>you</i> arrived at the quarry before I arrived?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will find my stake with its written notice
+sticking in the sand on the eastern edge of
+the quarry, about a hundred yards south of my
+bungalow!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>My</i> notice is very carefully staked on the
+western edge of the quarry about the same distance
+from my bungalow," he said. "I placed it
+there yesterday evening."</p>
+
+<p>"I also placed my notice there yesterday evening!"</p>
+
+<p>"By what train did you come?"</p>
+
+<p>"By the Verbena Special. It arrived at St.
+Augustine yesterday at four o'clock in the afternoon."<span class="pagenumsmall">[170]</span></p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> also came on that train."</p>
+
+<p>"I," she said, "waited in St. Augustine only
+long enough to telephone for servants, and then
+I jumped into a victoria and drove over the causeway
+to the eastern end of the quarry."</p>
+
+<p>"I did exactly the same," he insisted, "only I
+drove to the western end of the quarry. What
+time did you set your notice?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know exactly. It was just about
+dusk."</p>
+
+<p>"It was just about dusk when I drove in <i>my</i>
+stake!"</p>
+
+<p>After a moment's idling in the sand with her
+slim fingers, she looked up at him a trifle pale.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose this means a lawsuit."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid it does."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry. If I wasn't in such desperate need
+of money&mdash;&mdash;" But she said no more, and he
+also remained silent for a while. Then:</p>
+
+<p>"I shall write to my attorney to come down,"
+he said soberly. "You had better do the same
+this evening."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"It's got to be settled, of course," he continued;
+"because I'm too poor to concede the quarry to
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"It is that way with me also. I do not like<span class="pagenumsmall">[171]</span>
+to appear so selfish to you, but what am I to do,
+Mr. Gray?"</p>
+
+<p>"What am <i>I</i> to do? I honestly believe that I
+staked the quarry before you did.... And my
+financial situation does not permit me to relinquish
+my claim on the quarry."</p>
+
+<p>"What a horrid will that was!" she exclaimed,
+the quick tears of vexation springing into her
+brown eyes. "If you knew how hard I've worked,
+Mr. Gray&mdash;all these years having nothing that
+other girls have&mdash;being obliged to work my way
+through college, and then take a position as governess&mdash;and
+just as it seemed that relief was in
+sight&mdash;<i>you</i> come into sight!&mdash;you!&mdash;and you even
+try to take away my little dog&mdash;the only thing I&mdash;I
+ever really cared for since I have&mdash;have been
+alone in the world&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Gray sprang up nervously: "I'm sorry&mdash;terribly
+sorry for you! You may keep the dog anyway."</p>
+
+<p>She had turned away her face sharply as the
+quick tears started. Now she looked around at
+him in unfeigned surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;what will <i>you</i> do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I can stand being alone. I don't mind.
+There's no doubt about it; you must have the
+dog&mdash;&mdash;" He glanced down at the little creature<span class="pagenumsmall">[172]</span>
+and caught his breath sharply as the puppy
+opened one eye and wagged its absurd tail feebly.</p>
+
+<p>The girl rose lightly and gracefully from the
+sand, refusing his assistance, and stood looking
+down at the puppy. The little thing was on its
+clumsy feet, wagging and wriggling with happiness,
+and gazing up adoringly from Gray to Constance
+Leslie.</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked at the dog, then at Gray.</p>
+
+<p>"It&mdash;it seems too cruel," she said. "I can't
+bear to take him away from you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, that's all right. I'll get on very well
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>"You are generous. You are very generous.
+But after the way you expressed yourself concerning
+the dog, I don't feel that I can possibly
+take him."</p>
+
+<p>"You really must. I don't blame you at all for
+falling in love with him. Besides, one adores
+what one rescues, above everything in the world."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;but I thought that you thought <i>you</i>
+had rescued him?" she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>"It was a close call. I think perhaps that you
+arrived just a fraction of a second sooner than
+I did."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you really? Or do you say that to be kind?
+Besides, I am not at all sure. It is perfectly possible&mdash;even,<span class="pagenumsmall">[173]</span>
+perhaps, probable that you saw him
+before I did."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I don't think so. I think he's your dog,
+Miss Leslie. I surrender all claim to him&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No! I can not permit you to do such a thing!
+Forgive me. I was excited and a little vexed....
+I know you would be very unhappy if I took the
+little thing&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please take him. I do love him already, but
+that is why it gives me a p-p-peculiar pleasure to
+relinquish all claims in y-your favour."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you. It is&mdash;is charming of you&mdash;exceedingly
+nice of you&mdash;but how can I accept such
+a real sacrifice?... You would be perfectly
+wretched to-night without him."</p>
+
+<p>"So would you, Miss Leslie."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be wretched anyway. So it doesn't
+really matter."</p>
+
+<p>"It <i>does</i> matter! If this little dog can alleviate
+your unhappiness in the slightest degree, I
+insist most firmly that you take him!"</p>
+
+<p>The girl stood irresolute, lifted her brown eyes
+to his, lowered them, and gazed longingly at the
+puppy.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose he will follow me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Try!"</p>
+
+<p>So she walked one way and Gray started in<span class="pagenumsmall">[174]</span>
+the opposite direction, and the bewildered puppy,
+who at first supposed it was all in play, dashed
+from one back to the other, until the widening
+distance between them perplexed and finally began
+to trouble him.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he continued to run back and
+forth from Gray to Constance Leslie as long as
+his rather wavering legs held out. Then, unable
+to decide, he stood panting midway between
+them, whining at moments, until, unable to understand
+or endure the spectacle of his two best
+beloveds vanishing in opposite directions, he put
+up his nose and howled.</p>
+
+<p>Then both best beloveds came back running,
+and Constance snatched him to her breast and
+covered him with caresses.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth are we to do?" she said in consternation.
+"We nearly broke his heart that
+time."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> don't know what to do," he admitted, much
+perplexed. "This pup seems to be impartial in
+his new-born affections."</p>
+
+<p>"I thought," she said, with an admirable effort
+at self-denial, "that he rather showed a preference
+for <i>you</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because when he was sitting there howling his<span class="pagenumsmall">[175]</span>
+little heart out, he seemed to look toward you a
+little oftener than he gazed in my direction."</p>
+
+<p>Gray rose nobly to the self-effacing level of
+his generous adversary:</p>
+
+<p>"No, the balance was, if anything, in your
+favour. I'm very certain that he will be happier
+with you. T-take him!"</p>
+
+<p>The girl buried her pretty face in the puppy's
+coat as though it had been a fluffy muff.</p>
+
+<p>"What a pity," she said, in a muffled voice,
+"that he is compelled to make a choice. It will
+break his heart; I know it will. He is too young."</p>
+
+<p>"He'll very soon forget me, once he is alone
+with you in your bungalow."</p>
+
+<p>The girl shook her head and stood caressing
+the puppy. The soft, white hand, resting on the
+dog's head, fascinated Gray.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," he ventured, "I had better walk as
+far as your bungalow with you.... It may
+spare the dog a certain amount of superficial
+anguish."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded, dreamy-eyed there in the sunshine.
+And of what she might be thinking he could form
+no idea.<span class="pagenumsmall">[176]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 400px;">
+<img src="images/ch19.jpg" width="400" height="126" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XIX</h2>
+
+<p>He fell into step beside her, and they
+walked up from the little cover through
+the beach-grapes and out among the
+scrubby dunes, where in the heated silence the
+perfume of sweet-bay and pines mingled with the
+odour of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>Everywhere the great sulphur-coloured butterflies
+were flying, making gorgeous combinations
+with the smaller, orange butterflies and the great,
+velvet-winged Palamedes swallow-tail.</p>
+
+<p>Lizards frisked and raced away before them,
+emerald tinted, green with sky-blue tails, grey
+and red; the little gophers scurried into their
+burrows along the tangled hammock's edges. Over
+the palm-trees' feathery crests sailed a black vulture,
+its palmated wing-tips spread like inky
+fingers against the blue. Somewhere in the saw-grass
+a bittern boomed and boomed; and the seagulls'
+clamour rang incessantly above the thunder
+of the surf.<span class="pagenumsmall">[177]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," she murmured, "whether my sunburn
+makes me drowsy."</p>
+
+<p>"It's the climate. You'll feel sleepy for a week
+before you are acclimated," he said.... "Why
+don't you put down the puppy and let him follow?"</p>
+
+<p>She did so; and the little creature frisked and
+leaped and padded joyously about among the bayberry
+bushes, already possessed with the canine
+determination to investigate all the alluring smells
+in the world, and miss none of them.</p>
+
+<p>After a little while they arrived at the bungalow
+which Constance had chosen. The girl
+pushed open the unlocked door; the puppy
+pranced in like a diminutive hobby-horse, flushed
+a big lizard, and went into fits of excitement till
+the solitary cabin rang with his treble barking.</p>
+
+<p>They watched him through the doorway, laughingly;
+then Gray looked at the claim notice stuck
+upright in the sand. Presently he walked to the
+edge of the coquina quarry and looked down into
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Thousands of dollars' worth of the shell deposit
+lay already exposed. There were great strata of
+it; ledges, shelves, vast masses in every direction.
+The quarry had been worked very little, and that
+little had been accomplished stupidly. Either in<span class="pagenumsmall">[178]</span>
+the rough, or merely as lumps of conglomerate for
+crushing, the coquina in sight alone was very,
+very valuable. There could be no doubt of that.</p>
+
+<p>Also, he understood that the strata deposited
+there continued at least for half a mile to the
+westward, where his own bungalow marked its
+probable termination.</p>
+
+<p>He turned after a few minutes' inspection, and
+walked slowly back to where Constance was standing
+by the open door. A slight constraint,
+amounting almost to embarrassment, ensued for a
+few minutes, but the puppy dissipated it when he
+leaped at a butterfly, fell on his nose with a
+thump, and howled dismally until reassured by
+his anxious foster-parents, who caught him up and
+generously passed him to each other, petting him
+vigourously.</p>
+
+<p>Twice Gray said good-bye to Constance Leslie
+and started to go on toward his own bungalow,
+but the puppy invariably began a frantic series of
+circles embracing them both, and he had to come
+back to keep the dog from the demoralisation of
+utter exhaustion.</p>
+
+<p>"You know," he said, "this is going to be awkward.
+I believe that dog thinks we are mar&mdash;thinks
+we are sister and brother. Don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>She replied with a slight flush on her fair face,<span class="pagenumsmall">[179]</span>
+that the dog undoubtedly cherished some such
+idea.</p>
+
+<p>"Take him inside," said Gray firmly. "Then I'll
+beat it."</p>
+
+<p>So she took the puppy inside and closed the
+door, with a smiling nod of adieu to Gray. But
+he had not gone very far when he heard her clear,
+far call; and, turning, saw her beckon frantically.</p>
+
+<p>Back he came at top speed.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear," she exclaimed. "Oh, dear! He's
+tearing 'round and 'round the room moaning and
+whining and barking. I'm very certain he will
+have fits if you don't speak to him."</p>
+
+<p>Gray opened the door cautiously, and the little
+dog came out, projected like a bolt from a catapult,
+fairly flinging his quivering little body into
+Gray's arms.</p>
+
+<p>The reunion was elaborate and mutually satisfying.
+Constance furtively touched her brown
+eyes with a corner of her handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>"What on earth are we to do?" she asked, unfeignedly
+affected. "I would give him to you in
+a minute if you think he would be contented without
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"We can try it."</p>
+
+<p>So Constance started westward, across the
+dunes, and Gray went into the bungalow with the<span class="pagenumsmall">[180]</span>
+dog. But it required only a second or two to
+convince him that it wouldn't do, and he opened
+the door and called frantically to Constance.</p>
+
+<p>"There is no use in trying that sort of thing,"
+he admitted, when Constance hastened back to a
+touching reunion with the imprisoned dog.
+"Strategy is our only hope. I'll sit here on the
+threshold with you, and as soon as he goes to sleep
+I'll slink away."</p>
+
+<p>So side by side they seated themselves on the
+sandy threshold of the bungalow, and the little
+dog, happy and contented, curled up on the floor
+of the room, tucked his blunt muzzle into his flank,
+and took a series of naps with one eye always
+open. He was young, but suspicion had already
+done its demoralising work with him, and he intended
+to keep at least one eye on his best beloveds.</p>
+
+<p>She in her fresh and clinging gown, with the
+first delicate sunmask tinting her unaccustomed
+skin, sat silent and distrait, her idle fingers linked
+in her lap. And, glancing askance at her now
+and then, the droop of her under lip seemed to
+him pathetic, like that of a tired child in trouble.</p>
+
+<p>When he was not looking at her he was immersed
+in perplexed cogitation. The ownership
+of the dog he had already settled in his mind; the<span class="pagenumsmall">[181]</span>
+ownership of the quarry he had supposed he had
+settled.</p>
+
+<p>Therefore, why was he so troubled about it?
+Why was he so worried about her, wondering what
+she would do in the matter?</p>
+
+<p>The only solution left seemed to lie in a recourse
+to the law&mdash;unless&mdash;unless&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>But he couldn't&mdash;he simply couldn't, merely
+for a sentimental impulse, give up to a stranger
+what he honestly considered an inheritance. That
+would be carrying sentimentalism too far.</p>
+
+<p>And yet&mdash;and yet! He needed the inheritance
+desperately. Matters financial had gone all wrong
+with him. How <i>could</i> he turn his back on offered
+salvation just because a youthful and pretty girl
+also required a financial lift in a cold-blooded
+and calculating world?</p>
+
+<p>And yet&mdash;and yet! He would sleep over it,
+of course. But he honestly saw no prospect of
+changing his opinion concerning the ownership of
+the quarry.</p>
+
+<p>As he sat there biting a stem of sweet-bay and
+listening to the cardinals piping from the forest,
+he looked down into the heated coquina pit.</p>
+
+<p>A snake was coiled up on one of the ledges,
+basking.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Leslie!"<span class="pagenumsmall">[182]</span></p>
+
+<p>She lifted her head and straightened her drooping
+shoulders, looking at him from eyes made
+drowsy and beautiful by the tropic heat.</p>
+
+<p>"I only wanted to say," he began gravely,
+"that it is not safe for you to go into the quarry
+alone&mdash;in case you had any such intention."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are snakes there. Do you see that one?
+Well, he's harmless, I think&mdash;a king-snake, if I
+am not mistaken. But it's a good place for rattlers."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you should be careful, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I'm careful enough, but you might not
+know when to be on your guard. This island is
+a snaky one. It's famous for its diamond-back
+rattlers and the size of them. Their fangs are
+an inch long, and it usually means death to be
+struck by one of them."</p>
+
+<p>The girl nodded thoughtfully.</p>
+
+<p>He said with a new anxiety: "As a matter of
+fact, you really ought not to be down here all
+alone."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it. But it meant a race for ownership,
+and I had to come at a minute's notice."</p>
+
+<p>"You should have brought a maid."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Mr. Gray, I have no maid."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I forgot," he muttered&mdash;"but, somehow,<span class="pagenumsmall">[183]</span>
+you <i>look</i> as though you had been born to several."</p>
+
+<p>"I am the daughter of a very poor professor."</p>
+
+<p>He fidgetted with his sweet-bay twig, considering
+the aromatic leaves with a troubled and concentrated
+scowl.</p>
+
+<p>"You know," he said, "this wretched island is
+celebrated for its unpleasant fauna. Scorpions
+and wood-ticks are numerous. The sting of the
+one is horribly painful, and might be dangerous;
+the villainous habits of the other might throw
+you into a fever."</p>
+
+<p>"But what can I do?" she inquired calmly.</p>
+
+<p>"There are other kinds of snakes, too," he
+went on with increasing solicitude for this girl
+for whom, suddenly, he began to consider himself
+responsible. "There's a vicious snake called a
+moccasin; and he won't get out of your way or
+warn you. And there's a wicked little serpent
+with rings of black, scarlet, and yellow around his
+body. He pretends to be harmless, but if he gets
+your finger into his mouth he'll chew it full of a
+venom which is precisely the same sort of venom
+as that of the deadly East Indian cobra."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;what can I do?" she repeated pitifully.
+"If I go to St. Augustine and leave you here in
+possession, it might invalidate my claim."<span class="pagenumsmall">[184]</span></p>
+
+<p>He was silent, knowing no more about the law
+than did she, and afraid to deny her tentative assertion.</p>
+
+<p>"If it lay with me," he said, "I'd call a truce
+until you could go to St. Augustine and return
+again with the proper people to look out for
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Even if you were kind enough to do that, I
+could not afford even a servant under present&mdash;and
+unexpected&mdash;conditions."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because it has suddenly developed that I shall
+be obliged to engage a lawyer. And I had not
+expected that."</p>
+
+<p>He reddened to his hair but said nothing. After
+a while the girl looked over her shoulder. The
+puppy slept, this time with both eyes closed.</p>
+
+<p>When she turned again to Gray, he nodded his
+comprehension and rose to his feet cautiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to take a walk on the beach and
+think this thing all out," he whispered, taking the
+slim, half-offered hand in adieu. "Don't go out
+in the scrub after sun-down. Rattlers move then.
+Don't go near any swamp; moccasins are the
+colour of sun-baked mud, and you can't see them.
+Don't touch any pretty little snake marked scarlet,
+black, and yellow&mdash;&mdash;"<span class="pagenumsmall">[185]</span></p>
+
+<p>"How absurd!" she whispered. "As though I
+were likely to fondle snakes!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm terribly worried about you," he insisted,
+retaining her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't be."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I help it&mdash;what with these bungalows
+full of scorpions and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yours is, too," she said anxiously. "You will
+be very careful, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course.... I'm&mdash;I'm uncertain
+about you. That's what is troubling me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't bother about me. I've had to
+look out for myself for years."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you?" he said, almost tenderly. Then
+he drew a quick, determined breath.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll be careful, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you armed?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have a shot-gun inside."</p>
+
+<p>"That's all right. Don't open your door to
+any stranger.... You know I simply hate to
+leave you alone this way&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But I have the dog," she reminded him, with
+a pretty flush of gratitude.</p>
+
+<p>He had retained her hand longer than the
+easiest convention required or permitted. So he
+released it, hesitated, then with a visible effort<span class="pagenumsmall">[186]</span>
+he turned on his heel and strode away westward
+across the scrub.</p>
+
+<p>The sun hung low behind the tall, parti-coloured
+shaft of the Light House, towering smooth
+and round high above the forest.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up at Ibis Light, at the circling
+buzzards above it, then walked on, scarcely knowing
+where he was going, until he walked into the
+door of his own bungalow, and several large spiders
+scattered into flight across the floor.</p>
+
+<p>"There's no use," he said aloud to an audience
+of lizards clinging to the silvery bark of the log-room.
+"I can't take that quarry. I can't do it&mdash;whether
+it belongs to me or not. <i>How</i> can a
+big, strong, lumbering young man do a thing like
+that? No. No. <i>No!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>He picked up a pencil and a sheet of paper:</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Lord! I really do need the money, but I
+can't do it."</p>
+
+<p>And he wrote:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Dear Miss Leslie</span>:</p>
+
+<p>You arrived on the scene before I did. I am now
+convinced of this. I shall not dispute the ownership
+of the quarry. It is yours. This statement over my
+signature is your guarantee that I shall never interfere
+with your title to the coquina quarry on Ibis
+Island.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenumsmall">[187]</span></p>
+<p>So now I've got to return to New York and go to
+work. I'm going across to Augustine in a few
+moments; and while I'm there I'll engage a white
+woman as companion for you, and a white servant,
+and have them drive over at once so they will reach
+your bungalow before evening. With undisputed
+title to the quarry, you can easily afford their wages.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye. I wish you every happiness and success.
+Please give my love to the dog.</p>
+
+<p class="author">
+Yours very truly,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>
+<span class="smcap">Johnson Gray.</span><br>
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>"It's the only way out of it," he muttered. "I'll
+leave it with her and bolt before she reads it.
+There is nothing else to do, absolutely nothing."</p>
+
+<p>As he came out of his cabin, the sun hung low
+and red above the palm forest, and a few bats
+were already flying like tiny black devils above
+the scrub.</p>
+
+<p>There was a strip of beach near his cabin, and
+he went down to it and began to tramp up and
+down with a vague idea of composing himself so
+that he might accomplish what he had to do gracefully,
+gaily, and with no suspicion of striking an
+attitude for gods and men to admire his moral
+resignation and his heroic renunciation.</p>
+
+<p>No; he'd do the thing lightly, smilingly, determined
+that she should not think that it was a<span class="pagenumsmall">[188]</span>
+sacrifice. No; she must believe that a sense of
+fairness alone moved him to an honest recognition
+of her claims. He must make it plain to her
+that he really believed she had arrived at the
+quarry before he had.</p>
+
+<p>And so he meant to leave her the letter, say
+good-bye, and go.</p>
+
+<p>When this was all settled in his mind he looked
+at the ocean very soberly, then turned his back
+on the Atlantic and walked back to his cabin to
+gather up his effects.</p>
+
+<p>As he approached the closed door a desolate
+howl from the interior greeted him: he sprang to
+the door and flung it open; and the puppy rushed
+into his arms.</p>
+
+<p>Then, pinned to the scorpion-infested wall, he
+saw a sheet of writing, and he read:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Gray</span>:</p>
+
+<p>He woke up and howled for you. It was too
+tragic for me. I love him but I give him to you. I
+give the quarry to you, also. Under the circumstances
+it would be impossible for me to enjoy it,
+even if the law awarded it to me. Nobody could ever
+really know which one of us first arrived and staked
+the claim. No doubt you did.</p>
+
+<p>I am sorry I came into your life and made trouble
+for you and for the puppy.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenumsmall">[189]</span></p>
+<p>So I leave you in peaceful possession. It really
+is a happiness for me to do it.</p>
+
+<p>I am going North at once. Good-bye; and please
+give my love to the dog. Poor little darling, he
+thought we both stood <i>in loco parentis</i>. But he'll get
+over his grief for me.</p>
+
+<p class="author">
+Yours truly,&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>
+<span class="smcap">Constance Leslie</span>.<br>
+</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>The puppy at his feet was howling uncomforted
+for the best beloved who was so strangely
+missing from the delightful combination which he
+had so joyously accepted <i>in loco parentis</i>.<span class="pagenumsmall">[190]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 425px;">
+<img src="images/ch20.jpg" width="425" height="356" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XX</h2>
+
+<p>Gray gathered the dog into his arms and
+strode swiftly out into the sunshot, purple
+light of early evening.</p>
+
+<p>"What a girl!" he muttered to himself. "What
+a girl! What a corking specimen of her sex!"</p>
+
+<p>Presently he came in sight of her, and the
+puppy scrambled violently until set down. Then
+he bolted for Constance Leslie, and it was only
+when the little thing leaped frantically upon her
+that she turned with a soft, breathless little cry.
+And saw Gray coming toward her out of the rose
+and golden sunset.</p>
+
+<p>Neither spoke as he came up and looked into
+her brown eyes and saw the traces of tears there
+still. The puppy leaped deliriously about them.
+And for a long while her slim hands lay limply in<span class="pagenumsmall">[191]</span>
+his. He looked at the ocean; she at the darkening
+forest.</p>
+
+<p>And after a little while he drew the note from
+his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"I had written this when I found yours," he
+said. And he held it for her while she read it,
+bending nearer in the dim, rosy light.</p>
+
+<p>After she read it she took it from him gently,
+folded it, and slipped it into the bosom of her
+gown.</p>
+
+<p>Neither said anything. One of her hands still
+remained in his, listlessly at first&mdash;then the fingers
+crisped as his other arm encircled her.</p>
+
+<p>They were both gazing vaguely at the ocean
+now. Presently they moved slowly toward it
+through the fragrant dusk. Her hair, loosened a
+little, brushed his sunburned cheek.</p>
+
+<p>And around them gambolled the wise little dog,
+no longer apprehensive, but unutterably content
+with what the God of all good little doggies had
+so mercifully sent to him <i>in loco parentis</i>.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>"That," said the novelist, "is another slice of
+fact which would never do for fiction. Besides
+I once read a story somewhere or other about a
+dog bringing two people together."<span class="pagenumsmall">[192]</span></p>
+
+<p>"The theme," I observed, "is thousands of years
+old."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the trouble with all truth," nodded
+Duane. "It's old as Time itself, and needs a new
+suit of clothes every time it is exhibited to instruct
+people."</p>
+
+<p>"What with new manners, new fashions, new
+dances, and the moral levelling itself gradually to
+the level of the unmoral," said Stafford, "nobody
+on the street would turn around to look at the
+naked truth in these days."</p>
+
+<p>"Truth must be fashionably gowned to attract,"
+I admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"We of the eccentric nobility understand that,"
+said the little Countess Athalie, glancing out of
+the window; and to me she added: "Lean over
+and see whether they have stationed a policeman
+in front of the Princess Zimbamzim's residence."</p>
+
+<p>I went out on the balcony and glanced down
+the block. "Yes," I said.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor old Princess," murmured the girl. "She
+detests moving."</p>
+
+<p>"All frauds do," remarked Duane.</p>
+
+<p>"She isn't a fraud," said Athalie quietly.</p>
+
+<p>Our silence indicated our surprise. After a
+few moments the girl added:</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever else she may be she is not a fraud<span class="pagenumsmall">[193]</span>
+in her profession. I think I had better give you
+an example of her professional probity. It interested
+me considerably as I followed it in my
+crystal. She knew all the while that I was watching
+her as well as the very people she herself
+was watching; and once or twice she looked up
+at me out of my crystal and grinned."</p>
+
+<p>"Can she see us now?" I inquired uneasily.</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?" asked Duane.</p>
+
+<p>"I shall not tell you why."</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I care whether she sees me or not,"
+he added.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you care, Harry, whether I see you occasionally
+in my crystal?" smiled Athalie.</p>
+
+<p>Duane flushed brightly and reminded her that
+she was too honourable to follow the movements
+of her personal friends unless requested to do so
+by them.</p>
+
+<p>"That is quite true," rejoined the girl, simply.
+"But once I saw you when I did not mean to."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" he demanded, redder still.</p>
+
+<p>"You were merely asleep in your own bed," she
+said, laughing and accepting a lighted match
+from me. Then as the fragrant thread of smoke
+twisted in ghostly ringlets across her smooth
+young cheeks she settled back among her cushions.<span class="pagenumsmall">[194]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 250px;">
+<img src="images/ch21.jpg" width="250" height="529" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXI</h2>
+
+<p>"This," she said, "will acquaint you in a
+measure with the trustworthiness of the
+Princess Zimbamzim. And, if the policeman
+in front of her house could hear what I am
+going to tell you, he'd never remain there while his
+legs had power to run away with him."</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>They met by accident on Madison Square, and
+shook hands for the first time in many years.
+High in the Metropolitan Tower the chimes celebrated
+the occasion by sounding the half hour.</p>
+
+<p>"It seems incredible," exclaimed George Z.<span class="pagenumsmall">[195]</span>
+Green, "that you could have become so famous!
+You never displayed any remarkable ability in
+school."</p>
+
+<p>"I never displayed any ability at all. But you
+did," said Williams admiringly. "How beautifully
+you used to write your name on the blackboard!
+How neat and scholarly you were in everything."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," said Green gloomily. "And <i>you</i>
+flunked in almost everything."</p>
+
+<p>"In everything," admitted Williams, deeply
+mortified.</p>
+
+<p>"And yet," said Green, "here we are at thirty
+odd; and I'm merely a broker, and&mdash;<i>look</i> what
+<i>you</i> are! Why, I can't go anywhere but I find
+one of your novels staring me in the face. I've
+been in Borneo: they're there! They're in Australia
+and China and Patagonia. Why the devil
+do you suppose people buy the stories you write?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sure I don't know," said Williams modestly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know either, though I read them myself
+sometimes&mdash;I don't know why. They're all
+very well in their way&mdash;if you care for that sort
+of book&mdash;but the things you tell about, Williams,
+never could have happened. I'm not knocking
+you; I'm a realist, that's all. And when I read a
+short story by you in which a young man sees a<span class="pagenumsmall">[196]</span>
+pretty girl, and begins to talk to her without
+being introduced to her, and then marries her before
+luncheon&mdash;and finds he's married a Balkan
+Princess&mdash;good-night! I just wonder why people
+stand for your books; that's all."</p>
+
+<p>"So do I," said Williams, much embarrassed.
+"I wouldn't stand for them myself."</p>
+
+<p>"Why," continued Green warmly, "I read a
+story of yours in some magazine the other day, in
+which a young man sees a pretty girl for the first
+time in his life and is married to her inside of
+three quarters of an hour! And I ask <i>you</i>, Williams,
+how you would feel after spending fifteen
+cents on such a story?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm terribly sorry, old man," murmured Williams.
+"Here's your fifteen&mdash;if you like&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Dammit," said Green indignantly, "it isn't
+that they're not readable stories! I had fifteen
+cents' worth all right. But it makes a man sore
+to see what happens to the young men in your
+stories&mdash;and all the queens they collect&mdash;and then
+to go about town and never see anything of that
+sort!"</p>
+
+<p>"There are millions of pretty girls in town,"
+ventured Williams. "I don't think I exaggerate in
+that respect."</p>
+
+<p>"But they'd call an officer if young men in real<span class="pagenumsmall">[197]</span>
+life behaved as they do in your stories. As a
+matter of fact and record, there's no more romance
+in New York than there is in the annual
+meeting of the British Academy of Ancient Assyrian
+Inscriptions. And you know it, Williams!"</p>
+
+<p>"I think it depends on the individual man," said
+Williams timidly.</p>
+
+<p>"How?"</p>
+
+<p>"If there's any romance in a man himself, he's
+apt to find the world rather full of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean to say there isn't any romance
+in me?" demanded George Z. Green hotly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, George. Is there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Plenty. Pl-en-ty! I'm always looking for
+romance. I look for it when I go down town to
+business; I look for it when I go home. Do I
+find it? No! Nothing ever happens to me. Nothing
+beautiful and wealthy beyond the dreams of
+avarice ever tries to pick me up. Explain <i>that</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>Williams, much abashed, ventured no explanation.</p>
+
+<p>"And to think," continued Green, "that you,
+my old school friend, should become a celebrity
+merely by writing such stories! Why, you're as
+celebrated as any brand of breakfast food!"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't have to read my books, you know,"
+protested Williams mildly.<span class="pagenumsmall">[198]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I don't have to&mdash;I know it. But I do.
+Everybody does. And nobody knows why. So,
+meeting you again after all these unromantic
+years, I thought I'd just ask you whether by any
+chance you happen to know of any particular
+section of the city where a plain, everyday broker
+might make a hit with the sort of girl you write
+about. Do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Any section of this city is romantic enough&mdash;if
+you only approach it in the proper spirit,"
+asserted Williams.</p>
+
+<p>"You mean if my attitude toward romance is
+correct I'm likely to encounter it almost anywhere?"</p>
+
+<p>"That is my theory," admitted Williams bashfully.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Well, what <i>is</i> the proper attitude? Take
+me, for example. I've just been to the bank. I
+carry, at this moment, rather a large sum of
+money in my inside overcoat pocket. My purpose
+in drawing it was to blow it. Now, tell me how
+to blow it romantically."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I tell you such a thing, George&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It's your business. You tell people such
+things in books. Now, tell me, face to face, man
+to man, how to get thoroughly mixed up in the
+sort of romance you write&mdash;the kind of romance<span class="pagenumsmall">[199]</span>
+that has made William McWilliam Williams famous!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What! You won't! You admit that what
+you write is bunk? You confess that you don't
+know where there are any stray queens with whom
+I might become happily entangled within the next
+fifteen minutes?"</p>
+
+<p>"I admit no such thing," said Williams with
+dignity. "If your attitude is correct, in ten minutes
+you can be up against anything on earth!"</p>
+
+<p>"Where?"</p>
+
+<p>"Anywhere!"</p>
+
+<p>"Very well! Here we are on Madison Square.
+There's Admiral Farragut; there's the Marble
+Tower. Do you mean that if I walk from this
+spot for ten minutes&mdash;no matter in what direction&mdash;I'll
+walk straight into Romance up to my
+neck?"</p>
+
+<p>"If your attitude is correct, yes. But you've
+got to know the elements of Romance when you
+see them."</p>
+
+<p>"What are the elements of Romance? What
+do they resemble?" demanded George Z. Green.</p>
+
+<p>Williams said, in a low, impressive voice:</p>
+
+<p>"Anything that seems to you unusual is very
+likely to be an element in a possible romance. If<span class="pagenumsmall">[200]</span>
+you see anything extraordinary during the next
+ten minutes, follow it up. And ninety-nine chances
+in a hundred it will lead you into complications.
+Interfering with other people's business usually
+does," he added pleasantly.</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Green, "suppose during the next
+ten minutes, or twenty minutes, or the next twenty-four
+hours I <i>don't</i> see anything unusual."</p>
+
+<p>"It will be your own fault if you don't. The
+Unusual is occurring all about us, every second.
+A trained eye can always see it."</p>
+
+<p>"But suppose the Unusual doesn't occur for
+the next ten minutes," insisted Green, exasperated.
+"Suppose the Unusual is taking a vacation? It
+would be just my luck."</p>
+
+<p>"Then," said Williams, "you will have to
+imagine that everything you see is unusual. Or
+else," he added blandly, "you yourself will have
+to start something. <i>That</i> is where the creative
+mind comes in. When there's nothing doing it
+starts something."</p>
+
+<p>"Does it ever get arrested?" inquired Green
+ironically. "The creative mind! Sure! <i>That's</i>
+where all this bally romance is!&mdash;in the creative
+mind. I knew it. Good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>They shook hands; Williams went down town.<span class="pagenumsmall">[201]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 270px;">
+<img src="images/ch22.jpg" width="270" height="473" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXII</h2>
+
+<p>This picture is not concerned with his destination.
+Or even whether he ever got
+there.</p>
+
+<p>But it is very directly concerned with George
+Z. Green, and the direction he took when he parted
+from his old school friend.</p>
+
+<p>As he walked up town he said to himself,
+"Bunk!" several times. After a few moments he
+fished out his watch.</p>
+
+<p>"I know I'm an ass," he said to himself, "but
+I'll take a chance. I'll give myself exactly ten
+minutes to continue making an ass of myself. And
+if I see the faintest symptom of Romance&mdash;if I<span class="pagenumsmall">[202]</span>
+notice anything at all peculiar and unusual in
+any person or any thing during the next ten minutes,
+I won't let it get away&mdash;believe <i>me</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>He walked up Broadway instead of Fifth Avenue.
+After a block or two he turned west at
+hazard, crossed Sixth Avenue and continued.</p>
+
+<p>He was walking in one of the upper Twenties&mdash;he
+had not particularly noticed which. Commercial
+houses nearly filled the street, although a
+few old-time residences of brownstone still remained.
+Once well-to-do and comfortable homes,
+they had degenerated into chop sueys, boarding
+houses, the abodes of music publishers, artificial
+flower makers, and mediums.</p>
+
+<p>It was now a shabby, unkempt street, and Green
+already was considering it a hopeless hunting
+ground, and had even turned to retrace his steps
+toward Sixth Avenue, when the door of a neighbouring
+house opened and down the shabby,
+brownstone stoop came hurrying an exceedingly
+pretty girl.</p>
+
+<p>Now, the unusual part of the incident lay in
+the incongruity of the street and the girl. For
+the street and the house out of which she emerged
+so hastily were mean and ignoble; but the girl
+herself fairly radiated upper Fifth Avenue from
+the perfectly appointed and expensive simplicity<span class="pagenumsmall">[203]</span>
+of hat and gown to the obviously aristocratic and
+dainty face and figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Is <i>she</i> a symptom?" thought Green to himself.
+"Is <i>she</i> an element? That is sure a rotten looking
+joint she came out of."</p>
+
+<p>Moved by a sudden and unusual impulse of intelligence,
+he ran up the brownstone stoop and
+read the dirty white card pasted on the fa&ccedil;ade
+above the door bell.</p>
+
+<p class="h3">
+THE PRINCESS ZIMBAMZIM<br>
+TRANCE MEDIUM. FORTUNES.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p>Taken aback, he looked after the pretty girl
+who was now hurrying up the street as though the
+devil were at her dainty heels.</p>
+
+<p>Could <i>she</i> be the Princess Zimbamzim? Common
+sense rejected the idea, as did the sudden jerk
+of soiled lace curtains at the parlour window, and
+the apparition of a fat lady in a dingy, pink tea-gown.
+<i>That</i> must be the Princess Zimbamzim and
+the pretty girl had ventured into these purlieus
+to consult her. Why?</p>
+
+<p>"This <i>is</i> certainly a symptom of romance!"
+thought the young man excitedly. And he started
+after the pretty girl at a Fifth Avenue amble.</p>
+
+<p>He overtook and passed her at Sixth Avenue,
+and managed to glance at her without being offensive.<span class="pagenumsmall">[204]</span>
+To his consternation, she was touching
+her tear-stained eyes with her handkerchief. She
+did not notice him.</p>
+
+<p>What could be the matter? With what mystery
+was he already in touch?</p>
+
+<p>Tremendously interested he fell back a few
+paces and lighted a cigarette, allowing her to
+pass him; then he followed her. Never before in
+his life had he done such a scandalous thing.</p>
+
+<p>On Broadway she hailed a taxi, got into it, and
+sped uptown. There was another taxi available;
+Green took it and gave the driver a five dollar tip
+to keep the first taxi in view.</p>
+
+<p>Which was very easy, for it soon stopped at a
+handsome apartment house on Park Avenue; the
+girl sprang out, and entered the building almost
+running.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment George Z. Green thought that all
+was lost. But the taxi she had taken remained,
+evidently waiting for her; and sure enough, in a
+few minutes out she came, hurrying, enveloped in
+a rough tweed travelling coat and carrying a little
+satchel. Slam! went the door of her taxi; and
+away she sped, and Green after her in his taxi.</p>
+
+<p>Again the chase proved to be very short. Her
+taxi stopped at the Pennsylvania Station; out
+she sprang, paid the driver, and hurried straight<span class="pagenumsmall">[205]</span>
+for the station restaurant, Green following at a
+fashionable lope.</p>
+
+<p>She took a small table by a window; Green
+took the next one. It was not because she noticed
+him and found his gaze offensive, but because
+she felt a draught that she rose and took the table
+behind Green, exactly where he could not see her
+unless he twisted his neck into attitudes unseemly.</p>
+
+<p>He wouldn't do such things, being really a
+rather nice young man; and it was too late for
+him to change his table without attracting her attention,
+because the waiter already had brought
+him whatever he had ordered for tea&mdash;muffins,
+buns, crumpets&mdash;he neither knew nor cared.</p>
+
+<p>So he ate them with jam, which he detested;
+and drank his tea and listened with all his ears
+for the slightest movement behind him which might
+indicate that she was leaving.</p>
+
+<p>Only once did he permit himself to turn around,
+under pretense of looking for a waiter; and he
+saw two blue eyes still brilliant with unshed tears
+and a very lovely but unhappy mouth all ready
+to quiver over its toast and marmalade.</p>
+
+<p>What on earth could be the matter with that
+girl? What terrible tragedy could it be that was
+still continuing to mar her eyes and twitch her
+sensitive, red lips?<span class="pagenumsmall">[206]</span></p>
+
+<p>Green, sipping his tea, trembled pleasantly all
+over as he realised that at last he was setting his
+foot upon the very threshold of Romance. And
+he determined to cross that threshold if neither
+good manners, good taste, nor the police interfered.</p>
+
+<p>And what a wonderful girl for his leading lady!
+What eyes! What hair! What lovely little
+hands, with the gloves hastily rolled up from the
+wrist! Why should she be unhappy? He'd like
+to knock the block off any man who&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Green came to himself with a thrill of happiness:
+her pretty voice was sounding in exquisite
+modulations behind him as she asked the waiter
+for m-more m-marmalade.</p>
+
+<p>In a sort of trance, Green demolished bun after
+bun. Normally, he loathed the indigestible.
+After what had seemed to him an interminable
+length of time, he ventured to turn around again
+in pretense of calling a waiter.</p>
+
+<p>Her chair was empty!</p>
+
+<p>At first he thought she had disappeared past all
+hope of recovery; but the next instant he caught
+sight of her hastening out toward the ticket boxes.</p>
+
+<p>Flinging a five-dollar bill on the table, he hastily
+invited the waiter to keep the change; sprang
+to his feet, and turned to seize his overcoat. It<span class="pagenumsmall">[207]</span>
+was gone from the hook where he had hung it just
+behind him.</p>
+
+<p>Astonished, he glanced at the disappearing girl,
+and saw his overcoat over her arm. For a moment
+he supposed that she had mistaken it for her
+own ulster, but no! She was wearing her own
+coat, too.</p>
+
+<p>A cold and sickening sensation assailed the pit
+of Green's stomach. Was it not a mistake, after
+all? Was this lovely young girl a professional
+criminal? Had she or some of her band observed
+Green coming out of the bank and thrusting a fat
+wallet into the inside pocket of his overcoat?</p>
+
+<p>He was walking now, as fast as he was thinking,
+keeping the girl in view amid the throngs passing
+through the vast rotunda.</p>
+
+<p>When she stopped at a ticket booth he entered
+the brass railed space behind her.</p>
+
+<p>She did not appear to know exactly where she
+was going, for she seemed by turns distrait and
+agitated; and he heard her ask the ticket agent
+when the next train left for the extreme South.</p>
+
+<p>Learning that it left in a few minutes, and finding
+that she could secure a stateroom, she took
+it, paid for it, and hastily left without a glance
+behind her at Green.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Green had very calmly slipped one<span class="pagenumsmall">[208]</span>
+hand into the breast pocket of his own overcoat,
+where it trailed loosely over her left arm, meaning
+to extract his wallet without anybody observing him.
+The wallet was not there. He was
+greatly inclined to run after her, but he didn't.
+He watched her depart, then:</p>
+
+<p>"Is there another stateroom left on the Verbena
+Special?" he inquired of the ticket agent,
+coolly enough.</p>
+
+<p>"One. Do you wish it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>The ticket agent made out the coupons and
+shoved the loose change under the grille, saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Better hurry, sir. You've less than a minute."</p>
+
+<p>He ran for his train and managed to swing
+aboard just as the coloured porters were closing
+the vestibules and the train was in motion.</p>
+
+<p>A trifle bewildered at what he had done, and
+by the rapidity with which he had done it, he sank
+down in the vacant observation car to collect his
+thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>He was on board the Verbena Special&mdash;the
+southern train-de-luxe&mdash;bound for Jacksonville,
+St. Augustine, Palm Beach, Verbena Inlet, or Miami&mdash;or
+for Nassau, Cuba, and the remainder of
+the West Indies&mdash;just as he chose.</p>
+
+<p>He had no other luggage than a walking-stick.<span class="pagenumsmall">[209]</span>
+Even his overcoat was in possession of somebody
+else. That was the situation that now faced
+George Z. Green.</p>
+
+<p>But as the train emerged from the river tube,
+and he realised all this, he grew calmer; and the
+calmer he grew the happier he grew.</p>
+
+<p>He was no longer on the threshold of Romance;
+he had crossed it, and already he was being
+whirled away blindly into the Unusual and the
+Unknown!</p>
+
+<p>Exultingly he gazed out of the windows upon
+the uninspiring scenery of New Jersey. A wonderful
+sense of physical lightness and mental freedom
+took delightful possession of him. Opportunity
+had not beckoned him in vain. Chance
+had glanced sideways at him, and he had recognised
+the pretty flirt. His was certainly some
+brain!</p>
+
+<p>And now, still clinging to the skirts of Chance,
+he was being whisked away, pell mell, headlong
+toward Destiny, in the trail of a slender, strange
+young girl who had swiped his overcoat and who
+seemed continually inclined to tears.</p>
+
+<p>The incident of the overcoat no longer troubled
+him. That garment of his was not unlike the
+rough travelling coat she herself wore. And it
+might have been natural to her, in her distress of<span class="pagenumsmall">[210]</span>
+mind and very evident emotion, to have seized it
+by mistake and made off with it, forgetting that
+she still wore her own.</p>
+
+<p>Of course it was a mistake pure and simple.
+He had only to look at the girl and understand
+that. One glance at her sweet, highbred features
+was sufficient to exonerate her as a purloiner
+of gentlemen's garments.</p>
+
+<p>Green crossed his legs, folded his arms, and
+reflected. The overcoat was another and most
+important element in this nascent Romance.</p>
+
+<p>The difficulty lay in knowing how to use the
+overcoat to advantage in furthering and further
+complicating a situation already delightful.</p>
+
+<p>Of course he could do the obvious: he could
+approach her and take off his hat and do the well-bred
+and civil and explain to her the mistake.</p>
+
+<p>But suppose she merely said: "I'm sorry,"
+handed over his coat, and continued to read her
+magazine. That would end it. And it mustn't
+end until he found out why she had emerged with
+tears in her beautiful eyes from the abode of the
+Princess Zimbamzim.</p>
+
+<p>Besides, he was sure of getting his coat, his
+wallet, and its contents. His name and address
+were in the wallet; also both were sewed inside the
+inner pocket of the overcoat.<span class="pagenumsmall">[211]</span></p>
+
+<p>What would ultimately happen would be this:
+sooner or later she'd come to, wake up, dry her
+pretty eyes, look about, and find that she had <i>two</i>
+overcoats in her possession.</p>
+
+<p>It would probably distress her dreadfully, particularly
+when she discovered the wallet and the
+money. But, wherever she was going, as soon as
+she reached there she'd send overcoat and money
+back to his address&mdash;doubtless with a pretty and
+contrite note of regret.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, but that wouldn't do! What good would
+the overcoat and the money be to him, if he were
+South and she shipped them North? And yet he
+was afraid to risk an abrupt ending to his Romance
+by explaining to her the mistake.</p>
+
+<p>No; he'd merely follow her for the present. He
+couldn't help it very well, being aboard the same
+train. So it would not be difficult to keep his eye
+on her as well as his overcoat, and think out at his
+leisure how best to tend, guard, cherish, and nourish
+the delicate and unopened bud of Romance.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile, there were other matters he must
+consider; so he wrote out a telegram to Washington
+ordering certain necessary articles to be
+brought aboard the Verbena Special on its arrival
+there. The porter took charge of it.<span class="pagenumsmall">[212]</span></p>
+
+<p>That night at dinner he looked for the girl in
+vain. She did not enter the dining-car while he
+was there. Haunting the corridors afterward he
+saw no sign of her anywhere until, having received
+his necessaries in a brand new travelling satchel,
+and on his way to his stateroom, he caught a
+glimpse of her, pale and agitated, in conversation
+with the porter at her partly opened door.</p>
+
+<p>She did not even glance at him as he entered
+his stateroom, but he could not avoid hearing
+what she was saying because her enunciation was
+so exquisitely distinct.</p>
+
+<p>"Porter," she said in her low, sweet voice, "I
+have, somehow, made a very dreadful mistake
+somewhere. I have a man's overcoat here which
+does not belong to me. The cloth is exactly like
+the cloth of my own travelling ulster, and I must
+have forgotten that I had mine on when I took
+this."</p>
+
+<p>"Ain't de gemman abohd de Speshul, Miss?"
+inquired the porter.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid not. I'm certain that I must have
+taken it in the station restaurant and brought it
+aboard the train."</p>
+
+<p>"Ain't nuff'n in de pockets, is dey?" asked the
+porter.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; there's a wallet strapped with a rubber<span class="pagenumsmall">[213]</span>
+band. I didn't feel at liberty to open it. But
+I suppose I ought to in order to find out the
+owner's name if possible."</p>
+
+<p>"De gemman's name ain't sewed inside de
+pocket, is it, Miss?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't look," she said.</p>
+
+<p>So the porter took the coat, turned it inside
+out, explored the inside pocket, found the label,
+and read:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"Snipps Brothers: December, 1913. George Z.
+Green."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>A stifled exclamation from the girl checked him.
+Green also protruded his head cautiously from his
+own doorway.</p>
+
+<p>The girl, standing partly in the aisle, was now
+leaning limply against the door-sill, her hand
+pressed convulsively to her breast, her face white
+and frightened.</p>
+
+<p>"Is you ill, Miss?" asked the porter anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;no. Z&mdash;what name was that you read?"</p>
+
+<p>"George Z. Green, Miss&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It&mdash;it <i>can't</i> be! Look again! It can't be!"</p>
+
+<p>Her face was ashen to the lips; she closed her
+eyes for a second, swayed; then her hand clutched
+the door-sill; she straightened up with an effort
+and opened her eyes, which now seemed dilated by
+some powerful emotion.<span class="pagenumsmall">[214]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Let me see that name!" she said, controlling
+her voice with an obvious effort.</p>
+
+<p>The porter turned the pocket inside out for
+her inspection. There it was:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>"George Z. Green: 1008-1/2 Fifth Avenue, New
+York."</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"If you knows de gemman, Miss," suggested
+the porter, "you all kin take dishere garmint back
+yo'se'f when you comes No'th."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you.... Then&mdash;I won't trouble you....
+I'll&mdash;I'll ta-t-take it back myself&mdash;when I
+go North."</p>
+
+<p>"I kin ship it if you wishes, Miss."</p>
+
+<p>She said excitedly: "If you ship it from somewhere
+South, he&mdash;Mr. Green&mdash;would see where
+it came from by the parcels postmark on the express
+tag&mdash;wouldn't he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, Miss."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I don't want you to ship it! I'll do it
+myself.... <i>How</i> can I ship it without giving
+Mr. Green a clue&mdash;" she shuddered, "&mdash;a clue
+to my whereabouts?"</p>
+
+<p>"Does you know de gemman, Miss?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" she said, with another shudder,&mdash;"and
+I do not wish to. I&mdash;I particularly do not wish
+ever to know him&mdash;or even to see him. And above
+all I do not wish Mr. Green to come South and<span class="pagenumsmall">[215]</span>
+investigate the circumstances concerning this
+overcoat. He might take it into his head to do
+such a thing. It&mdash;it's horrible enough that I
+have&mdash;that I actually have in my possession the
+overcoat of the very man on whose account I left
+New York at ten minutes' notice&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her pretty voice broke and her eyes filled.</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you don't understand, porter," she
+added, almost hysterically, "but my possession of
+this overcoat&mdash;of all the billions and billions of
+overcoats in all the world&mdash;is a t-terrible and
+astounding b-blow to me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is&mdash;is you afeard o' dishere overcoat, Miss?"
+inquired the astonished darkey.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" she said. "Yes, I am! I'm horribly
+afraid of that overcoat! I&mdash;I'd like to throw it
+from the train window, but I&mdash;I can't do that,
+of course! It would be stealing&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice broke again with nervous tears:</p>
+
+<p>"I d-don't want the coat! And I can't throw
+it away! And if it's shipped to him from the
+South he may come down here and investigate.
+He's in New York now. That's why I am on my
+way South! I&mdash;I want him to remain in New
+York until&mdash;until all&mdash;d-danger is over. And by
+the first of April it will be over. And then I'll
+come North&mdash;and bring him his coat&mdash;&mdash;"<span class="pagenumsmall">[216]</span></p>
+
+<p>The bewildered darkey stared at her and at the
+coat which she had unconsciously clutched to
+her breast.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think," she said, "that M-Mr. Green
+will <i>need</i> the coat this winter? Do you suppose
+anything would happen to him if he doesn't have
+it for a while&mdash;pneumonia or anything? Oh!" she
+exclaimed in a quivering voice, "I wish he and
+his overcoat were at the South Pole!"</p>
+
+<p>Green withdrew his head and pressed both
+palms to his temples. Could he trust his ears?
+Was he going mad? Holding his dizzy head in
+both hands he heard the girl say that she herself
+would attend to shipping the coat; heard the perplexed
+darkey take his leave and go; heard her
+stateroom door close.</p>
+
+<p>Seated in his stateroom he gazed vacantly at
+the couch opposite, so completely bewildered with
+his first over-dose of Romance that his brain
+seemed to spin like a frantic squirrel in a wheel,
+and his thoughts knocked and jumbled against
+each other until it truly seemed to him that all
+his senses were fizzling out like wet firecrackers.</p>
+
+<p>What on earth had he ever done to inspire such
+horror in the mind of this young girl?</p>
+
+<p>What terrible injury had he committed against
+her or hers that the very sound of his name terrified<span class="pagenumsmall">[217]</span>
+her&mdash;the mere sight of his overcoat left her
+almost hysterical?</p>
+
+<p>Helplessly, half stupefied, he cast about in his
+wrecked mind to discover any memory or record
+of any injury done to anybody during his particularly
+blameless career on earth.</p>
+
+<p>In school he had punched the noses of several
+schoolmates, and had been similarly smitten in return.
+That was the extent of physical injury
+ever done to anybody.</p>
+
+<p>Of grave moral wrong he knew he was guiltless.
+True, he had frequently skinned the assembly
+at convivial poker parties. But also he had
+often opened jacks only to be mercilessly deprived
+of them amid the unfeeling and brutal laughter
+of his companions. No, he was not guilty of
+criminal gambling.</p>
+
+<p>Had he ever done a wrong to anybody in business?
+Never. His firm's name was the symbol
+for probity.</p>
+
+<p>He dashed his hands to his brow distractedly.
+What in Heaven's name <i>had</i> he done to fill the
+very soul of this young girl with fear and loathing?
+What in the name of a merciful Providence
+had he, George Z. Green, banker and broker,
+ever done to drive this young and innocent girl
+out of the City of New York!<span class="pagenumsmall">[218]</span></p>
+
+<p>To collect and marshal his disordered thoughts
+was difficult but he accomplished it with the aid
+of cigarettes. To a commonplace intellect there
+is no aid like a cigarette.</p>
+
+<p>At first he was inclined to believe that the girl
+had merely mistaken him for another man with a
+similar name. George Z. Green was not an unusual
+name.</p>
+
+<p>But his address in town was also written inside
+his coat pocket; and she had read it. Therefore,
+it was painfully evident to him that her detestation
+and fear was for him.</p>
+
+<p>What on earth had inspired such an attitude
+of mind toward himself in a girl he had seen for
+the first time that afternoon? He could not imagine.
+And another strange feature of the affair
+was that she had not particularly noticed him.
+Therefore, if she entertained such a horror of
+him, why had she not exhibited some trace of it
+when he was in her vicinity?</p>
+
+<p>Certainly she had not exhibited it by crying.
+He exonerated himself on that score, for she had
+been on the verge of tears when he first beheld her
+hurrying out of the parlours of the Princess Zimbamzim.</p>
+
+<p>It gradually became plain to him that, although
+there could be no doubt that this girl was afraid<span class="pagenumsmall">[219]</span>
+of him, and cordially disliked him, yet strangely
+enough, she did not know him by sight.</p>
+
+<p>Consequently, her attitude must be inspired by
+something she had heard concerning him. What?</p>
+
+<p>He puffed his cigarette and groaned. As far
+as he could remember, he had never harmed a
+fly.<span class="pagenumsmall">[220]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 550px;">
+<img src="images/ch23.jpg" width="550" height="353" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXIII</h2>
+
+<p>That night he turned in, greatly depressed.
+Bad dreams assailed his slumbers&mdash;menacing
+ones like the visions that annoyed
+<i>Eugene Aram</i>.</p>
+
+<p>And every time he awoke and sat up in his
+bunk, shaken by the swaying car, he realised that
+Romance had also its tragic phases&mdash;a sample
+of which he was now enduring. And yet, miserable
+as he was, a horrid sort of joy neutralised
+the misery when he recollected that it <i>was</i> Romance,
+after all, and that he, George Z. Green,
+was in it up to his neck.</p>
+
+<p>A grey morning&mdash;a wet and pallid sky lowering
+over the brown North Carolina fields&mdash;this was
+his waking view from his tumbled bunk.<span class="pagenumsmall">[221]</span></p>
+
+<p>Neither his toilet nor his breakfast dispelled
+the gloom; certainly the speeding landscape did
+not.</p>
+
+<p>He sat grimly in the observation car, reviewing
+a dispiriting landscape set with swamps, razorbacks,
+buzzards, and niggers.</p>
+
+<p>Luncheon aided him very little. <i>She</i> had not
+appeared at all. Either her own misery and
+fright were starving her to death or she preferred
+to take her meals in her stateroom. He hoped
+fervently the latter might be the case; that
+murder might not be added to whatever else he
+evidently was suspected of committing.</p>
+
+<p>Like the ticket he had seen her purchase, his
+own ticket took him as far as Ormond. Of course
+he could go on if she did. She could go to the
+West Indies and ultimately to Brazil. So could
+he. They were on the main travelled road to almost
+anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, he was on the watch at St. Augustine;
+and when he saw her come forth hastily and
+get into a bus emblazoned with the name and
+escutcheon of the Hotel Royal Orchid, he got in
+also.</p>
+
+<p>The bus was full. Glancing at the other occupants
+of the bus, she included him in her brief
+review, and to his great relief he saw her incurious<span class="pagenumsmall">[222]</span>
+blue eyes pass calmly to the next countenance.</p>
+
+<p>A dreadful, almost hysterical impulse assailed
+him to suddenly rise and say: "I am George Z.
+Green!"&mdash;merely to observe the cataclysmic effect
+on her.</p>
+
+<p>But it did not seem so funny to him on after
+thoughts, for the chances appeared to be that she
+could not survive the shock. Which scared him;
+and he looked about nervously for fear somebody
+who knew him might be among the passengers,
+and might address him by name.</p>
+
+<p>In due time the contents of the bus trooped
+into the vast corridors of the Hotel Royal Orchid.
+One by one they registered; and on the
+ledger Green read her name with palpitating heart&mdash;Miss
+Marie Wiltz and Maid. And heard her
+say to the clerk that her maid had been delayed
+and would arrive on the next train.</p>
+
+<p>It never occurred to this unimaginative man
+to sign any name but his own to the register that
+was shoved toward him. Which perfectly proves
+his guilelessness and goodness.</p>
+
+<p>He went to his room, cleansed from his person
+the stains of travel, and, having no outer
+clothes to change to, smoked a cigarette and gazed
+moodily from the window.<span class="pagenumsmall">[223]</span></p>
+
+<p>Now, his window gave on the drive-encircled
+fountain before the front entrance to the hotel;
+and, as he was standing there immersed in tobacco
+smoke and gloom, he was astonished to see the
+girl herself come out hastily, travelling satchel
+in hand, and spring lightly into a cab. It was
+one of those victorias which are stationed for hire
+in front of such southern hotels; he could see her
+perfectly plainly; saw the darkey coachman flourish
+his whip; saw the vehicle roll away.</p>
+
+<p>The next instant he seized his new satchel,
+swept his brand new toilet articles into it, snapped
+it, picked up hat and cane, and dashed down stairs
+to the desk.</p>
+
+<p>Here he paid his bill, ran out, and leaped into
+a waiting victoria.</p>
+
+<p>"Where did that other cab drive?" he demanded
+breathlessly to his negro coachman.
+"Didn't you hear what the young lady said to
+her driver?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, suh. De young lady done say she's in
+a pow'ful hurry, suh. She 'low she gotta git to
+Ormond."</p>
+
+<p>"Ormond! There's no train!"</p>
+
+<p>"Milk-train, suh."</p>
+
+<p>"What! Is she going to Ormond on a milk-train?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[224]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, suh."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, then. Drive me to the station."</p>
+
+<p>It was not very far. She was standing alone
+on the deserted platform, her bag at her feet, his
+overcoat lying across it. Her head was bent, and
+she did not notice him at first. Never had he seen
+a youthful figure so exquisitely eloquent of despair.</p>
+
+<p>The milk-train was about an hour overdue,
+which would make it about due in the South.
+Green seated himself on a wooden bench and folded
+his hands over the silver crook of his walking-stick.
+The situation was now perfectly clear to
+him. She had come down from her room, and
+had seen his name on the register, had been seized
+by a terrible panic, and had fled.</p>
+
+<p>Had he been alone and unobserved, he might
+have attempted to knock his brains out with his
+walking-stick. He desired to, earnestly, when he
+realised what an ass he had been to sign the register.</p>
+
+<p>She had begun to pace the platform, nervously,
+halting and leaning forward from time to time
+to scan impatiently the long, glittering perspective
+of the metals.</p>
+
+<p>It had begun to grow dusk. Lanterns on
+switches and semaphores flashed out red, green,<span class="pagenumsmall">[225]</span>
+blue, white, stringing their jewelled sparks far
+away into the distance.</p>
+
+<p>To and fro she paced the empty platform, passing
+and repassing him. And he began to notice
+presently that she looked at him rather intently
+each time.</p>
+
+<p>He wondered whether she suspected his identity.
+Guiltless of anything that he could remember having
+done, nevertheless he shivered guiltily every
+time she glanced at him.</p>
+
+<p>Then the unexpected happened; and he fairly
+shook in his shoes as she marched deliberately up
+to him.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon," she said in a very sweet
+and anxious voice, "but might I ask if you happen
+to be going to Ormond?"</p>
+
+<p>He was on his feet, hat in hand, by this time;
+his heart and pulses badly stampeded; but he
+managed to answer calmly that he was going to
+Ormond.</p>
+
+<p>"There is only a milk-train, I understand," she
+said.</p>
+
+<p>"So I understand."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think there will be any difficulty in
+my obtaining permission to travel on it? The
+station-master says that permission is not given
+to ladies unaccompanied."<span class="pagenumsmall">[226]</span></p>
+
+<p>She looked at him almost imploringly.</p>
+
+<p>"I really must go on that train," she said in a
+low voice. "It is desperately necessary. Could
+you&mdash;could you manage to arrange it for me? I
+would be so grateful!&mdash;so deeply grateful!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll do what I can," said that unimaginative
+man. "Probably bribery can fix it&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There might be&mdash;if&mdash;if&mdash;you would be willing&mdash;if
+you didn't object&mdash;I know it sounds very
+strange&mdash;but my case is so desperate&mdash;&mdash;" She
+checked herself, flushing a delicate pink. And
+he waited.</p>
+
+<p>Then, very resolutely she looked up at him:</p>
+
+<p>"Would you&mdash;could you p-pretend that I am&mdash;am&mdash;your
+sister?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," he said. An immense happiness
+seized him. He was not only up to his neck in
+Romance. It was already over his head, and he
+was out of his depth, and swimming.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly," he repeated quietly, controlling
+his joy by a supreme effort. "That would be the
+simplest way out of it, after all."</p>
+
+<p>She said earnestly, almost solemnly: "If you
+will do this generous thing for&mdash;for a stranger&mdash;in
+very deep perplexity and trouble&mdash;that
+stranger will remain in your debt while life lasts!"</p>
+
+<p>She had not intended to be dramatic; she may<span class="pagenumsmall">[227]</span>
+not have thought she was; but the tears again
+glimmered in her lovely eyes, and the situation
+seemed tense enough to George Z. Green.</p>
+
+<p>Moreover, he felt that complications already
+were arising&mdash;complications which he had often
+read of and sometimes dreamed of. Because,
+as he stood there in the southern dusk, looking
+at this slim, young girl, he began to realise that
+never before in all his life had he gazed upon anything
+half as beautiful.</p>
+
+<p>Very far away a locomotive whistled: they both
+turned, and saw the distant headlight glittering
+on the horizon like a tiny star.</p>
+
+<p>"W-would it be best for us to t-take your name
+or mine&mdash;in case they ask us?" she stammered,
+flushing deeply.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," he said pleasantly, "you might be
+more likely to remember yours in an emergency."</p>
+
+<p>"I think so," she said na&iuml;vely; "it is rather difficult
+for me to deceive anybody. My name is
+Marie Wiltz."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I am Mr. Wiltz, your brother, for an
+hour or two."</p>
+
+<p>"If you please," she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>It had been on the tip of his tongue to add,
+"Mr. George Z. Wiltz," but he managed to check
+himself.<span class="pagenumsmall">[228]</span></p>
+
+<p>The great, lumbering train came rolling in;
+the station agent looked very sharply through
+his spectacles at Miss Wiltz when he saw her with
+Green, but being a Southerner, he gallantly assumed
+that it was all right.</p>
+
+<p>One of the train crew placed two wooden chairs
+for them in the partly empty baggage car; and
+there they sat, side by side, while the big, heavy
+milk cans were loaded aboard, and a few parcels
+shoved into their car. Then the locomotive tooted
+leisurely; there came a jolt, a resonant clash;
+and the train was under way.<span class="pagenumsmall">[229]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 330px;">
+<img src="images/ch24.jpg" width="330" height="199" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXIV</h2>
+
+<p>For a while the baggage master fussed about
+the car, sorting out packages for Ormond;
+then, courteously inquiring
+whether he could do anything for them, and learning
+that he could not, he went forward into his
+own den, leaving Marie Wiltz and George Z. Green
+alone in a baggage car dimly illumined by a small
+and smoky lamp.</p>
+
+<p>Being well-bred young people, they broke the
+tension of the situation gracefully and naturally,
+pretending to find it amusing to travel in a milk
+train to a fashionable southern resort.</p>
+
+<p>And now that the train was actually under way
+and speeding southward through the night, her
+relief from anxiety was very plain to him. He
+could see her relax; see the frightened and hunted
+look in her eyes die out, the natural and delicious
+colour return to her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>As they conversed with amiable circumspection
+and pleasant formality, he looked at her whenever<span class="pagenumsmall">[230]</span>
+he dared without seeming to be impertinent; and
+he discovered that the face she had worn since
+he had first seen her was not her natural expression;
+that her features in repose or in fearless
+animation were winning and almost gay.</p>
+
+<p>She had a delightful mouth, sweet and humourous;
+a delicate nose and chin, and two very blue
+and beautiful eyes that looked at him at moments
+so confidently, so engagingly, that the knowledge
+of what her expression would be if she knew who
+he was smote him at moments, chilling his very
+marrow.</p>
+
+<p>What an astonishing situation! How he would
+have scorned a short story with such a situation
+in it! And he thought of Williams&mdash;poor old
+Williams!&mdash;and mentally begged his pardon.</p>
+
+<p>For he understood now that real life was far
+stranger than fiction. He realised at last that
+Romance loitered ever around the corner; that
+Opportunity was always gently nudging one's elbow.</p>
+
+<p>There lay his overcoat on the floor, trailing
+over her satchel. He looked at it so fixedly that
+she noticed the direction of his gaze, glanced
+down, blushed furiously.</p>
+
+<p>"It may seem odd to you that I am travelling
+with a man's overcoat," she said, "but it will seem<span class="pagenumsmall">[231]</span>
+odder yet when I tell you that I don't know how
+I came by it."</p>
+
+<p>"That <i>is</i> odd," he admitted smilingly. "To
+whom does it belong?"</p>
+
+<p>Her features betrayed the complicated emotions
+that successively possessed her&mdash;perplexity,
+anxiety, bashfulness.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment she said in a low voice: "You
+have done so much for me already&mdash;you have been
+so exceedingly nice to me&mdash;that I hesitate to ask
+of you anything more&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please ask!" he urged. "It will be really a
+happiness for me to serve you."</p>
+
+<p>Surprised at his earnestness and the unembarrassed
+warmth of his reply, she looked up at him
+gratefully after a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Would you," she said, "take charge of that
+overcoat for me and send it back to its owner?"</p>
+
+<p>He laughed nervously: "Is <i>that</i> all? Why,
+of course I shall! I'll guarantee that it is restored
+to its rightful owner if you wish."</p>
+
+<p>"Will you? If you do <i>that</i>&mdash;&mdash;" she drew a
+long, sighing breath, "it will be a relief to me&mdash;such
+a wonderful relief!" She clasped her gloved
+hands tightly on her knee, smiled at him breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't suppose you will ever know what you<span class="pagenumsmall">[232]</span>
+have done for me. I could never adequately express
+my deep, deep gratitude to you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;I am doing nothing except shipping
+back an overcoat&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah&mdash;if you only knew what you really are
+doing for me! You are helping me in the direst
+hour of need I ever knew. You are aiding me
+to regain control over my own destiny! You are
+standing by me in the nick of time, sheltering
+me, encouraging me, giving me a moment's respite
+until I can become mistress of my own fate once
+more."</p>
+
+<p>The girl had ended with a warmth, earnestness
+and emotion which she seemed to be unable to
+control. Evidently she had been very much
+shaken, and in the blessed relief from the strain
+the reaction was gathering intensity.</p>
+
+<p>They sat in silence for a few moments; then
+she looked up, nervously twisting her gloved
+fingers.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," she said in a low voice, "not to
+exhibit reticence and proper self-control before a&mdash;a
+stranger.... But I&mdash;I have been&mdash;rather
+badly&mdash;frightened."</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing need frighten you now," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so, too. I thought that as soon as
+I left New York it would be all right. But&mdash;but<span class="pagenumsmall">[233]</span>
+the first thing I saw in my stateroom was <i>that</i>
+overcoat! And the next thing that occurred was&mdash;was
+almost&mdash;stupefying. Until I boarded this
+milk-train, I think I must have been almost irresponsible
+from sheer fright."</p>
+
+<p>"What frightened you?" he asked, trembling internally.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I can't tell you. It would do no good.
+You could not help me."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you say I have already aided you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes.... That is true.... And you <i>will</i>
+send that overcoat back, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said. "To remember it, I'd better
+put it on, I think."</p>
+
+<p>The southern night had turned chilly, and he
+was glad to bundle into his own overcoat again.</p>
+
+<p>"From where will you ship it?" she asked anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"From Ormond&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please don't!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because," she said desperately, "the owner of
+that coat might trace it to Ormond and&mdash;and
+come down there."</p>
+
+<p>"Where is he?"</p>
+
+<p>She paled and clasped her hands tighter:</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I thought&mdash;I had every reason to believe<span class="pagenumsmall">[234]</span>
+that he was in New York. B-but he isn't. He is
+in St. Augustine!"</p>
+
+<p>"You evidently don't wish to meet him."</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;oh, no, I don't wish to meet him&mdash;ever!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh. Am I to understand that this&mdash;this <i>fellow</i>,"
+he said fiercely, "is <i>following</i> you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know&mdash;oh, I really don't know," she
+said, her blue eyes wide with apprehension. "All
+I know is that I do not desire to see him&mdash;or to
+have him see me.... He <i>must</i> not see me; it
+must not be&mdash;it <i>shall</i> not be! I&mdash;it's a very terrible
+thing;&mdash;I don't know exactly what I'm&mdash;I'm
+fighting against&mdash;because it's&mdash;it's simply too
+dreadful&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Emotion checked her, and for a moment she
+covered her eyes with her gloved hands, sitting in
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Can't I help you?" he asked gently.</p>
+
+<p>She dropped her hands and stared at him.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know. Do you think you could? It
+all seems so&mdash;like a bad dream. I'll have to tell
+you about it if you are to help me&mdash;won't
+I?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you think it best," he said with an inward
+quiver.</p>
+
+<p>"That's it. I don't know whether it <i>is</i> best to
+ask your advice. Yet, I don't know exactly what<span class="pagenumsmall">[235]</span>
+else to do," she added in a bewildered way, passing
+one hand slowly over her eyes. "Shall I tell
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you'd better."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I will!... I&mdash;I left New York in a
+panic at a few moments' notice. I thought I'd
+go to Ormond and hide there for a while, and then,
+if&mdash;if matters looked threatening, I could go to
+Miami and take a steamer for the West Indies,
+and from there&mdash;if necessary&mdash;I could go to Brazil&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But <i>why</i>?" he demanded, secretly terrified at
+his own question.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him blankly a moment: "Oh;
+I forgot. It&mdash;it all began without any warning;
+and instantly I began to run away."</p>
+
+<p>"From what?"</p>
+
+<p>"From&mdash;from the owner of that overcoat!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who is he?"</p>
+
+<p>"His name," she said resolutely, "is George Z.
+Green. And I am running away from him....
+And I am afraid you'll think it very odd when
+I tell you that although I am running away from
+him I do not know him, and I have never seen
+him."</p>
+
+<p>"Wh-what is the matter with him?" inquired
+Green, with a sickly attempt at smiling.<span class="pagenumsmall">[236]</span></p>
+
+<p>"He wants to marry me!" she exclaimed indignantly.
+"<i>That</i> is what is the matter with him."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure?" he asked, astounded.</p>
+
+<p>"Perfectly. And the oddest thing of all is that
+I do not think he has ever seen me&mdash;or ever even
+heard of me."</p>
+
+<p>"But how can&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll tell you. I must tell you now, anyway.
+It began the evening before I left New York. I&mdash;I
+live alone&mdash;with a companion&mdash;having no parents.
+I gave a dinner dance the evening before I&mdash;I
+ran away;&mdash;there was music, too; professional
+dancers;&mdash;a crystal-gazing fortune teller&mdash;and
+a lot of people&mdash;loads of them."</p>
+
+<p>She drew a short, quick breath, and shook her
+pretty head.</p>
+
+<p>"Everybody's been talking about the Princess
+Zimbamzim this winter. So I had her there....
+She&mdash;she is uncanny&mdash;positively terrifying. A
+dozen women were scared almost ill when they
+came out of her curtained corner.</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;and then she demanded me.... I had
+no belief in such things.... I went into that
+curtained corner, never for one moment dreaming
+that what she might say would matter anything
+to me.... In ten minutes she had me scared and
+trembling like a leaf.... I didn't want to stay;<span class="pagenumsmall">[237]</span>
+I wanted to go. I&mdash;couldn't, somehow. My limbs
+were stiff&mdash;I couldn't control them&mdash;I couldn't
+get up! All my will power&mdash;was&mdash;was paralysed!"</p>
+
+<p>The girl's colour had fled; she looked at Green
+with wide eyes dark with the memory of fear.</p>
+
+<p>"She told me to come to her for an hour's crystal
+gazing the following afternoon. I&mdash;I didn't
+<i>want</i> to go. But I couldn't seem to keep away.</p>
+
+<p>"Then a terrible thing happened. I&mdash;I looked
+into that crystal and I saw there&mdash;saw with my
+own eyes&mdash;<i>myself</i> being married to a&mdash;a perfectly
+strange man! I saw myself as clearly as in a
+looking glass;&mdash;but I could see only his back. He&mdash;he
+wore an overcoat&mdash;like that one I gave to
+you to send back. Think of it! Married to a man
+who was wearing an <i>overcoat</i>!</p>
+
+<p>"And there was a clergyman who looked sleepy,
+and&mdash;and two strangers as witnesses&mdash;and there
+was I&mdash;<i>I!</i>&mdash;getting married to this man....
+And the terrible thing about it was that I looked
+at him as though I&mdash;I l-loved him&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her emotions overcame her for a moment, but
+she swallowed desperately, lifted her head, and
+forced herself to continue:</p>
+
+<p>"Then the Princess Zimbamzim began to laugh,
+very horridly: and I asked her, furiously, who that<span class="pagenumsmall">[238]</span>
+man was. And she said: 'His name seems to be
+George Z. Green; he is a banker and broker; and
+he lives at 1008-1/2 Fifth Avenue.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Am <i>I</i> marrying him?' I cried. 'Am <i>I</i> marrying
+a strange broker who wears an overcoat at
+the ceremony?'</p>
+
+<p>"And she laughed her horrid laugh again and
+said: 'You certainly are, Miss Wiltz. You can
+not escape it. It is your destiny.'</p>
+
+<p>"'When am I to do it?' I demanded, trembling
+with fright and indignation. And she told me
+that it was certain to occur within either three
+months or three days.... And&mdash;can you imagine
+my n-natural feelings of horror&mdash;and repugnance?
+Can you not now understand the panic
+that seized me&mdash;when there, all the time in the
+crystal, I could actually see myself doing what
+that dreadful woman prophesied?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't blame you for running," he said,
+stunned.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not blame myself. I ran. I fled, distracted,
+from that terrible house! I left word
+for my maid to pack and follow me to Ormond.
+I caught the first train I could catch. For the
+next three months I propose to continue my flight
+if&mdash;if necessary. And I fear it will be necessary."<span class="pagenumsmall">[239]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Finding his overcoat in your stateroom must
+have been a dreadful shock to you," he said, pityingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Imagine! But when, not an hour ago, I saw
+his name on the register at the Hotel Royal Orchid&mdash;<i>directly
+under my name!</i>&mdash;can you&mdash;oh,
+can you imagine my utter terror?"</p>
+
+<p>Her voice broke and she leaned up against the
+side of the car, so white, so quivering, so utterly
+demoralised by fear, that, alarmed, he took her
+trembling hands firmly in his.</p>
+
+<p>"You mustn't give way," he said. "This won't
+do. You must show courage."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I show courage when I'm f-frightened?"</p>
+
+<p>"You must not be frightened, because&mdash;because
+I am going to stand by you. I am going to stand
+by you very firmly. I am going to see this matter
+through."</p>
+
+<p>"Are you? It is so&mdash;so kind of you&mdash;so good&mdash;so
+generous.... Because it's uncanny enough
+to frighten even a man. You see we don't know
+what we're fighting. We're threatened by&mdash;by the
+occult! By unseen f-forces.... <i>How</i> could
+that man be in St. Augustine?"</p>
+
+<p>He drew a long breath. "I am going to tell you
+something.... May I?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[240]</span></p>
+
+<p>She turned in silence to look at him. Something
+in his eyes disturbed her, and he felt her
+little, gloved hands tighten spasmodically within
+his own.</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't anything to frighten you," he said.
+"It may even relieve you. Shall I tell you?"</p>
+
+<p>Her lips formed a voiceless word of consent.</p>
+
+<p>"Then I'll tell you.... I know George Z.
+Green."</p>
+
+<p>"W-what?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know him very well. He is&mdash;is an exceedingly&mdash;er&mdash;nice
+fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't care! I'm not going to marry
+him!... Am I? Do you think I am?"</p>
+
+<p>And she fell a-trembling so violently that,
+alarmed, he drew her to his shoulder, soothing her
+like a child, explaining that in the twentieth century
+no girl was going to marry anybody against
+her will.</p>
+
+<p>Like a child she cowered against him, her hands
+tightening within his. The car swayed and
+rattled on its clanging trucks; the feeble lamp
+glimmered.</p>
+
+<p>"If I thought," she said, "that George Z. Green
+was destined to marry me under such outrageous
+and humiliating circumstances, I&mdash;I believe I
+would marry the first decent man I encountered<span class="pagenumsmall">[241]</span>&mdash;merely
+to confound the Princess Zimbamzim&mdash;and
+every wicked crystal-gazer in the world! I&mdash;I
+simply hate them!"</p>
+
+<p>He said: "Then you believe in them."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I help it? Look at me! Look at me
+here, in full light&mdash;asking protection of you!...
+And I don't care! I&mdash;think I am becoming more
+angry than&mdash;than frightened. I think it is your
+kindness that has given me courage. Somehow, I
+feel safe with you. I am sure that I can rely on
+you; can't I?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said miserably.</p>
+
+<p>"I was very sure I could when I saw you sitting
+there on the platform before the milk-train
+came in.... I don't know how it was&mdash;I was
+not afraid to speak to you.... Something
+about you made me confident.... I said to myself,
+'He is <i>good</i>! I <i>know</i> it!' And so I spoke
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>Conscience was tearing him inwardly to shreds,
+as the fox tore the Spartan. How could he pose
+as the sort of man she believed him to be, and
+endure the self-contempt now almost overwhelming
+him?</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I'm not good," he blurted out, miserably.</p>
+
+<p>She turned and looked at him seriously for a
+moment. Then, for the first time aware of his<span class="pagenumsmall">[242]</span>
+arm encircling her, and her hands in his, she
+flushed brightly and freed herself, straightening
+up in her little wooden chair.</p>
+
+<p>"You need not tell me that," she said. "I <i>know</i>
+you <i>are</i> good."</p>
+
+<p>"As a m-matter of f-fact," he stammered. "I'm
+a scoundrel!"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't bear to have you know it&mdash;b-but I
+am!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>How</i> can you say that?&mdash;when you've been so
+perfectly sweet to me?" she exclaimed.</p>
+
+<p>And after a moment's silence she laughed deliciously.</p>
+
+<p>"Only to look at you is enough," she said, "for
+a girl to feel absolute confidence in you."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you feel that?"</p>
+
+<p>"I?... Yes.... Yes, I do. I would trust
+you without hesitation. I have trusted you, have
+I not? And after all, it is not so strange. You
+are the sort of man to whom I am accustomed.
+We are both of the same sort."</p>
+
+<p>"No," he said gloomily, "I'm really a pariah."</p>
+
+<p>"You! Why do you say such things, after
+you have been so&mdash;perfectly charming to a frightened
+girl?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[243]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I'm a pariah," he repeated. "I'm a social outcast!
+I&mdash;I know it, now." And he leaned his
+head wearily on both palms.</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked at him in consternation.</p>
+
+<p>"Are <i>you</i> unhappy?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Wretched."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," she said softly, "I didn't know that....
+I am so sorry.... And to think that you took
+all <i>my</i> troubles on your shoulders, too,&mdash;burdened
+with your own! I&mdash;I <i>knew</i> you were that kind
+of man," she added warmly.</p>
+
+<p>He only shook his head, face buried in his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>"I am <i>so</i> sorry," she repeated gently. "Would
+it help you if you told me?"</p>
+
+<p>He did not answer.</p>
+
+<p>"Because," she said sweetly, "it would make me
+very happy if I could be of even the very slightest
+use to you!"</p>
+
+<p>No response.</p>
+
+<p>"Because you have been so kind."</p>
+
+<p>No response.</p>
+
+<p>"&mdash;And so p-pleasant and c-cordial and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>No response.</p>
+
+<p>She looked at the young fellow who sat there
+with head bowed in his hands; and her blue eyes
+grew wistful.<span class="pagenumsmall">[244]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Are you in physical pain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mental," he said in a muffled voice.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry. Don't you believe that I am?"
+she asked pitifully.</p>
+
+<p>"You would not be sorry if you knew why I am
+suffering," he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>"How <i>can</i> you say that?" she exclaimed warmly.
+"Do you think I am ungrateful? Do you
+think I am insensible to delicate and generous
+emotions? Do you suppose I could ever forget
+what you have done for me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose," he said in a muffled voice, "I turned
+out to be a&mdash;a villain?"</p>
+
+<p>"You couldn't!"</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose it were true that I am one?"</p>
+
+<p>She said, with the warmth of total inexperience
+with villains, "What you have been to me is only
+what concerns me. You have been good, generous,
+noble! And I&mdash;like you."</p>
+
+<p>"You must not like me."</p>
+
+<p>"I <i>do</i>! I do like you! I shall continue to do
+so&mdash;always&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You can not!"</p>
+
+<p>"What? Indeed I can! I like you very much.
+I defy you to prevent me!"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want to prevent you&mdash;but you mustn't
+do it."<span class="pagenumsmall">[245]</span></p>
+
+<p>She sat silent for a moment. Then her lip
+trembled.</p>
+
+<p>"Why may I not like you?" she asked unsteadily.</p>
+
+<p>"I am not worth it."</p>
+
+<p>He didn't know it, but he had given her the
+most fascinating answer that a man can give a
+young girl.</p>
+
+<p>"If you are not worth it," she said tremulously,
+"you can become so."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I never can."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you say that? No matter what a
+man has done&mdash;a young man&mdash;such as you&mdash;he
+can become worthy again of a girl's friendship&mdash;if
+he wishes to."</p>
+
+<p>"I never could become worthy of yours."</p>
+
+<p>"Why? What have you done? I don't care
+anyway. If you&mdash;if you want my&mdash;my friendship
+you can have it."</p>
+
+<p>"No," he groaned, "I am sunk too low to even
+dream of it! You don't know&mdash;you don't know
+what you're saying. I am beyond the pale!"</p>
+
+<p>He clutched his temples and shuddered. For a
+moment she gazed at him piteously, then her timid
+hand touched his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"I can't bear to see you in despair," she faltered,
+"&mdash;you who have been so good to me.<span class="pagenumsmall">[246]</span>
+Please don't be unhappy&mdash;because&mdash;I want you
+to be happy&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I can never be that."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because&mdash;I am in love!"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"With a girl who&mdash;hates me."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," she said faintly. Then the surprise in
+her eyes faded vaguely into wistfulness, and into
+something almost tender as she gazed at his bowed
+head.</p>
+
+<p>"Any girl," she said, scarcely knowing what
+she was saying, "who could not love such a man
+as you is an absolutely negligible quantity."</p>
+
+<p>His hands fell from his face and he sat up.</p>
+
+<p>"Could <i>you</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?" she said, not understanding.</p>
+
+<p>"Could you do what&mdash;what I&mdash;mentioned just
+now?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked curiously at him for a moment, not
+comprehending. Suddenly a rose flush stained
+her face.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think you mean to say that to me,"
+she said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said, "I do mean to say it.... Because,
+since I first saw you, I have&mdash;have dared
+to&mdash;to be in love with you."<span class="pagenumsmall">[247]</span></p>
+
+<p>"With <i>me</i>! We&mdash;you have not known me an
+hour!"</p>
+
+<p>"I have known you three days."</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> am George Z. Green!"<span class="pagenumsmall">[248]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/ch25.jpg" width="600" height="363" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXV</h2>
+
+<p>Minute after minute throbbed in silence,
+timed by the loud rhythm of the roaring
+wheels. He did not dare lift his head to
+look at her, though her stillness scared him.
+Awful and grotesque thoughts assailed him. He
+wondered whether she had survived the blow&mdash;and
+like an assassin he dared not look to see what
+he had done, but crouched there, overwhelmed
+with misery such as he never dreamed that a
+human heart could endure.</p>
+
+<p>A century seemed to have passed before, far
+ahead, the locomotive whistled warningly for the
+Ormond station.</p>
+
+<p>He understood what it meant, and clutched his
+temples, striving to gather courage sufficient to<span class="pagenumsmall">[249]</span>
+lift his head and face her blazing contempt&mdash;or
+her insensible and inanimate but beautiful young
+form lying in a merciful faint on the floor of the
+baggage car.</p>
+
+<p>And at last he lifted his head.</p>
+
+<p>She had risen and was standing by the locked
+side doors, touching her eye-lashes with her handkerchief.</p>
+
+<p>When he rose, the train was slowing down.
+Presently the baggage master came in, yawning;
+the side doors were unbolted and flung back as
+the car glided along a high, wooden platform.</p>
+
+<p>They were standing side by side now; she did
+not look at him, but when the car stopped she laid
+her hand lightly on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>Trembling in every fibre, he drew the little,
+gloved hand through his arm and aided her to descend.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you unhappy?" he whispered tremulously.</p>
+
+<p>"No.... What are we to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Am I to say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said faintly.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall I register as your brother?"</p>
+
+<p>She blushed and looked at him in a lovely and
+distressed way.</p>
+
+<p>"What <i>are</i> we to do?" she faltered.</p>
+
+<p>They entered the main hall of the great hotel<span class="pagenumsmall">[250]</span>
+at that moment, and she turned to look around her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh!" she exclaimed, clutching his arm. "Do
+you see that man? Do you <i>see</i> him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Which man&mdash;dearest?&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>That</i> one over there! That is the clergyman
+I saw in the crystal. Oh, dear! Oh, dear! Is it
+going to come true right away?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think it is," he said. "Are you afraid?"</p>
+
+<p>She drew a deep, shuddering breath, lifted her
+eyes to his:</p>
+
+<p>"N-no," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Ten minutes later it was being done around
+the corner of the great veranda, where nobody
+was. The moon glimmered on the Halifax; the
+palmettos sighed in the chilly sea-wind; the still,
+night air was scented with orange bloom and the
+odour of the sea.</p>
+
+<p>He wore his overcoat, and he used the plain,
+gold band which had decorated his little finger.
+The clergyman was brief and businesslike; the
+two clerks made dignified witnesses.</p>
+
+<p>When it was done, and they were left alone,
+standing on the moonlit veranda, he said:</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we send a present to the Princess Zimbamzim?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes.... A beautiful one."</p>
+
+<p>He drew her to him; she laid both hands on<span class="pagenumsmall">[251]</span>
+his shoulders. When he kissed her, her face was
+cold and white as marble.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you afraid?" he whispered.</p>
+
+<p>The marble flushed pink.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>"That," said Stafford, "was certainly quick
+action. Ten minutes is a pretty short time for
+Fate to begin business."</p>
+
+<p>"Fate," remarked Duane, "once got busy with
+me inside of ten seconds." He looked at Athalie.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ut solent poetae</i>," she rejoined, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>I said: "<i>Verba placent et vox, et quod corrumpere
+non est; Quoque minor spes est, hoc
+magis ille cupit</i>."</p>
+
+<p>In a low voice Duane replied to me, looking at
+her: "<i>Vera incessu patuit Dea</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Slowly the girl blushed, lowering her dark eyes
+to the green jade god resting in the rosy palm
+of her left hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Physician, cure thyself," muttered Stafford,
+slowly twisting a cigarette to shreds in his nervous
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>I rose, walked over to the small marble fountain
+and looked down at the sleeping goldfish.
+Here and there from the dusky magnificence of<span class="pagenumsmall"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
+their colour a single scale glittered like a living
+spark under water.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you preaching to them?" asked Athalie,
+raising her eyes from the green god in her palm.</p>
+
+<p>"No matter where a man turns his eyes," said
+I, "they may not long remain undisturbed by the
+vision of gold. I was not preaching, Athalie; I
+was reflecting upon my poverty."</p>
+
+<p>"It is an incurable ailment," said somebody;
+"the millionaire knows it; the gods themselves suffered
+from it. From the bleaching carcass of the
+peon to the mausoleum of the emperor, the world's
+highway winds through its victims' graves."</p>
+
+<p>"Athalie," said I, "is it possible for you to look
+into your crystal and discover hidden treasure?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not for my own benefit."</p>
+
+<p>"For others?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have done it."</p>
+
+<p>"Could you locate a few millions for us?" inquired
+the novelist.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, widely distributed among you. Your
+right hand is heavy as gold; your brain jingles
+with it."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not write for money," he said bluntly.</p>
+
+<p>"That is why," she said, smiling and placing a
+sweetmeat between her lips.</p>
+
+<p>I had the privilege of lighting a match for her.<span class="pagenumsmall">[253]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 330px;">
+<img src="images/ch26.jpg" width="330" height="375" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXVI</h2>
+
+<p>When the tip of her cigarette glowed
+rosy in the pearl-tinted gloom, the
+shadowy circle at her feet drew a
+little nearer.</p>
+
+<p>"This is the story of Valdez," she said. "Listen
+attentively, you who hunger!"</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>On the first day it rained torrents; the light was
+very dull in the galleries; fashion kept away.
+Only a few monomaniacs braved the weather, left
+dripping mackintoshes and umbrellas in the coat
+room, and spent the dull March morning in mousing
+about among the priceless treasures on view
+to those who had cards of admission. The sale<span class="pagenumsmall">[254]</span>
+was to take place three days later. Heikem was
+the auctioneer.</p>
+
+<p>The collection to be disposed of was the celebrated
+library of Professor Octavo de Folio&mdash;a
+small one; but it was composed almost exclusively
+of rarities. A million and a half had been refused
+by the heirs, who preferred to take chances
+at auction.</p>
+
+<p>And there were Caxtons, first edition Shakespeares,
+illuminated manuscripts, volumes printed
+privately for various kings and queens, bound
+sketch books containing exquisite aquarelles and
+chalk drawings by Bargue, Fortuny, Drouais,
+Boucher, John Downman; there were autographed
+monographs in manuscript; priceless order books
+of revolutionary generals, private diaries kept by
+men and women celebrated and notorious the world
+over.</p>
+
+<p>But the heirs apparently preferred yachts and
+automobiles.</p>
+
+<p>The library was displayed in locked glass cases,
+an attendant seated by each case, armed with a
+key and discretionary powers.</p>
+
+<p>From where James White sat beside his particular
+case, he had a view of the next case and
+of the young girl seated beside it.</p>
+
+<p>She was very pretty. No doubt, being out of<span class="pagenumsmall">[255]</span>
+a job, like himself, she was glad to take this
+temporary position. She was so pretty she made
+his head ache. Or it might have been the ventilation.</p>
+
+<p>It rained furiously; a steady roar on the glass
+roof overhead filled the long and almost empty
+gallery of Mr. Heikem, the celebrated auctioneer,
+with a monotone as dull and incessant as the business
+voice of that great man.</p>
+
+<p>Here and there a spectacled old gentleman
+nosed his way from case to case, making at intervals
+cabalistic pencil marks on the margin of his
+catalogue&mdash;which specimen of compiled literature
+alone cost five dollars.</p>
+
+<p>It was a very dull day for James White, and
+also, apparently, for the pretty girl in charge of
+the adjoining case. Nobody even asked either of
+them to unlock the cases; and it began to appear
+to young White that the books and manuscripts
+confided to his charge were not by any means the
+<i>chefs-d'oeuvre</i> of the collection.</p>
+
+<p>They were a dingy looking lot of books, anyway.
+He glanced over the private list furnished
+him, read the titles, histories and pedigrees of
+the volumes, stifled a yawn, fidgetted in his chair,
+stared at the rain-battered glass roof overhead,
+mused lightly upon his misfortunes, shrugged his<span class="pagenumsmall">[256]</span>
+broad shoulders, and glanced at the girl across
+the aisle.</p>
+
+<p>She also was reading her private list. It
+seemed to bore her.</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her as long as decency permitted,
+then gazed elsewhere. She was exceedingly pretty
+in her way, red haired, white skinned; and her
+eyes seemed to be a very lovely Sevres blue. Except
+in porcelain he thought he had never seen
+anything as dainty. He knew perfectly well that
+he could very easily fall in love with her. Also
+he knew he'd never have the opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>Duller and duller grew the light; louder roared
+the March rain. Even monomaniacs no longer
+came into the galleries, and the half dozen who
+had arrived left by luncheon time.</p>
+
+<p>When it was White's turn to go out to lunch,
+he went to Childs' and returned in half an hour.
+Then the girl across the aisle went out&mdash;probably
+to a similar and sumptuous banquet. She came
+back very shortly, reseated herself, and glanced
+around the empty galleries.</p>
+
+<p>There seemed to be absolutely nothing for anybody
+to do, except to sit there and listen to the
+rain.</p>
+
+<p>White pondered on his late failure in affairs.
+Recently out of Yale, and more recently still<span class="pagenumsmall">[257]</span>
+established in business, he had gone down in the
+general slump, lacking sufficient capital to tide
+him over. His settlement with his creditors left
+him with fifteen hundred dollars. He was now
+waiting for an opportunity to invest it in an enterprise.
+He believed in enterprises. Also, he
+was firmly convinced that Opportunity knocked
+no more than once in a lifetime, and he was always
+cocking his ear to catch the first timid rap. It
+was knocking then but he did not hear it, for it
+was no louder than the gentle beating of his red-haired
+neighbour's heart.</p>
+
+<p>But Opportunity is a jolly jade. She knocks
+every little while&mdash;but one must possess good
+hearing.</p>
+
+<p>Having nothing better to do as he sat there,
+White drifted into mental speculation&mdash;that being
+the only sort available.</p>
+
+<p>He dreamed of buying a lot in New York for
+fifteen hundred dollars and selling it a few years
+later for fifty thousand. He had a well developed
+imagination; wonderful were the lucky strikes he
+made in these day dreams; marvellous the financial
+returns. He was a very Napoleon of finance when
+he was dozing. Many are.</p>
+
+<p>The girl across the aisle also seemed to be immersed
+in day dreams. Her Sevres blue eyes had<span class="pagenumsmall">[258]</span>
+become vague; her listless little hands lay in her
+lap unstirring. She was pleasant to look at.</p>
+
+<p>After an hour or so it was plain to White that
+she had had enough of her dreams. She sighed
+very gently, straightened up in her chair, looked
+at the rain-swept roof, patted a yawn into modest
+suppression, and gazed about her with speculative
+and engaging eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as though driven to desperation, she
+turned, looked into the glass case beside her for a
+few minutes, and then, fitting her key to the door,
+opened it, selected a volume at hazard, and composed
+herself to read.</p>
+
+<p>For a while White watched her lazily, but presently
+with more interest, as her features gradually
+grew more animated and her attention seemed to
+be concentrated on the book.</p>
+
+<p>As the minutes passed it became plain to White
+that the girl found the dingy little volume exceedingly
+interesting. And after a while she appeared
+to be completely absorbed in it; her blue
+eyes were rivetted on the pages; her face was
+flushed, her sensitive lips expressive of the emotion
+that seemed to be possessing her more and
+more.</p>
+
+<p>White wondered what this book might be which
+she found so breathlessly interesting. It was<span class="pagenumsmall">[259]</span>
+small, dingy, bound in warped covers of old
+leather, and anything but beautiful. And by and
+by he caught a glimpse of the title&mdash;"The Journal
+of Pedro Valdez."</p>
+
+<p>The title, somehow, seemed to be familiar to
+him; he glanced into his own case, and after a
+few minutes' searching he caught sight of another
+copy of the same book, dingy, soiled, leather-bound,
+unlovely.</p>
+
+<p>He looked over his private list until he found
+it. And this is what he read concerning it:</p>
+
+<blockquote><p><i>Valdez, Pedro&mdash;Journal of. Translated by Thomas
+Bangs, of Philadelphia, in 1760. With map. Two
+copies, much worn and damaged by water. Several
+pages missing from each book.</i></p>
+
+<p>Pedro Valdez was a soldier of fortune serving with
+Cortez in Mexico and with De Soto in Florida. Nothing
+more is known of him, except that he perished
+somewhere in the semi-tropical forests of America.</p>
+
+<p>Thomas Bangs, an Englishman, pretended to have
+discovered and translated the journal kept by Valdez.
+After the journal had been translated&mdash;if, indeed,
+such a document ever really existed&mdash;Bangs pretended
+that it was accidentally destroyed.</p>
+
+<p>Bangs' translation and map are considered to be
+works of pure imagination. They were published
+from manuscript after the death of the author.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenumsmall">[260]</span></p>
+<p>Bangs died in St. Augustine of yellow fever, about
+1760-61, while preparing for an exploring expedition
+into the Florida wilderness.</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>Mildly edified, White glanced again at the girl
+across the aisle, and was surprised to see how
+her interest in the volume had altered her features.
+Tense, breathless, utterly absorbed in the book,
+she bent over the faded print, leaning close, for
+the sickly light that filtered through the glass
+roof scarcely illumined the yellow pages at all.</p>
+
+<p>The curiosity of White was now aroused; he
+opened the glass case beside him, fished out his
+copy of the book, opened it, and began to read.</p>
+
+<p>For the first few minutes his interest was anything
+but deep: he read the well-known pages
+where Bangs recounts how he discovered the journal
+of Valdez&mdash;and it sounded exceedingly fishy&mdash;a
+rather poorly written fairy-tale done by a man
+with little invention and less imagination, so worn
+out, hackneyed and trite were the incidents, so
+obvious the coincidences.</p>
+
+<p>White shrugged his shoulders and turned from
+the preface to what purported to be the translation.</p>
+
+<p>Almost immediately it struck him that this part
+of the book was not written by the same man.<span class="pagenumsmall">[261]</span>
+Here was fluency, elegance of expression, ease, the
+simplicity of a soldier who had something to say
+and but a short time in which to say it. Even
+the apparent clumsiness of the translation had not
+deformed the work.</p>
+
+<p>Little by little the young man became intensely
+interested, then absorbed. And after a while the
+colour came into his face; he glanced nervously
+around him; suppressed excitement made his hands
+unsteady as he unfolded the enclosed map.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time he referred to the map as
+he read; the rain roared on the glass roof; the
+light grew dimmer and dimmer.</p>
+
+<p>At five o'clock the galleries closed for the day.
+And that evening, sitting in his hall-bedroom,
+White made up his mind that he must buy "The
+Journal of Valdez" if it took every penny that
+remained to him.</p>
+
+<p>The next day was fair and cold; fashion graced
+the Octavo de Folio exhibition; White had no
+time to re-read any passages or to re-examine the
+map, because people were continually asking to
+see and handle the books in his case.</p>
+
+<p>Across the aisle he noticed that his pretty
+neighbour was similarly occupied. And he was
+rather glad, because he felt, vaguely, that it was
+just as well she did not occupy her time in reading<span class="pagenumsmall">[262]</span>
+"The Journal of Valdez." Girls usually have
+imagination. The book might stir her up as it
+had stirred him. And to no purpose.</p>
+
+<p>Also, he was glad that nobody asked to look at
+the Valdez copy in his own case. He didn't want
+people to look at it. There were reasons&mdash;among
+others, he wanted to buy it himself. He meant to
+if fifteen hundred dollars would buy it.</p>
+
+<p>White had not the remotest idea what the book
+might bring at auction. He dared not inquire
+whether the volume was a rare one, dreading even
+to call the attention of his fellow employees to it.
+A word <i>might</i> arouse their curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>All day long he attended to his duties there,
+and at five he went home, highly excited, determined
+to arrive at the galleries next morning in
+time enough to read the book a little before the
+first of the public came.</p>
+
+<p>And he did get there very early. The only
+other employee who had arrived before him was
+the red-haired girl. She sat by her case reading
+"The Journal of Valdez." Once she looked up at
+him with calm, clear, intelligent eyes. He did not
+see her; he hastily unlocked his case and drew
+out the coveted book. Then he sat down and began
+to devour it. And so utterly and instantly
+was he lost amid those yellow, time-faded pages<span class="pagenumsmall">[263]</span>
+that he did not even glance across the aisle at his
+ornamental neighbour. If he had looked he would
+have noticed that she also was buried in "The
+Journal of Valdez." And it might have made him
+a trifle uneasy to see her look from her book to
+him and from him to the volume he was perusing
+so excitedly.</p>
+
+<p>It being the last day that the library was to be
+on view before the sale, fashion and monomania
+rubbed elbows in the Heikem Galleries, crowding
+the well known salons morning and afternoon.
+And all day long White and his neighbour across
+the aisle were busy taking out books and manuscripts
+for inspection, so that they had no time
+for luncheon, and less for Valdez.</p>
+
+<p>And that night they were paid off and dismissed;
+and the auctioneer and his corps of assistants
+took charge.</p>
+
+<p>The sale took place the following morning and
+afternoon. White drew from the bank his fifteen
+hundred dollars, breakfasted on bread and milk,
+and went to the galleries more excited than he had
+ever been before in his long life of twenty-three
+years. And that is some time.</p>
+
+<p>It was a long shot at Fortune he meant to take&mdash;a
+really desperate chance. One throw would
+settle it&mdash;win or lose. And the idea scared him<span class="pagenumsmall">[264]</span>
+badly, and he was trembling a little when he took
+his seat amid the perfumed gowns of fashion and
+the white whiskers of high finance, and the shabby
+vestments of monomania.</p>
+
+<p>Once or twice he wondered whether he was
+crazy. Yet, every throb of his fast-beating heart
+seemed to summon him to do and dare; and he
+felt, without even attempting to explain the feeling
+to himself, that now at last Opportunity was
+loudly rapping at his door, and that if he did not
+let her in he would regret it as long as he lived.</p>
+
+<p>As he glanced fearfully about him he caught
+sight of his pretty neighbour who had held sway
+across the aisle. So she, too, had come to watch
+the sale! Probably for the excitement of hearing
+an auctioneer talk in thousands.</p>
+
+<p>He was a little surprised, nevertheless, for she
+did not look bookish&mdash;nor even intellectual
+enough to mar her prettiness. Yet, wherever she
+went she would look adorable. He understood
+that, now.</p>
+
+<p>It was a day of alarms for him, of fears, shocks,
+and frights innumerable. With terror he heard
+the auctioneer talking in terms of thousands;
+with horror he witnessed the bids on certain books
+advance by thousands at a clip. Five thousand,
+ten thousand, twenty thousand were bid, seen,<span class="pagenumsmall">[265]</span>
+raised, called, hiked, until his head spun and despair
+seized him.</p>
+
+<p>What did he know about Valdez? Either volume
+might bring fifty thousand dollars for all he
+knew. Had he fifty thousand he felt, somehow,
+that he would have bid it to the last penny for
+the book. And he came to the conclusion that he
+was really crazy. Yet there he sat, glued to his
+chair, listening, shuddering, teeth alternately
+chattering or grimly locked, while the very air
+seemed to reek of millions, and the incessant gabble
+of the auctioneer drove him almost out of his
+wits.</p>
+
+<p>Nearer and nearer approached the catalogued
+numbers of the two copies of Valdez; pale and
+desperate he sat there, his heart almost suffocating
+him as the moment drew near. And now the
+time had come; now the celebrated Mr. Heikem
+began his suave preliminary chatter; now he was
+asking confidently for a bid.</p>
+
+<p>A silence ensued&mdash;and whether it was the silence
+of awe at the priceless treasure or the silence of
+indifference White did not know. But after the
+auctioneer had again asked for a bid he found his
+voice and offered ten dollars. His ears were scarlet
+when he did it.</p>
+
+<p>"Fifteen," said a sweet but tremulous voice not<span class="pagenumsmall">[266]</span>
+far from White, and he looked around in astonishment.
+It was his red-haired vis-a-vis.</p>
+
+<p>"Twenty!" he retorted, still labouring under
+his astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"Twenty-five!" came the same sweet voice.</p>
+
+<p>There was a silence. No other voices said anything.
+Evidently nobody wanted Valdez except
+himself and his red-haired neighbour.</p>
+
+<p>"Thirty!" he called out at the psychological
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>The girl turned in her chair and looked at him.
+She seemed to be unusually pale.</p>
+
+<p>"Thirty-five!" she said, still gazing at White
+in a frightened sort of way.</p>
+
+<p>"Forty," he said; rose at the same moment and
+walked over to where the girl was sitting.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him as he bent over her chair;
+both were very serious.</p>
+
+<p>"You and I are the only two people bidding,"
+he said. "There are two copies of the book.
+Don't bid against me and you can buy in the other
+one for next to nothing&mdash;judging from the course
+this one is taking."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," she said quietly.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later the first copy of Valdez was
+knocked down to James White. An indifferent
+audience paid little attention to the transaction.<span class="pagenumsmall">[267]</span></p>
+
+<p>Two minutes later the second copy fell to Miss
+Jean Sandys for five dollars&mdash;there being no other
+bidder.</p>
+
+<p>White had already left the galleries. Lingering
+at the entrance he saw Miss Sandys pass him,
+and he lifted his hat. The slightest inclination
+of her pretty head acknowledged it. The next
+moment they were lost to each other's view in the
+crowded street.</p>
+
+<p>Clutching his battered book to his chest, not
+even daring to drop it into his overcoat for fear
+of pickpockets, the young fellow started up
+Broadway at a swinging pace which presently
+brought him to the offices of the Florida Spanish
+Grants Company; and here, at his request, he was
+ushered into a private room; a map of Seminole
+County spread on the highly polished table before
+him, and a suave gentleman placed at his
+disposal.</p>
+
+<p>"Florida," volunteered the suave gentleman, "is
+the land of perpetual sunshine&mdash;the land of milk
+and honey, as it were, the land of the orange&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"One moment, please," said White.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir?"</p>
+
+<p>They looked at each other for a second or two,
+then White smiled:</p>
+
+<p>"I don't want dope," he said pleasantly, "I<span class="pagenumsmall">[268]</span>
+merely want a few facts&mdash;if your company deals
+in them."</p>
+
+<p>"Florida," began the suave gentleman, watching
+the effect of his words, "is the garden of the
+world." Then he stopped, discouraged, for White
+was grinning at him.</p>
+
+<p>"It won't do," said White amiably.</p>
+
+<p>"No?" queried the suave gentleman, the ghost
+of a grin on his own smooth countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"No, it won't do. Now, if you will restrain
+your very natural enthusiasm and let me ask a
+few questions&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Go ahead," said the suave gentleman, whose
+name was Munsell. "But I don't believe we have
+anything to suit you in Seminole County."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I don't know," returned White coolly, "is
+it <i>all</i> under water?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are a few shell mounds. The highest is
+nearly ten inches above water. We call them hills."</p>
+
+<p>"I might wish to acquire one of those mountain
+ranges," remarked White seriously.</p>
+
+<p>After a moment they both laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you in the game yourself?" inquired Mr.
+Munsell.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, my game is a trifle different."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh. Do you care to be more explicit?"</p>
+
+<p>White shook his head:<span class="pagenumsmall">[269]</span></p>
+
+<p>"No; what's the use? But I'll say this: it isn't
+the 'Perpetual Sunshine and Orange Grove' game,
+or how to become a millionaire in three years."</p>
+
+<p>"No?" grinned Munsell, lifting his expressive
+eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>White bent over the map for a few moments.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he said carelessly, "is the Spanish
+Causeway and the Coakachee River. It's all
+swamp and jungle, I suppose&mdash;although I see you
+have it plotted into orange groves, truck gardens,
+pineapple plantations, and villas."</p>
+
+<p>Munsell made a last but hopeless effort.
+"Some day," he began, with dignity&mdash;but White's
+calm wink discouraged further attempts. Then
+the young man tapped with his pencil lots numbered
+from 200 to 210, slowly, going over them
+again for emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"Are those what you want?" asked Munsell.</p>
+
+<p>"Those are what I want."</p>
+
+<p>"All right. Only I can't give you 210."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yesterday a party took a strip along the
+Causeway including half of 210 up to 220."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't I get all of 210?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll ask the party. Where can I address you?"</p>
+
+<p>White stood up. "Have everything ready Tuesday.
+I'll be in with the cash."<span class="pagenumsmall">[270]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 330px;">
+<img src="images/ch27.jpg" width="330" height="186" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXVII</h2>
+
+<p>And on Tuesday he kept his word and the
+land was his for a few hundred dollars&mdash;all
+except the half of Lot No. 210, which
+it appeared the "party" declined to sell, refusing
+to consider any profit whatever.</p>
+
+<p>"It's like a woman," remarked Munsell.</p>
+
+<p>"Is your 'party' a woman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I guess she's into some game or other,
+too. Say, what is this Seminole County game,
+Mr. White?&mdash;if you don't mind my asking, now
+that you have taken title to your&mdash;h'm!&mdash;orange
+grove."</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you think there is any particular
+game afoot?" inquired the young man curiously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, come! <i>You</i> know what you're buying.
+And that young lady knew, too. You've both
+bought a few acres of cypress swamp and you
+know it. What do you think is in it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Snakes," said White coolly.<span class="pagenumsmall">[271]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Oh, <i>I</i> know," said Munsell. "You think there's
+marl and phosphoric rock."</p>
+
+<p>"And isn't there?" asked White innocently.</p>
+
+<p>"How should <i>I</i> know?" replied Munsell as innocently;
+the inference being that he knew perfectly
+well that there was nothing worth purchasing
+in the Causeway swamp.</p>
+
+<p>But when White went away he was a trifle worried,
+and he wondered uneasily why anybody else
+at that particular time should happen to invest
+in swampy real estate along the Spanish Causeway.</p>
+
+<p>He knew the Spanish Causeway. In youthful
+and prosperous days, when his parents were alive,
+they had once wintered at Verbena Inlet.</p>
+
+<p>And on several occasions he had been taken on
+excursions to the so-called Spanish Causeway&mdash;a
+dike-shaped path, partly ruined, made of marl
+and shell, which traversed the endless swamps of
+Seminole County, and was supposed to have been
+built by De Soto and his Spaniards.</p>
+
+<p>But whoever built it, Spaniard, Seminole, or
+the prehistoric people antedating both, there it
+still was, a ruined remnant of highway penetrating
+the otherwise impassable swamps.</p>
+
+<p>For miles across the wilderness of cypress,
+palmetto, oak, and depthless mud it stretched&mdash;a<span class="pagenumsmall">[272]</span>
+crumbling but dry runway for deer, panther, bear,
+black wolf, and Seminole. And excursion parties
+from the great hotels at Verbena often picnicked
+at its intersection with the forest road, but ventured
+no farther along the dismal, forbidding, and
+snake-infested ridge which ran anywhere between
+six inches and six feet above the level of the evil-looking
+marsh flanking it on either side.</p>
+
+<p>In the care-free days of school, of affluence, and
+of youth, White had been taken to gaze upon this
+alleged relic of Spanish glory. He now remembered
+it very clearly.</p>
+
+<p>And that night, aboard the luxurious Verbena
+Special, he lay in his bunk and dreamed dreams
+awake, which almost overwhelmed him with their
+magnificence. But when he slept his dreams were
+uneasy, interspersed with vague visions of women
+who came in regiments through flowering jungles
+to drive him out of his own property. It was a
+horrid sort of nightmare, for they pelted him with
+iron-bound copies of Valdez, knocking him almost
+senseless into the mud. And it seemed to him
+that he might have perished there had not his little
+red-haired neighbour extended a slender, helping
+hand in the nick of time.</p>
+
+<p>Dreaming of her he awoke, still shaking with
+the experience. And all that day he read in his<span class="pagenumsmall">[273]</span>
+book and pored over the map attached to it, until
+the locomotive whistled for St. Augustine, and
+he was obliged to disembark for the night.</p>
+
+<p>However, next morning he was on his way to
+Verbena, the train flying through a steady whirlwind
+of driving sand. And everywhere in the sunshine
+stretched the flat-woods, magnificently green&mdash;endless
+miles of pine and oak and palmetto, set
+with brilliant glades of vast, flat fields of wild
+phlox over which butterflies hovered.</p>
+
+<p>At Verbena Station he disembarked with his
+luggage, which consisted of a complete tropical
+camping outfit, tinned food, shot-gun, rifle, rods,
+spade, shovel, pick, crow. In his hand he carried
+an innocent looking satchel, gingerly. It
+contained dynamite in sticks, and the means to
+explode it safely.</p>
+
+<p>To a hackman he said: "I'm not going to any
+hotel. What I want is a wagon, a team of mules,
+and a driver to take me and my outfit to Coakachee
+Creek on the Spanish Causeway. Can you
+fix it for me?"</p>
+
+<p>The hackman said he could. And in half an
+hour he drove up in his mule wagon to the deserted
+station, where White sat all alone amid
+his mountainous paraphernalia.</p>
+
+<p>When the wagon had been loaded, and they had<span class="pagenumsmall">[274]</span>
+been driving through the woods for nearly half
+an hour in silence, the driver's curiosity got the
+better of him, and he ventured to enquire of White
+why everybody was going to the Spanish Causeway.</p>
+
+<p>Which question startled the young man very
+disagreeably until he learned that "everybody"
+merely meant himself and one other person taken
+thither by the same driver the day before.</p>
+
+<p>Further, he learned that this person was a
+woman from the North, completely equipped for
+camping as was he. Which made him more uneasy
+than ever, for he of course identified her with
+Mr. Munsell's client, whose land, including half
+of Lot 210, adjoined his own. Who she might
+be and why she had come down here to Seminole
+County he could not imagine, because Munsell had
+intimated that she knew what she was buying.</p>
+
+<p>No doubt she meant to play a similar game to
+Munsell's, and had come down to take a look at
+her villainous property before advertising possibilities
+of perpetual sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, why had she brought a camping outfit?
+Ordinary land swindlers remained comfortably
+aloof from the worthless property they advertised.
+What was she intending to do there?</p>
+
+<p>Instead of a swindler was she, perhaps, the<span class="pagenumsmall">[275]</span>
+swindlee? Had she bought the property in good
+faith? Didn't she know it was under water? Had
+she come down here with her pitiful camping
+equipment prepared to rough it and set out orange
+trees? Poor thing!</p>
+
+<p>"Was she all alone?" he inquired of his cracker
+driver.</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, suh."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor thing. Did she seem young and inexperienced?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, suh&mdash;'scusin she all has right smart o'
+red ha'r."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" exclaimed White excitedly. "You say
+she is young, and that she seemed inexperienced,
+except for her red hair!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, suh. She all has a right smart hank of
+red ha'r on her haid. I ain't never knowed nobody
+with red ha'r what ain't had a heap mo'
+'sperience than the mostest."</p>
+
+<p>"D-d-did you say that you drove her over to
+the Spanish Causeway yesterday?" stammered
+the dismayed young man.</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, suh."</p>
+
+<p>Horrified thoughts filled his mind. For there
+could be scarcely any doubt that this intruder was
+his red-haired neighbour across the aisle at the
+library sale.<span class="pagenumsmall">[276]</span></p>
+
+<p>No doubt at all that he already crossed her trail
+at Munsell's agency. Also, she had bid in one
+of the only two copies of Valdez.</p>
+
+<p>First he had seen her reading it with every
+symptom of profound interest. Then she had
+gone to the sale and bid in one of the copies.
+Then he had heard from Munsell about a woman
+who had bought land along the Causeway the day
+before he had made his own purchase.</p>
+
+<p>And now once more he had struck her swift,
+direct trail, only to learn that she was still one
+day in advance of him!</p>
+
+<p>In his mental panic he remembered that his
+title was secure. That thought comforted him
+for a few moments, until he began to wonder
+whether the land he had acquired was really sufficient
+to cover a certain section of perhaps half
+an acre along the Causeway.</p>
+
+<p>According to his calculations he had given himself
+ample margin in every direction, for the spot
+he desired to control ought to lie somewhere about
+midway between Lot 200 and Lot 210.</p>
+
+<p>Had he miscalculated? Had <i>she</i> miscalculated?
+Why had she purchased that strip from half of
+Lot 210 to Lot 220?</p>
+
+<p>There could be only one answer: this clever<span class="pagenumsmall">[277]</span>
+and astoundingly enterprising young girl had
+read Valdez, had decided to take a chance, had
+proved her sporting spirit by backing her judgment,
+and had started straight as an arrow for
+the terrifying territory in question.</p>
+
+<p>Hers had been first choice of Mr. Munsell's lots;
+she had deliberately chosen the numbers from
+half of 210 to 220. She was perfectly ignorant
+that he, White, had any serious intentions in
+Seminole County. Therefore, it had been her
+judgment, based on calculations from the Valdez
+map, that half of Lot 210 and the intervening
+territory including Lot 220, would be ample for
+her to control a certain spot&mdash;the very spot
+which he himself expected to control.</p>
+
+<p>Either he or she had miscalculated. Which?</p>
+
+<p>Dreadfully worried, he sat in silence beside his
+taciturn driver, gazing at the flanking forest
+through which the white road wound.</p>
+
+<p>The only habitation they passed was fruit-drying
+ranch No. 7, in the wilderness&mdash;just this one
+sunny oasis in the solemn half-light of the woods.</p>
+
+<p>White did not remember the road, although
+when a child he must have traversed it to the
+Causeway. Nor when he came in sight of the
+Causeway did he recognise it, where it ran<span class="pagenumsmall">[278]</span>
+through a glade of high, silvery grass set sparsely
+with tall palmettos.</p>
+
+<p>But here it was, and the cracker turned his
+mules into it, swinging sharply to the left along
+Coakachee Creek and proceeding for about two
+miles, where a shell mound enabled him to turn
+his team.</p>
+
+<p>A wagon could proceed no farther because the
+crumbling Causeway narrowed to a foot-path beyond.
+So here they unloaded; the cracker rested
+his mules for a while, then said a brief good-bye
+to White and shook the reins.</p>
+
+<p>When he had driven out of sight, White started
+to drag his tent and tent-poles along the dike top
+toward his own property, which ought to lie just
+ahead&mdash;somewhere near the curve that the Causeway
+made a hundred yards beyond. For he had
+discovered a weather-beaten shingle nailed to a
+water-oak, where he had disembarked his luggage;
+and on it were the remains of the painted number
+198.</p>
+
+<p>Lugging tent and poles, he started along the
+Causeway, keeping a respectful eye out for snakes.
+So intent was he on avoiding the playful attentions
+of rattler or moccasin that it was only when
+he almost ran into it that he discovered another
+tent pitched directly in his path.<span class="pagenumsmall">[279]</span></p>
+
+<p>Of course he had expected to find her encamped
+there on the Causeway, but he was surprised,
+nevertheless, and his tent-poles fell, clattering.</p>
+
+<p>A second later the flap of her tent was pushed
+aside, and his red-haired neighbour of the galleries
+stepped out, plainly startled.<span class="pagenumsmall">[280]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 480px;">
+<img src="images/ch28.jpg" width="480" height="390" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXVIII</h2>
+
+<p>She seemed to be still more startled when she
+saw him: her blue eyes dilated; the colour
+which had ebbed came back, suffusing her
+pretty features. But when she recognised him,
+fear, dismay, astonishment, and anxiety blended
+in swift confusion, leaving her silent, crimson,
+rooted to the spot.</p>
+
+<p>White took off his hat and walked up to where
+she stood.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry, Miss Sandys," he said. "Only a
+few hours ago did I learn who it was camping
+here on the Causeway. And&mdash;I'm afraid I know
+why you are here.... Because the same reason
+that brought you started me the next day."</p>
+
+<p>She had recovered her composure. She said
+very gravely:<span class="pagenumsmall">[281]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I wondered when I saw you reading Valdez
+whether, by any possibility, you might think of
+coming here. And when you bought the other
+copy I was still more afraid.... But I had already
+secured an option on my lots."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it," he said, chagrined.</p>
+
+<p>"Were you," she inquired, "the client of Mr.
+Munsell who tried to buy from me the other half
+of Lot 210?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"I wondered. But of course I would not sell it.
+What lots have you bought?"</p>
+
+<p>"I took No. 200 to the northern half of No.
+210."</p>
+
+<p>"Why?" she asked, surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"Because," he said, reddening, "my calculations
+tell me that this gives me ample margin."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him in calm disapproval, shaking
+her head; but her blue eyes softened.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm sorry," she said. "You have miscalculated,
+Mr. White. The spot lies somewhere within
+the plot numbered from half of 210 to 220."</p>
+
+<p>"I am very much afraid that <i>you</i> have miscalculated,
+Miss Sandys. I did not even attempt to
+purchase your plot&mdash;except half of 210."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor did I even consider <i>your</i> plot, Mr. White,"
+she said sorrowfully, "and I had my choice.<span class="pagenumsmall">[282]</span>
+Really I am very sorry for you, but you have
+made a complete miscalculation."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see how I could. I worked it out from
+the Valdez map."</p>
+
+<p>"So did I."</p>
+
+<p>She had the volume under her arm; he had his
+in his pocket.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me show you," he began, drawing it out
+and opening it. "Would you mind looking at the
+map for a moment?"</p>
+
+<p>Her dainty head a trifle on one side, she looked
+over his shoulder as he unfolded the map for
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Here," he said, plucking a dead grass stem
+and tracing the Causeway on the map, "here lie
+my lots&mdash;including, as you see, the spot marked
+by Valdez with a Maltese cross.... I'm sorry;
+but how in the world could you have made your
+mistake?"</p>
+
+<p>He turned to glance at the girl and saw her
+amazement and misunderstood it.</p>
+
+<p>"It's too bad," he added, feeling profoundly
+sorry for her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know," she said in a voice quivering
+with emotion, "that a very terrible thing has happened
+to us?"</p>
+
+<p>"To <i>us</i>?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[283]</span></p>
+
+<p>"To <i>both</i> of us. I&mdash;we&mdash;oh, please look at my
+map! It is&mdash;it is different from yours!"</p>
+
+<p>With nervous fingers she opened the book,
+spread out the map, and held it under his horrified
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you see!" she exclaimed. "According to
+<i>this</i> map, my lots include the Maltese cross of
+Valdez! I&mdash;I&mdash;p-please excuse me&mdash;&mdash;" She
+turned abruptly and entered her tent; but he had
+caught the glimmer of sudden tears in her eyes
+and had seen the pitiful lips trembling.</p>
+
+<p>On his own account he was sufficiently scared;
+now it flashed upon him that this plucky young
+thing had probably spent her last penny on the
+chance that Bangs had told the truth about "The
+Journal of Pedro Valdez."</p>
+
+<p>That the two maps differed was a staggering
+blow to him; and his knees seemed rather weak
+at the moment, so he sat down on his unpacked
+tent and dropped his face in his palms.</p>
+
+<p>Lord, what a mess! His last cent was invested;
+hers, too, no doubt. He hadn't even railroad
+fare North. Probably she hadn't either.</p>
+
+<p>He had gambled and lost. There was scarcely
+a chance that he had not lost. And the same
+fearful odds were against her.</p>
+
+<p>"The poor little thing!" he muttered, staring at<span class="pagenumsmall">[284]</span>
+her tent. And after a moment he sprang to his
+feet and walked over to it. The flap was open;
+she sat inside on a camp-chair, her red head in
+her arms, doubled over in an attitude of tragic
+despair.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Sandys?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up hastily, the quick colour dyeing
+her pale cheeks, her long, black lashes glimmering
+with tears.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you mind talking it over with me?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"N-no."</p>
+
+<p>"May I come in?"</p>
+
+<p>"P-please."</p>
+
+<p>He seated himself cross-legged on the threshold.</p>
+
+<p>"There's only one thing to do," he said, "and
+that is to go ahead. We must go ahead. Of
+course the hazard is against us. Let us face the
+chance that Bangs was only a clever romancer.
+Well, we've already discounted that. Then let us
+face the discrepancy in our two maps. It's bad,
+I'll admit. It almost knocks the last atom of
+confidence out of me. It has floored you. But
+you must not take the count. You must get up."</p>
+
+<p>He paused, looking around him with troubled
+eyes; then somehow the sight of her pathetic figure&mdash;the<span class="pagenumsmall">[285]</span>
+soft, helpless youth of her&mdash;suddenly
+seemed to prop up his back-bone.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Sandys, I am going to stand by you anyway!
+I suppose, like myself, you have invested
+your last dollar in this business?"</p>
+
+<p>"Y-yes."</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at the pick, shovel and spade in the
+corner of her tent, then at her hands.</p>
+
+<p>"Who," he asked politely, "was going to wield
+these?"</p>
+
+<p>She let her eyes rest on the massive implements
+of honest toil, then looked confusedly at him.</p>
+
+<p>"I was."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you ever try to dig with any of these
+things?"</p>
+
+<p>"N-no. But if I <i>had</i> to do it I knew I could."</p>
+
+<p>He said, pleasantly: "You have all kinds of
+courage. Did you bring a shot-gun?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know how to load and fire it?"</p>
+
+<p>"The clerk in the shop instructed me."</p>
+
+<p>"You are the pluckiest girl I ever laid eyes
+on.... You camped here all alone last night, I
+suppose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"How about it?" he asked, smilingly. "Were
+you afraid?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[286]</span></p>
+
+<p>She coloured, cast a swift glance at him, saw
+that his attitude was perfectly respectful and sympathetic,
+and said:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was horribly afraid."</p>
+
+<p>"Did anything annoy you?"</p>
+
+<p>"S-something bellowed out there in the swamp&mdash;&mdash;"
+She shuddered unaffectedly at the recollection.</p>
+
+<p>"A bull-alligator," he remarked.</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he nodded, "it is terrifying, but they
+let you alone. I once heard one bellow on the
+Tomoka when I was a boy."</p>
+
+<p>After a while she said with tremulous lips:</p>
+
+<p>"There seem to be snakes here, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't you expect any?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Munsell said there were not any."</p>
+
+<p>"Did he?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not," she explained resolutely, "that the presence
+of snakes would have deterred me. They
+frighten me terribly, but&mdash;I would have come just
+the same."</p>
+
+<p>"You are sheer pluck," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know.... I am very poor....
+There seemed to be a chance.... I took it&mdash;&mdash;"
+Tears sprang to her eyes again, and she brushed
+them away impatiently.<span class="pagenumsmall">[287]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, "the only way is to go on, as
+you say, Mr. White. Everything in the world
+that I have is invested here."</p>
+
+<p>"It is the same with me," he admitted dejectedly.</p>
+
+<p>They looked at each other curiously for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't it strange?" she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"Strange as 'The Journal of Valdez.'... I
+have an idea. I wonder what you might think of
+it."</p>
+
+<p>She waited; he reflected for another moment,
+then, smiling:</p>
+
+<p>"This is a perfectly rotten place for you," he
+said. "You could not do manual labour here in
+this swamp under a nearly vertical sun and keep
+your health for twenty-four hours. I've been in
+Trinidad. I know a little about the tropics and
+semi-tropics. Suppose you and I form a company?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Call it the Valdez Company, or the Association
+of the Maltese Cross," he continued cheerfully.
+"You will do the cooking, washing, housekeeping
+for two tents, and the mending. I will do the
+digging and the dynamiting. And we'll go ahead
+doggedly, and face this thing and see it through<span class="pagenumsmall">[288]</span>
+to the last ditch. What do you think of it?
+Your claim as plotted out is no more, no less,
+valuable than mine. Both claims may be worthless.
+The chances are that they are absolutely
+valueless. But there <i>is</i> a chance, too, that we
+might win out. Shall we try it together?"</p>
+
+<p>She did not answer.</p>
+
+<p>"And," he continued, "if the Maltese cross happens
+to be included within my claim, I share
+equally with you. If it chances to lie within
+your claim, perhaps I might ask a third&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. White!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>"You will take <i>two</i> thirds!"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Two</i> thirds," she repeated firmly, "because
+your heavier labour entitles you to that proportion!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Miss Sandys, you are unworldly and
+inexperienced in your generosity&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"So are you! The idea of your modestly venturing
+to ask a <i>third</i>! And offering me a <i>half</i> if
+the Maltese cross lie inside your own territory!
+That is not the way to do business, Mr. White!"</p>
+
+<p>She had become so earnest in her admonition,
+so charmingly emphatic, that he smiled in spite
+of himself.<span class="pagenumsmall">[289]</span></p>
+
+<p>She flushed, noticing this, and said: "Altruism
+is a luxury in business matters; selfishness of the
+justifiable sort a necessity. Who will look out
+for your interests if you do not?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>You</i> seem to be doing it."</p>
+
+<p>Her colour deepened: "I am only suggesting
+that you do not make a foolish bargain with
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Which proves," he said, "that you are not
+much better at business than am I. Otherwise
+you'd have taken me up."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm a very good business woman," she insisted,
+warmly, "but I'm too much of the other kind of
+woman to be unfair!"</p>
+
+<p>"Commercially," he said, "we both are sadly
+behind the times. To-day the world is eliminating
+its appendix; to-morrow it will be operated on
+for another obsolete and annoying appendage. I
+mean its conscience," he added, so seriously that
+for a moment her own gravity remained unaltered.
+Then, like a faint ray of sunlight, across her face
+the smile glimmered. It was a winning smile,
+fresh and unspoiled as the lips it touched.</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>will</i> take half&mdash;won't you?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I will. Is it a bargain?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you care to make it so, Mr. White."</p>
+
+<p>He said he did, and they shook hands very<span class="pagenumsmall">[290]</span>
+formally. Then he went out and pitched his tent
+beside hers, set it in order, lugged up the remainder
+of his equipment, buried the jars of
+spring water, and, entering his tent, changed to
+flannel shirt, sun-helmet, and khaki.<span class="pagenumsmall">[291]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 350px;">
+<img src="images/ch29.jpg" width="350" height="397" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXIX</h2>
+
+<p>A little later he called to her: she
+emerged from her tent, and together they
+sat down on the edge of the Causeway,
+with the two maps spread over their knees.</p>
+
+<p>That both maps very accurately represented the
+topography of the immediate vicinity there could
+be no doubt; the only discrepancy seemed to lie
+in the situation of the Maltese cross. On White's
+map the cross fell well within his half of Lot 210;
+in Jean Sandys' map it was situated between her
+half of 210 and 220.</p>
+
+<p>Plot it out as they might, using Mr. Munsell's
+diagram, the result was always the same; and
+after a while they gave up the useless attempt to
+reconcile the differences in the two maps.<span class="pagenumsmall">[292]</span></p>
+
+<p>From where they were sitting together on the
+Causeway's edge, they were facing due west. At
+their feet rippled the clear, deep waters of the
+swamp, lapping against the base of the Causeway
+like transparent little waves in a northern lake.
+A slight current disclosed the channel where it
+flowed out of the north western edges of the
+swamp, which was set with tall cypress trees,
+their flaring bases like silvery pyramids deep set
+in the shining ooze.</p>
+
+<p>East of them the Coakachee flowed through
+thickets of saw-grass and green brier, between a
+forest of oak, pine, and cedar, bordered on the
+western side by palm and palmetto&mdash;all exactly
+as drawn in the map of Pedro Valdez.</p>
+
+<p>The afternoon was cloudless and warm; an exquisite
+scent of blossoms came from the forest
+when a light breeze rippled the water. Somewhere
+in those green and tangled depths jasmine
+hung its fairy gold from arching branches, and
+wild oranges were in bloom. At intervals, when
+the breeze set from the east, the heavenly fragrance
+of magnolia grew more pronounced.</p>
+
+<p>After a little searching he discovered the huge
+tree, far towering above oak and pine and palm,
+set with lustrous clusters, ivory and palest gold,
+exhaling incense.<span class="pagenumsmall">[293]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Wonderful," she said under her breath, when
+he pointed it out to her. "This enchanted land
+is one endless miracle to me."</p>
+
+<p>"You have never before been in the South?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have been nowhere."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh. I thought perhaps when you were a
+child&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We were too poor. My mother taught piano."</p>
+
+<p>"I see," he said gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"I had no childhood," she said. "After the
+public school, it was the book section in department
+stores.... They let me go last week.
+That is how I came to be in the Heikem galleries."</p>
+
+<p>He clasped his hands around one knee and
+looked out across the semi-tropical landscape.</p>
+
+<p>Orange-coloured butterflies with wings like
+lighted lanterns fluttered along the edges of the
+flowering shrubs; a lovely purplish-black one with
+four large, white polka dots on his wings flitted
+persistently about them.</p>
+
+<p>Over the sun-baked Causeway blue-tailed lizards
+raced and chased each other, frisking up tree
+trunks, flashing across branches: a snowy heron
+rose like some winged thing from Heaven, and
+floated away into the silvery light. And like living
+jewels the gorgeous wood-ducks glided in and<span class="pagenumsmall">[294]</span>
+out where the water sparkled among the cypress
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Think," he said, "of those men in armour toiling
+through these swamps under a vertical sun!
+Think of them, starved, haggard, fever racked,
+staggering toward their El Dorado!&mdash;their steel
+mail scorching their bodies, the briers and poison-grass
+festering their flesh; moccasin, rattler, and
+copperhead menacing them with death at every
+step; the poisoned arrows of the Indians whizzing
+from every glade!"</p>
+
+<p>"Blood and gold," she nodded, "and the deathless
+bravery of avarice! That was Spain. And
+it inflamed the sunset of Spanish glory."</p>
+
+<p>He mused for a while: "To think of De Soto
+being here&mdash;<i>here</i> on this very spot!&mdash;here on this
+ancient Causeway, amid these forests!&mdash;towering
+in his armour! His plated mail must have made
+a burning hell for his body!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked down at the cool, blue water at her
+feet. He, too, gazed at it, curiously. For a
+few feet the depths were visible, then a translucent
+gloom, glimmering with emerald lights, obscured
+further penetration of his vision. Deep
+down in that water was what they sought&mdash;if it
+truly existed at all.</p>
+
+<p>After a few moments' silence he rose, drew the<span class="pagenumsmall">[295]</span>
+hunting-knife at his belt, severed a tall, swamp-maple
+sapling, trimmed it, and, returning to the
+water's edge, deliberately sounded the channel.
+He could not touch bottom there, or even at the
+base of the Causeway.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Sandys," he said, "there is plenty of
+room for such a structure as the Maltese cross
+is supposed to mark."</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, there's room enough," he repeated, with
+an uneasy laugh. "Suppose we begin operations!"</p>
+
+<p>"When?"</p>
+
+<p>"Now!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him, flushed and smiling:</p>
+
+<p>"It is going to take weeks and weeks, isn't
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so before I came down here. But&mdash;I
+don't see why we shouldn't blow a hole
+through this Causeway in a few minutes."</p>
+
+<p>"What!"</p>
+
+<p>She rose to her feet, slightly excited, not understanding.</p>
+
+<p>"I could set off enough dynamite right here,"
+he said, stamping his heel into the white dust,
+"&mdash;enough dynamite to open up that channel into
+the Coakachee. Why don't I do it?"<span class="pagenumsmall">[296]</span></p>
+
+<p>Pink with excitement she said breathlessly:
+"Did you bring <i>dynamite</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Didn't <i>you</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I never even thought of it. F-fire crackers
+frighten me. I thought it would be all I could
+do to fire off my shot-gun." And she bit her
+lip with vexation.</p>
+
+<p>"Why," he said, "it would take a gang of men
+a week to cut through this Causeway, besides
+building a coffer-dam." He looked at her curiously.
+"How did <i>you</i> expect to begin operations
+all alone?"</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I expected to dig."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her delicate little hands:</p>
+
+<p>"You meant to dig your way through with
+pick and shovel?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;if it took a year."</p>
+
+<p>"And how did you expect to construct your
+coffer-dam?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't know about a coffer-dam," she admitted,
+blushing. After a moment she lifted her
+pretty, distressed eyes to his: "I&mdash;I had no knowledge&mdash;only
+courage," she said.... "And I
+needed money."</p>
+
+<p>A responsive flush of sympathy and pity passed
+over him; she was so plucky, so adorably helpless.
+Even now he knew she was unconscious of<span class="pagenumsmall">[297]</span>
+the peril into which her confidence and folly had
+led her&mdash;a peril averted only by the mere accident
+of his own arrival.</p>
+
+<p>He said lightly: "Shall we try to solve this
+thing now? Shall we take a chance, set our
+charges, and blow a hole in this Causeway big
+enough to drain that water off in an hour?"</p>
+
+<p>"Could you do <i>that</i>?" she exclaimed, delighted.</p>
+
+<p>"I think so."</p>
+
+<p>"Then tell me what to do to help you."</p>
+
+<p>He turned toward her, hesitated, controlling the
+impulsive reply.</p>
+
+<p>"To help me," he said, smilingly, "please keep
+away from the dynamite."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I will," she nodded seriously. "What else
+am I to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would you mind preparing dinner?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him a little shyly: "No....
+And I am very glad that I am not to dine alone."</p>
+
+<p>"So am I," he said. "And I am very glad that
+it is with <i>you</i> I am to dine."</p>
+
+<p>"You never even looked at me in the galleries,"
+she said.</p>
+
+<p>"Then&mdash;how could I know you were reading
+Valdez if I never looked at you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, you may have looked at the <i>book</i> I was
+reading."<span class="pagenumsmall">[298]</span></p>
+
+<p>"I did," he said, "&mdash;and at the hands that held
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Never dreaming that they meant to wield a
+pick-axe," she laughed, "and encompass your discomfiture.
+But after all they did neither the one
+nor the other; did they?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the smooth little hands cupped
+in the shallow pockets of her white flannel Norfolk.
+They fascinated him.</p>
+
+<p>"To think," he said, half to himself, "&mdash;to
+think of those hands wielding a pick-axe!"</p>
+
+<p>She smiled, head slightly on one side, and bent,
+contemplating her right hand.</p>
+
+<p>"You know," she said, "I certainly would have
+done it."</p>
+
+<p>"You would have been crippled in an hour."</p>
+
+<p>Her head went up, but she was still smiling as
+she said: "I'd have gone through with it&mdash;somehow."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he said slowly. "I believe you would."</p>
+
+<p>"Not," she added, blushing, "that I mean to
+vaunt myself or my courage&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No: I understand. You are not that kind....
+It's rather extraordinary how well I&mdash;I <i>think</i> I
+know you already."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you <i>do</i> know me&mdash;already."</p>
+
+<p>"I really believe I do."<span class="pagenumsmall">[299]</span></p>
+
+<p>"It's very likely. I am just what I seem to
+be. There is no mystery about me. I am what
+I appear to be."</p>
+
+<p>"You are also very direct."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. It's my nature to be direct. I am not
+a bit politic or diplomatic or circuitous."</p>
+
+<p>"So I noticed," he said smilingly, "when you
+discussed finance with me. You were not a bit
+politic."</p>
+
+<p>She smiled, too, a little embarrassed: "How
+could I be anything but frank in return for your
+very unworldly generosity?" she said. "Because
+what you offered <i>was</i> unworldly. Anyway, I
+should have been direct with you; I knew what I
+wanted; I knew what you wanted. All I had to
+do was to make up my mind. And I did so."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you make up your mind about me, also?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, about you, also."</p>
+
+<p>They both smiled.</p>
+
+<p>She was so straight and slender and pretty in
+her white flannels and white outing hat&mdash;her attitude
+so confident, so charmingly determined, that
+she seemed to him even younger than she really
+was&mdash;a delightful, illogical, fresh and fearless
+school-girl, translated by some flash of magic
+from her school hither, and set down unruffled and
+unstartled upon her light, white-shod feet.<span class="pagenumsmall">[300]</span></p>
+
+<p>Even now it amazed him to realise that she
+really understood nothing of the lonely perils
+lately confronting her in this desolate place.</p>
+
+<p>For if there were nothing actually to fear from
+the wild beasts of the region, <i>that which the beasts
+themselves feared</i> might have confronted her at
+any moment. He shuddered as he thought of
+it.</p>
+
+<p>And what would she have done if suddenly
+clutched by fever? What would she have done if
+a white-mouthed moccasin had struck her ankle&mdash;or
+if it had been the diamond-set Death himself?</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mind my speaking plainly, do you?"
+he said bluntly.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no, of course not." She looked at him
+inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't stray far away from me, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't wander away by yourself, out of sight,
+while we are engaged in this business."</p>
+
+<p>She looked serious and perplexed for a moment,
+then turned a delicate pink and began to
+laugh in a pretty, embarrassed way.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you afraid I'll get into mischief? Do you
+know it is very kind of you to feel that way?...
+And rather unexpected&mdash;in a man who&mdash;sat for<span class="pagenumsmall">[301]</span>
+three days across the aisle from me&mdash;and never
+even looked in my direction. Tell me, what am
+I to be afraid of in this place?"</p>
+
+<p>"There are snakes about," he said with emphasis.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes; I've seen some swimming."</p>
+
+<p>"There are four poisonous species among
+them," he continued. "That's one of the reasons
+for your keeping near me."</p>
+
+<p>She nodded, a trifle awed.</p>
+
+<p>"So you will, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," she said, taking his words so literally
+that, when they turned to walk toward the tents,
+she came up close beside him, na&iuml;vely as a child,
+and laid one hand on his sleeve as they started
+back across the Causeway.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose either one of us is bitten?" she asked
+after a silence.</p>
+
+<p>"I have lancets, tourniquets, and anti-venom in
+my tent."</p>
+
+<p>Her smooth hand tightened a little on his arm.
+She had not realised that the danger was more
+than a vague possibility.</p>
+
+<p>"You have spring water, of course," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"No.... I boiled a little from the swamp before
+I drank it."</p>
+
+<p>He turned to her sternly and drew her arm<span class="pagenumsmall">[302]</span>
+through his with an unconscious movement of
+protection.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you sure that water was properly boiled&mdash;<i>thoroughly</i>
+boiled?" he demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"It bubbled."</p>
+
+<p>"Listen to me! Hereafter when you are thirsty
+you will use my spring water. Is that understood?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes.... And thank you."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't want to get break-bone fever, do
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No-o!" she said hastily. "I will do everything
+you wish."</p>
+
+<p>"I'll hang your hammock for you," he said.
+"Always look in your shoes for scorpions and
+spiders before you put them on. Never step over
+a fallen log before you first look on the other side.
+Rattlers lie there. Never go near a swamp without
+looking for moccasins.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't let the direct sunlight fall on your bare
+head; don't eat fruit for a week; don't ever go
+to sleep unless you have a blanket on. You won't
+do any of these things, will you?" he inquired anxiously,
+almost tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>"I promise. And I never dreamed that there
+was anything to apprehend except alligators!"
+she said, tightening her arm around his own.<span class="pagenumsmall">[303]</span></p>
+
+<p>"Alligators won't bother you&mdash;unless you run
+across a big one in the woods. Then keep clear
+of him."</p>
+
+<p>"I will!" she said earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"And don't sit about on old logs or lean against
+trees."</p>
+
+<p>"Why? Lizards?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, they're not harmful. But wood-ticks
+might give you a miserable week or two."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, dear, oh, dear," she murmured, "I am so
+glad you came here!" And quite innocently she
+pressed his arm. She did it because she was grateful.
+She had a very direct way with her.<span class="pagenumsmall">[304]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;">
+<img src="images/ch30.jpg" width="600" height="428" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXX</h2>
+
+<p>When they came to their tents he went
+into hers, slung her hammock properly,
+shook a scorpion out of her slippers,
+and set his heel on it; drove a non-poisonous
+but noisy puff-adder from under her foot-rug,
+the creature hissing like a boiling kettle and distending
+its grey and black neck.</p>
+
+<p>Terrified but outwardly calm, she stood beside
+him, now clutching his arm very closely; and at
+last her tent was in order, the last spider and
+lizard hustled out, the oil cook-stove burning, the
+tinned goods ready, the aluminum batterie-de-cuisine
+ranged at her elbow.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder," he said, hesitating, "whether I<span class="pagenumsmall">[305]</span>
+dare leave you long enough to go and dig some
+holes with a crow-bar."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, of course!" she said. "You can't have
+me tagging at your heels every minute, you
+know."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed: "It's <i>I</i> who do the tagging."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't disagreeable," she said shyly.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't mean to dog every step you take,"
+he continued, "but now, when you are out of my
+sight, I&mdash;I can't help feeling a trifle anxious."</p>
+
+<p>"But you mustn't feel responsible for me. I
+came down here on my own initiative. I certainly
+deserve whatever happens to me. Don't I?"</p>
+
+<p>"What comfort would that be to me if anything
+unpleasant did happen to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why," she asked frankly, "should you feel as
+responsible for my welfare as that? After all,
+I am only a stranger, you know."</p>
+
+<p>He said: "Do you really feel like a stranger?
+Do you really feel that I am one?"</p>
+
+<p>She considered the proposition for a few moments.</p>
+
+<p>"No," she said, "I don't. And perhaps it is
+natural for us to take a friendly interest in each
+other."</p>
+
+<p>"It comes perfectly natural to me to take a
+v-very v-vivid interest in you," he said. "What<span class="pagenumsmall">[306]</span>
+with snakes and scorpions and wood-ticks and unboiled
+water and the actinic rays of the sun, I
+can't very well help worrying about you. After
+all," he added lucidly, "you're a girl, you know."</p>
+
+<p>She admitted the accusation with a smile so
+sweet that there could be no doubt of her sex.</p>
+
+<p>"However," she said, "you should entertain no
+apprehensions concerning me. I have none concerning
+you. I think you know your business."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," he said, going into his tent and
+returning loaded with crow-bar, pick-axe, dynamite,
+battery, and wires.</p>
+
+<p>She laid aside the aluminum cooking-utensils
+with which she had been fussing and rose from
+her knees as he passed her with a pleasant nod of
+<i>au revoir</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"You'll be careful with that dynamite, won't
+you?" she said anxiously. "You know it goes
+off at all sorts of unexpected moments."</p>
+
+<p>"I think I understand how to handle it," he reassured
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you quite certain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes. But perhaps you'd better not come
+any nearer&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. White!"</p>
+
+<p>"What!"</p>
+
+<p>"It <i>is</i> dangerous! I don't like to have you go<span class="pagenumsmall">[307]</span>
+away alone with that dynamite. You make me
+very anxious."</p>
+
+<p>"You needn't be. If&mdash;in the very remote event
+of anything going wrong&mdash;now don't forget what
+I say!&mdash;but in case of an accident to me, you'll
+be all right if you start back to Verbena at once&mdash;instantly&mdash;and
+take the right-hand road&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. <i>White</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>"I was <i>not</i> thinking of myself! I was concerned
+about <i>you</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"Me?&mdash;<i>personally</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course! You say you have me on your
+mind. Do you think I am devoid of human feeling?"</p>
+
+<p>"Were you&mdash;really&mdash;thinking about <i>me</i>?" he
+repeated slowly. "That was very nice of you....
+I didn't quite understand.... I'll be careful
+with the dynamite."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps I'd better go with you," she suggested
+irresolutely.</p>
+
+<p>"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>"I could hold a green umbrella over you while
+you are digging holes. You yourself say that
+the sun is dangerous."</p>
+
+<p>"My sun-helmet makes it all right," he said,
+deeply touched.<span class="pagenumsmall">[308]</span></p>
+
+<p>"You won't take it off, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No."</p>
+
+<p>"And you'll look all around you for snakes
+before you take the next step, won't you?" she
+insisted.</p>
+
+<p>He promised, thrilled by her frank solicitude.</p>
+
+<p>A little way up the path he paused, looked
+around, and saw her standing there looking after
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"You're sure you'll be all right?" he called back
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Are you sure <i>you</i> will be?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes!"</p>
+
+<p>They made two quick gestures of adieu, and
+he resumed the path. Presently he turned again.
+She was still standing there looking after him.
+They made two gestures of farewell and he resumed
+the path. After a while he looked back.
+She&mdash;but what's the use!</p>
+
+<p>When he came to the spot marked for destruction,
+he laid down his paraphernalia, seized the
+crow-bar, and began to dig, scarcely conscious
+of what he was about because he had become so
+deeply absorbed in other things&mdash;in <i>an</i>-other
+thing&mdash;a human one with red hair and otherwise
+divinely endowed.</p>
+
+<p>The swift onset of this heavenly emotion was<span class="pagenumsmall">[309]</span>
+making him giddy&mdash;or perhaps it was unaccustomed
+manual labor under a semi-tropical
+sun.</p>
+
+<p>Anyway he went about his work blindly but
+vigorously, seeing nothing of the surrounding
+landscape or of the immediate ground into which
+he rammed his crow-bar, so constantly did the
+charming vision of her piquant features shut out
+all else.</p>
+
+<p>And all the time he was worrying, too. He
+thought of snakes biting her distractingly pretty
+ankles; he thought of wood-ticks and of her
+snowy neck; of scorpions and of the delicate little
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>How on earth was he ever going to endure the
+strain if already, in these few hours, his anxiety
+about her welfare was assuming such deep and
+portentous proportions! How was he going to
+stand the worry until she was safe in the snakeless,
+tickless North again!</p>
+
+<p>She couldn't remain here! She must go North.
+His mind seemed already tottering under its new
+and constantly increasing load of responsibility;
+and he dug away fiercely with his bar, making
+twice as many holes as he had meant to.</p>
+
+<p>For he had suddenly determined to be done with
+the job and get her into some safe place, and he<span class="pagenumsmall">[310]</span>
+meant to set off a charge of dynamite that would
+do the business without fail.</p>
+
+<p>Charging and tamping the holes, he used caution,
+even in spite of his increasing impatience to
+return and see how she was; arguing very justly
+with himself that if he blew himself up he couldn't
+very well learn how she was.</p>
+
+<p>So he attached the wires very carefully, made
+his connections, picked up the big reel and the
+remainder of his tools, and walked toward the distant
+tents, unreeling his wire as he moved along.</p>
+
+<p>She was making soup, but she heard the jangle
+of his equipment, sprang to her feet, and ran out
+to meet him.</p>
+
+<p>He let fall everything and held out both hands.
+In them she laid her own.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so glad to see you!" he said warmly. "I'm
+so thankful that you're all right!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm so glad you came back," she said frankly.
+"I have been most uneasy about you."</p>
+
+<p>"I've been very anxious, too," he said. Then,
+drawing an unfeigned sigh of relief: "It does
+seem good to get back again!" He had been away
+nearly half an hour.</p>
+
+<p>She examined the wire and the battery gingerly,
+asking him innumerable questions about it.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose," she ended, "that it will be<span class="pagenumsmall">[311]</span>
+safe for you to set off the charge from this
+camp?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, perfectly," he nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," she said, half to herself, "we'll
+both be blown up if it isn't safe. And that is
+<i>something</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>And she came up very close when he said he
+was ready to fire, and laid her hand on his arm.
+The hand was steady enough. But when he
+glanced at her he saw how white she had become.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Jean!" he said gently. "Are you frightened?"</p>
+
+<p>"No.... I won't mind it if I may stand
+rather near you." And she closed her eyes and
+placed both hands over her ears.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think I'd fire this charge," he demanded
+warmly, "if there was the slightest possible
+danger to <i>you</i>? Take down your hands and
+listen."</p>
+
+<p>Her closed eyelids quivered: "We'll both&mdash;there
+won't be anything left of either of us if anything
+does happen," she said tremulously. "I
+am not afraid.... Only tell me when to close
+my ears."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you really think there is danger?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her standing there, pale, plucky,<span class="pagenumsmall">[312]</span>
+eyes tightly shut, her pretty fingers resting lightly
+on her ears.</p>
+
+<p>He said: "Would you think me crazy if I tell
+you something?"</p>
+
+<p>"W-What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Would you think me insane, Jean?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think I would."</p>
+
+<p>"You wouldn't consider me utterly mad?"</p>
+
+<p>"N-no."</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;<i>what</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, I wouldn't consider you mad&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;<i>what</i>?" he persisted.</p>
+
+<p>And after a moment her pallor was tinted with
+a delicate rose.</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;<i>what</i>?" he insisted again.</p>
+
+<p>"No&mdash;Jim," she answered under breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Then&mdash;close your ears, Jean, dear."</p>
+
+<p>She closed them; his arm encircled her waist.
+She bore it nobly.</p>
+
+<p>"You may fire when you are ready&mdash;James!"
+she said faintly.</p>
+
+<p>A thunder-clap answered her; the Causeway
+seemed to spring up under their feet; the world
+reeled.</p>
+
+<p>Presently she heard his voice sounding calmly:
+"Are you all right, Jean?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes.... I was thinking of you&mdash;as long as<span class="pagenumsmall">[313]</span>
+I could think at all. I was ready to go&mdash;anywhere&mdash;with
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"I have been ready for that," he said unsteadily,
+"from the moment I heard your voice. But
+it is&mdash;is wonderful of <i>you</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>She opened her blue eyes, dreamily looking up
+into his. Then the colour surged into her face.</p>
+
+<p>"If&mdash;if you had spoken to me across the aisle,"
+she said, "it would have begun even sooner, I
+think.... Because I can't imagine myself not&mdash;caring
+for you."</p>
+
+<p>He took her into his arms:</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry," he said, "I'll make a place for
+you in the world, even if that Maltese cross means
+nothing."</p>
+
+<p>She looked into his eyes fearlessly: "I know
+you will," she said.</p>
+
+<p>Then he kissed her and she put both arms
+around his neck and offered her fresh, young lips
+again.<span class="pagenumsmall">[314]</span></p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="figcenter" style="width: 330px;">
+<img src="images/ch31.jpg" width="330" height="490" alt="" title="">
+</div>
+
+<h2>XXXI</h2>
+
+<p>Toward sunset he came to, partially,
+passed his hand across his enchanted
+eyes, and rose from the hammock beside
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Dearest," he said, "that swamp ought to be
+partly drained by this time. Suppose we walk
+over before dinner and take a look?"</p>
+
+<p>Still confused by the sweetness of her dream,
+she sat up, and he drew her to her feet, where she
+stood twisting up her beautiful hair, half smiling,
+shy, adorable.</p>
+
+<p>Then together they walked slowly out along
+the Causeway, so absorbed in each other that already
+they had forgotten the explosion, and even
+the Maltese cross itself.</p>
+
+<p>It was only when they were halted by the great<span class="pagenumsmall">[315]</span>
+gap in the Causeway that Jean Sandys glanced
+to the left, over a vast bed of shining mud, where
+before blue wavelets had lapped the base of the
+Causeway.</p>
+
+<p>Then her vaguely smiling eyes flew wide open;
+she caught her lover's arm in an excited clasp.</p>
+
+<p>"O Jim!" she exclaimed. "Look! Look! It
+is true! It is true! <i>Look</i> at the bed of the lake!"</p>
+
+<p>They stood trembling and staring at the low,
+squat, windowless coquina house, reeking with the
+silt of centuries, crawling with stranded water
+creatures.</p>
+
+<p>The stones that had blocked the door had fallen
+before the shock of the dynamite.</p>
+
+<p>"Good God!" he whispered. "<i>Do you see what
+is inside?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>But Jean Sandys, calmly looking untold wealth
+in its glittering face, sighed, smiled, and turned
+her blue gaze on her lover, finding in his eyes the
+only miracle that now had power to hold her undivided
+attention.</p>
+
+<p>For it is that way with some girls.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But the novelist, unable to endure a dose of his
+own technique, could no longer control his impatience:<span class="pagenumsmall">[316]</span></p>
+
+<p>"What in God's name was there in that stone
+house!" he burst out.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, Lord!" muttered Stafford, "it is two
+hours after midnight."</p>
+
+<p>He rose, bent over the girl's hand, and kissed
+the emerald on the third finger.</p>
+
+<p>Figure after figure, tall, shadowy, leisurely followed
+his example, while her little hand lay listlessly
+on the silken cushions and her dreaming
+eyes seemed to see nobody.</p>
+
+<p>Duane and I remained for a while seated, then
+in silence,&mdash;which Athalie finally broke for us:</p>
+
+<p>"Patience," she said, "is the art of hoping....
+Good-night."</p>
+
+<p>I rose; she looked up at me, lifted her slim arm
+and placed the palm of her hand against my
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>And so I took my leave; thinking.</p>
+
+<hr class="chapter">
+
+<div class="topbox">
+<p class="h3">Novels by Robert W. Chambers</p>
+
+<div class="centered">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="Novels by Robert W. Chambers">
+<tr><td class="tdl">Quick Action</td><td class="tdl">The Gay Rebellion</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Blue-Bird Weather</td><td class="tdl">The Streets of Ascalon</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Japonette</td><td class="tdl">The Common Law</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Adventures of a Modest Man</td><td class="tdl">Ailsa Paige</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Danger Mark</td><td class="tdl">The Green Mouse</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Special Messenger</td><td class="tdl">Iole</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Firing Line</td><td class="tdl">The Reckoning</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Younger Set</td><td class="tdl">The Maid-at-Arms</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Fighting Chance</td><td class="tdl">Cardigan</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Some Ladies in Haste</td><td class="tdl">The Haunts of Men</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Tree of Heaven</td><td class="tdl">The Mystery of Choice</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Tracer of Lost Persons</td><td class="tdl">The Cambric Mask</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">A Young Man in a Hurry</td><td class="tdl">The Maker of Moons</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Lorraine</td><td class="tdl">The King in Yellow</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Maids of Paradise</td><td class="tdl">In Search of the Unknown</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Ashes of Empire</td><td class="tdl">The Conspirators</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Red Republic</td><td class="tdl">A King and a Few Dukes</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">Outsiders</td><td class="tdl">In the Quarter</td></tr>
+<tr><td class="tdl">The Business of Life</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+</div>
+
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Quick Action, by Robert W. Chambers
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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@@ -0,0 +1,8810 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Quick Action, by Robert W. Chambers
+
+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: Quick Action
+
+Author: Robert W. Chambers
+
+Illustrator: Edmund Frederick
+
+Release Date: September 25, 2011 [EBook #37528]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUICK ACTION ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Suzanne Shell, Matthew Wheaton and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ QUICK ACTION
+
+ [Illustration: "'Are you preaching?' asked Athalie, raising her eyes
+ from the Green God."]
+
+
+
+
+ QUICK ACTION
+
+ _By_
+
+ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS
+
+
+ ILLUSTRATED BY
+
+ EDMUND FREDERICK
+
+ D. APPLETON AND COMPANY
+ NEW YORK AND LONDON: MCMXIV
+
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1914, BY
+
+ ROBERT W. CHAMBERS
+
+ Copyright, 1913, by Harper's Bazaar, Inc.
+ Copyright, 1914, by The Star Co.
+
+ Printed in the United States of America
+
+
+ TO
+ PENELOPE SEARS
+ DEBUTANTE
+
+ _To rhyme your name
+ With something lovely, fresh and young,
+ And sing the same
+ In measures heretofore unsung,
+ Is far beyond me, I'm afraid;
+ I'll not attempt it, dearest maid._
+
+ _No, not in verse,
+ Synthetic, stately, classic, chaste,
+ Shall I rehearse--
+ Although in perfectly good taste--
+ A catalogue of every grace
+ That you inherit from your race._
+
+ _Gracious and kind,
+ The gods your beauty gave to you,
+ And with a mind
+ These same kind gods endowed you, too;
+ That charming union is, I fear,
+ Somewhat uncommon on this sphere._
+
+ _I have no doubt
+ That scores of poets chant your fame;
+ No doubt, about
+ A million suitors press their claim;
+ And fashion, elegance and wit
+ Are at your feet inclined to sit._
+
+ _Penelope,
+ The fire-light flickers to and fro:
+ In you I see
+ The winsome child I used to know--
+ My little Maiden of Romance
+ Still whirling in your Shadow Dance._
+
+ _Though woman-grown,
+ To my unreconciled surprise
+ I gladly own
+ The same light lies within your eyes--
+ The same sweet candour which beguiled
+ Your rhymster when you were a child._
+
+ _And so I come,
+ With limping verse to you again,
+ Amid the hum
+ Of that young world wherein you reign--
+ Only a moment to appear
+ And say: "Your rhymster loves you, dear."_
+
+ _R. W. C._
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE
+
+
+Always animated by a desire to contribute in a small way toward
+scientific investigation, the author offers this humble volume to a more
+serious audience than he has so far ventured to address.
+
+For all those who have outgrown the superficial amusement of mere
+fiction this volume, replete with purpose, is written in hopes that it
+may stimulate students to original research in certain obscure realms of
+science, the borderlands of which, hitherto, have been scarcely crossed.
+
+There is perhaps no division of science as important, none so little
+understood, as the science of Crystal Gazing.
+
+A vast field of individual research opens before the earnest, patient,
+and sober minded investigator who shall study the subject and discover
+those occult laws which govern the intimate relations between crystals,
+playing cards, cigarettes, soiled pink wrappers, and the Police.
+
+
+ Amor nihil est celerius!
+
+
+
+
+ LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ "'Are you preaching?' asked Athalie, raising her eyes from the
+ green god"
+
+ "They inspected each other, apparently bereft of the power of
+ speech"
+
+ "The magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady Alene"
+
+ "'I am in possession of the dog and you merely claim
+ possession'"
+
+
+
+
+QUICK ACTION
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+There was a new crescent moon in the west which, with the star above it,
+made an agreeable oriental combination.
+
+In the haze over bay and river enough rose and purple remained to veil
+the awakening glitter of the monstrous city sprawling supine between
+river, sound, and sea. And its incessant monotone pulsated, groaning,
+dying, ceaseless, interminable in the light-shot depths of its darkening
+streets.
+
+The sky-drawing-room windows of the Countess Athalie were all wide open,
+but the only light in the room came from a crystal sphere poised on a
+tripod. It had the quality and lustre of moon-light, and we had never
+been able to find out its source, for no electric wires were visible,
+and one could move the tripod about the room.
+
+The crystal sphere itself appeared to be luminous, yet it remained
+perfectly transparent, whatever the source of its silvery
+phosphorescence.
+
+At any rate, it was the only light in the room except the dulled glimmer
+of our cigarettes, and its mild, mysterious light enabled us to see one
+another as through a glass darkly.
+
+There were a number of men there that evening. I don't remember, now,
+who they all were. Some had dined early; others, during the evening,
+strolled away into the city to dine somewhere or other, drifting back
+afterward for coffee and sweetmeats and cigarettes in the
+sky-drawing-room of the Countess Athalie.
+
+As usual the girl was curled up by the open window among her silken
+cushions, one smooth little gem-laden hand playing with the green jade
+god, her still dark eyes, which slanted a little, fixed dreamily upon
+infinite distance--or so it always seemed to us.
+
+Through the rusty and corrugated arabesques of the iron balcony she
+could see, if she chose, the yellow flare where Sixth Avenue crossed
+the shabby street to the eastward. Beyond that, and parallel, a brighter
+glow marked Broadway. Further east street lamps stretched away into
+converging perspective, which vanished to a point in the faint nebular
+radiance above the East River.
+
+All this the Countess Athalie could see if she chose. Perhaps she did
+see it. We never seemed to know just what she was looking at even when
+she turned her dark eyes on us or on her crystal sphere cradled upon its
+slender tripod.
+
+But the sphere seemed to understand, for sometimes, under her still
+gaze, it clouded magnificently like a black opal--another thing we never
+understood, and therefore made light of.
+
+"They have placed policemen before several houses on this street,"
+remarked the Countess Athalie.
+
+Stafford, tall and slim in his evening dress, relieved her of her coffee
+cup.
+
+"Has anybody bothered you?" he asked.
+
+"Not yet."
+
+Young Duane picked up a pack of cards at his elbow and shuffled them,
+languidly.
+
+"Where is the Ace of Diamonds, Athalie?" he asked.
+
+"Any card you try to draw will be the Ace of Diamonds," replied the girl
+indifferently.
+
+"Can't I escape drawing it?"
+
+"No."
+
+We all turned and looked at Duane. He quickly spread the pack,
+fan-shaped, backs up. After a moment's choosing he drew a card, looked
+at it, held it up for us to see. It was the Ace of Diamonds.
+
+"Would you mind trying that again, Athalie?" I asked. And Duane replaced
+the card and shuffled the pack.
+
+"But it's gone, now," said the girl.
+
+"I replaced it in the pack," explained Duane.
+
+"No, you gave it to me," she said.
+
+We all smiled. Duane searched through the pack in his hands, once,
+twice; then he laughed. The girl held up one empty hand. Then, somehow
+or other, there was the Ace of Diamonds between her delicate little
+thumb and forefinger.
+
+She held it a moment or two for our inspection; then, curving her wrist,
+sent it scaling out into the darkness. It soared away above the street,
+tipped up, and describing an aerial ellipse, returned straight to the
+balcony where she caught it in her fingers.
+
+Twice she did this; but the third time, high in the air, the card burst
+into violet flame and vanished.
+
+"That," remarked Stafford, "is one thing which I wish to learn how to
+do."
+
+"Two hundred dollars," said the Countess Athalie, "--in two lessons;
+also, your word of honour."
+
+"Monday," nodded Stafford, taking out a note-book and making a
+memorandum, "--at five in the afternoon."
+
+"Monday and Wednesday at five," said the girl, lighting a cigarette and
+gazing dreamily at nothing.
+
+From somewhere in the room came a voice.
+
+"Did they ever catch that crook, Athalie?"
+
+"Which?"
+
+"The Fifty-ninth Street safe-blower?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Did _you_ find him?"
+
+She nodded.
+
+"How? In your crystal?" I asked.
+
+"Yes, he was there."
+
+"It's odd," mused Duane, "that you can never do anything of advantage to
+yourself by gazing into your crystal."
+
+"It's the invariable limit to clairvoyance," she remarked.
+
+"A sort of penalty for being super-gifted," added Stafford.
+
+"Perhaps.... We can't help ourselves."
+
+"It's too bad," I volunteered.
+
+"Oh, I don't care," she said, with a slight shrug of her pretty
+shoulders.
+
+"Come," said somebody, teasingly, "wouldn't you like to know how soon
+you are going to fall in love, and with whom?"
+
+She laughed, dropped her cigarette into a silver bowl, stretched her
+arms above her head, straightened her slender figure, turned her head
+and looked at us.
+
+"No," she said, "I do not wish to know. Light is swift; Thought is
+swifter; but Love is the swiftest thing in Life, and if it is now
+travelling toward me, it will strike me soon enough to suit me."
+
+Stafford leaned forward and arranged the cushions for her; she sank back
+among them, her dark eyes still on us.
+
+"Hours are slow," she said; "years are slower, but the slowest thing in
+Life is Love. If it is now travelling toward me, it will reach me soon
+enough to suit me."
+
+"I," said Duane, "prefer quick action, O Athalie, the Beautiful!"
+
+"Athalie, lovely and incomparable," said Stafford, "I, also, prefer
+quick action."
+
+"Play _Scheherazade_ for us, Athalie," I said, "else we slay you with
+our compliments."
+
+A voice or two from distant corners repeated the menace. A match flared
+and a fresh cigarette glowed faintly.
+
+Somebody brought the tripod with its crystal sphere and set it down in
+the middle of the room. Its mild rays fell on the marble basin of the
+tiny fountain,--Duane's offering. The goldfish which I had given her
+were floating there fast asleep.
+
+When we had placed sweetmeats and cigarettes convenient for her, we all,
+in turn, with circumstance and ceremony, bent over her left hand where
+it rested listlessly among the cushions, saluting the emerald on her
+third finger with our lips.
+
+Then the dim circle closed around her, nearer.
+
+"Of all the visions which have passed before your eyes within the depths
+of that crystal globe," said Duane, "--of all the histories of men and
+women which, unsuspected by them, you have witnessed, seated here in
+this silent, silk-hung place, we desire to hear only those in which Fate
+has been swiftest, Opportunity a loosened arrow, Destiny a flash of
+lightning."
+
+"But the victims of quick action must be nameless, except as I choose to
+mask them," she said, looking dreamily into her crystal.
+
+After a moment's silence Duane said in a low voice:
+
+"Does anybody notice the odour of orange blossoms?"
+
+We all noticed the fragrance.
+
+"I seem to catch a whiff of the sea, also," ventured Stafford. "Am I
+right?"
+
+"Yes," she nodded, "you will notice the odour of the semi-tropics, even
+if you miss the point of everything I tell you."
+
+"In other words," said I, "we are but a material bunch, Athalie, and may
+be addressed and amused only through our physical senses. Very well:
+transpose from the spiritual for us if you please a little story of
+quick action which has happened here in the crystal under your matchless
+eyes!"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+With her silver tongs she selected a sweetmeat. When it had melted in
+her sweeter mouth, she lighted a cigarette, saluted us with a gay little
+gesture and smilingly began:
+
+"Don't ask me how I know what these people said; that is _my_ concern,
+not yours. Don't ask me how I know what unspoken thoughts animated these
+people; that is _my_ affair. Nor how I seem to be perfectly acquainted
+with their past histories; for _that_ is part of my profession."
+
+"And still the wonder grew," commented the novelist tritely, "that one
+small head could carry all she knew!"
+
+"Why," asked Stafford, "do you refuse to reveal your secret? Do you no
+longer trust us, Athalie?"
+
+She answered: "_Comment pretendons-nous qu'un autre garde notre secret,
+si nous n'avons pas pu le garder nous-meme?_"
+
+Nobody replied.
+
+"Now," she said, laughingly, "I will tell you all that I know about the
+_Orange Puppy_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Plans for her first debut began before her birth. When it became
+reasonably certain that she was destined to decorate the earth, she was
+entered on the waiting lists of two schools--The Dinglenook School for
+Boys, and The Idlebrook Institute for Young Ladies--her parents taking
+no chances, but playing both ends coming and going.
+
+When ultimately she made her first earthly appearance, and it was
+apparent that she was destined to embellish the planet in the guise of a
+girl, the process of grooming her for her second debut, some eighteen
+years in the future, began. She lived in sanitary and sterilized
+seclusion, eating by the ounce, sleeping through accurately measured
+minutes, every atom of her anatomy inspected daily, every pore of her
+skin explored, every garment she wore weighed, every respiration, pulse
+beat, and fluctuation of bodily temperature carefully noted and
+discussed.
+
+When she appeared her hair was black. After she shed this, it came in
+red; when she was eight her hair was coppery, lashes black, eyes blue,
+and her skin snow and wild-strawberry tints in agreeably delicate
+nuances. Several millions were set aside to grow up with her and for
+her. Also, the list of foreign and aristocratic babyhood was scanned and
+several dozen possibilities checked off--the list running from the
+progeny of down-and-out monarchs with a sporting chance for a crown, to
+the more solid infant aristocracy of Britain.
+
+At the age of nine, the only symptom of intellect that had yet appeared
+in her was a superbly developed temper. That year she eluded a governess
+and two trained nurses in the park, and was discovered playing with some
+unsterilized children near the duck-pond, both hands full of slime and
+pollywogs.
+
+It was the only crack in the routine through which she ever crawled.
+Lessons daily in riding, driving, dancing, fencing, gymnastics, squash,
+tennis, skating, plugged every avenue of escape between morning school
+and evening sleep, after a mental bath in sterilized literature. Once,
+out of the window she saw a fire. This event, with several runaways on
+the bridle-path, included the sensations of her life up to her release
+from special instructors, and her entry into Idlebrook Institute.
+
+Here she did all she could to misbehave in a blind and instinctive
+fashion, but opportunities were pitiably few; and by the time she had
+graduated, honest deviltry seemed to have been starved out of her; and a
+half year's finishing abroad apparently eliminated it, leaving only a
+half-confused desire to be let alone. But solitude was the luxury always
+denied her.
+
+Unlike the usual debutante, who is a social veteran two years before her
+presentation, and who at eighteen lacks no experience except
+intellectual, Miss Cassillis had become neither a judge of champagne nor
+an expert in the various cabaret steps popular at country houses and the
+more exclusive dives.
+
+"Mother," she said calmly, on her eighteenth birthday, "do you know that
+I am known among my associates as a dead one?" At which that fat and
+hard-eyed matron laughed, surveying her symmetrical daughter with grim
+content.
+
+"Let me tell you something," she said. "America, socially, is only one
+vast cabaret, mostly consisting of performers. The spectators are few.
+You're one. Conditions are reversed across the water; the audience is
+in the majority.... How do you like young Willowmere?"
+
+The girl replied that she liked Lord Willowmere. She might have added
+that she was prepared to like anything in trousers that would give her a
+few hours off.
+
+"Do you think," said her mother, "you can be trusted to play in the
+social cabaret all next winter, and then marry Willowmere?"
+
+Said Cecil: "I am perfectly ready to marry anybody before luncheon, if
+you will let me."
+
+"I do not wish you to feel _that_ way."
+
+"Mother, I _do_! All I want is to be let alone long enough to learn
+something for myself."
+
+"What do you not know? What have you _not_ learned? What accomplishment
+do you lack, little daughter? What is it you wish?"
+
+The girl glanced out of the window. A young and extremely well-built man
+went striding down the avenue about his business. He looked a little
+like a man she had seen playing ball on the Harvard team a year ago. She
+sighed unconsciously.
+
+"I've learned about everything there is to learn, I suppose....
+Except--where do men go when they walk so busily about their business?"
+
+"Down town," said her mother, laughing.
+
+"What do they do there?"
+
+"A million things concerning millions."
+
+"But I don't see how there's anything left for them to do after their
+education is completed. What is there left for me to do, except to marry
+and have a few children?"
+
+"What do you want to do?"
+
+"Nothing.... I'd like to have something to do which would make me look
+busy and make me walk rather fast--like that young man who was hurrying
+down town all by himself. Then I'd like to be let alone while I'm busy
+with my own affairs."
+
+"When you marry Willowmere you'll be busy enough." She might have added:
+"And lonely enough."
+
+"I'll be occupied in telling others how to busy themselves with my
+affairs. But there won't be anything for _me_ to do, will there?"
+
+"Yes, dear child; it will be one steady fight to better a good position.
+It will afford you constant exercise."
+
+The tall young girl bit her lip and shook her pretty head in silence.
+She felt instinctively that she knew how to do that. But that was not
+the exercise she wanted. She looked out into the February sunshine and
+saw the blue shadows on the snow and the sidewalks dark and wet, and
+the little gutter arabs throwing snow-balls, and a yellow pup barking
+blissfully. And, apropos of nothing at all, she suddenly remembered how
+she had run away when she was nine; and a rush of blind desire surged
+within her. What it meant she did not know, did not trouble to consider,
+but it stirred her until the soft fire burned in her cheeks, and left
+her twisting her white fingers, lips parted, staring across the wintry
+park into the blue tracery of trees. To Miss Cassillis adolescence came
+late.
+
+They sang _Le Donne Curiose_ at the opera that evening; she sat in her
+father's box; numbers of youthful, sleek-headed, white-shirted young men
+came between the acts. She talked to all with the ardor of the young and
+unsatisfied; and, mentally and spiritually still unsatisfied, buried in
+fur, she was whirled back through snowy streets to the great grey
+mansion of her nativity, and the silence of her white-hung chamber.
+
+All through February the preparatory regime continued, with preliminary
+canters at theatre and opera, informal party practice, and trial
+dinners. Always she gave herself completely to every moment with a
+wistful and unquenched faith, eager novice in her quest of what was
+lacking in her life; ardent enthusiast in her restless searching for
+the remedy. And, unsatisfied, lingering mentally by the door of Chance,
+lest she miss somewhere the magic that satisfies and quiets--lest the
+gates of Opportunity swing open after she had turned away--reluctantly
+she returned to the companionship of her own solitary mind and
+undeveloped soul, and sat down to starve with them in spirit, wondering
+wherein might lie the reason for this new hunger that assailed her, mind
+and body.
+
+She ran up her private flag the next winter, amid a thousand other gay
+and flaunting colours breaking out all over town. The newspapers roared
+a salute to the wealthiest debutante; and an enthusiastic press, not yet
+housebroken but agile with much exercise in leaping and fawning, leaped
+now about the debutante's slippers, grinning, slavering and panting.
+Later, led by instinct and its Celebrated Nose, it bounded toward young
+Lord Willowmere, jumped and fawned about him, slightly soiling him,
+until in midwinter the engagement it had announced was corroborated, and
+a million shop-girls and old women were in a furor.
+
+He was a ruddy-faced young man who wore his bowler hat toward the back
+of his head, a small, pointed moustache, and who walked always as
+though he were shod in riding boots.
+
+He would have made a healthy studgroom for any gentleman's stable.
+Person and intellect were always thoroughly scrubbed as with
+saddle-soap. Had he been able to afford it, his stables would have been
+second to none in England.
+
+Soon he would be able to afford it.
+
+To his intimates, including his fiancee, he was known as "Stirrups." All
+day long he was in the saddle or on the box, every evening at the
+Cataract Club or at a cabaret. Between times he called upon Miss
+Cassillis--usually finding her out. When he found her not at home, he
+called elsewhere, very casually.
+
+Two continents were deeply stirred over the impending alliance.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+Young Jones, in wildest Florida, had never heard of it or of her, or of
+her income. His own fortune amounted to six hundred dollars, and he had
+been born in Brooklyn, and what his salary might be only he and the
+Smithsonian Institution knew.
+
+He was an industrious young man, no better than you or I, accepting
+thankfully every opportunity for mischief which the Dead Lake region
+afforded. No opportunities of that kind ever presenting themselves in
+that region, he went once a month to Miami in the _Orange Puppy_, and
+drank too many swizzles and so forth, et cetera.
+
+Having accomplished this, he returned to the wharf, put the _Orange
+Puppy_ into commission, hoisted sail, and squared away for Matanzas
+Inlet, finding himself too weak-minded to go home by a more direct
+route.
+
+He had been on his monthly pilgrimage to Miami, and was homeward bound
+noisily, using his auxiliary power so that silence should not descend
+upon him too abruptly. He had been, for half an hour now, immersed in a
+species of solitaire known as The Idiot's Delight, when he caught
+himself cheating himself, and indignantly scattered the pack to the four
+winds--three of which, however, were not blowing. One card, the deuce of
+hearts, fluttered seaward like a white butterfly. Beyond it he caught
+sight of another white speck, shining like a gull's breast.
+
+It was a big yacht steaming in from the open sea; and her bill of lading
+included Miss Cassillis and Willowmere. But Jones could not know that.
+So he merely blinked at the distant _Chihuahua_, yawned, flipped the
+last card overboard, and swung the _Orange Puppy_ into the inlet, which
+brimmed rather peacefully, the tide being nearly at flood.
+
+Far away on the deck of the _Chihuahua_ the quick-fire racket of Jones's
+auxiliary was amazingly audible. Miss Cassillis, from her deck-chair,
+could see the _Orange Puppy_, a fleck of glimmering white across a
+sapphire sea. How was she to divine that one Delancy Jones was aboard of
+her? All she saw when the two boats came near each other was a noisy
+little craft progressing toward the lagoon, emitting an earsplitting
+racket; and a tall, lank young man clad in flannels lounging at the
+tiller and smoking a cigarette.
+
+Around her on the snowy deck were disposed the guests of her parents,
+mostly corpulent, swizzles at every elbow, gracefully relaxing after a
+morning devoted to arduous idleness. The Victor on deck, which had
+furnished the incentive to her turkey-trotting with Lord Willowmere, was
+still exuding a syncopated melody. Across the water, Jones heard it and
+stood looking at the great yacht as the _Orange Puppy_ kicked her way
+through the intensely blue water under an azure sky.
+
+Willowmere lounged over to the rail and gazed wearily at the sand dunes
+and palmettos. Presently Miss Cassillis slipped from her deck-chair to
+her white-shod feet, and walked over to where he stood. He said
+something about the possibilities of "havin' a bit of shootin'," with a
+vague wave of his highly-coloured hand toward the palmetto forests
+beyond the lagoon.
+
+If the girl heard him she made no comment. After a while, as the
+distance between the _Chihuahua_ and the _Orange Puppy_ lengthened, she
+levelled her sea glasses at the latter craft, and found that the young
+man at the helm was also examining her through his binoculars.
+
+While she inspected him, several unrelated ideas passed through her
+head; she thought he was very much sunburned and that his hatless head
+was attractive, with its short yellow hair crisped by the sun. Without
+any particular reason, apparently, she recollected a young man she had
+seen the winter before, striding down the wintry avenue about his
+business. He might have been this young man for all she knew. Like the
+other, this one wore yellow hair. Then, with no logic in the sequence of
+her thoughts, suddenly the memory of how she had run away when she was
+nine years old set her pulses beating, filling her heart with the
+strange, wistful, thrilling, overwhelming longing which she had supposed
+would never again assail her, now that she was engaged to be married.
+And once more the soft fire burned in her cheeks.
+
+"Stirrups," she said, scarcely knowing what she was saying, "I don't
+think I'll marry you after all. It's just occurred to me."
+
+"Oh, I say!" protested Willowmere languidly, never for a moment
+mistrusting that the point of her remark was buried in some species of
+American humour. He always submitted to American humour. There was
+nothing else to do, except to understand it.
+
+"Stirrups, dear?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"You're very pink and healthy, aren't you?"
+
+He shrugged his accustomed shrug of resignation.
+
+"Oh, I say--come, now----" he murmured, lighting a cigarette.
+
+"What a horrid smash there would be if I didn't make good, wouldn't
+there, Stirrups?" She mused, her blue eyes resting on him, too coldly.
+
+"Rather," he replied, comfortably settling his arms on the rail.
+
+"It might happen, you know. Suppose I fell overboard?"
+
+"Fish you out, ducky."
+
+"Suppose I--ran away?"
+
+"Ow."
+
+"What would you do, Stirrups? Why, you'd go back to town and try to
+pick another winner. Wouldn't you?"
+
+He laughed.
+
+"Naturally that is what you would do, isn't it?" She considered him
+curiously for a moment, then smiled. "How funny!" she said, almost
+breathlessly.
+
+"Rather," he murmured, and flicked his cigarette overboard.
+
+The _Orange Puppy_ had disappeared beyond the thicket of palmettos
+across the point. The air was very warm and still.
+
+Her father waddled forward presently, wearing the impressive summer
+regalia of a commodore in the Siwanois Yacht Club. His daughter's blue
+eyes rested on the portly waistline of her parent--then on his fluffy
+chop-whiskers. A vacant, hunted look came into her eyes.
+
+"Father," she said almost listlessly, "I'm going to run away again."
+
+"When do you start?" inquired that facetious man.
+
+"Now, I think. What is there over there?"--turning her face again toward
+the distant lagoon, with its endless forests of water-oak, cedar, and
+palmetto.
+
+"Over there," said her father, "reside several species of snakes and
+alligators. Also other reptiles, a number of birds, and animals, and
+much microbic mud."
+
+She bit her lip. "I see," she said, nodding.
+
+Willowmere said: "We should find some shootin' along the lagoon. Look at
+the ducks."
+
+Mr. Cassillis yawned; he had eaten too heavily of duck to be interested.
+Very thoughtfully he presented himself with a cigar, turned it over and
+over between his soft fingers, and yawned again. Then, nodding solemnly
+as though in emphasis of a profound idea of which he had just been
+happily delivered, he waddled slowly back along the deck.
+
+His daughter looked after him until he disappeared; gazed around her at
+the dawdling assortment of guests aboard, then lifted her quiet eyes to
+Willowmere.
+
+"Ducky," she said, "I can't stand it. I'm going to run away."
+
+"Come on, then," he said, linking his arm in hers.
+
+The Victor still exuded the Tango.
+
+She hesitated. Then freeing herself:
+
+"Oh, not with you, Stirrups! I wish to go away somewhere entirely alone.
+Could you understand?" she added wistfully.
+
+He stifled a yawn. American humour bored him excessively.
+
+"You'll be back in a day or two?" he inquired. And laughed violently
+when the subtlety of his own wit struck him.
+
+"In a day or two or not at all. Good-bye, Stirrups."
+
+"Bye."
+
+The sun blazed on her coppery hair and on the white skin that never
+burned, as she walked slowly across the yacht's deck and disappeared
+below.
+
+While she was writing in her cabin, the _Chihuahua_ dropped her anchors.
+Miss Cassillis listened to the piping, the thud of feet on deck, the
+rattle and distant sound of voices. Then she continued her note:
+
+ I merely desire to run away. I don't know why, Mother, dear.
+ But the longing to bolt has been incubating for many years. And
+ now it's too strong to resist. I don't quite understand how it
+ came to a crisis on deck just now, but I looked at Stirrups,
+ whose skin is too pink, and at Father, who had lunched too
+ sumptuously, and at the people on deck, all digesting in a
+ row--and then at the green woods on shore, and the strip of
+ white where a fairy surf was piling up foam into magic castles
+ and snowy battlements, ephemeral, exquisite. And all at once
+ it came over me that I must go.
+
+ Don't be alarmed. I shall provision a deck canoe, take a tent,
+ some rugs and books, and paddle into that lagoon. If you will
+ just let me alone for two or three days, I promise I'll return
+ safe and sound, and satisfied. For something has got to be done
+ in regard to that longing of mine. But really, I think that if
+ you and Father _won't_ understand, and if you send snooping
+ people after me, I won't come back at all, and I'll never marry
+ Stirrups. Please understand me, Mother, dear.
+
+ CECIL.
+
+This effusion she pinned to her pillow, then rang for the steward and
+ordered the canoe to be brought alongside, provisioned for a three days'
+shooting trip.
+
+So open, frank, and guileless were her orders that nobody who took them
+suspected anything unusual; and in the full heat and glare of the
+afternoon siesta, when parents, fiance, and assorted guests were all
+asleep and in full process of digestion and the crew of the _Chihuahua_
+was drowsing from stem to stern, a brace of sailors innocently connived
+at her escape, aided her into the canoe, and, doubting nothing, watched
+her paddle away through the inlet, and into the distant lagoon, which
+lay sparkling in golden and turquoise tints, set with palms like a
+stupid picture in a child's geography.
+
+Later, the _Chihuahua_ fired a frantic gun. Later still, two boats left
+the yacht, commanded respectively by one angry parent and one fiance,
+profoundly bored.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+When Miss Cassillis heard the gun, it sounded very far away. But it
+irritated as well as scared her. She pushed the canoe energetically
+through a screen of foliage overhanging the bank of the lagoon, it being
+merely her immediate instinct to hide herself.
+
+To her surprise and pleasure, she discovered herself in a narrow, deep
+lead, which had been entirely concealed by the leaves, and which wound
+away through an illimitable vista of reeds, widening as she paddled
+forward, until it seemed like a glassy river bordered by live-oak,
+water-oak, pine, and palmetto, curving out into a flat and endless land
+of forests.
+
+Here was liberty at last! No pursuit need now be feared, for the
+entrance to this paradise which she had forced by a chance impulse
+could never be suspected by parent or fiance.
+
+A little breeze blew her hair and loosened it; silently her paddle
+dipped, swept astern in a swirl of bubbles, flashed dripping, and dipped
+again.
+
+Ahead of her a snake-bird slipped from a dead branch into the water; a
+cormorant perched on the whitened skeleton of a mango, made hideous
+efforts to swallow a mullet before her approach disorganized his
+manoeuvres.
+
+So silently the canoe stole along that the fat alligators, dozing in the
+saw-grass, dozed on until she stirred them purposely with a low tap of
+her paddle against the thwarts; then they rose, great lumbering bodies
+propped high on squatty legs, waddled swiftly to the bank's edge, and
+slid headlong into the water.
+
+Everywhere dragon-flies glittered over the saw-grass; wild ducks with
+golden eyes and heads like balls of brown plush swam leisurely out of
+the way; a few mallard, pretending to be frightened, splashed and
+clattered into flight, the sunlight jewelling the emerald heads of the
+drakes.
+
+"Wonderful, wonderful," her heart was singing to itself, while her
+enchanted eyes missed nothing--neither the feebly flying and strangely
+shaped, velvety black butterflies, the narrow wings of which were
+striped with violent yellow; nor the metallic blue and crestless jays
+that sat on saplings, watching her; nor the pelicans fishing with
+nature's orange and iridescent net in the shallows; nor the tall,
+slate-blue birds that marched in dignified retreat through the sedge,
+picking up their stilt-like legs with the precision of German
+foot-soldiers on parade.
+
+These and other phenomena made her drop her paddle at intervals and clap
+her hands softly in an ecstasy beyond mere exclamation. How restfully
+green was the world; how limpid the water; how royally blue the heavens!
+Listening, she could hear the soft stirring of palmetto fronds in the
+forests; the celestial song of a little bird that sat on a sparkle-berry
+bush, its delicate long-curved bill tilted skyward. Then the deep note
+of splendour flashed across the scheme of sound and colour as a crimson
+cardinal alighted near her, crest erect.
+
+But more wonderful than all was that at last, after eighteen years, she
+was utterly alone; and liberty was showering its inestimable gifts upon
+her in breathless prodigality--liberty to see with her own eyes and
+judge with her own senses; liberty to linger capriciously amid mental
+fancies, to move on impulsively to others; liberty to reflect unurged
+and unrestricted; liberty to choose, to reject, to ignore.
+
+[Illustration: "They inspected each other, apparently bereft of the
+power of speech."]
+
+Now and then a brilliant swimming snake filled her with interest and
+curiosity. Once, on a flat, low bush, she saw a dull, heavy,
+blunt-bodied serpent lying asleep in the sun like an old and swollen
+section of rubber hose. But when she ventured to touch the bush with her
+paddle, the snake reared high and yawned at her with jaws which seemed
+to be lined in white satin. Which fortunately made her uneasy, and she
+meddled no more with the Little Death of the southern swamps.
+
+She was now passing very close to the edge of the "hammock," where
+palmettos overhung the water; and as the cool, dim woodlands seemed to
+invite her, she looked about her leisurely for an agreeable landing
+place. There were plenty to choose from; and she selected a little sandy
+point under a red cedar tree, drove her canoe upon it, and calmly
+stepped ashore. And found herself looking into the countenance of Jones.
+
+For a full minute they inspected each other, apparently bereft of the
+power of speech.
+
+She said, finally: "About a year ago last February, did you happen to
+walk down Fifth Avenue--very busily? Did you?"
+
+It took him an appreciable time to concentrate for mental retrospection.
+
+"Yes," he said, "I did."
+
+"You were going down town, weren't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"On business?"
+
+"Yes," he said, bewildered.
+
+"I wonder," she said timidly, "if you would tell me what that business
+was? Do you mind? Because, really, I don't mean to be impertinent."
+
+He made an effort to reflect. It was difficult to reflect and to keep
+his eyes on her but also it is impolite to converse with anybody and
+look elsewhere. This he had been taught at his mother's knee--and
+sometimes over it.
+
+"My business down town," he said very slowly, "was with an officer of
+the Smithsonian Institution who had come on from Washington to see
+something which I had brought with me from Florida."
+
+"Would you mind telling me what it was you brought with you from
+Florida?" she asked wistfully.
+
+"No. It was malaria."
+
+"What!"
+
+"It was malaria," he repeated politely.
+
+"I--I don't see how you could--could show it to him," she murmured,
+perplexed.
+
+"Well, I'll tell you how I showed it to him. I made a little incision in
+my skin with a lancet; he made a smear or two----"
+
+"A--what?"
+
+"A smear--he put a few drops of my blood on some glass plates."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"To examine them under the microscope."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"So that he might determine what particular kind of malaria I had
+brought back with me."
+
+"Did he find out?" she asked, deeply interested.
+
+"Yes," said Jones, displaying mild symptoms of enthusiasm, "he
+discovered that I was fairly swarming with a perfectly new and
+undescribed species of bacillus. That bacillus," he added, with modest
+diffidence, "is now named after me."
+
+She looked at him very earnestly, dropped her blue eyes, raised them
+again after a moment:
+
+"It must be--pleasant--to give one's name to a bacillus."
+
+"It is an agreeable and exciting privilege. When I look into the culture
+tubes I feel an intimate relationship with those bacilli which I have
+never felt for any human being."
+
+"You--you are a----" she hesitated, with a slight but charming colour in
+her cheeks, "a naturalist, I presume?" And she added hastily, "No doubt
+you are a famous one, and my question must sound ignorant and absurd to
+you. But as I do not know your name----"
+
+"It is Jones," he said gloomily, "--and I am not famous."
+
+"Mine is Cecil Cassillis; and neither am I," she said. "But I thought
+when naturalists gave their names to butterflies and microbes that
+everything concerned immediately became celebrated."
+
+Jones smiled; and she thought his expression very attractive.
+
+"No," he said, "fame crowns the man who, celebrated only for his wealth,
+names hotels, tug-boats, and art galleries after himself. Thus are
+Immortals made."
+
+She laughed, standing there gracefully as a boy, her hands resting on
+her narrow hips. She laughed again. A tug-boat, a hotel, and a cigar
+were named after her father.
+
+"Fame is an extraordinary thing," she said. "But liberty is still more
+wonderful, isn't it?"
+
+"Liberty is only comparative," he said, smiling. "There is really no
+such thing as absolute freedom."
+
+"_You_ have all the freedom you desire, haven't you?"
+
+"Well--I enjoy the only approach to absolute liberty I ever heard of."
+
+"What kind of liberty is that?"
+
+"Freedom to think as I please, no matter what I'm obliged to do."
+
+"But you do what you please, too, don't you?"
+
+"Oh, no!" he said smiling. "The man was never born who did what he
+pleased."
+
+"Why not? You choose your own work, don't you?"
+
+"Yes. But once the liberty of choice is exercised, freedom ends. I
+choose my profession. There my liberty ends, because instantly I am
+enslaved by the conditions which make my choice a profession."
+
+She was deeply interested. A mossy log lay near them; she seated herself
+to listen, her elbow on her knee, and her chin cupped in her hand. But
+Jones became silent.
+
+"Were you not in that funny little boat that passed the inlet about
+three hours ago?" she asked.
+
+"The _Orange Puppy_? Yes."
+
+"What an odd name for a boat--the _Orange Puppy_!"
+
+"An orange puppy," he explained, "is the name given in the Florida
+orange groves to the caterpillar of a large swallow-tail butterfly,
+which feeds on orange leaves. The butterfly it turns into is known to
+entomologists as _Papilio cresphontes_ and _Papilio thoas_. The latter
+is a misnomer."
+
+She gazed upon this young man in undisguised admiration.
+
+"Once," she said, "when I was nine years old, I ran away from a
+governess and two trained nurses. They found me with both hands full of
+muddy pollywogs. It has nothing to do with what you are saying, but I
+thought I'd tell you."
+
+He insisted that the episode she recalled was most interesting and
+unusual, considered purely as a human document.
+
+"Would you tell me what you are doing down here in these forests?" she
+asked, "--as we are discussing human documents."
+
+"Yes," he said. "I am investigating several thousand small caterpillars
+which are feeding on the scrub-palmetto."
+
+"Is that your _business_?"
+
+"Exactly. If you will remain very still for a moment and listen very
+intently you can hear the noise which these caterpillars make while
+they are eating."
+
+She thought of the _Chihuahua_, and it occurred to her that she had
+rather tired of seeing things eat. However, except in Europe, she had
+never _heard_ things eat. So she listened.
+
+He said: "These caterpillars are in their third moult--that is, they
+have changed their skin three times since emerging from the egg--and are
+now busily chewing the immature fruit of the scrub-palmetto. You can
+hear them very plainly."
+
+She sat silent, spellbound; and presently in the woodland stillness, all
+around her she heard the delicate and continuous sound--the steady,
+sustained noise of thousands of tiny jaws, all crunching, all busily
+working together. And when she realized what the elfin rustle really
+meant, she turned her delighted and grateful eyes on Jones. And the
+beauty of them made him exceedingly thoughtful.
+
+"Will you explain to me," she whispered, "why you are studying these
+caterpillars, Mr. Jones?"
+
+"Because they are spreading out over the forests. Until recently this
+particular species of caterpillar, and the pretty little moth into which
+it ultimately turns, were entirely confined to a narrow strip of
+jungle, only a few miles long, lying on the Halifax River. Nowhere else
+in all the world could these little creatures be found. But recently
+they have been reported from the Dead Lake country. So the Smithsonian
+Institution sent me down here to study them, and find out whither they
+were spreading, and whether any natural parasitic enemies had yet
+appeared to check them."
+
+She gazed at him, fascinated.
+
+"Have any appeared?" she asked, under her breath.
+
+"I have not yet found a single creature that preys upon them."
+
+"Isn't it a very arduous and difficult task to watch these thousands of
+little caterpillars all day long?"
+
+"It is quite impossible for me to do it thoroughly all alone."
+
+"Would you like to have me help you?" she asked innocently.
+
+Which rather bowled him over, but he said:
+
+"I'd b-b-be d-d-delighted--only you haven't time, have you?"
+
+"I have three days. I've brought a tent, you see, and everything
+necessary--rugs, magazines, blankets, toilet articles, bon-bons,
+books--everything, in fact, to last three days.... I wonder how that
+tent is put up. Do you know?"
+
+He went over to the canoe and gazed at the tent.
+
+"I think I could pitch it for you," he said.
+
+"Oh, thanks so much! May I help you? I think I'll put it here on this
+pretty stretch of white sand by the water's edge."
+
+"I'm afraid that wouldn't do," he said, gravely.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because the lagoon is tidal. You'd be awash sooner or later."
+
+"I see. Well, then, anywhere in the woods will do----"
+
+"Not _anywhere_," he said, smiling. "High water leaves few dry places in
+this forest; in fact--I'm afraid that my shack is perched on the only
+spot which is absolutely dry at all times. It is a shell mound--the only
+one in the Dead Lake region."
+
+"Isn't there room for my tent beside yours?" she asked, a trifle
+anxiously.
+
+"Y-es," he said, in a voice as matter of fact as her own. "How many will
+there be in your party?"
+
+"In my _party_! Why, only myself," she said, with smiling animation.
+
+"Oh, I see!" But he didn't.
+
+They lugged the tent back among the trees to the low shell mound, where
+in the centre of a ring of pines and evergreen oaks his open-faced shack
+stood, thatched with palmetto fans. She gazed upon the wash drying on
+the line, upon a brace of dead ducks hanging from the eaves, upon the
+smoky kettle and the ashes of the fire. Purest delight sparkled in her
+blue eyes.
+
+Erecting her silk tent with practiced hands, he said carelessly:
+
+"In case you cared to send any word to the yacht----"
+
+"Did I say that I came from the yacht?" she asked; and her straight
+eyebrows bent a trifle inward.
+
+"Didn't you?"
+
+"Will you promise me something, Mr. Jones?"
+
+The things he was prepared to promise her choked him for a second, but
+when he regained control of his vocal powers he said, very pleasantly,
+that he would gladly promise her anything.
+
+"Then don't ask me where I came from. Let me stay three days. Then I'll
+go very quietly away, and never trouble you again. Is it a promise?"
+
+"Yes," he said, not looking at her. His face had become very serious;
+she noticed it--and how well his head was set on his shoulders, and how
+his clipped hair was burned to the color of crisp hay.
+
+"You were Harvard, of course," she said, unthinkingly.
+
+"Yes." He mentioned the year.
+
+"Not crew?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Baseball?"
+
+"'Varsity pitcher," he nodded, surprised.
+
+"Then this is the third time I've seen you.... I wonder what it is about
+you----" She remained silent, watching him burying her water bottles in
+the cool marl.
+
+When all was in order, he smiled, made her a little formal bow, and
+evinced a disposition to retire and leave her in possession.
+
+"I thought we were going to work at once!" she said uneasily. "I am
+quite ready." And, as he did not seem to comprehend, "I was going to
+help you to examine the little caterpillars, one by one; and the minute
+I saw anything trying to bite them I was going to call you. Didn't you
+understand?" she added wistfully.
+
+"That will be fine!" he said, with an enthusiasm very poorly
+controlled.
+
+"You will show me where the little creatures are hiding, won't you?"
+
+"Indeed I will! Here they are, all about us!" He made a sweeping gesture
+over the low undergrowth of scrub-palmetto; and the next moment:
+
+"I see them!" she exclaimed, delighted. "Oh, what funny, scrubby, busy
+little creatures! They are everywhere--_everywhere_! Why, there seem to
+be thousands and thousands of them! And all are eating the tiny green
+bunches of fruit!"
+
+They bent together over a group of feeding larvae; he handed her a pocket
+microscope like his own; and, enchanted, she studied the tiny things
+while he briefly described their various stages of development from the
+little eggs to the pretty, pearl-tinted moth so charmingly striped with
+delicate, brown lines--a rare prize in the cabinet of any collector.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+Through the golden forest light of afternoon, they moved from shrub to
+shrub; and he taught her to be on the watch for any possible foes of the
+neat and busy little caterpillars, warning her to watch for birds,
+spiders, beetles, ichneumon flies, possibly squirrels or even hornets.
+She nodded her comprehension; he went one way, she the other. For nearly
+ten minutes they remained separated, and it seemed ages to one of them
+anyway.
+
+But the caterpillars appeared to be immune. Nothing whatever interfered
+with them; wandering beetles left them unmolested; no birds even noticed
+them; no gauzy-winged and parasitic flies investigated them.
+
+"Mr. Jones!" she called.
+
+He was at her side in an instant.
+
+"I only wanted to know where you were," she said happily.
+
+The sun hung red over the lagoon when they sauntered back to camp. She
+went into her tent with a cheerful nod to him, which said:
+
+"I've had a splendid time, and I'll rejoin you in a few moments."
+
+When she emerged in fresh white flannels, she found him writing in a
+blank-book.
+
+"I wonder if I might see?" she said. "If it's scientific, I mean."
+
+"It is, entirely."
+
+So she seated herself on the ground beside him, and read over his
+shoulder the entries he was making in his field book concerning the
+day's doings. When he had finished his entry, she said:
+
+"You have not mentioned my coming to you, and how we looked for
+ichneumon flies together."
+
+"I----" He was silent.
+
+She added timidly: "I know I count for absolutely nothing in the
+important experiences of a naturalist, but--I did look very hard for
+ichneumon flies. Couldn't you write in your field book that I tried very
+hard to help you?"
+
+He wrote gravely:
+
+"Miss Cassillis most generously volunteered her invaluable aid, and
+spared no effort to discover any possible foe that might prove to be
+parasitic upon these larvae. But so far without success."
+
+"Thank you," she said, in a very low voice. And after a short silence:
+"It was not mere vanity, Mr. Jones. Do you understand?"
+
+"I know it was not vanity, even if I do not entirely understand."
+
+"Shall I tell you?"
+
+"Please."
+
+"It was the first thing that I have ever been permitted to do all by
+myself. It meant so much to me.... And I wished to have a little record
+of it--even if you think it is of no scientific importance."
+
+"It is of more importance than----" But he managed to stop himself,
+slightly startled. She had lifted her head from the pages of the field
+book to look at him. When his voice failed, and while the red burned
+brilliantly in his ears, she resumed her perusal of his journal,
+gravely. After a while, though she turned the pages as if she were
+really reading, he concluded that her mind was elsewhere. It was.
+
+Presently he rose, mended the fire, filled the kettle, and unhooked the
+brace of wild ducks from the eaves where they swung, and marched off
+with them toward the water.
+
+When he returned, the ducks were plucked and split for broiling. He
+found her seated as he had left her, dreaming awake, idle hands folded
+on the pages of his open field book.
+
+For dinner they had broiled mallard, coffee, ash-cakes, and bon-bons.
+After it she smoked a cigarette with him.
+
+Later she informed him that it was her first, and that she liked it, and
+requested another.
+
+"Don't," he said, smiling.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"It spoils a girl's voice, ultimately."
+
+"But it's very agreeable."
+
+"Will you promise not to?" he asked, lightly.
+
+Suddenly her blue eyes became serious.
+
+"Yes," she said, "if you wish."
+
+The woods grew darker. Far across the lagoon a tiger-owl woke up and
+began to yelp like a half-strangled hobgoblin.
+
+She sat silent for a little while, then very quietly and frankly put her
+hand on Jones's. It was shaking.
+
+"I am afraid of that sound," she said calmly.
+
+"It is only a big owl," he reassured her, retaining her hand.
+
+"Is that what it is? How _very_ dark the woods are! I had no idea that
+there could be such utter darkness. I am not sure that I care for it."
+
+"There is nothing to harm you in these woods."
+
+"No bears and wolves and panthers?"
+
+"There are a few--and all very anxious to keep away from anything
+human."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Absolutely."
+
+"Do you mind if I leave my hand where it is?"
+
+It appeared that he had no insurmountable objections.
+
+After the seventh tiger-owl had awakened and the inky blackness quivered
+with the witch-like shouting and hellish tumult, he felt her shoulder
+pressing against his. And bending to look into her face saw that all the
+colour in it had fled.
+
+"You mustn't be frightened," he said earnestly.
+
+"But I am. I'm sorry.... I'll try to accustom myself to it.... The
+darkness is a--a trifle terrifying--isn't it?"
+
+"It's beautiful, too," he said, looking up at the firelit foliage
+overhead. She looked up also, her slender throat glimmering rosy in the
+embers' glare. After a moment she nodded:
+
+"It _is_ wonderful.... If I only had a little time to accustom myself to
+it I am sure I should love it.... Oh! What was that very loud splash
+out there in the dark?"
+
+"A big fish playing in the lagoon; or perhaps wild ducks feeding."
+
+After a few minutes he felt her soft hand tighten within his.
+
+"It sounds as though some great creature were prowling around our fire,"
+she whispered. "Do you hear its stealthy tread?"
+
+"Noises in the forest are exaggerated," he said carelessly. "It may be a
+squirrel or some little furry creature out hunting for his supper.
+Please don't be afraid."
+
+"Then it _isn't_ a bear?"
+
+"No, dear," he said, so naturally and unthinkingly that for a full
+second neither realised the awful break of Delancy Jones.
+
+When they did they said nothing about it. But it was some time before
+speech was resumed. She was the first to recover. Perhaps the
+demoralisation was largely his. It usually is that way.
+
+She said: "This has been the most perfect day of my entire life. I'm
+even glad I am a little scared. It is delicious to be a trifle afraid.
+But I'm not, now--very much.... Is there any established hour for
+bedtime in the woods?"
+
+"Inclination sounds the hour."
+
+"Isn't that wonderful!" she sighed, her eyes on the fire. "Inclination
+rules in the forest.... And here I am."
+
+The firelight on her copper-tinted hair masked her lovely eyes in a soft
+shadow. Her shoulder stirred rhythmically as she breathed.
+
+"And here you live all alone," she mused, half to herself.... "I once
+saw you pitch a game against Yale.... And the next time I saw you
+walking very busily down Fifth Avenue.... And now--you are--here....
+That is wonderful.... Everything seems to be wonderful in this place....
+Wh-what _is_ that flapping noise, please?"
+
+"Two herons fighting in the sedge."
+
+"You know everything.... That is the most wonderful of all. And yet you
+say you are not famous?"
+
+"Nobody ever heard of me outside the Smithsonian."
+
+"But--you _must_ become famous. To-morrow I shall look very hard for an
+ichneumon fly for you----"
+
+"But your discovery will make _you_ famous, Miss Cassillis----"
+
+"Why--why, it's for _you_ that I am going to search so hard! Did you
+suppose I would dream of claiming any of the glory!"
+
+He said, striving to speak coolly:
+
+"It is very generous and sweet of you.... And, after all, I hardly
+suppose that you need any added lustre or any additional happiness in a
+life which must be so full, so complete, and so care-free."
+
+She was silent for a while, then:
+
+"Is _your_ life then so full of care, Mr. Jones?"
+
+"Oh, no," he said; "I get on somehow."
+
+"Tell me," she insisted.
+
+"What am I to tell you?"
+
+"Why it is that your life is care-ridden."
+
+"But it isn't----"
+
+"Tell me!"
+
+He said, gaily enough: "To labour for others is sometimes a little
+irksome.... I am not discontented.... Only, if I had means--if I had
+barely sufficient--there are so many fascinating and exciting lines of
+independent research to follow--to make a name in----" He broke off with
+a light laugh, leaned forward and laid another log on the fire.
+
+"You can not afford it?" she asked, in a low voice; and for the moment
+astonishment ruled her to discover that this very perfect specimen of
+intelligent and gifted manhood was struggling under such an amazingly
+trifling disadvantage. Only from reading and from hearsay had she been
+even vaguely acquainted with the existence of poverty.
+
+"No," he said pleasantly, "I can not yet afford myself the happiness of
+independent research."
+
+"When will you be able to afford it?"
+
+Neither were embarrassed; he looked thoughtfully into the fire; and for
+a while she watched him in his brown study.
+
+"Will it be soon?" she asked, under her breath.
+
+"No, dear."
+
+That time a full minute intervened before either realised how he had
+answered. And both remained exceedingly still until she said calmly:
+
+"I thought you were the very ideal embodiment of personal liberty. And
+now I find that wretched and petty and ignoble circumstances fetter even
+such a man as you are. It--it is--is heartbreaking."
+
+"It won't last forever," he said, controlling his voice.
+
+"But the years are going--the best years, Mr. Jones. And your life's
+work beckons you. And you are equipped for it, and you can not take it!"
+
+"Some day----" But he could say no more then, with her hand tightening
+in his.
+
+"To--to rise superior to circumstances--that is god-like, isn't it?" she
+said.
+
+"Yes." He laughed. "But on six hundred dollars a year a man can't rise
+very high above circumstances."
+
+The shock left her silent. Any gown of hers cost more than that. Then
+the awfulness of it all rose before her in its true and hideous
+proportions. And there was nothing for her to do about it, nothing,
+absolutely nothing, except to endure the degradation of her wealth and
+remember that the merest tithe of it could have made this man beside her
+immortally famous--if, perhaps, no more wonderful than he already was in
+her eyes.
+
+Was there no way to aid him? She could look for ichneumon flies in the
+morning. And on the morning after that. And the next morning she would
+say good-bye and go away forever--out of this enchanted forest, out of
+his life, back to the _Chihuahua_, and to her guests who ate often and
+digested all day long--back to her father, her mother--back to
+Stirrups----
+
+He felt her hand close on his convulsively, and turned to encounter her
+flushed and determined face.
+
+"You like me, don't you?" she said.
+
+"Yes." After a moment he said: "Yes--absolutely."
+
+"Do you like me enough to--to let me help you in your research work--to
+be patient enough to teach me a little until I catch up with you?... So
+we can go on together?... I know I am presumptuous--perhaps
+importunate--but I thought--somehow--if you did like me well enough--it
+would be--very agreeable----"
+
+"It would be!... And I--like you enough for--anything. But you could not
+remain here----"
+
+"I don't mean here."
+
+"Where, then?"
+
+"Where?" She looked vaguely about her in the firelight. "Why,
+everywhere. Wherever you go to make your researches."
+
+"Dear, I would go to Ceylon if I could."
+
+"I also," she said.
+
+He turned a little pale, looking at her in silence. She said calmly:
+"What would you do in Ceylon?"
+
+"Study the unknown life-histories of the rarer Ornithoptera."
+
+She knew no more than a kitten what he meant. But she wanted to know,
+and, moreover, was perfectly capable of comprehending.
+
+"Whatever you desire to study," she said, "would prove delightful to
+me.... If you want me. Do you?"
+
+"Want you!" Then he bit his lip.
+
+"Don't you? Tell me frankly if you don't. But I think, somehow, you
+would not make a mistake if you did want me. I really am intelligent. I
+didn't know it until I talked with you. Now, I know it. But I have never
+been able to give expression to it or cultivate it.... And, somehow, I
+know I would not be a drag on you--if you would teach me a little in the
+beginning."
+
+He said: "What can I teach _you_, Cecil? Not the heavenly frankness that
+you already use so sweetly. Not the smiling and serene nobility which
+carries your head so daintily and so fearlessly. Not the calm purity of
+thought, nor the serene goodness of mind that has graciously included a
+poor devil like me in your broad and generous sympathies----"
+
+"Please!" she faltered, flushing. "I am not what you say--though to hear
+you say such things is a great happiness--a pleasure--very intense--and
+wonderful--and new. But I am nothing, _nothing_--unless I should become
+useful to you. I _could_ amount to something--with--you----" She checked
+herself; looked at him as though a trifle frightened. "Unless," she
+added with an effort, "you are in love with somebody else. I didn't
+think of that. _Are_ you?"
+
+"No," he said. "Are you?"
+
+"No.... I have never been in love.... This is the nearest I have come to
+it."
+
+"And I."
+
+She smiled faintly.
+
+"If we----"
+
+"Oh, yes," he said, calmly, "if we are to pass the balance of our
+existence in combined research, it would be rather necessary for us to
+marry."
+
+"Do you mind?"
+
+"On the contrary. Do you?"
+
+"Not in the least. Do you really mean it? It wouldn't be disagreeable,
+would it? You are above marrying for mere sentiment, aren't you?
+Because, somehow, I seem to know you like me.... And it would be death
+for me--a mental death--to go back now to--to Stirrups----"
+
+"Where?"
+
+"To--why do you ask? Couldn't you take me on faith?"
+
+He said, unsteadily: "If you rose up out of the silvery lagoon, just
+born from the starlight and the mist, I would take you."
+
+"You--you are a poet, too," she faltered. "You seem to be about
+everything desirable."
+
+"I'm only a man very, very deep in--love."
+
+"In love!... I thought----"
+
+"Ah, but you need think no more. You _know_ now, Cecil."
+
+She remained silent, thinking for a long while. Then, very quietly:
+
+"Yes, I know.... It is that way with me also. For I no sooner find my
+liberty than I lose it--in the same moment--to you. We must never again
+be separated.... Do you feel as I do?"
+
+"Absolutely.... But it must be so."
+
+"Why?" she asked, troubled.
+
+"For one thing, I shall have to work harder now."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Don't you know we can not marry on what I have?"
+
+"Oh! Is _that_ the reason?" She laughed, sprang lightly to her feet,
+stood looking down at him. He got up, slowly.
+
+"I bring you," she said, "six hundred dollars a year. And a _little_
+more. Which sweeps away that obstacle. Doesn't it?"
+
+"I could not ask you to live on that----"
+
+"I can live on what you live on! I should wish to. It would make me
+utterly and supremely happy."
+
+Her flushed, young face confronted his as she took a short, eager step
+toward him.
+
+"I am not making love to you," she said, "--at least, I don't think I
+am. All I desire is to help--to give you myself--my youth, energy,
+ambition, intelligence--and what I have--which is of no use to me unless
+it is useful to you. Won't you take these things from me?"
+
+"Do you give me your heart, too, Cecil?"
+
+She smiled faintly, knowing now that she had already given it. She did
+not answer, but her under lip trembled, and she caught it between her
+teeth as he took her hands and kissed them in silence.
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+"Miami is not very far, is it?" she asked, as she sprang aboard the
+_Orange Puppy_.
+
+"Not very, dear."
+
+"We could get a license immediately, couldn't we?"
+
+"I think so."
+
+"And then it will not take us very long to get married, will it?"
+
+"Not very."
+
+"What a wonderful night!" she murmured, looking up at the stars. She
+turned toward the shore. "What a wonderful place for a honeymoon!...
+And we can continue business, too, and watch our caterpillars all day
+long! Oh, it is all too wonderful, wonderful!" She kissed her hand to
+the unseen camp. "We will be back to-morrow!" she called softly. Then a
+sudden thought struck her. "You never can get the _Orange Puppy_ through
+that narrow lead, can you?"
+
+"Oh, there is an easier way out," he said, taking the tiller as the sail
+filled.
+
+Her head dropped back against his knees. Now and then her lips moved,
+murmuring in sheerest happiness the thoughts that drifted through her
+enchanted mind.
+
+"I wonder when it began," she whispered, "--at the ball-game--or on
+Fifth Avenue--or when I saw you here? It seems to me as if I always had
+been in love with you."
+
+Outside in the ocean, the breeze stiffened and the perfume was tinged
+with salt.
+
+Lying back against his knees, her eyes fixed dreamily on the stars, she
+murmured:
+
+"Stirrups _will_ be surprised."
+
+"What are you talking about down there all by yourself?" he whispered,
+bending over her.
+
+She looked up into his eyes. Suddenly her own filled; and she put up
+both arms, linking them around his neck.
+
+And so the _Orange Puppy_ sailed away into the viewless, formless,
+starry mystery of all romance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After a silence the young novelist, who had been poking the goldfish,
+said slowly: "That's pretty poor fiction, Athalie, but, as a matter of
+simple fact and inartistic truth, recording sentimental celerity, it
+stands unequalled."
+
+"Straight facts make poor fiction," remarked Duane.
+
+"It all depends on who makes the fiction out of them," I ventured.
+
+"Not always," said Athalie. "There are facts which when straightly told
+are far stranger than fiction. I noticed a case of that sort in my
+crystal last winter." And to the youthful novelist she said: "Don't try
+to guess who the people were if I tell it, will you?"
+
+"No," he promised.
+
+"Please fix my cushions," she said to nobody in particular. And after
+the stampede was over she selected another cigarette, thoughtfully, but
+did not light it.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+"You are queer folk, you writers of fiction," she mused aloud. "No
+monarch ordained of God takes himself more seriously; no actor lives
+more absolutely in a world made out of his imagination."
+
+She lighted her cigarette: "You often speak of your most 'important'
+book,--as though any fiction ever written were important. Painters speak
+of their most important pictures; sculptors, composers, creative
+creatures of every species employ the adjective. And it is all very
+silly. Facts only can be characterised as important; figments of the
+creative imagination are as unimportant----" she blew a dainty ring of
+smoke toward the crystal globe--"as that! '_Tout ce qu'ont fait les
+hommes, les hommes peuvent le detruire. Il n'y a de caracteres
+ineffacables que ceux qu' imprime la nature._' There has never been but
+one important author."
+
+I said smilingly: "To quote the gentleman you think important enough to
+quote, Athalie, '_Tout est bien sortant des mains de l'Auteur des
+choses: tout degenere entre les mains de l'homme_.'"
+
+Said the novelist simply: "Imagination alone makes facts important.
+'_Cette superbe puissance, ennemie de la raison!_'"
+
+"O Athalie," whispered Duane, "night-blooming, exquisite blossom of the
+arid municipal desert, recount for us these facts which you possess and
+which, in your delightful opinion, are stranger than fiction, and more
+important."
+
+And Athalie, choosing another sweetmeat, looked at us until it had
+dissolved in her fragrant mouth. Then she spoke very gravely, while her
+dark eyes laughed at us:
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When young Lord Willowmere's fiancee ran away from him and married
+Delancy Jones, that bereaved nobleman experienced a certain portion of
+the universal shock which this social seismic disturbance spread far and
+wide over two hemispheres.
+
+That such a girl should marry beneath her naturally disgusted everybody.
+So both Jones and his wife were properly damned.
+
+England read its morning paper, shrugged its derision, and remarked that
+nobody ought to be surprised at anything that happened in the States.
+"The States" swallowed the rebuke and squirmed.
+
+Now, among the sturdy yeomanry, gentry, and nobility of those same
+British and impressive Isles there was an earnest gentleman whose ample
+waist and means and scholarly tastes inclined him to a sedentary life of
+research. The study of human nature in its various native and exotic
+phases had for forty years obsessed his insular intellect. Philologist,
+anthropologist, calm philosopher, and benignant observer, this
+gentleman, who had never visited the United States, determined to do so
+now. For, he reasoned--and very properly--a country where such a thing
+could happen to a British nobleman and a Peer of the Realm must be worth
+exploring, and its curious inhabitants merited, perhaps, the
+impersonally judicial inspection of an F. R. B. A. whose gigantic work
+on the folk manners of the world had now reached its twentieth volume,
+without as yet including the United States. So he determined to devote
+several chapters in the forthcoming and twenty-first volume to the
+recent colonies of Great Britain.
+
+Now, when the Duke of Pillchester concluded to do anything, that thing
+was invariably and thoroughly done. And so, before it entirely realised
+the honour in store for it, the United States was buttoning its collar,
+tying its white tie, and rushing down stairs to open its front door to
+the Duke of Pillchester, the Duchess of Pillchester, and the Lady Alene
+Innesly, their youthful and ornamental daughter.
+
+For a number of months after its arrival, the Ducal party inspected the
+Yankee continent through a lens made for purposes of scientific
+investigation only. The massed wealth of the nation met their Graces in
+solid divisions of social worth. The shock was mutual.
+
+Then the massed poverty of the continent was exhibited, leaving the
+poverty indifferent and slightly bored, and the Ducal party taking
+notes.
+
+It was his Grace's determination to study the folk-ways of Americans;
+and what the Duke wished the Duchess dutifully desired. The Lady Alene
+Innesly, however, was dragged most reluctantly from function to
+function, from palace to purlieu, from theatre to cathedral, from Coney
+Island to Newport. She was "havin' a rotten time."
+
+All day long she had nothing to look at but an overdressed and alien
+race whose voices distressed her; day after day she had nothing to say
+except, "How d'y do," and "Mother, shall we have tea?" Week after week
+she had nothing to think of except the bare, unkempt ugliness of the
+cities she saw; the raw waste and sordid uglification of what once had
+been matchless natural resources; dirty rivers, ruined woodlands, flimsy
+buildings, ignorant architecture. The ostentatious and wretched hotels
+depressed her; the poor railroads and bad manners disgusted her.
+
+Listless, uninterested, Britishly enduring what she could not escape,
+the little Lady Alene had made not the slightest effort to mitigate the
+circumstances of her temporary fate. She was civilly incurious
+concerning the people she met; their social customs, amusements,
+pastimes, duties, various species of business or of leisure interested
+her not a whit. All the men looked alike to her; all the women were
+over-gowned, tiresomely pretty, and might learn one day how to behave
+themselves after they had found out how to make their voices behave.
+
+Meanwhile, requiring summer clothing--tweeds and shooting boots being
+not what the climate seemed to require in July--she discovered with
+languid surprise that for the first time in her limited life she was
+well gowned. A few moments afterward another surprise faintly thrilled
+her, for, chancing to glance at herself after a Yankee hairdresser had
+finished her hair, she discovered to her astonishment that she was
+pretty.
+
+For several days this fact preyed upon her mind, alternately troubling
+and fascinating her. There were several men at home who would certainly
+sit up; Willowmere among others.
+
+As for considering her newly discovered beauty any advantage in America,
+the idea had not entered her mind. Why should it? All the men looked
+alike; all wore sleek hair, hats on the backs of their heads, clothing
+that fitted like a coster's trousers. She had absolutely no use for
+them, and properly.
+
+However, she continued to cultivate her beauty and to adorn it with
+Yankee clothing and headgear befitting; which filled up considerable
+time during the day, leaving her fewer empty hours to fill with tea and
+three-volumed novels from the British Isles.
+
+Now, it had never occurred to the Lady Alene Innesly to read anything
+except British fact and fiction. She had never been sufficiently
+interested even to open an American book. Why should she, as long as the
+three props of her national literature endured intact--curates, tea, and
+thoroughbred horses?
+
+But there came a time during the ensuing winter when the last of the
+three-volumed novels had been assimilated, the last serious tome
+digested; and there stretched out before her a bookless prospect which
+presently began to dismay her with the aridness of its perspective.
+
+The catastrophe occurred while the Ducal party was investigating the
+strange folk-customs of those Americans who gathered during the winter
+in gigantic Florida hotels and lived there, uncomfortably lodged, vilely
+fed, and shamelessly robbed, while third-rate orchestras play cabaret
+music and enervating breezes stir the cabbage-palmettos till they rustle
+like bath-room rubber plants.
+
+It was a bad place and a bad time of year for a young and British girl
+to be deprived of her native and soporific fiction; for the livelier and
+Frenchier of British novelists were self-denied her, because somebody
+had said they were not unlike Americans.
+
+Now she was, in the uncouth vernacular of the country, up against it
+for fair! She didn't know what it was called, but she realised how it
+felt to be against something.
+
+Three days she endured it, dozing in her room, half awake when the
+sea-breeze rattled the Venetian blinds, or the niggers were noisy at
+baseball.
+
+On the fourth day she arose, went to the window, gazed disgustedly out
+over the tawdry villas of Verbena Inlet, then rang for her maid.
+
+"Bunn," she said, "here are three sovereigns. You will please buy for me
+one specimen of every book on sale in the corridor of this hotel. And,
+Bunn!----"
+
+"Yes, my lady."
+
+"What was it you were eating the other day?"
+
+"Chewing-gum, my lady."
+
+"Is it--agreeable?"
+
+"Yes, my lady."
+
+"Is it nourishing?"
+
+"No, my lady. It is not intended to be eaten; it is to be chewed."
+
+"Then one does not swallow it when one supposes it to be sufficiently
+masticated?"
+
+"No, my lady."
+
+"What does one do with it?"
+
+"Beg pardon, my lady--one spits it out."
+
+"Ow," said the girl.
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+She was lying on the bed when a relay of servants staggered in bearing
+gaudy piles of the most recent and popular novels, and placed them in
+tottering profusion upon the adjacent furniture.
+
+The Lady Alene turned her head where it lay lazily pillowed on her left
+arm, and glanced indifferently at the multi-coloured battlement of
+books. The majority of the covers were embellished with the heads of
+young women, all endowed with vaudeville-like beauty--it having been
+discovered by intelligent publishers that a girl's head on any book
+sells it.
+
+On some covers were displayed coloured pictures of handsome and athletic
+American young men, usually kissing beautiful young ladies who wore
+crowns, ermines, and foreign orders over dinner dresses. Sometimes,
+however, they were kicking Kings. That seemed rather odd to the Lady
+Alene, and she sat up on the bed and reached out her hand. It
+encountered a book on which rested a small, oblong package. She took
+book and package. On the pink wrapper of the latter she read this verse:
+
+ Why are my teeth so white and bright?
+ Because I chew with all my might
+ The gum that fills me with delight
+ And keeps me healthy day and night.
+ Five cents.
+
+The Lady Alene's unaccustomed fingers became occupied with the pink
+wrapper. Presently she withdrew from it a thin and brittle object,
+examined it, and gravely placed it in her mouth.
+
+For a while the perplexed and apprehensive expression remained upon her
+face, but it faded gradually, and after a few minutes her lovely
+features settled into an expression resembling contentment. And,
+delicately, discreetly, at leisurely intervals, her fresh, sweet lips
+moved as though she were murmuring a prayer.
+
+All that afternoon she perused the first American novel she had ever
+read. And the cumulative effect of the fiction upon her literal mind was
+amazing as she turned page after page, and, gradually gathering mental
+and nervous speed, dashed from one chapter, bang! into another, only to
+be occultly adjured to "take the car ahead"--which she now did quite
+naturally, and on the run.
+
+Never, never had she imagined such things could be! Always heretofore,
+to her, fiction had been a strict reflection of actuality in which a
+dull imagination was licensed to walk about if it kept off the grass.
+And it always did in the only novels to which she had been accustomed.
+
+But good heavens! Here was a realism at work in these pages so
+astonishing yet so convincing, so subtle yet so natural, so matter of
+fact yet so astoundingly new to her that the book she was reading was
+already changing the entire complexion of the Yankee continent for her.
+
+It had to do with a young, penniless, and athletic American who went to
+Europe, tipped a king off his throne, pushed a few dukes, counts, and
+barons out of the way, reorganized the army, and went home taking with
+him a beautiful and exclusive princess with honest intentions.
+
+The inhabitants of several villages wept at his departure; the abashed
+nobility made unsuccessful attempts to shoot him; otherwise the trip to
+the Cunard Line pier was uneventful, and diplomatic circles paid no
+attention to the incident.
+
+When the Lady Alene finished the story her oval face ached; but this was
+no time to consider aches. So with a charming abandon she relieved her
+pretty teeth of the morceau, replaced it with another, helped herself to
+a second novel, settled back on her pillow, and opened the enchanted
+pages.
+
+And zip! Instantly she became acquainted with another athletic and
+penniless American who was raising the devil in the Balkans.
+
+Never in her life had she dreamed that any nation contained such
+fearless, fascinating, resourceful, epigrammatic, and desirable young
+men! And here she was in the very midst of them, and never had realised
+it until now.
+
+Where were they? All around her, no doubt. When, a few days later, she
+had read some baker's dozen novels, and in each one of them had
+discovered similar athletic, penniless, and omniscient American young
+men, her opinion was confirmed, and she could no longer doubt that, like
+the fiction of her own country, the romances of American novelists must
+have a substantial foundation in solid fact.
+
+There could be no use in quibbling. The situation had become exciting.
+Her youthful imagination was now fired; her Saxon blood thoroughly
+stirred. She knew perfectly well that there were in her own country no
+young men like these she had read about--not a man-jack among them who
+would ever dream of dashing about the world cuffing the ears of
+reprehensible monarchs, meting out condign punishment to refractory
+nobility, reconstructing governments and states and armies, and escaping
+with a princess every time.
+
+Not that she actually believed that such episodes were of common
+occurrence. Young as she was she knew better. But somehow it seemed very
+clear to her that a race of writers who were so unanimous on the subject
+and a nation which so complacently read of these events without denying
+their plausibility, must within itself harbour germs and seeds of
+romance and reckless deeds which no doubt had produced a number of young
+men thoroughly capable of doing a few of the exciting things she had
+read about.
+
+Now she regretted she had not noticed the men she had met; now she was
+indeed sorry she had not at least taken pains to learn to distinguish
+them one from the other. She wished that she had investigated this
+reckless, chivalrous, energetic, and distinguishing trait of the
+American young man.
+
+It seemed odd, too, that Pa-_pa_ had never investigated it; that
+Ma-_ma_ had never appeared to notice it.
+
+She mentioned it at dinner carelessly, in the midst of a natural and
+British silence. Neither parent enlightened her. One said, "Fancy!" And
+the other said, "Ow."
+
+And so, as both parents departed the following morning to investigate
+the tarpon fishing at Miami, the little Lady Alene made private
+preparations to investigate and closely observe the astonishing,
+reckless, and romantic tendencies of the American young man. Her tour of
+discovery she scheduled for five o'clock that afternoon.
+
+Just how these investigations were to be accomplished she did not see
+very clearly. She had carefully refrained from knowing anybody in the
+hotel. So how to go about it she did not know; but she knew enough after
+luncheon to have her hair done by somebody besides her maid, selected
+the most American gown in her repertoire, took a sunshade hitherto
+disdained, and glanced in the mirror at a picture in white, with gold
+hair, violet eyes, and a skin of snow and roses.
+
+Further she did not know how to equip herself, except by going out doors
+at five o'clock. And at five o'clock she went.
+
+From the tennis courts young men and girls looked at her. On the golf
+links youth turned to observe her slim and dainty progress. She was
+stared at from porch and veranda, from dock and deck, from garden and
+walk and orange grove and hedge of scarlet hibiscus.
+
+From every shop window in the village, folk looked out at her; from
+automobile, wheeled chair, bicycle, and horse-drawn vehicle she was
+inspected. But she knew nobody; not one bright nod greeted her; not one
+straw hat was lifted; not one nigger grinned. She knew nobody. And,
+alas! everybody knew her. A cold wave seemed to have settled over
+Verbena Inlet.
+
+Yet her father was not unpopular, nor was her mother either; and
+although they asked too many questions, their perfectly impersonal and
+scientific mission in Verbena Inlet was understood.
+
+But the Lady Alene Innesly was not understood, although her indifference
+was noted and her exclusiveness amusedly resented. However, nobody
+interfered with her or her seclusion. The fact that she desired to know
+nobody had been very quickly accepted. Youth and the world at Verbena
+Inlet went on without her; the sun continued to rise and set as usual;
+and the nigger waiters played baseball.
+
+She stood watching them now for a few minutes, her parasol tilted over
+her lovely shoulders. Tiring of this, she sauntered on, having not the
+slightest idea where she was going, but very calmly she made up her mind
+to speak to the first agreeable looking young man she encountered, as
+none of them seemed at all inclined to speak to her.
+
+Under her arm she had tucked a novel written by one Smith. She had read
+it half through. The story concerned a young and athletic and penniless
+man from Michigan and a Balkan Princess. She had read as far as the
+first love scene. The young man from Michigan was still kissing the
+Princess when she left off reading. And her imagination was still on
+fire.
+
+She had wandered down to the lagoon without finding anybody sufficiently
+attractive to speak to. The water was blue and pretty and very inviting.
+So she hired a motor-boat, seated herself in the stern, and dabbled her
+fingers in the water as the engineer took her whizzing across the lagoon
+and out into the azure waste, headed straight for the distant silvery
+inlet.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+She read, gazed at the gulls and wild ducks, placed a bit of gum between
+her rose-leaf lips, read a little, glanced up to mark the majestic
+flight of eight pelicans, sighed discreetly, savoured the gum, deposited
+it in a cunning corner adjacent to her left and snowy cheek, and spoke
+to the boatman.
+
+"Did you ever read this book?" she asked.
+
+"Me! No, ma'am."
+
+"It is very interesting. Do you read much?"
+
+"No, ma'am."
+
+"This is a very extraordinary book," she said. "I strongly advise you to
+read it."
+
+The boatman glanced ironically at the scarlet bound volume which bore
+the portrait of a pretty girl on its covers.
+
+"Is it that book by John Smith they're sellin' so many of down to the
+hotel?" he inquired slowly.
+
+"I believe it was written by one Smith," she said, turning over the
+volume to look. "Yes, John Smith is the author's name. No doubt he is
+very famous in America."
+
+"He lives down here in winter."
+
+"Really!" she exclaimed with considerable animation.
+
+"Oh, yes. I take him shooting and fishing. He has a shack on the Inlet
+Point."
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Over there, where them gulls is flying."
+
+The girl looked earnestly at the point. All she saw were snowy dunes and
+wild grasses and seabirds whirling.
+
+"He writes them books over there," remarked the boatman.
+
+"How extremely interesting!"
+
+"They say he makes a world o' money by it. He's rich as mud."
+
+"Really!"
+
+"Yaas'm. I often seen him a settin' onto a camp chair out beyond them
+dunes a-writing pieces like billy-bedam. Yes'm."
+
+"Do you think he is there now?" she asked with a slight catch in her
+breath.
+
+"Well, we kin soon find out----" He swung the tiller; the little boat
+rushed in a seething circle toward the point, veered westward, then
+south.
+
+"Yaas'm," said the boatman presently. "Mr. Smith he's reclinin' out
+there onto his stummick. I guess he's just a thinkin'. He thinks more'n
+five million niggers, he does. Gor-a-mighty! _I_ never see such a man
+for thinkin'! He jest lies onto his stummick an' studies an' ruminates
+like billy-bedam. Yaas'm. Would you want I should land you so's you can
+take a peek at him?"
+
+"Might I?"
+
+"Sure, Miss. Go up over them dunes and take a peek at him. He won't
+mind. Ten to nothin' he won't even see ye."
+
+There was a little dock built of coquina. A power boat, a sloop, several
+row-boats, and a canoe lay there, riding the little, limpid,
+azure-tinted wavelets. Under their keels swam gar-pike, their fins and
+backs also shimmering with blue and turquoise green.
+
+Lady Alene rose; her boatman aided her, and she sprang lightly to the
+coquina dock and walked straight over the low dune in front of her.
+
+There was nothing whatever in sight except beach-grapes and scrubby
+tufts of palmetto, and flocks of grey, long-legged, long-billed birds
+running to avoid her. But they did not run very fast or very far, and
+she saw them at a little distance loitering, with many a bright and
+apparently friendly glance at her.
+
+There was another dune in front. She mounted it. Straight ahead of her,
+perhaps half a mile distant, stood a whitewashed bungalow under a
+cluster of palms and palmettos.
+
+From where she stood she could see a cove--merely a tiny crescent of
+sand edged by a thin blade of cobalt water, and curtained by the
+palmetto forest. And on this little crescent beach, in the shade of the
+palms, a young man lay at full length, very intent upon his occupation,
+which was, apparently, to dig holes in the sand with a child's toy
+shovel.
+
+He was clad in white flannels; beside him she noticed a red tin pail,
+such as children use for gathering shells. Near this stood two
+camp-chairs, one of which was piled with pads of yellow paper and a few
+books. She thought his legs very eloquent. Sometimes they lay in
+picturesque repose, crossed behind him; at other moments they waved in
+the air or sprawled widely, appearing to express the varying emotions
+which possessed his deep absorption in the occult task under his nose.
+
+"Now, what in the world can he be doing?" thought Lady Alene Innesly,
+watching him. And she remained motionless on top of the dune for ten
+minutes to find out. He continued to sprawl and dig holes in the sand.
+
+Learning nothing, and her interest increasing inversely, she began to
+walk toward him. It was her disposition to investigate whatever
+interested her. Already she was conscious of a deep interest in his
+legs.
+
+From time to time low dunes intervened to hide the little cove, but
+always when she crossed them, pushing her way through fragrant thickets
+of sweet bay and sparkle-berry shrub, cove and occupant came into view
+again. And his legs continued to wave. The nearer she drew the less she
+comprehended the nature of his occupation, and the more she decided to
+find out what he could be about, lying there flat on his stomach and
+digging and patting the sand.
+
+Also her naturally calm and British heart was beating irregularly and
+fast, because she realised the fact that she was approaching the
+vicinity of one of those American young men who did things in books that
+she never dreamed could be done anywhere. Nay--under her arm was a novel
+written by this very man, in which the hero was still kissing a Balkan
+Princess, page 169. And it occurred to her vaguely that her own good
+taste and modesty ought to make an end of such a situation; and that she
+ought to finish the page quickly and turn to the next chapter to relieve
+the pressure on the Princess.
+
+Confused a trifle by a haunting sense of her own responsibility, by the
+actual imminence of such an author, and by her intense curiosity
+concerning what he was now doing, she walked across the dunes down
+through little valleys all golden with the flowers of a flat, spreading
+vine. The blossoms were larger and lovelier than the largest golden
+portulacca, but she scarcely noticed their beauty as she resolutely
+approached the cove, moving forward under the cool shadow of the border
+forest.
+
+He did not seem to be aware of her approach, even when she came up and
+stood by the camp-chairs, parasol tilted, looking down at him with
+grave, lilac-blue eyes.
+
+But she did not look at him as much as she gazed at what he was doing.
+And what he was doing appeared perfectly clear to her now.
+
+With the aid of his toy shovel, his little red pail, and several
+assorted shells, he had constructed out of sand a walled city. Houses,
+streets, squares, market place, covered ways, curtain, keep, tower,
+turret, crenelated battlement, all were there. A driftwood drawbridge
+bridged the moat, guarded by lead soldiers in Boznovian uniform.
+
+And lead soldiers were everywhere in the miniature city; the keep
+bristled with their bayonets; squads of them marched through street and
+square; they sat at dinner in the market place; their cannon winked and
+blinked in the westering sun on every battlement.
+
+And after a little while she discovered two lead figures which were not
+military; a civilian wearing a bowler hat; a feminine figure wearing a
+crown and ermines. The one stood on the edge of the moat outside the
+drawbridge: the other, in crown and ermines, was apparently observing
+him of the bowler hat from the top of a soldier-infested tower.
+
+It was plain enough to her now. This amazing young man was working out
+in concrete detail some incident of an unwritten novel. And the
+magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady Alene. Genius only
+possesses such a capacity for detail.
+
+Without even arousing young Smith from his absorbed preoccupation, she
+seated herself on the unincumbered camp-chair, laid her book on her
+knees, rested both elbows on it, propped her chin on both clasped hands,
+and watched the proceedings.
+
+The lead figure in the bowler hat seemed to be in a bad way. Several
+dozen Boznovian soldiers were aiming an assortment of firearms at him;
+cavalry were coming at a gallop, too, not to mention a three-gun battery
+on a dead run.
+
+The problem seemed to be how, in the face of such a situation, was the
+lead gentleman in the bowler hat to get away, much less penetrate the
+city?
+
+Flight seemed hopeless, but presently Smith picked him up, marched him
+along the edge of the moat, and gave him a shove into it.
+
+"He's swimming," said Smith, aloud to himself. "Bang! Bang! But they
+don't hit him.... Yes, they do; they graze his shoulder. It is the only
+wound possible to polite fiction. There is consequently a streak of red
+in the water. Bang--bang--bang! Crack--crack! The cavalry empty their
+pistols. Boom! A field piece opens---- Where the devil is that
+battery----"
+
+[Illustration: "The magnificent realism of it fascinated the Lady
+Alene."]
+
+Smith reached over, drew horses, cannoniers, gun and caisson over the
+drawbridge, galloped them along the moat, halted, unlimbered, trained
+the guns on the bowler hatted swimmer, and remarked, "Boom!"
+
+"The shell," he murmured with satisfaction, "missed him and blew up in
+the casemates. Did it kill anybody? No; that interferes with the
+action.... He dives, swims under water to an ancient drain." Smith stuck
+a peg where the supposed drain emptied into the moat.
+
+"That drain," continued Smith thoughtfully, "connects with the royal
+residence.... Where's that Princess? Can she see him dive into it? Or
+does she merely suspect he is making for it? Or--or--doesn't she know
+anything about it?"
+
+"She doesn't know anything about it!" exclaimed Lady Alene Innesly. The
+tint of excitement glowed in her cheeks. Her lilac-tinted eyes burned
+with a soft, blue fire.
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+Slowly as a partly paralysed crab, Smith raised himself to a sitting
+posture and looked over his shoulder into the loveliest face that he had
+ever beheld, except on the paper wrappers of his own books.
+
+"I'm sorry," said the Lady Alene. "Shouldn't I have spoken?"
+
+The smoke and turmoil of battle still confused Smith's brain;
+visualisation of wall and tower and crowns and ermines made the Lady
+Alene's fresh, wholesome beauty very unreal to him for a moment or two.
+
+When his eyes found their focus and his mind returned to actuality, he
+climbed to his feet, hat in hand, and made his manners to her. Then,
+tumbling books and pads from the other camp-chair, he reseated himself
+with a half smiling, half shamed glance at her, and a "May I?" to which
+she responded, "Please! And might I talk to you for a few moments?"
+
+Smith shot a keen glance at the book on her knees. Resignation and pride
+altered his features, but when again he looked at the Lady Alene he
+experienced a pleasure in his resignation which hitherto no curious
+tourist, no enterprising reporter had ever aroused. Smilingly he
+composed himself for the impending interview.
+
+"Until now," said the girl earnestly, "I think I have not been entirely
+convinced by your novels. Somehow or other I could not bring myself to
+comprehend the amazing realism of your plots. But now I understand the
+basis of great and fundamental truth on which you build so plausibly
+your splendid novels of love and life."
+
+"What?" said Smith.
+
+"To see you," she continued, "constructing the scenes of which later you
+are to write, has been a wonderful revelation to me. It has been a
+privilege the importance of which I can scarcely estimate. Your devotion
+to the details of your art, your endless patience, your almost austere
+absorption in truth and realism, have not only astounded me but have
+entirely convinced me. The greatest thing in the world is Truth. _Now_ I
+realise it!"
+
+She made a pretty gesture of enthusiasm:
+
+"What a wonderful nation of young men is yours, Mr. Smith! What
+qualities! What fearlessness--initiative--idealism--daring--! What
+invention, what recklessness, what romance----"
+
+Her voice failed her; she sat with lips parted, a soft glow in her
+cheeks, gazing upon Smith with fascinated eyes. And Smith gazed back at
+her without a word.
+
+"I don't believe," she said, "that in all England there exists a single
+man capable even of conceiving the career for which so many young
+Americans seem to be equipped."
+
+After a moment Smith said very quietly:
+
+"I am sorry, but do you know I don't quite understand you?"
+
+"I mean," she said, "that you Americans have a capacity for conceiving,
+understanding, and performing everything you write about."
+
+"Why do you think so?" asked Smith, a trifle red.
+
+"Because if Englishmen could understand and do such things, our
+novelists would write about them. They never write about them. But you
+Americans do. You write thousands of most delightful novels about young
+men who do things unheard of, undreamed of, in England. Therefore, it is
+very clear to me that you Americans are quite capable of doing what you
+write about, and what your readers so ardently admire."
+
+"I see," said Smith calmly. His ear-tips still burned.
+
+"No doubt," said the girl, "many of the astonishing things you Americans
+write about are really done. Many astounding episodes in fiction are of
+not uncommon occurrence in real life."
+
+"What kind of episodes?" asked Smith gravely.
+
+"Why, any of them you write about. They all are astonishing enough. For
+example, your young men do not seem to know what fear is."
+
+"No," said Smith, "they don't."
+
+"And when they love," said the girl, "nothing can stop them."
+
+"Nothing."
+
+"Nothing!" she repeated, the soft glow coming into her cheeks again.
+"--Nothing! Neither rank nor wealth nor political considerations nor
+family prejudices, nor even the military!"
+
+Smith bit his lip in silence. He had heard of irony; never had he
+dreamed it could be so crushing: he had heard of sarcasm; but the quiet
+sarcasm of this unknown young girl was annihilating him. Critics had
+carved him in his time; but the fine mincemeat which this pretty
+stranger was making of him promised to leave nothing more either to
+carve or to roast.
+
+"Do you mind my talking to you?" she asked, noting the strained
+expression of his features.
+
+"No," he said, "go ahead."
+
+"Because if I am tiring you----"
+
+He said he was not tired.
+
+"--or if it bores you to discuss your art with a foreigner who so truly
+admires it----"
+
+He shot a glance at her, then forced a laugh.
+
+"I am not offended," he said. "What paper do you represent?"
+
+"I?" she said, bewildered.
+
+"Yes. You are a newspaper woman, are you not?"
+
+"Do you mean a reporter?"
+
+"Naturally."
+
+"No," she said very seriously, "I am not a reporter. What an odd idea!"
+
+"Do you think it odd?"
+
+"Why, yes. Do not many admirers of your works express their pleasure in
+them to you?"
+
+He studied her lovely face coolly and in detail--the dainty arch of the
+questioning eyebrows, the sensitive curve of the mouth, the clear, sweet
+eyes. Could it be possible that such candour masked irony? Could all
+this be the very essence of the art of acting, concealing the most
+murderous sarcasm ever dreamed of by a terrified author?
+
+And suddenly his face went red all over, and he understood that the
+essence of this young girl was a candour so utterly free of
+self-consciousness--a frankness so absolutely truthful, that the
+simplicity of her had been a miracle too exquisite for him to
+comprehend.
+
+"You _do_ like what I write!" he exclaimed.
+
+Her blue eyes widened: "Of course I do," she said, amazed. "Didn't you
+understand me?"
+
+"No," he said, cooling his burning face in the rising sea-wind. "I
+thought you were laughing at me."
+
+"I'm sorry if I was stupid," she said.
+
+"_I_ was stupid."
+
+"You!" She laughed a little.
+
+The sinking sun peered through the palm forest behind them and flung a
+beam of blinding light at her.
+
+"Am I interrupting your work, Mr. Smith? I mean, I know I am, but----"
+
+"Please don't go away."
+
+"Thank you.... I have noticed what agreeable manners you Americans have
+in novels. Naturally you are even more kindly and polite in real life."
+
+"Have you met many Americans?"
+
+"No, only you. In the beginning I did not feel interested in Americans."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"The young men all seemed to resemble one another," she said frankly,
+"like Chinese. But now that I really know an American I am intensely
+interested."
+
+"You notice no Mongolian monotony in me?" he inquired gravely.
+
+"Oh, no----" She coloured; then discovering that he was laughing, she
+laughed, too, rather faintly.
+
+"That was a joke, wasn't it?" she said.
+
+"Yes, that was a joke."
+
+"Because," she said, "there is no Mongolian uniformity about _you_. On
+the contrary, you remind me in every way of one of your own heroes."
+
+"Oh, really now!" he protested; but she insisted with serious
+enthusiasm.
+
+"You are the counterpart of the hero in this book," she repeated,
+resting one hand lightly on the volume under her elbow. "You wear white
+flannels, you are tall, well built, straight, with very regular
+features and a fasci---- a smile," she corrected herself calmly, "which
+one naturally associates with your features."
+
+"Also," she continued, "your voice is cultivated and modulated with just
+enough of the American accent to make it piquantly agreeable. And what
+you say is fasci---- is well expressed and interesting. Therefore, as I
+have said, to me you resemble one of your own heroes."
+
+There was enough hot colour in his face to make it boyishly bashful.
+
+"And you appear to be as modest as one of your own heroes," she added,
+studying him. "That is truly delightful."
+
+"But really, I am nothing like any of my heroes," he explained, terribly
+embarrassed.
+
+"Why do you say that, Mr. Smith?"
+
+"Because it's true. I don't even resemble 'em superficially."
+
+She made a quick, graceful gesture: "Why do you say that, when here you
+are before me, the exact and exciting counterpart of the reckless and
+fasci---- the reckless and interesting men you write about?"
+
+He said nothing. She closed the parasol and considered him in silence
+for a moment or two. Then:
+
+"And I have no doubt that you are capable of doing the very things that
+your heroes do so adroitly and so charmingly."
+
+"What, for example?" he asked, reddening to his temples.
+
+"Reconstructing armies, for instance."
+
+"Filibustering?"
+
+"Is that what it is called?"
+
+"It's called that in the countries south of the United States."
+
+"Well, would you not be capable of overturning a government and of
+reconstructing the army, Mr. Smith?"
+
+"Capable?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well," he said cautiously, "if it was the thing I wanted to do, perhaps
+I might have a try at it."
+
+"I knew it," she exclaimed triumphantly.
+
+"But," he explained, "I never desired to overturn any government."
+
+"You probably have never seen any that you thought worth while
+overturning."
+
+Her confident rejoinder perplexed him and he remained silent.
+
+"Also," she continued, still more confidently, "I am certain that if you
+were in love, no obstacles would prove too great for you to surmount.
+Would they?"
+
+"Really," he said, "I don't know. I'm not very enterprising."
+
+"That is the answer of a delightfully modest man. Your own hero would
+return me such an answer, Mr. Smith. But I--and your heroine
+also--understand you--I mean your hero."
+
+"Do you?" he asked gravely.
+
+"Certainly. I, as well as your heroine, understand that no obstacles
+could check you if you loved her--neither political considerations,
+diplomatic exigencies, family prejudices, nor her own rank, no matter
+what it might be. Is not that true?"
+
+Eager, enthusiastic, impersonally but warmly interested, she leaned a
+little toward him, intent on his reply.
+
+He looked into the lovely, flushed face in silence for a while. Then:
+
+"Yes," he said, "it is true. If I loved, nothing could check me
+except----" he shrugged.
+
+"Death?" She nodded, fascinated.
+
+He nodded. He had meant to say the police.
+
+She said exultantly: "I knew it, Mr. Smith! I was certain that you are
+the living embodiment of your own heroes! The moment I set eyes on you
+playing in the sand with your lead soldiers, I was sure of it!"
+
+Thrilled, she considered him, her soft eyes brilliant with undisguised
+admiration.
+
+"I wish I could actually _see_ it!" she said under her breath.
+
+"See what?"
+
+"See you, in real life, as one of your own heroes--doing some of the
+things they do so cleverly, so winningly--careless of convention,
+reckless of consequences, oblivious to all considerations except only
+the affair in hand. That," she said excitedly, "would be glorious, and
+well worth a trip to the States!"
+
+"How far," he asked, "have you read in that book of mine?"
+
+"In this book?" She opened it, impulsively, ran over the pages,
+hesitated, stopped.
+
+"He was--was kissing the Balkan Princess," she said. "I left them--_in
+statu quo_."
+
+"I see.... Did he do _that_ well?"
+
+"I--suppose so."
+
+"Have you no opinion?"
+
+"I think he did it--very--thoroughly, Mr. Smith."
+
+"It ought to be done thoroughly if done at all," he said reflectively.
+
+"Otherwise," she nodded, "it would be offensive."
+
+"To the reader?"
+
+"To her, too. Wouldn't it?"
+
+"You know better than I."
+
+"No, I don't know. A nice girl can not imagine herself being
+kissed--except under very extraordinary circumstances, and by a very
+extraordinary man.... Such a man as you have drawn in this book."
+
+"Had you been that Balkan Princess, what would you have done?" he asked,
+rather pale.
+
+"I?" she said, startled.
+
+"Yes, you."
+
+She sat considering, blue eyes lost in candid reverie. Then the faintest
+smile curved her lips; she looked up at Smith with winning simplicity.
+
+"In your story, Mr. Smith, does the Balkan Princess return his kiss?"
+
+"Not in that chapter."
+
+"I think I would have returned it--in that--chapter." Then, for the
+first time, she blushed.
+
+The naive avowal set the heart and intellect of Mr. Smith afire. But he
+only dropped his well-shaped head and didn't look at her. Which was
+rather nice of him.
+
+"Romance," he said after a moment or two, "is all well enough. But real
+life is stranger than fiction."
+
+"Not in the British Isles," she said with decision. "It _is_ tea and
+curates and kennels and stables--as our writers depict it."
+
+"No, you are mistaken! Everywhere it is stranger than fiction," he
+insisted--"more surprising, more charming, more wonderful. Even here in
+America--here in Florida--here on this tiny point of sand jutting into
+the Atlantic, life is more beautiful, more miraculous than any fiction
+ever written."
+
+"Why do you say that?" she asked.
+
+"I am afraid I can't tell you why I say it."
+
+"Why can't you tell me?"
+
+"Only in books could what I might have to tell you be logically
+told--and listened to----"
+
+"Only in books? But books in America reflect actual life," she said.
+"Therefore, you can tell me what you have to tell. Can't you?"
+
+"Can I?" he asked.
+
+"Yes...." Far in the inmost recesses of her calm and maiden heart
+something stirred, and her breath ceased for a second.... Innocent, not
+comprehending why her breath missed, she looked at him with the
+question still in her blue eyes.
+
+"Shall I tell you why real life is stranger than fiction?" he asked
+unsteadily.
+
+"Tell me--yes--if----"
+
+"It is stranger," he said, "because it is often more headlong and
+romantic. Shall we take ourselves, for example?"
+
+"You and me?"
+
+"Yes. To illustrate what I mean."
+
+She inclined her head, her eyes fixed on his.
+
+"Very well," he said. "Even in the most skillfully constructed
+story--supposing that you and I were hero and heroine--no author would
+have the impudence to make us avow our love within a few minutes of our
+first meeting."
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"In the first chapter," he continued, "certain known methods of
+construction are usually followed. Time is essential--the lapse of time.
+How to handle it cleverly is a novelist's business. But even the most
+skillful novelist would scarcely dare make me, for example, tell you
+that I am in love with you. Would he?"
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"And in real life, even if a man does fall in love so suddenly, he does
+not usually say so, does he?" he asked.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+"But he _does_ fall in love sometimes more suddenly than in fiction. And
+occasionally he declares himself. In real life this actually happens.
+And _that_ is stranger than any fiction. Isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," she said.
+
+"One kind of fiction," he continued very unsteadily, "is that in which,
+when he falls in love--he doesn't say so--I mean in such a case as
+ours--supposing I had already fallen in love with you. I could not say
+so to you. No man could say it to any girl. He remains mute. He observes
+very formally every convention. He smiles, hat in hand, as the girl
+passes out of his life forever.... Doesn't he? And that is one kind of
+fiction--the tragic kind."
+
+She had been looking down at the book in her lap. After a moment she
+lifted her troubled eyes to his.
+
+"I do--not know what men do--in real life," she said. "What would they
+do in the--_other_ kind of fiction?"
+
+"In the other kind of fiction there would be another chapter."
+
+"Yes.... You mean that for us there is only this one chapter."
+
+"Only one chapter."
+
+"Or--might it not be called a short story, Mr. Smith?"
+
+"Yes--one kind of short story."
+
+"Which kind?"
+
+"The kind that ends unhappily."
+
+"But this one is not going to end unhappily, is it?"
+
+"You are about to walk out of the story when it ends."
+
+"Yes--but----" She bit her lip, flushed and perplexed, already
+dreadfully confused between the personal and the impersonal--between
+fact and fancy.
+
+"You see," he said, "the short story which deals with--love--can end
+only as ours is going to end--or the contrary."
+
+"How is ours going to end?" she asked with candid curiosity.
+
+"It must be constructed very carefully," he said, "because this is
+realism."
+
+"You must be very skillful, too," she said. "I do not see how you are to
+avoid----"
+
+"What?"
+
+"A--an--unhappy--ending."
+
+He looked gravely at his sand castle. "No," he said, "I don't see how it
+can be avoided."
+
+After a long silence she murmured, half to herself:
+
+"Still, this is America--after all."
+
+He shrugged, still studying his sand castle.
+
+"I wish I had somebody to help me work it out," he said, half to
+himself.
+
+"A collaborator?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I'm so sorry that I could not be useful."
+
+"Would you try?"
+
+"What is the use? I am utterly unskilled and inexperienced."
+
+"I'd be very glad to have you try," he repeated.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+After a moment she rose, went over and knelt down in the sand before the
+miniature city, studying the situation. All she could see of the lead
+hero in the bowler hat were his legs protruding from the drain.
+
+"Is this battery of artillery still shelling him?" she inquired, looking
+over her shoulder at Smith.
+
+He went over and dropped on his knees beside her.
+
+"You see," he explained, "our hero is still under water."
+
+"All this time!" she exclaimed in consternation. "He'll drown, won't
+he?"
+
+"He'll drown unless he can crawl into that drain."
+
+"Then he must crawl into it immediately," she said with decision.
+
+So he of the bowler was marched along a series of pegs indicating the
+subterranean drain, and set down in the court of the castle.
+
+"Good heavens!" exclaimed the Lady Alene. "We can't leave him here! They
+will know him by his bowler hat!"
+
+"No," said Smith gloomily, "we can't leave him here. But what can we do?
+If he runs out they'll fire at him by platoons."
+
+"_Couldn't_ they miss him?" pleaded the girl.
+
+"I'm afraid not. He has already lived through several showers of
+bullets."
+
+"But he can't die _here_!--here under the very eyes of the Princess!"
+she insisted.
+
+"Then," said Smith, "the Princess will have to pull him through. It's up
+to her now."
+
+The girl knelt there in excited silence, studying the problem intently.
+
+It was bad business. The battlements bristled with bayonets; outside,
+cavalry, infantry, artillery were massed to destroy the gentleman in the
+bowler hat.
+
+Presently the flush deepened on the girl's cheeks; she took the bowler
+hat between her gloved fingers and set its owner in the middle of the
+moat again.
+
+"Doesn't he crawl into the drain?" asked Smith anxiously.
+
+"No. But the soldiers in the castle think he does. So," she continued
+with animation, "the brutal commander rushes downstairs, seizes a
+candle, and enters the drain from the castle court with about a thousand
+soldiers!"
+
+"But----"
+
+"With about ten thousand soldiers!" she repeated firmly. "And no
+sooner--_no sooner_--does their brutal and cowardly commander enter that
+drain with his lighted candle than the Princess runs downstairs, seizes
+a hatchet, severs the gas main with a single blow, and pokes the end of
+the pipe into the drain!"
+
+"B-but----" stammered Smith, "I think----"
+
+"Oh, _please_ wait! You don't understand what is coming."
+
+"_What_ is coming?" ventured Smith timidly, instinctively closing both
+ears with his fingers.
+
+"Bang!" said Lady Alene triumphantly. And struck the city of sand with
+her small, gloved hand.
+
+After a silence, still kneeling there, they turned and looked at each
+other through the red sunset light.
+
+"The explosion of gas killed them both," said Smith, in an awed voice.
+
+"No."
+
+"What?"
+
+"No. The explosion killed everybody in the city except those two young
+lovers," she said.
+
+"But why?"
+
+"Because!"
+
+"By what logic----"
+
+"I desire it to be so, Mr. Smith." And she picked up the bowler hat and
+the Princess and calmly set them side by side amid the ruins.
+
+After a moment Smith reached over and turned the two lead figures so
+that they faced each other.
+
+There was a long silence. The red sunset light faded from the sand.
+
+Then, very slowly, the girl reached out, took the bowler hat between her
+small thumb and forefinger, and gently inclined the gentleman forward at
+the slightest of perceptible angles.
+
+After a moment Smith inclined him still farther forward. Then, with
+infinite precaution, he tipped forward the Princess, so that between her
+lips and the lips of the bowler hat only the width of a grass blade
+remained.
+
+The Lady Alene looked up at him over her left shoulder, hesitated,
+looked at bowler hat and at the Princess. Then, supporting her weight on
+one hand, with the other she merely touched the Princess--delicately--so
+that not even a blade of grass could have been slipped between their
+painted lips.
+
+She was a trifle pale as she sank back on her knees in the sand. Smith
+was paler.
+
+After both her gloved hands had rested across his palm for five full
+minutes, his fingers closed over them, tightly, and he leaned forward a
+little. She, too, swayed forward a trifle. Her eyes were closed when he
+kissed her.
+
+Now, whatever misgivings and afterthoughts the Lady Alene Innesly may
+have had, she was nevertheless certain that to resist Smith was to fight
+against the stars in their courses. For not only was she in the toils of
+an American, but more hopeless still, an American who chronicled the
+most daring and headlong idiosyncrasies of the sort of young men of whom
+he was very certainly an irresistible example.
+
+To her there was something Shakespearean about the relentless sequence
+of events since the moment when she had first succumbed to the small,
+oblong pink package, and her first American novel.
+
+And, thinking Shakespeareanly as she stood in the purple evening light,
+with his arm clasping her waist, she looked up at him from her charming
+abstraction:
+
+"'If 'twere done,'" she murmured, "'when 'tis done, then 'twere well it
+were done quickly.'" And then, gazing deep into his eyes, a noble idiom
+of her adopted country fell from her lips:
+
+"Dearest," she said, "my father won't do a thing to you."
+
+And so she ran away with him to Miami where the authorities, civil and
+religious, are accustomed to quick action.
+
+It was only fifty miles by train, and preliminary telephoning did the
+rest.
+
+The big chartered launch that left for Verbena Inlet next morning poked
+its nose out of the rainbow mist into the full glory of the rising sun.
+Her golden head lay on his shoulder.
+
+Sideways, with delicious indolence, she glanced at a small boat which
+they were passing close aboard. A fat gentleman, a fat lady, and a
+boatman occupied the boat. The fat gentleman was fast to a tarpon.
+
+Up out of the dazzling Atlantic shot three hundred pounds of quivering
+silver. Splash!
+
+"Why, Dad!" exclaimed the girl.
+
+Her father and mother looked over their shoulders at her in wooden
+amazement.
+
+"We are married----" called out their pretty daughter across the sunlit
+water. "I will tell you all about it when you land your fish. Look
+sharp, Dad! Mind your reel!"
+
+"Who is that damned rascal?" demanded the Duke.
+
+"My husband, Dad! Don't let him get away!--the fish, I mean. Put the
+drag on! Check!"
+
+Said his Grace of Pillchester in a voice of mellow thunder:
+
+"If I were not fast to my first tarpon----"
+
+"Reel in!" cried Smith sharply, "reel or you lose him!"
+
+The Duke reeled with all the abandon of a squirrel in a wheel.
+
+"Dearest," said Mrs. John Smith to her petrified mother, "we will see
+you soon at Verbena. And _don't_ let Dad over-play that fish. He always
+over-plays a salmon, you know."
+
+The Duchess folded her fat hands and watched her departing offspring
+until the chartered launch was a speck on the horizon. Then she looked
+at her husband.
+
+"Fancy!" she said.
+
+"Nevertheless," remarked the youthful novelist, coldly, "there is
+nothing on earth as ignoble as a best-seller."
+
+"I wonder," ventured Duane, "whether you know which books actually do
+sell the best."
+
+"Or which books of bygone days were the best-sellers?"
+
+"Some among them are still best-sellers," added Athalie.
+
+"A truly important book----" began the novelist, but Athalie interrupted
+him:
+
+"O solemn child," she said, "write on!--and thank the gods for their
+important gifts to you of hand and mind! So that you keep tired eyes
+awake that otherwise would droop to brood on pain or sorrow you have
+done well; and what you have written to this end will come nearer being
+important than anything you ever write."
+
+"True, by the nine muses!" exclaimed Stafford with emphasis. Athalie
+glanced at him out of sweetly humourous eyes.
+
+"There is a tenth muse," she said. "Did you never hear of her?"
+
+"Never! Where did you discover her, Athalie?"
+
+"Where I discover many, many things, my friend."
+
+"In your crystal?" I said. She nodded slowly while the sweetmeat was
+dissolving in her mouth.
+
+Through the summer silence a bell here and there in the dusky city
+sounded the hour.
+
+"The tenth muse," she repeated, "and I believe there are other sisters,
+also. Many a star is suspected before its unseen existence is proven....
+Please--a glass of water?"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+
+She sipped the water pensively as we all returned to our places. Then,
+placing the partly empty glass beside her jar of sweetmeats, she opened
+her incomparable lips.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is a fine thing when a young man, born to travel the speedway of
+luxury, voluntarily leaves it to hew out a pathway for himself through
+life. Brown thought so, too. And at twenty-four he resolutely graduated
+from Harvard, stepped out into the world, and looked about him very
+sternly.
+
+All was not well with the world. Brown knew it. He was there to correct
+whatever was wrong. And he had chosen Good Literature as the vehicle for
+self expression.
+
+Now, the nine sister goddesses are born flirts; and every one of them
+immediately glanced sideways at Brown, who was a nice young man with
+modesty, principles, and a deep and reverent belief in Good Literature.
+
+The nine daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne seemed very attractive to him
+until the tenth and most recent addition to the Olympian family
+sauntered by with a flirt of her narrow skirt--the jade!
+
+One glance into the starry blue wells of her baby eyes bowled him over.
+Henceforth she was to be his steady--Thalomene, a casual daughter of
+Zeus, and muse of all that is sacredly obvious in the literature of
+modern realism.
+
+From early infancy Brown's had been a career of richest promise. His
+mother's desk was full of his earlier impressions of life. He had, in
+course of time, edited his school paper, his college paper; and, as an
+undergraduate, he had appeared in the contributor's columns of various
+periodicals.
+
+His was not only a wealthy but a cultivated lineage as well. The love of
+literature was born in him.
+
+To love literature is all right in its way; to love it too well is to
+mistake the appreciative for the creative genius. Reverence and devotion
+are no equipment for creative authorship. It is not enough to have
+something to say about what other people have said. And the inspiration
+which comes from what others have done is never the true one. But Brown
+didn't know these things. They were not revealed unto him at Harvard; no
+inward instinct made them plain to him.
+
+He began by foregathering with authors. Many, many authors foregather,
+from various causes--tradition, inclination, general shiftlessness. When
+they do that they produce a sort of serum called literary atmosphere,
+which is said to be delightful. And so Brown found it. However, there
+are authors who seem to be too busy with their profession to foregather
+and exhale atmosphere. But these are doubtless either literary hacks or
+the degraded producers of best-sellers. They are not authors, either;
+they are merely writers.
+
+Now, in all the world there is only one thing funnier than an author;
+and that is a number of them. But Brown didn't know that, either.
+
+All authors are reformers. Said one of them to Brown in the Empyrean
+Club:
+
+"When an author in his own heart ceases to be a reformer he begins to be
+a menace!"
+
+It was a fine sentiment, and Brown wrote it in his note-book.
+Afterward, the more he analyzed it the less it seemed to mean.
+
+Another author informed him that the proper study for man is man. He'd
+heard that before, but the repetition steeled his resolve. And his
+resolve was to reproduce in literature exactly what he observed about
+him; nothing more, nothing less.
+
+There was to be no concession to imagination, none to convention, none
+to that insidious form of human weakness known as good taste. As for
+art, Brown already knew what Art really was.
+
+There was art enough for anybody in sheer truth, enough in the realism
+made up of photographic detail, recorded uncompromisingly in ordered
+processional sequence. After all, there was really no beauty in the
+world except the beauty of absolute truth. All other alleged beauty was
+only some form of weakness. Thus Brown, after inhaling literary
+atmosphere.
+
+Like the majority of young men, Brown realised that only a man, and a
+perfectly fearless, honest, and unprejudiced one, was properly equipped
+to study woman and tell the entire truth about her in literature.
+
+So he began his first great novel--"The Unquiet Sex"--and he made heavy
+weather of it that autumn--what with contributing to the literary
+atmosphere every afternoon and evening at various clubs and cafes--not
+to mention the social purlieus into which he ventured with the immortal
+lustre already phosphorescent on his brow. Which left him little time
+for mere writing. It is hard to be an author and a writer, too.
+
+The proper study for man being woman, Brown studied her solemnly and
+earnestly. He studied his mother and his sisters, boring them to the
+verge of distraction; he attempted to dissect the motives which governed
+the behaviour of assorted feminine relatives, scaring several of the
+more aged and timorous, agitating others, and infuriating one or
+two--until his father ordered him to desist.
+
+House-maids, parlour-maids, ladies'-maids, waitresses, all fought very
+shy of him; for true to his art, he had cast convention aside and had
+striven to fathom the souls and discover the hidden motives imbedded in
+Milesian, Scandinavian and Briton.
+
+"The thing for me to do," said Brown rather bitterly to his father, "is
+to go out into the world and investigate far and wide."
+
+"Investigate what?" asked his father.
+
+"Woman!" said Brown sturdily.
+
+"There's only one trouble about that."
+
+"What's that?"
+
+"Woman," said his father, "is likely to do the investigating. This
+household knows more about you than you do about it."
+
+Brown smiled. So did his father.
+
+"Son," said the latter, "what have you learned about women without
+knowing anything about them?"
+
+"Nothing, naturally," said Brown.
+
+"Then you will never have anything more than _that_ to say about them,"
+remarked Brown senior.
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because the only thing possible for a man to say about them is what his
+imagination dictates. He'll never learn any more concerning women than
+that."
+
+"Imagination is not literature," said Brown junior, with polite
+toleration.
+
+"Imagination is often the truer truth," said the old gentleman.
+
+"Father, that is rot."
+
+"Yes, my son--and it is almost Good Literature, too. Go ahead, shake us
+if you like. But, if you do, you'll come back married."
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+
+So Brown, who was nourishing a theory, shook his family and, requiring
+mental solitude to develop his idea, he went to Verbena Inlet. Not to
+the enormous and expensive caravansary swarming with wealth, ennui,
+envy, and fashion; not even to its sister hotel similarly infested. But
+to West Verbena, where for a mile along the white shell road modest
+hotels, boarding houses, and cottages nestled behind mosquito screens
+under the dingy cabbage-palmettos.
+
+Here was stranded the winter driftwood from the North--that peculiar
+flotsam and jetsam which summered in similar resorts in the North,
+rocked in rocking chairs on dreary rural verandas, congregated at the
+village post-office, awaited its men folk every week-end from the filthy
+and sweltering metropolis.
+
+It was at a shabby but pretentious hostelry called the Villa Hibiscus
+that Brown took up his quarters. Several rusty cabbage-palmettos waved
+above the whitish, sandy soil surrounding it; one or two discouraged
+orange trees fruited despondently near the veranda. And the place
+swarmed with human beings from all over the United States, lured from
+inclement climes, into the land of the orange and the palm--wistfully
+seeking in the land of advertised perpetual sunshine what the restless
+world has never yet discovered anywhere--surcease from care, from
+longing, from the unkindliness of its fellow seekers.
+
+Dowdiness filled the veranda rocking chairs; unlovely hands were folded;
+faded eyes gazed vacantly at the white road, at the oranges; enviously
+at the flashing wheels and fluttering lingerie from the great Hotel
+Verbena.
+
+Womanhood was there in all its ages and average phases; infancy, youth,
+middle age, age--all were there in the rusty villas and hotels ranged
+for a mile along the smooth shell road.
+
+The region, thought Brown to himself, was rich in material. And the
+reflection helped him somewhat with his dinner, which needed a fillip or
+two.
+
+In his faultless dinner jacket he sauntered out after the evening meal;
+and the idea which possessed and even thrilled him aided him to forget
+what he had eaten.
+
+The lagoon glimmered mysteriously in the starlight; the royal palms
+bordering it rustled high in the night breeze from the sea. Perfume from
+oleander hedges smote softly the olfactories of Brown; the southern
+whip-poor-wills' hurried whisper thrilled the darkness with a deeper
+mystery.
+
+Here was the place to study woman. There could be no doubt about that.
+Here, untrammelled, uninterrupted, unvexed by the jarring of the world,
+he could place his model, turn her loose, and observe her.
+
+To concentrate all his powers of analytical observation upon a single
+specimen of woman was his plan. Painters and sculptors used models. He
+meant to use one, too.
+
+It would be simple. First, he must discover what he wanted. This
+accomplished, he had decided to make a plain business proposition to
+her. She was to go about her own affairs and her pleasure without
+embarrassment or self-consciousness--behave naturally; do whatever it
+pleased her to do. But he was to be permitted to observe her, follow
+her, make what notes he chose; and, as a resume of each day, they were
+to meet in some quiet spot in order that he might question her as he
+chose, concerning whatever interested him, or whatever in her movements
+or behaviour had seemed to him involved or inexplicable.
+
+Thus and thus only, he had decided, could light be shed upon the
+mysterious twilight veiling the inner woman! Thus only might carefully
+concealed motives be detected, cause and effect co-ordinated, the very
+source of all feminine logic, reason, and emotion be laid bare and
+dissected at leisure.
+
+Never had anybody written such a novel as he would be equipped to write.
+The ultimate word concerning woman was about to be written.
+
+Inwardly excited, outwardly calm, he had seated himself on the coquina
+wall which ran along the lagoon under the Royal Palms. He was about to
+study his subject as the great masters studied, coolly, impersonally,
+with clear and merciless intelligence, setting down with calm simplicity
+nothing except facts.
+
+All that was worthy and unworthy should be recorded--the good with the
+evil--nothing should be too ephemeral, too minute, to escape his
+searching analysis.
+
+And all the while, though Brown was not aware of it, the memory of a
+face he had seen in the dining-room grew vaguely and faded, waxing and
+waning alternately, like a phantom illustration accompanying his
+thoughts.
+
+As for the model he should choose to study, she ought to be thoroughly
+feminine, he thought; young, probably blonde, well formed, not very
+deeply experienced, and with every human capacity for good and bad
+alike.
+
+He would approach her frankly, tell her what he required, offer her the
+pay of an artist's model, three dollars a day; and, if she accepted, she
+could have her head and do what she liked. All that concerned him was to
+make his observations and record them.
+
+In the blue starlight people passed and re-passed like ghosts along the
+shell-road--the white summer gowns of young girls were constantly
+appearing in the dusk, taking vague shape, vanishing. On the lagoon, a
+guitar sounded very far away. The suave scent of oleander grew sweeter.
+
+Spectral groups passed in clinging lingerie; here and there a ghost
+lingered to lean over the coquina wall, her lost gaze faintly accented
+by some level star. One of these, a slender young thing, paused near to
+Brown, resting gracefully against the wall.
+
+All around her the whip-poor-wills were calling breathlessly; the
+perfume of oleander grew sweeter.
+
+As for the girl herself, she resembled the tenth muse. Brown had never
+attempted to visualise his mistress; it had been enough for him that she
+was Thalomene, daughter of Zeus, and divinely fair.
+
+But now, as he recognised the face he had noticed that evening in the
+dining-room, somehow he thought of his muse for the first time,
+concretely. Perhaps because the girl by the coquina wall was young,
+slim, golden haired, and Greek.
+
+His impulse, without bothering to reason, was to hop from the wall and
+go over to where she was standing.
+
+She looked around calmly as he approached, gave him a little nod in
+recognition of his lifted hat.
+
+"I'm John Brown, 4th," he said. "I'm stopping at the Villa Hibiscus. Do
+you mind my saying so?"
+
+"No, I don't mind," she said.
+
+"There is a vast amount of nonsense in formality and convention," said
+Brown. "If you don't mind ignoring such details, I have something
+important to say to you."
+
+She looked at him unsmilingly. Probably it was the starlight in her
+eyes that made them glimmer as though with hidden laughter.
+
+"I am," said Brown, pleasantly, "an author."
+
+"Really," she said.
+
+"When I say that I am an author," continued Brown seriously, "I mean in
+the higher sense."
+
+"Oh. What is the higher sense, Mr. Brown?" she asked.
+
+"The higher sense does not necessarily imply authorship. I do not mean
+that I am a mere writer. I have written very little."
+
+"Oh," she said.
+
+"Very little," repeated Brown combatively. "You will look in vain among
+the crowded counters piled high with contemporary fiction for anything
+from my pen."
+
+"Then perhaps I had better not look," she said so simply that Brown was
+a trifle disappointed in her.
+
+"Some day, however," he said, "you may search, and, perhaps, not wholly
+in vain."
+
+"Oh, you are writing a book!"
+
+"Yes," he said, "I am, so to speak, at work on a novel."
+
+"Might one, with discretion, make further inquiry concerning your novel,
+Mr. Brown?"
+
+"_You_ may."
+
+"Thank you," she said, apparently a trifle disconcerted by the privilege
+so promptly granted.
+
+"_You_ may," repeated Brown. "Shall I explain why?"
+
+"Please."
+
+"You will not mistake me, I am sure. Will you?"
+
+She turned her pretty face toward him.
+
+"I don't think so," she said after a moment. The starlight was meddling
+with her eyes again.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+
+So Brown told her about his theory; how he desired to employ a model,
+how he desired to study her; what were his ideas of the terms suitable.
+
+He talked fluently, earnestly, and agreeably; and his pretty audience
+listened with so much apparent intelligence and good taste that her very
+attitude subtly exhilarated Brown, until he became slightly aware that
+he was expressing himself eloquently.
+
+He had, it seemed, much to say concerning the profession and practice of
+good literature. It seemed, too, that he knew a great deal about it,
+both theoretically and practically. His esteem and reverence for it were
+unmistakable; his enthusiasm worthy of his courage.
+
+He talked for a long while, partly about literature, partly about
+himself. And he was at intervals a trifle surprised that he had so much
+to say, and wondered at the valuable accumulations of which he was
+unburdening himself with such vast content.
+
+The girl had turned her back to the lagoon and stood leaning against the
+coquina wall, facing him, her slender hands resting on the coping.
+
+Never had he had such a listener. At the clubs and cafes other literary
+men always wanted to talk. But here under the great southern stars
+nobody interrupted the limpid flow of his long dammed eloquence. And he
+ended leisurely, as he had begun, yet auto-intoxicated, thrillingly
+conscious of the spell which he had laid upon himself, upon his young
+listener--conscious, too, of the spell that the soft air and the perfume
+and the stars had spun over a world grown suddenly and incredibly lovely
+and young.
+
+She said in a low voice: "I need the money very much.... And I don't
+mind your studying me."
+
+"Do you really mean it?" he exclaimed, enchanted.
+
+"Yes. But there is one trouble."
+
+"What is it?" he asked apprehensively.
+
+"I _must_ have my mornings to myself."
+
+He said: "Under the terms I must be permitted to ask you any questions I
+choose. You understand that, don't you?"
+
+"Yes," she said.
+
+"Then--why must you have your mornings to yourself?"
+
+"I have work to do."
+
+"What work? What are you?"
+
+She flushed a trifle, then, accepting the rules of the game, smiled at
+Brown.
+
+"I am a school-teacher," she said. "Ill health from overwork drove me
+South to convalesce. I am trying to support myself here by working in
+the mornings."
+
+"I am sorry," he said gently. Then, aware of his concession to a very
+human weakness, he added with businesslike decision: "What is the nature
+of your morning's work?"
+
+"I--write," she admitted.
+
+"Stories?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Fiction?"
+
+"Anything, Mr. Brown. I send notes to fashion papers, concerning the
+costumes at the Hotel Verbena; I write for various household papers
+special articles which would not interest you at all. I write little
+stories for the women's and children's columns in various newspapers.
+You see what I do is not literature, and could not interest you."
+
+"If you are to act for me in the capacity of a model," he said firmly,
+"I am absolutely bound to study every phase of you, every minutest
+detail."
+
+"Oh."
+
+"Not one minute of the day must pass without my observing you," he said.
+"Unless you are broad-minded enough to comprehend me you may think my
+close and unremitting observation impertinent."
+
+"You don't mean to be impertinent, I am sure," she faltered, already
+surprised, apprehensive, and abashed by the prospect.
+
+"Of course I don't mean to be impertinent," he said smilingly, "but all
+great observers pursue their studies unremittingly day and night----"
+
+"_You_ couldn't do _that_!" she exclaimed.
+
+"No," he admitted, troubled, "that would not be feasible. You require,
+of course, a certain amount of slumber."
+
+"Naturally," she said.
+
+"I ought," he said thoughtfully, "to study that phase of you, also."
+
+"What phase, Mr. Brown?"
+
+"When you are sleeping."
+
+"But that is impossible!"
+
+"Convention," he said disdainfully, "makes it so. A literary student is
+fettered.
+
+"But it is perfectly possible for you to imagine what I look like when
+I'm asleep, Mr. Brown."
+
+"Imagination is to play no part in my literary work," he said coldly.
+"What I set down are facts."
+
+"But is that art?"
+
+"There is more art in facts than there are facts in art," he said.
+
+"I don't quite know what you mean."
+
+He didn't, either, when he came to analyse what he had said; and he
+turned very red and admitted it.
+
+"I mean to be honest and truthful," he said. "What I just said sounded
+clever, but meant nothing. I admit it. I mean to be perfectly pitiless
+with myself. Anything tainted with imagination; anything hinting of
+romance; any weak concession to prejudice, convention, good taste, I
+refuse to be guilty of. Realism is what I aim at; raw facts, however
+unpleasant!"
+
+"I don't believe you will find anything very unpleasant about me," she
+said.
+
+"No, I don't think I shall. But I mean to detect every imperfection,
+every weakness, every secret vanity, every unworthy impulse. That is why
+I desire to study you so implacably. Are you willing to submit?"
+
+She bit her lip and looked thoughtfully at the stars.
+
+"You know," she said, "that while it may be all very well for you to say
+'anything for art's sake,' _I_ can't say it. I can't _do_ it, either."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Because I can't. You know perfectly well that you can't follow me about
+taking notes _every_ minute of the twenty-four hours."
+
+He said very earnestly: "Sir John Lubbock sat up day and night, never
+taking his eyes off the little colony of ants which he had under
+observation in a glass box!"
+
+"Do you propose to sit up day and night to keep me under observation?"
+she asked, flushed and astounded.
+
+"Not at first. But as my studies advance, and you become accustomed to
+the perfectly respectful but coldly impersonal nature of my
+observations, your mind, I trust, will become so broadened that you will
+find nothing objectionable in what at first might scare you. An artist's
+model, for example----"
+
+"But I am not an artist's model!" she exclaimed, with a slight shiver.
+
+"To be a proper model at all," he said, "you must concede all for art,
+and remain sublimely unconscious of self. _You_ do not matter. _I_ do
+not matter. Only my work counts. And that must be honest, truthful,
+accurate, minute, exact--a perfect record of a woman's mind and
+personality."
+
+For a few moments they both remained silent. And after a little the
+starlight began to play tricks with her eyes again, so that they seemed
+sparkling with hidden laughter. But her face was grave.
+
+She said: "I really do need the money. I will do what I can.... And if
+in spite of my courage I ever shrink--our contract shall terminate at
+once."
+
+"And what shall I do then?" inquired Brown.
+
+The starlight glimmered in her eyes. She said very gravely:
+
+"In case the demands of your realism and your art are too much for my
+courage, Mr. Brown--you will have to find another model to study."
+
+"But another model might prove as conventional as you!"
+
+"In that case," she said, while her sensitive lower lip trembled, and
+the starlight in her eyes grew softly brilliant, "in that case, Mr.
+Brown, I am afraid that there would be only one course to pursue with
+that _other_ model."
+
+"What course is that?" he asked, deeply interested.
+
+"I'm afraid you'd have to marry her."
+
+"Good Lord!" he said. "I can't marry every girl I mean to study!"
+
+"Oh! Do you mean to study very many?"
+
+"I have my entire life and career before me."
+
+"Yes. That is true. But--women are much alike. One model, thoroughly
+studied, might serve for them all--with a little imagination."
+
+"I have no use for imagination in fiction," said Brown firmly. After a
+moment's silence, he added: "Is it settled, then?"
+
+"About our--contract?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+She considered for a long while, then, looking up, she nodded.
+
+"That's fine!" exclaimed Brown, with enthusiasm.
+
+They walked back to the Villa Hibiscus together, slowly, through the
+blue starlight. Brown asked her name, and she told him.
+
+"No," he said gaily, "your name is Thalomene, and you are the tenth
+muse. For truly I think I have never before been so thoroughly inspired
+by a talk with anyone."
+
+She laughed. He had done almost all the talking. And he continued it,
+very happily, as by common consent they seated themselves on the
+veranda.
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+
+The inhabitants of the Villa Hibiscus retired. But Brown talked on,
+quite unconscious that the low-voiced questions and softly modulated
+replies were magic which incited him to a perfect ecstasy of
+self-revelation.
+
+Perhaps he thought he was studying her--for the compact by mutual
+consent was already in force--and certainly his eyes were constantly
+upon her, taking, as no doubt he supposed, a cold and impersonal measure
+of her symmetry. Calmly, and with utter detachment, he measured her
+slender waist, her soft little hands; noting the fresh, sweet lips, the
+clear, prettily shaped eyes, the delicate throat, the perfect little
+Greek head with its thick, golden hair.
+
+And all the while he held forth about literature and its true purpose;
+about what art really is; about his own art, his own literature, and
+his own self.
+
+And the girl was really fascinated.
+
+She had seen, at a distance, such men. When Brown had named himself to
+her, she had recognised the name with awe, as a fashionable and wealthy
+name known to Gotham.
+
+Yet, had Brown known it, neither his eloquence nor his theories, nor his
+aims, were what fascinated her. But it was his boyish enthusiasm, his
+boyish intolerance, his immaturity, his happy certainty of the
+importance of what concerned himself.
+
+He was so much a boy, so much a man, such a candid, unreasonable, eager,
+selfish, impulsive, portentous, and delightfully illogical mixture of
+boy and man that the combination fascinated every atom of womanhood in
+her--and at moments as the night wore on, she found herself listening
+perilously close to the very point of sympathy.
+
+He appeared to pay no heed to the flight of time. The big stars frosted
+Heaven; the lagoon was silvered by them; night winds stirred the orange
+bloom; oleanders exhaled a bewitching perfume.
+
+As he lay there in his rocking chair beside her, it seemed to him that
+he had known her intimately for years--so wonderfully does the charm of
+self-revelation act upon human reason. For she had said almost nothing
+about herself. Yet, it was becoming plainer to him every moment that
+never in all his life had he known any woman as he already knew this
+young girl.
+
+"It is wonderful," he said, lying back in his chair and looking up at
+the stars, "how subtle is sympathy, and how I recognise yours. I think I
+understand you perfectly already."
+
+"Do you?" she said.
+
+"Yes, I feel sure I do. Somehow, I know that secretly and in your own
+heart you are in full tide of sympathy with me and with my life's work."
+
+"I thought you had no imagination," she said.
+
+"I haven't. Do you mean that I only imagine that you are in sympathy
+with me?"
+
+"No," she said. "I am."
+
+After a few moments she laughed deliciously. He never knew why. Nor was
+she ever perfectly sure why she had laughed, though they discussed the
+matter very gravely.
+
+A new youth seemed to have invaded her, an exquisite sense of lightness,
+of power. Vaguely she was conscious of ability, of a wonderful and
+undreamed of capacity. Within her heart she seemed to feel the subtle
+stir of a new courage, a certainty of the future, of indefinable but
+splendid things.
+
+The manuscript of the novel which she had sent North two weeks ago
+seemed to her a winged thing soaring to certain victory in the empyrean.
+Suddenly, by some magic, doubt, fear, distress, were allayed--and it was
+like surcease from a steady pain, with all the blessed and heavenly
+languor relaxing her mind and body.
+
+And all the while Brown talked on.
+
+Lying there in her chair she listened to him while the thoughts in her
+eased mind moved in delicate accompaniment.
+
+Somehow she understood that never in her life had she been so
+happy--with this boy babbling beside her, and her own thoughts
+responding almost tenderly to his youth, his inconsistencies, to the
+arrogance typical of his sex. He was _so_ wrong!--so far from the track,
+so utterly astray, so pitiably confident! Who but she should know, who
+had worked and studied and failed and searched, always _writing_,
+however--which is the only way in the world to learn how to write--or to
+learn that there is no use in writing.
+
+Her hand lay along the flat arm of her rocking-chair; and once, when he
+had earnestly sustained a perfectly untenable theory concerning success
+in literature, unconsciously she laid her fresh, smooth hand on his arm
+in impulsive protest.
+
+"No," she said, "don't think that way. You are quite wrong. That is the
+road to failure!"
+
+It was her first expression of disagreement, and he looked at her
+amazed.
+
+"I am afraid you think I don't know anything about real literature and
+realism," she said, "but I do know a little."
+
+"Every man must work out his salvation in his own way," he insisted,
+still surprised at her dissent.
+
+"Yes, but one should be equipped by long practice in the art before
+definitely choosing one's final course."
+
+"I am practiced."
+
+"I don't mean theoretically," she murmured.
+
+He laughed: "Oh, you mean mere writing," he said, gaily confident.
+"That, according to my theory, is not necessary to real experience.
+Literature is something loftier."
+
+In her feminine heart every instinct of womanhood was aroused--pity for
+the youth of him, sympathy for his obtuseness, solicitude for his
+obstinacy, tenderness for the fascinating combination of boy and man,
+which might call itself by any name it chose--even "author"--and go
+blundering along without a helping hand amid shrugs and smiles to a goal
+marked "Failure."
+
+"I wonder," she said almost timidly, "whether you could ever listen to
+me."
+
+"Always," he said, bending nearer to see her expression. Which having
+seen, he perhaps forgot to note in his little booklet, for he continued
+to look at her.
+
+"I haven't very much to say," she said. "Only--to learn any art or trade
+or profession it is necessary to work at it unremittingly. But to
+discuss it never helped anybody."
+
+"My dear child," he said, "I know that what you say was the old idea.
+But," he shrugged, "I do not agree with it."
+
+"I am so sorry," she said.
+
+"Sorry? Why are you sorry?"
+
+"I don't know.... Perhaps because I like you."
+
+It was not very much to say--not a very significant declaration; but the
+simplicity and sweetness of it--her voice--the head bent a little in the
+starlight--all fixed Brown's attention. He sat very still there in the
+luminous dusk of the white veranda; the dew dripped steadily like rain;
+the lagoon glittered.
+
+Then, subtly, taking Brown unawares, his most treacherous enemy crept
+upon him with a stealth incredible, and, before Brown knew it, was in
+full possession of his brain. The enemy was Imagination.
+
+Minute after minute slipped away in the scented dusk, and found Brown's
+position unchanged, where he lay in his chair looking at her.
+
+The girl also was very silent.
+
+With what wonderful attributes his enemy, Imagination, was busily
+endowing the girl beside him in the starlight, there is no knowing. His
+muse was Thalomene, slim daughter of Zeus; and whether she was really
+still on Olympus or here beside him he scarcely knew, so perfectly did
+this young girl inspire him, so exquisitely did she fill the bill.
+
+"It is odd," he said, after a long while, "that merely a few hours with
+you should inspire me more than I have ever been inspired in all my
+life."
+
+"That," she said unsteadily, "is your imagination."
+
+At the hateful word, imagination, Brown seemed to awake from the spell.
+Then he sat up straight, rather abruptly.
+
+"The thing to do," he said, still confused by his awakening, "is to
+consider you impersonally and make notes of everything." And he fumbled
+for pencil and note-book, and, rising, stepped across to the front door,
+where a light was burning.
+
+Standing under it he resolutely composed his thoughts; but to save his
+life he could remember nothing of which to make a memorandum.
+
+This worried him, and finally alarmed him. And so long did he stand
+there, note-book open, pencil poised, and a sickly expression of dismay
+imprinted upon his otherwise agreeable features, that the girl rose at
+last from her chair, glanced in through the door at him, and then came
+forward.
+
+"What is the matter?" she asked.
+
+"The matter is," said Brown, "that I don't seem to have anything to
+write about."
+
+"You are tired," she said. "I think we both are a little tired."
+
+"_I_ am not. Anyway, I have something to write about now. Wait a moment
+till I make a note of how you walk--the easy, graceful, flowing motion,
+so exquisitely light and----"
+
+"But _I_ don't walk like that!" she said, laughing.
+
+"--Graciously as a youthful goddess," muttered Brown, scribbling away
+busily in his note-book. "Tell me; what motive had you just now in
+rising and coming to ask me what was the matter--with such a sweetly
+apprehensive expression in your eyes?"
+
+"My--my motive?" she repeated, astonished.
+
+"Yes. You had one, hadn't you?"
+
+"Why--I don't know. You looked worried; so I came."
+
+"The motive," said Brown, "was feminine solicitude--an emotion natural
+to nice women. Thank you." And he made a note of it.
+
+"But motives and emotions are different things," she said timidly. "I
+had no motive for coming to ask you why you seemed troubled."
+
+"Wasn't your motive to learn why?"
+
+"Y-yes, I suppose so."
+
+He laid his head on one side and inspected her critically.
+
+"And if anything had been amiss with me you would have been sorry,
+wouldn't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Why? Because--one is sorry when a friend--when anyone----"
+
+"I _am_ your friend," he said. "So why not say it?"
+
+"And I am yours--if you wish," she said.
+
+"Yes, I do." He began to write: "It's rather odd how friendship begins.
+We both seem to want to be friends." And to her he said: "How does it
+make you feel--the idea of our being friends? What emotions does it
+arouse in you?"
+
+She looked at him in sorrowful surprise. "I thought it was real
+friendship you meant," she murmured, "not the sort to make a note
+about."
+
+"But I've got to make notes of everything. Don't you see? Certainly our
+friendship is real enough--but I've got to study it minutely and make
+notes concerning it. It's necessary to make records of everything--how
+you walk, stand, speak, look, how you go upstairs----"
+
+"I am going now," she said.
+
+He followed, scribbling furiously; and it is difficult to go upstairs,
+watch a lady go upstairs, and write about the way she does it all at the
+same time.
+
+"Good-night," she said, opening her door.
+
+"Good-night," he said, absently, and so intent on his scribbling that he
+followed her through the door into her room.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+
+"She goes upstairs as though she were floating up," he wrote, with
+enthusiasm; "her lovely figure, poised on tip-toe, seems to soar upward,
+ascending as naturally and gracefully as the immortals ascended the
+golden stairs of Jacob----"
+
+In full flood of his treacherous imagination he seated himself on a
+chair beside her bed, rested the note-book on his knees, and scribbled
+madly, utterly oblivious to her. And it was only when he had finished,
+for sheer lack of material, that he recollected himself, looked up, saw
+how she had shrunk away from him against the wall--how the scarlet had
+dyed her face to her temples.
+
+"Why--why do you come--into my bedroom?" she faltered. "Does our
+friendship count for no more than that with you?"
+
+"What?" he said, bewildered.
+
+"That you do what you have no right to do. Art--art is _not_ enough
+to--to--excuse--disrespect----"
+
+Suddenly the tears sprang to her eyes, and she covered her flushed face
+with both hands.
+
+For a moment Brown stood petrified. Then a deeper flush than hers
+settled heavily over his features.
+
+"I'm sorry," he said.
+
+She made no response.
+
+"I didn't mean to hurt you. I _do_ respect you," he said.
+
+No response.
+
+Brown gazed at her, gazed at his note-book.
+
+Then he hurled the note-book across the room and walked over to her as
+she lifted her lovely head, startled and tearful.
+
+"You are right," he said, swallowing nothing very desperately. "You can
+not be studied this way. Will you--marry me?"
+
+"What!"
+
+"Will you marry me?"
+
+"Why?" she gasped.
+
+"Because I--want to study you."
+
+"No!" she said, looking him straight in the eyes.
+
+Brown thought hard for a full minute.
+
+"Would you marry me because I love you?" he asked timidly.
+
+The question seemed to be more than she could answer. Besides, the tears
+sprang to her blue eyes again, and her under lip began to tremble, and
+she covered her face with both hands. Which made it impossible for him
+to kiss her.
+
+"Isn't it wonderful?" he said earnestly, trembling from head to foot.
+"Isn't it wonderful, dear?"
+
+"Yes," she whispered. The word, uttered against his shoulder, was
+stifled. He bent his head nearer, murmuring:
+
+"Thalomene--Thalomene--embodiment of Truth! How wonderful it is to me
+that at last I find in you that absolute Truth I worship."
+
+"I am--the embodiment--of your--imagination," she said. "But you will
+never, never believe it--most adorable of boys--dearest--dearest of
+men."
+
+And, lifting her stately and divine young head, she looked innocently at
+Brown while he imprinted his first and most chaste kiss upon the fresh,
+sweet lips of the tenth muse, Thalomene, daughter of Zeus.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Athalie," said the youthful novelist more in sorrow than in anger,
+"you are making game of everything I hold most important."
+
+"Provide yourself with newer and truer gods, dear child," said the girl,
+laughing. "After you've worshipped them long enough somebody will also
+poke fun at them. Whereupon, if you are fortunate enough to be one of
+those who continues to mature until he matures himself into the
+Ewigkeit, you will instantly quit those same over-mauled and worn out
+gods for newer and truer ones."
+
+"And so on indefinitely," I added.
+
+"In literature," began the novelist, "the great masters must stand as
+parents for us in our first infantile steps----"
+
+"No," said the girl, "all worthy aspirants enter the field of literature
+as orphans. Opportunity and Fates alone stand for them _in loco
+parentis_. And the child of these is known as Destiny."
+
+"No cubist could beat that, Athalie," remarked Duane. "I'm ashamed of
+you--or proud--I don't know which."
+
+"Dear child," she said, "you will never know the true inwardness of any
+sentiment you entertain concerning me until I explain it to you."
+
+"Smitten again hip and thigh," said Stafford. "Fair lady, I am far too
+wary to tell you what I think of the art of incoherence as practised
+occasionally by the prettiest Priestess in the Temple."
+
+Athalie looked at me as the sweetmeat melted on her tongue.
+
+"You promised me a dog," she remarked.
+
+"I've picked him out. He'll be weaned in another week."
+
+"What species of pup is he?" inquired Duane.
+
+"An Iceland terrier," I answered. "They use them for digging out walrus
+and seals."
+
+"Thank you," said Duane pleasantly.
+
+"After all," observed the girl, lifting her glass of water, "it does not
+concern Mr. Duane what sort of a dog you have chosen for me."
+
+She sipped it leisurely, looking over the delicate crystal rim at Duane.
+
+"You are young," she said. "'_L'enfance est le sommeil de la raison._'"
+
+"How would you like to have an Angora kitten?" he asked, reddening
+slightly.
+
+"But infancy," she added, "is always adorable.... I think I might like a
+white one with blue eyes."
+
+"Puppies, kittens, children," remarked Stafford--"they're all tolerable
+while they're young."
+
+"All of these," said the girl softly, "I should like to have."
+
+And she gazed inquiringly at the crystal. But it could tell her nothing
+of herself or of her hopes. She turned and looked out into the dark
+city, a trifle wearily, it seemed to me.
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+
+After a silence, she lay back among her cushions and glanced at us with
+a faint smile.
+
+"One day last winter," she said, "after the last client had gone and
+office hours were over, I sat here thinking, wondering what in the world
+could be worse for a girl than to have no parents.... And I happened to
+glance into my crystal, and saw there an incident beginning to evolve
+that cheered me up, because it was a parody on my more morbid train of
+thought. After all, the same Chance that gives a child to its parents
+gives the parents to that child. You may think this is Tupper," she
+added, "but it is Athalie. And that being the case, nobody will laugh."
+
+Nobody did laugh.
+
+"Thank you," she said sweetly. "Now I will tell you what I saw in my
+crystal when I happened to be feeling unusually alone in the world." And
+with a pretty nod to us, collectively, she began.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The bulk of the cargo and a few bodies were coming ashore at the eastern
+end of the island, and that is where the throngs were--people from the
+Light House, fishermen from the inlet, and hundreds of winter tourists
+from St. Augustine, in white flannels and summer gowns, all attracted to
+Ibis Island by the grewsome spectacle of the wreck.
+
+The West Indian hurricane had done its terrific business and had gone,
+leaving a turquoise sky untroubled by a cloud, and a sea of snow and
+cobalt.
+
+Nothing living had been washed ashore from the wreck. As for the brig,
+she had vanished--if there had been anything left of her to disappear
+except the wreckage, human and otherwise, that had come tumbling ashore
+through the surf all night long.
+
+So young Gray, seeing that there was nothing for him to do, and not
+caring for the spectacle at the eastern end of the island, turned on his
+heel and walked west through thickets of sweet bay, palmetto, and
+beach-grape.
+
+He wore the lightest weight solaro, with a helmet and close-fitting
+puttees of the same. Two straps crossed his breast, the one supporting a
+well filled haversack, the other a water bottle. Except for fire arms he
+was equipped for darkest Africa, or for anything else on earth--at least
+he supposed so. He was wrong; he was not equipped for what he was about
+to encounter on Ibis Island.
+
+It happened in this manner: traversing the seaward dunes, because the
+beach no longer afforded him even a narrow margin for a footing,
+shoulder deep in a tangle of beach-grapes, he chanced to glance at the
+little sandy cove which he was skirting, and saw there an empty fruit
+crate tumbling in the smother of foam, and a very small setter puppy
+clinging to it frantically, with every claw clutching, and his drenched
+tail between his legs.
+
+Even while Gray was forcing his eager way through the tangle, he was
+aware of somebody else moving forward through the high scrub just west
+of him; and as he sprang out onto the beach and laid his hand on the
+stranded fruit crate, another hand, slimmer and whiter than his, fell
+on the crate as he dragged it out of the foamy shallows and up across
+the dry sand, just as a tremendous roller smashed into clouds of foam
+behind it.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said a breathless voice at his elbow, "but I think
+I saw this little dog first."
+
+Gray already was reaching for the shivering little thing, but two other
+hands deprived him of the puppy; and he looked up, impatient and
+annoyed, into the excited brown eyes of a young girl.
+
+She had taken the dripping, clawing little creature to her breast, where
+it shivered and moaned and whined, shoving its cold nose up under her
+chin.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said Gray, firmly, "but I am really very certain
+that I first discovered that dog."
+
+"I am sorry you think so," she said, clasping the creature all the
+tighter.
+
+"I _do_ think so," insisted Gray. "I _know_ it!"
+
+"I am very sorry," she repeated. Over the puppy's shivering back her
+brown eyes gazed upon Gray. They were very pretty, but hostile.
+
+"There can be no question about the ownership of this pup," persisted
+Gray. "Of course, I am sorry if you really think you discovered the
+dog. Because you didn't."
+
+"I _did_ discover him," she said, calmly.
+
+"I beg your pardon. I was walking through the beach-grapes----"
+
+"I beg yours! I also was crossing the sweet-bay scrub when I happened to
+glance down at the cove and saw this poor little dog in the water."
+
+"That is exactly what _I_ did! I happened to glance down, and there I
+saw this little dog. Instantly I sprang----"
+
+"So did I!--I _beg_ your pardon for interrupting you!"
+
+"I was merely explaining that I first saw the dog, and next I noticed
+you. But first of all I saw the dog."
+
+"That is the exact sequence in my own observations," she rejoined
+calmly. "First of all I saw the dog in the water, then I heard a crash
+in the bush, and saw something floundering about in the tangle."
+
+"And," continued Gray, much annoyed by her persistency, "no sooner had I
+caught hold of the crate than _you_ came up and laid _your_ hand on it,
+also. You surely must remember that I had my hand on the crate before
+you did!"
+
+"I am very sorry you think so. The contrary was the case. _I_ took firm
+hold of the crate, and then you aided me to draw it up out of the
+water."
+
+"It is extraordinary," he said, "how mistaken you are concerning the
+actual sequence of events. Not that I doubt for a moment that you really
+suppose you discovered the dog. Probably you were a little excited----"
+
+"I was perfectly cool. Possibly _you_ were a trifle excited."
+
+"Not in the least," he retorted with calm exasperation. "I never become
+agitated."
+
+The puppy continued to shiver and drive its nose up under the girl's
+chin.
+
+"Poor little thing! Poor little shipwrecked baby!" she crooned. And, to
+Gray: "I don't know why this puppy should be so cold. The water is warm
+enough."
+
+"Put it in the hot sand," he said. "We can rub it dry."
+
+She hesitated, flushing perhaps at her own suspicions; but nevertheless
+she said:
+
+"You would not attempt to take it if I put it down, would you?"
+
+"I don't intend to snatch it," he said with dignity. "_Men_ don't
+snatch."
+
+So they went inland a few paces where the sand was hot and loose and
+deep; and there they knelt down and put the puppy on the sand.
+
+[Illustration: "'I am in possession of the dog and you merely claim
+possession.'"]
+
+"Scrub him thoroughly," she suggested, pouring heaping handfuls of hot,
+silvery sand over the little creature.
+
+Gray did likewise, and together they rubbed and scrubbed and rolled the
+puppy about until the dog began to roll on his back all by himself,
+twisting and wriggling and waving his big, padded paws.
+
+"What he wants is water," asserted Gray, unstrapping his haversack and
+bottle. From the one he produced an aluminum pannikin; from the other he
+filled it with water. The puppy drank it all while Gray and the
+brown-eyed girl looked on intently.
+
+Then Gray produced some beef sandwiches, and the famished little
+creature leaped and whirled and danced as Gray fed him cautiously, bit
+by bit.
+
+"Do you think that is perfectly fair?" asked the girl gravely.
+
+"Fair?" repeated Gray guiltily.
+
+"Yes. Who first feeds a strange dog is recognised as the reigning
+authority."
+
+"Very well, you may feed him, too. But that does not alter the facts in
+the case."
+
+"The facts," said the girl, taking a sandwich from Gray, "are that I am
+in possession of the dog and you merely claim possession."
+
+They fed him alternately and in silence--until their opinion became
+unanimous that it was dangerous, for the present, to feed him any more.
+
+The puppy begged and pleaded and cajoled and danced--a most appealing
+and bewitching little creature, silvery white and blue-ticked, with a
+tiny tan point over each eye and a black and tan saddle.
+
+"Lavarack," observed Gray.
+
+"English," she nodded.
+
+It wagged not only its little, whippy tail, but in doing so wriggled its
+entire hind quarters, showing no preference for either of its rescuers,
+but bestowing winning and engaging favours impartially.
+
+The girl could endure it no longer, but snatched the puppy to her with a
+soft little cry, and cuddled it tight. Gray looked on gloomily. Then,
+when she released it, he took it and caressed it in masculine fashion.
+There was no discernible difference in its affectionate responses.
+
+After the dog had lavished enthusiasm and affection on its saviours to
+the point of physical exhaustion, it curled up on the hot sand between
+them. At first, when they moved or spoke, the little, silky head was
+quickly lifted, and the brown eyes turned alertly from one to the other
+of the two beings most beloved on earth. But presently only the whippy
+tail stirred in recognition of their voices. And finally the little dog
+slept in the hot sunshine.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+
+For a long while, seated on either side of the slumbering puppy, they
+remained silent, in fascinated contemplation of what they had rescued.
+
+Finally Gray said slowly: "It may seem odd to you that I should be so
+firm and uncompromising concerning my right to a very small dog which
+may be duplicated in the North for a few dollars."
+
+She lifted her brown eyes to his, then let them fall again on the dog.
+
+"The reason is this," said Gray. "The native dogs I dislike intensely.
+Dogs imported from the North soon die in this region. But this little
+pup was evidently born on shipboard and on tropical seas. I think he's
+very likely to survive the climate. And as I am obliged to reside here
+for a while, and as I am to live all alone, this pup is a godsend to
+me."
+
+The girl, still resting her eyes on the sleeping puppy, said very
+quietly:
+
+"I do not desire to appear selfish, but a girl is twice as lonely as a
+man. And as I fortunately first discovered the dog it seems to me
+absolutely right and just that I should keep him."
+
+Gray sat pouring sand through his fingers and casting an occasional
+oblique glance at the girl. She was not sunburned, so she must be a
+recent arrival. She spoke with a northern accent, which determined her
+origin.
+
+_What_ was she doing down here on this absurd island? Why didn't she go
+back to St. Augustine where she belonged?
+
+"You know," he said craftily, "I can buy a very nice little dog indeed
+for you in St. Augustine."
+
+"I am not stopping in St. Augustine. Besides, there are only horrid
+little lap-dogs there."
+
+"Don't you like lap-dogs--Pomms, Pekinese, Maltese?" he inquired
+persuasively.
+
+"No."
+
+"You are unlike the majority of girls then. What sort of dog do you
+like?"
+
+"Setters," she explained with decision.
+
+And as he bit his lip in annoyed silence she added:
+
+"Setter puppies are what I adore."
+
+"I'm sorry," he said bluntly.
+
+She added, not heeding his observation: "I am mad about setter puppies,
+particularly English setter puppies. And when I try to realise that I
+discovered a shipwrecked one all by myself, and rescued it, I can
+scarcely believe in such an adorable miracle."
+
+It was on the tip of his tongue to offer to purchase the pup, but a
+quick glance at the girl checked him. She was evidently perfectly
+sincere, and the quality of her was unmistakable.
+
+Already, within these few minutes, her skin had begun to burn a delicate
+rose tint from the sun's fierce reflection on the white sands. Her hair
+was a splendid golden brown, her eyes darker, or perhaps the long, dark
+lashes made them seem so. She was daintily and prettily made, head,
+throat, shoulders, and limbs; she wore a summer gown so waistless and
+limp that it conformed to the corsetless fashions in vogue, making
+evident here and there the contours of her slim and supple figure.
+
+From the tip of her white shoe to the tip of her hat she was the futile
+and exquisite essence of Gotham.
+
+Gray realised it because he lived there himself. But he could not
+understand where all her determination and obstinacy came from, for she
+seemed so young and inexperienced, and there was about her a childish
+dewiness of eye and lip that suggested a blossom's fragrance.
+
+She was very lovely; and that was all very well in its way, but Gray had
+come down there on stern business, and how long his business might last,
+and how long he was to inhabit a palmetto bungalow above the coquina
+quarry he did not know. The coquina quarry was as hot as the infernal
+pit. Also, snakes frequented it.
+
+No black servant--promised him faithfully in St. Augustine the day
+before--had yet arrived. A few supplies had been sent over from St.
+Augustine, and he was camping in his little house of logs, along with
+wood-ticks, blue lizards, white ants, gophers, hornets, and several
+chestnut-colored scorpions.
+
+"I wouldn't mind yielding the dog to you," he admitted, "if I were not
+so horribly lonely on this miserable island. When evening comes, _you_
+will go back to luxury and comfort somewhere or other, with dinner
+awaiting you and servants to do everything, and a nice bed to retire to.
+That's a pleasant picture, isn't it?"
+
+"Very," she replied, with a slight shrug.
+
+"Now," he said, "please gaze mentally upon this other picture. _I_ am
+obliged to go back to a shack haunted by every species of creature that
+this wretched island harbours.
+
+"There will be no dinner for me except what I can scoop out of a tin; no
+servants to do one bally thing for me; no bed.
+
+"Listen attentively," he continued, becoming slightly dramatic as he
+remembered more clearly the horrors of the preceding night--his first on
+Ibis Island. "I shall go into that devilish bungalow and look around
+like a scared dog, standing very carefully in the exact centre of the
+room. And what will be the first object that my unwilling eyes
+encounter? A scorpion! Perhaps two, crawling out from the Spanish moss
+with which the chinks of that miserable abode are stuffed. I shall slay
+it--or _them_--as the case may be. Then a blue-tailed lizard will frisk
+over the ceiling--or perhaps one of those big, heavy ones with blunt,
+red heads. Doubtless at that same instant I shall discover a wood-tick
+advancing up one of my trousers' legs. Spiders will begin to move across
+the walls. Perhaps a snake or two will then develop from some shadowy
+corner."
+
+He waved his arm impressively and pointed at the sleeping puppy.
+
+"Under such circumstances," he said pathetically, "would you care to
+deprive me of this little companion sent by Providence for me to rescue
+out of the sea?"
+
+She, too, had been steadily pouring sand between her white fingers
+during the moving recital of his woes. Now she looked up, controlling a
+shudder.
+
+"Your circumstances, with all their attendant horrors, are my own," she
+began. "I, also, since last night, inhabit a picturesque but most horrid
+bungalow not very far from here; and every one of the creatures you
+describe, and several others also, inhabit it with me. Do you wonder I
+want _some_ companionship? Do you wonder that I am inclined to cling to
+this little dog--whether or not it may seem ill bred and selfish to
+you?"
+
+He said: "I suppose all the houses in this latitude harbour tarantulas,
+centipedes, and similar things, but you must remember that you do not
+live alone as I do----"
+
+"Yes, I do!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Certainly. I engaged two black servants in St. Augustine, but they have
+not arrived, and I was obliged to remain all alone in that frightful
+place last night."
+
+"That's very odd," he said uneasily. "Where _is_ this bungalow of
+yours?"
+
+She started to speak, checked herself as at a sudden and unpleasant
+thought, looked up at him searchingly; and found his steel-grey eyes as
+searchingly fixed on her.
+
+"Where is _your_ bungalow?" she asked, watching him intently.
+
+"Mine is situated at the west end of a coquina quarry. Where is yours?"
+
+"Mine," she answered unsteadily but defiantly, "is situated on the
+eastern edge of a coquina quarry."
+
+"Why did _you_ choose a quarry bungalow?"
+
+"Why did _you_ choose one?"
+
+"Because the coquina quarry happens to belong to me."
+
+"The quarry," she retorted, "belongs to _me_."
+
+He was almost too disgusted to speak, but he contrived to say, quietly
+and civilly:
+
+"You are Constance Leslie, are you not?"
+
+"Yes.... You are Johnson Gray?"
+
+"Yes, I am," he answered, checking his exasperation and forcing a smile.
+"It's rather odd, isn't it--rather unfortunate, I'm afraid."
+
+"It _is_ unfortunate for you, Mr. Gray," she returned firmly. "I'm
+sorry--really sorry that this long journey is in vain."
+
+"So am I," he said, with lips compressed.
+
+For a few moments they sat very still, not looking at each other.
+
+Presently he said: "It was a fool of a will. He was a most disagreeable
+old man."
+
+"_I_ never saw him."
+
+"Nor I. They say he was a terror. But he had a sense of humour--a grim
+and acrid one--the cynic's idea of wit. No doubt he enjoyed it. No doubt
+he is enjoying this very scene between you and me--if he's anywhere
+within sight or hearing----"
+
+"Don't say that!" she exclaimed, almost violently. "It is horrible
+enough on this island without hinting of ghosts."
+
+"Ghosts? Of course there are ghosts. But I'd rather have my bungalow
+full of 'em than full of scorpions."
+
+"We differ," she said coldly.
+
+Silence fell again, and again was broken by Gray.
+
+"Certainly the old fellow had a sense of humour," he insisted; "the will
+he left was one huge joke on every relative who had expectations.
+Imagine all that buzzard family of his who got nothing to amount to
+anything; and all those distant relatives who expected nothing and got
+almost everything!"
+
+"Do you think that was humourous?"
+
+"Yes; don't you? And I think what he did about you and me was really
+very funny. Don't you?"
+
+"Why is it funny for a very horrid old man to make a will full of grim
+jokes and jests, and take that occasion to tell everybody exactly what
+he thinks of everybody?"
+
+"He said nothing disagreeable about _us_ that I recollect," remarked
+Gray, laughing.
+
+Pouring sand between her fingers, she said:
+
+"I remember very well how he mentioned us. He said that he had never
+seen either one of us, and was glad of it. He said that as I was an
+orphan with no money, and that as you were similarly situated, and that
+as neither you nor I had brains enough to ever make any, he would leave
+his coquina quarry to that one of us who had brains enough to get here
+first and stake the claim. Do you call that an agreeable manner of
+making a bequest?"
+
+Gray laughed easily: "_I_ don't care what he thought about my
+intellectual capacity."
+
+"I suppose that I don't either. And anyway the bequest may be valuable."
+
+"There is no doubt about that," said Gray.
+
+She let her brown eyes rest thoughtfully on the ocean.
+
+"I think," she said, "that I shall dispose of it at once."
+
+"The dog?" he asked politely.
+
+Her pretty, hostile eyes met his:
+
+"The quarry," she replied calmly.
+
+"Good Lord!" he exclaimed. "Do you think also that _you_ arrived at the
+quarry before I arrived?"
+
+"You will find my stake with its written notice sticking in the sand on
+the eastern edge of the quarry, about a hundred yards south of my
+bungalow!"
+
+"_My_ notice is very carefully staked on the western edge of the quarry
+about the same distance from my bungalow," he said. "I placed it there
+yesterday evening."
+
+"I also placed my notice there yesterday evening!"
+
+"By what train did you come?"
+
+"By the Verbena Special. It arrived at St. Augustine yesterday at four
+o'clock in the afternoon."
+
+"_I_ also came on that train."
+
+"I," she said, "waited in St. Augustine only long enough to telephone
+for servants, and then I jumped into a victoria and drove over the
+causeway to the eastern end of the quarry."
+
+"I did exactly the same," he insisted, "only I drove to the western end
+of the quarry. What time did you set your notice?"
+
+"I don't know exactly. It was just about dusk."
+
+"It was just about dusk when I drove in _my_ stake!"
+
+After a moment's idling in the sand with her slim fingers, she looked up
+at him a trifle pale.
+
+"I suppose this means a lawsuit."
+
+"I'm afraid it does."
+
+"I'm sorry. If I wasn't in such desperate need of money----" But she
+said no more, and he also remained silent for a while. Then:
+
+"I shall write to my attorney to come down," he said soberly. "You had
+better do the same this evening."
+
+She nodded.
+
+"It's got to be settled, of course," he continued; "because I'm too poor
+to concede the quarry to you."
+
+"It is that way with me also. I do not like to appear so selfish to
+you, but what am I to do, Mr. Gray?"
+
+"What am _I_ to do? I honestly believe that I staked the quarry before
+you did.... And my financial situation does not permit me to relinquish
+my claim on the quarry."
+
+"What a horrid will that was!" she exclaimed, the quick tears of
+vexation springing into her brown eyes. "If you knew how hard I've
+worked, Mr. Gray--all these years having nothing that other girls
+have--being obliged to work my way through college, and then take a
+position as governess--and just as it seemed that relief was in
+sight--_you_ come into sight!--you!--and you even try to take away my
+little dog--the only thing I--I ever really cared for since I have--have
+been alone in the world----"
+
+Gray sprang up nervously: "I'm sorry--terribly sorry for you! You may
+keep the dog anyway."
+
+She had turned away her face sharply as the quick tears started. Now she
+looked around at him in unfeigned surprise.
+
+"But--what will _you_ do?"
+
+"Oh, I can stand being alone. I don't mind. There's no doubt about it;
+you must have the dog----" He glanced down at the little creature and
+caught his breath sharply as the puppy opened one eye and wagged its
+absurd tail feebly.
+
+The girl rose lightly and gracefully from the sand, refusing his
+assistance, and stood looking down at the puppy. The little thing was on
+its clumsy feet, wagging and wriggling with happiness, and gazing up
+adoringly from Gray to Constance Leslie.
+
+The girl looked at the dog, then at Gray.
+
+"It--it seems too cruel," she said. "I can't bear to take him away from
+you."
+
+"Oh, that's all right. I'll get on very well alone."
+
+"You are generous. You are very generous. But after the way you
+expressed yourself concerning the dog, I don't feel that I can possibly
+take him."
+
+"You really must. I don't blame you at all for falling in love with him.
+Besides, one adores what one rescues, above everything in the world."
+
+"But--but I thought that you thought _you_ had rescued him?" she
+faltered.
+
+"It was a close call. I think perhaps that you arrived just a fraction
+of a second sooner than I did."
+
+"Do you really? Or do you say that to be kind? Besides, I am not at all
+sure. It is perfectly possible--even, perhaps, probable that you saw
+him before I did."
+
+"No, I don't think so. I think he's your dog, Miss Leslie. I surrender
+all claim to him----"
+
+"No! I can not permit you to do such a thing! Forgive me. I was excited
+and a little vexed.... I know you would be very unhappy if I took the
+little thing----"
+
+"Please take him. I do love him already, but that is why it gives me a
+p-p-peculiar pleasure to relinquish all claims in y-your favour."
+
+"Thank you. It is--is charming of you--exceedingly nice of you--but how
+can I accept such a real sacrifice?... You would be perfectly wretched
+to-night without him."
+
+"So would you, Miss Leslie."
+
+"I shall be wretched anyway. So it doesn't really matter."
+
+"It _does_ matter! If this little dog can alleviate your unhappiness in
+the slightest degree, I insist most firmly that you take him!"
+
+The girl stood irresolute, lifted her brown eyes to his, lowered them,
+and gazed longingly at the puppy.
+
+"Do you suppose he will follow me?"
+
+"Try!"
+
+So she walked one way and Gray started in the opposite direction, and
+the bewildered puppy, who at first supposed it was all in play, dashed
+from one back to the other, until the widening distance between them
+perplexed and finally began to trouble him.
+
+Nevertheless, he continued to run back and forth from Gray to Constance
+Leslie as long as his rather wavering legs held out. Then, unable to
+decide, he stood panting midway between them, whining at moments, until,
+unable to understand or endure the spectacle of his two best beloveds
+vanishing in opposite directions, he put up his nose and howled.
+
+Then both best beloveds came back running, and Constance snatched him to
+her breast and covered him with caresses.
+
+"What on earth are we to do?" she said in consternation. "We nearly
+broke his heart that time."
+
+"_I_ don't know what to do," he admitted, much perplexed. "This pup
+seems to be impartial in his new-born affections."
+
+"I thought," she said, with an admirable effort at self-denial, "that he
+rather showed a preference for _you_!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because when he was sitting there howling his little heart out, he
+seemed to look toward you a little oftener than he gazed in my
+direction."
+
+Gray rose nobly to the self-effacing level of his generous adversary:
+
+"No, the balance was, if anything, in your favour. I'm very certain that
+he will be happier with you. T-take him!"
+
+The girl buried her pretty face in the puppy's coat as though it had
+been a fluffy muff.
+
+"What a pity," she said, in a muffled voice, "that he is compelled to
+make a choice. It will break his heart; I know it will. He is too
+young."
+
+"He'll very soon forget me, once he is alone with you in your bungalow."
+
+The girl shook her head and stood caressing the puppy. The soft, white
+hand, resting on the dog's head, fascinated Gray.
+
+"Perhaps," he ventured, "I had better walk as far as your bungalow with
+you.... It may spare the dog a certain amount of superficial anguish."
+
+She nodded, dreamy-eyed there in the sunshine. And of what she might be
+thinking he could form no idea.
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+
+He fell into step beside her, and they walked up from the little cover
+through the beach-grapes and out among the scrubby dunes, where in the
+heated silence the perfume of sweet-bay and pines mingled with the odour
+of the sea.
+
+Everywhere the great sulphur-coloured butterflies were flying, making
+gorgeous combinations with the smaller, orange butterflies and the
+great, velvet-winged Palamedes swallow-tail.
+
+Lizards frisked and raced away before them, emerald tinted, green with
+sky-blue tails, grey and red; the little gophers scurried into their
+burrows along the tangled hammock's edges. Over the palm-trees' feathery
+crests sailed a black vulture, its palmated wing-tips spread like inky
+fingers against the blue. Somewhere in the saw-grass a bittern boomed
+and boomed; and the seagulls' clamour rang incessantly above the thunder
+of the surf.
+
+"I wonder," she murmured, "whether my sunburn makes me drowsy."
+
+"It's the climate. You'll feel sleepy for a week before you are
+acclimated," he said.... "Why don't you put down the puppy and let him
+follow?"
+
+She did so; and the little creature frisked and leaped and padded
+joyously about among the bayberry bushes, already possessed with the
+canine determination to investigate all the alluring smells in the
+world, and miss none of them.
+
+After a little while they arrived at the bungalow which Constance had
+chosen. The girl pushed open the unlocked door; the puppy pranced in
+like a diminutive hobby-horse, flushed a big lizard, and went into fits
+of excitement till the solitary cabin rang with his treble barking.
+
+They watched him through the doorway, laughingly; then Gray looked at
+the claim notice stuck upright in the sand. Presently he walked to the
+edge of the coquina quarry and looked down into it.
+
+Thousands of dollars' worth of the shell deposit lay already exposed.
+There were great strata of it; ledges, shelves, vast masses in every
+direction. The quarry had been worked very little, and that little had
+been accomplished stupidly. Either in the rough, or merely as lumps of
+conglomerate for crushing, the coquina in sight alone was very, very
+valuable. There could be no doubt of that.
+
+Also, he understood that the strata deposited there continued at least
+for half a mile to the westward, where his own bungalow marked its
+probable termination.
+
+He turned after a few minutes' inspection, and walked slowly back to
+where Constance was standing by the open door. A slight constraint,
+amounting almost to embarrassment, ensued for a few minutes, but the
+puppy dissipated it when he leaped at a butterfly, fell on his nose with
+a thump, and howled dismally until reassured by his anxious
+foster-parents, who caught him up and generously passed him to each
+other, petting him vigourously.
+
+Twice Gray said good-bye to Constance Leslie and started to go on toward
+his own bungalow, but the puppy invariably began a frantic series of
+circles embracing them both, and he had to come back to keep the dog
+from the demoralisation of utter exhaustion.
+
+"You know," he said, "this is going to be awkward. I believe that dog
+thinks we are mar--thinks we are sister and brother. Don't you?"
+
+She replied with a slight flush on her fair face, that the dog
+undoubtedly cherished some such idea.
+
+"Take him inside," said Gray firmly. "Then I'll beat it."
+
+So she took the puppy inside and closed the door, with a smiling nod of
+adieu to Gray. But he had not gone very far when he heard her clear, far
+call; and, turning, saw her beckon frantically.
+
+Back he came at top speed.
+
+"Oh, dear," she exclaimed. "Oh, dear! He's tearing 'round and 'round the
+room moaning and whining and barking. I'm very certain he will have fits
+if you don't speak to him."
+
+Gray opened the door cautiously, and the little dog came out, projected
+like a bolt from a catapult, fairly flinging his quivering little body
+into Gray's arms.
+
+The reunion was elaborate and mutually satisfying. Constance furtively
+touched her brown eyes with a corner of her handkerchief.
+
+"What on earth are we to do?" she asked, unfeignedly affected. "I would
+give him to you in a minute if you think he would be contented without
+me."
+
+"We can try it."
+
+So Constance started westward, across the dunes, and Gray went into the
+bungalow with the dog. But it required only a second or two to convince
+him that it wouldn't do, and he opened the door and called frantically
+to Constance.
+
+"There is no use in trying that sort of thing," he admitted, when
+Constance hastened back to a touching reunion with the imprisoned dog.
+"Strategy is our only hope. I'll sit here on the threshold with you, and
+as soon as he goes to sleep I'll slink away."
+
+So side by side they seated themselves on the sandy threshold of the
+bungalow, and the little dog, happy and contented, curled up on the
+floor of the room, tucked his blunt muzzle into his flank, and took a
+series of naps with one eye always open. He was young, but suspicion had
+already done its demoralising work with him, and he intended to keep at
+least one eye on his best beloveds.
+
+She in her fresh and clinging gown, with the first delicate sunmask
+tinting her unaccustomed skin, sat silent and distrait, her idle fingers
+linked in her lap. And, glancing askance at her now and then, the droop
+of her under lip seemed to him pathetic, like that of a tired child in
+trouble.
+
+When he was not looking at her he was immersed in perplexed cogitation.
+The ownership of the dog he had already settled in his mind; the
+ownership of the quarry he had supposed he had settled.
+
+Therefore, why was he so troubled about it? Why was he so worried about
+her, wondering what she would do in the matter?
+
+The only solution left seemed to lie in a recourse to the
+law--unless--unless----
+
+But he couldn't--he simply couldn't, merely for a sentimental impulse,
+give up to a stranger what he honestly considered an inheritance. That
+would be carrying sentimentalism too far.
+
+And yet--and yet! He needed the inheritance desperately. Matters
+financial had gone all wrong with him. How _could_ he turn his back on
+offered salvation just because a youthful and pretty girl also required
+a financial lift in a cold-blooded and calculating world?
+
+And yet--and yet! He would sleep over it, of course. But he honestly saw
+no prospect of changing his opinion concerning the ownership of the
+quarry.
+
+As he sat there biting a stem of sweet-bay and listening to the
+cardinals piping from the forest, he looked down into the heated coquina
+pit.
+
+A snake was coiled up on one of the ledges, basking.
+
+"Miss Leslie!"
+
+She lifted her head and straightened her drooping shoulders, looking at
+him from eyes made drowsy and beautiful by the tropic heat.
+
+"I only wanted to say," he began gravely, "that it is not safe for you
+to go into the quarry alone--in case you had any such intention."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"There are snakes there. Do you see that one? Well, he's harmless, I
+think--a king-snake, if I am not mistaken. But it's a good place for
+rattlers."
+
+"Then you should be careful, too."
+
+"Oh, I'm careful enough, but you might not know when to be on your
+guard. This island is a snaky one. It's famous for its diamond-back
+rattlers and the size of them. Their fangs are an inch long, and it
+usually means death to be struck by one of them."
+
+The girl nodded thoughtfully.
+
+He said with a new anxiety: "As a matter of fact, you really ought not
+to be down here all alone."
+
+"I know it. But it meant a race for ownership, and I had to come at a
+minute's notice."
+
+"You should have brought a maid."
+
+"My dear Mr. Gray, I have no maid."
+
+"Oh, I forgot," he muttered--"but, somehow, you _look_ as though you
+had been born to several."
+
+"I am the daughter of a very poor professor."
+
+He fidgetted with his sweet-bay twig, considering the aromatic leaves
+with a troubled and concentrated scowl.
+
+"You know," he said, "this wretched island is celebrated for its
+unpleasant fauna. Scorpions and wood-ticks are numerous. The sting of
+the one is horribly painful, and might be dangerous; the villainous
+habits of the other might throw you into a fever."
+
+"But what can I do?" she inquired calmly.
+
+"There are other kinds of snakes, too," he went on with increasing
+solicitude for this girl for whom, suddenly, he began to consider
+himself responsible. "There's a vicious snake called a moccasin; and he
+won't get out of your way or warn you. And there's a wicked little
+serpent with rings of black, scarlet, and yellow around his body. He
+pretends to be harmless, but if he gets your finger into his mouth he'll
+chew it full of a venom which is precisely the same sort of venom as
+that of the deadly East Indian cobra."
+
+"But--what can I do?" she repeated pitifully. "If I go to St. Augustine
+and leave you here in possession, it might invalidate my claim."
+
+He was silent, knowing no more about the law than did she, and afraid to
+deny her tentative assertion.
+
+"If it lay with me," he said, "I'd call a truce until you could go to
+St. Augustine and return again with the proper people to look out for
+you."
+
+"Even if you were kind enough to do that, I could not afford even a
+servant under present--and unexpected--conditions."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because it has suddenly developed that I shall be obliged to engage a
+lawyer. And I had not expected that."
+
+He reddened to his hair but said nothing. After a while the girl looked
+over her shoulder. The puppy slept, this time with both eyes closed.
+
+When she turned again to Gray, he nodded his comprehension and rose to
+his feet cautiously.
+
+"I'm going to take a walk on the beach and think this thing all out," he
+whispered, taking the slim, half-offered hand in adieu. "Don't go out in
+the scrub after sun-down. Rattlers move then. Don't go near any swamp;
+moccasins are the colour of sun-baked mud, and you can't see them. Don't
+touch any pretty little snake marked scarlet, black, and yellow----"
+
+"How absurd!" she whispered. "As though I were likely to fondle snakes!"
+
+"I'm terribly worried about you," he insisted, retaining her hand.
+
+"Please don't be."
+
+"How can I help it--what with these bungalows full of scorpions and----"
+
+"Yours is, too," she said anxiously. "You will be very careful, won't
+you?"
+
+"Yes, of course.... I'm--I'm uncertain about you. That's what is
+troubling me----"
+
+"Please don't bother about me. I've had to look out for myself for
+years."
+
+"Have you?" he said, almost tenderly. Then he drew a quick, determined
+breath.
+
+"You'll be careful, won't you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Are you armed?"
+
+"I have a shot-gun inside."
+
+"That's all right. Don't open your door to any stranger.... You know I
+simply hate to leave you alone this way----"
+
+"But I have the dog," she reminded him, with a pretty flush of
+gratitude.
+
+He had retained her hand longer than the easiest convention required or
+permitted. So he released it, hesitated, then with a visible effort he
+turned on his heel and strode away westward across the scrub.
+
+The sun hung low behind the tall, parti-coloured shaft of the Light
+House, towering smooth and round high above the forest.
+
+He looked up at Ibis Light, at the circling buzzards above it, then
+walked on, scarcely knowing where he was going, until he walked into the
+door of his own bungalow, and several large spiders scattered into
+flight across the floor.
+
+"There's no use," he said aloud to an audience of lizards clinging to
+the silvery bark of the log-room. "I can't take that quarry. I can't do
+it--whether it belongs to me or not. _How_ can a big, strong, lumbering
+young man do a thing like that? No. No. _No!_"
+
+He picked up a pencil and a sheet of paper:
+
+"Oh, Lord! I really do need the money, but I can't do it."
+
+And he wrote:
+
+ DEAR MISS LESLIE:
+
+ You arrived on the scene before I did. I am now convinced of
+ this. I shall not dispute the ownership of the quarry. It is
+ yours. This statement over my signature is your guarantee that
+ I shall never interfere with your title to the coquina quarry
+ on Ibis Island.
+
+ So now I've got to return to New York and go to work. I'm going
+ across to Augustine in a few moments; and while I'm there I'll
+ engage a white woman as companion for you, and a white servant,
+ and have them drive over at once so they will reach your
+ bungalow before evening. With undisputed title to the quarry,
+ you can easily afford their wages.
+
+ Good-bye. I wish you every happiness and success. Please give
+ my love to the dog.
+
+ Yours very truly,
+ JOHNSON GRAY.
+
+"It's the only way out of it," he muttered. "I'll leave it with her and
+bolt before she reads it. There is nothing else to do, absolutely
+nothing."
+
+As he came out of his cabin, the sun hung low and red above the palm
+forest, and a few bats were already flying like tiny black devils above
+the scrub.
+
+There was a strip of beach near his cabin, and he went down to it and
+began to tramp up and down with a vague idea of composing himself so
+that he might accomplish what he had to do gracefully, gaily, and with
+no suspicion of striking an attitude for gods and men to admire his
+moral resignation and his heroic renunciation.
+
+No; he'd do the thing lightly, smilingly, determined that she should not
+think that it was a sacrifice. No; she must believe that a sense of
+fairness alone moved him to an honest recognition of her claims. He must
+make it plain to her that he really believed she had arrived at the
+quarry before he had.
+
+And so he meant to leave her the letter, say good-bye, and go.
+
+When this was all settled in his mind he looked at the ocean very
+soberly, then turned his back on the Atlantic and walked back to his
+cabin to gather up his effects.
+
+As he approached the closed door a desolate howl from the interior
+greeted him: he sprang to the door and flung it open; and the puppy
+rushed into his arms.
+
+Then, pinned to the scorpion-infested wall, he saw a sheet of writing,
+and he read:
+
+ DEAR MR. GRAY:
+
+ He woke up and howled for you. It was too tragic for me. I love
+ him but I give him to you. I give the quarry to you, also.
+ Under the circumstances it would be impossible for me to enjoy
+ it, even if the law awarded it to me. Nobody could ever really
+ know which one of us first arrived and staked the claim. No
+ doubt you did.
+
+ I am sorry I came into your life and made trouble for you and
+ for the puppy.
+
+ So I leave you in peaceful possession. It really is a happiness
+ for me to do it.
+
+ I am going North at once. Good-bye; and please give my love to
+ the dog. Poor little darling, he thought we both stood _in loco
+ parentis_. But he'll get over his grief for me.
+
+ Yours truly,
+ CONSTANCE LESLIE.
+
+The puppy at his feet was howling uncomforted for the best beloved who
+was so strangely missing from the delightful combination which he had so
+joyously accepted _in loco parentis_.
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+
+Gray gathered the dog into his arms and strode swiftly out into the
+sunshot, purple light of early evening.
+
+"What a girl!" he muttered to himself. "What a girl! What a corking
+specimen of her sex!"
+
+Presently he came in sight of her, and the puppy scrambled violently
+until set down. Then he bolted for Constance Leslie, and it was only
+when the little thing leaped frantically upon her that she turned with a
+soft, breathless little cry. And saw Gray coming toward her out of the
+rose and golden sunset.
+
+Neither spoke as he came up and looked into her brown eyes and saw the
+traces of tears there still. The puppy leaped deliriously about them.
+And for a long while her slim hands lay limply in his. He looked at the
+ocean; she at the darkening forest.
+
+And after a little while he drew the note from his pocket.
+
+"I had written this when I found yours," he said. And he held it for her
+while she read it, bending nearer in the dim, rosy light.
+
+After she read it she took it from him gently, folded it, and slipped it
+into the bosom of her gown.
+
+Neither said anything. One of her hands still remained in his,
+listlessly at first--then the fingers crisped as his other arm encircled
+her.
+
+They were both gazing vaguely at the ocean now. Presently they moved
+slowly toward it through the fragrant dusk. Her hair, loosened a little,
+brushed his sunburned cheek.
+
+And around them gambolled the wise little dog, no longer apprehensive,
+but unutterably content with what the God of all good little doggies had
+so mercifully sent to him _in loco parentis_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"That," said the novelist, "is another slice of fact which would never
+do for fiction. Besides I once read a story somewhere or other about a
+dog bringing two people together."
+
+"The theme," I observed, "is thousands of years old."
+
+"That's the trouble with all truth," nodded Duane. "It's old as Time
+itself, and needs a new suit of clothes every time it is exhibited to
+instruct people."
+
+"What with new manners, new fashions, new dances, and the moral
+levelling itself gradually to the level of the unmoral," said Stafford,
+"nobody on the street would turn around to look at the naked truth in
+these days."
+
+"Truth must be fashionably gowned to attract," I admitted.
+
+"We of the eccentric nobility understand that," said the little Countess
+Athalie, glancing out of the window; and to me she added: "Lean over and
+see whether they have stationed a policeman in front of the Princess
+Zimbamzim's residence."
+
+I went out on the balcony and glanced down the block. "Yes," I said.
+
+"Poor old Princess," murmured the girl. "She detests moving."
+
+"All frauds do," remarked Duane.
+
+"She isn't a fraud," said Athalie quietly.
+
+Our silence indicated our surprise. After a few moments the girl added:
+
+"Whatever else she may be she is not a fraud in her profession. I think
+I had better give you an example of her professional probity. It
+interested me considerably as I followed it in my crystal. She knew all
+the while that I was watching her as well as the very people she herself
+was watching; and once or twice she looked up at me out of my crystal
+and grinned."
+
+"Can she see us now?" I inquired uneasily.
+
+"No."
+
+"Why not?" asked Duane.
+
+"I shall not tell you why."
+
+"Not that I care whether she sees me or not," he added.
+
+"Do you care, Harry, whether I see you occasionally in my crystal?"
+smiled Athalie.
+
+Duane flushed brightly and reminded her that she was too honourable to
+follow the movements of her personal friends unless requested to do so
+by them.
+
+"That is quite true," rejoined the girl, simply. "But once I saw you
+when I did not mean to."
+
+"Well?" he demanded, redder still.
+
+"You were merely asleep in your own bed," she said, laughing and
+accepting a lighted match from me. Then as the fragrant thread of smoke
+twisted in ghostly ringlets across her smooth young cheeks she settled
+back among her cushions.
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+
+"This," she said, "will acquaint you in a measure with the
+trustworthiness of the Princess Zimbamzim. And, if the policeman in
+front of her house could hear what I am going to tell you, he'd never
+remain there while his legs had power to run away with him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They met by accident on Madison Square, and shook hands for the first
+time in many years. High in the Metropolitan Tower the chimes celebrated
+the occasion by sounding the half hour.
+
+"It seems incredible," exclaimed George Z. Green, "that you could have
+become so famous! You never displayed any remarkable ability in school."
+
+"I never displayed any ability at all. But you did," said Williams
+admiringly. "How beautifully you used to write your name on the
+blackboard! How neat and scholarly you were in everything."
+
+"I know it," said Green gloomily. "And _you_ flunked in almost
+everything."
+
+"In everything," admitted Williams, deeply mortified.
+
+"And yet," said Green, "here we are at thirty odd; and I'm merely a
+broker, and--_look_ what _you_ are! Why, I can't go anywhere but I find
+one of your novels staring me in the face. I've been in Borneo: they're
+there! They're in Australia and China and Patagonia. Why the devil do
+you suppose people buy the stories you write?"
+
+"I'm sure I don't know," said Williams modestly.
+
+"I don't know either, though I read them myself sometimes--I don't know
+why. They're all very well in their way--if you care for that sort of
+book--but the things you tell about, Williams, never could have
+happened. I'm not knocking you; I'm a realist, that's all. And when I
+read a short story by you in which a young man sees a pretty girl, and
+begins to talk to her without being introduced to her, and then
+marries her before luncheon--and finds he's married a Balkan
+Princess--good-night! I just wonder why people stand for your books;
+that's all."
+
+"So do I," said Williams, much embarrassed. "I wouldn't stand for them
+myself."
+
+"Why," continued Green warmly, "I read a story of yours in some magazine
+the other day, in which a young man sees a pretty girl for the first
+time in his life and is married to her inside of three quarters of an
+hour! And I ask _you_, Williams, how you would feel after spending
+fifteen cents on such a story?"
+
+"I'm terribly sorry, old man," murmured Williams. "Here's your
+fifteen--if you like----"
+
+"Dammit," said Green indignantly, "it isn't that they're not readable
+stories! I had fifteen cents' worth all right. But it makes a man sore
+to see what happens to the young men in your stories--and all the queens
+they collect--and then to go about town and never see anything of that
+sort!"
+
+"There are millions of pretty girls in town," ventured Williams. "I
+don't think I exaggerate in that respect."
+
+"But they'd call an officer if young men in real life behaved as they
+do in your stories. As a matter of fact and record, there's no more
+romance in New York than there is in the annual meeting of the British
+Academy of Ancient Assyrian Inscriptions. And you know it, Williams!"
+
+"I think it depends on the individual man," said Williams timidly.
+
+"How?"
+
+"If there's any romance in a man himself, he's apt to find the world
+rather full of it."
+
+"Do you mean to say there isn't any romance in me?" demanded George Z.
+Green hotly.
+
+"I don't know, George. Is there?"
+
+"Plenty. Pl-en-ty! I'm always looking for romance. I look for it when I
+go down town to business; I look for it when I go home. Do I find it?
+No! Nothing ever happens to me. Nothing beautiful and wealthy beyond the
+dreams of avarice ever tries to pick me up. Explain _that_!"
+
+Williams, much abashed, ventured no explanation.
+
+"And to think," continued Green, "that you, my old school friend, should
+become a celebrity merely by writing such stories! Why, you're as
+celebrated as any brand of breakfast food!"
+
+"You don't have to read my books, you know," protested Williams mildly.
+
+"I don't have to--I know it. But I do. Everybody does. And nobody knows
+why. So, meeting you again after all these unromantic years, I thought
+I'd just ask you whether by any chance you happen to know of any
+particular section of the city where a plain, everyday broker might make
+a hit with the sort of girl you write about. Do you?"
+
+"Any section of this city is romantic enough--if you only approach it in
+the proper spirit," asserted Williams.
+
+"You mean if my attitude toward romance is correct I'm likely to
+encounter it almost anywhere?"
+
+"That is my theory," admitted Williams bashfully.
+
+"Oh! Well, what _is_ the proper attitude? Take me, for example. I've
+just been to the bank. I carry, at this moment, rather a large sum of
+money in my inside overcoat pocket. My purpose in drawing it was to blow
+it. Now, tell me how to blow it romantically."
+
+"How can I tell you such a thing, George----"
+
+"It's your business. You tell people such things in books. Now, tell me,
+face to face, man to man, how to get thoroughly mixed up in the sort of
+romance you write--the kind of romance that has made William McWilliam
+Williams famous!"
+
+"I'm sorry----"
+
+"What! You won't! You admit that what you write is bunk? You confess
+that you don't know where there are any stray queens with whom I might
+become happily entangled within the next fifteen minutes?"
+
+"I admit no such thing," said Williams with dignity. "If your attitude
+is correct, in ten minutes you can be up against anything on earth!"
+
+"Where?"
+
+"Anywhere!"
+
+"Very well! Here we are on Madison Square. There's Admiral Farragut;
+there's the Marble Tower. Do you mean that if I walk from this spot for
+ten minutes--no matter in what direction--I'll walk straight into
+Romance up to my neck?"
+
+"If your attitude is correct, yes. But you've got to know the elements
+of Romance when you see them."
+
+"What are the elements of Romance? What do they resemble?" demanded
+George Z. Green.
+
+Williams said, in a low, impressive voice:
+
+"Anything that seems to you unusual is very likely to be an element in a
+possible romance. If you see anything extraordinary during the next ten
+minutes, follow it up. And ninety-nine chances in a hundred it will lead
+you into complications. Interfering with other people's business usually
+does," he added pleasantly.
+
+"But," said Green, "suppose during the next ten minutes, or twenty
+minutes, or the next twenty-four hours I _don't_ see anything unusual."
+
+"It will be your own fault if you don't. The Unusual is occurring all
+about us, every second. A trained eye can always see it."
+
+"But suppose the Unusual doesn't occur for the next ten minutes,"
+insisted Green, exasperated. "Suppose the Unusual is taking a vacation?
+It would be just my luck."
+
+"Then," said Williams, "you will have to imagine that everything you see
+is unusual. Or else," he added blandly, "you yourself will have to start
+something. _That_ is where the creative mind comes in. When there's
+nothing doing it starts something."
+
+"Does it ever get arrested?" inquired Green ironically. "The creative
+mind! Sure! _That's_ where all this bally romance is!--in the creative
+mind. I knew it. Good-bye."
+
+They shook hands; Williams went down town.
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+
+This picture is not concerned with his destination. Or even whether he
+ever got there.
+
+But it is very directly concerned with George Z. Green, and the
+direction he took when he parted from his old school friend.
+
+As he walked up town he said to himself, "Bunk!" several times. After a
+few moments he fished out his watch.
+
+"I know I'm an ass," he said to himself, "but I'll take a chance. I'll
+give myself exactly ten minutes to continue making an ass of myself. And
+if I see the faintest symptom of Romance--if I notice anything at all
+peculiar and unusual in any person or any thing during the next ten
+minutes, I won't let it get away--believe _me_!"
+
+He walked up Broadway instead of Fifth Avenue. After a block or two he
+turned west at hazard, crossed Sixth Avenue and continued.
+
+He was walking in one of the upper Twenties--he had not particularly
+noticed which. Commercial houses nearly filled the street, although a
+few old-time residences of brownstone still remained. Once well-to-do
+and comfortable homes, they had degenerated into chop sueys, boarding
+houses, the abodes of music publishers, artificial flower makers, and
+mediums.
+
+It was now a shabby, unkempt street, and Green already was considering
+it a hopeless hunting ground, and had even turned to retrace his steps
+toward Sixth Avenue, when the door of a neighbouring house opened and
+down the shabby, brownstone stoop came hurrying an exceedingly pretty
+girl.
+
+Now, the unusual part of the incident lay in the incongruity of the
+street and the girl. For the street and the house out of which she
+emerged so hastily were mean and ignoble; but the girl herself fairly
+radiated upper Fifth Avenue from the perfectly appointed and expensive
+simplicity of hat and gown to the obviously aristocratic and dainty
+face and figure.
+
+"Is _she_ a symptom?" thought Green to himself. "Is _she_ an element?
+That is sure a rotten looking joint she came out of."
+
+Moved by a sudden and unusual impulse of intelligence, he ran up the
+brownstone stoop and read the dirty white card pasted on the facade
+above the door bell.
+
+ THE PRINCESS ZIMBAMZIM
+ TRANCE MEDIUM. FORTUNES.
+
+Taken aback, he looked after the pretty girl who was now hurrying up the
+street as though the devil were at her dainty heels.
+
+Could _she_ be the Princess Zimbamzim? Common sense rejected the idea,
+as did the sudden jerk of soiled lace curtains at the parlour window,
+and the apparition of a fat lady in a dingy, pink tea-gown. _That_ must
+be the Princess Zimbamzim and the pretty girl had ventured into these
+purlieus to consult her. Why?
+
+"This _is_ certainly a symptom of romance!" thought the young man
+excitedly. And he started after the pretty girl at a Fifth Avenue amble.
+
+He overtook and passed her at Sixth Avenue, and managed to glance at her
+without being offensive. To his consternation, she was touching her
+tear-stained eyes with her handkerchief. She did not notice him.
+
+What could be the matter? With what mystery was he already in touch?
+
+Tremendously interested he fell back a few paces and lighted a
+cigarette, allowing her to pass him; then he followed her. Never before
+in his life had he done such a scandalous thing.
+
+On Broadway she hailed a taxi, got into it, and sped uptown. There was
+another taxi available; Green took it and gave the driver a five dollar
+tip to keep the first taxi in view.
+
+Which was very easy, for it soon stopped at a handsome apartment house
+on Park Avenue; the girl sprang out, and entered the building almost
+running.
+
+For a moment George Z. Green thought that all was lost. But the taxi she
+had taken remained, evidently waiting for her; and sure enough, in a few
+minutes out she came, hurrying, enveloped in a rough tweed travelling
+coat and carrying a little satchel. Slam! went the door of her taxi; and
+away she sped, and Green after her in his taxi.
+
+Again the chase proved to be very short. Her taxi stopped at the
+Pennsylvania Station; out she sprang, paid the driver, and hurried
+straight for the station restaurant, Green following at a fashionable
+lope.
+
+She took a small table by a window; Green took the next one. It was not
+because she noticed him and found his gaze offensive, but because she
+felt a draught that she rose and took the table behind Green, exactly
+where he could not see her unless he twisted his neck into attitudes
+unseemly.
+
+He wouldn't do such things, being really a rather nice young man; and it
+was too late for him to change his table without attracting her
+attention, because the waiter already had brought him whatever he had
+ordered for tea--muffins, buns, crumpets--he neither knew nor cared.
+
+So he ate them with jam, which he detested; and drank his tea and
+listened with all his ears for the slightest movement behind him which
+might indicate that she was leaving.
+
+Only once did he permit himself to turn around, under pretense of
+looking for a waiter; and he saw two blue eyes still brilliant with
+unshed tears and a very lovely but unhappy mouth all ready to quiver
+over its toast and marmalade.
+
+What on earth could be the matter with that girl? What terrible tragedy
+could it be that was still continuing to mar her eyes and twitch her
+sensitive, red lips?
+
+Green, sipping his tea, trembled pleasantly all over as he realised that
+at last he was setting his foot upon the very threshold of Romance. And
+he determined to cross that threshold if neither good manners, good
+taste, nor the police interfered.
+
+And what a wonderful girl for his leading lady! What eyes! What hair!
+What lovely little hands, with the gloves hastily rolled up from the
+wrist! Why should she be unhappy? He'd like to knock the block off any
+man who----
+
+Green came to himself with a thrill of happiness: her pretty voice was
+sounding in exquisite modulations behind him as she asked the waiter for
+m-more m-marmalade.
+
+In a sort of trance, Green demolished bun after bun. Normally, he
+loathed the indigestible. After what had seemed to him an interminable
+length of time, he ventured to turn around again in pretense of calling
+a waiter.
+
+Her chair was empty!
+
+At first he thought she had disappeared past all hope of recovery; but
+the next instant he caught sight of her hastening out toward the ticket
+boxes.
+
+Flinging a five-dollar bill on the table, he hastily invited the waiter
+to keep the change; sprang to his feet, and turned to seize his
+overcoat. It was gone from the hook where he had hung it just behind
+him.
+
+Astonished, he glanced at the disappearing girl, and saw his overcoat
+over her arm. For a moment he supposed that she had mistaken it for her
+own ulster, but no! She was wearing her own coat, too.
+
+A cold and sickening sensation assailed the pit of Green's stomach. Was
+it not a mistake, after all? Was this lovely young girl a professional
+criminal? Had she or some of her band observed Green coming out of the
+bank and thrusting a fat wallet into the inside pocket of his overcoat?
+
+He was walking now, as fast as he was thinking, keeping the girl in view
+amid the throngs passing through the vast rotunda.
+
+When she stopped at a ticket booth he entered the brass railed space
+behind her.
+
+She did not appear to know exactly where she was going, for she seemed
+by turns distrait and agitated; and he heard her ask the ticket agent
+when the next train left for the extreme South.
+
+Learning that it left in a few minutes, and finding that she could
+secure a stateroom, she took it, paid for it, and hastily left without a
+glance behind her at Green.
+
+Meanwhile Green had very calmly slipped one hand into the breast pocket
+of his own overcoat, where it trailed loosely over her left arm, meaning
+to extract his wallet without anybody observing him. The wallet was not
+there. He was greatly inclined to run after her, but he didn't. He
+watched her depart, then:
+
+"Is there another stateroom left on the Verbena Special?" he inquired of
+the ticket agent, coolly enough.
+
+"One. Do you wish it?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+The ticket agent made out the coupons and shoved the loose change under
+the grille, saying:
+
+"Better hurry, sir. You've less than a minute."
+
+He ran for his train and managed to swing aboard just as the coloured
+porters were closing the vestibules and the train was in motion.
+
+A trifle bewildered at what he had done, and by the rapidity with which
+he had done it, he sank down in the vacant observation car to collect
+his thoughts.
+
+He was on board the Verbena Special--the southern train-de-luxe--bound
+for Jacksonville, St. Augustine, Palm Beach, Verbena Inlet, or Miami--or
+for Nassau, Cuba, and the remainder of the West Indies--just as he
+chose.
+
+He had no other luggage than a walking-stick. Even his overcoat was in
+possession of somebody else. That was the situation that now faced
+George Z. Green.
+
+But as the train emerged from the river tube, and he realised all this,
+he grew calmer; and the calmer he grew the happier he grew.
+
+He was no longer on the threshold of Romance; he had crossed it, and
+already he was being whirled away blindly into the Unusual and the
+Unknown!
+
+Exultingly he gazed out of the windows upon the uninspiring scenery of
+New Jersey. A wonderful sense of physical lightness and mental freedom
+took delightful possession of him. Opportunity had not beckoned him in
+vain. Chance had glanced sideways at him, and he had recognised the
+pretty flirt. His was certainly some brain!
+
+And now, still clinging to the skirts of Chance, he was being whisked
+away, pell mell, headlong toward Destiny, in the trail of a slender,
+strange young girl who had swiped his overcoat and who seemed
+continually inclined to tears.
+
+The incident of the overcoat no longer troubled him. That garment of his
+was not unlike the rough travelling coat she herself wore. And it might
+have been natural to her, in her distress of mind and very evident
+emotion, to have seized it by mistake and made off with it, forgetting
+that she still wore her own.
+
+Of course it was a mistake pure and simple. He had only to look at the
+girl and understand that. One glance at her sweet, highbred features was
+sufficient to exonerate her as a purloiner of gentlemen's garments.
+
+Green crossed his legs, folded his arms, and reflected. The overcoat was
+another and most important element in this nascent Romance.
+
+The difficulty lay in knowing how to use the overcoat to advantage in
+furthering and further complicating a situation already delightful.
+
+Of course he could do the obvious: he could approach her and take off
+his hat and do the well-bred and civil and explain to her the mistake.
+
+But suppose she merely said: "I'm sorry," handed over his coat, and
+continued to read her magazine. That would end it. And it mustn't end
+until he found out why she had emerged with tears in her beautiful eyes
+from the abode of the Princess Zimbamzim.
+
+Besides, he was sure of getting his coat, his wallet, and its contents.
+His name and address were in the wallet; also both were sewed inside the
+inner pocket of the overcoat.
+
+What would ultimately happen would be this: sooner or later she'd come
+to, wake up, dry her pretty eyes, look about, and find that she had
+_two_ overcoats in her possession.
+
+It would probably distress her dreadfully, particularly when she
+discovered the wallet and the money. But, wherever she was going, as
+soon as she reached there she'd send overcoat and money back to his
+address--doubtless with a pretty and contrite note of regret.
+
+Yes, but that wouldn't do! What good would the overcoat and the money be
+to him, if he were South and she shipped them North? And yet he was
+afraid to risk an abrupt ending to his Romance by explaining to her the
+mistake.
+
+No; he'd merely follow her for the present. He couldn't help it very
+well, being aboard the same train. So it would not be difficult to keep
+his eye on her as well as his overcoat, and think out at his leisure how
+best to tend, guard, cherish, and nourish the delicate and unopened bud
+of Romance.
+
+Meanwhile, there were other matters he must consider; so he wrote out a
+telegram to Washington ordering certain necessary articles to be brought
+aboard the Verbena Special on its arrival there. The porter took charge
+of it.
+
+That night at dinner he looked for the girl in vain. She did not enter
+the dining-car while he was there. Haunting the corridors afterward he
+saw no sign of her anywhere until, having received his necessaries in a
+brand new travelling satchel, and on his way to his stateroom, he caught
+a glimpse of her, pale and agitated, in conversation with the porter at
+her partly opened door.
+
+She did not even glance at him as he entered his stateroom, but he could
+not avoid hearing what she was saying because her enunciation was so
+exquisitely distinct.
+
+"Porter," she said in her low, sweet voice, "I have, somehow, made a
+very dreadful mistake somewhere. I have a man's overcoat here which does
+not belong to me. The cloth is exactly like the cloth of my own
+travelling ulster, and I must have forgotten that I had mine on when I
+took this."
+
+"Ain't de gemman abohd de Speshul, Miss?" inquired the porter.
+
+"I'm afraid not. I'm certain that I must have taken it in the station
+restaurant and brought it aboard the train."
+
+"Ain't nuff'n in de pockets, is dey?" asked the porter.
+
+"Yes; there's a wallet strapped with a rubber band. I didn't feel at
+liberty to open it. But I suppose I ought to in order to find out the
+owner's name if possible."
+
+"De gemman's name ain't sewed inside de pocket, is it, Miss?"
+
+"I didn't look," she said.
+
+So the porter took the coat, turned it inside out, explored the inside
+pocket, found the label, and read:
+
+ "Snipps Brothers: December, 1913. George Z. Green."
+
+A stifled exclamation from the girl checked him. Green also protruded
+his head cautiously from his own doorway.
+
+The girl, standing partly in the aisle, was now leaning limply against
+the door-sill, her hand pressed convulsively to her breast, her face
+white and frightened.
+
+"Is you ill, Miss?" asked the porter anxiously.
+
+"I--no. Z--what name was that you read?"
+
+"George Z. Green, Miss----"
+
+"It--it _can't_ be! Look again! It can't be!"
+
+Her face was ashen to the lips; she closed her eyes for a second,
+swayed; then her hand clutched the door-sill; she straightened up with
+an effort and opened her eyes, which now seemed dilated by some powerful
+emotion.
+
+"Let me see that name!" she said, controlling her voice with an obvious
+effort.
+
+The porter turned the pocket inside out for her inspection. There it
+was:
+
+ "George Z. Green: 1008-1/2 Fifth Avenue, New York."
+
+"If you knows de gemman, Miss," suggested the porter, "you all kin take
+dishere garmint back yo'se'f when you comes No'th."
+
+"Thank you.... Then--I won't trouble you.... I'll--I'll ta-t-take it
+back myself--when I go North."
+
+"I kin ship it if you wishes, Miss."
+
+She said excitedly: "If you ship it from somewhere South, he--Mr.
+Green--would see where it came from by the parcels postmark on the
+express tag--wouldn't he?"
+
+"Yaas, Miss."
+
+"Then I don't want you to ship it! I'll do it myself.... _How_ can I
+ship it without giving Mr. Green a clue--" she shuddered, "--a clue to
+my whereabouts?"
+
+"Does you know de gemman, Miss?"
+
+"No!" she said, with another shudder,--"and I do not wish to. I--I
+particularly do not wish ever to know him--or even to see him. And above
+all I do not wish Mr. Green to come South and investigate the
+circumstances concerning this overcoat. He might take it into his head
+to do such a thing. It--it's horrible enough that I have--that I
+actually have in my possession the overcoat of the very man on whose
+account I left New York at ten minutes' notice----"
+
+Her pretty voice broke and her eyes filled.
+
+"You--you don't understand, porter," she added, almost hysterically,
+"but my possession of this overcoat--of all the billions and billions of
+overcoats in all the world--is a t-terrible and astounding b-blow to
+me!"
+
+"Is--is you afeard o' dishere overcoat, Miss?" inquired the astonished
+darkey.
+
+"Yes!" she said. "Yes, I am! I'm horribly afraid of that overcoat!
+I--I'd like to throw it from the train window, but I--I can't do that,
+of course! It would be stealing----"
+
+Her voice broke again with nervous tears:
+
+"I d-don't want the coat! And I can't throw it away! And if it's shipped
+to him from the South he may come down here and investigate. He's in New
+York now. That's why I am on my way South! I--I want him to remain in
+New York until--until all--d-danger is over. And by the first of April
+it will be over. And then I'll come North--and bring him his coat----"
+
+The bewildered darkey stared at her and at the coat which she had
+unconsciously clutched to her breast.
+
+"Do you think," she said, "that M-Mr. Green will _need_ the coat this
+winter? Do you suppose anything would happen to him if he doesn't have
+it for a while--pneumonia or anything? Oh!" she exclaimed in a quivering
+voice, "I wish he and his overcoat were at the South Pole!"
+
+Green withdrew his head and pressed both palms to his temples. Could he
+trust his ears? Was he going mad? Holding his dizzy head in both hands
+he heard the girl say that she herself would attend to shipping the
+coat; heard the perplexed darkey take his leave and go; heard her
+stateroom door close.
+
+Seated in his stateroom he gazed vacantly at the couch opposite, so
+completely bewildered with his first over-dose of Romance that his brain
+seemed to spin like a frantic squirrel in a wheel, and his thoughts
+knocked and jumbled against each other until it truly seemed to him that
+all his senses were fizzling out like wet firecrackers.
+
+What on earth had he ever done to inspire such horror in the mind of
+this young girl?
+
+What terrible injury had he committed against her or hers that the very
+sound of his name terrified her--the mere sight of his overcoat left
+her almost hysterical?
+
+Helplessly, half stupefied, he cast about in his wrecked mind to
+discover any memory or record of any injury done to anybody during his
+particularly blameless career on earth.
+
+In school he had punched the noses of several schoolmates, and had been
+similarly smitten in return. That was the extent of physical injury ever
+done to anybody.
+
+Of grave moral wrong he knew he was guiltless. True, he had frequently
+skinned the assembly at convivial poker parties. But also he had often
+opened jacks only to be mercilessly deprived of them amid the unfeeling
+and brutal laughter of his companions. No, he was not guilty of criminal
+gambling.
+
+Had he ever done a wrong to anybody in business? Never. His firm's name
+was the symbol for probity.
+
+He dashed his hands to his brow distractedly. What in Heaven's name
+_had_ he done to fill the very soul of this young girl with fear and
+loathing? What in the name of a merciful Providence had he, George Z.
+Green, banker and broker, ever done to drive this young and innocent
+girl out of the City of New York!
+
+To collect and marshal his disordered thoughts was difficult but he
+accomplished it with the aid of cigarettes. To a commonplace intellect
+there is no aid like a cigarette.
+
+At first he was inclined to believe that the girl had merely mistaken
+him for another man with a similar name. George Z. Green was not an
+unusual name.
+
+But his address in town was also written inside his coat pocket; and she
+had read it. Therefore, it was painfully evident to him that her
+detestation and fear was for him.
+
+What on earth had inspired such an attitude of mind toward himself in a
+girl he had seen for the first time that afternoon? He could not
+imagine. And another strange feature of the affair was that she had not
+particularly noticed him. Therefore, if she entertained such a horror of
+him, why had she not exhibited some trace of it when he was in her
+vicinity?
+
+Certainly she had not exhibited it by crying. He exonerated himself on
+that score, for she had been on the verge of tears when he first beheld
+her hurrying out of the parlours of the Princess Zimbamzim.
+
+It gradually became plain to him that, although there could be no doubt
+that this girl was afraid of him, and cordially disliked him, yet
+strangely enough, she did not know him by sight.
+
+Consequently, her attitude must be inspired by something she had heard
+concerning him. What?
+
+He puffed his cigarette and groaned. As far as he could remember, he had
+never harmed a fly.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+
+That night he turned in, greatly depressed. Bad dreams assailed his
+slumbers--menacing ones like the visions that annoyed _Eugene Aram_.
+
+And every time he awoke and sat up in his bunk, shaken by the swaying
+car, he realised that Romance had also its tragic phases--a sample of
+which he was now enduring. And yet, miserable as he was, a horrid sort
+of joy neutralised the misery when he recollected that it _was_ Romance,
+after all, and that he, George Z. Green, was in it up to his neck.
+
+A grey morning--a wet and pallid sky lowering over the brown North
+Carolina fields--this was his waking view from his tumbled bunk.
+
+Neither his toilet nor his breakfast dispelled the gloom; certainly the
+speeding landscape did not.
+
+He sat grimly in the observation car, reviewing a dispiriting landscape
+set with swamps, razorbacks, buzzards, and niggers.
+
+Luncheon aided him very little. _She_ had not appeared at all. Either
+her own misery and fright were starving her to death or she preferred to
+take her meals in her stateroom. He hoped fervently the latter might be
+the case; that murder might not be added to whatever else he evidently
+was suspected of committing.
+
+Like the ticket he had seen her purchase, his own ticket took him as far
+as Ormond. Of course he could go on if she did. She could go to the West
+Indies and ultimately to Brazil. So could he. They were on the main
+travelled road to almost anywhere.
+
+Nevertheless, he was on the watch at St. Augustine; and when he saw her
+come forth hastily and get into a bus emblazoned with the name and
+escutcheon of the Hotel Royal Orchid, he got in also.
+
+The bus was full. Glancing at the other occupants of the bus, she
+included him in her brief review, and to his great relief he saw her
+incurious blue eyes pass calmly to the next countenance.
+
+A dreadful, almost hysterical impulse assailed him to suddenly rise and
+say: "I am George Z. Green!"--merely to observe the cataclysmic effect
+on her.
+
+But it did not seem so funny to him on after thoughts, for the chances
+appeared to be that she could not survive the shock. Which scared him;
+and he looked about nervously for fear somebody who knew him might be
+among the passengers, and might address him by name.
+
+In due time the contents of the bus trooped into the vast corridors of
+the Hotel Royal Orchid. One by one they registered; and on the ledger
+Green read her name with palpitating heart--Miss Marie Wiltz and Maid.
+And heard her say to the clerk that her maid had been delayed and would
+arrive on the next train.
+
+It never occurred to this unimaginative man to sign any name but his own
+to the register that was shoved toward him. Which perfectly proves his
+guilelessness and goodness.
+
+He went to his room, cleansed from his person the stains of travel, and,
+having no outer clothes to change to, smoked a cigarette and gazed
+moodily from the window.
+
+Now, his window gave on the drive-encircled fountain before the front
+entrance to the hotel; and, as he was standing there immersed in tobacco
+smoke and gloom, he was astonished to see the girl herself come out
+hastily, travelling satchel in hand, and spring lightly into a cab. It
+was one of those victorias which are stationed for hire in front of such
+southern hotels; he could see her perfectly plainly; saw the darkey
+coachman flourish his whip; saw the vehicle roll away.
+
+The next instant he seized his new satchel, swept his brand new toilet
+articles into it, snapped it, picked up hat and cane, and dashed down
+stairs to the desk.
+
+Here he paid his bill, ran out, and leaped into a waiting victoria.
+
+"Where did that other cab drive?" he demanded breathlessly to his negro
+coachman. "Didn't you hear what the young lady said to her driver?"
+
+"Yaas, suh. De young lady done say she's in a pow'ful hurry, suh. She
+'low she gotta git to Ormond."
+
+"Ormond! There's no train!"
+
+"Milk-train, suh."
+
+"What! Is she going to Ormond on a milk-train?"
+
+"Yaas, suh."
+
+"All right, then. Drive me to the station."
+
+It was not very far. She was standing alone on the deserted platform,
+her bag at her feet, his overcoat lying across it. Her head was bent,
+and she did not notice him at first. Never had he seen a youthful figure
+so exquisitely eloquent of despair.
+
+The milk-train was about an hour overdue, which would make it about due
+in the South. Green seated himself on a wooden bench and folded his
+hands over the silver crook of his walking-stick. The situation was now
+perfectly clear to him. She had come down from her room, and had seen
+his name on the register, had been seized by a terrible panic, and had
+fled.
+
+Had he been alone and unobserved, he might have attempted to knock his
+brains out with his walking-stick. He desired to, earnestly, when he
+realised what an ass he had been to sign the register.
+
+She had begun to pace the platform, nervously, halting and leaning
+forward from time to time to scan impatiently the long, glittering
+perspective of the metals.
+
+It had begun to grow dusk. Lanterns on switches and semaphores flashed
+out red, green, blue, white, stringing their jewelled sparks far away
+into the distance.
+
+To and fro she paced the empty platform, passing and repassing him. And
+he began to notice presently that she looked at him rather intently each
+time.
+
+He wondered whether she suspected his identity. Guiltless of anything
+that he could remember having done, nevertheless he shivered guiltily
+every time she glanced at him.
+
+Then the unexpected happened; and he fairly shook in his shoes as she
+marched deliberately up to him.
+
+"I beg your pardon," she said in a very sweet and anxious voice, "but
+might I ask if you happen to be going to Ormond?"
+
+He was on his feet, hat in hand, by this time; his heart and pulses
+badly stampeded; but he managed to answer calmly that he was going to
+Ormond.
+
+"There is only a milk-train, I understand," she said.
+
+"So I understand."
+
+"Do you think there will be any difficulty in my obtaining permission to
+travel on it? The station-master says that permission is not given to
+ladies unaccompanied."
+
+She looked at him almost imploringly.
+
+"I really must go on that train," she said in a low voice. "It is
+desperately necessary. Could you--could you manage to arrange it for me?
+I would be so grateful!--so deeply grateful!"
+
+"I'll do what I can," said that unimaginative man. "Probably bribery can
+fix it----"
+
+"There might be--if--if--you would be willing--if you didn't object--I
+know it sounds very strange--but my case is so desperate----" She
+checked herself, flushing a delicate pink. And he waited.
+
+Then, very resolutely she looked up at him:
+
+"Would you--could you p-pretend that I am--am--your sister?"
+
+"Certainly," he said. An immense happiness seized him. He was not only
+up to his neck in Romance. It was already over his head, and he was out
+of his depth, and swimming.
+
+"Certainly," he repeated quietly, controlling his joy by a supreme
+effort. "That would be the simplest way out of it, after all."
+
+She said earnestly, almost solemnly: "If you will do this generous thing
+for--for a stranger--in very deep perplexity and trouble--that stranger
+will remain in your debt while life lasts!"
+
+She had not intended to be dramatic; she may not have thought she was;
+but the tears again glimmered in her lovely eyes, and the situation
+seemed tense enough to George Z. Green.
+
+Moreover, he felt that complications already were arising--complications
+which he had often read of and sometimes dreamed of. Because, as he
+stood there in the southern dusk, looking at this slim, young girl, he
+began to realise that never before in all his life had he gazed upon
+anything half as beautiful.
+
+Very far away a locomotive whistled: they both turned, and saw the
+distant headlight glittering on the horizon like a tiny star.
+
+"W-would it be best for us to t-take your name or mine--in case they ask
+us?" she stammered, flushing deeply.
+
+"Perhaps," he said pleasantly, "you might be more likely to remember
+yours in an emergency."
+
+"I think so," she said naively; "it is rather difficult for me to
+deceive anybody. My name is Marie Wiltz."
+
+"Then I am Mr. Wiltz, your brother, for an hour or two."
+
+"If you please," she murmured.
+
+It had been on the tip of his tongue to add, "Mr. George Z. Wiltz," but
+he managed to check himself.
+
+The great, lumbering train came rolling in; the station agent looked
+very sharply through his spectacles at Miss Wiltz when he saw her with
+Green, but being a Southerner, he gallantly assumed that it was all
+right.
+
+One of the train crew placed two wooden chairs for them in the partly
+empty baggage car; and there they sat, side by side, while the big,
+heavy milk cans were loaded aboard, and a few parcels shoved into their
+car. Then the locomotive tooted leisurely; there came a jolt, a resonant
+clash; and the train was under way.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+
+For a while the baggage master fussed about the car, sorting out
+packages for Ormond; then, courteously inquiring whether he could do
+anything for them, and learning that he could not, he went forward into
+his own den, leaving Marie Wiltz and George Z. Green alone in a baggage
+car dimly illumined by a small and smoky lamp.
+
+Being well-bred young people, they broke the tension of the situation
+gracefully and naturally, pretending to find it amusing to travel in a
+milk train to a fashionable southern resort.
+
+And now that the train was actually under way and speeding southward
+through the night, her relief from anxiety was very plain to him. He
+could see her relax; see the frightened and hunted look in her eyes die
+out, the natural and delicious colour return to her cheeks.
+
+As they conversed with amiable circumspection and pleasant formality, he
+looked at her whenever he dared without seeming to be impertinent; and
+he discovered that the face she had worn since he had first seen her was
+not her natural expression; that her features in repose or in fearless
+animation were winning and almost gay.
+
+She had a delightful mouth, sweet and humourous; a delicate nose and
+chin, and two very blue and beautiful eyes that looked at him at moments
+so confidently, so engagingly, that the knowledge of what her expression
+would be if she knew who he was smote him at moments, chilling his very
+marrow.
+
+What an astonishing situation! How he would have scorned a short story
+with such a situation in it! And he thought of Williams--poor old
+Williams!--and mentally begged his pardon.
+
+For he understood now that real life was far stranger than fiction. He
+realised at last that Romance loitered ever around the corner; that
+Opportunity was always gently nudging one's elbow.
+
+There lay his overcoat on the floor, trailing over her satchel. He
+looked at it so fixedly that she noticed the direction of his gaze,
+glanced down, blushed furiously.
+
+"It may seem odd to you that I am travelling with a man's overcoat," she
+said, "but it will seem odder yet when I tell you that I don't know how
+I came by it."
+
+"That _is_ odd," he admitted smilingly. "To whom does it belong?"
+
+Her features betrayed the complicated emotions that successively
+possessed her--perplexity, anxiety, bashfulness.
+
+After a moment she said in a low voice: "You have done so much for me
+already--you have been so exceedingly nice to me--that I hesitate to ask
+of you anything more----"
+
+"Please ask!" he urged. "It will be really a happiness for me to serve
+you."
+
+Surprised at his earnestness and the unembarrassed warmth of his reply,
+she looked up at him gratefully after a moment.
+
+"Would you," she said, "take charge of that overcoat for me and send it
+back to its owner?"
+
+He laughed nervously: "Is _that_ all? Why, of course I shall! I'll
+guarantee that it is restored to its rightful owner if you wish."
+
+"Will you? If you do _that_----" she drew a long, sighing breath, "it
+will be a relief to me--such a wonderful relief!" She clasped her gloved
+hands tightly on her knee, smiled at him breathlessly.
+
+"I don't suppose you will ever know what you have done for me. I could
+never adequately express my deep, deep gratitude to you----"
+
+"But--I am doing nothing except shipping back an overcoat----"
+
+"Ah--if you only knew what you really are doing for me! You are helping
+me in the direst hour of need I ever knew. You are aiding me to regain
+control over my own destiny! You are standing by me in the nick of time,
+sheltering me, encouraging me, giving me a moment's respite until I can
+become mistress of my own fate once more."
+
+The girl had ended with a warmth, earnestness and emotion which she
+seemed to be unable to control. Evidently she had been very much shaken,
+and in the blessed relief from the strain the reaction was gathering
+intensity.
+
+They sat in silence for a few moments; then she looked up, nervously
+twisting her gloved fingers.
+
+"I am sorry," she said in a low voice, "not to exhibit reticence and
+proper self-control before a--a stranger.... But I--I have been--rather
+badly--frightened."
+
+"Nothing need frighten you now," he said.
+
+"I thought so, too. I thought that as soon as I left New York it would
+be all right. But--but the first thing I saw in my stateroom was _that_
+overcoat! And the next thing that occurred was--was almost--stupefying.
+Until I boarded this milk-train, I think I must have been almost
+irresponsible from sheer fright."
+
+"What frightened you?" he asked, trembling internally.
+
+"I--I can't tell you. It would do no good. You could not help me."
+
+"Yet you say I have already aided you."
+
+"Yes.... That is true.... And you _will_ send that overcoat back, won't
+you?"
+
+"Yes," he said. "To remember it, I'd better put it on, I think."
+
+The southern night had turned chilly, and he was glad to bundle into his
+own overcoat again.
+
+"From where will you ship it?" she asked anxiously.
+
+"From Ormond----"
+
+"Please don't!"
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because," she said desperately, "the owner of that coat might trace it
+to Ormond and--and come down there."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+She paled and clasped her hands tighter:
+
+"I--I thought--I had every reason to believe that he was in New York.
+B-but he isn't. He is in St. Augustine!"
+
+"You evidently don't wish to meet him."
+
+"No--oh, no, I don't wish to meet him--ever!"
+
+"Oh. Am I to understand that this--this _fellow_," he said fiercely, "is
+_following_ you?"
+
+"I don't know--oh, I really don't know," she said, her blue eyes wide
+with apprehension. "All I know is that I do not desire to see him--or to
+have him see me.... He _must_ not see me; it must not be--it _shall_ not
+be! I--it's a very terrible thing;--I don't know exactly what I'm--I'm
+fighting against--because it's--it's simply too dreadful----"
+
+Emotion checked her, and for a moment she covered her eyes with her
+gloved hands, sitting in silence.
+
+"Can't I help you?" he asked gently.
+
+She dropped her hands and stared at him.
+
+"I don't know. Do you think you could? It all seems so--like a bad
+dream. I'll have to tell you about it if you are to help me--won't I?"
+
+"If you think it best," he said with an inward quiver.
+
+"That's it. I don't know whether it _is_ best to ask your advice. Yet, I
+don't know exactly what else to do," she added in a bewildered way,
+passing one hand slowly over her eyes. "Shall I tell you?"
+
+"Perhaps you'd better."
+
+"I think I will!... I--I left New York in a panic at a few moments'
+notice. I thought I'd go to Ormond and hide there for a while, and then,
+if--if matters looked threatening, I could go to Miami and take a
+steamer for the West Indies, and from there--if necessary--I could go to
+Brazil----"
+
+"But _why_?" he demanded, secretly terrified at his own question.
+
+She looked at him blankly a moment: "Oh; I forgot. It--it all began
+without any warning; and instantly I began to run away."
+
+"From what?"
+
+"From--from the owner of that overcoat!"
+
+"Who is he?"
+
+"His name," she said resolutely, "is George Z. Green. And I am running
+away from him.... And I am afraid you'll think it very odd when I tell
+you that although I am running away from him I do not know him, and I
+have never seen him."
+
+"Wh-what is the matter with him?" inquired Green, with a sickly attempt
+at smiling.
+
+"He wants to marry me!" she exclaimed indignantly. "_That_ is what is
+the matter with him."
+
+"Are you sure?" he asked, astounded.
+
+"Perfectly. And the oddest thing of all is that I do not think he has
+ever seen me--or ever even heard of me."
+
+"But how can----"
+
+"I'll tell you. I must tell you now, anyway. It began the evening before
+I left New York. I--I live alone--with a companion--having no parents. I
+gave a dinner dance the evening before I--I ran away;--there was music,
+too; professional dancers;--a crystal-gazing fortune teller--and a lot
+of people--loads of them."
+
+She drew a short, quick breath, and shook her pretty head.
+
+"Everybody's been talking about the Princess Zimbamzim this winter. So I
+had her there.... She--she is uncanny--positively terrifying. A dozen
+women were scared almost ill when they came out of her curtained corner.
+
+"And--and then she demanded me.... I had no belief in such things.... I
+went into that curtained corner, never for one moment dreaming that what
+she might say would matter anything to me.... In ten minutes she had me
+scared and trembling like a leaf.... I didn't want to stay; I wanted to
+go. I--couldn't, somehow. My limbs were stiff--I couldn't control
+them--I couldn't get up! All my will power--was--was paralysed!"
+
+The girl's colour had fled; she looked at Green with wide eyes dark with
+the memory of fear.
+
+"She told me to come to her for an hour's crystal gazing the following
+afternoon. I--I didn't _want_ to go. But I couldn't seem to keep away.
+
+"Then a terrible thing happened. I--I looked into that crystal and I saw
+there--saw with my own eyes--_myself_ being married to a--a perfectly
+strange man! I saw myself as clearly as in a looking glass;--but I could
+see only his back. He--he wore an overcoat--like that one I gave to you
+to send back. Think of it! Married to a man who was wearing an
+_overcoat_!
+
+"And there was a clergyman who looked sleepy, and--and two strangers as
+witnesses--and there was I--_I!_--getting married to this man.... And
+the terrible thing about it was that I looked at him as though I--I
+l-loved him----"
+
+Her emotions overcame her for a moment, but she swallowed desperately,
+lifted her head, and forced herself to continue:
+
+"Then the Princess Zimbamzim began to laugh, very horridly: and I asked
+her, furiously, who that man was. And she said: 'His name seems to be
+George Z. Green; he is a banker and broker; and he lives at 1008-1/2
+Fifth Avenue.'
+
+"'Am _I_ marrying him?' I cried. 'Am _I_ marrying a strange broker who
+wears an overcoat at the ceremony?'
+
+"And she laughed her horrid laugh again and said: 'You certainly are,
+Miss Wiltz. You can not escape it. It is your destiny.'
+
+"'When am I to do it?' I demanded, trembling with fright and
+indignation. And she told me that it was certain to occur within either
+three months or three days.... And--can you imagine my n-natural
+feelings of horror--and repugnance? Can you not now understand the panic
+that seized me--when there, all the time in the crystal, I could
+actually see myself doing what that dreadful woman prophesied?"
+
+"I don't blame you for running," he said, stunned.
+
+"I do not blame myself. I ran. I fled, distracted, from that terrible
+house! I left word for my maid to pack and follow me to Ormond. I caught
+the first train I could catch. For the next three months I propose to
+continue my flight if--if necessary. And I fear it will be necessary."
+
+"Finding his overcoat in your stateroom must have been a dreadful shock
+to you," he said, pityingly.
+
+"Imagine! But when, not an hour ago, I saw his name on the register at
+the Hotel Royal Orchid--_directly under my name!_--can you--oh, can you
+imagine my utter terror?"
+
+Her voice broke and she leaned up against the side of the car, so white,
+so quivering, so utterly demoralised by fear, that, alarmed, he took her
+trembling hands firmly in his.
+
+"You mustn't give way," he said. "This won't do. You must show courage."
+
+"How can I show courage when I'm f-frightened?"
+
+"You must not be frightened, because--because I am going to stand by
+you. I am going to stand by you very firmly. I am going to see this
+matter through."
+
+"Are you? It is so--so kind of you--so good--so generous.... Because
+it's uncanny enough to frighten even a man. You see we don't know what
+we're fighting. We're threatened by--by the occult! By unseen
+f-forces.... _How_ could that man be in St. Augustine?"
+
+He drew a long breath. "I am going to tell you something.... May I?"
+
+She turned in silence to look at him. Something in his eyes disturbed
+her, and he felt her little, gloved hands tighten spasmodically within
+his own.
+
+"It isn't anything to frighten you," he said. "It may even relieve you.
+Shall I tell you?"
+
+Her lips formed a voiceless word of consent.
+
+"Then I'll tell you.... I know George Z. Green."
+
+"W-what?"
+
+"I know him very well. He is--is an exceedingly--er--nice fellow."
+
+"But I don't care! I'm not going to marry him!... Am I? Do you think I
+am?"
+
+And she fell a-trembling so violently that, alarmed, he drew her to his
+shoulder, soothing her like a child, explaining that in the twentieth
+century no girl was going to marry anybody against her will.
+
+Like a child she cowered against him, her hands tightening within his.
+The car swayed and rattled on its clanging trucks; the feeble lamp
+glimmered.
+
+"If I thought," she said, "that George Z. Green was destined to marry me
+under such outrageous and humiliating circumstances, I--I believe I
+would marry the first decent man I encountered--merely to confound the
+Princess Zimbamzim--and every wicked crystal-gazer in the world! I--I
+simply hate them!"
+
+He said: "Then you believe in them."
+
+"How can I help it? Look at me! Look at me here, in full light--asking
+protection of you!... And I don't care! I--think I am becoming more
+angry than--than frightened. I think it is your kindness that has given
+me courage. Somehow, I feel safe with you. I am sure that I can rely on
+you; can't I?"
+
+"Yes," he said miserably.
+
+"I was very sure I could when I saw you sitting there on the platform
+before the milk-train came in.... I don't know how it was--I was not
+afraid to speak to you.... Something about you made me confident.... I
+said to myself, 'He is _good_! I _know_ it!' And so I spoke to you."
+
+Conscience was tearing him inwardly to shreds, as the fox tore the
+Spartan. How could he pose as the sort of man she believed him to be,
+and endure the self-contempt now almost overwhelming him?
+
+"I--I'm not good," he blurted out, miserably.
+
+She turned and looked at him seriously for a moment. Then, for the first
+time aware of his arm encircling her, and her hands in his, she
+flushed brightly and freed herself, straightening up in her little
+wooden chair.
+
+"You need not tell me that," she said. "I _know_ you _are_ good."
+
+"As a m-matter of f-fact," he stammered. "I'm a scoundrel!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"I can't bear to have you know it--b-but I am!"
+
+"_How_ can you say that?--when you've been so perfectly sweet to me?"
+she exclaimed.
+
+And after a moment's silence she laughed deliciously.
+
+"Only to look at you is enough," she said, "for a girl to feel absolute
+confidence in you."
+
+"Do you feel that?"
+
+"I?... Yes.... Yes, I do. I would trust you without hesitation. I have
+trusted you, have I not? And after all, it is not so strange. You are
+the sort of man to whom I am accustomed. We are both of the same sort."
+
+"No," he said gloomily, "I'm really a pariah."
+
+"You! Why do you say such things, after you have been so--perfectly
+charming to a frightened girl?"
+
+"I'm a pariah," he repeated. "I'm a social outcast! I--I know it, now."
+And he leaned his head wearily on both palms.
+
+The girl looked at him in consternation.
+
+"Are _you_ unhappy?" she asked.
+
+"Wretched."
+
+"Oh," she said softly, "I didn't know that.... I am so sorry.... And to
+think that you took all _my_ troubles on your shoulders, too,--burdened
+with your own! I--I _knew_ you were that kind of man," she added warmly.
+
+He only shook his head, face buried in his hands.
+
+"I am _so_ sorry," she repeated gently. "Would it help you if you told
+me?"
+
+He did not answer.
+
+"Because," she said sweetly, "it would make me very happy if I could be
+of even the very slightest use to you!"
+
+No response.
+
+"Because you have been so kind."
+
+No response.
+
+"--And so p-pleasant and c-cordial and----"
+
+No response.
+
+She looked at the young fellow who sat there with head bowed in his
+hands; and her blue eyes grew wistful.
+
+"Are you in physical pain?"
+
+"Mental," he said in a muffled voice.
+
+"I am sorry. Don't you believe that I am?" she asked pitifully.
+
+"You would not be sorry if you knew why I am suffering," he muttered.
+
+"How _can_ you say that?" she exclaimed warmly. "Do you think I am
+ungrateful? Do you think I am insensible to delicate and generous
+emotions? Do you suppose I could ever forget what you have done for me?"
+
+"Suppose," he said in a muffled voice, "I turned out to be a--a
+villain?"
+
+"You couldn't!"
+
+"Suppose it were true that I am one?"
+
+She said, with the warmth of total inexperience with villains, "What you
+have been to me is only what concerns me. You have been good, generous,
+noble! And I--like you."
+
+"You must not like me."
+
+"I _do_! I do like you! I shall continue to do so--always----"
+
+"You can not!"
+
+"What? Indeed I can! I like you very much. I defy you to prevent me!"
+
+"I don't want to prevent you--but you mustn't do it."
+
+She sat silent for a moment. Then her lip trembled.
+
+"Why may I not like you?" she asked unsteadily.
+
+"I am not worth it."
+
+He didn't know it, but he had given her the most fascinating answer that
+a man can give a young girl.
+
+"If you are not worth it," she said tremulously, "you can become so."
+
+"No, I never can."
+
+"Why do you say that? No matter what a man has done--a young man--such
+as you--he can become worthy again of a girl's friendship--if he wishes
+to."
+
+"I never could become worthy of yours."
+
+"Why? What have you done? I don't care anyway. If you--if you want
+my--my friendship you can have it."
+
+"No," he groaned, "I am sunk too low to even dream of it! You don't
+know--you don't know what you're saying. I am beyond the pale!"
+
+He clutched his temples and shuddered. For a moment she gazed at him
+piteously, then her timid hand touched his arm.
+
+"I can't bear to see you in despair," she faltered, "--you who have been
+so good to me. Please don't be unhappy--because--I want you to be
+happy----"
+
+"I can never be that."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Because--I am in love!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"With a girl who--hates me."
+
+"Oh," she said faintly. Then the surprise in her eyes faded vaguely into
+wistfulness, and into something almost tender as she gazed at his bowed
+head.
+
+"Any girl," she said, scarcely knowing what she was saying, "who could
+not love such a man as you is an absolutely negligible quantity."
+
+His hands fell from his face and he sat up.
+
+"Could _you_?"
+
+"What?" she said, not understanding.
+
+"Could you do what--what I--mentioned just now?"
+
+She looked curiously at him for a moment, not comprehending. Suddenly a
+rose flush stained her face.
+
+"I don't think you mean to say that to me," she said quietly.
+
+"Yes," he said, "I do mean to say it.... Because, since I first saw you,
+I have--have dared to--to be in love with you."
+
+"With _me_! We--you have not known me an hour!"
+
+"I have known you three days."
+
+"What?"
+
+"_I_ am George Z. Green!"
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+
+Minute after minute throbbed in silence, timed by the loud rhythm of the
+roaring wheels. He did not dare lift his head to look at her, though her
+stillness scared him. Awful and grotesque thoughts assailed him. He
+wondered whether she had survived the blow--and like an assassin he
+dared not look to see what he had done, but crouched there, overwhelmed
+with misery such as he never dreamed that a human heart could endure.
+
+A century seemed to have passed before, far ahead, the locomotive
+whistled warningly for the Ormond station.
+
+He understood what it meant, and clutched his temples, striving to
+gather courage sufficient to lift his head and face her blazing
+contempt--or her insensible and inanimate but beautiful young form lying
+in a merciful faint on the floor of the baggage car.
+
+And at last he lifted his head.
+
+She had risen and was standing by the locked side doors, touching her
+eye-lashes with her handkerchief.
+
+When he rose, the train was slowing down. Presently the baggage master
+came in, yawning; the side doors were unbolted and flung back as the car
+glided along a high, wooden platform.
+
+They were standing side by side now; she did not look at him, but when
+the car stopped she laid her hand lightly on his arm.
+
+Trembling in every fibre, he drew the little, gloved hand through his
+arm and aided her to descend.
+
+"Are you unhappy?" he whispered tremulously.
+
+"No.... What are we to do?"
+
+"Am I to say?"
+
+"Yes," she said faintly.
+
+"Shall I register as your brother?"
+
+She blushed and looked at him in a lovely and distressed way.
+
+"What _are_ we to do?" she faltered.
+
+They entered the main hall of the great hotel at that moment, and she
+turned to look around her.
+
+"Oh!" she exclaimed, clutching his arm. "Do you see that man? Do you
+_see_ him?"
+
+"Which man--dearest?----"
+
+"_That_ one over there! That is the clergyman I saw in the crystal. Oh,
+dear! Oh, dear! Is it going to come true right away?"
+
+"I think it is," he said. "Are you afraid?"
+
+She drew a deep, shuddering breath, lifted her eyes to his:
+
+"N-no," she said.
+
+Ten minutes later it was being done around the corner of the great
+veranda, where nobody was. The moon glimmered on the Halifax; the
+palmettos sighed in the chilly sea-wind; the still, night air was
+scented with orange bloom and the odour of the sea.
+
+He wore his overcoat, and he used the plain, gold band which had
+decorated his little finger. The clergyman was brief and businesslike;
+the two clerks made dignified witnesses.
+
+When it was done, and they were left alone, standing on the moonlit
+veranda, he said:
+
+"Shall we send a present to the Princess Zimbamzim?"
+
+"Yes.... A beautiful one."
+
+He drew her to him; she laid both hands on his shoulders. When he
+kissed her, her face was cold and white as marble.
+
+"Are you afraid?" he whispered.
+
+The marble flushed pink.
+
+"No," she said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"That," said Stafford, "was certainly quick action. Ten minutes is a
+pretty short time for Fate to begin business."
+
+"Fate," remarked Duane, "once got busy with me inside of ten seconds."
+He looked at Athalie.
+
+"_Ut solent poetae_," she rejoined, calmly.
+
+I said: "_Verba placent et vox, et quod corrumpere non est; Quoque minor
+spes est, hoc magis ille cupit_."
+
+In a low voice Duane replied to me, looking at her: "_Vera incessu
+patuit Dea_."
+
+Slowly the girl blushed, lowering her dark eyes to the green jade god
+resting in the rosy palm of her left hand.
+
+"Physician, cure thyself," muttered Stafford, slowly twisting a
+cigarette to shreds in his nervous hands.
+
+I rose, walked over to the small marble fountain and looked down at the
+sleeping goldfish. Here and there from the dusky magnificence of their
+colour a single scale glittered like a living spark under water.
+
+"Are you preaching to them?" asked Athalie, raising her eyes from the
+green god in her palm.
+
+"No matter where a man turns his eyes," said I, "they may not long
+remain undisturbed by the vision of gold. I was not preaching, Athalie;
+I was reflecting upon my poverty."
+
+"It is an incurable ailment," said somebody; "the millionaire knows it;
+the gods themselves suffered from it. From the bleaching carcass of the
+peon to the mausoleum of the emperor, the world's highway winds through
+its victims' graves."
+
+"Athalie," said I, "is it possible for you to look into your crystal and
+discover hidden treasure?"
+
+"Not for my own benefit."
+
+"For others?"
+
+"I have done it."
+
+"Could you locate a few millions for us?" inquired the novelist.
+
+"Yes, widely distributed among you. Your right hand is heavy as gold;
+your brain jingles with it."
+
+"I do not write for money," he said bluntly.
+
+"That is why," she said, smiling and placing a sweetmeat between her
+lips.
+
+I had the privilege of lighting a match for her.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+
+When the tip of her cigarette glowed rosy in the pearl-tinted gloom, the
+shadowy circle at her feet drew a little nearer.
+
+"This is the story of Valdez," she said. "Listen attentively, you who
+hunger!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the first day it rained torrents; the light was very dull in the
+galleries; fashion kept away. Only a few monomaniacs braved the weather,
+left dripping mackintoshes and umbrellas in the coat room, and spent the
+dull March morning in mousing about among the priceless treasures on
+view to those who had cards of admission. The sale was to take place
+three days later. Heikem was the auctioneer.
+
+The collection to be disposed of was the celebrated library of Professor
+Octavo de Folio--a small one; but it was composed almost exclusively of
+rarities. A million and a half had been refused by the heirs, who
+preferred to take chances at auction.
+
+And there were Caxtons, first edition Shakespeares, illuminated
+manuscripts, volumes printed privately for various kings and queens,
+bound sketch books containing exquisite aquarelles and chalk drawings by
+Bargue, Fortuny, Drouais, Boucher, John Downman; there were autographed
+monographs in manuscript; priceless order books of revolutionary
+generals, private diaries kept by men and women celebrated and notorious
+the world over.
+
+But the heirs apparently preferred yachts and automobiles.
+
+The library was displayed in locked glass cases, an attendant seated by
+each case, armed with a key and discretionary powers.
+
+From where James White sat beside his particular case, he had a view of
+the next case and of the young girl seated beside it.
+
+She was very pretty. No doubt, being out of a job, like himself, she
+was glad to take this temporary position. She was so pretty she made his
+head ache. Or it might have been the ventilation.
+
+It rained furiously; a steady roar on the glass roof overhead filled the
+long and almost empty gallery of Mr. Heikem, the celebrated auctioneer,
+with a monotone as dull and incessant as the business voice of that
+great man.
+
+Here and there a spectacled old gentleman nosed his way from case to
+case, making at intervals cabalistic pencil marks on the margin of his
+catalogue--which specimen of compiled literature alone cost five
+dollars.
+
+It was a very dull day for James White, and also, apparently, for the
+pretty girl in charge of the adjoining case. Nobody even asked either of
+them to unlock the cases; and it began to appear to young White that the
+books and manuscripts confided to his charge were not by any means the
+_chefs-d'oeuvre_ of the collection.
+
+They were a dingy looking lot of books, anyway. He glanced over the
+private list furnished him, read the titles, histories and pedigrees of
+the volumes, stifled a yawn, fidgetted in his chair, stared at the
+rain-battered glass roof overhead, mused lightly upon his misfortunes,
+shrugged his broad shoulders, and glanced at the girl across the aisle.
+
+She also was reading her private list. It seemed to bore her.
+
+He looked at her as long as decency permitted, then gazed elsewhere. She
+was exceedingly pretty in her way, red haired, white skinned; and her
+eyes seemed to be a very lovely Sevres blue. Except in porcelain he
+thought he had never seen anything as dainty. He knew perfectly well
+that he could very easily fall in love with her. Also he knew he'd never
+have the opportunity.
+
+Duller and duller grew the light; louder roared the March rain. Even
+monomaniacs no longer came into the galleries, and the half dozen who
+had arrived left by luncheon time.
+
+When it was White's turn to go out to lunch, he went to Childs' and
+returned in half an hour. Then the girl across the aisle went
+out--probably to a similar and sumptuous banquet. She came back very
+shortly, reseated herself, and glanced around the empty galleries.
+
+There seemed to be absolutely nothing for anybody to do, except to sit
+there and listen to the rain.
+
+White pondered on his late failure in affairs. Recently out of Yale, and
+more recently still established in business, he had gone down in the
+general slump, lacking sufficient capital to tide him over. His
+settlement with his creditors left him with fifteen hundred dollars. He
+was now waiting for an opportunity to invest it in an enterprise. He
+believed in enterprises. Also, he was firmly convinced that Opportunity
+knocked no more than once in a lifetime, and he was always cocking his
+ear to catch the first timid rap. It was knocking then but he did not
+hear it, for it was no louder than the gentle beating of his red-haired
+neighbour's heart.
+
+But Opportunity is a jolly jade. She knocks every little while--but one
+must possess good hearing.
+
+Having nothing better to do as he sat there, White drifted into mental
+speculation--that being the only sort available.
+
+He dreamed of buying a lot in New York for fifteen hundred dollars and
+selling it a few years later for fifty thousand. He had a well developed
+imagination; wonderful were the lucky strikes he made in these day
+dreams; marvellous the financial returns. He was a very Napoleon of
+finance when he was dozing. Many are.
+
+The girl across the aisle also seemed to be immersed in day dreams. Her
+Sevres blue eyes had become vague; her listless little hands lay in her
+lap unstirring. She was pleasant to look at.
+
+After an hour or so it was plain to White that she had had enough of her
+dreams. She sighed very gently, straightened up in her chair, looked at
+the rain-swept roof, patted a yawn into modest suppression, and gazed
+about her with speculative and engaging eyes.
+
+Then, as though driven to desperation, she turned, looked into the glass
+case beside her for a few minutes, and then, fitting her key to the
+door, opened it, selected a volume at hazard, and composed herself to
+read.
+
+For a while White watched her lazily, but presently with more interest,
+as her features gradually grew more animated and her attention seemed to
+be concentrated on the book.
+
+As the minutes passed it became plain to White that the girl found the
+dingy little volume exceedingly interesting. And after a while she
+appeared to be completely absorbed in it; her blue eyes were rivetted on
+the pages; her face was flushed, her sensitive lips expressive of the
+emotion that seemed to be possessing her more and more.
+
+White wondered what this book might be which she found so breathlessly
+interesting. It was small, dingy, bound in warped covers of old
+leather, and anything but beautiful. And by and by he caught a glimpse
+of the title--"The Journal of Pedro Valdez."
+
+The title, somehow, seemed to be familiar to him; he glanced into his
+own case, and after a few minutes' searching he caught sight of another
+copy of the same book, dingy, soiled, leather-bound, unlovely.
+
+He looked over his private list until he found it. And this is what he
+read concerning it:
+
+ _Valdez, Pedro--Journal of. Translated by Thomas Bangs, of
+ Philadelphia, in 1760. With map. Two copies, much worn and
+ damaged by water. Several pages missing from each book._
+
+ Pedro Valdez was a soldier of fortune serving with Cortez in
+ Mexico and with De Soto in Florida. Nothing more is known of
+ him, except that he perished somewhere in the semi-tropical
+ forests of America.
+
+ Thomas Bangs, an Englishman, pretended to have discovered and
+ translated the journal kept by Valdez. After the journal had
+ been translated--if, indeed, such a document ever really
+ existed--Bangs pretended that it was accidentally destroyed.
+
+ Bangs' translation and map are considered to be works of pure
+ imagination. They were published from manuscript after the
+ death of the author.
+
+ Bangs died in St. Augustine of yellow fever, about 1760-61,
+ while preparing for an exploring expedition into the Florida
+ wilderness.
+
+Mildly edified, White glanced again at the girl across the aisle, and
+was surprised to see how her interest in the volume had altered her
+features. Tense, breathless, utterly absorbed in the book, she bent over
+the faded print, leaning close, for the sickly light that filtered
+through the glass roof scarcely illumined the yellow pages at all.
+
+The curiosity of White was now aroused; he opened the glass case beside
+him, fished out his copy of the book, opened it, and began to read.
+
+For the first few minutes his interest was anything but deep: he read
+the well-known pages where Bangs recounts how he discovered the journal
+of Valdez--and it sounded exceedingly fishy--a rather poorly written
+fairy-tale done by a man with little invention and less imagination, so
+worn out, hackneyed and trite were the incidents, so obvious the
+coincidences.
+
+White shrugged his shoulders and turned from the preface to what
+purported to be the translation.
+
+Almost immediately it struck him that this part of the book was not
+written by the same man. Here was fluency, elegance of expression,
+ease, the simplicity of a soldier who had something to say and but a
+short time in which to say it. Even the apparent clumsiness of the
+translation had not deformed the work.
+
+Little by little the young man became intensely interested, then
+absorbed. And after a while the colour came into his face; he glanced
+nervously around him; suppressed excitement made his hands unsteady as
+he unfolded the enclosed map.
+
+From time to time he referred to the map as he read; the rain roared on
+the glass roof; the light grew dimmer and dimmer.
+
+At five o'clock the galleries closed for the day. And that evening,
+sitting in his hall-bedroom, White made up his mind that he must buy
+"The Journal of Valdez" if it took every penny that remained to him.
+
+The next day was fair and cold; fashion graced the Octavo de Folio
+exhibition; White had no time to re-read any passages or to re-examine
+the map, because people were continually asking to see and handle the
+books in his case.
+
+Across the aisle he noticed that his pretty neighbour was similarly
+occupied. And he was rather glad, because he felt, vaguely, that it was
+just as well she did not occupy her time in reading "The Journal of
+Valdez." Girls usually have imagination. The book might stir her up as
+it had stirred him. And to no purpose.
+
+Also, he was glad that nobody asked to look at the Valdez copy in his
+own case. He didn't want people to look at it. There were reasons--among
+others, he wanted to buy it himself. He meant to if fifteen hundred
+dollars would buy it.
+
+White had not the remotest idea what the book might bring at auction. He
+dared not inquire whether the volume was a rare one, dreading even to
+call the attention of his fellow employees to it. A word _might_ arouse
+their curiosity.
+
+All day long he attended to his duties there, and at five he went home,
+highly excited, determined to arrive at the galleries next morning in
+time enough to read the book a little before the first of the public
+came.
+
+And he did get there very early. The only other employee who had arrived
+before him was the red-haired girl. She sat by her case reading "The
+Journal of Valdez." Once she looked up at him with calm, clear,
+intelligent eyes. He did not see her; he hastily unlocked his case and
+drew out the coveted book. Then he sat down and began to devour it. And
+so utterly and instantly was he lost amid those yellow, time-faded
+pages that he did not even glance across the aisle at his ornamental
+neighbour. If he had looked he would have noticed that she also was
+buried in "The Journal of Valdez." And it might have made him a trifle
+uneasy to see her look from her book to him and from him to the volume
+he was perusing so excitedly.
+
+It being the last day that the library was to be on view before the
+sale, fashion and monomania rubbed elbows in the Heikem Galleries,
+crowding the well known salons morning and afternoon. And all day long
+White and his neighbour across the aisle were busy taking out books and
+manuscripts for inspection, so that they had no time for luncheon, and
+less for Valdez.
+
+And that night they were paid off and dismissed; and the auctioneer and
+his corps of assistants took charge.
+
+The sale took place the following morning and afternoon. White drew from
+the bank his fifteen hundred dollars, breakfasted on bread and milk, and
+went to the galleries more excited than he had ever been before in his
+long life of twenty-three years. And that is some time.
+
+It was a long shot at Fortune he meant to take--a really desperate
+chance. One throw would settle it--win or lose. And the idea scared him
+badly, and he was trembling a little when he took his seat amid the
+perfumed gowns of fashion and the white whiskers of high finance, and
+the shabby vestments of monomania.
+
+Once or twice he wondered whether he was crazy. Yet, every throb of his
+fast-beating heart seemed to summon him to do and dare; and he felt,
+without even attempting to explain the feeling to himself, that now at
+last Opportunity was loudly rapping at his door, and that if he did not
+let her in he would regret it as long as he lived.
+
+As he glanced fearfully about him he caught sight of his pretty
+neighbour who had held sway across the aisle. So she, too, had come to
+watch the sale! Probably for the excitement of hearing an auctioneer
+talk in thousands.
+
+He was a little surprised, nevertheless, for she did not look
+bookish--nor even intellectual enough to mar her prettiness. Yet,
+wherever she went she would look adorable. He understood that, now.
+
+It was a day of alarms for him, of fears, shocks, and frights
+innumerable. With terror he heard the auctioneer talking in terms of
+thousands; with horror he witnessed the bids on certain books advance by
+thousands at a clip. Five thousand, ten thousand, twenty thousand were
+bid, seen, raised, called, hiked, until his head spun and despair
+seized him.
+
+What did he know about Valdez? Either volume might bring fifty thousand
+dollars for all he knew. Had he fifty thousand he felt, somehow, that he
+would have bid it to the last penny for the book. And he came to the
+conclusion that he was really crazy. Yet there he sat, glued to his
+chair, listening, shuddering, teeth alternately chattering or grimly
+locked, while the very air seemed to reek of millions, and the incessant
+gabble of the auctioneer drove him almost out of his wits.
+
+Nearer and nearer approached the catalogued numbers of the two copies of
+Valdez; pale and desperate he sat there, his heart almost suffocating
+him as the moment drew near. And now the time had come; now the
+celebrated Mr. Heikem began his suave preliminary chatter; now he was
+asking confidently for a bid.
+
+A silence ensued--and whether it was the silence of awe at the priceless
+treasure or the silence of indifference White did not know. But after
+the auctioneer had again asked for a bid he found his voice and offered
+ten dollars. His ears were scarlet when he did it.
+
+"Fifteen," said a sweet but tremulous voice not far from White, and he
+looked around in astonishment. It was his red-haired vis-a-vis.
+
+"Twenty!" he retorted, still labouring under his astonishment.
+
+"Twenty-five!" came the same sweet voice.
+
+There was a silence. No other voices said anything. Evidently nobody
+wanted Valdez except himself and his red-haired neighbour.
+
+"Thirty!" he called out at the psychological moment.
+
+The girl turned in her chair and looked at him. She seemed to be
+unusually pale.
+
+"Thirty-five!" she said, still gazing at White in a frightened sort of
+way.
+
+"Forty," he said; rose at the same moment and walked over to where the
+girl was sitting.
+
+She looked up at him as he bent over her chair; both were very serious.
+
+"You and I are the only two people bidding," he said. "There are two
+copies of the book. Don't bid against me and you can buy in the other
+one for next to nothing--judging from the course this one is taking."
+
+"Very well," she said quietly.
+
+A moment later the first copy of Valdez was knocked down to James White.
+An indifferent audience paid little attention to the transaction.
+
+Two minutes later the second copy fell to Miss Jean Sandys for five
+dollars--there being no other bidder.
+
+White had already left the galleries. Lingering at the entrance he saw
+Miss Sandys pass him, and he lifted his hat. The slightest inclination
+of her pretty head acknowledged it. The next moment they were lost to
+each other's view in the crowded street.
+
+Clutching his battered book to his chest, not even daring to drop it
+into his overcoat for fear of pickpockets, the young fellow started up
+Broadway at a swinging pace which presently brought him to the offices
+of the Florida Spanish Grants Company; and here, at his request, he was
+ushered into a private room; a map of Seminole County spread on the
+highly polished table before him, and a suave gentleman placed at his
+disposal.
+
+"Florida," volunteered the suave gentleman, "is the land of perpetual
+sunshine--the land of milk and honey, as it were, the land of the
+orange----"
+
+"One moment, please," said White.
+
+"Sir?"
+
+They looked at each other for a second or two, then White smiled:
+
+"I don't want dope," he said pleasantly, "I merely want a few facts--if
+your company deals in them."
+
+"Florida," began the suave gentleman, watching the effect of his words,
+"is the garden of the world." Then he stopped, discouraged, for White
+was grinning at him.
+
+"It won't do," said White amiably.
+
+"No?" queried the suave gentleman, the ghost of a grin on his own smooth
+countenance.
+
+"No, it won't do. Now, if you will restrain your very natural enthusiasm
+and let me ask a few questions----"
+
+"Go ahead," said the suave gentleman, whose name was Munsell. "But I
+don't believe we have anything to suit you in Seminole County."
+
+"Oh, I don't know," returned White coolly, "is it _all_ under water?"
+
+"There are a few shell mounds. The highest is nearly ten inches above
+water. We call them hills."
+
+"I might wish to acquire one of those mountain ranges," remarked White
+seriously.
+
+After a moment they both laughed.
+
+"Are you in the game yourself?" inquired Mr. Munsell.
+
+"Well, my game is a trifle different."
+
+"Oh. Do you care to be more explicit?"
+
+White shook his head:
+
+"No; what's the use? But I'll say this: it isn't the 'Perpetual Sunshine
+and Orange Grove' game, or how to become a millionaire in three years."
+
+"No?" grinned Munsell, lifting his expressive eyebrows.
+
+White bent over the map for a few moments.
+
+"Here," he said carelessly, "is the Spanish Causeway and the Coakachee
+River. It's all swamp and jungle, I suppose--although I see you have it
+plotted into orange groves, truck gardens, pineapple plantations, and
+villas."
+
+Munsell made a last but hopeless effort. "Some day," he began, with
+dignity--but White's calm wink discouraged further attempts. Then the
+young man tapped with his pencil lots numbered from 200 to 210, slowly,
+going over them again for emphasis.
+
+"Are those what you want?" asked Munsell.
+
+"Those are what I want."
+
+"All right. Only I can't give you 210."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"Yesterday a party took a strip along the Causeway including half of 210
+up to 220."
+
+"Can't I get all of 210?"
+
+"I'll ask the party. Where can I address you?"
+
+White stood up. "Have everything ready Tuesday. I'll be in with the
+cash."
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+
+And on Tuesday he kept his word and the land was his for a few hundred
+dollars--all except the half of Lot No. 210, which it appeared the
+"party" declined to sell, refusing to consider any profit whatever.
+
+"It's like a woman," remarked Munsell.
+
+"Is your 'party' a woman?"
+
+"Yes. I guess she's into some game or other, too. Say, what is this
+Seminole County game, Mr. White?--if you don't mind my asking, now that
+you have taken title to your--h'm!--orange grove."
+
+"Why do you think there is any particular game afoot?" inquired the
+young man curiously.
+
+"Oh, come! _You_ know what you're buying. And that young lady knew, too.
+You've both bought a few acres of cypress swamp and you know it. What do
+you think is in it?"
+
+"Snakes," said White coolly.
+
+"Oh, _I_ know," said Munsell. "You think there's marl and phosphoric
+rock."
+
+"And isn't there?" asked White innocently.
+
+"How should _I_ know?" replied Munsell as innocently; the inference
+being that he knew perfectly well that there was nothing worth
+purchasing in the Causeway swamp.
+
+But when White went away he was a trifle worried, and he wondered
+uneasily why anybody else at that particular time should happen to
+invest in swampy real estate along the Spanish Causeway.
+
+He knew the Spanish Causeway. In youthful and prosperous days, when his
+parents were alive, they had once wintered at Verbena Inlet.
+
+And on several occasions he had been taken on excursions to the
+so-called Spanish Causeway--a dike-shaped path, partly ruined, made of
+marl and shell, which traversed the endless swamps of Seminole County,
+and was supposed to have been built by De Soto and his Spaniards.
+
+But whoever built it, Spaniard, Seminole, or the prehistoric people
+antedating both, there it still was, a ruined remnant of highway
+penetrating the otherwise impassable swamps.
+
+For miles across the wilderness of cypress, palmetto, oak, and depthless
+mud it stretched--a crumbling but dry runway for deer, panther, bear,
+black wolf, and Seminole. And excursion parties from the great hotels at
+Verbena often picnicked at its intersection with the forest road, but
+ventured no farther along the dismal, forbidding, and snake-infested
+ridge which ran anywhere between six inches and six feet above the level
+of the evil-looking marsh flanking it on either side.
+
+In the care-free days of school, of affluence, and of youth, White had
+been taken to gaze upon this alleged relic of Spanish glory. He now
+remembered it very clearly.
+
+And that night, aboard the luxurious Verbena Special, he lay in his bunk
+and dreamed dreams awake, which almost overwhelmed him with their
+magnificence. But when he slept his dreams were uneasy, interspersed
+with vague visions of women who came in regiments through flowering
+jungles to drive him out of his own property. It was a horrid sort of
+nightmare, for they pelted him with iron-bound copies of Valdez,
+knocking him almost senseless into the mud. And it seemed to him that he
+might have perished there had not his little red-haired neighbour
+extended a slender, helping hand in the nick of time.
+
+Dreaming of her he awoke, still shaking with the experience. And all
+that day he read in his book and pored over the map attached to it,
+until the locomotive whistled for St. Augustine, and he was obliged to
+disembark for the night.
+
+However, next morning he was on his way to Verbena, the train flying
+through a steady whirlwind of driving sand. And everywhere in the
+sunshine stretched the flat-woods, magnificently green--endless miles of
+pine and oak and palmetto, set with brilliant glades of vast, flat
+fields of wild phlox over which butterflies hovered.
+
+At Verbena Station he disembarked with his luggage, which consisted of a
+complete tropical camping outfit, tinned food, shot-gun, rifle, rods,
+spade, shovel, pick, crow. In his hand he carried an innocent looking
+satchel, gingerly. It contained dynamite in sticks, and the means to
+explode it safely.
+
+To a hackman he said: "I'm not going to any hotel. What I want is a
+wagon, a team of mules, and a driver to take me and my outfit to
+Coakachee Creek on the Spanish Causeway. Can you fix it for me?"
+
+The hackman said he could. And in half an hour he drove up in his mule
+wagon to the deserted station, where White sat all alone amid his
+mountainous paraphernalia.
+
+When the wagon had been loaded, and they had been driving through the
+woods for nearly half an hour in silence, the driver's curiosity got the
+better of him, and he ventured to enquire of White why everybody was
+going to the Spanish Causeway.
+
+Which question startled the young man very disagreeably until he learned
+that "everybody" merely meant himself and one other person taken thither
+by the same driver the day before.
+
+Further, he learned that this person was a woman from the North,
+completely equipped for camping as was he. Which made him more uneasy
+than ever, for he of course identified her with Mr. Munsell's client,
+whose land, including half of Lot 210, adjoined his own. Who she might
+be and why she had come down here to Seminole County he could not
+imagine, because Munsell had intimated that she knew what she was
+buying.
+
+No doubt she meant to play a similar game to Munsell's, and had come
+down to take a look at her villainous property before advertising
+possibilities of perpetual sunshine.
+
+Yet, why had she brought a camping outfit? Ordinary land swindlers
+remained comfortably aloof from the worthless property they advertised.
+What was she intending to do there?
+
+Instead of a swindler was she, perhaps, the swindlee? Had she bought
+the property in good faith? Didn't she know it was under water? Had she
+come down here with her pitiful camping equipment prepared to rough it
+and set out orange trees? Poor thing!
+
+"Was she all alone?" he inquired of his cracker driver.
+
+"Yaas, suh."
+
+"Poor thing. Did she seem young and inexperienced?"
+
+"Yaas, suh--'scusin she all has right smart o' red ha'r."
+
+"What?" exclaimed White excitedly. "You say she is young, and that she
+seemed inexperienced, except for her red hair!"
+
+"Yaas, suh. She all has a right smart hank of red ha'r on her haid. I
+ain't never knowed nobody with red ha'r what ain't had a heap mo'
+'sperience than the mostest."
+
+"D-d-did you say that you drove her over to the Spanish Causeway
+yesterday?" stammered the dismayed young man.
+
+"Yaas, suh."
+
+Horrified thoughts filled his mind. For there could be scarcely any
+doubt that this intruder was his red-haired neighbour across the aisle
+at the library sale.
+
+No doubt at all that he already crossed her trail at Munsell's agency.
+Also, she had bid in one of the only two copies of Valdez.
+
+First he had seen her reading it with every symptom of profound
+interest. Then she had gone to the sale and bid in one of the copies.
+Then he had heard from Munsell about a woman who had bought land along
+the Causeway the day before he had made his own purchase.
+
+And now once more he had struck her swift, direct trail, only to learn
+that she was still one day in advance of him!
+
+In his mental panic he remembered that his title was secure. That
+thought comforted him for a few moments, until he began to wonder
+whether the land he had acquired was really sufficient to cover a
+certain section of perhaps half an acre along the Causeway.
+
+According to his calculations he had given himself ample margin in every
+direction, for the spot he desired to control ought to lie somewhere
+about midway between Lot 200 and Lot 210.
+
+Had he miscalculated? Had _she_ miscalculated? Why had she purchased
+that strip from half of Lot 210 to Lot 220?
+
+There could be only one answer: this clever and astoundingly
+enterprising young girl had read Valdez, had decided to take a chance,
+had proved her sporting spirit by backing her judgment, and had started
+straight as an arrow for the terrifying territory in question.
+
+Hers had been first choice of Mr. Munsell's lots; she had deliberately
+chosen the numbers from half of 210 to 220. She was perfectly ignorant
+that he, White, had any serious intentions in Seminole County.
+Therefore, it had been her judgment, based on calculations from the
+Valdez map, that half of Lot 210 and the intervening territory including
+Lot 220, would be ample for her to control a certain spot--the very spot
+which he himself expected to control.
+
+Either he or she had miscalculated. Which?
+
+Dreadfully worried, he sat in silence beside his taciturn driver, gazing
+at the flanking forest through which the white road wound.
+
+The only habitation they passed was fruit-drying ranch No. 7, in the
+wilderness--just this one sunny oasis in the solemn half-light of the
+woods.
+
+White did not remember the road, although when a child he must have
+traversed it to the Causeway. Nor when he came in sight of the Causeway
+did he recognise it, where it ran through a glade of high, silvery
+grass set sparsely with tall palmettos.
+
+But here it was, and the cracker turned his mules into it, swinging
+sharply to the left along Coakachee Creek and proceeding for about two
+miles, where a shell mound enabled him to turn his team.
+
+A wagon could proceed no farther because the crumbling Causeway narrowed
+to a foot-path beyond. So here they unloaded; the cracker rested his
+mules for a while, then said a brief good-bye to White and shook the
+reins.
+
+When he had driven out of sight, White started to drag his tent and
+tent-poles along the dike top toward his own property, which ought to
+lie just ahead--somewhere near the curve that the Causeway made a
+hundred yards beyond. For he had discovered a weather-beaten shingle
+nailed to a water-oak, where he had disembarked his luggage; and on it
+were the remains of the painted number 198.
+
+Lugging tent and poles, he started along the Causeway, keeping a
+respectful eye out for snakes. So intent was he on avoiding the playful
+attentions of rattler or moccasin that it was only when he almost ran
+into it that he discovered another tent pitched directly in his path.
+
+Of course he had expected to find her encamped there on the Causeway,
+but he was surprised, nevertheless, and his tent-poles fell, clattering.
+
+A second later the flap of her tent was pushed aside, and his red-haired
+neighbour of the galleries stepped out, plainly startled.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII
+
+
+She seemed to be still more startled when she saw him: her blue eyes
+dilated; the colour which had ebbed came back, suffusing her pretty
+features. But when she recognised him, fear, dismay, astonishment, and
+anxiety blended in swift confusion, leaving her silent, crimson, rooted
+to the spot.
+
+White took off his hat and walked up to where she stood.
+
+"I'm sorry, Miss Sandys," he said. "Only a few hours ago did I learn who
+it was camping here on the Causeway. And--I'm afraid I know why you are
+here.... Because the same reason that brought you started me the next
+day."
+
+She had recovered her composure. She said very gravely:
+
+"I wondered when I saw you reading Valdez whether, by any possibility,
+you might think of coming here. And when you bought the other copy I was
+still more afraid.... But I had already secured an option on my lots."
+
+"I know it," he said, chagrined.
+
+"Were you," she inquired, "the client of Mr. Munsell who tried to buy
+from me the other half of Lot 210?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"I wondered. But of course I would not sell it. What lots have you
+bought?"
+
+"I took No. 200 to the northern half of No. 210."
+
+"Why?" she asked, surprised.
+
+"Because," he said, reddening, "my calculations tell me that this gives
+me ample margin."
+
+She looked at him in calm disapproval, shaking her head; but her blue
+eyes softened.
+
+"I'm sorry," she said. "You have miscalculated, Mr. White. The spot lies
+somewhere within the plot numbered from half of 210 to 220."
+
+"I am very much afraid that _you_ have miscalculated, Miss Sandys. I did
+not even attempt to purchase your plot--except half of 210."
+
+"Nor did I even consider _your_ plot, Mr. White," she said sorrowfully,
+"and I had my choice. Really I am very sorry for you, but you have made
+a complete miscalculation."
+
+"I don't see how I could. I worked it out from the Valdez map."
+
+"So did I."
+
+She had the volume under her arm; he had his in his pocket.
+
+"Let me show you," he began, drawing it out and opening it. "Would you
+mind looking at the map for a moment?"
+
+Her dainty head a trifle on one side, she looked over his shoulder as he
+unfolded the map for her.
+
+"Here," he said, plucking a dead grass stem and tracing the Causeway on
+the map, "here lie my lots--including, as you see, the spot marked by
+Valdez with a Maltese cross.... I'm sorry; but how in the world could
+you have made your mistake?"
+
+He turned to glance at the girl and saw her amazement and misunderstood
+it.
+
+"It's too bad," he added, feeling profoundly sorry for her.
+
+"Do you know," she said in a voice quivering with emotion, "that a very
+terrible thing has happened to us?"
+
+"To _us_?"
+
+"To _both_ of us. I--we--oh, please look at my map! It is--it is
+different from yours!"
+
+With nervous fingers she opened the book, spread out the map, and held
+it under his horrified eyes.
+
+"Do you see!" she exclaimed. "According to _this_ map, my lots include
+the Maltese cross of Valdez! I--I--p-please excuse me----" She turned
+abruptly and entered her tent; but he had caught the glimmer of sudden
+tears in her eyes and had seen the pitiful lips trembling.
+
+On his own account he was sufficiently scared; now it flashed upon him
+that this plucky young thing had probably spent her last penny on the
+chance that Bangs had told the truth about "The Journal of Pedro
+Valdez."
+
+That the two maps differed was a staggering blow to him; and his knees
+seemed rather weak at the moment, so he sat down on his unpacked tent
+and dropped his face in his palms.
+
+Lord, what a mess! His last cent was invested; hers, too, no doubt. He
+hadn't even railroad fare North. Probably she hadn't either.
+
+He had gambled and lost. There was scarcely a chance that he had not
+lost. And the same fearful odds were against her.
+
+"The poor little thing!" he muttered, staring at her tent. And after a
+moment he sprang to his feet and walked over to it. The flap was open;
+she sat inside on a camp-chair, her red head in her arms, doubled over
+in an attitude of tragic despair.
+
+"Miss Sandys?"
+
+She looked up hastily, the quick colour dyeing her pale cheeks, her
+long, black lashes glimmering with tears.
+
+"Do you mind talking it over with me?" he asked.
+
+"N-no."
+
+"May I come in?"
+
+"P-please."
+
+He seated himself cross-legged on the threshold.
+
+"There's only one thing to do," he said, "and that is to go ahead. We
+must go ahead. Of course the hazard is against us. Let us face the
+chance that Bangs was only a clever romancer. Well, we've already
+discounted that. Then let us face the discrepancy in our two maps. It's
+bad, I'll admit. It almost knocks the last atom of confidence out of me.
+It has floored you. But you must not take the count. You must get up."
+
+He paused, looking around him with troubled eyes; then somehow the sight
+of her pathetic figure--the soft, helpless youth of her--suddenly
+seemed to prop up his back-bone.
+
+"Miss Sandys, I am going to stand by you anyway! I suppose, like myself,
+you have invested your last dollar in this business?"
+
+"Y-yes."
+
+He glanced at the pick, shovel and spade in the corner of her tent, then
+at her hands.
+
+"Who," he asked politely, "was going to wield these?"
+
+She let her eyes rest on the massive implements of honest toil, then
+looked confusedly at him.
+
+"I was."
+
+"Did you ever try to dig with any of these things?"
+
+"N-no. But if I _had_ to do it I knew I could."
+
+He said, pleasantly: "You have all kinds of courage. Did you bring a
+shot-gun?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Do you know how to load and fire it?"
+
+"The clerk in the shop instructed me."
+
+"You are the pluckiest girl I ever laid eyes on.... You camped here all
+alone last night, I suppose?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"How about it?" he asked, smilingly. "Were you afraid?"
+
+She coloured, cast a swift glance at him, saw that his attitude was
+perfectly respectful and sympathetic, and said:
+
+"Yes, I was horribly afraid."
+
+"Did anything annoy you?"
+
+"S-something bellowed out there in the swamp----" She shuddered
+unaffectedly at the recollection.
+
+"A bull-alligator," he remarked.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Yes," he nodded, "it is terrifying, but they let you alone. I once
+heard one bellow on the Tomoka when I was a boy."
+
+After a while she said with tremulous lips:
+
+"There seem to be snakes here, too."
+
+"Didn't you expect any?"
+
+"Mr. Munsell said there were not any."
+
+"Did he?"
+
+"Not," she explained resolutely, "that the presence of snakes would have
+deterred me. They frighten me terribly, but--I would have come just the
+same."
+
+"You are sheer pluck," he said.
+
+"I don't know.... I am very poor.... There seemed to be a chance.... I
+took it----" Tears sprang to her eyes again, and she brushed them away
+impatiently.
+
+"Yes," she said, "the only way is to go on, as you say, Mr. White.
+Everything in the world that I have is invested here."
+
+"It is the same with me," he admitted dejectedly.
+
+They looked at each other curiously for a moment.
+
+"Isn't it strange?" she murmured.
+
+"Strange as 'The Journal of Valdez.'... I have an idea. I wonder what
+you might think of it."
+
+She waited; he reflected for another moment, then, smiling:
+
+"This is a perfectly rotten place for you," he said. "You could not do
+manual labour here in this swamp under a nearly vertical sun and keep
+your health for twenty-four hours. I've been in Trinidad. I know a
+little about the tropics and semi-tropics. Suppose you and I form a
+company?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Call it the Valdez Company, or the Association of the Maltese Cross,"
+he continued cheerfully. "You will do the cooking, washing, housekeeping
+for two tents, and the mending. I will do the digging and the
+dynamiting. And we'll go ahead doggedly, and face this thing and see it
+through to the last ditch. What do you think of it? Your claim as
+plotted out is no more, no less, valuable than mine. Both claims may be
+worthless. The chances are that they are absolutely valueless. But there
+_is_ a chance, too, that we might win out. Shall we try it together?"
+
+She did not answer.
+
+"And," he continued, "if the Maltese cross happens to be included within
+my claim, I share equally with you. If it chances to lie within your
+claim, perhaps I might ask a third----"
+
+"Mr. White!"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"You will take _two_ thirds!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"_Two_ thirds," she repeated firmly, "because your heavier labour
+entitles you to that proportion!"
+
+"My dear Miss Sandys, you are unworldly and inexperienced in your
+generosity----"
+
+"So are you! The idea of your modestly venturing to ask a _third_! And
+offering me a _half_ if the Maltese cross lie inside your own territory!
+That is not the way to do business, Mr. White!"
+
+She had become so earnest in her admonition, so charmingly emphatic,
+that he smiled in spite of himself.
+
+She flushed, noticing this, and said: "Altruism is a luxury in business
+matters; selfishness of the justifiable sort a necessity. Who will look
+out for your interests if you do not?"
+
+"_You_ seem to be doing it."
+
+Her colour deepened: "I am only suggesting that you do not make a
+foolish bargain with me."
+
+"Which proves," he said, "that you are not much better at business than
+am I. Otherwise you'd have taken me up."
+
+"I'm a very good business woman," she insisted, warmly, "but I'm too
+much of the other kind of woman to be unfair!"
+
+"Commercially," he said, "we both are sadly behind the times. To-day the
+world is eliminating its appendix; to-morrow it will be operated on for
+another obsolete and annoying appendage. I mean its conscience," he
+added, so seriously that for a moment her own gravity remained
+unaltered. Then, like a faint ray of sunlight, across her face the smile
+glimmered. It was a winning smile, fresh and unspoiled as the lips it
+touched.
+
+"You _will_ take half--won't you?" she asked.
+
+"Yes, I will. Is it a bargain?"
+
+"If you care to make it so, Mr. White."
+
+He said he did, and they shook hands very formally. Then he went out
+and pitched his tent beside hers, set it in order, lugged up the
+remainder of his equipment, buried the jars of spring water, and,
+entering his tent, changed to flannel shirt, sun-helmet, and khaki.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX
+
+
+A little later he called to her: she emerged from her tent, and together
+they sat down on the edge of the Causeway, with the two maps spread over
+their knees.
+
+That both maps very accurately represented the topography of the
+immediate vicinity there could be no doubt; the only discrepancy seemed
+to lie in the situation of the Maltese cross. On White's map the cross
+fell well within his half of Lot 210; in Jean Sandys' map it was
+situated between her half of 210 and 220.
+
+Plot it out as they might, using Mr. Munsell's diagram, the result was
+always the same; and after a while they gave up the useless attempt to
+reconcile the differences in the two maps.
+
+From where they were sitting together on the Causeway's edge, they were
+facing due west. At their feet rippled the clear, deep waters of the
+swamp, lapping against the base of the Causeway like transparent little
+waves in a northern lake. A slight current disclosed the channel where
+it flowed out of the north western edges of the swamp, which was set
+with tall cypress trees, their flaring bases like silvery pyramids deep
+set in the shining ooze.
+
+East of them the Coakachee flowed through thickets of saw-grass and
+green brier, between a forest of oak, pine, and cedar, bordered on the
+western side by palm and palmetto--all exactly as drawn in the map of
+Pedro Valdez.
+
+The afternoon was cloudless and warm; an exquisite scent of blossoms
+came from the forest when a light breeze rippled the water. Somewhere in
+those green and tangled depths jasmine hung its fairy gold from arching
+branches, and wild oranges were in bloom. At intervals, when the breeze
+set from the east, the heavenly fragrance of magnolia grew more
+pronounced.
+
+After a little searching he discovered the huge tree, far towering above
+oak and pine and palm, set with lustrous clusters, ivory and palest
+gold, exhaling incense.
+
+"Wonderful," she said under her breath, when he pointed it out to her.
+"This enchanted land is one endless miracle to me."
+
+"You have never before been in the South?"
+
+"I have been nowhere."
+
+"Oh. I thought perhaps when you were a child----"
+
+"We were too poor. My mother taught piano."
+
+"I see," he said gravely.
+
+"I had no childhood," she said. "After the public school, it was the
+book section in department stores.... They let me go last week. That is
+how I came to be in the Heikem galleries."
+
+He clasped his hands around one knee and looked out across the
+semi-tropical landscape.
+
+Orange-coloured butterflies with wings like lighted lanterns fluttered
+along the edges of the flowering shrubs; a lovely purplish-black one
+with four large, white polka dots on his wings flitted persistently
+about them.
+
+Over the sun-baked Causeway blue-tailed lizards raced and chased each
+other, frisking up tree trunks, flashing across branches: a snowy heron
+rose like some winged thing from Heaven, and floated away into the
+silvery light. And like living jewels the gorgeous wood-ducks glided in
+and out where the water sparkled among the cypress trees.
+
+"Think," he said, "of those men in armour toiling through these swamps
+under a vertical sun! Think of them, starved, haggard, fever racked,
+staggering toward their El Dorado!--their steel mail scorching their
+bodies, the briers and poison-grass festering their flesh; moccasin,
+rattler, and copperhead menacing them with death at every step; the
+poisoned arrows of the Indians whizzing from every glade!"
+
+"Blood and gold," she nodded, "and the deathless bravery of avarice!
+That was Spain. And it inflamed the sunset of Spanish glory."
+
+He mused for a while: "To think of De Soto being here--_here_ on this
+very spot!--here on this ancient Causeway, amid these forests!--towering
+in his armour! His plated mail must have made a burning hell for his
+body!"
+
+She looked down at the cool, blue water at her feet. He, too, gazed at
+it, curiously. For a few feet the depths were visible, then a
+translucent gloom, glimmering with emerald lights, obscured further
+penetration of his vision. Deep down in that water was what they
+sought--if it truly existed at all.
+
+After a few moments' silence he rose, drew the hunting-knife at his
+belt, severed a tall, swamp-maple sapling, trimmed it, and, returning to
+the water's edge, deliberately sounded the channel. He could not touch
+bottom there, or even at the base of the Causeway.
+
+"Miss Sandys," he said, "there is plenty of room for such a structure as
+the Maltese cross is supposed to mark."
+
+"I wonder," she murmured.
+
+"Oh, there's room enough," he repeated, with an uneasy laugh. "Suppose
+we begin operations!"
+
+"When?"
+
+"Now!"
+
+She looked up at him, flushed and smiling:
+
+"It is going to take weeks and weeks, isn't it?"
+
+"I thought so before I came down here. But--I don't see why we shouldn't
+blow a hole through this Causeway in a few minutes."
+
+"What!"
+
+She rose to her feet, slightly excited, not understanding.
+
+"I could set off enough dynamite right here," he said, stamping his heel
+into the white dust, "--enough dynamite to open up that channel into the
+Coakachee. Why don't I do it?"
+
+Pink with excitement she said breathlessly: "Did you bring _dynamite_?"
+
+"Didn't _you_?"
+
+"I--I never even thought of it. F-fire crackers frighten me. I thought
+it would be all I could do to fire off my shot-gun." And she bit her lip
+with vexation.
+
+"Why," he said, "it would take a gang of men a week to cut through this
+Causeway, besides building a coffer-dam." He looked at her curiously.
+"How did _you_ expect to begin operations all alone?"
+
+"I--I expected to dig."
+
+He looked at her delicate little hands:
+
+"You meant to dig your way through with pick and shovel?"
+
+"Yes--if it took a year."
+
+"And how did you expect to construct your coffer-dam?"
+
+"I didn't know about a coffer-dam," she admitted, blushing. After a
+moment she lifted her pretty, distressed eyes to his: "I--I had no
+knowledge--only courage," she said.... "And I needed money."
+
+A responsive flush of sympathy and pity passed over him; she was so
+plucky, so adorably helpless. Even now he knew she was unconscious of
+the peril into which her confidence and folly had led her--a peril
+averted only by the mere accident of his own arrival.
+
+He said lightly: "Shall we try to solve this thing now? Shall we take a
+chance, set our charges, and blow a hole in this Causeway big enough to
+drain that water off in an hour?"
+
+"Could you do _that_?" she exclaimed, delighted.
+
+"I think so."
+
+"Then tell me what to do to help you."
+
+He turned toward her, hesitated, controlling the impulsive reply.
+
+"To help me," he said, smilingly, "please keep away from the dynamite."
+
+"Oh, I will," she nodded seriously. "What else am I to do?"
+
+"Would you mind preparing dinner?"
+
+She looked up at him a little shyly: "No.... And I am very glad that I
+am not to dine alone."
+
+"So am I," he said. "And I am very glad that it is with _you_ I am to
+dine."
+
+"You never even looked at me in the galleries," she said.
+
+"Then--how could I know you were reading Valdez if I never looked at
+you?"
+
+"Oh, you may have looked at the _book_ I was reading."
+
+"I did," he said, "--and at the hands that held it."
+
+"Never dreaming that they meant to wield a pick-axe," she laughed, "and
+encompass your discomfiture. But after all they did neither the one nor
+the other; did they?"
+
+He looked at the smooth little hands cupped in the shallow pockets of
+her white flannel Norfolk. They fascinated him.
+
+"To think," he said, half to himself, "--to think of those hands
+wielding a pick-axe!"
+
+She smiled, head slightly on one side, and bent, contemplating her right
+hand.
+
+"You know," she said, "I certainly would have done it."
+
+"You would have been crippled in an hour."
+
+Her head went up, but she was still smiling as she said: "I'd have gone
+through with it--somehow."
+
+"Yes," he said slowly. "I believe you would."
+
+"Not," she added, blushing, "that I mean to vaunt myself or my
+courage----"
+
+"No: I understand. You are not that kind.... It's rather extraordinary
+how well I--I _think_ I know you already."
+
+"Perhaps you _do_ know me--already."
+
+"I really believe I do."
+
+"It's very likely. I am just what I seem to be. There is no mystery
+about me. I am what I appear to be."
+
+"You are also very direct."
+
+"Yes. It's my nature to be direct. I am not a bit politic or diplomatic
+or circuitous."
+
+"So I noticed," he said smilingly, "when you discussed finance with me.
+You were not a bit politic."
+
+She smiled, too, a little embarrassed: "How could I be anything but
+frank in return for your very unworldly generosity?" she said. "Because
+what you offered _was_ unworldly. Anyway, I should have been direct with
+you; I knew what I wanted; I knew what you wanted. All I had to do was
+to make up my mind. And I did so."
+
+"Did you make up your mind about me, also?"
+
+"Yes, about you, also."
+
+They both smiled.
+
+She was so straight and slender and pretty in her white flannels and
+white outing hat--her attitude so confident, so charmingly determined,
+that she seemed to him even younger than she really was--a delightful,
+illogical, fresh and fearless school-girl, translated by some flash of
+magic from her school hither, and set down unruffled and unstartled upon
+her light, white-shod feet.
+
+Even now it amazed him to realise that she really understood nothing of
+the lonely perils lately confronting her in this desolate place.
+
+For if there were nothing actually to fear from the wild beasts of the
+region, _that which the beasts themselves feared_ might have confronted
+her at any moment. He shuddered as he thought of it.
+
+And what would she have done if suddenly clutched by fever? What would
+she have done if a white-mouthed moccasin had struck her ankle--or if it
+had been the diamond-set Death himself?
+
+"You don't mind my speaking plainly, do you?" he said bluntly.
+
+"Why, no, of course not." She looked at him inquiringly.
+
+"Don't stray far away from me, will you?"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Don't wander away by yourself, out of sight, while we are engaged in
+this business."
+
+She looked serious and perplexed for a moment, then turned a delicate
+pink and began to laugh in a pretty, embarrassed way.
+
+"Are you afraid I'll get into mischief? Do you know it is very kind of
+you to feel that way?... And rather unexpected--in a man who--sat for
+three days across the aisle from me--and never even looked in my
+direction. Tell me, what am I to be afraid of in this place?"
+
+"There are snakes about," he said with emphasis.
+
+"Oh, yes; I've seen some swimming."
+
+"There are four poisonous species among them," he continued. "That's one
+of the reasons for your keeping near me."
+
+She nodded, a trifle awed.
+
+"So you will, won't you?"
+
+"Yes," she said, taking his words so literally that, when they turned to
+walk toward the tents, she came up close beside him, naively as a child,
+and laid one hand on his sleeve as they started back across the
+Causeway.
+
+"Suppose either one of us is bitten?" she asked after a silence.
+
+"I have lancets, tourniquets, and anti-venom in my tent."
+
+Her smooth hand tightened a little on his arm. She had not realised that
+the danger was more than a vague possibility.
+
+"You have spring water, of course," he said.
+
+"No.... I boiled a little from the swamp before I drank it."
+
+He turned to her sternly and drew her arm through his with an
+unconscious movement of protection.
+
+"Are you sure that water was properly boiled--_thoroughly_ boiled?" he
+demanded.
+
+"It bubbled."
+
+"Listen to me! Hereafter when you are thirsty you will use my spring
+water. Is that understood?"
+
+"Yes.... And thank you."
+
+"You don't want to get break-bone fever, do you?"
+
+"No-o!" she said hastily. "I will do everything you wish."
+
+"I'll hang your hammock for you," he said. "Always look in your shoes
+for scorpions and spiders before you put them on. Never step over a
+fallen log before you first look on the other side. Rattlers lie there.
+Never go near a swamp without looking for moccasins.
+
+"Don't let the direct sunlight fall on your bare head; don't eat fruit
+for a week; don't ever go to sleep unless you have a blanket on. You
+won't do any of these things, will you?" he inquired anxiously, almost
+tenderly.
+
+"I promise. And I never dreamed that there was anything to apprehend
+except alligators!" she said, tightening her arm around his own.
+
+"Alligators won't bother you--unless you run across a big one in the
+woods. Then keep clear of him."
+
+"I will!" she said earnestly.
+
+"And don't sit about on old logs or lean against trees."
+
+"Why? Lizards?"
+
+"Oh, they're not harmful. But wood-ticks might give you a miserable week
+or two."
+
+"Oh, dear, oh, dear," she murmured, "I am so glad you came here!" And
+quite innocently she pressed his arm. She did it because she was
+grateful. She had a very direct way with her.
+
+
+
+
+XXX
+
+
+When they came to their tents he went into hers, slung her hammock
+properly, shook a scorpion out of her slippers, and set his heel on it;
+drove a non-poisonous but noisy puff-adder from under her foot-rug, the
+creature hissing like a boiling kettle and distending its grey and black
+neck.
+
+Terrified but outwardly calm, she stood beside him, now clutching his
+arm very closely; and at last her tent was in order, the last spider and
+lizard hustled out, the oil cook-stove burning, the tinned goods ready,
+the aluminum batterie-de-cuisine ranged at her elbow.
+
+"I wonder," he said, hesitating, "whether I dare leave you long enough
+to go and dig some holes with a crow-bar."
+
+"Why, of course!" she said. "You can't have me tagging at your heels
+every minute, you know."
+
+He laughed: "It's _I_ who do the tagging."
+
+"It isn't disagreeable," she said shyly.
+
+"I don't mean to dog every step you take," he continued, "but now, when
+you are out of my sight, I--I can't help feeling a trifle anxious."
+
+"But you mustn't feel responsible for me. I came down here on my own
+initiative. I certainly deserve whatever happens to me. Don't I?"
+
+"What comfort would that be to me if anything unpleasant did happen to
+you?"
+
+"Why," she asked frankly, "should you feel as responsible for my welfare
+as that? After all, I am only a stranger, you know."
+
+He said: "Do you really feel like a stranger? Do you really feel that I
+am one?"
+
+She considered the proposition for a few moments.
+
+"No," she said, "I don't. And perhaps it is natural for us to take a
+friendly interest in each other."
+
+"It comes perfectly natural to me to take a v-very v-vivid interest in
+you," he said. "What with snakes and scorpions and wood-ticks and
+unboiled water and the actinic rays of the sun, I can't very well help
+worrying about you. After all," he added lucidly, "you're a girl, you
+know."
+
+She admitted the accusation with a smile so sweet that there could be no
+doubt of her sex.
+
+"However," she said, "you should entertain no apprehensions concerning
+me. I have none concerning you. I think you know your business."
+
+"Of course," he said, going into his tent and returning loaded with
+crow-bar, pick-axe, dynamite, battery, and wires.
+
+She laid aside the aluminum cooking-utensils with which she had been
+fussing and rose from her knees as he passed her with a pleasant nod of
+_au revoir_.
+
+"You'll be careful with that dynamite, won't you?" she said anxiously.
+"You know it goes off at all sorts of unexpected moments."
+
+"I think I understand how to handle it," he reassured her.
+
+"Are you quite certain?"
+
+"Oh, yes. But perhaps you'd better not come any nearer----"
+
+"Mr. White!"
+
+"What!"
+
+"It _is_ dangerous! I don't like to have you go away alone with that
+dynamite. You make me very anxious."
+
+"You needn't be. If--in the very remote event of anything going
+wrong--now don't forget what I say!--but in case of an accident to me,
+you'll be all right if you start back to Verbena at once--instantly--and
+take the right-hand road----"
+
+"Mr. _White_!"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+"I was _not_ thinking of myself! I was concerned about _you_!"
+
+"Me?--_personally_?"
+
+"Of course! You say you have me on your mind. Do you think I am devoid
+of human feeling?"
+
+"Were you--really--thinking about _me_?" he repeated slowly. "That was
+very nice of you.... I didn't quite understand.... I'll be careful with
+the dynamite."
+
+"Perhaps I'd better go with you," she suggested irresolutely.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"I could hold a green umbrella over you while you are digging holes. You
+yourself say that the sun is dangerous."
+
+"My sun-helmet makes it all right," he said, deeply touched.
+
+"You won't take it off, will you?"
+
+"No."
+
+"And you'll look all around you for snakes before you take the next
+step, won't you?" she insisted.
+
+He promised, thrilled by her frank solicitude.
+
+A little way up the path he paused, looked around, and saw her standing
+there looking after him.
+
+"You're sure you'll be all right?" he called back to her.
+
+"Yes. Are you sure _you_ will be?"
+
+"Oh, yes!"
+
+They made two quick gestures of adieu, and he resumed the path.
+Presently he turned again. She was still standing there looking after
+him. They made two gestures of farewell and he resumed the path. After a
+while he looked back. She--but what's the use!
+
+When he came to the spot marked for destruction, he laid down his
+paraphernalia, seized the crow-bar, and began to dig, scarcely conscious
+of what he was about because he had become so deeply absorbed in other
+things--in _an_-other thing--a human one with red hair and otherwise
+divinely endowed.
+
+The swift onset of this heavenly emotion was making him giddy--or
+perhaps it was unaccustomed manual labor under a semi-tropical sun.
+
+Anyway he went about his work blindly but vigorously, seeing nothing of
+the surrounding landscape or of the immediate ground into which he
+rammed his crow-bar, so constantly did the charming vision of her
+piquant features shut out all else.
+
+And all the time he was worrying, too. He thought of snakes biting her
+distractingly pretty ankles; he thought of wood-ticks and of her snowy
+neck; of scorpions and of the delicate little hands.
+
+How on earth was he ever going to endure the strain if already, in these
+few hours, his anxiety about her welfare was assuming such deep and
+portentous proportions! How was he going to stand the worry until she
+was safe in the snakeless, tickless North again!
+
+She couldn't remain here! She must go North. His mind seemed already
+tottering under its new and constantly increasing load of
+responsibility; and he dug away fiercely with his bar, making twice as
+many holes as he had meant to.
+
+For he had suddenly determined to be done with the job and get her into
+some safe place, and he meant to set off a charge of dynamite that
+would do the business without fail.
+
+Charging and tamping the holes, he used caution, even in spite of his
+increasing impatience to return and see how she was; arguing very justly
+with himself that if he blew himself up he couldn't very well learn how
+she was.
+
+So he attached the wires very carefully, made his connections, picked up
+the big reel and the remainder of his tools, and walked toward the
+distant tents, unreeling his wire as he moved along.
+
+She was making soup, but she heard the jangle of his equipment, sprang
+to her feet, and ran out to meet him.
+
+He let fall everything and held out both hands. In them she laid her
+own.
+
+"I'm so glad to see you!" he said warmly. "I'm so thankful that you're
+all right!"
+
+"I'm so glad you came back," she said frankly. "I have been most uneasy
+about you."
+
+"I've been very anxious, too," he said. Then, drawing an unfeigned sigh
+of relief: "It does seem good to get back again!" He had been away
+nearly half an hour.
+
+She examined the wire and the battery gingerly, asking him innumerable
+questions about it.
+
+"Do you suppose," she ended, "that it will be safe for you to set off
+the charge from this camp?"
+
+"Oh, perfectly," he nodded.
+
+"Of course," she said, half to herself, "we'll both be blown up if it
+isn't safe. And that is _something_!"
+
+And she came up very close when he said he was ready to fire, and laid
+her hand on his arm. The hand was steady enough. But when he glanced at
+her he saw how white she had become.
+
+"Why, Jean!" he said gently. "Are you frightened?"
+
+"No.... I won't mind it if I may stand rather near you." And she closed
+her eyes and placed both hands over her ears.
+
+"Do you think I'd fire this charge," he demanded warmly, "if there was
+the slightest possible danger to _you_? Take down your hands and
+listen."
+
+Her closed eyelids quivered: "We'll both--there won't be anything left
+of either of us if anything does happen," she said tremulously. "I am
+not afraid.... Only tell me when to close my ears."
+
+"Do you really think there is danger?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+He looked at her standing there, pale, plucky, eyes tightly shut, her
+pretty fingers resting lightly on her ears.
+
+He said: "Would you think me crazy if I tell you something?"
+
+"W-What?"
+
+"Would you think me insane, Jean?"
+
+"I don't think I would."
+
+"You wouldn't consider me utterly mad?"
+
+"N-no."
+
+"No--_what_?"
+
+"No, I wouldn't consider you mad----"
+
+"No--_what_?" he persisted.
+
+And after a moment her pallor was tinted with a delicate rose.
+
+"No--_what_?" he insisted again.
+
+"No--Jim," she answered under breath.
+
+"Then--close your ears, Jean, dear."
+
+She closed them; his arm encircled her waist. She bore it nobly.
+
+"You may fire when you are ready--James!" she said faintly.
+
+A thunder-clap answered her; the Causeway seemed to spring up under
+their feet; the world reeled.
+
+Presently she heard his voice sounding calmly: "Are you all right,
+Jean?"
+
+"Yes.... I was thinking of you--as long as I could think at all. I was
+ready to go--anywhere--with you."
+
+"I have been ready for that," he said unsteadily, "from the moment I
+heard your voice. But it is--is wonderful of _you_!"
+
+She opened her blue eyes, dreamily looking up into his. Then the colour
+surged into her face.
+
+"If--if you had spoken to me across the aisle," she said, "it would have
+begun even sooner, I think.... Because I can't imagine myself
+not--caring for you."
+
+He took her into his arms:
+
+"Don't worry," he said, "I'll make a place for you in the world, even if
+that Maltese cross means nothing."
+
+She looked into his eyes fearlessly: "I know you will," she said.
+
+Then he kissed her and she put both arms around his neck and offered her
+fresh, young lips again.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI
+
+
+Toward sunset he came to, partially, passed his hand across his
+enchanted eyes, and rose from the hammock beside her.
+
+"Dearest," he said, "that swamp ought to be partly drained by this time.
+Suppose we walk over before dinner and take a look?"
+
+Still confused by the sweetness of her dream, she sat up, and he drew
+her to her feet, where she stood twisting up her beautiful hair, half
+smiling, shy, adorable.
+
+Then together they walked slowly out along the Causeway, so absorbed in
+each other that already they had forgotten the explosion, and even the
+Maltese cross itself.
+
+It was only when they were halted by the great gap in the Causeway that
+Jean Sandys glanced to the left, over a vast bed of shining mud, where
+before blue wavelets had lapped the base of the Causeway.
+
+Then her vaguely smiling eyes flew wide open; she caught her lover's arm
+in an excited clasp.
+
+"O Jim!" she exclaimed. "Look! Look! It is true! It is true! _Look_ at
+the bed of the lake!"
+
+They stood trembling and staring at the low, squat, windowless coquina
+house, reeking with the silt of centuries, crawling with stranded water
+creatures.
+
+The stones that had blocked the door had fallen before the shock of the
+dynamite.
+
+"Good God!" he whispered. "_Do you see what is inside?_"
+
+But Jean Sandys, calmly looking untold wealth in its glittering face,
+sighed, smiled, and turned her blue gaze on her lover, finding in his
+eyes the only miracle that now had power to hold her undivided
+attention.
+
+For it is that way with some girls.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the novelist, unable to endure a dose of his own technique, could no
+longer control his impatience:
+
+"What in God's name was there in that stone house!" he burst out.
+
+"Oh, Lord!" muttered Stafford, "it is two hours after midnight."
+
+He rose, bent over the girl's hand, and kissed the emerald on the third
+finger.
+
+Figure after figure, tall, shadowy, leisurely followed his example,
+while her little hand lay listlessly on the silken cushions and her
+dreaming eyes seemed to see nobody.
+
+Duane and I remained for a while seated, then in silence,--which Athalie
+finally broke for us:
+
+"Patience," she said, "is the art of hoping.... Good-night."
+
+I rose; she looked up at me, lifted her slim arm and placed the palm of
+her hand against my lips.
+
+And so I took my leave; thinking.
+
+
+ +-------------------------------------------------+
+ | Novels by Robert W. Chambers |
+ | |
+ | Quick Action The Business of Life |
+ | Blue-Bird Weather The Gay Rebellion |
+ | Japonette The Streets of Ascalon |
+ | The Adventures of a The Common Law |
+ | Modest Man Ailsa Paige |
+ | The Danger Mark The Green Mouse |
+ | Special Messenger Iole |
+ | The Firing Line The Reckoning |
+ | The Younger Set The Maid-at-Arms |
+ | The Fighting Chance Cardigan |
+ | Some Ladies in Haste The Haunts of Men |
+ | The Tree of Heaven The Mystery of Choice |
+ | The Tracer of Lost The Cambric Mask |
+ | Persons The Maker of Moons |
+ | A Young Man in a The King in Yellow |
+ | Hurry In Search of the Unknown |
+ | Lorraine |
+ | Maids of Paradise The Conspirators |
+ | Ashes of Empire A King and a Few |
+ | The Red Republic Dukes |
+ | Outsiders In the Quarter |
+ +-------------------------------------------------+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Quick Action, by Robert W. Chambers
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK QUICK ACTION ***
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