COPYRIGHT. 1009. BY THE BOBB5-MERR1LL CHAPTER I. WHI5 MAIDE.NS JELL JROM THE SKY. IOlt twenty shimmering miles the gulf beach lay in the sun, a white straight edge against blue. Mistily through the surf haze glimmered the tower of Sand is land light save when obscured by the smoke plume of a fruiter standing in past Fort Morgan for Mobile. It was early forenoon. The yellow globe of tke mooring balloon at the fort ahoue in the sua like a dome of some auda cious new architecture flung high Into the pulsating air. Two men far down the coast toward Tensacola caught the faroff apleudor and noted In the very act of casting off from it a long, cigar shaped aeronat an immeuse, elongat ed bubble of quicksilver. It floated seaward, rounded to, stood a moment end on, llbratlng like a balancing top. "She's boun' fo' N'Yawllns. Ah reck on, sun." The speaker was a typical gulf fish erman, long bearded, soft of speech, courteous as a diplomat, barefooted, weathered In garments and skin. Over his cheeks and nose were scattered broad brown blotches which had it not been for their size might have been called freckles. He rolled a ciga rette, lighted It, turned his eyes on his more youthful companion, repeat ing, "She's sho boun' fo' N'Yawllns." In the mleu of the younger man there was something of kinship to the elder, as there might be in a New England chemist or engineer something that is like bis forty-second cousin fishing on the Newfoundland banks. The soft ness of speech was Diodjfled to a sub tle firmness and a subdued decision. The slight, tall frame whs arrowy and erect, as if the youth had imbibed from some winler air a luteut self esteem expressed in the hint of in cisiveness In speech. The boy also had the areas of mottled freckling, overlay ing a pink glow. He wore a blue flan nel shirt with a bright silk cravat. His shoes were scoured gray by the beach sand, and his well shaped bat was powdered with it. His trousers were of cadet gray and were striped down the side; seemingly they were a part of some obsolete uniform. He sat on a great square timber half buried in the sand and had been studying a blue green Portuguese man-of-war cast ashore and rolled up before the breeze, dragging Its yard long tentacles. On the beam lay a steel square, a brace and bit, a roll of blueprints, some steel drills and a book of logarithms., The speech of the old fisbertnau made him look up. He picked up a pair of binoculars from a cast-up crate and studied the distant airship. "Mo' likely bound for Pensacola, cap tain," he said. "She's coming this way a Condor with bow rudder." The aeronat. drawing uearer, swell id like a great silver moon, The men admired her as they walked lushore through soft, trodden sand dowu to a lower level of yellowed palmettoes and scaled a steep dune slope thlcket ed with curious scrub oaks. Here was hidden a cabin of rough boards with a wide veranda or gallery, on the col umns of which were to be seen bleached barnacles, telling of the storm tossed voyage which had brought them hither. Abutting on the cabin by one end was a spacious shed without visible door or window. So thoroughly was the edifice concealed by the oak scrub and the low growing stunted 'spruce that one might have passed a dozen times within a stono's throw of it without seeing It. and even from the airships its drab roof powder ed with blown sand was well nigh In visible. Under the gnllery was per fect safety from observation from aloft. Ai seen through the glass, the ilr- hip was swelled to impressive bulk now. Her rudder stood aslant, a stripe of brown against the silver foil of her bilge. On the seaward side ran the darker line of a toy aeroplane a matter of appearance more than use and slung beneath by a gossamer na celle, steady as the deck of a liner, bung her roomy car, the engine room astern, the three great screws half in visible, like the vibrant wings of bees. She veered to the north and stood in land as if to cross the Little lagoon, that beautiful salt luke which for ten miles lies wlthlu souud of the gulf surf, but separated from it by a little wilderness of dunes, then by a majes tic swooping movemout she threw her whole vast sweep of broodslde open to their gaze. The captain's dimmer eye now made out the woman and the two men on her deck, while Theodore Car son's, keen for such u sight and armed with the glass, observed that the wo man wore a broad hat of vivid red. a scarf of the same color and a woman would have told him a pique gown. "They bette' moor." said the fisher man. "Tbey's a norther comln' out. What they doln' now. Mlste' TheodoT "Why," snld Carson, studying the aeronat with the glass and clipping off his sentences as the astounding evolution of the Incident far up there In the blue rendered every utterance obsolete before it was finished, "why, they have thrown off a package of It's mechanism of some sort In op eration, and They're making a tow of it They're reversing and rounding to. See them drift off: They're ex- COMPANY LIWW Mil - I cltedand all aback about something. Heavens: See that thing shoot up! It's some sort of helicopter. I believe and the girl's alone In It. captain! Alone. I say! Why did they She's lost control she's lost: It's shooting over this way and coming down! It will-It will- My God: My God:" The thing purted from the great aerouut was n little speck topped with a broader, mushroom shaped shimmer which Carbon knew for the revolving blades of a helicopter, tbnt Insidious toy that promised so much for the con quest of the air. Then, as though re leased from the pull of gravity. It shot skyward, leaving the silver airship far below, as a fly might speed from a floating bubble. The two spectators drew their breaths sharply In. their hearts frozen In fascinated apprehen sion. They saw It rise skyward like a boy's dart until they shuddered at the abyss that yawned between It and the eorth: saw it struck by the far advanc ed loftier vanguard of the north wind predicted by the fisher captain: saw It burled southward before the blast like a feather. The Condor had a name. She was the Roc, owned by Mr. Flnley Sbayne, and her home port was Shayne's Hold, in the Catskllls. Those who are fa miliar wtth the scope, power and spec tacular success of Mr. Shayne's opera tions in aerostatic power stocks in the latter part of the first quarter of the present century will surmise that the Roc was the finest product of the art of avlatlonnt construction np to that time. This fateful morning she had moor ed in the aerial harbor at Mobile, in her berth hard by the lift near the Bienville statue. Mrs. Shayne, a na tive Moblllan. pleaded Indisposition, but went out to see some old houses dear to her youth. Mr. Shayne and their guest. Mr. Max SUberberg. had insisted upon the presence of Virginia Suarez. Mrs. Shayne's niece, on a trip down the bay in the Roc to witness the demonstration of a new flying ma chine, and she had yielded. The in ventor. Wlzner. a suspicious, foxy, middle aged man. proved objectionable to Miss Suarez because bis thumbs turned back so far that the sight of them made her feel creepy, and as he gesticulated freely while denouncing all devices for aerial navigation except his his thumbs were much In evidence Virginia wished Wlzner at her side, crooked thumbs and all. for no thumbs or voice could be : offensive as the unrelieved presence of Mr. Slllyrberg. the head of the Federated Metals con cern, controlling the copper, gold ami silver output of a continent. She felt herself thrown at bis heart by her aunt. "So you think. Aunt Mnrle." she hud ald, "that Mr. SUberberg is oue of the great ones of the earth?" "Most certainly." rejoined Mrs. Shayne. "He Is retaining and increas ing the enormous wealth and power he inherited. To do what he Is do ing takes a great man. Your uncle will tell you so." SUberberg made the buy of court ship in the sun of opportunity. Vir ginia pondered on ber aunt's standard of greatness. . "Where's Uncle Flnley?" she asked "We are getting a long way south." "Giving the helicopter a private ex amination." replied SUberberg. "It la a happiness to me that he Is. Hut the Inventor would go wild If he knew the sort of expert his precious machine is alone with." "Wild:" repented Virginia. "Listen even now." Above the purr of the screws came. the angry a(ce of the. inventor in the engine room abusing the Roc's second engineer for some remark derogatory to helicopters. Already he was quite wild enough, Virginia thought "Why don't we try bis machine?" she asked. "Must we go out over the gulf? Isn't the bay big enough?" "Mr. Shayne wants to pick up a spe cialist at the fort" replied SUberberg. "the man who wrote up the Chinese war aerostats, ne's here on some ueronautlcal business for the army." The Hoc circled to the west to avoid the Inhibited passage over the bat teries and stood east along the bench. Wlzner abandoned his quarrel and came forward to make the test. He set the helicopter ou the deck, where it stood unsteadily on Its slender bam boo legs. Its puiuter hanging over the rail. Its top crowned by the screw wings, slanted a little outboard for the launching. "How will you get her off, Wlzner?" asked Mr. Shayne. "Easy enough." answered Wlzner tartly. "Maybe we'd better make a descent for you," suggested SUberberg. "It may be one of these terrestrial hell copters." "I'll ask when I want you to go down." replied Wlzner, glaring. "You will see whether It's a ground machine or not May I take dowu a section of that rail?" "Certainly," answered Mr. 8hayne. "But don't let the helicopter topple off. It might fall on a fisherman. What are you doing, Virginia?" The girl had stepped forward as If to take a seat In the little cane car of the helicopter. "Let r.ie sii In It." said she. "I want to imagine how you teel when you get out Into space." "I wish ,vn would." said Wlzner. "It will hold her still. It's perfectly safe." Virginia, lauvhlnt: ut playing pu(er weight, eutored the car. "Which Is the clutch lever?" she asked. "This." s:ild the Inventor, pointing. "I'm going to the engine room. When I come back I'll show you bow it works." Mr. Shayne went aft with Wlzner in animated conversation, leaving Vir ginia In the throbbing car. The rail bad been removed, and a little push would have been quite sufficient to shove the girl and the machine over board Into the empty air. The thrill of the vibration, the sense of risk or the Inteuse gaze of SUberberg made her face flush. He had never seen her so charming. She laid tier hand ou the clutch lever. "I could move this lever a little," said she. "and By away. I feel as If I should fly:" "I shall not let yon," said- be. "I shall hold you!" - "Mr. SUberberg!" . . The rebuke was evoked by his put ting his arm about ber. One white, Jeweled hand was slipped behind her, the other laid on her arm, the oily perfumed curls stooping until the red lips approached hers. Perfectly aware of what she was doing, but quite reck less of consequences, Virginia pushed the lever, threw in the clutch and the wings started. The pull of the vivified mechanism drawing him Out to death made Sllberberg'a very fingers tingle with terror, and he let go girl and car and leaped backward. Under the lift of the wings the car dragged to the edge, slipped off with a grating sound l J THKIIK FELL OCT OF THB CAK A MASS OF KKD HAT AMD OUIUHON SCARF. and swung there In midair, the puiuter dangling almost within reach 300 fath oms In the air, supported only by the spinning helices driven by an engine that oue man only knew bow to man age, and he as far removed from it potentially as If he bad been In Mars! The girl's hand trembled so that she could not bold to anything, no matter how she tried. At last It was over in a moment more by accident thun de sign, she moved something. With ap palling velocity the thing shot upward: the aeronnf fell away toward the earth; the fisherman's bouse fur beneath whs w blsked down to the littleness of a toy. The air struck her face, blow ing downward more and more chill. Overhead the screws hummed Impla cably, the only souud she heard. She studied the machinery, trying to apply her pbked up knowledge of en gines. Here was the thing with which to stop It. she felt sure of tint, but to stop It suddenly was mete sulfide, a wift fall to death. She was growing calmer now. It would surely slow down of itself, she reasoned, and If it did not-well, she had escaped from SUberberg anyhow. And then the north wind struck. The puff smote ber cheek. The hell copter yielded to It and swept south ward like a feather before a fan. She was blowing out to sea. She reached out to stop the engine, but the vision passed through her mind of falling fulling like the stick or a rocket, be ing dashed to pieces on the earth. Then a voice seemed to speak in her ear from the chill solitude, senseless words, as of one stammering, like the phantasms of voices ueurd In the de lirium of fever, finally growing dis tinct and repeating over and over a command. "Retard the spark!" it said. "Retard the spark!" The Roc was fur below and to the north now. The gulf breakers f on mod nenrer and nearer and still rang in her ears the ghostly command. "Retard the spark!" She tried to remember about engines, but this one was so different! Aimlessly she put her hand out. touch ed a little sliding thing aliS paused. She moved the sliding thing and thought the buzz of the helices less strenuous. The roar of the breakers swelled In her ears like the crescendo of some tremendous, uprushlng music, and she realized that she was falling in a great parabola that might carry her Into the sea or might dash her upon the driftwood and wreckage of the beach. Suddenly the machine careened, and he thought she bad struck, to be dush ed broken on the ground, lost She had not seen Theodore Carson on that highest dune, but he had grasped the painter as It dragged over hi in. and it was he who had thrown the flying ma chine from its level swoop, even as It Jerked him down the dune, with Cap tain Harrod clinging to bis legs, drag ging them almost to the water's edge. The car swung horribly, and finally, spilled from It by Its careening, there fell out of It a mass of red hat. crim son scurf, pique and silken fallals. The helicopter tore loose and fled out to sea before the gale. CHAPTER II. A HOSPITABLE BANDIT. THEODORE CARSON stared for a moment In amazement at the prostrate girl, then took her tenderly In bis arms, carrying ber toward the bidden cabin. At the teepeBt spot Captain Harrod overtook him. But' the young man paid no heed to offers of aid, wading steudlly on to the door, which the captain un locked and opened, standing aside for Carson and his Interesting burden. Theodore took her Into the large sin gle room and laid ber softly on a clean looking bed. "She Is dead!" said Theodore In a hushed voice. "Is her heart beatln'?" the captain inquired. "1 don't know!" cried Carson. Carson laid bis ear lightly to the white blouse. Some fluttering be seemed to feel, but he could not be certain. Harrod brought water In a watering pot. which he seemed to have planned to use us upon a Illy or rose. "lo It beat?" be asked. "I can't tell." said Carson, "nor whether It's my pulse or hers that beats. Oh, I wish what do they gen erally do. captain?" "Tbey's some punt o they frock that always has to be unrove, ain't they?" Inquired the captuin anxiously, "Captain," sold Carson, the perspira tion standing on bis brow, "I'm going out on the gallery for air. You do what has to be done, captain or she may ule!" "Put some watab ou huh fuce, suli," said the cuptniu. In Judicious avoid ance of extreme measures. "Ah don't reckon this byah's a cuse fo' vl'lent o' onconse'vatlve remedies. I'll oncork that bu'tsho'u bottle!" Carson pressed a wet towel to the girl's face. The captain held a bottle labeled "ammonia" to ber nostrils. She gasied. drew a (inh ering sigh aud opened her eyes.' The older man was looking at her In a futherly way. and the young one was sponging her fore head, his face near hers. She sat op suddenly. ' ' "You have had a fall, madam," said Csrsou. "and are shaken up a little. But you an safe and among friends." "Oh. thank you," she said. In tone of the most correct formality. "It'a ever so kind of you, sir. I I I Oh, I thought 1 was lost! I thought I oh: oh: oh: Oh: o-o-o-h:" Suddenly, from the polite common places of speech, she broke Into hys terical screaming. Captain Harrod poured a stiff glass of red liquid from a bottle, diluted it and took It to the shuddering girl, who looked pathetical ly up into bis fnce for a moment, swal lowed it obediently and coughed as if strangled by it. "And now." said Mr. Carson, "we will leave you, if you will excuse ns. Please feel at ease. You are quite safe, and the cabin Is yours. We are In all ways at yo' service. The cap tain hcrt Is my friend, and we belong to a race that sees a sister In every helpless lady. I think you will desire to sleep, and I hope you may awake refreshed, after which we shall place ourselves mo' definitely under your command' She looked at him questioning!;. The softness of his voice, his little Inconsistent lapses Into dialect as be uttered the old fashioned cblvalrlc'sen tlments, won her trust. "Ah'd He down, ma'am." suggested the captain, "ontll that medicine gits a chance to wuk. Goodby, ma'am." Virginia lay back and closed her eyes, but the potion brought no drow siness. Her face grew hot. and she knew her eyes would shine If she opened them with a brilliancy quite fasclnutlng to the young man with the little black mustache. The fact that she thought of this startled ber. Was sho growing flighty with fever? Why this abnormal hilarity of spirits, in the exaltation of which all anxiety depart ed? She rose and walked out unsteadily upon the veranda and saw Mr. Carson and the captain sitting Idly Just be yond earshot of the cabin. They came to her respectfully. "I came out to thank you, sir," said Vlrglula flight Uy. "'for your' heroic be havior heroic, romantic, mediaeval behavior!" "I beg of you not to mention it. madam," urged Mr. Carson, with in finite solicitude. "But may I not in sist upon your allowing me to escort you buck to your room?" The girl assented, and Bhe was soon asleep. Theodore made broth of one quail, peeped In to see If his guest were awake, served the broth to the captain BHI BOSI AND WALKED OUT UNSTEADILY UPON THB VKHANDA. and mado more. The sun wore to the west, the lust quail wus cooked, the captain wus providently gorged with alternate courses of bird and broth, when Vlrglula. very stately and very reserved, opened the door and walked out upon the gallery. Carson shrank back Into the kitchen and shoved the cuptniu Into the breach. "How do you do, ma'am?" be in quired solicitously. "Ah sho' hope yo' bette' aftah yo' sleep." "Much better, thank you." she re plied. "We bnve some pahtrldge broth, ma'am." be weut on, "with rice, and a baked yum, and a planked green trout from the lake back byah, and some coffee. Sit down, ma'am, and Ah'll suhve It" The little table was spread on the gallery, its top made of the bead of a derelict cask, Its legs of barnacled sections of a boom. Virginia's bead ached in dreadful similitude to the traditional feeling of the morning after, but the coffee fragrance was pleasant. "You ure too good." said she, accept ing the chair. "I shall be glnd to eat a little. Where Is your your friend?" "He's soiu'eres about," replied the captain. "Ah really don't know, ma'am. Won't you pleuse take yo' coffee?" The coffee was black and strong. The broth was a temptation, and she Ipped with increasing appetite. But tered yam and planked trout brought the meal to a triumphant end. Yet where was she, and bow should abe depurt? Where was the Roc? Who were these men? The guns, the brass Instruments that looked as if they per tained to navigation, the big window less shed, all suggested things nautical, bold and nefarious. The kindness and courtesy of the rough looking fellows reassured her as to her personal safe ty. Yet If they were atnugglers or freebooters how could they safely re turn her to the civilization of coast guards and constables? It was dell clously romantic but how creepy; Bhe turned to Captain Harrod with an expression so agitated that be was somewhat startled. "I wish you would say to the lieu tenant" Bald she, "that 1 must see him at once If possible." The fisherman analyzed this speech for perhaps a minute In absolute si lence, then be said. "Yes. ma'am," aud instantly produced Carson, who, so far as Vlrglula could Judge, bad been within the captain's sight when she hnd been assured that his whereabouts were unknown, "You are," said the young man, avoiding any reference to her recovery, "doubtless wondering where your companions may be and thinking It strange that they have not returned?" "It la strange," said she. "Some thing must have happened to the en gines " "ro," said Theodore, "not that. Tbey all but blow out to sea. Tbey Imply had to tight their way off to ward Pensacola, where they must have mnde harbor. It was almost half a gale." "And so they went-and loft me?" "They really couldn't help It," urged the young man. "It shows the sort of man SUberberg Is," she cried hotly. "And now per haps you will be so good as to help me to some conveyance to Mobile?" "I have a boat on the lake," said Carson, "half a mile Inland. There Is a cJiajTnelto Palmetto. Bench,. The ooat and crew are at your service." "I should prefer to wa'.k, if you please." said she. "Unless you hsve a day r two to spend In the Journey I should not rec ommend the attempt." "1 know some people." said she, "at the Yupon Hedge inn at Palmetto Beach. Can you" "If we go at once." he replied, "yon may be there for dinner." ' "I am ready." said she. rising. "Let ns go, please. Immediately." Captain Harrod led the way easterly longshore to a spot where the shrub grew well down toward the beaten beach. They walked back between clumps of dark green rosemary, over a low place In the dunes, down to the dry, burd bottom of a former pooL Tbey emerged upon a little lrregu lur hillock and looked forth upon a strange tarn of inky water, Its black waves crested with foam, like white plumes on funeral crape. The shores of this sinister lake were densely wooded by sullen ranks of pines and cypresses. Virginia gasped at alght of the somber mere. It accmed such an eery spot In which to be cast away with these strange men who lived be hind .closed doors and walked the ands as to leave no footprints! "Haul out the launch, captain." Why was the trim, speedy looking launch so completely hidden in the tall cane? The puldooa puddling In the reeds made sounds like prowling ac complices. , , Miss Sunres awept haughtily to her place In the boat Carson, with his eye steadfastly fixed on bla engine, quickly shoved off. "Evenln to yet)." said the captain, till with one foot In the water, like a heron. "Good evening," responded the younf man. Virginia said nothing. Carson, steal ing a look at her, saw the flush dying out upon her face and a smile taking Its place a dimpling, spasmodic smile, accompanied by little quick dilation of the nostrils, as If Miss Suarea was desirous of Indulging In a laugh, but aw do citable renson for so doing She waved ber handkerchief at toe captain. "Do you see," said Carson, pointing to the receding shore, "that the little bill at the landing Is Just a mass of shells r "Why. so It Is, I believe." she ex claimed "How came so many there?" "It's a prehistoric kitchen midden," aid this most extraordinary yonng pirate. "So many people lived there that tbey literally made a hill of the bells of the molluska tbey ate." "Indeed!" ejaculated Virginia, and after a long pause she added. "How odd!" Mentally her speech was, "How odd that this young outcast should know about archaeology, or Is It paleontol ogy r It waa easy to study him because he looked bo religiously away from her. . He was rather Interesting. He threw over the tiller to round Into i little reedy cove, but instead ( running ashore he entered a narrow creek, which he followed through Bucb amazing tortuosities that the sua, low In the west; waa now on the right, now on the teft. sometimes astern ane again dead ahead Their talk was verging upon the per onal and therefore fo be discouraged. How keenly observing he must be la detect In ber cosmopolitan English the old home accent! She bad supposed herself to be quite rid of It She waa quite recovered from ber alarm tad looked bewitching as tbey emerged from the narrows and shot out Into the lagoon, the blue waves of which bad aubslded Into round rolling short wells. "Goodly," cried Virginia, looking back Into the enchanted marsh. "Good by! This is the world again!" Carson was looking the other way with less persistence now. There was something mysterious In the charm ol tbla girl's manner. Her goodby to the narrows Beemed a subtle rapproche ment to bini. They were in the world, and therefore, figuratively, she let him come closer. The lights of the hotels and villas along the north shore swept by them In a panorama of fulry Illuminations. "We have been very impersonal," aid be. "May 1 Introduce myself? My name Is" "Oh, please don't!" she exclaimed. "Forgive me, but I'd rather not know." "It Is mo' Interesting," said he, with, a slow smile, "not to know, I shall always think of you as" "As the girl from Mars," Bhe sug gested. "1 came tumbling down to you In a beup out of the sky." "Isu't there an asteroid named Psyche?" be inquired. ""I'm going to assume that there Is and name you after that." "A purely telescopic tar" "Because of Its dlstauce only. Psyche." The boat quietly passed out across the woven threuds of light that web bed the water from a thousand points about Strong's bayou and gently came to at the dock of the Yupon Hedgx (Continued to Page 8). ,