THE SUNDAY BEE: OMAHA, NOVEMBER 2G. 1922. The Room on the Roof By Will Payne The Story at a (Jlanre. Nathaniel Harwood, a handaome Widower 4) Veer eld. haa dtaalpated the greater arl af (ha fortune Uft to htm and hie dauahter wtten Adolph Krum, a laua grinder, of fers Mm a chance to re-oup tor fljnm a project to produce mo tion puturea In natural colore and In rl:ef by meana of a camera In verted by Simon Curtis, a cruaty old camera maiuracturer who la Krom'a em llor and who la perfncting a ls for the Centura with the aid of Prraor Htefnman, dry little wlap of a man who saya he original ad the Invention. Krom brlnse ptrlMnan to tfnrwood'e offlre on the IMh floor of the Belknap building In I .a Halle atr"t; the three atrtka haiseln, and Krorn teare ap for. Una contract with Htelnmen, which he had alolen. It la earned that frlrlriii an and Krom ehall work ee rfetly for Harwood while pretending to r-t:,eln with r'urlln. Whnt the mailer of a eecret worktfhnp la dli cueied Harwood leerfw them to The ftoom on the ftoof of the ekyraper, toil Htelnman loneW down the dlr.ir height and la fearful Ho. for the time blng he la riven a ahr.p n Slow Hirer, Ml'-h., where Harwood, JOelnman and Krom fnr ;ilzebeth Maiden, tl and beautl fui. who fa .fudge Macomb' a eecre tary. Ilnrwood at nnr-e la attracted to h'-r althoiiah practically eneaired to Ietitia llrlknap and bar SKCON'D INSTALLMENT. urlin Malic Raid. When Ilnrwood started for Mow River Hint April day hl life ap peared :o ho firmly arranged on a spaciou.-i and lordly pattern. There hail been a misfortune with hla In vent menis. but he could wave that asldo. If ho had lout the money In took gambling or the like he would he said have blamed himself bit terly. Lut be had gone Into legltl mate business, on good advice. The time had been adverse; he'd suf fered tome poor luck. An Letitla Belknap'j husband there would be no real difficulty about accounting to hla daughter for her share of the estate. It would Involve a some what humiliating explanation to Let it la, but he could show her that he'd simply been unfortuntte. He won sure there would be no real difficulty. And as Letitla's hus band I litre would be no further bother about money. Bo the pattern had been arranged, lie could not conceive of an accept able or even tolerable pattern of life which did not include an ample, se cure Income. He was not a gambler or profligate, but he had a fine flair for spending money. His shapely, nervous hands shed It as naturally as he breathed. The lux urious furnishings of his law of fice and the conceit of a cabin on the roof were only two Instances. His Income from the law firm ran from forty to fifty thousand a year: but that was mere beggarly hand to mouth. Letltia would solve the money question. Then ho had met a witch who cast an inescapable spell upon him. Her clear laughter rang In hla heart, dimming all other sounds. When he started In his car for Slow Itiver or took the train bis pulses leaped. At Slow River lie couldn't rest utll he was in her presence and felt the charm anew. And every time the miracle hap pened over again; across 20 years youth and love were poured through his veins. But at 43 one has learned some cautiion even in love; he was canny, apprehending her attitude toward him. By July many of his friends were out of town for the summer; but he stayed on, alleging Important business which took him bock and forth to Michigan. In August he did take two weeks' vacation at Long Lake, three miles from Slow River. The end of the month he was back again for three days. "When Elizabeth went home, the last of those days, the long, shiny car stood In front of her mother's cottage. Harwood and her mother at on the veranda, with a honey suckle vine at the end. Besa hardly climbed the steps before being aware that they had been talking about her: there was open conspir acy In their smiting fncea. Harwood spoke; "Sit down. IV" -for by now ha used hlr nickname. Sitting down, she wondered what the conapliacy wan. He at once told her. "How would It suit you to go to Chicago as my swretarv? I've got to hnvw .Mitr'tMMly. Tou ran read law ihere, too," lir even opened and ebon at him. "Uvally?" sha braathe.1 In credulously. "Vra, lff.h-e.1' You ran do It bet ec th.tti anUly I know." Mm Mil.len was beaming with graDfUatton. "ttf route Id tike It" KllraWlh iWWr.l taut a It inch f.ir he rank.r A ttltle tilee Mrs, U il.t-n eti Intel the KrfUce, ktu (li-m In tlik aver the thUlW "I ay yu IM a weea, aiM II (w4. rtiM -r ! aJ leetel e-trtve4l ' O I m a4 w. IH IMI" Ml tf )dii at t ran a-l you back here," Hurwood replied with a smile. "A secretary who's capable of doing my work must be worth Uuat much. We can try It out and see wliethur or not you are." lie was speaking pleasantly, yet It all sounded tremendously busi ness like even down to dry dollars and cents. And liess was aglow over the prospect; Chicago, $75 a week, a big law office! Nathaniel Harwood had given her a wonderful summer. The first eve ning when she hud found him In her mother's cottage sho hud fallen In love with him and declared tha fact to her mother as they ate their canned supper on the kitchen tuUe. She bad mentioned It with t-ntliUHi-asm to Judge Llacomb the next day. It was somewhat dlffereut from fulling in love with Weinman be cause it was more deferential, ad miring; but otherwise It was much the same. She had a sort of persotiul pride In his good looks the handsomest man she had ever seen. And In tils clothes that were always just right without being like a tailor's dummy. She eagerly admired his air no pleasant, so smluble, yet assured; bearing himself toward the world with a smile, yet with poise, and with that effect of alert, vigorous capability. He wus a big man, moving at ease in big affairs! She was by no means above a certain invidious pleasure which hl'i p m rmf .yywff'y"''''"' a u.'ih 1,1)1.1,.;. w 1, ywr.-g .v.g,...- f 7',, TT7 - ' x ' , H V ' '''ft t" ' I 1 A 'V ' ft! e. . ra A 1 tit ir.i.Vv- ri. hi In August he did take a two weeks' vacation at Long lake, three miles from Slow River. companionship conferred upon her. For example, she was abundant ly willing to let other Slow River ladles, young and old, to see her sitting beside him in the long, shiny car. Here and there one of these ladles had been inclined to look down upon the shabby genteel Mai dens! She had a very sincere, warm-hearted admiration and re gard for this rather splendid visitor from Chicago. But of lata there had been a trou blesome Interrogation mark in the back of her head. Sha could not account for Harwood on tha ground that he was coming up there on business: he found her good com pany; he was old enough to be her father; he liked to visit and run around with her. But of late well, sha st-vmed In feel a temperature above mere friendship; an ardor be hind this pleasant companionship. ' Was she possibly going to he asked a momentous question? Of Uta there bad beort such an Interrogation point In the, bark of her bead. Hut this offer of the secretaryship stne4 In eras the question tolk ll Wus propoalug a perfectly ma iter of fc nfe tixtal reUttonahlp: and a wi'niltf ful tipittng for her In a nOalneas a! tfhm was ta k la Chh-aso a wek from the fallowing MftJy. I Uat (taturiUr In HIow Itiver, Tare v'.U.k In I a af'.ernta. Jjtea .la.in, rtnree. la the ef fii- froea t h raurihamea Here he hid h Id lk uh a ritvnl s Uvea - autiog lit I woe, as a rt la, tr a avaa)te, irf4 (aat-ne.1 a.l. hiat. a 1 tJ lma s'ta ha'. whiMta age nobody knew, wus push ed to the buck of his buld, per spiring head. An alpaca ju kt dangled from his lean shoulders, the left sleeve empty sine Sltllnh. His Urand Army button was In the lapel of the Jacket. He secjiied to Hess a kind of beloved ghost more than ever ghostly since the country was full of stnooth-cheked vet erans of another war. "I'roper hot!" he confessed, as he replaced the watch and wiped his forehead with a hand that had long done the work of two. His thin, parchment face, with a pen dant none, wrinkled deeply In a smile which confessed the joke of Its being so hot in Septcmljcr. H retained soma of the smile as he uddt-d with a casual air: "You'll be having crrunds. No use your staying here any longer. There'll be nothing for you to do." The stump of his left arm flopped in the empty sleeve. When ho wag nervous the stump flopped that way. His speech meant that her employ ment in his office was ended. Sho knew well enough that Judge I.lsconib was no longer the leading lawyer in Slow River, nor by any means the mot prosperous. This office was old and shabby. Rut it had been a haven. ' The old mun, with his empty sleeve and Grand Army button, loved her; she had a port of call in his heart. She wanted to cc'tch him In her arms and hug him; the wanted to I'.Imi him. But his lifelong, prim Yankee decorum would have been vastly disconcerted at either demonstra tion. "Of course, I'll run around to morrow to say good-bye," she as sured him. Yet this was the real leave tak ing. Monday tha stout Harrington girl, who chewed gum, would be his stenographer. With a bright nod and smile sha went out and paused a moment In tha dingy hall to bits a corner of her lip and wink her eye rapidly. When tha door cloaed on her bright nod and smile the Judga stared at it a moment, very thought fully. Sort of ghostly, for he had reached that old ago when a loved face that disappears behind a door may never be seen again. It tugged at his heart. Then, with a vague stmla under his while mustache, ha ant down at his desk, look off a glased straw hat, and begun writing out a memorandum of lha tat mat ter. She had another good bye to say and waa praaonily approaching the squat bru k basket Cv. tuty. The street a huh it fronted bad been little iuhhI sini'e the basket enter, prtae tilled, grass and weeds grew In lb rvlwsy; lha cement side W4lk waa brvken here and there, (te all, king through lha rtarks, Nrarlng Ida fad.wy she heard klsh, angry w-wds from mil hla. Tkrej a kallesA, araUng w4 waS ram f!tng aut af ika ass aVw, vtOeully iuite-l kf r f l furv. eM terhKl avtea Ida broken cement walk and fell sprawling In the weeds beyond. Hu was Immediately followed by 1'eter tlreen, also hatlrss, and In high wnitli. I'etor Utte- d some unprintablo words as he advanced upon th prostrate mun, who roll.-d over to get out of ths way. Then a large young man, In a cap and loose flannel Jacket, ran out of the office. I'eter had already drawn his foot back to kick the mun In the weeds. The young mun Si-lz'-d, his arm with a jerk to spoil bis kick, saying, "Here! Here!" H was frowning, yet he seemed not vury angry. Peter swung around a bit and drew back the free urm for a blow. The next Instant he wus on his back in the weeds and Kll&ibeth was looking at the young man with decided and admiring Interest. The sudden trip that sent Peter on bis back was a masterpiece. It took a good man to do thut. At Ann Arbor her Irvely Interest In athletics had led her to study the best men critically; she had a 'wise eye in th.U direction. This young man In the , loose flannel Jacket looked promlnlng, and that trip was corking. Rut all this wal a swift, subconscious byplay In her inlnrl. For a moment Peter Green was vastly d'sconocrtcd at finding him self on his bark. Then the young man was holding a hand to help him to his feet, saying, "Get up. Don't be foolish.!' He was frown ing, but It was clear to the spectator that he was not very angry. Peter had recovered himself, then, and sprang aglely to his feet, avoid ing the extended hand and swiftly taking the position of a boxer. He culled the young man a name which is sometimes considered sufficient provocation for homicide. "Don't be silly," the young man reproved him, gravely. "You know we did no harm." To Peter Green this was proof that the young man had no stomach for a fight. He thrust his heavy law toward the pacifist's face and bawled: "Sneakln skates! Damn pick pocket rubbernecks! Smelt o' that!" and extended h i balled fist within three Inches of his opponent's nose. But the opponent merely looked at him reprovingly, with an 'annoyed little frown. That further con firmed Peter's belief !n the young man's lack of spirit and further raised hla Ire. Impatient at the feeble, medium of speech, he put a mighty paw against 'the young man's breast and gave him a push that sent him two or three steps backward. "You're acting foolishly," the young man soberly reproved. "We simply made a mistake." - Peter's reply was prompt and to the point: "Yer a stlnkln' liar! You saw the plgn plain enough! Damn stlnkln" liar!" He shouted the Insult, and seemed provoked beyond endurance by the other's passive attitude, hands at side" "I'm goin' to stop yer clock!" he declared, and squared to strike. Elizabeth then screamed. In a flash she saw that the old man who had been thrown out waa on his feet, with a leveled platol In his hand, about to fire. The young man sprang back. The gangling old man with the -pistol pulled the trigger, and all of them heard a metallic click as the ham mer of the weapon fell on a car tridge that failed to explode. Peter Green's blow expended itself harm lessly In the air. In a flash the young man com prehended the cause of Elizabeth's scream. Fairly before the hammer of the pistol fell he was moving with great agallty upon tha shoot er. He grasped tha pistol wrist, forcing It downward, and as tha old man pulled tha trigger again, a cartridge exploded, tha bullet bury ing Itself In the ground. . There was a struggle for the weapon then. "Drop It! Drop It!" tha young man waa saying. The old man managed to swing with hla left fist, striking his captor on tha cheek. The captor merely held on .to the wrist, repeating. "Drop It!" Tha tU man gave a sound that expressed pain and raise sort of muffled, snarling scream aa lbs powerful bund twisted hla wrlal. He dropped lha latn Into tha weed and struck at his raptor gain. Tha raptor, however, hud tt hi head down and a ihauldr-r hum-tint up defensively, aa lbs blow merely glance, the lop of bis bee. 0. II released taa lwUt4 artel and put a lg arm acrsa tha el I man's eheat la atit further biuwa. Tb old man kacknl aay glowering at aim. f'Usaheta laotmM aha Kad avee seea a mora nUetervtU eii at than (hla taa. loaves iated eld sa ta prente. eejeev hieea lit a wtrvia at tag, hi ral. leutkery face l.a- lorled, his eyes like hot coals, lils mouth open, the lower lip, beneath his struggling grl::.l.d tnuetai.he, thruat out a mouth ready to bite. Thn young man followed him a step or two and spoke cool, emol lient, us one speaks to a child In a fit of temper: "Steady, uncle, steady!" We're all right. Keep cool." The eld man glared at him ond summed, "Damn dog! Dawn yel low dog!" The young man repented, kindly, "He cool. We're all right. Wo can't do anything here, now, you katiw. We must go back." Peter Green stool gaping at this not yet quite able to adjust hi mind to the sudden change In tha sltuntlun. "W must go back now," tha young man was saying to the elder, low and cooly "There's nothing more we can do here. Soma peo ple ere eomlfig " Indeed, several men nnd boys, at tracted by the shot, were coming up the disused street. Some glim mer of reason evidently was return ing to the old man's congested brain.' Rut ha couldn't iulte tear himself away yet. He turned to Peter Green and hurled a couple of Insults nt him: "Thug! Ulackguard:" A tame ending lo this scene waa by no means to Peter Green's taste, especially now that a larger audi ence was on the way. He took up the challenge itiHtantly. striding for ward, f sts balk-d "and Jaw out thrust, and threw down the gang of battla ffius: "Sneag thief! Stlnkln' old porch climber! Open yer head again and I'll land cn your The sorely afflicted peacemaker thrust himself between them, frowning with great perplexity, but still perfectly cool. He reasoned with Peter mildly: "Don't be foolish. You see he's lost control of himself. Just keep quiet and wel'U get away." Ry this time I'eter was perfectly aHsifred of this bulky young per son's pacific principles. He there fore sounded a scornful challenge: "You! You big stiff! Purty face! I ll slap you to sleep!" Again, swiftly, he assumed the attitude of a boxer, ready to strike. The hard tried young man seemed almost in despair." "Be reasonable," he urged, his eyes on Peter's dancing fists, but without putting up a defense. They all Itnew that Elizabeth was there, for they had heard her scream. Yet the rutdi of action had, so to speak, swept her aside. Tbo three men had been so busy watch ing each other that they'd no time to notice her. At this point however, slje canio Into the scene decisively, stepping swiftly toward Peter Green and ex claiming In a voice of authority: "Peter! Let them alone! Behave yourself! Go back to the office!" It was, vicariously, the voice of authority, since In a way she repre sented his employer, Judge Lis comb. But a young female's inter vention in this fashion was highly offensive to lilm particularly as half a dozen men" and boys, before whom he might play a stellar role, were coming on at a rapid walk. "You keep out of this," ha growled. " 'Taint your affair. I'll tend to my own business. You tend to yours." She had already drawn herself up, chin lifted. Her dark blue eyes lashed at him: color rose In her cheeks. Her voice rang; "It is my affair! Let them alone!" She looked obliquely over her shoulder at the young man In the flannel Jacket and aubdtied her voice to a courteous tone: "You'd best go now." For a moment she felt It was Just touch and go whether or not Peter Green was going to defy her author ity. He waa scowling at her. His defiance. If it came, was quite sure to take a rude form. She was aware that the young man waited also, regarding Peter very soberly. For the moment she and the young man had Joined moral forces and fr sn Instant lha Issue hung In the bal ance; but for that Instant Peter held his tongue, and they felt lha! they had wan. The young man took off hi bnt. He was sweating from tha heat of tha day and lha strussle with bis undo. A spot on hi ihevk bnr, abet the unH struck bun. abraded, and a trickle of blad r front II. :t I. leth thouahl be a a t.nly twa or three ye re t4dr than herself, lie waa not a ksn.lem.a yaung man. Hi Mir waa kihUr and tlw. There a funny lu ll t rU.ntal rteasa la hi !. head III mm was anything l( t'rx-laa. Instead ? a flu ! 4 atoaaa. M faca was sunte.i i.e.1. It M lug that a eaatial t ( aa aKt bar rul aha N-ir, (teattaaed aa la Beieal a