I * r I ! , . Tottered Forward and Collapsed in a Heap. W.ROSSES , 1010 OV THt SUfcCCSS CO SYNOPSIS. Philip Cayley , accused of a crime of tfhlch he is not guilty , resigns from the Winy In disgrace and his affection for pi friend , Lieut. Perry Hunter , turns to htred. Cayley seeks solitude , where he perfects a flying machine. "While soaring ever the Arctic regions , he picks up a CBriousJir shaped stick he had seen in the mJsassinV hand. Mounting again , he dis covers a yacht anchored in the bay. De- ecendlng near the steamer , he meets a lrl on an ice floe. He learns that the girl's name is Jeanne Fielding and that the yacht has come north to seek signs 'or her father. Captain Fielding , an arctic explorer. A party from the yacht is ina- Klng1 search ashore. After Cayley departs Jeanne finds that he had dropped a cu riously-shaped stick. Captain Planck and the surviving crew of his wrecked whaler are in hiding on the coast A giant ruf- rhan namedRoscoe , had murdered Fielding ajm his two companions , after the ex plorer had revealed the location of an enormous ledge of pure gold. Roscoe then took command of the party. It develops that the ruffian had committed the mur- a r witnessed by Cayley. Roscoe plans to capture the yacht and escape with a big load of gold. Jeanne tells Fanshaw , owner'of the yacht , about the visit of the sky-man and shows him the stick left by Cayley. Fanshaw declares that it is an sklmo throwing stick , used to shoot darts. Tom Fanshaw returns from the parching party with a sprained ankle. Ferry Hunter is found murdered and Cayley is accused of the crime but Jeanne believes him innocent A relief party goes to find the searchers. Tom professes his arsre for Jeanne. She rows ashore and jnters an abandoned hut , and there finds " fatner's , diary , which discloses the ex- yorers suspicion of Roscoe. The ruf- flan returns to the hut and sees Jeanne. He ta intent on murder , when the sky- fcan swoops down and the ruffian flees. Jeanne gives Cayley her father's diary to read. The yacht disappears and Ros coe s plans to capture It are revealed. Jeanne's only hope is In Cayley. The eWotisness of their situation bepomes ap parent to Jeanne and the sky-man. CHA'PTER XIII. Continued. / Suddenly he was flying downward , as fast as gravity and his great wings would take him. Drenched with the sweat of a sudden terror , cleaving the air so fast that the sound of its whinIng - Ing rose to a scream through his taut rigging. Down , he slanted , seaward a little , past the end of the great head land. Then , with the sudden exertion of all his strength , upon one lowered wing , the other flashing high like the stroke of a scimitar , In the curve of the shortest possible arc , he shot landward , pounced , checked , and alighted not far from the girl. She had been seated upon a broken ledge of rock when he had first caught sight of her. She was in act of 'getting ' to her teei when he alighted , not a half dccen paces away. She had been pale , but her color ; had come back now in a sudden surge. Ehe was breathing unsteadily and her { bands were clasped against her jbreast "You you musn't fly like that , " she said. "If you had been an , * agle , the way you wheeled and came * rushing down out of the sky would jhave terrified me. I shut my ey s in order not to see you killed. " j He did not answer her at once , and fche , looking Intently Into his face , ( went on. "You know it was danger- jous. You thought yourself that you ( were going to be killed. I can see Jlhe horror ot it in your eyes. " ' . Then ho got his breath. "You're pafo ? " he sectioned unsteadily. "You i n ftrere In d tttftr , sudden danger , and in error at 5t Vhat was what frighten- frd me , tl < At codden knowledge. I came fe/tfinf I should be too late. " ' 1 had a fright , " she admitted ; "but I don't see how you could know. I'm very sure I didn't cry out. " "No , I heard nothing , no sound at all. I just knew , and so I came to you as fast as I could. What was it that frightened you ? " . "Nothing at all , I imagine. I was sitting here on the ledge , looking at that wonderful sky , and all at once I found I was growing afraid. I didn't know what it was about , at all. I sup pose it was just because I was a little tired and had begun to realize that I was a long way from from home. I had come around the headland , not really to look for more firewood , but In the hope that I might happen to find a clue to where the stores are hid den ; and , as I said , suddenly it seemed a long way back and I began to find myself afraid. And then , be ing afraid , I well , I thought I saw something moving up there behind the rocks something big , bigger than a man , and whitish-yellow. " His eyes followed the direction in which she had pointed , but could make out nothing in the deep , vibrant blue shadows. "That's likely enough , " he told her. "It was probably a bear. If it was , we're in luck. I'll come back by and by and go gunning for him. But first , I'm going to take you home. " She had used the word before , but In what sense he was not entirely sure ; and she had undoubtedly used it not more than half consciously. At any rate , when he said it now she flushed a little , and so did he , and their eyes , meeting , brightened sud denly. Silently he turned away from her and began furling up his wings , and she helped him , as she had helped him that other time when he had tried to convince her that he was not a dream. When it was done , they set out slowly , in the deepening twilight , for the hut. "It's very good of you to walk down here with me , " she said , "you who could fly. " CHAPTER XIV. The Red-Bound Book. By the time they had reached the headland , the whole beach before them was enveloped in the sapphire shadow of the cliff , and the little clus ter of huts toward which they were trudging was hardly distinguishable. It was not until they had halved the distance that the girl made out the little plume of rose-colored smoke that floated above Philip's newly construct ed chimney. But the next instant he laid a hand upon her arm and , with the other , pointed imperatively down the beach toward the hut. "Whether you saw him before , or not , " he said , with a short grim laugh , "you can see him now. " Looking where he pointed , she saw. a big , yellowish-white , ungainly thing come lumbering round the corner of the hut , upon all fours. "A "bear , " he said , "and a good big one. You're not to beafraid. . This is really unmerited good luck. " "Aren't they dangerous , these polar bears ? " she asked. In his answering laugn she heard the ring of rising excitement. "I won't deny , " he said , "that if I had my way about it , I'd have you safely shut up inside the hut there before I tried conclusions with him. Give me the revolver , and take care to keep out of the line of fire. If you see a chance to slip inside the hut , do it. And don't assume that he's dead until I tell you so. These polar bears have no nerves at all. You can't shock them. They don't stop until you have put their 'locomotor facilities Complete ly out of business. " She was smiling when she Jianded him the revolver. "Here's lucK , " she said. "Don't he afraid for me. " Cayley smiled , too. "Keep behind me , but not so far that you're in any danger of getting cut off in case I have to dance around him a little. There he's winded us already. " Cayley turned for a last look at her. He had slipped his bundled wings from his liack and laid them on the ice. He was still smiling , but some what ironically. "I'm half afraid he'll run away , " he said , "and half afraicl he won't" > < * ' --.aSSiF- . The next instant all doubt on that head was set at rest. The monster hissed and came lumb'erlng toward them , pretty rapidly , across the ice. Cayley advanced slowly to meet him , but not in a direct line. Instead , he bore off in a curve to the left The girl understood the maneuver instant ly , and , herself , set out landward at a brisk pace , moving in the arc of a cir cle , parallel to his but larger , in such a way as to keep the bear , Philip and herself , as all three moved in dif ferent directions , in a straight line. They quartered round In this way , the bear swerving in well toward Philip , until all three were in a line , about equidistant from the hut. Philip and the bear , were , perhaps , a dozen paces apart Without turning , he call ed over his shoulder to her , "Now run for it for the hut. I'll keep him amused ont here. " At the sound of his voice the bear rushed him. The girl had never in her life found anything so hard to do as to obey orders now. But she did obey and was running at top speed toward the open door of the hut when she heard Cayley fire for the first time. Just as she reached it , she heard his second shot. When she turned about , panting , to observe the result of it , the two seemed to her to be at horribly close quarters. The bear , reared up on his hind legs , had just lunged forward. He sprang back clear of the flashing , scythelike cut of those terrible claws. A little to the girl's surpise and con siderably to her alarm , he turned and went sprinting up the beach toward the talus , at full speed , the bear wounded , but not in the least disabled , lumbering after him. It takes a fast runner to outrun a bear , but Cayley did it. When he reached the .foot of the talus , the bear was 20 paces behind him. She saw him stop short , whirl round again and face his pursuer with a shout The bear also checked his speed and reared up once more , towering , upon his hind legs. Then Cayley fired twice , the shots coming so close ly together as to be hardly distinguish able. One or both of them took in stantaneous effect. The great yellow ish-white mass tottered forward , and collapsed in a heap only a pace or two from where Philip was standing. He waved his hand at the girl , and walked back for his wings. When she met him , half way up the beach , he was carefully taking the spent shells out of his revolver , one at a time , and depositing them in his pock et. "No telling how they may prove useful , " he commented ; then , with a quick look into her face , "I hope you weren't frightened when you saw me run. " "I suppose 1 shouldn't have been , but I'll have to confess that I was. You weren't trying to get away from him , or you wouldn't have run in that direction. But it looked rather dread ful , just the same. Why did you do it ? " "We were too far down the beach , too near the water's edge before. It was too late to skin him and cut him up tonight , and I was afraid if a storm were to come up before morning , a really big storm , we might lose him. It was a lot easier to get him up the beach before I fired those last two shots than it would have been after. I thought at first of running toward tne hut It occurred to me , only just in time , that there was no use in ma king an abattoir of our front yard. " They had reached the hut , and as he finished speaking , they entered it. Even Philip caught his breath rather suddenly with that first glance about its transformed interior. The drift wood fire , which glowed upon the hearth , filled the whole room with light , and bathed the walls and rafters with warm colors. Here was their fortress against the cold and 'the dark ; a fortress , too , against despair. That rude hearth which he .had built today was to be their altar of hope. The girl stood looking at it a mo ment in silence , her lips pressed tight together , one outstretched hand grop ing for the door-jamb behind her , as if she wanted the support of some thing. Even in this warm firelight she looked a little pale. By an evi dent effort of will she was breathing very deep and steadily. She did not try to speak. Cayley understood well enough what it meant This place that they had come back to for tKe night was home now , probably the last home she would ever have in the world , if one were to balance the chances fairly. Its warmth and light and. comparative comfort did more to enforce a .realization of their "tragic plight than anything be fore had done. The thing she was fighting with was a sudden wave of plain terror. Cayley went out into the little ves tibule and closed and bolted the outer door. He contrived to waste a minute or two over the trifling task , In order to give her that moment by herself. When he came back , closing the in ner door behind him as he did so , he found that she had taken off her cap and the heavy cur coat which had en cumbered her shoulders all day , and hung them upon a convenient wooden peg In the wall. She was standing near the fireplace now , warming her cold fingers at the blaze. Cayley started a little at sight of her , for now she was transformed , too. Standing there , silhouetted against the blaze , in her gray cardi gan jacket and moleskins , she looked like a young boy. He had discovered before this that there was not a grain of false modesty about her ; neverthe less , It pleased him when , with a cer tain charming frank simplicity , she called his attention to her costume. "It's a lucky thing , " she observed , "that I dressed for a scramble over _ , - * " -"j- L - * the Ice before * jcjqming ashore with -Uncle Jerry and Mr Scales. And lucky , tqp Juhat Ij dnjtchangejba " " " when"we returneid lo"the1 Aurora ? left it the second time with no other idea than of pulling about for awhile in the dinghy. I'd have done that just the same if I had dressed for dinner that night , as I usually did. " "Yes , " he said. "A skirt would have been a pretty serious matter to people in pur situation. " "Show me the rest of cur house , " she commanded presently. "This is the only room I've seen. " The subdivision of the hut was ac complished by an L-shaped partition seven feet or so from the outer wall , around two sides of it. It yielded two tiny , cubical bedrooms ( that was the purpose which the wooden bunk in each of them indicated ) ; and a third room of the same width ( about seven feet ) , but running the entire length of the side of the hut nearest the cliff. This room had evidently served for stores and for a kitchen , since part of the reconstructed fireplace projected into it It was in this last room where the greater part of what the searchers from the Aurora had dismissed as "rubbish" was accumulated. Cayley did as the girl commanded , and showed her every nook and cup board which the four walls of the hut contained. When they returned to the living room where the fire was , she dropped down on one of the bunks with a little sigh of fatigue. "You've been disobeying orders , " he said , looking her over with a serious sort of smile. "You've let yourself get too tired. You'll have to make up for it by being exceptionally obedi ent now. " As he spoke , he shook out the sleep ing-bag on the bunk , behind where she was sitting. "You're to lie down on that , " he said , "until I can get supper ready ; and directly after supper youire to take this bag into whichever of those bedrooms you would like for yours , and really undress and go to bed. " She assented to that after a little demur. That he had rightly guessed the degree of her fatigue was attested by the fact that when he re-entered the hut after dressing the fowl that was to provide their evening meal , he found her cuddled up upon the great sheepskin , fast asleep. It was not until his rudimentary culinary operations were about com pleted that , glacing over to where she lay , he found her regarding him with a sleepy smile. "I thought of something just as I was dropping off to sleep , " she said , "a really beautiful idea. I tried to call out and tell you , but I was too sleepy. I hope I haven't lost it. It was something about oh , I know. Don't you suppose we might find a clue to where the stores are hidden in father's journal or in the maps ? " He laid down the drum-stick he had been about to bite into , and gazed at her , partly in astonishment , partly in a sort of amused dismay that the idea had not occurred to him before. "That suggestion , " he saidt "is worth the ' whole of my day's work. Of course that's the way to begin our search the only way , and tomorrow morn ing " "Tomorrow morning ! I thought the i worst thing you could possibly say would be after supper. I wanted to let the duck go and begin the search now. " She smiled at him. "You'll compromise , won't you , on directly after supper ? " He assented with a laugh. "If you can keep awake , but the first time I catch you nodding " "All right , " she said , "only let's hur ry with the duck. " Then , a little later , 'It can't be possible , can it , that we're going to eat the whole of it at one meal ? It's beginning to look that way. " There was one compensation to the rudeness of their fare and the ex iguity of their equipment. Clearing up after dinner was an operation of extreme simplicity. When it was completed , Philip heaped more wood on the fire , and in the glow of the crackling flames tiiey spread out the maps and began their search. "I believe , " said Cayley , "that the journal will be worth more than the maps in this search of ours tonight Anyway , while you work one I can work the other. " She nodded , picked up the journal and crossed over with it to another of the bunks. There she seated herself - self , , tucked her feet up comfortably under her , tailor-fashion , , and , prop ping her chin upon one palm , began to read. The light coming from behind tier made , to Cayley's vision , a misty halo of her hair , and played softly over the cheek and the fingers that were half embedded in it The sight of her made it hard for him to stick to his maps. But present ly he looked up with a sudden ques tion. "Do you happen to find any thing " he began , and then broke off shortly. From her face , half-shaded as It was , he could see that what she had been reading just then was no mere description of this land upon which theyfc had been cast away , but some thing far more personal to the father she had lost here. "There's something perfectly terri fying , " she said , "about father's de scription of this man Roscoe. Over here near the end , before the sun came back to them , he tells of going out for a walk by himself "and of dis covering that Roscoe was stalking him , in the hope , he thought , of dis covering , in advance of the others , where the gold ledge was. In the twi light , father says , he looked , in his white bear-skins , perfectly enormous and incredible. And Philip " She closed the book , holding it tight in both hands , and leaning forward a Httle sjjhj yjntjon , "and Philip , his * * description s unds = oh Tsuppose it's silly , but it sounds like the thing I thought I saw today when I was alone them on the beach , before you came flying down out of the sky. It didn't look like a bear. It wouldn't have been so dreadful if it had. " * - - "It's possible , " hesald _ _ gravely , "it may'have been he whonTTTrightened I off when I came down last night. Cer tainly there was somebody , and that somebody may stiff be here on shore , though I supposed he had gone out to join in the attack on the yacht But it's very strange , if there is any one , that we could have passed a whole day without encountering him. " The girl shivered ; then , with a shake of her head as if dismissing the uncanny thought from her mind , said : "You started to ask me about some thing else , and I interrupted. " It took him a moment to collect his thoughts. "Oh , yes. There's some thing marked here on this map which I took at irst for the location of the hut , but it appears now that it was marked before they built it. * I wonder if , in the early pages of the journal , there was a description of any natural formation about here like a cave , " or She made as If to open the book , then , suddenly , changed her intention and held it out to him , instead. "I haven't been playing fair , " she I said. "I wasn't really looking for any thing. I was just reading stories and dreaming over them. It's his hand writing , I think , that makes It so hard to be good. It's well , almost like hearing his voice. Won't you work the book and the maps and give me something to do with my hands , I mean ? oh , I know I'm tired , but that doesn't matter. " Cayreys first impulse was to refuse , but it needed only one thoughtful look ' into her face to convince him that the kindest as well as the wisest , thing was to do as she asked. An uncanny horror of the monstrous Roscoe and the appalling idea that he , and per haps others of his gang , might be sharing the solitude of this frozen coast with them was plainly to fce i read in her eyes , and her own prescription - i scription for dispelling it was probably - 1 ably the best that could be thought of. With a nod of assent , he rose and went into the storeroom , returning the < next moment with an armful of heavy ] rope. "In the old days of wooden ships , " he said , "when they wanted to disci pline , a sailor , they set him to picking oakum. Next to pounding rust off the anchor , it's the dullest job In the world. But we need some for calking up the cracks in our. walls. Do you i mind ? " 1 "Mind ! " she echoed. "Did ysra thin * I wanted to do embroidery ? " Ht showed her how the work was to be done , and in five minutes she was Jbusily engaged at it. She had moved to another bunk , a little further from , the fire , and he , with innocent artifice , had contrived that the big soft sleep ing-bag should be spread out under her. Meanwhile he plunged into a sys tematic search , through journal and maps , for the thing that was to spell either life or death for them. At the end of an hour he looked - p > suddenly , an exclamation of triumph on his lips. But at the sight of her , It died out in a smile. She had slipped down on the sleeping-bag , her head cradled in the crook of one arm. And she was fast asleep. CHAPTER XV. Discoveries , The sunlight of another crystalline day had made a path of gold across the floor and half way up the wall when Philip roused himself from what he had intended to make the merest cat-nap on one of the bunks , and with , difficulty rubbed his eyes open. The savour of something good to eat was already in his nostrils. Jeanne , with her back to him , was Sending ovejMjie ire , busy with the * * * ' IKkTastT She heard him stirring , and looked around. - w"WEO * * - ] "Oh , I'm sorry/ she said. "I didn't mean to bang that pan down that way. I meant you to go on sleeping for hours and hours. " Looking fairly at him as he sat there on the bunk she saw his hands clutch tightly over the edge of it ; saw the color go ebbing out of his face and then come surging back again. She had seen him do that once before. . "Why what's the matter , Philip ? " she asked. "It's just the wonder of you , " he said slowly ; "of waking up to find you here , busy about this home of our as if as If it were all true. I've been very deep asleep. " "You'd better get ready for breakfast fast/ ' she said , in a tone whose mat ter-of-fact inflection was a little exag gerated. "It's nearly ready. " When they had finished , and while they still sat face to face across the board plank which had served them for a table , Cayley leaned forward a little and , smiling , asked a question. "What's the secret , Jeanne ? Your eyes have been shining with mystery ever since we sat down here. " She laughed. "You're much too pen etrating. I didn't .mean . you even to dream there was a mystery to pene trate. But well , it's time to tell you now. any way. " She , too , leaned forward a little and shook her head at him with a tanta lizing air of triumph. "You didn't find the thing you were looking for last night in father's jour nal the place where they hid the stores , I mean. " "Oh , but I did ! " he cried. "I only- waited to give you time to eat-a nec essary and sensible breakfast before I spoke of it I had It on the tip of my tongue to suggest that we set about finding it in good earnest , when I saw , in your eyes , that you had a mystery of your own. " It was evident from the look in those eyes now that she was both sur prised and puzzled. "You found it last night ! " she ex * claimed. "Found it in the journal , and then never went to look at it ! " ( TO BE CONTINUED. ) Valuable Asset. Learn to say "No. " It will be ot more use to you than to learn to rc-.d Latin. Spurgeon. \ "Why What'a the Matter , Philip ? "