TUB PKE: OMAHA. SUNDAY. FKKKUAKY 10, 1122. 5-n "1 i j.-; j)r A fif " V- - XX I A ove-m-&r Heaslip Lea Gouamer Thread of Old Romance and New Weave Some Surprising Changes in Three Lives. fttllKlifc. certain oil f.uhlonfd flower I called Une-nt-e MlM. It kuccii Vietorl aiitrin, crinoline, gift book and chignons uung women given lo dying of broken liesrt and )oum men hauditomely given 10 condoling tiieinprs ihTrnfLr. Ami ! ijne-in-aMim! Wh-n waa love lit! nilet? lawn or mlaanilc. Some mlata, of ourc, melt away bifoi the nun: aom don't. 11 ua nm crowd t ha metaphor. Tska the story i.f Ameh Lawrence. InMrml there. If you like. U h modern Iiim.ui. e. When Anxilc vim twenty lilclt tuy lme been no Brent thakea of n hbo a generation or so a it. but Im now he t into when one alts among the prniln ti, die promtxed one night, standing hrneath u linncy locimt In full flower, to marry Arthur Wicrwood. , Not at once, of courso; Arthur was nt tlmt lime only Just out of tit li and In no porlllon to marry anl.d. II had worked way through (ilf MitrrKlns therefore compara lively lute twctity-tlve or so ami hla aolo for tune cotiKtHie,) ,f three modeat Liberty honda, a fat gold watch which had belonged to hla grandfather and would probably belong to hla grandson, and two hundred and fifteen dollars. (.Strang, the odd oenls which always disfigure oo a bank account however ) Artnur asked Amelia to marry him. and be neath th honey locust, Iter little uptllted (me inla aa the dronping flower, her dark eyes lnn cunroua, Amelle mi Id she would. It should not have been used against her, for It was not a night on which any girl could easily have re fused any man except a tuttooed South Sea IxlHtider. Hut Arthur took tho moment seii otialy. lie held her clime and kissed her fum bllnaly at first, but much better the third and fourth time. Ilia voice grew husky: his hand shook. At which, of course, Ainelle'a hand shook, too. Arthur was distinctly good looking In a straight featured, fair, solemn way. Alto, he waa tall, and Amelle experienced the most ilelieieus thrill when he stooped above her. The aame thrill, tio doubt, which In the botanic world leads a roue veined, azure throated morn ing glory to atreich up Ha tendrlla to clasp the honest fence. "Darling." said Arthur (there are two kinds of lovers those who ay darling seriously and those who put a laugh In it Arthur was not the latter. Ilia "darling" had already a delicate aura, of coffee, bacon, and eggs). "Darling it will have to be a long engagement, I'm afraid do you mind?" What could a nice girl have said if she did? "No truly, Arthur " said Amelie, dore against his cheek. "I shall have to make good for you!" he told her. Making good and a square deal were among Arthur's clinches, lie was the sort of young man to whom politicians refer as the backbone, of the country or the salt of the earth. Really, it needs no language but English to describe him. Hut hist chin was wonderful. Smooth shaven, of course, as perfect In line mid contour as the chin of a statue. Women take great stock In chins. Amelle looked at Arthur's, and throbbed with pride. She reflected happily that he hud a nice taste in collars Of course,, one inay marry a man to reform him, but It's nicer not to have to. "You see," Arthur was saying, "this offer I've had from those people in Mexico means a comfortable living, but not at once. It may be a year, even two years, darling!" "I'll wait for you, honey," murmured Amelie. "And when I write you you'll come?" "O, Arthur way down there?" , "Darling we'll have to live way down there, for a while at least. If things turn out as I hope they will. You'd like it. I'm sure you would. You're such a romantic little girl " Here he tightened a strong arm, and Amelle sighed hap pily. "You'd be sure to like it; palms and lots of flowers and patios and fountains an er palms!" said Arthur. "I do love Spanish stuff," mused Amelie "I always have that sort of catch in the mtsio as If your heart missed a beat or something because you saw somebody coming. And the big carvetl combs and mantillas O. Arthur, will you send me a Spanish fan? They're go ing to be smart next winter." Arthur said he would. He wasn't entirely clear as to the puro Castillianness. so to speak, of Mexico, but it was bound to be something like that. And the scent of the honey locust was potent as old wine. "Only " said Amelie, doubtfully "only Arthur, honey I couldn't go all the way there, you know I really don't think I could. It seems so sort of conspicuous. Why couldn't you come up instead and meet me somewhero halfway?" "Darling," said Arthur, "do you know, I can see how you feel, absolutely, and I love you for it. Let's see, now. There must be some place in between some place I could come up to." "And that I could go down to," cooed Amelie. There was. There always is. Even between heaven and hell, as lovers a-plenty had charted it before these two. "I've got It," said Arthur at last. "Riverside a llttlo town In California. I was out there one summer. It's a nice place, with rather a wonderful inn Spanish. Now, Amelie here it is! At the end of two years " "Or less. If possible," whispered Amelie. "Absolutely," said Arthur "however, at the end of two years at the outside I will come to Riverside you will meet me there and we will be married! Is it a bargain!" "Say 'Is It a promise?' " she corrected sweetly. He obeyed her. She gave her word. They' kissed each other with a touch of delicious drama. A flower of the honey locust fell and caught in her hair. He disentangled it gently, put it to his lips, and bestowed it in his pocket book. "O, Amelie, darling," he groaned, "two whole years " "Or less, if possible," said Amelie consol ingly. But she was just as beautifully distressed as he. They stayed out in the yard till midnight, when Arthur's well bred conscience drove him home, seeking in each other's arms and eyes and lips the frail assurance that journey's end means one thing only. "I shall never forget this evening," said Arthur just before he left her. "Say night sighed Amelie whimsically "it's a so much more loverly word!" . She cried herself to sleep when he had gone. He was really her first definite suitor. And the sincerity of his lovemaking had set her heart strings singing like a wind harp. - Arthur himself slept little. Across the sleeping town they wore a web of rosy fancies, from his heart to hers. One week later Arthur departed for Mexico. A week is not a long time in which to be engaged. It allows for all of the thrill and none of the anticlimax. Amelie and Arthur achieved In those seven days a pretty cycle of devotion. They accepted congratulations Arthur was for shouting his news from the housetops at once in a sort of lovely haze, and clung to each other as the time for parting drew near in a noble agony of renunciation. "We'll have our honeymoon at the inn in California, two years from, now," was Arthur's ulinii.iiv Kuodbv. pruiuiM' iht noituugnoili ing in this world shall keep you from coming U me, darling:' Amelia proinli.ed. In (ears, Arthur realty extraordinarily good looking, with th4t steady ti.imt In his An gray eyes, Hhe flung herself Into his arms and sobbed wildly. "It's killing ins to let you go" Hut It didn't kill Iter, of rourae. Fhe sat shout .the tiouie snd moped patheti cally for s full month after his departure, then gradually drifted out into the current again and buck Into something Ilk her old routine. Nothing exactly ss It n before, of couue - for ono thing, Arthur's ardent announcement of their engagement had set her a little outaids the gayeties of li'r old crowd, Mm titld, "Ame lia Lawrence? O. yes! Plies engagej to Fher liood going to bo married as soon as he can g'l a start." and neglected to sk Amelle to dance. Hie felt U, rat Ik r wistfully, at flrM; cite hud not iulto meant to put her youth in pawn when Arthur left, but that apparently was what she hud done. Neither matron nor debutante neither fish. Ilfth. nor good red herring! Still Arthur wrote devotedly. Jure at nt every day. later on with a faithful regulatiiy three times a week; and the fed her soul on th irpeated expression of his love, his loneliness without her. Ins continual longing for her. "I'm making good,'! he wrote toward th end of the first year. "The two years we et wilt Just about see it. Then we can have a hit: t T A A &i HI VVJ'f ft BW SH W a i rr , . m . w - - M kakfr W r V" Wat M W s I I house on the side of the mountain, with vines growing about the door." The old, old dream, whose background has been usually a far country but not always Mexico. Amelie read with a smile tipping up the cor ners of her sensitive mouth and one eye on the honey locust. It took a deal of concentration sometimes to evoke the magic of that brief, glamorous hour. Sometimes she found it hard even to visualize Arthur's frank, kindly face. But she focused the eyes of her soul on it deter minedly. She had only to wait love and be true! That winter her father died, suddenly, with out a shadow of warning, and Amelie found herself and her mother, when the dead man's affairs were finally settled, facing the world with only a small insurance policy between them and outright penury. She announced, with a courage that sur prised herself: "I'm going to find a job some whore. I ought to have been doing something long afo." "Do call it a position, my child!" wailed her mother out of a fog of crepe. "Wait till we see what I can get," said Ame lie. Shs smiled her rather plaintive smile.-Black clothes made a pale small wraith of her, but her spirit shot up like a candle flame in the wind. She found a place ultimately in a combina tion book and art shop of which Beechwood was justly proud. Books she had always loved in a haphazard, omnivorous way; pictures she pro ceeded eagerly to learn about. Arthur's epistolary protest was prompt and earnest: "I don't like the idea of your being in a store. I am working harder than ever, with an eye to the day when I can take you out of it and set you in our little house, where you shall have nothing to do but be my little wife." "And sweep floors." thought Amelie per versely, "and wash dishes, and mend socks." She turned back to her beloved job. Like a new world, the goods on the shelves about her opened a thousand vistas. Her awakening intelligence nearly foundered itself, trying to drink the stream dry. She realized for the first time what color and line might mean; her finger tips lingered happily over silken fabric and tissues crusted with embroidery; She was like a new creature, vibrant and exquisitely responsive. She tried to write Arthur something of her evolu tion. He replied with characteristic consideration: "Are you sure you aren't overworking, dar ling? You sound so excited. . I don't want my little girl wearing herself out. I have a piece of news for you that may make you forget the store, for once. I am getting a raise this month. One more like it and all our hopes can come true. Isn't that wonderful? I wish I could see yout face when you read this!" Amelie read it, standing beside a box of new prints that had just come in,' colorful things, French and English, with an occasional spirited bit of black and white among them. When she had done reading she lifted her eyes to a frivo lous gilt framed mirror on the opposite wall of the shop. She saw a small, pale face with a touch of delicate rose on the cheeks; cloudy dark bair, artistically loose (Arthur loved it sleek and net ted); a mouth touched with mockery eyes full of dreams, but the ecstatic happiness which Arthur would have liked to be able to watch the mirror did not give back. "What's the matter with you?" cried Amelle to herself amazedly. "What have you been waiting for all this time?" She tucked the letter inside her soft gray frock and turned away humming "Annie Laurie." but a psycho-analyst, from whom none of us is quite safe nowadays, would have ob served that she had first to stop and consciously " wouldn't gtP tonight for tho rest of my life. This place and that Song and yoa." recall that it; was Arthur's favorite tune. Then she flatted it. She wished sometimes that Arthur's letters had more of Arthur himself. How many a woman has wished that before her, of stolid, businesslike masculine script! One remembers a moment of beautiful madness a husky mas culine voice, breaking with tenderness eyes that burn a hole in one's soul, and the postman obliges next day or next week, with a chilly crackling sheet of paper beginning clumsily: "My Dearest M. or N.: I am sitting down to write to you after a busy day. I know you will be glad to hear that I found the place Okeh and everything ready for me to take hold." It isn't quite what one would be glad to hear, of course; however, the average man makes but inadequate love with a pen. Which probably saves him a good deal of trouble, at that. Arthur, in any case, was no knight of the quill. He said what he had to say definitely and on time, added the customary number of darl ings and little girls, and called it a day. "He takes me just as much for granted as if I were his collar button!" Amelie thought re belliously. She thought of the honey locust, but with the passing of two years, the honey locust grew vague somehow, like a tree in a lovely stage setting, hung with artificial garlands. It still stood in Amelia's yard, two springs it flow ered heartlessly without Arthur; but its magic waned. It was now, at best, a tree. A little stereotyped, like the letters, which . were now all Amelie had of her great moment. Toward the end of the second year, Amelie's mother remarried. That was a distinct blow to Amelie, who had not even een it coming. She knew the man had been an old suitor of her mother's, knew that he sometimes came to the house, knew that he seemed to care, in a stolid, inarticulate sort of way but marriage with Amelie's father so new a ghost! With the crepe veil and black kid gloves so lately put away! ' Amelie was hurt. She was affronted. She quivered with disgust the fastidious unreason ing disgust of youth for middle aged ardors. ' The stepfather had been some years a wid ower and possessed already of a tidy family. When Amelie thought of his grizzled mustache and neat alpaca coat, of his grown daughter's shrill. Inane laughter, and the deviltries of his two small freckled sons, she felt as if cuckoos had crowded her out of her nest She stayed late at the shop and came home with reluctance to her place at the noisy din ner table over which her mother now presided. Mrs. Lawrence, Mrs. Lawrence no longer, torn between old ties and new, offered the ob vious solution when Amelie's unrest became ap parent. "Anyhow," she protested pathetically, "you'd be leaving; me, sooner or later, to get married yourself, you know, you and Arthur." It made Amelie turn with a desperate de pendence to Arthur's letters, which just about that time displayed a renaissance of ardor, as if in answer to her need. "The time's almost up," he wrote.. "I'm due another raise in a month and as soon as I get it I'll wire you. Then you will start west to meet me, darling! Riverside, Cal. remember? Take the California limited that's the best train get off at San Bernardino and drive over to the inn. I'll be wraiting for you, there. 1 wonder If we will find each other at all changed. I am sure you will be the same dear, little girl. As fer me, I am what I have always been, your faithful old sweetheart. It's been a hard two years, but we'll forget all that once we're to gether again. A man has temptations" (he had blacked something out there and gone on again), "a lot of temptations a sheltered little girl like you knows nothing about but I've , kept your picture on my desk and your promise in my mind and here we are, almost out of the wood! When I wire, be ready to start. It might be any day now." Amelie was distinctly moved by that letter. She went out and bought herself a gray coat and skirt to travel in, also some demurely smart blouses and an engaging little gray hat. She added other things, a small but dainty trous seau, then held her hands and waited for Ar thur's wire to come. Her road to Rome, as it were. Her key to the garden of the world. It troubled her a bit, nevertheless, that even Arthur's photograph could not make real for her now his eyes and mouth. She had lost her power to visualize him, completely. "I feel as if he were almost strange," she told her moth er in a moment of insistent misgiving. "It's so hard to keep it all real over two years and he" (a flare of nervous shyness) "he seems so sure and so so" (she stumbled over a reti cent word) "so affectionate." "It'll be all right," said her mother com fortingly. "Arthur's a good boy. Just you be as faithful as he is." That really seemed to cover everything, that last homely bit of advice. s. When Arthur's wire eventually came Amelie packed her trunk, gave up her position in the little bookshop, and climbed aboard the Cali fornia limited with a sense of high fulfillment "if a most irregular pulse. Arthur had said merely.' "Meet me Mission Inn Riverside June Fifteenth love." Not a lengthy slogan at the sound of which to tear up one's life by the roots, but Amelle responded gallantly. She said goodby to the ' locust tree the night before she left with a ' vague feeling that she who was sbout to die rilultd it. The bvukt !( was blooming but Mifefarfiy Ih! 'r. It Uropfdl im suu'iou blotsoms on h.-r Imir. Approaches now the dintn t.(ul sint proble-mm,- rt of the story of Aniflie I-awreiKe, nh Ui't iiono io wrll iht fiit nig lit. a might luv been tiptrtd, n Ut- tit nt lnornnih hrfd a, lower berth-and deeded and made her way out t the dining rar, A negro waiter rams forward la meet her, 1 la mno either stupid or an uncommonly civfr ' ntature, Ho edited Amrlip at 4 stiittll pot e table mi which ktlver and sla and china glittered brightly In Ilia raa ot the I o'clock sun, snd presented her with menu. Jut across th small spotlens laid t a man read ing a hook and waiting apparently fr hi break fait. In th fact of him lay the stupidity or un common lievenir of tha waiter. Oiiitiid the window tha Kanwi lindawnpe t re lined by. naked aa 1 1 ml bad made It, yet with a certain flat frenline.a about It. Amelia wrote upon her order hp: Oranii Juice, coffee, rolls, Hut aha nearly set down htr atnrilrd sub roiiictoiis cry, "Oh. Amelle. my child. What man! II louldii t poaxibty be as wonderful as he looks." riie shouldn't liae reoponded to th" won derf ultima of htm, of cnume. but alio did In an odd sort of way. with Arthur looming alwaja in th bm k of her mind. I "or ono thing he, the man acroMi tho table, looked like tho direct lineal descendant of cabal leros and hidalgos, Ilia dark eyca were full of a melancholy nmiiKenieut. lie had dark, smooth hair and a small sophixtlcHted dark muxtiicli. In another day he would ha worn ruffles nt the wrist snd carried a rapier. As It was, hi tiothra were good, not too new, and ho wore a black opal In a diirk knitted tic. His hsnda. holding th book, which Amelle made out by indirect Indy-liko glances to be a play of Henii vente's, w ere slim and brow n and lncoi uotisly airong looking. They gave her, thoie hands, merely In looking at them, a faint wnrnimt thrill, which site could not help but feel to be illicit. In the mid.-t of her musings lie looked at ber and spoke, in a voice that could have be longed to no other man that Amelle had ever met. Of course, he only suid. "May I have the sugar?" (His grapefruit had arrived.) Hut that voice! It was tragically beautiful. Full of whimsical Inflections and deep velvety under tones. The voice of Harlequin, rhyming the moon In an old garden, among foNglovea and roses, where fountains played but languidly and one time gods and goddesses stood for mally about, their marble limb gleaming pale ly agalnM the masked dark green of laurel and rhododendron. Amelie gave him the tsugar bowl, smiling faintlj. Not in the least beyond the degree prescribed by convention for ladles traveling alone. "It'a a delightful morning," he assured her gravely. There was an undoubtedly humorous glint in the deep dark eyes. "A little warm, I think," said Amelle primly. "I like It warm," he said, as if that obviously affoeted tho thing. "But not too warm." aid Amelie. To herself she cried In scorn. "He'll think you're a hopeless prig. Do behave as if you'd talked to a man without an introduction be fore." As a matter of fact she never had, which glamored the whole affair and put her at a disadvantage. She shut her tepth, took a deep breath, wiped what Arthur would think of her out of consideration, and said sweetly: "Do tell mo what that is you're reading. I've been dying of curiously." He held it up for her to see with a sudden and charming smil1. "'Autumnal rinses,' by Jacinto Benavente. Do you kn'nv him?" "Xo it's good?" said Amelie eagerly. "It dibtinctly isn't. Although I hoped it would be. Are you ever violently disappointed in books you take on trains with you? It mat ters so much more, then you're so helpless. You can't trot an entire library about. I sup pose one should rely on Shakespeare and the Bible. But fancy either one of 'em In an ob servation car. It doesn't sejin decent somehow. What do you read?" She could see ho was really interested in what she read and answered with a touch of shyness: "I've got two this time." fshe was glad he couldn't possibly know she had never been two whole days on a train before in her narrow little life). "The Way of All Flesh and in case I shouldn't like that, 'The Book of a Hundred Houses'." "You must be going to build one," he of fered. His eyes, even in the lightest moments, had a glow and a warmth that startled. "I unless it's built already," said Amelie. She applied herself hurriedly to her break fast, which the waiter set down before her. After all, one didn't tell one's Intimate affairs to strangers. "May I have the sugar back again?" she inquired quaintly. "Which means," he interpreted, handing it, "that you consider we're getting on too fast for dining car acquaintances. Sorry! Shall we go back and begin at the weather? I'll try -to progress more slowly. Let me see books look safe enough, and yet they got us into per sonalities in no time." "I really like personalities, rather," said Amelie unexpectedly. "Which means you've reconsidered and are willing to take a chance on my being respect able " She lifted an eyebrow at him impertinently. "Oh, respectable no question of that but how safe are you?" "Not too safe to be Interesting, I hope." "A dark man and a blonde woman, you know," said Amelie daringly "nature's danger signals, so I've been told." "Then it must have been a blonde man or a dark woman that told you, he retorted pleas antly. He finished his breakfast and lingered, mak-, ing conversation, obviously attracted by her! Amelie deliberately dawdled over hers. They discovered a bookish tendency in common laughed at the same things. She said at last, rising: "Goodby you may go back to Benavente now." "Perhaps I shall see you later on in the ob servation car?" Did he sound assured. A frequent con queror? Amelie replied coolly: "Oh, I scarcely think so." He bowed, accepted the, rebuff with a dig nity so delightful Amelie felt herself absurd to have offered it. Nevertheless, she left him standing there and made her way back to the Pullman, where among her bags and wraps and maga zines she sat down determinedly to think of Arthur and the future. It was not so easy to think of Arthur. He seemed at first to wear a small, dark mustache, which was, of course, ridiculous. Amelie swept her mind clear of extraneous matter and said to herself over and over like a charm, "Riverside, June 15th, love'." In the midst of which, some one paused In her section, murmured a vague apology, and sat down in the other seat. It was the man of the dining car. ' Amelie flushed brilliantly. Alarm took her. Had her first and only adventure in unac credited romance resulted unfortunately? "Sorry." ho said, with an appeasing smile, "know it seems like a silly musical show or something. I nearly doubted my eyes when I came down the car Just now and saw you sit ting here. Have you the lower?" "Yes," said Amelie, a trifle coldly, "I have." He continued deprecatingly: "I am going as far as San Bernardino." "So am I," said Amelie. At which a tide of amusement rose In them both. "Riverside?" he suggested hopefully. Amelie nodded, trying to look grim. "And the Mission inn?" "I'll, this Is to sbsurd' si cried, "Ln t it?" h aiitx-d. "but I do think, In ilia Intcreais of propriety, we atmuld not tail racli other our namra and piodur letteu by way of credentials,, I'on'i jou?" , Amelie had really a d"lUiou laugh, alight i.nd silvery, with a shy sort of tatth, bhe told hint formally It th mldt of I'; ' "Mm la Amelie Lawrenc," "It'a utterly adorable," ha imumcnlt.1. "bounds Ilka ( roo's and moonlight," What s our?" h demanded, "Don Iteynard." "Aa In fK?" "Aa in a Kremh fr Heynard accent on tha lant syllable, I'm fuuv about that, Ahat do you think I sound lik7" "You sound like th loter In a medarn French comedy." Amelie told him quickly; "hut you look like a FpanlPh grander on t or twic removed." Keynsrd said with a softened pot In his voire, "My mother wa H.uiih. Her nam .i Meivedca t'astcllanoi." "How lovely!" a.ild Amclln softly. Mia added Willi a ahy aeon of suddn Intimacy: "Mines nam waa Amelu Manning brfora ah married my father,' "t lint la it now?" lie en d. "Amelia Manning Ijiwrtino Wollrrs," jM Amelie. "Oh!" said Don ' lie) mrd. " "I see." II looked so sympathetic that Amelie's underltp nearly quivered. "Are uu running away from a stepfather, by sny chance?" "I am going" Amello begun, Hhe slopped, and looked down at her two hands folded nicely together In her lap, Jt occurred to her sud denly, almotit violently, that to say to this fat dilating stranger that h was going out to meat Arthur uud be married to him would undoubt edly put a period to what was beginning to seem the most romantic of advenlurea. AImo. once married to Arthur, romantic ad vcut'iiTH would likely not come her way every i.ay In th wpek, If any day In any week. It was not, deliberately, as a last fling that she embarked upon the tiling but something like it. Her mental procewrB were su'-h ss to bring a flush to her smooth, soft cheek and Keep her long, dark lashes at halfmust. "What shHil we talk about?" ho Inquired suddenly, watching her. "that Is likely to get ua past tho preliminaries quickest and put ua heart to heart, so to speak. I know a lot' of thliiKS on which I'd like to compare preferences with you." "Begin at the beginning and tell me about you," commanded Amelle. "You'll like that and I can be thinking what to leave out about me." She had a faint, a very faint and rather provocative dimple In her left cheek. Don Rey nard observed It at once. "I'll tell you on thing," tie said earnestly, "and that is this: I never expected, when curs ing my luck at having to take this upper yester day, that you oh, well: How far back shall I begin? I was born of honest parents not so poor then as later, unhappily In a plarf in Louisiana of which you never heard in Bayou Lafourche My father had som monpy, from his father; won some mor In the Louisiana lottery, of cruel fame; lost everything In th same convenient way and shot himself through the head one fine morning In April when I was 5 years old." Amelie exclaimed sharply a small, shaken sound. For all his light tone and the slightly bitter mockery of his words thero was, for th moment, a heavy shadow in her companion's eyes "My story at least begins with a. shock technically, I believe, that's said to b good. It's whfn I think of my mother it seems inde cently unfair. Sho wasn't made for hard times. She didn't know how to be poor. Nor unhappy. She was lovely and frail and helpless. She died a year after my father, and an aunt in Chicago took me. I must have been a handful. But she had three boys of her own who licked m into shape, gratuitously. I went to school with them, went to college, got out, floundered around a bit, tried business, tried law to please my aunt tried architecture, to please myBelf and found myself. "Oh, you are an architect!" said AmeU happily- "Of sorts," he admitted, smiling into her eager eyes. "Why? Do you like the tribe? Or is it just because you are going to build a house unless it's built already?" "I like houses," she explained, smiling back at him. "And I've been working In a shop where we did a bit of decorating, you know! Oh, not a big shop. But we used to help people about framing and draperies and things." "I like girls who worlc at something," said Don Reynard, approvingly. "I was afraid you might be an idle rich." "Ma!" said Amelie scornfully. "Do I look It?" "Now that," he returned gravely, "is some thing we won't go Into, becaus if I tell you so early as this, what I think you look like, I shall be snubbed and put out of this section." "I'm glad you realize it." "So, Instead, suppose you tell me about you," he finished gravely. "And then we can proced to likes and dislikes, favorite flowers, pet aver sions and such. Begin at the beginning. When I was a little girl by the way you aren't much more than that now, are you?" 1 "When I was a little girl," copied Amelle, Ignoring frivolities. She told him a great deal about herself In th next half-hour, all of it quite truthful, but none of It involving Arthur. And when she had done with her feminine Oryssey, they went on as he had suggested, likes to dislikes, of which it appeared almost at once they had an extraordinary number in common. Amelie had never known a man with whom she felt herself so Instantly and utterly at home in the most beautiful sense of the word. She began to feel and so, apparently, did he, almost at once, as if they had known each other forever. "Simpatlca that's what you are, most of till!" he told her just before they went out to luncheon together. "Sympathetic?" inquired Amelie, frankly pleased. Don Reynard looked at her for a moment, smiling his dark, amused smile before he an swered: "Not Just that, exactly. Sympathetic, of course, congenial all that sort of thing. But It implies as well let me see! Someone you you could love, if you see what I mean. That's really the sense of It." , Amelie saw. It was what in a less definite phrasing she had been working out to herself about him. A trifle early to have arrived at it, on either side. They lunched together. Tart of that after noon he took himself off to the smoker while Amelia tried to sleep and tiresomely couldn't; but part they sat and talked as in the morning, of a thousand suddenly Important nothings, after which they dined together, and for two v moonlit dusty hours watched thin silver rails spinning out into the flying shadows behind the train. A folding chair on the rear platform of an observation car is not a cushiony seat, but Amelle could not remember afterward any dee discomfort. She went to sleep with the sound of a slow caressing drawl in her ears meaning to dream of Arthur. On the following day she meant to tell about Arthur. But she didn't. For the following oay, advancing out of farms Into prairies and out of prairies into long gray stretches of sage brush with painted rocks smudg ing the sky line, advanced also with an incredible swiftness and a breathless charm in to a multitude of acutely personal discoveries as that they both liked quantities of sugar in coffee (after all it ha.d begun with the augar bowl significant), as that neither ot them could bear "Main Street" (with all the rest of th world devouring it), as that he adored beauti ful hands, and Amelie's were the Innocent pride of her life. As that he as that she as that they! ll'a never a new story, unless you happen to b starring in it. Don Reynard had laughed at a hundraa other men for the same sort of thing into ' (Continued oa tf t B.)