A .'... 'x$6m$tos kLmmmm tr ,. i li'i..: ; i ".' " w . tf -. . T iiiiiivi 1 :-.-. ,fV-il,,!tir.:" . if!: "J;. ' "'V .fiy; VJiV r- ' '. , " , , "V" . fW1 r ' !J0 j 1 JT' I Jilt' Si J- m . f'r W- 111 ' flf i- , I Hill N3& BJPPV: ""1 Aiir ''itoSW IHn'.l wasaii;,.iil.i,.. Javij ,fl UvtHVJlnlj- "-v. jft)' rinimiwin ' ' -a S i h U i. . l! I ' I! ) It! if g2sS3ci J&& CHAPTER I. clean boy llko this ono had not boon eont to her In her youth. You see, tho worldly-wlso womnn knows that It is Invariably tho layflguro and not Prince Charming that a woman mnr rloB, and that matrimony Is blind man's buft In grown-up". Many of ub lay tho blanio upon our parents. We shift tho burden of won dering why wo have this fault and lack that grnco to tho shoulders of our Immcdlato forbears. We go to the office each morning denying that wo have any responsibility; wo lot the boss do tho worrying. Hut George never went prospecting In hlB bouI for any such drosa philosophy. Ho waH grateful for having had so beautiful ii mother; proud of having had bo honest a sire; and If either of them had endued him with false weights he did his best to even up tho balance. Tho mother had been as romantic What's In a Name? To possess two distinctly alien red corpuscles In one's blood, metaphor ically It not In fact, two characters or Individualities under ono epidermis, Is, In moBt cases, a peculiar disadvan tage. Ono hears of scoundrels and saints striving to consume ono an other In one body, nngels and har pies; but ofttlmcs, quite tho contrary to being a curse, these two warring temperaments becomo a man's ulti mate bleaslng: as In tho cas of Qcorgo P. A. Jones, of Mortimer & Jones, tho great metropolitan Oriental nig and carpet company, all of which has a dignified, sonorous sound. Georgo was divided within himself. This ho would not havo confessed oven Into tho trusted If battered car ot tho Egyptian Sphynx. There was, as any heroine out of Mrs. nadcllff s ky TiAROLD MACGRATH AvtKor of HEARTS AND .MASKS Uw MAN ON THE BOX etc;. Illvisfraiioix by M.G.Kettte5:f- COPYRIGHT lgil by BOBBS - MERRILL COMPANY however, no demon-angel sparring for points In George's soul. Tho difficulty might bo Bet forth In this manner: On ono sldo Btood Inherent common sonso; on tho other, a boundless, ro oeato Imagination which was like wise Inherent a kind of nulxoto Imag ination of Biiltablo modern pattern. This niter ego terrified him whenever it raised Its strnngcly beautiful head and shouldered aside his guardian angol (for that'B what common sonao (s, arguo to what end you will) and pleaded In that lumlnouB rhetoric un der tho spoil of which our old friend Hancho often fell asleep. P. A., ns they called him behind tho counters, was but twonty-clght, and If ho was vice-president In his Into fa ther's shoes ho didn't wabble round in them to any great extent. In a crowd ho wns not noticeable; ho didn't stand head and shoulders abovo his fellow-men, nor would ho have been mistaken by near-sighted per sons, tho myopes, for tho Vntlcan's Apollo In tho flesh. Ho was of me dium height, beardless, slender, but tough and wiry and enduring. You may boo his prototype on tho streets a dozen times a day, and you may also pass him without turning round for a second view. Young men like P. A. must bo Intimately known to ho admired; you did not throw your arm across IiIb neck, flrst-off. His lialr was brown and 'closely clipped about a head that would havo gained tho attention ot tho phrenologist, If not that of tho cannnl pusser-by. His bumps, In tho phruscology of that nclonco, wero good ones. For tho rest, novels, whllo tho father had owned to as much romance as ono generally finds In a thorough business man, which Is practically nono at all. Tho very name Itself 1b a bulwark agnlnst tho Intrusions of romance. Ono can not lift tho Imagination to the pros pect of picturing a Jones In rufllcs and hlghboots, pinking a varlot In the midriff. It smells of sugar-barrels and cotton-bales, of steamships and rail roads, of stolid routlno In tho office and of placid concern over tho daily nows under tho evening lamp. Mra. Jones, lovely, lettered yet not worldly, had dreamed ot her boy, bayed and decorated, marrying tho moBt distinguished woman In all Eu ropo, whoever she might be. Mr. Jones had had no dreams at all, and had put the boy to work In tho Bhlp ping department a little whllo after tho college threshold had been crossed, outward bound. The mother, while Bweet and gentlo, had a will, Iron un der velvet, and when sho held out for Porclval Algernon and a decent knowl edge ot modern languages, tho old man agreed If, on tho other hand, the boy's first nnmo should bo Georgo and that ho should learn tho business from tho cellar up. There wero sev eral tilts over tho matter, but at length a truce wiib dclr-d. It wan ugreed that tho boy himself ought( to have a word to spy upon a subject which eoncornd him more vitally than any ono else. So, at tho ago of fifteen, when ho wan starting off for preparatory school, ho was advised to choose for himself. Ilo wau an obe dient son, adoring his mother and idol- mMMuM I III r 1 I -' - HI II I ' I, I . i Ink sgSjlSaSglfejj JSB Kits' 11 He Haunted the Romantic Quarter of the Globe; He Was Romantic. ,,ho observed tho world through a pair of kindly, Bhy, bluo eyoB. Young girls, myopic through igno Tanco or silliness, seeing nothing be yond what tho oyoB see, seldom gave ihlm a second inspection; for ho did not know how to make himself nt tractlvo, and vmB mortally afraid of tho opposlto, or opposing box. Ho could bullyrag a sheik out ot his cam els' saddlo-bogs, but petticoats and laco parasols and small Oxfords had -tho sumo effect upon him that tho prodding stick of n small boy has upon a retiring turtlo. But many a worldly-wlso woman, drawing out with -tact nnd kindness tho truly beautiful thoughts of this young man'B soul, adly domanded of fato why a sweet, lzlng his father. Ho wroto himself down ob Georgo I'erclval Algernon Jones, promised to bocomo a linguist and to learn tho rug business from tho collar up. On tho face of It, It looked like a big Job; It ull depended upon tho boy. Tho first day at school his misery began. Ho had signed himself ob Georgo P. .A. Jones, no small diplo macy fpr 4 lad; but tho, two Initials, stnndlng up llko dismantled pines l:i tho mldBt of uninteresting landecnpo, roused tho curioBlty of his school mates. Hoys are boys tho world over, and possess a finesse In cruelty that only Indians can match; nnd It did not tnko them long to unoarth tho fa tal secret. For throe years ho was Percy Algy, nnd not only tho boys laughed, but tho pretty girls snig gered. Many a tlmo ho had returned to his dormitory decorated (not In a'ceord with tho fond hopes of his mother) with a Bwollen ear, or a ruddy proboscis, or n green-brown eye. There was a limit, and when they stopped over that, why, ho pro ceeded to tho boat of his ability to solve tho difficulty with his lists. Georgo was no milksop; but Perclval Algernon would havo been ,tho Old Man of the Sea on broader shoulders than his. He dimly realized thnt had ho been named Georgo Henry William Jones his sun would have been many dlnmoters larger. There was a splen did quality of pluck under his appar ent timidity, and ho stuck doggedly to It. He never wroto homo and com plained. What was good enough for IiIh mother was good enough for him. It seemed Just nn ordinary matter of routlno for him to pick up French nnd Germnn verbs. He was far from being brilliant, but ho was sensitive nnd his memory wns sound. Since hlB mother's nmbltlon was to Bee him an accomplished linguist, ho applied himself to tho task as If everything In tho world depended upon It, Just ns ho knew that when the tlma came ho would npply himself as thoroughly to tho question of rugs and carpets. Under nil this filial loyalty ran the pure strain of golden romance, side by sldo wjth tho lesser metal of prac ticality. When ho begnn to read tho masters ho preferred their romances to their novels. Ho oven wroto poetry In secret, and when his mother discov ered tho fact alio cried over tho senti mental verses. The father llad to be told. Ho laughed and declared that tho boy would some day develop Into a good writer of advertisements. This quiet laughter, unburdened as It wns with ridicule, was enough to set George's muse a-wlnglng, and she ncv?r came bn"k. After leaving college ho was given a modest letter of credit and told to go whoro ho pleased for :i wholo yc,ar. George started out at once In quest of th"o Holy Grail, and there are more roads to that than thoro nro to Rome. Ono may be reasonably uro of get ting Into Rome, whereas the Holy Grail (diversified, variable, innumer able) 1b always tho exact sum of a bunch of hay hanging beforo old Dob bin's nose. NovertiieleBB, Georgo gal loped hlB fancies with loose rein. Ho haunted romance, burrowed and plowed for It; and never his spade clanged musically against tho hidden treasure, never n forlorn beauty in distress, not so much aB chapter ono of tho Golden Dook offered its daz zling first page. Georgo lost some con fidence. Two or threo times a woman looked into the young man's mind, and In hla gullelessnesB they effected sundry holes In his letter of credit, but left his soul Blngularly untouched. Tho red corpuscle, his father's gift, though It lay dormant, subconsciously erected barriers. Ilo was Innocent, but ho waB no fool. That ono yenr taught him tho lesson, rather cheaply, too. If there wns any romance In life, It enme uninvited, and If courted and sought was as quick on tho wing as that erst while poesy must. Tho year pnsBcd, and while ho hud not wholly given up the queBt, tho practical Georgo agreed with tho ro mantic Pcrclvnl to shelve It Indefi nitely. Ho returned to New York with thirty-two pounds sterling out of the original thousand, a fact that reju venated hla paternal parent by somo ten years. "Jane, thnt boy Is all right. Porcl val Algernon could not kill a boy llko thnt." "Do you mean to Infer that It over could?" Sometimes a qunlm wrinkled her conscience? Her mother's heart told her that her son ought not to bo shy and bashful, thnt It wns not in tho nature of his blood to suspect ridicule where there wns nono. Per haps sho had handicapped him with those names; but It won too late now to admit of this, and useless, since It would not havo remedied tho evil. Jones hemmed nnd hawed for a space. "No," ho answered; "but I wiib afraid lie might try to llvo up to It; nnd no Perclval Algernon who lived up to It could put his nose down to n Shah Abbas and tell how ninny knotu It hud to tho square Inch. I'll otnrt him In on the Job tomorrow." Whereupon the mother sat bnck dreamily. Now, where was tho girl worthy of her boy? Monumental ques tion, besotting every mother, from Evo down, Eve, whoso trials In this direc tion must havo been heartrending! Georgo left tho ccllnr in duo tlmo, and after that ho went up tho lnddor In boundfi, on his own merit, mind you, for hlB father novor stirred a hand to boost him. He took tho in terest In ruga hat turns a buyer Into a collector; It became a fascinating pleasure rather than a business. Ho bocame Invnluablo to tho house, and acquired somo fame as a Judgo und an appraiser. When tho chief-buyer retired Georgo was given tho position, J with an Itinerary that carried him half way round tho plnnet onco a year, to Greece, Turkey, Persia, Arabia, and India, tho lands of tho genii and tho bottles, of arabesques, of temples and tombs, of many-colored turbans nnd flowing robes nnd distracting tongues. Ho walked and alwayB in a kind of mental enchantment. Tho Biiave nnd elusive Oriental, with IiIb sharp practices, found his match in this pleasant young man, who know tho history of tho very wools nnd cottons and silks woven In a rug or enrpet. So Georgo pros pered, became known In strange places, by strange peoples; nnd saw romance, light of foot and eager of eye, pass and repass; learned that romance did not essentially mean fall ing in love or reaculng maidens from burning houses and wrecks; thnt, on tho contrary, true -romance was kalei doscopic, having more brilliant facets than a diamond; and that tho man who begins with nothing and ends with something Is more wonderful than any excursion recounted by Sin- bad or any tale by Scheherazade. But ho still hoped that tho iridescent god dess would some day touch his shoul der and lead him into that maze of romanco so peculiar to his own fancy. And then into this little world of business and pleasure came, death and death again, leaving him alone and with a twisted heart. Riches mattered little, and the sounding title of Vice-president still less. It was with a dlBtinct shock that ho realized the mother and tho father had been with him so long that he had forgot ten to mako other friends. From one thing to another ho turned in hope to soothe the smart, to heal tho wound; nnd nfter a Ime ho drifted, as all shy, intelligent and Imaginative men drift who are friendless, Into tho silent and intimate comrado.-ihlp of In animate things, such as jewels, Ivories, old meials, rare woodo and ancient embroideries, and perhaps more com forting' than all these, good books. The proper tale of how the afore said Iridescent goddess jostled (for It scarce may bo said that Bhe led) him Into a romanco lacking neither com edy nor tragedy, now begins with a trifling bit of retrospection. One of thoso women vho wero not good nnd who looked into the clear pool of the boy's mind saw Uie harmless longing there, and made note, hoping to find profit by her knowledge when tho per tinent day arrived. She was a woman so pleuslng, bo handsome, so adroit, that many a man, older and wiser than Georgo, found her mesh too strong for him. Her plan matured, suddenly and brilliantly, as projects of men and women of her class and caliber without variation do. Lato ono December nfternoon (to bo precise, 1909), George eat on the tca-voranda of tho Hotel Semlramls In Cairo. A book lay Idly upon his knees. It was ono of thoso yarns in which something was happening every other minute, ab adventures go, George hnd never had a real .one In nil hla twenty-eight years, and ho believed that fato had treated him rather shabbily. Ho didn't quite ap preciate her reserve. No matter how late ho wandered through tho mysteri ous bazaars, either here In Egypt or over yonder In India, nothing ever be fell more exciting than nn argument with a carriage-driver. Ho never cur ried small-arms, for ho would not havo known how to use them. The only deadly things in IiIb hands wero bass-rods and Icnnls-rncquets. No, nothing over happened to him; yet ho never met a mnn In a ship's smoke- room who nnun't run tno gamut 01 thrilling experiences. As Georgo wasn't a liar himself, ho believed all ho saw and most of what ho heard. Well, hero ho was, elght-and-twonty, a pocket full of money, n heart full of llfo, and as hopeless nn outlook, so far as romnnco anj) adventure were concerned, ns an old maid In a New England village. "Georgo, you old fool, what'fl the use?" ho thought. "What's tho use of a dcslro that never goes In a straight lino, but always round nnd round In a circle?" Ho thrust nBldo his grievance and surrendered to tho never-ending won der of tho Egyptian sunset; the Nile feluccas, riding upon perfect reflec tions; tho date-palms, black and mo tionless against tho translucent blue of tho sky; tho amethystine prisms of tho Pyramids, and the deepening gold of the desert's brim. Ho loved the Orient, always bo new, always so strange, yet ever so old and familiar. A carriago stopped In front, and his enzo nnturally shitted. There Is cease less attraction In speculating ubout new-comers In a hotel, what they are, what they do, where thoy como from, nnd where thoy are going. A ftno oldorly man of fifty got out. In tho Bquaro set of his shoulders, tho flow ing white mustache and imperial, there was a suggestion of militarism. Ho waB immediately followed by n young woman of twenty, certainly not over that ago. Georgo sighed wist fully. Ho envied thoso polo-players and gentleman-riders nnd bridge-experts who woro stopping at the hotel. It wouldn't be an hour after dinner beforo boiuo ono of them found out who sho was and Bpoke to her In that easy style which ho concluded must bo a gift rather than an accomplishment. You mustn't suppose for a minute that George wasn't well-born and well-bred, simply because his name was Jones. Many a Fltz-IIugh Maurice or Hugh Fltz-Maurlco might have been But, no matter. Ho knew Instinctively, then, what elegance was when ho saw It, and this girl was elegant, In dresB, In movement. He rather liked the pallor of her Bkln, which hinted that sho wnsn't ono of those athletic girls who bounced In and out of the dining-room, talking loudly and smoking cigarettes and playing bridge for six penny points. She was tall. He was sure that her eyes wero on tho level with his own. The grey veil that drooped from the rim of her simple Leghorn hat to the tip of her nose ob scured her eyes, so ho could not know that thoy wero largo and brown and Indefinably sad. They spoke not of a weariness of travel, but of a weari ness of tho world, more precisely, of the people who Inhabited It. Sho and her companion passed on Into tho hotel, nnd if George's eyes veered again toward tho desert over which the stealthy purples of night wero creeping, the impulse was me chanical; ho saw nothing. In truth, ho was desperately lonesome, nnd he knew, moreover, that ho had no busi ness to bo. Ho was young; ho could at a pinch tell a Joke ub well as the next man; and If he had never had what he called an adventure, ho had seen many strange and wonderful things and could describe them with that mental afterglow which still lin gers over the sunset of our first ex pressions In poetry. But there was always that hydra-headed monster, for ever getting about his feet, numbing his voice, paralyzing his hands, and never ho lopped off a head that an other did not Instantly grow In Its a dog; but ono can not carry a dog half way round tho world and back, at least not with comfort. What with all theflo new-'anglcd quarantine laws, duties, and fussy ships' officers who wouldn't let you keep tho animal In your state-room, traveling with a four footed friend was almost an Impossi bility. To bo sure, womon with poodles. . . . And then, there wna the bitter of ncld In the knowledgo that no ono e,ver came up to him and slapped him on tho Bhouldcr with a "Hel-lo, Goorglc, old sport; what's tho good word?" for tho simple fact that his shoulder was always bristling with spikes, born of the fear that some ono wns making fun of him. Perchance his mother's spirit, hov ering over him this evening, might havo been inclined to tears. For they do say that tho ghosts of tho dear ones nro thus employed when wo are near to committing somo folly, or to exploring somo forgotten chamber of Piuidora'a box, or worse still, when that lady Intends emptying tho whole contents down upon our unfortunato heads. If so be, they wero futilo tearB; Perclval Algernon hnd accom plished its deadly purpose. . Pandora? Well, then, for the bene fit of tho children. Sho was a lady who was an intimate friend of the mythological gods. They liked her ap pearance so well that they one day gave her a box, casket, chest, or what ever It was, to guard. By some mar velous method, known only ot gods, they had got together nil the trials and tribulations of mankind (nnd somo of the Joys) and locked them up In this casket. It was tho Golden Age, as you may surmise. You recall Evo and tho apple? Well, Pandora was a forecast of Eve; she couldn't keep her eyes oft tho latch, and at length her hands Fatal curiosity! Whirr! And everything has been at Blxes and at sevens "since that time. Pandora 1b eternally recurring, now here, now there; she la a blondo sometimes, and again she is a brunette; and you may take It from George and me that there is always something left In the casket. George closed tho book and consult ed his sailing-list. In a short time ho would leave for Port Gald, thence to Naples, ChrlstnuiB there, and homo In January Business hnd been ripping. ill J$M , i m 1 tr-' ' Thl Girl Elegant, In Drees, In Movement. place". Even the sword of Perseus could not havo saved him, since one has to get away from an object In order to cutt down. Had ho really over tried to over come this monster? Had ho not wait ed for tho propitious moment (which you and 1 know never comes) to throw oft this species from Hades? It 1b all very well, when you are old and dried up, to turn to Ivories and metals and precious stones; but when a fellow's youug! You can't shake hands with nn ivory ropllcu of tho Taj Mahal, nor exchange pleasantries with a Mandarin's ring, nor yet conlldo Joya nnd ills Into a casket of rare emer alds; Indeed, they do but emphasize one's' louellncss. If only he had had Ho would bo Jolly glad to get homo again, to renow his comradeship with his treasures. And, by Jovo! there was one man who shipped him on tho shoulder, and he was no less a person than tho genial president of tho firm, IiIb father's partner, nt present his own. If tho old chap had hnd a daugh ter now. . . . And hero one comes nt last to the bottom ot the sack. He had only one definite longing, a healthy human longing, tho only long ing worth whllo In nil this deep, wide, round old top; to lovo 11 woman and by her be loved. At exuetly half after six the gentle man with tho reversible cuffs arrived; and Georgo missed his boat. (TO DE CONTINUED.) J .