7T" ' . rfl . C ' -iBlv.(. i v. ' ,: fl .... . .." A"?, V' 'wi nctty ''''j' 1 W , " , f r '",( f, TffiROlD MACGRATH Author of HEARTS AND nk$V& Che "AN OR THE BOX c&. IllvistrOLliorvs by AI.G.Kettmr- . COPYRIGHT 1911 Iy BOBBS - MERRILL COMPANY t I if 'i' jwfiftr hi1 ill. wj&a&n!i. mhrrmwTriX-KKtfjiv,js. rv.iryjjH-w:.-i WMMWimmS mmmxmmmm , fmmffMmrM ST ' lS ( -"1 ..- .- "8h8 Shall Never Marry 8YN0PSIS. OeorKe I'orclval AlKcrnon JonoR,' vlcn xirrwldnnt of tho Metropolitan Oriental ItiiK company of New Turk, thtrstliu; for ronmiieo, 1h In Cairo on u buidiiesft trip. Horace Hynnno at riven at tlw liotol lti Cniio Willi a carefully truurdrd bundle. Klynnno 110IU Jotiu.n tliu famous holy Ylil prrtcH ruK Which lio admits ImUtiK stolon fiotu ii pasha lit IluKdad. Joiiph tneeM Major Callahan nnd lntor l.i ttitrculuoccl to jrlnnn Clioriuoyo by a woman to whom tin had loaned ICO potiwlH nt Montu Carlo boioo inontliu previously, unit who turns ut to ho Jrortuuo'n mother. Jonos taken Wrii. ChcdHoyo nnd Fortune to a polo came. Fortune returns to Jones the money borrnwod by her inothor, Mra, Cheflnoyo appcnni to ba engaged In noma tnyiilcrloiiB ontcrprlHu unknown to tho daunhtor. Uyanuo IntercntH Jonon In tho tJeiltoil Homanco nnd Advouturo com tiiiny, a concern which for a prlco will orranKo any kind of nn advouturo to or dqr Mrs Clmdaoyo,. her brother, Major Cnllnhan, Wallace and It ya line, an tho United Ilomnnco and Adventuro company, lilan a risky enterprise. Involving Jones. CHAPTER VII. (Continued.) "I accopt It rtB Bitch. I nm tired of liotty things. I repent, fnlluro la not possible. IIuvu I not thought it out, dotal! hy dotntl, mapped out each lino, anticipated dangers by eliminating MiomT" "All hut that ono danger of which wo know nothing. You'ro n great woman, lCulo. You liavo, as you say, mado nluoty-ulno dungors out of n fiundrod impossible. Lot us keep an eyo 'out for that hundredth. Our pho tographs havo yot to graco the rogues' Cnllory." "With ono oxcpptlon." Ryanno's laughtor wa,s sardonic. "Whoso?" shot tho major. "MIihj. A round nnd youthful phiz, fttlky young uuiBtacho. Hut rest eaey; thoro'n no UkanosB between that and tho original ono I wear now." "You novor told 1110 . . . " bo iCau Mrfl. Ohodsoyo. "There was nevor any need till now. TCIght yeara ago. Certnln powers that )o worked toward my escape. Hut I win novor to return. You will recol lect that I havo nlways remnlned thin uldo. Enough. What I did does not tuajlor. I will say this much: my tsruno was in bolng found out, Ono vouluro into New York and out to sen ngnln . thoy will not havo 11 chnnco. 1 doubt tf any could recall tho clrcum r.taucon of my motooric cntoor. You will ohservo that I nm Uoyed for uny thl lift Let us got to work, It doovn't nuttier, nnyhow." "You did not ..." Mrs. died coyo hesitated. Illnqd?" roadlng her thought. "No. aioeoiulii: my haiulH are kuIUIcbk, at loust thoy woro till this Ilngdnd af fnlr; nnd I nm not suro there. I was a tnifilod clerk; I gambled; 1 took inouoy that did not belong to mo. And iioio I nm, room number 208." "It ilurum't mator. Conio, Katoj loii't Blaro at Hoddy ua If he woro a now hpoulos." The major nmoothod (ho eitdu of his luoustucho. "This con ifuHHlon will bo good forhla bouI." "Yoa, Olocomla; I feel oaslor now. if am heart and soul In this affair. 1 mood excltemont, too. Lord, yos. Whou I wont to Ungdnd, I had no Idea flint I aliould over lay'eyon upon that rug. Hut I did. And thoro'o tho emoraldH, too, major." Tha major rubbed his hands pleas --!-- MiXt4F t-tff. H-Wi fWr-l- a Man of Your Stamp." urably. "Yob, yea; tho emeralda; I had not forgotten them. One hundred lovely green stones, worth not a penny undor thirty thousand. A lino collec tion. Hut another idea has taken pos session of this teeming brain of mine. Havo you noticed how this fellow Jonoa hovers about Fortune? He's worth a million, If ho's worth a cent. I am sure, In pure gratitude, sho would hco to It that her loved ones Woie well tuken care of lu their old age." "I um going to mnrry Fortuno niy Bolf," said Hyanno blandly. "You?" Tho major wns nonplussed. Wnllaco shuffled his foot unenslly. This blond companion of his was al ways showing klnka In his unturo, klnka that ravoly, ever straightened nut. "Yos. And why not? What Is Bho to either you or hor mother? Noth ing. Affection you have nevor given her, being unablo It surprises you; hut, novortholo8s, I lovo her, nnd I nm going to mnrry hor." "Ilenlly?" said Mrs. Chedsoyo. "Even fo." "You are a fool, Horaco!" with ris ing fury. So then, tho child had not Jibed her in u moment of nlnuo? ''Men in lovo generally are fools. 1'vo never spoken boforo, bocauso you novor absolutely needed mo till now. Tliero's my cards, put." Mrs. Chcdsoyo'B fury deepened, but not visibly. "You aro welcomo to hor, If she will havo you." "Yes," supplemented tho major; "If ahe will havo you, my friend, tnko her, and our bonedlctlons," Hyanno's shoutdors stirred sugges tively. "Of course, I expect to havo tho final iord to say on tho subject. Sho Is niy'tlaughtor," said Mrs. Chedsoyo. "A trilling accident, my dear Glo condn," smiled Hynnno! "merely that.'' "Just a llttlo oil, Just a llttlo oil," the major pleaded auxloualy. "Dash It all, this la no time for n row of this silly order. Hut It's always tho way," Inltably. "A big onterprlso, domnnd lng a slnglo purpose, and a trlfto llko this to tipsot It all!" "I nm ready for business at any mo ment." "And you, Kate?" "We'll any no more about It till tho uffnlr la over. After that ..." "Those who llvo will see, eh?" Hynnno rolled a cigarette. "To buslnoss, then. In tho first pluce, Mr. Jones must not roach the Ludwlg." "Ho will not." Hyanno apoko with quiet nsaurnnce. "Ho will not even see that bout," added Wnllaco, glad to hear tho sound of his voice again. "Oood. Hut, mind, ho lough work." "Lonvo It all to mo," said Hyanno. "Tho Unltod Hnmnnco nnd Advouturo Company will glvo him an advouturo on approval, ns It wore." "To you, then. Tho roport from New York vends oncoumglngly. Our friends thoro aro busy. Thoy aro merely waiting for us. From now on Perclvnl Algernon must recolvo no more mull, tolegrams or cables." "I'll tako euro of that also." Hyanno looked at Mrs ChcdBoyo musingly. will wire him. possibly tomorrow." "In that event, ho will rocclvo a cable signifying that tho transaction Is perfectly correct." "Ho may also Inquire ns to what to do with the valuables In the wall safe." "Ho will be Instructed to touch nothing, as the people who will occupy tho house nro old friends." Hynnno smoked calmly. "Wnllaco, you will return to New York nt once." "I thought I was wanted heie?" "No longer." "All right; I'm off. I'll sail on the Prince Ludwlg, c-tnteroom US. I'll havo my Joke by tho way. "You will do nothjng o tho kind. You will havo a Btaloroom by your self," said Mrs. Chcdioyo crisply. "And no wine, nor cards. If jou fall, I'll break you ..." "As wo would n churchwarden's pipe, Wnllaco, my Ind." Hjanno grip ped his companion by the shoulder, and there wiut enough prcfasuio in the grip to cause tho recipient to wince. "Well, well; I'll lny 11 straight course." Wallace slid his shoulder from under Ryanno's hnnd. "To you, then, lloddy, the business of quarantining our fiicnd Perclvnl. Don't hurt him; simply detain him. You must realize tho lmportnnco of this. Hnvo you your pinna?" "I'll porfect them lomoriow I shnll find a way, never fonr." "Does the rug como in nnywherc?" The major was curious. It sometimes seemed to him that Hyanno did not al ways lay hla cards face up upon the table. "It will play Its patt. Besides, 1 am rather inclined to the lden of tak ing It back. It may bo tho old wish- Ing-carpet. In thnt case. It will como lu handy. Who knowB?" "How much la it worth?" "Ah, major, Porclval hlmsdlf could not say exactly. Ho gavo mo a thous and pounds for It." "A thousand pounds!" murmured Wallace. The major struck his hands lightly together. Whether In npplnuso or wonder ho alono know. "And it was worth every shilling of It, too. I'll tell you tho Btory somo day. Thoro aro a dozen ways of sup pressing Perclvnl, but I must havo something appealing to my artistic side." "You hnvo never told us vour real name, Horace," Mrs. Chodaoyo bent toward him. Ho laughed. "I must havo some thing to confess to you In tho future, dear Olocondn." "Well, tho mooting adjourna, sine die." "What aro you going to do with Fortune?" demnnded Hyanne. "Send hor back to Mentono." "What tho deuco did you bring her hero for, knowing what was in tho wind?" "Sho expressed a. desire to seo Cairo again," answered Mrs. Ched soyo. "Wo novor dony hor anything." Tho mnjor roae and yawned suggestively. In tho corridor, Ryanne whlspored softly: "Why not, Gloconda " "Sho- shall novor mnrry a man of your stamp," coldly. "Charming mothor! How tendorly you havo ohorlshod her!" "Horaco," calmly enough, "Is It wlso to anger" mo?" "It may not be wlso, but I havo novor seen you lu a rage. You would bo magnificent." "Cease this foolery," patiently. "I nm In no mood for it tonight. As an assoclato In this equivocal business, you do very woll; you aio necessary. Hut do not presume too much upon that. For nil tftnt I mny not hnvo been what a mothor should bo, I still hnvo aomo solf-respoct. So long a I havo any power ovor hor, Fortuno shnll never marry a man so far down in tho social scale as yoursolf." "Social scuiov uiocouun, now jou hurt mo!" mockingly. "I slvould real ly llko to know what your Idea of that lminclblo barrier Is. Is It be cause my face is in tho rogues' gal lory? Surely, you would not bo ciuoll" "Sho la fnr above us all, my friend," continuing unruffled. "Sometimes I Htund In nbsoluto nwo of hor." "A mnrvol! If my recollection is not nt fault, many a man llns entered tho Villa Fanny, with a view to court ship, men bosldo whom I am as Roland to tho lowest Snraccu. You never objected to thorn." "They had money nnd position." "Mnglc talisman! And If I had monoy and position?" "My objectlona would bo no loss strong." "Your code puzzles mo. You would welcomo na a son-in-law a man who stolo openly tho widow'a mlto, whllo I, who harass none, but tho predatory rich, must dwell In tho outlnnd? Rnuk injustico!" "His real rBtato agent "You couldn't take caro of her." "Yes, I could. With but llttlo effort I could make theso two hands as hon est as tho dny is long." "I have my doubts," nmlllng a little. "Suppose, for tho sake of an argu ment, suppose Fottune accepted mo?" Mrs. Chedsoye's good humor returned.- She know her daughter toler nhly well; the child nnd a horror of men "Poor Horace! Do you build upon that?" "Less, perhaps,- than upon my own bright Invention. My suit, then to be brief. Is rejected?" "Kniphatlcally. I have spoken." "Oh, well; tho fomlnlno prerogative shall be mine, tho Inst word. Good night; dorm! bene!" Ho bowed grandly and tinned toward his own room. He po&sesned that kind of mockery which was the despair of thoso at whom It wns directed. They never know whether his mood was one of hnnnless fun or of deadly Intent. And rather than mistake the one quality for the other, they generally pretend ed to Ignore. Mrs. Chedsoje, who hnd a similar talent, was ono of tho few who felt along tho wall as one does In tho dark, instinctively. To night she recognl.ed that there was no harmless fun but a real desporate ness behind the mask; and she had hold In her temper with a firm hand. This was not tho hour for a clash. Sho shivered a llttlo; and for tho llrst tlmo In the six or aoven years ahe had known him, alio faced a fear of him. Hla great strength, hla reckless cour age, his subtle way of mastering men by appearing to be raastored by them, held her In tho thrall of a peculiar fascination which, in quiet periods, sho looked upon as something deeper. Marriage was not to her an ideal state, nor was there nny man, Hlng or .dead, who had appealed to the physical sido of hor. But he was in the ono sex what sho waa In tho other; and while sho herself would nevor have married him, sho raged Inwardly at the possi bility of his wanting another woman. To her the social fabrjc which holds humanity together was merely a con venience; tho moral significance touched neither her heart nor hor mind. In her tho primordial craving for cnao, for material comforts, pret ty trlnketa and gowns was strongest developed. It wns as if this sense had been handed down to her, untouched by contact with progression, from the remote ages, that tlmo between tho fall of Roman civilization and where modern civilization began. In short a beautiful barbarian, whoso intellect alono had advanced. Fortuno was asleep. The mothor went over to tho bed and gently shook tho slim, round arm which lay upon tho coverlet. Tho child's nature lay rovcaled as Bho opened her eyes and smiled. It did not matter that the smile Instantly changed to a frowning Inquiry. Tho mother spoko truly when she said that there were times when she stood In awo of this, her flesh and blood. "My child, I wish to ask you a ques tion, nnd for your own good answer truthfully. Do you lovo Horace?" Fortuno sat up and rubbed her oyeB. "No." Had her wits been less scattered sho might havo paltered. Tho syllable had a finality to It that reassured tho mother moro than a thousand protestations would hav'e dono. "Good night," sho said. Fortuno lay down ngain and drow tho coverlet up to her chin. With hor eyes shut Bho watted, but in vain. Her mother disrobed and sought hor own bed. Ryanno was Intensely dissatisfied with himself. For once his desperate mood had carried him too far. He had made too many confessions, hnd antagonized a woman who wua every bit as clever and Ingenious as him Bolf. The entorprlso toward which they wou moving held him simply be cause it wns an exploit that enticed wholly his twlated outlook upon life. Thoro was a forbidding humor in tho whole affair, too, which ho alono saw. Tho po&slblo rewards were to him of secondurj consideration. It whb tho fun of tho thing. It wna tho fun of tho thing that had put him squarely upon tho wide, short road to perdi tion, which had made him first a spendthrift, then u thief. Tito fun of tho thing; sinister plnaso! A thous and times had bo longed to go back, for ho wasn't all hnd; but door after door nnu shut uouimt nun; ami now tho slnglo purpose wns to get to tho end of tho road by tho shortest route. Ho did not docolvo himself. Ills desporato mood was tho rosult of an Infernal rngo against himself, a rago against the weaknosti of his heait. Fortuno Cuodsoyt,. Why had sho not crosced his path nt that tlmo when he might hnvo been saved? And yot, would sho havo saved him? God nlono know. Ho heard Jones stirring In his room next door. Presently nil became still. The Porter Had No Suspicion That To sleep like that! Ho shrugged, throw off his coat, swept tho cover from tho Btand, found a pack of cards, and played solitaire till the first pallor of dawn announced tho new day. Reclining snugly agalnBt tho para pot, wrapped In his tattered arbiyeth, or cloak, hla head pillowed upon his loan arm, motionless with that pre tended sleep 0 tho wati hor. Mahomed-El-Gebel kept his vigil. Miles upon miles he had come, across tnree bleak, cold, blinding deserts, on camels, In trains, on camels again, night and day, day and night, across tho soundless, yollow plains. Allah was good to tho true believer. The night was chill, but certain fires warmed his blood. All day long ho had followed the uccursed, lying giaour, but never onco had ho wandered Into tho native quartera of tho city. Patience! What was a day, a week, a year? Grains of sand. Ho could wait. Inshalla! CHAPTER VIII. The Purloined Cable. George, having made his bargain with consclenco relative to tho Yhlor des rug, slopt tho sleep of tho untrou bled, of tho Just, of the man who had nothing In pnrtlcular to got up for. In fact, after having drunk his breakfast cocoa arid eaten his butterod toast, ho evinced his satisfaction by turning his face away from tho attracting morn ing light and passing off into sleep ngain. And theroby hangs this tale. So much depended upon his getting his mall as it came in that morning, that Fato herself must have resisted sturdily tho desire to shake him by tho shoulder. Perhaps sho would havo done so hut for tho serenity of his poso and tho lnfnnttlo smile thnt lin gered for a whllo round his llpa. Fate, as with most of us, has her sentiment al -lapses. Tho man next door, having no con science to speak of (Indeed, ho had de railed her whllo passing his twenti eth meridian!) was up betimes. He had turned In at four; at six ho was strolling about tho deserted lounging room, watching the entrances. It Is Inconceivable how easily mull may be purloined In a largo hotel, Thcro are as many wajs as points to tho wind. Rynnuc choso the simplest. Ho waited for tho mall-bag to be emptied upon the head-potter's counter. Nonchal antly, but deftly, while tho porter looked on, the adventurer ran through tho bulk. He found threo letters and a cnble, tho latter having been re ceived by Georgo's bankers the day before and mailed directly to tho lio tol. Tho porter had no suspicion that a bold theft was being committed un der his very eyes. Moreover, circum stances prevented his ever learning of It. Ryanne stuffed the spoils Into a pocket. "If any ono asks for mo," he said, "say that I shall bo at my baukor's, tho Anglo-Egyptian bank, at 10 o'clock. "Yes, sir," replied the porter, as he began to sort tho rost of tho mull, not forgetting to peruse the postals. Ryanno wont out Into tho street, walking rapidly Into town. Mahomed-Kl-Gebcl shook the folds of 111 clonk and followod. Tho adventurer did not slacken his gait till ho reached Shop- I tumult! hotel ITpon tho stops ho paused Some "Migllsh troops were a Bold Theft Was Being Committed. marching past, on the way to the rail way station; tho usual number of na tives were patrolling tho sidewalks, dangling strings of Imitation scarabs; a caravan of pack-camels, laden with cotton, shuffled by haughtily; a blind beggar sat on the curb in front, munching a piece of sugar cane. , Ryanne, assured that no ono ho knew was about, proceeded into tho wiltlng rooni, wholly deserted at this early hour. He sat down at a desk and opened tho cable. It contained exactly what ho expected. It was a call for ad vice In regard to tho rental of Mr. Georgo P. A. Jones' mansion In New York and tho temporary disposing of the loose valuables. Ryanno read It over a dozen times, with puckered brow, and finally balled It florcely In his fist. Fool! Ho could not, nt that moment, remember tho most essen tial point In the game, tho name and ofllco of tho agent to whom ho must this very morning send reply. Hur riedly ho fished out tho letters; ono cbanco in a thousand. Ho swore, but In relief. In the corner of ono of tho letters he saw that for somo unknown reason tho gods were still with him, Reynolds and Reynolds, estates, Broad street; ho remembered. Ho wroto out a reply on n pleco of hotel paper, In tending to copy it oft at the cable office. This reply covered tho ground convincingly. "Renting for two months. Old friends. Leavo things ns they are. P. A." Tho Initials wore a llttlo stroke. From somo sourco Ryanne has picked up tho fact that Jones' business correspondence was conducted over those two initials. He tore up tho cable Into smnll illegi ble squares and dropped somo into one bnskot and sdme into another. Next, he readdressed' Georgo'.s mall to Leip zig; another stroke, meaning a delay of two or threo months; from the head olllco of his banker's there to Paris, Paris to Naples, Naples to New York. That Ryanno did not open these letters was in nowise duo to moral suasion; whatever thoy con tained could be of no vital Importance to him. "Now, Hoiace, we shall bend the crook of our elbow in tho bar-room. Tho teactlon warrants a stimulant." An hour luter (ho whole affair waa nicely off his hands. Tho cablo had cost him threo sovereigns. But what was that? Nlente, rien; nothing, a mere bagatelle. For tho first tlmo In weeks n benso of security Invaded his being. It was by now 9 o'clock: and Per clvnl Algornon still reposed upon his bed ot enso. Let him sleep. Many days weie to pass ore ho would again know the comfort of linen sheets, tho luxury ot down under his ear. (TO lin CONTINUED ) Long Record as Public Singer. What is probably tho world's record as a public singer Is held by MrB. George V. Johnson, who for moro than 62 yenr as ben soloist In tho Preaby torian churth. Sho has traveled a distance of mora than -10,000 miles In meroly going to and. from 'her choir rehearsals and church sorvicea. whllo the actual tlmo alio lies spent In h choir seat would amount to tho oqul alont of ono year and a half, piko (N Y) Ga70tte. 1 1