THE DELUGE By DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIRS, Author of “THECGSft fc (CQty&tSffT l'90S by &>• BQBB3-/2EP&ZS. CO/Z2£/Vyz> CHAPTER XXII.—Continued. "You scoundrel!” she hissed, her whole body shaking and her care fully-cultivated appearance of the gra cious evening of youth swallowed up in a black cyclone of hate. “You gut ter-plant! God will punish you for the shame you have brought upon us!” I opened the door and bowed, with out a word, without even the desire to return insult for insult—had not Anita evidently again and finally re jected them and chosen me? As they passed into the private hall I rang for Sanders to come and let them out. When I turned back into the drawing-room, Anita was seated, was reading a book. I waited until I saw she was not going to speak. Then I said: “What time will you have dinner?” But my face must have been .expressing some of th^ joy anl gratitude that filled me. “She has chosen!” I was saying to myself over and over. "Whenever you usually have it," she replied, without looking up. “At seven o’clock, then. You had better tell Sanders.” I rang for him and went iijto my little smoking-room. She had resisted her parents’ final appeal to her to re turn to them. She had cast in her lot with me. “The rest can be left to time,” said I to myself. And, review ing all that had happened. I let a wild hope send tenacious roots deep into me. How often ignorance is a bless ing; how often knowledge would make the step falter and the heart quail! XXIII. BLACKLOCK ATTENDS FAMILY PRAYERS. During dinner I bore the whole burden of conversation—though bur den I did not find it. Like most close mouthed men, I am extremely talk ative. Silence sets people to won dering and prying; he hides his se crets best who hides them at the bot tom of a river of words. If my spir its are high, I often talk aloud to my self when there is na one convenient. And how could my spirits be anything but high, with her sitting there op posite me, mine, mine for better or for worse, through good and evil re port—my wife! She was only formally responsive, reluctant and brief in answers, vol unteering nothing. The servants waiting on us no doubt laid her man ner to shyness; I understood it, or thought I did—but I was not troubled. It is as natural for me to hope as to breathe; and with my knowledge of character, how could I take*seriously the moods and impulses of one whom I regarded as a child-like girl, trained to false pride and false ideals? “She has chosen to stay with me,” said I to myself. “Actions count, not words or manner. A few days or weeks, and she will be herself, and mine.” And I went gaily on with my efforts to interest her, to make her smile and forget the role she had commanded herself to play. Nor was I wholly unsuccessful. Again and again I thought I saw a gleam of in terest in her eyes or the beginnings of a smile about that sweet mouth of hers. I was careful not to overdo my part. As soon as we finished dessert I said: “You loathe cigar smoke, so I’ll hide myself in my den. Sanders will bring you the cigarettes.” I had my self telephoned for a supply of her kind early in the day. She made a polite protest for the benefit of the servants; but I was firm, and left her free to think things over alone in the drawing-room— “your sitting-room,” I called it. I had not finished a small cigar when there came a timid knock at my door. I threw away the cigar and opened. “I thought it was you,” said I. “I'm familiar with the knocks of all the others. And this was new—like a summer wind tapping with a flower for admission at a closed window.” And I laughed with a little raillery, and she smiled, colored, tried to seem cold and hostile again. “Shall I go with you to your sit ting-room?" I went on. "Perhaps the cigar smoke here—” “No, no,” she interrupted; “I don’t really mind cigars—and the windows are wide open. Besides, I came for only a moment—just to say—” As she cast about for words to carry her on, I drew up a chair for her. She looked at it uncertainly, seated herself. “When mamma was here— this afternoon,” she went on, "she was urging me to—to do what she wished. And after she had used sev eral arguments, she said something 1 I ve been thinking it over, and it seemed I ought in fairness to tell you.” 9 I waited. “She said: ’In a few days more he’ —that meant you—‘he will be ruined. He imagines the worst is over for him, when in fact they’ve only be gun.’ “ “They! I repeated. “Who are ‘they’? The Lang