I 1MB... -- 1 J CTe i H n m - -r - Jl Cae j$rfk,rSba4' (r )tini t:i.) ! I ru.il i-.onie work of my own to koop me busy tint night, ho devoted no thought to France, llolladay an 1 her affairs, but they were recalled to mo with renewed force next morning. I "Did you (jet Miss Hollnday'a slg-j nature to that conveyance?" Mr. Grn-' ltn..t .lllfl IWtl in I. ill. I.I.. at,, m...... la. !.. ' iu.ii iuiiivv.il ii unit, inn mi iuv:l ill liiu courso of the morning. "No, sir," answered Mr. Itojrce, with just a trace of embarrassment. "I called at the house last night, but sho ' eut down word that she was too 111 to see me or to transact any business." "Nothing serious, 1 hope7" asked tho other quickly. "No, sir. I think not. Just u trnco of nervousness, probably." Hut when he called again at tho Iiouho that evening he received a sim ilar message, supplemented with the news Imparted by the butler, n servant of many years' standing In the family, that Miss llolladuy had suddenly de cided to leave the city and open her country place on Long Island. It was only the end of March, and so a full two months and more ahead of the ueasou. But she was feeling very HI, was not able to leave her room, Indeed, and believed the fresh air and quiet of the country would do more than luivthlnir else to restore her shattered nerves. So tho whole household, with tho exception of her maid, a cook, house girl and undcrbutler, were to leave the city next day In order to get the couutry house ready at once. "I don't wonder she needs a little toning up," remarked our chief sym pathetically. "She has gone through u nerve trying ordeal, especially for n girl reared as she has been. Two or three months of quiet will do her good. When does sho expect to leave?" "In about a week, I think. The tlmo hasn't been definitely set. It will de pend upon how the arrangements go forward. It won't be necessary, will It, to bollier her with any details of business? That conveyance, for In istauce" "Can wnlt till she gets back. No, we won't bother her at all." Hut it seemed that she had cither Im proved or changed her mind, for two days later a note, which her maid had -written tor her, came to Mr. Graham asking him to call upon her In tho course of the next twenty-four hours, as she wished to talk over some mat ters of business with him. It struck me as singular that she should ask for Mr. Graham, but our senior called a oub and started off at once without comment. An hour later the door open ed anil he entered the olllco with a most peculiar expression of counte nance. "Well, that beats me!" he exclaimed m ho dropped Into his chair. Our junior wheeled around toward him without speaking, but his anxiety was plain enough. "To think that a girl as level headed as Frances llolladay has always been tJiould suddenly develop such whhnsl iilltles. Yet I couldn't but admire her grasp of things. Here have 1 been thinking she didn't know nuythlng about her business and didn't care, but rfiv seems to have kept her eyes open." "Well?" asked Mr. Itoyce as tho oth . paused. "Well, she started out by reminding me that her property had been left to her absolutely, to do as sho pleased with, a point which I, of course, con ceded. She then went on to say that .she know of a number of bequests her father had intended to mllko before his death, and which he would have made- If he had not been cut oil' so suuueuiy; that the bequests were of such a na ture that he did not wish his name to appear In them, nnd that she was going to undertake to carry them out anony mously." "Well?" asked our Junior again. "Well," said Mr. Graham slowly, "she asked me to dispose at once of such of lior securities as I thought best In or der that 1 might place In her hands by tomorrow night $100,000 In cash-a cool hundred thousand!" CIIArTEIt VIII. A I IIUNDltED thousand dollars!" ejaculated Mr. Itoyce, nnd sat staring nt his chief. "A hundred thousand dollars 5 That's a good deal for a girl to give away In a-himp, but sho can afford It. Of courso we've nothing to do but car ry out her Instructions. I think both of ub enn guess what she Intends doing with the mouey." Tho other nodded. I believed that I could guess too. Tho money, ot: course, was intended for tho othor woman. Sho was not to suffer for her crime aft- A Mystery Of Two Continents BURTON E. STEVENSON Copyriiht, 1903, by Hary Hall nJ Comp&ny or all. Miss Holfaday HootniHl to mo In ",lI' dnngvr of becoming un ncces- sory niter uie inc.. "She seems really 111," continued our Hcnlor. "She looks thinner anil quite careworn. I commended her resolution to sock rest and (iiilut and change ot Hcene." "When does sho go, sir?" asked Mr. Itoyco In n subdued voice. "The dny after tomorrow, I think. She did not Hay definitely. In fnct, she oould talk very little. She's managed to catch com tuo grip, l Hupposo mm was very hoarse. It would have been cruelty to inako her talk, and I didn't try." He wheeled around to his desk and then suddenly back again. "By tho way," he said, "I nnw the new maid. I can't say I wholly ap prove of her." lie paused a minute, weighing his words. "She seoms careful and devoted," he went on at last, "but I don't like her eyes. They're too Intense. I caught her two or three times watching me strangely. I can't Imagine where MIkh llolladay picked her up, or why she should have picked her up at all. She's French, of course. She speaks with ft decided accent. About the money, I Hiipposo we'd better sell a block of U. P. bonds. They're the least produc- tlve of her securities." "Yes, I suppose so," agreed Mr. Itoyco, nnd tho chief called up n broker and gave the necessary orders. Then he turned to other work, and the dny passed without any further referenco to Miss llolladay or her affairs. The proceeds of tho sale were brought to the olllce early the next afternoon, a small packet neatly sealed nnd docketed 100 thousand dollar bills. Mr. Graham turned It over In his hand thoughtfully. "You'll take it to the house, of courso, John," he said to his partner. "Les ter 'd better go with you." So Mr. Itoyce placed the package In his pocket, n cab was summoned, and we were off. The trip was made with out Incident, and nt the end of half an hour we drew up before the llolla day mansion. It was one of the old style brown stone fronts which lined both Hides of the avenue twenty years ago. It was no longer In the ultra fashionable quarter, which had moved up toward Central nark, and shops of various kinds were beginning to encroach upon the neighborhood, but it had been Ill ram llolladay's home for forty years, and he had never been willing to part with it. At this moment all the blinds were down and the house had a de serted look. We mounted the steps to the door, which was opened at once to our ring by a woman whom I know instinctively to be the new maid, though she looked much less like a j maid than like mi elderly working wo man of the middle class. "We've brought tho money Miss Hoi- ' ladny asked Mr. Graham for yester day," said Mr. Itoyce. "I'm John Itoyce, his partner." And without an- . favoring the woman motioned us In. "Of courso we must hnve a receipt for It," he added. "I have It ready here, , and she need only attach her signa ture." "Miss llolladay Is too 111 to see you, ulr," said the maid, with careful enun ciation. "I will myself the paper take to her and get her signature." I Mr. Itoyce hesitated a moment In perplexity. As for me, I was ransack ing my memory. Where had I heard Unit voice before? Somewhere, I was certain a voice low, vibrant, re pressed, full of color. Then, with a start, I remembered. It was Miss llol laday's voice as she had risen to wel come our Junior that morning at tho coroner's court. 1 shook myself to gether, for that was nonsense. "I fear that won't do," said Mr. Itoyco at last. "Tho sum Is a consid erable one and must bo given to Miss llolladay by me personally In the pres ence of this witness." It was Uio maid's turn to hesitate. I Raw her lips tighten ominously. "Very well, sir," sho snld. "But I warn you she Is most nervous, und It has been forbidden her to talk." "She will not be called upon to talk," retorted Mr. Itoyco curtly, nnd with out answering the woman turned nnd led tho way up Uio stair and to her mistress' room. Miss nollnday was lying back In a great chair with a bandngo about her hood, and even In the half light I could see how chnnged she was. She Beemed much thinner and older and coughed occasionally In a way Uint frightened me. Not grief alone, I told myself, could have caused this breakdown; It was tho secret weighing upon her. My k compnnlon noted tho change, too, of con rev a greater change perhaps than my eyes could perceive and 1 haw how moved and nhockvil he was. "My dear MIbs llolladay," he began, but nhe stopped htm abruptly with n Utile Imperative motion of the hand. "Pray do not," she whispered hoarse ly. "Pray do not." He stopped nnd pulled himself to. got her. When he sp )ke again It was In quite a different tone. "I have brought tho money you asked for," and ho handed her the package. "Thnnk you," Hhe murmured. "Will you verify the amount?" "Oh, no; that Is not necessary." "1 have n receipt here," and he pro tluved It and his fountain pen. "Please sign It." Sho took the pen with trembling lin gers, laid the receipt upon her chair arm without reading and signed her name with a somewhat painful slow ness. Then she leaned back with a sigh of relief and burled her face In her hands. Mr. Itoyce placed the re ceipt In his pocketbook nnd stopped, hesitating, lint the maid had opened the door nnd was awaiting us. Her mistress made no sign; there was no excuse to linger. We turned and fol lowed the maid. "Miss llolladay seems very 111," snld Mr. Itoyco In n voice Bomewhat tremu- .'' 4F "J have brought the money lV'u mk Jar." lous as she paused before us In tho lower hall. "Yes, sir; ret" HI." Again tho voice! I took advantage .of the chance to look nt her Intently. Her hnlr was turning grny, certainly; her face was seamed with lines which only care and poverty could have graven there, and yet, beneath It all, I fancied I could detect a faded but living likeness to Hiram llolladay's dnughter. I looked ngaln-lt was faint, uncertnln-norhnns my nerves were overwrought nnd were deceiving me. For how could such a likeness possibly exist? "She haB n physician, of course?" nskisl my compaulon. "Oh, yes, sir." "He has advised rest and quiet?" "Yes, sir." "When do you leave for the coun try?" I "Tomorrow or the next dny after Unit. I think, sir." He turned to the door nnd Uien pans- ed, hesitating. He opened his lips to say something more his nnxlety was clamoring for utterance then ho changed his mind and stepped outsldo as she held the door open. "Good day," he snld, with stem re-' presslon. "I wish her n pleasant Jour ney." I The door closed after us, and wo went down the steps. "Jenklnson's tho family doctor," he said. "Let's drive around there and find out bow ill Miss llolladay really is. I'm worried about her, Lester." I "That's n good Idea," I agreed and gave the driver tho nddress. Jenkln son was In his olllco und received us nt once. "Dr. Jenklnson," began our Junior without preamble, "I am John Itoyce, of Graham & Itoyce. You know, I sup pose, Unit wo are the legal advisers of , Miss Frances llolladay." j "Yes," answered Jenklnson. "Glad to meet you, Mr. Itoyce." "In consequenco we'ro naturally lu-. j forested In her welfare and nil that , concerns her, nnd I culled to ask you ' for Borne definite details of her condl-, tlou." I "Her condition? I don't quite under fitnnd " M0RHART BROS. Hardware Co. advice." And he recounted rnpuily the facts of Miss llolladay's Illness, In so far an he knew them, ending with an account of our recent visit and the statement of the nialil that her mis tress was under a doctor's care. Jen klusou heard him to the end without Interrupting, but he was plainly pus zleil and annoyed. "And you say she looked very III?" he asked. "Oh, very 111, sir; nlarmlngly 111, to my uuprncliccd vycM. She seemed Uiln and worn. She could scarcely talk, she had such a cough. I hardly know her." Again the doctor paused to consider. He was a very famous doctor, with many very famous patients, and 1 could sec that this case piqued him that another physician should have been preferred I "Of course, Mr. Hoycc," ho said final ly, "Miss I 'adny was perfectly free to choose another physician If sho thought best." "Hut would you have thought It prob able?" queried our Junior. "Ten minutes ago I should have thought It extremely Improbable," an swered the doctor emphatically. "Still, women are sometimes erratic, as wo doctors know to our sorrow." Mr. Itoyco hesitated nnd then took the bull by the horns. "Dr. Jenklnson," he begun earnest ly, "don't you think It would be wlso to see Miss llolladay yon know how her father trusted you and relied on you mid assure yourself that she's In good hands? I confess I don't know what to think, but I fear some danger Is hanging over her. Perhaps she may even have fallen Into the hands of tho faith curlsts." Jenklnson smiled. "The advice to seek rest nnd quiet seems sane enough," he said, "and ut terly unlike any that a faith curlst would give." "Hut still, If you could see for your self," persisted Mr. Itoyce. The doctor hesitated, drumming with his lingers upon the arm of his chair. "Such a course would be somewhat unprofessional," he said at last. "Still I might call In a merely social way. My Interest In tho fnmlly would, I think, excuse me." Mr. Noyce's face brightened, nnd he caught the doctor's hand. "Thank you, sir," he said warmly. "It will lift a great anxiety from tho llrm, nnd, I may add, from me person ally." Tho doctor laughed good naturedly. "I knew that, of course," ho snld. "We doctors hear all the gossip go'.ng. I might add that I was glad to hear this bit. If you'll wait for me here, I'll go at once. We Instantly assented, and ho called his carriage and was driven away. I felt that at last wo were to see behind ot-' corner or the curtain- perhaps one glimpse would be enough to penetrate the mystery. Hut In half an hour ho was back again, and n glance at his face told me that wo were again ties- fined to disappointed, "I Hont up my card," he reported ' briefly, "and Miss llolladay sent down word that she must beg to Im excused." "And that was all?" he asked. "That was all. Of course thero was nothing for mo to do but come away. I couldn't Insist on seeing her." "No," assented Uio other; "no. How do you explain It, doctor?" Jenklnson sat down and for n mo ment studied the pattern of tho cur poL "Frankly, Mr. Itoyce," he said ntlast, "1 don't know how to explain it. Tho most probable explanation Is that Miss llolladay Is suffering from some form of dementia, perhaps only acute pri mary dementln, which Is usunlly mere ly temporary, but which may easily grow serious mid oven become perma nent." The theory had occurred to me, nnd I saw from tho expression of Mr. Itoyce's face that he also had thought of It. "Is thero no way that wc can mako sure?" he askW. "She may need to bo saved from herself." "Sho may need it very badly," agreed Uie doctor, nodding. "Yet she Is of legal age and absolute mistress of her actions. Thero are no relatives to In terfere, no Intimate friends even that I know of. 1 see no way unless you, ns her legal adviser, apply to the au thorities for an Inquest of lunacy." Hut Mr. Itoyce mado an Instant ges ture of repugnance. "Oh, that's absurd!" ho cried. "We hrve no possible reason to take such action. It would offend her mortally." "No doubt." assented the other. "So I fear that ut present nothing can be done. Things will Just have to take their course till Bomethlng more de cided happens." "There's no tendency to mental dls- I eoso In the family?" inquired Mr. Itoyce after a moment. "Not tho slightest," snld the doctor emphatically. "Her father and mother were both Bound and well balanced. I know the history of the family through Uiree generations, and there's no hint of any taint. Twenty-five yeara ago llolladay, who was then Just working to Uie top in Wall street, drove himself too hard it was when Uie market went all to pieces over that Central Pacific deal and had a touch of apoplexy. It wan Just a touch, but I mado him tnko a long vacation, which ho spent abroad with his wife. It. waa then, by the way, that his daughter was born. Since then he has been careful, and linn never been bothered with a recurrence of the trouble- -In fact, that's the only Illness in the least serious 1 ever knew htm to have." There was nothing more to be snld, and we turned to go. "If there are any further develop ments," added the doctor as hu opened the door, "will you let me know? You may count upon me If I can be of any assistance." "Certainly," answered our Junior. "You're very kind, sir," and wo wont back to our cab, The week that followed was n per plexing one for me and a miserable one for Koyce. As I know now, he had written her half a dozen times and had received not u single word of answer. For myself, I had discovered ono more development of the mystery. On tho day following the delivery of the mon ey I had glanced, as usual, through Uio financial column of my paper as I rodu home on the car, and one Item had at traded my attention. The brokerage llrm of Swift .fc Currer had that day presented at the subtreasury the sum of $100,000 In currency for conversion Into gold. An Inquiry at their olllco next morning elicited the fnct that tho exchange had been effected for tho ac count of Miss Francos llolladay. It was done, of course, that the recipient of the money might remain beyond trace of the police. OHAPTl'.It IX. O Ult regular work ot tho oftlco Just at that time happened to be unusually heavy and try ing. Tho Brown Injunction suit, while not greatly attracting pub lic attention, Involved points of such nicety nnd affected Interests so wide spread that the whole bar of New York was watching It. Tho Hurd sub stitution case was more spectaculnr and appealed to tho press with peculiar force, since one of the principal vic tims 1 Mil been tho eldest son of Pres ton McLandberg, the veteran manag ing editor of the Record, and tho bring ing of the suit Impugned the honor of his family. Hut It Is still too fresh In the public mind to need recapitulation here, oven were It connected with this story. The incessant strain told upon both our partners und even upon me, so that I returned to my rooms after dinner one evening determined to go early to bed. Hut I had scarcely donned my house coat, settled In my chair and got my pipe to going when there camo u tap at the door. "Come In," I called, thinking It wuh Mrs. Fitch, my landlady, and loo weary to get up. Hut It was not Mrs. Fltch'B pale countenance, with lis crown of gray hnlr, ich appeared In the doorway; it wits n rotund und exceedingly florid visage. ' "You will pardon me, sir," began a resonant voice, which I Instantly re membered, oven before the short, square figure stepped over the thresh old Into the full light, "but I have Just discovered that I have no match with which to Ignite my gas. If I might from you borrow one" "Help yourself," I said, and held out to him my case, which was lying on tho table at my elbow. "You are very good," he said, and then, as he stepped forward and saw me more distinctly, he uttered n llttlo exclamation of surprise. "Ah, It 1 Mistnlr" "Lester," I added, seeing that he hesi tated. "It Is n great pleasure," ho was say ing us he took the matches; n "gteat good fortune which brought mo lo thto i L. ...v. So lonely one grown nt times mid then, I greatly desire some ad vice. If you would have the leisure-" 'Certainly," nnd I waved toward a chair. "Sit down." I "In one moment," he snld. "You ' will pardon me," and he disappeared I through the doorway. I Ho wiib back almost at once with n onndful of cigarettes, which he placed . on the table. Then he drew up n chair. 1 With a llttlo deprecatory gesture hu used ono of my matches to light a cigarette. "It was truly for the gas," he said, catching my smile, "and tho gaB for the cigarette!" Thero was something fasclnntlng about the man nn air of good humor, of comradeship, of strength of pur pose. My eyes were caught by hla stodgy, nervous hnnilB ns he held tho match to his cigarette. Then they wandered to his face, to the blnck hair flecked hero and thero wlUi gray, to the bright, deep set eyes, ambushed under heavy brows; to tho full lips, which the carefully arranged mustncho did not at nil concenl; to the projecting chin, with Us little plume of nn Im porlal a strong faco and a not un handsome one, with n certain look of mastery about It. "It is true that I need advice," he wuh saying us he slowly exhnled a great puff of Binoko which he had drawn deep Into his lungs. "My nnmo Is Martlgny Jasper Mnrtlgny" I nod ded by way of salutation "nnd I am from Frnnce, na you havo doubUcss long since suspected. It 1b my deslro to become n citizen of Arfier-rlc'." "How loug have you been living la America 7" I asked. (To be Continued ) ' V .