jjaraaii)awwiaaiii9Bii aaiaSSSSZSSSSS I HSlSMll MAX OR HIS PICTURE mm mm (OuprlRbt r tlm KNOCK Bounded on tho principal's door. "That's Florence," bIio thought; and nho Blgh od In tho Hamu breath, Tho principal had se cretly liked Florence llulmund. tho best of rf-TTVJ- her two hundred girls, for thrco yenra; and, sometimes, nho BUBpectcd that Florcnco knew It. MIbb Wing Bat at her desk. It w(ib a lnrgo desk of oak, always kept In blameless order. No ono could recall fleeing nioro than ono letter nt a time lying on tho blotter. Any others, yet unread, lay In tho wicker trny to tho Heft; tho letters read but not answered were In tlio wicker tray to the right; tho answered letters were In npproprl ato pigeonholes or In ashes, Miss Wing being a Arm believer In flro os n contl Uentlal agont. About tho desk hung Mo most Interesting object In tho room, to tho school-girls; In fact It would bo hard to gauge Justly tho In Iflucnco this ono, muto and motionless, had over their young Imaginations; or how far It was responsible for tho rose-tinted halo that beyond doubt, felorlflcd tho principal for them. Tho object was a plcturo, tho picture of a young man In tho uniform of a captain Jn the German cuirassiers. Ills thick Eight hair was brushed back from a Ine and candid forehead. A smile Icreascd his cheek under the warllko curl of his mustache. It was a smllo iso happy and so friendly In Its hap piness, that it won tho beholder. Tho wyes were not large, but even In tho black and white of a photograph (tho (portrait wbb nn ordinary cabinet carte) they Bccmed to sparkle. Tho young fellow's figure was superb, and held with a military precision nnd 'Jauntlness. Ono said, looking at tho whole presence, "This man Is a good fellow." Viewing him more closely, ono might add, "And ho 1b In lovo." Tho plcturo was framed handsomely In a glided frame. On tho desk below, an exquisite vaso of Venice lifted a single, perfect rose. For 1C years a flower had always bloomed thus. Ml. is rWIng had hung tho plcturo herself, 15 iyears ago. Then, she was tho new principal, and tho school was but half Its size; and the vlllago people ex claimed at trusting "such a girl" with o much responsibility. During those 15 years tho new building had been built, the school had grown and flour ished; and tho gray had crept Into Margaret Wing's bright hair. Sho had eo often put on mourning for her near kindred that she1 had nssumed It ns her permanent garb. To tho certain i(and ecstatic) knowledge of the school, he had refused divers offers of mar irlage from citizens of good reputo and substance. Hut during nil tho changing years, tho plcturo had kept Its place nnd tho fresh flowers had 'bloomed below. No girl could remem ber tho desk without tho picture; nnd -when tho old girls visited tho school, 1helr eyes would Instinctively seek it in Its old place; always with a llttlo moving of the heart. Yet no ono ever alluded to It to tho principal; and no one, not her most trusted ' teacher, nor her best loved pupil, had ever heard tho principal speak of It. Tho name of tho pictured soldier, his etory, his relation to Miss Wing; Miss Wing's nearest kindred and friends know ob much about all these as tho school and that was nothing. Never theless, the school tradition reported part or a name on tho authority of a dingle Incident. Years ago an acci dent happened to tho picture. It was tho principal's custom to carry it with her on her Journeys, however brief; always taking it down nnd putting It back In its placo herself. On this oc casion tho floor had been newly pol ished, and In hanging the picture her chair on which sho stood slipped and sho foil, whllo tho picture dropped out of her grasp. Ono of tho girls, who was passing," ran to her aid; but bIio had crawled toward tho plcturo and would havo it In her hands beforo she allowed the girl to aid her to rise a circumstance, you may bo sure, not likely to escape tho sharp young eyes. Neither did these snmo eyes miss tho further circumstance that tho Jar had shifted tho carto in the frnmo and a line of writing, hitherto hidden, was taring out at tho world. The hand was tho sharp, minute German hand, but tho words wore English; tho girl took them in at an eyobllnk, as she handed tho plcturo to Miss Wing; "Thino for over, Max." Miss Wing made no comment; perhaps she sup posed that tho girl had not seen, por haps In any case sho was silent. Of course, tho new light flooded tho school gossip Immediately. But there never camo any more; overy new girl was free to work her own will on MIsb Wing's romance. Was "Max" dead? Had they parted because of any act on the woman's part? Suroly ho could not havo boon falBe, to rccelvo that dally oblation of flowers. It was moro likely that bIio thus expressed an im perlBhablo regret. Youth, ever fanci ful, played with nil manner of dainty and plaintive variations on tho thomo.. ilta very mystery was its poignant charm; since each tender young soul created a new romance nnd a now ap peal. Eluslvo and pathotlc, It hovered on tho edge of these young lives, like &JP fly OCTAVE THANET Author of Tfce Man of the Hour." "The Lion's Shire,' "tty Inherlunce," etc Uobta - Merrlll Co.) tho perfume of n flower. And Hb in fluence was the more potent thnt It asked for nothing. It Is not too much to say that tho spectacle of that gen tlo and reticent fuithfulncHB was tho st longest clement in the school at mosphere. Certainly, becnuso of It, Mlsn Wing had greater power over her scholars. Sho was a woman of ability and gentlo force; by nature a llttlo aloof, a little precise, ablo to feel deeply, but not nblo to express her sympathies or her pain. Without her mysterious sorrow, sho would have seemed to young girls a thought too admirable; they would havo been chilled by her virtues; but nB it was, their perception that she had lived doeply, that sho had suffered, that sho had been loved nnd had Wed eternal ly, opened their hearts. They would havo admired her, now they adored her. Dy degrees, and insensibly to herself, sho becamo the confessor of her llttlo world. After they left Bchool, her glrlB brought hor their perplexities of tho heart , Today, however, MIsb Wing sat be foro tho plcturo which so many young eyes had studied with such vague, yet ardent, sympathy, nnd pondered over a confidence that had not come. Tho lack of its coming hurt her; and the tnp on her door was welcome, for bIio thought, "It is she coming to tell me. Oh, I hopo ho Is tho right man." At her response, tho door swung open with a Jerk, and the dark-eyed girl who entered was catching her breath, although sho tried to mako tho quick Intakes noiseless. There waB a look of palo resolution on her features. "Havo you como to let mo congrat ulate you, my dear?" Bald tho princi pal, rising. Tho girl colored scarlet. "I'vo como becauso I had to, because I couldn't deceive you," sho blurted. "Miss Wing, it isn't so. I let , Miss Parker think bo; but I'm not engaged to him." , "Sit down, dear," said MIsb Wing. Tho soft cadence of her volco did not roughen. Sho sat down when hor guest sat, and leaued back In her desk chair, folding hor slim, whlto handB. There wore flashing rings on her hands; and the girls used to wonder which ring "Max" had given her. They favored the Bapphlre, set between two dia monds, becauso of its beauty ("a real Cashmere, you know"), and because, whether sho woro other rlngB or not, this nlwaya kept Its place. "Now, tell me," said MIsb Wing. "I had a letter from him this morn ing; It was Just a note In ono of Helen Grler'B" tho girl's litho form wna erect In tho chnlr, every muscle tense; Bho looked past Miss Wing to tho wall nnd Bpoko In tonelcsa volco; no ono could seo that she was driving straight on to her purpose, over hor own writh ing nerves "all ho said was that ho had been called back to Germany " "Ib ho a Germnn? MIsb Parker said hlB nauio was Cutler." "It Ib nutler," tho girl said, flinging her head back, while a Bpark crept in to her liquid, troubled, dark eyes, "but ho is a Gorman. Don't you know the ButlcrB In 'Wnllcnstcln?' You know ho was a real man; and ho founded a family. He my my friend Is tho Count von Butler." MIsb Wing's chair, llko other desk chairs, was set on a pivot; Bho turned very slightly and slowly, at tho same tlmo resting hor elbow on tho desk. Tho girl ventured a timid glance at her, and thought that she looked sterner, whereforo her heart Bank; but Bho only continued tho faster: "Ho Isn't in America Just to travel; ho was Bent by his govern ment to watch tho Cuban war. He's very brave; and ho Isn't a bit llko a foreigner and hasn't any nasty Buper clllous notions about women. Mr. Grlor says ho has a future. And real ly, Miss Wing, ho Ib Just llko a a a kind of knight." "Where did you meet him?" "At Helen's last summer. And ho was going out to Minneapolis to seo papa, I I think. Hut ho got a cablo or his unclo'B death. And his two llt tlo cousins dlod last year; so now ho is tho head of tho family; and ho must go to Germany at once. For IiIb father Is dead, you know. So ho wrote (In Helen's letter, becauso ho is so so nwfully proper!) asking to let him como hero and tako mo to drive in tho American fashion. I know who put him up to that Bchomo; It wns Helen. I had to ask Miss Parker, be causo you wcro out; and sho said If ho wasn't a relation or tho man I was going to marry I couldn't go. 'Or courso, If ho wcro tho man you expect to marry,' sho said, nnd and I I said, 'nut ho Is!' Just like that. I can't fancy how I camo to say bucIi a thing, but when It was said I didn't know how to explain; nnd I was so awfully ashamed; and, besides" she lifted hor eyes In tho frank and direct gazo that Miss Wing always liked "besides, I do want to seo him." "And do you oxpect him to ask you to marrjr him?" said Miss Wing, with a deepening of the color on her cheek, which went out suddonly llko tho flnmo of a lamp In the wind. Florence Ilnlmund blushed ngaln, but this tlmo Bho laughed: "I don't know. Ho Ib bo nwfully proper," said she, "nnd ho hasn't had n chanco to ask papa; but I think ho wants to." I m luuk tunv-i idu i it u tuu iuuu nuuiu you expect to marry?" nsltod Miss Wing dryly. "Hut It wna deceiving her Just tho snmo. I am glad you came, Florcnco." Miss Wing stifled a sigh; it may bo that sho was not so auro of the firm purpose of a lover; sho spoke more gently: "It Ib only tho disappoint ment, then, ir you can't boo him?" Tho girl's race quivered a llttlo. "Perhaps I am foolish," said Miss Wing, "but I think it would bo a dis appointment very hard to bear. Still, you must admit that parents do not send their children to school expecting them to becomef engaged to bo mar ried; on tho contrary, thero is a tacit plcdgo that wo shall protect our wards from any entanglement. Hut this did not happen at school; tho only ques tion Is, ought I to provent It going any farther? My dear, do you havo confi dence In me?" "Yes, Mlsn Wing," said tho girl. "Of courso, I do not think thnt I ought to consent to your driving alone together." TJio girl drew n long sigh. "I sup pose not," Bho breathed, in dismal resignation. "Hut I Bhould llko him to como here, to boo me; nnd then, If I find him to bo what your father would ap prove, you may boo him hero; and wo Hliall all havo to explain things to gether, 2 fancy, to your father." Tho girl drew another, a very dif ferent, Blgh, and Impulsively kissed Miss Wing's hand. She tried to speak, and could only murmur, "Oh, I do love you!" "And bo, if you will tell Graf von Hutlcr what Is his Christian name, Florence?" "Max," said tho girl, very low, for Bho felt tho presence of tho picture, on which sho had not one turned her eyeB. Mies Wing stood' In tho center of the room, smiling, until tho door closed. But then In a second she was at tho door, almost fiercely, but noise lessly, twisting tho key in tho lock. From tho door sho passed to tho win dows nnd dropped tho shades. At last, eafo from every chanco of eBplal, sho Bat down again In her chair be foro tho desk, leaned her elbows on tho desk, and looked desperately, mis erably, Into tho JoyouB faco of the plc turo. Sho did not speak, but her thoughts took on words and sank llko hot lead into her heart. "Max But ler! Max Butlor! The llttlo nephew he told mo about And ho has been allvo all these years; and happy; with llttlo sons, whllo I I havo lied to these trusting girls. It was wicked and shameless., I deceived myself; then I deceived' them. I wonder why. I knew what they were thinking. How dared I look that honest child in the faco! I Bupposo she wonders like tho rest why I havo not told anyono of my romance. And It is simply that thero was nothing to tell. Nothing." Sho looked Into tho soldier's happy eyes while her ,llps curled and sho mur mured, drearily and bitterly, "I haven't even tho right to bo angry with you, poor lad. What did you do? You are not my Max; I only mado him up out of my heart like children playing a game!" Her mind drifted dizzily through shapeless and inconsequent visions of tho past. She was seeing again tho grim pile of tho ruined cas tle, tho masses of broken shadow, the intricate carving on arch and archl travo and plinth, tho wuverlng masB of limbs and tree-trunks on tho green sward; and she, with her twisted ankle, was kneeling, trying to peer through tho shrubbery for her lost companions. Did ho come by chanco? Sho had Been tho handsome young of fleer dally, for a woek. HIb great aunt wna Margaret's right-hand neigh bor at the" pension table d'hote, a withered relic of Polish nobility with line, black eyeB in n faco like a hick ory nut; who woro shabby gowns and mngnlflccnt Jowela, frankly smoked cigarettes, and Bcemed to havo a venomous talo ready to fit any name mentioned In conversation with ono exception, her nephew's. Margar garet'a first sight of him was not un der the shelter of conventionalities. It happened that tho countess' feroci ous pet (and the terror of the pen sion), a Great Dane, was trying to cat up a llttlo girl, but fortunately had begun with her pottlcoats. Tho court of the house was tho aceno of the fray; a large, timid cook, tho only -witness, wns waving a copper kettle full of tho meringue thnt sho was beating, in ono hnnd, and tho great wire whip In tho other, while she shrieked im partially on heaven and tho police. Margaret heard tho din. Sho ran to tho spot. Being a New England wom an, sho didn't scream; one swift glanco went from tho child's writhing body nnd tho dog's horriblo hend to tho walling cook. In two strides Bho caught tho kettle out of a fat and agi tated Gorman hand and hurled tho wholo Bttcky, whlto mass full at the dog's eyes; then, as tho blinded and astounded beast flung his head back to howl, and spattered tho world with meringue, sho snatched up tho child and sent hor flying into tho door and tho cook. Tho dog was smenred with meringue, sho was smeared, the child wns smeared, tho cook was smeared; and now a. beautiful whlto and gold olllcer, who bounded over tho wall nnd fell upon tho dog with his Babor and two heels, was smenred tho most lav ishly of all I No wonder Frau Muller (vlslblo aloft, tn an artless German toilet of caso and without her teeth), f tho countoss (who wns a gazing stock, for tho samo reason), and Augustine, her maid, tho thrco Russians on tho second floor, nnd tho threo Americans on tho third, filled tho windows with polyglot constornntlon! Tho conse quence of it nil was that when the Count von Hutlcr was formally pre sented to Miss Wing that evening, she blushed. Sho was too palo and list less to be pretty, but when Bho blushed sho was enchanting. Remembering the meringue, sho smiled and ventured an upward glance; and, for tho first tlmo in her life, met the admiration In tho eyes of a man. At this time Mar garet was thirty years old and had never been asked in marriage. Sho had spent most or tho thirty years In a boarding-school, nB pupil or as teacher; and sho hnd brought from her cloistered llfo a single vivid feel ing, a passionate friendship which death had ended. Tho sapphire ring was her poor friend's last .token. To bo thirty and never to have been sought like other girls, leaves a chill In tho heart. It may bo lonely never to have loved, but It Is bleak never to have been loved. Margaret remem bered her delicate, girlish dreams with a recoil of humiliation; they Rcemed to her almost Immodest. Sho thought sho was too old to wear hats, nnd wondered whether sho ought -not to discard the pinks nnd light blues which poor Elly hnd liked on her, for moro scdnto colors. Hut alio wore pink nftcr she mot Max Hutlcr. Yet ho never Baw her save In tho pres ence of others. Ho was full of little, graceful attentions, but ho showed tho snmo attentions to tho portly clergy man's widow nnd tho meritorious but cross-eyed teacher of fifty, who formed MIbb Wing's "party"; it wbb only his eyes, his eyeB "nlwaya following her, approvingly, delighting, admiring, pleading, speaking to her as they Bpoko to no other woman. Sho told herself that it was Just tho pleasant, foreign way; nnd sho wroto to her friends In America, "Tho German or fleers havo very agreeable, deferential manners; I think they nre much more gentlo and polite and havo a higher respect for women than tho French or Italians." And ho said no word, even br friendship, until that afternoon at the Hcldelberger Schloss. Ho came upon her almost Imme diately, scrambling up tho bank at a rato which had worked woe to his uni form. He was torn, ho was scratched, ho was alalncd with mud apd grass; and ho .was beaming with delight. "I havo seen you rrom below," ho ex claimed in his carerul English, "so I camo up. Will you excuse?" Then his mood changed, perceiving her plight, and he Insisted on tearing his handkerchief into strips to bind her nnklo. It Bemed nbsurd to refuse his aid, which ho offered quit simply; but hlB hands trembled a llttlo over tho knots. "It will bo most easy, I think," said he, "that you should let mo assist you a small way, to tho res tauraclon; bo I can get tho carriage, and you can have somo ico cream. Again, to-day, Ib It burned " Sho had laughed and Bald that Bho never had heard of burned ice cream. Ho laughed, too, and explained that it was burned as a custard, and some how under cover of this sho let him put her hand on his shoulder and his arm about her waist. Sho was grate ful to him for tho matter-of-fact man ner in which he did It all, Baying, "You will have to bo my comrade that haB been wounded, and I will help him off tho field; so I did, once, with my colonel; It Is better than to wait until I could bring help." In this fash ion they walked for some twenty min utes. Ho told her of his country and his home; and how ho loved tho hills that his fathers had always owned, and tho rugged, simple, faithful peo ple; he told her of tho plans of his father and himself for them; ho told her of his father, who had tho bost heart in the world, but was credited with a flerco temper Blmply becnuso his voice was loud; and his mother, who was bo gentlo that every ono loved her; and his handsome Bister, and his brother, who was a diplomat and far cleverer than he; and his llt tlo brother who died and would have no ono carry him in his pain but Max By now they were rattling through the modern town of Heidelberg, tho plain walls of which looked bare after tho lawless pomp of carving and form on the old castle; they had not even the bizarre, affected grace of the ar chitecture then decking American countrysides. But Margaret thought how homelike and honest tho houses looked; staunch 'and trusty, llko the German. Butler, Just then, was prais ing American buggies, from which he mado a general transition to the cus toms of society. "In America, is It not," says he, "tho young ladles drive alone with young men?" "Yea, very often? But not with you?" "Oh, no, meln frauleln, this Is the first tlmo I am alone with a young lady!" ' She had called herself old for so loug that there was a distinct pleas ure in being "a young lady" to him, and aho had not time to remember it partook or tho nature or deceit, be causo ho Bont a wavo or confusion over her by continuing: "In America, also, ono would propoBo marriage to a lady, herself, bofore to her father?" "It la our custom," agreed Margaret, "but" with her prim tcacher'B air "your custom Is far moro docorouB." HIb face fell, then promptly bright ened. "PerhapB It would bo best to speak to both, bo near tho sumo time one can. But this is another thing you must explain mo. How is it most preferable to tho lady, that ono shall write or shall come " "Oh, write," said Margnrot quickly. "Look!" ho exclaimed, "at tho sun set. Ah, is it not lovely?" Of a BUdden they woro looking, not at tho sunsot, but Into cachothor's eyes; and all about them was that wondorful, transfiguring glow, and it seemed as if there were nothing In tho wholo world thnt ho had not said. "Ib it to tho right, Herr Captain?" naked tho driver, turning on his Beat to dlvldo a benign and seml-lntoxlcat-cd smllo between them. Then It was hardly a moment until tho yellow stucco of tho pension Jumped 'at their ayes, around a cor ner; nnd thero were tho clergyman's widow and tho teacher at tho door. They fell upon the carriage In a clam or of explanation und sympathy; thoy wero at her side when ho bowed over her hand and kissed it, saying, "Auf wledcrsehcn." That wbb all. There was never nny more. Ho did not come again. Or If he came, she was not there, since tho next day they were on their way to Bremen, summoned by cablo to her sister's deathbed. Sho never heard from him or of him again. Yet Bhc had left her American address with his aunt for any letters that might need to bo forwarded, and a stiff little note of thanks nnd farewell a per fectly neutral uote such us any friend might give or receive. Thoro followed ncss (tho slater was a widow without children, and sho shared her c3tato weeks crowded with sorrow and busl with her other sister); and Margaret imputed hor deep depression to these natural nnd sulllclent causes. She rat ed herself for vanity In reading her own meanings Into a courteous young man's looks nnd his Intelligent Inter est In national difference of manners. Sho fostered her Bhamc with tho Now Englnndcr's zest for Helf-torture. Hut one nfternoon, without warning, there fell upon her a deep nnd hopeless peace. It was as if somo invisible power controlled and chnuged all the currentB of her thought. She know that her friend was not faithless or careless; he was dead. Sho began to weep gently, thinking pitifully of his old father with the loud voice, and his fragile mother and tho sister nnd brother and tho llttlo nephew. "Poor people," Bho murmured, wishing, for tho first time in her life, to make somo Btgn of her sorrow ror them to them, sho who always paid her toll of sympnthy, but dreaded it and know that she wna clumsy. She remem bered the day at the castle, and went over again each word, each look. A sensation that Bho could not under stand, full of awe and sweetness, pos sessed her. It was indescribable, un thinkable, but it was also irresistible. Under its impulse Bho went to a trunk in another room, from which Bho had not yet removed nil tho contents, and took out her Heidelberg photographs. Sho said to herself that sho would look at tho scenes of that day. In her search sho camo upon a package of her own pictures which had como tho morning of tho day that she had gone. Sho could not remember any details of receiving them, except that she had been at the photographer's the day before and paid for them. When they came she was in too great agitation (they wero just packing) to more than fling them lnto,n tray. Sho could not toll why sho took tho cartes out of tho cnvolopo and ran them llstlesbly through her fingers ; but at the last of the package Bho uttered a cry. The last carto was a picture of Max, with tho inscription In his own hand, "Thine for ever." It is not exact to say that with the finding of the plc turo her doubt of his affection for her vanished; for in truth, she had no doubts, the possession wars too abso lute. But tho sight enmo upon her bb the presence of a mortal being, nllvo and visible, comes on ono when ho enters a room. And thero is no ques tion that It was a comfort; if she bad really loved Max, at this time, tho knowledge of his death would have been her crudest shock; for then she could havo no hopo to meet him ngaln in tho world no hopo of aomo expla nation and tho happiness of life to gether. But sho was not in lovo with tho young German, sho was touched by his admiration, Bho admired him tenderly, she felt tho moving or a sub tle attraction which she called friend ship and which might pass into a keener reeling; but she did not lovo him Not then. Therefore, Bho felt a sweetness in her pain; Bho could re spect herself once moro; she had a new and mystical Joy; for was she not beloved abovo women? Had not her lover come to her, through what strange paths who may know, to com fort her? This la tho story of the picture. She could not tell it. Nor did she; but she hung Max'a portrait on the wallB of her little parlor; and sho hung opposite a picture of tho castle; and rrom that day, never a day passed that it did not influence her. Sho used to think her thoughts be fore it. Sho came to it with her grief for tho loss or kindred and friends, with her loneliness, with her anxie ties, with her aspirations, her plans, her careB ror others, her slowly dawn ing interests and affections. She was a reticent woman, who might never hnve allowed her heart to expand to her husband himself, beyond a certain limit; but she hid no'thing from Max. In time, she fell into tho habit of talk ing to the picture. Sho called him Max. The first tlmo sho spoke his name she blushed. She mado her toi lets for him moro than for tho world; but whether Max could ndmlro them or not, it Ib certain that the girls know every change in her pretty gowns. Now sho began to paco tho room, trying to think clearly. Was it her duty to tell Florence tho story and let her tell tho girls? Tho red-hot agony of tho idea seemed to her ex cited conscience an intimation that it was her duty rrom which she shrank becnuso sho was a selfish, hysterical, .dishonorable coward. Horriblo as such abasement would be, If it wcro her duty, Bho could do It; whit she could not, what sho would not do, was to tear tho veil rrom tho pure and mystical passion which had been tho flower of her heart. "Not if it cost mo my soul," sho said, with tho fro zen quiet of despair; "it Is awful, but I can't do HI" Ono thing did romaln; Bho could remove tho picture. That false witness of what had never been Bhould go. No eyes should ever fall on it again. It Bhould, never deceive moro. Sho walked toward it firmly. She Uftsd her band and it fell. "I can't!" nho moaned. "I'll do It to morrow." Sho could not remember, In years, so weak a compromise offered her conscience. But she felt a cense of respite, al most relief, onco having decided, nnd sho recovered her composure enough to go to her chamber and bathe her eyes. Whllo she was thus engnged sho heard a knock. "It Is he," sho said quietly; "well, tho sooner tho bet ter." It was he; he had come earlier than he expected, he explained; he was most grateful for Miss Wing's kind message. He looked llko his uncle, as tho members or a family will look alike. He was not bo tall; ho wbb not ' bo handsome. Perhaps most pcoplo would call him moro graceful. And hlB English was faultless; ho must havo spoken it from his childhood. Iu tho midst of his first Rentcnccs, be fore they had permitted him to take a chair, his eyes traveled patft Miss Wing's face. She perceived tbt Uo saw tho plcturo; she know that nlit grew pale; but, to her amazement, a calm llko tho calm which had wrapped her senses on the dny of her finding the picture, closed about her again. "I beg pardon?" said he. , "Yes, that la Count von Butler's por trait," said Bhe, in n clear voice, with out emotion. He wbb not bo com posed. "Then it was you," he said. Following her example, ho took a chair and looked earnestly nt the pic tured fncc. "When MIsb Raimund spoko of you so warmly, I noticed that the name was tho same, and I determined to Inquire, but It Bcctncd to me unlikely. Yet It Is. Miss Wing, I hnvo a message to you, from my un cle." "I was with him when ho died." That wnB a strange thing to bear when the message of his uncle's death bad come to him in another country; she hoped that her brain was not go ing to play her false. "It was fifteen years ago last July, you know. I never knew how many details you received, or only tho bar fact In the papers." Fifteen years! fifteen years! What was that dato ho was giving? That wbb tho day on which sho sailed for America, the day after what was that story ho waB telling of a visit and a flro and a child rescued and an ac cident? But still Bho listened with tho samo iron composure. Tho noxt words sho heard distinctly. "It was like him to lose his llfo that way; and he did not grudge it. Yet it was hard that I should bo tho only ono of his blood with him. Ho could speak with difficulty when h told mo to tako a lock or hair and hla signet ring to you. He dictated tho addrcsB, himself, to mo. 'You must bo sure and tako it,' he said. 'It is to tho lady that I hoped would be my be trothed; you muBt tell grandmamma about it, too. 8ne has my plcturo and she knows but tell her and then, I think his mind must havo wundercd a llttlo, for ho smiled brightly at me, say ing, 'I'll tell her myBclf,' and then tho doctors came. He said nothing more, only once, they told me, ho murmured something about his betrothed. But I had the ring; he took it off his finger nnd kissed it and gave it to me. Child ns I was, I know that it was sacred. I wrapped it in tho paper, and after ward I put the lock of hair beside It So soon os I could, I went to Heidel berg, to tho pension. You had gone and there was no address, no trace " "I left my address with tho coun tess " "My aunt Is dead," Bald tho young German gravely. "I would not criti cize her, but Bho had her own cholco of a wire for my undo; I do not think one could trust her with addresses." "Wo all gave ours to her to give to Frau Muller." . "That Is why, then, I could not Had you. ,My grandmother also tried. But you were gone. I thought of the banks, long after, but I found noth ing. Often it has Beemed dreadful that you should learn of' this only through the papers. But I could not tell whether anything. When I camo to America, I confess It was alwayB In my mind. I always carried my un cle's llttlo packet with me. I Mil have It sent to you." "Excuso me," said MIbb Wing gent ly. "Will you plcaso bring me the glass of water I am afraid I can't walk to it" But she would not let him pour th water on his handkerchief to batho her head. She sipped tho water, and very pale, but quite herself, brought him back to his own matters. Sho found that it was a cousin, miscalled an uncle, In the German manner, who had died. It did not seem to her that Max's nephew could be unworthy of any girl; yet sho conscientiously ques tioned him .regarding hla worldly af fairs, for Florence waB an only daugh ter whose father had great posses sions and a distrust of adventurers, and nt last she Bent him forth to walk In tho grovo with his Bwoethcart "And speak to her," she said, with a look that sank Into his heart; "it la tho American way; don't wait to write, tho American way Ib beat." So, at last, she was alone. Alona with her lover who had always been true;, whoso lovo many waters could not quench, and It was stronger than death. Sho nover touched tho picture, save reverently to dUBt It, to tako it down when sho wont away, to replace it in its station when sho returned. But now, trembling, yet not blushing, sho took the plcturo Into her hands. Sho looked long Into its eyes; Bho kissed It with a light nnd timid kiss, and swiftly hid tho smiling fnoo against hor heart, pressing tho framo in both hands, nnd touching It with her cheek bont over It, whllo sho whispered: "You did tell mo. You camo back and told me. I lovo you. Max, my knight my hus band I" , .1 ' .; -. , iM,i. i. ;l V'jWk&. !.!. .. l....'.j.iC-J..i4,. . aMflaHBHBBjfiH-jBSU-Kiua .