at the chattering carrier! nl si lence held the hrtlit 'ade for minute. ' . , , "Vn," he answered presently. I lieard it. I don't reckon il'i any thing to worry over." -Why?" . , , "Because when a nig 1 out lor business he doesn't let you hear him." , , , "Then you think." asked Gault in low tone, -that thcrc'i somebody hanging about?" ,"l reckon so." What do yon" Irvine pointed at the carrier. They were leaning forward, month open, eye staring, each one ol them "registering" curiosity and in terest vividly. "Irtrl, for a tanner. "A girl? What would ahe be do intf about our camp?" "I shoul suppose." laid Irvine, calmly, "that ihe'a either surveying for a projected railroad, or collect in K taxes." "I dare aay you think that's fun ny" "Well, what doe your wide ex perience lead you to think a gitl doca want, hanging about lot of men?" "I suppose the want one of the men." . . "You aeem," observed Irvine, leaning comfortably against a rock, to be growing up, Kid." "Ask 'em about It," suggested Cault. The carriers were begin ning to buzz among themselves like a hatful of flies. Irvine asked a question or two, In one or two native languages. "They say," he explained, "that there's a woman somewhere, be cause they smelted the flowers the women wear, and heard her mov ing." "What are they looking so un comfortable about?" "O, that'a because tncy think that she's ghost woman, and up to mischief. If any of them fol low her into the bush, she turns into a fiend and eats them." "Well, it's pretty simple; if they think that, they'd better stop wheic they are." "But the trouble is," explained Irvine, "that they don't know till they find out. You see, the devils and the common or yam-garden girls look alike. Seems to me I can remember dreaming of the same sort of notion among people who weren't black. "She's let them go for this night," . observed Cault, interestedly, his eyes fixed on the carriers, who seemed suddenly to have lost in terest in the dusk wall of scrub and ' were turning their attention to the circling bamboo pipe. One of the carriers nodded. "Eo, Taubada" (yes, sir), he said. "Debit girl him go home. Me no like debit girl Me flight along him." "If you pay attention to all the yap of the carriers, you'll not have much to spare for anything else," was Irvine's comment Did I think there was anyone really there? Yes; I don't know who or what she was. No, village girls don't generally wander off to the bush when there's strange people about; they're too scary. No, I don't believe in devils. I don't think at all about it. Is this the longer, or the shorter catechism? And are you going to turn in?" From girl or devil, no further sound was heard. The carriers laid themselves out, one by one, upon the stage of branches they had put up; each man wrapped, ob livious of the heat, in his blanket. The white men slung mosquito nets, and crept beneath the. tents that sheltered them both. The night went by. Next day it appeared that biriii of paradise were very plentiful in this area of dense forest, also that they were somewhat less wild, somewhat easier to stalk with Phil Gault's splendid guns than they had been hitherto. Je was agreed that a star of two or three days should be made. Irvine spent an hour or two rcconnoitering and carr.e back with the news that there was a big village about three ntiles away but that the people seemed to be long to the tribe who had attacked the expedition, and he thought, on the whole, it was better to leave them alone. "We've got tucker enough to do till we get down to the coast again," he said, "and mixing with natives when you've a mob of cat riers al. ng means rows, and rows mean Mischief. If we let them aloiie, I reckon they'll let us alone." Cault was well pleased to stay on in the forest: apart from the chance of sport, he confesed to himself though not to Irvine that the ghostly happening of the night had waked his interest. He could not rest tilt he had found out the cause of it. "Devil-giit my eye," he thought. "It was a live woman, and I want to know what she was up to." Something told him that Irvine would not entourage his curiosity. The bushnun treated all forms o( native superstition wuh fine con tempt eru though he and Can It THE SUNDAY had on that Journey been witnessre of "manifestations" among the soi cercrrs of the great towns that' would have puttied a circle of spiritualists and a team ol conjur ors combined. "Native rot" was all that Irvine bad to lay after trans lating and explaining, as fur as ex planations could go. tie would certainly call this rot. Neverthe less, Cault was determined to fiid out; he didn't know what, but fin J out anyhow. In the middle of the night lis slipped quietly away front the tent, and was gone a couple of bonis. Irvine woke once or twice, and missed him. "What bit you last night?" he asked suddenly, a he was helping himself to baron at breakfast. "There's yours," he added. "Don't want any? Hals. Fever again?" "No, I'm all right," was Cault'i reply. He did t answer the first part of the question, and Irvine was not minded to press him. Neverthe less, he noted the odd, pinched look that the face of the "Kid" set mid to bear that morning took that, during the day, scarce lessened at all. "Not fever," thought the bush man. "Looks more like scare ci some kind. I wonder what he thinks he's up to?" On the next night, being tike other seeming simple men of the wilds, very full of guile, he lay still and pretended to sleep, while se cretly watching. Gault waited un til he thought it was safe, and then erept noiselessly out of the tent. Through a hole in the aide canvas Irvine watched hit shadow, dusk among shadows, melt into the ashy velvet of the forest wall. The bush man swore softly to himself, softly and with determination. Then he lay down and waited. Near morning Cault came back, treading cautiously but breathing hard with haste and exertion. He lay down very quietly and seemc I to listen. Then he gave a sigh of relief and composed himself to sleep. It was at this point that Irvine wrecked his comfortable persua sion! of secrecy by remarking, ir a characteristic drawl: "What the etcetera dash do you etcetera well think you have been doing?" "By Jove, you're awake, are you?" was all that Gault could find to say. "Of course I'm (decorated and embroidered) awake. Where have you been? Playing the giddy goat about the village?" Gault did not answer; his chest was heaving with some unex pressed elation. One would almost have thought had he not been a man, and a millionaire, and a pro spective husband that he was very near crying. "Here, Kid," said Irvine Irrever ently, but kindly, "spit it out; thia is a devil of a queer country, and if you got any sort of a scare, yoa aren't the first. What's happened?" Gault, rolling over so that hlj face was turned away Trom Irvine, mattered into his camp mattress: "I saw a woman." "Well, if you did. What was she doing?" "She was In a tree." "In a tree I" Irvine knew as well as Gault better that native girls do not climb trees. A thought crossed his mind. Gault might be going insane. In the Papuan bush. But the Kid had not done. "Hon or bright," he said, suddenly roll ing over and sitting up Irvine could see his face in the clear, late moonlight. "I did see her. I've seen her two nights. And she was up in a tree. High up. And she looked at me down through the leaves. And her hair was all gold, like gossamer or silk; it stood out and flew. Her face was white." "That's clean impossible," ob jected Irvine. "No white woman could possibly be in the country without everyone knowing. You dreamt it." "Did I? Did the carriers dream there was some one about the other night when they said there was a girl in the bush? Why, you heard something yourself." "Might have been a dog: or a pig," declared Irvine, who knew very well it was nothing of the kind. "And anyhow, if they did hear a girl, it must have been a native. And if there was a girl there, and if you really saw some thing or another up a tree, what are you chewing the rag about?" "Because I rttn't understand it." "What can't you understand?" "You won't listen till I tell you. She was in a cage." "A how much?" "A cage, I tell you. Barred in so that she couldn't get out." "Well, if she couldn't, how was It she was walking about the camp in the dark?" "She wasn't. I hid myself and watched. And I saw a woman come, a native woman in. a grass petticoat, black woman or rather brown; that's what they are. She had a banket In her hand, and it was full of stuff food, ! think, wrapped p lit green leaves and she had one of thone bamboos they REE: OMAHA, SKPTKMBKH 10. 1922. carry water in. She called out, and the woman in the cage let down a bark ladder. So then the one who had the bakrt climbed up it, and I couldn't see her among the leaves. And by and by she came down, and the basket was empty." "If you had a dream, you had a blaukcty long one, muttered Irvine, who began to look pusrled. "Sounds almost as if there w'as something in it. I'll lay yon saw a tree house one of the ordinary tree hou.ru, and the rent you fancied." "I did not fancy it. I tell you. Yes, it seemed like what 1 ve heard about trerhouc, but she was caged in. And she was while at leai-t " "Yes at least now, we re get ting at it." "She was so very white. More than a while woman. Our women are pinky, or sallow, or tale, or something they're not while pa per color. She was, and it didn't look it didn't look alive." Irvine, staring out through the triangular door of the tent into the moon flooded clearing, seem ed to consider things in general. "Night middle of - the night's bad time for thinking," was his verdirt. "Y.pu go to sleep and I'll go to sleep and we'll talk it over in the morning. Perhaps you can dream a little more before sun up." "It wasn't a dream," persisted the Kid, rolling over. In the daylight, as Irvine had foretold, things looked different. Cault was inclined to allow after breakfast and after a bath in the creek, wilh two carriers on the lookout for alligators that the mysterious woman mightn't have been so verv w'e after all. He : ; v v. ' ' "Glad you like her," aaid the Kid. even agreed, under protest, to Ir vine's suggestion that she might have been in native mourning which sometimes expresses itself by a face and body painted over with white wood ashes. But he was quite clear that he had seen her and that she was beautiful. "We'll leave the boys to look after our camp and you can take me to the place," Irvine declared. "There'll be no peace till we know what the thing really is. It sounds like somebody gone crazy to me, but this country is full of things that can't happen and do." 'This has happened, anyhow," said Gault, leading the way. Ir- vine noted that he was hurried and eager, in spite of his sleep less night; that he slashed at the layer vines overhanging the nar row track as if they were human enemies, and hurried tip and down the gullies scanning the way at a pace that left both of them breathless and wet through. Yet the road was not long, in 20 min utes they came to a huge red ce dar tree beside which Gault turn ed off into the uncleared bush, mo tioning, as he went, for silence. "It's quite close," he whispered. "Stoop down under those bushes. I found it by following the sound the other woman made; you could never see it. Now. Look up." Irvine looked up and, as he after wards said, received the shock of his life. Some 30 feet above him, among the clotted leaves of a great Barringtonia tree, a face looked out and down. And it was, as Gault had said, white white as stone and it was beautiful. The eyes were large, half hid bjf very deep, curved eyelids; he could not sec" fTicir col or, but they were not dark. The mouth and nose were nothing in particular; the neck was glorious, a column of pure marble. In that and in the deep, carved eyelids, and in the hair gold, sparkling, float ing, so fine that it looked less like hair than mist the woman's beau ty lay. He could not account for the dead-white color; European in whole or in part, he was certain she was not. An idea struck hint, and he slapped hi leg. crying, "I have it. Kid I" The woman drew in her head, at a startled bird draw hark ilj V...J w into it net, but he did not heed her, though Cault nudged him in dignantly and said in a hissing whisper: "Now you've done itf "I'll tell you what she Is," said Irvine. "She's a while Papuan." "What I 1 don't-" "Albino same as a while mouse or while blackbird. They're very uncommon ; I've never seen one myself and, li's an odd thing, they're mostly always men but they have thai dead while skin and they have wonderful gold hair like feathers. See how hers grew not hanging down, but standing up, like a" "It doesn't stand up; it floats like like the halo of an angel in a piiitirel" "(, you're there, are you?" thought Irvine to himself; but aloud he went on: "It's a bit finer than the ordinary Papuan hair, but it doet stand up, or would If it was stiff enough. Yes, she's an Albino all right. Looks a if they didn't fancy her much, sinking her up in a tree house by herself." "She can't get out. I walked around the tree when the moon was shining right on it, and I saw the house has bars all round It, heavy bar lashed wilh bark rone, and the lashings are put so that they're out of her reach. She'd need an ax, or at least a good knife, to get out of that. It'i a cage." That's queer, damned queer," aid Irvine, and fell to thinking. , "1 don't know the ways of these' tribes very well," he told the Kid. "I-ooks as if she'd made them wild over something or other. But it might be they re keeping her for some big chief. I've known them toand yet, that was in a house in the middle of the village, with people on the watch all round. Thia is another business altogether. It interests me. Let's wait to see the woman come with her tucker tonight; we might find out some thing that way." "Yes, let's agreed the Kid. hit eyes looking suddenly very big and bright. Theft, after a moment's silence: "Irvine, would you mind going out of sight for a minute? You scared her you I want " Irvine nodded, without a word, and dived under the screen of bush. He did not go so far but that he could see, while safely hidden, any thing that might be going on at the loot of the great Barringtonia. He counted himself more or less re sponsible for the Kid, and it seemed to him that there were the elements of trouble, ripe for gathering, not very far away. Gault, standing beneath the tree, began to call, in his own language, for he knew no other, to the gold haired creature hidden above. He used soft words; he whistled like a bird. There came no reply; the leaves brushed fingers with the winds; a locust, loud and wooden, chirred in a betel nut tree. Else, in the pauses, there was silence. "It's no go," he said at last, turn ing away. "Just close on dark is the time the other woman comes. I'll be there a little before." "We will," corrected Irvine. In telling the tale years after, Irvine was used to say that the day they spent in waiting was the worst of the whole trip. "We'd had leeches in the range," he said, "that hung all over us like bunches of tassels dropping blood that was a nuisance and in the sago swamp country we were never dry night or day; that wasn't agree able, either. And when we camped a day and a night at the Angabun ga we were eaten alive by mos quitoes. There were bad days all those times, but the cap sheaf of the lot was the day the Kid hung round waiting to see that girl. You see, he was dead, mad in love with her, because he'd thought her a spirit or something at first, and because of her face and the goldy hair and the way she looked down out of the tree O, because of God knows what it don't matter what, when a man's got it bad. Well, he had it bad for the first time, and it had knocked him clean over. He wouldn't have his dinner and he wouldn't have let mc have mine, if yarning and yapping would have kept me from it. He wouldn't stop in the camp, and he wouldn't stay out of it; he would take the car riers off shooting and come back in a quarter of an hour with one old crow and lie down on the ground and kick his toes and say he wished he was dead and get up again and start smoking and let his pipe go out and throw it away. All day he went on like a poisoned dog; it just about made me sick. When it was near dusk he tried to get away without me, but I was on to him and went after, -and I put his revolver and mine, too, into my fielt,- because when a white man gels to fooling around native girls in cannibal country well, you know " "Keep quiet," whispered the Kid. "There's the woman with the food at last. I can hear her." Irvine nodded. The last spears of sunset were sinking tow in the forest; huge violet mock plum lying among dead leaves; red, nniso ion mork apricots; w hite toadstools, lily shaped, green snakes of ihoto act citrper were, for a moment, enchauied into fruit, flowers, stems of magic gold, and blotted, almost iniamly, by the diik. You could still see. as a man swimming sees under water, I lie shadowed stems of trees, the feathers of the ferns iiiotioulcse, outspread. Then came a moving shallow and stood still at the foot of the great tree. Like a cal walrhing a mousrhold, Cault watrhed his r tuner. It came when the basket of lo had hern Uken up and the woiiwn descend in to earth had just let go her hold. Then Cault sprang up out ol hi rathe ol leave and with out hesitation or parlry flung him self upon the end of .he Udder. The woman lt out a rrram and, crying, ran away, Vp In the tree the while, caged creature pulled at the ladder, and when it refused to answer her hand, lraned forth. The men rnuld not see her, but thev could hear her voice, asking, remonstrating. Cault answered her as if he knew what she was saying: "It's all right. Don't be afraid of us. VS'e only want to help you." "O. do we?" muttered Irvine in the background. "Some of u are a lot more concerned about help ing ourselves out of the mess you're likely to get us into." The woman seemed to under stand, at least, the tone of Gault's speeches. She murmured some thing indefinite, wilh a note of en treaty in it. "She's asking us to set tier free I'll swear she is. Where's that ax?" demanded Gault. He had brought one with him: he found it in a minute and was away with it in hia teeth, up the bark ladder, before Irvine could do anything to stop him. "Three miles to the village." thought that worthy, drumming a little tune on the butt of his re volver. "A native girl in a hurry will make half an hour of if. Na tive buck in a damned hurrv. with their fighting kit on. wilt make rather less. Something under an hour to get the carriers off and clear, if we don't want to make pot roast for the village. What'a he alt" There was a sudden crash among the branches above; a heavy beam or two fell whooping through the dark. Irvine jumped aside. "Done it now, evidently," he said to himself. "And what the several unpleasant things he means to do next. 1 should very much like to Hi, Kid, what are you up to? We'll have the whole village in our hair inside of an hour." "I've made her understand," came triumphantly from the brok en tree house. ("I'll go bail," was Irvine's comment.) "She knows we want to help her. Shes' coming with us." Irvine, to himself, down among the dank smelling leaves and thorny creepers, swore as.few of his friends had ever heard him swear. To the other he said not a word. He, who was above all things, a fighter, knew when fighting was no use. In another minute two came down the ladder Gault first, scrambling and hanging by his hands; the girl after, moving with less activity than one might have expected from a native. "She's stiff and cramped, poor little soul," said the Kid, swinging lymself to the ground and watch ing the descent of the half seen, shadowy form above him. "My God, did any one ever hear of such beastly cruelty? Whatever she's done and it couldn't be much, anyhow to shut her up like a bird in a cage away by herself in the bush, and I suppose to leave her till she died! Thank heaven we came along." "Is it any use." said Irvine, blocking the way before him, "to tell you that you've time, just time, to get out of the maddest trick you've ever played in your life? Any use telling you that you're probably throwing away your life and mine, and the carriers', poor beasts, to help a damned little hussy of a native girl who just as likely doesn't want any help at all? Kid, put her back where you got her and get on as fast as you can. Don't you see she can look after herself, since she's done it so far? She" "You can shut up," came sharply through the dusk. "She's coming. I I don't believe what you said about Albinos I I believe she's white. I'm going to take her with us, and when we get to a mis sion " "O. Lord! O, Lord!" was Ir vine's only comment. There was no quiet steep, rolled in blankets by the fire, that night for the carriers. Insted they spent the hours from dusk to dawn going hard, relentlessly driven, along the narrow, root encumbeered track that led. by compass, toward the distant sea. Irvine calculated that it was just possible for the party to do the ditanee to the eoat In a nijht. and he wa determined that thry should. They had the best part of an hour's start, and they ICmObmmI m Pat BiM I