unday Bee magazine' section! vol. 52 no. ir,. OMAHA, SUN'DAV MOIININC, M.IT..MI.KK 21. 1922. KIVK I'KNTS THE OUTLAW By Arthur Stringer The It All Started When Cosgrave Set Out to Arrest the Girl Whose Turban Was oj Forbidden Herring Gull Plumage, Topped off With a Snowy Egret. COSGRAVI' first saw t he snowy egret at lie turned into Fifth avenue al Thirty-third sin i t. Iff 1iaJ in tended walking south, to his publisher's ofhee, but lie promptly headed not th. For that egret was to bini very much wlj.it an aniseed linn might be to a beagle or wli.it a rid rag might lie to a bull. Nor was it the .snowy egret alone that awakened bi.s anger. 'J lie thing seemed doubly offensive because the wind-tossed white feathers cascaded about a small and slightly tiptiltcd turban most unmistakably made of herring gull's plumage. Anil both were interdicted; were illegal a hat ornaments. He bad no knowledge as to who was wear ing these forbidden decorations, but he had his own opinion of the woman who would deck herself out in such tilings. She was a violator of the law. an enemy of the precious wild life that her petty vanities bad all but exterminated. Vet so briskly did site walk up the carlv morn ing avenue that J'bilip Co-grave, was compelled to follow her for three blocks before catching up with her. When he did so be tapped her on the arm, very much as a patrolman might. She turned sharply, at that unlocked for alfront, and made lwr shoulder movement away from him a perceptible one. Hut his stern eye was fixed on the snowy egret. "I suppose you know you're breaking the law in wearing those feathers," he proclaimed, notic ing for the first time that the soft gray of the hrr-ring-gull plumage matched the soft gray of her eyes. "What feathers?" she demanded, with open hostility on her face. It was a pretty enough face, but Cosgrave had no intention of permitting a pret ty face to come between bint and a moral obliga tion. "The feathers on your hat there," he anonnnced, with all the acerbity at his command. "Is it any particular business of yours what I wear on my hat?" she challenged, resuming her walk up the avenue and compelling him to fall into step or be left hhind. She was looking straight ahead of her by this time, and he noticed the qu:cl flush of annoyance which had deepened the color ing of her oval cheek. "It's very much my business," asserted Cos grave, nettling under her obvious contempt. "It's my business, not only as a member of the Migra tory Birds' Protective association and an officer of the Audubon society, but also as a decent citizen decently interested in seeing our laws enforced." "From which I am to infer that I'm not even a decent citizen," she said, smiling for the first time. Her face, he noticed, was not as hard as he had expected. The head wearing the snowy egret, indeed, bad just nodded gayly to an old lady in sables, stepping out of a limousine. I hat, he told the girl at his side, is not the important point." "Then what is?" she demanded. "The fact that there's a law against the use of ' the snowy egret and herring-gull plumage as ap parel and that you are at the present moment breaking that law." Her gloved hand went up to the tiptiltcd tur ban, giving it, if possible, a slightly saucier angle than before. "Would you be good enough to tell me of that law?" she said, quite solemnly. And Cosgrave ex plained to her the enactment of ffie migratory birds' convention act, after which he told her, as graphically as he could, how4hc dorsal plumes of the Ameri can egret, the Ardea candidissima, were plucked during the breeding season, and how such pot-hunting for venal mil liners had almost succeeded in exterminating otic of the loveliest of the native herons. "You know, I never thought of that," she said, favoring him with her first oblique glance of appraisal. "Too few of you do," snapped Cosgrave. determined not to be sidetracked by any last-moment parade of humility. "Hut in some cases," she gently suggested, "there may be extenuating circumstances." "That." he coldly announced, "is a matter for the court to decide." "The court?" she echoed, sweeping him with still an other sidelong glance. "They are maintained for precisely that purpose," he announced. "Am I to understand, then, that you insist on pro claiming me a lawbreaker " The peach blow that had come into her cheeks, Co gravc noticed, had now 'given way to a gardenia-white. "Isince you are breaking the law, 1 intend to see that voii'te arrested," be s4'd. with a firmness which kept her silent ior a full halt block. "lo you realize just how humiliating that might be to mi she finally aked "It should be humiliating to any woman ni imagination, ni on !jj nation enough to perceive how much sultet iik her ae i can impose on the dumb creatures oi this earth!" lie si,.ke with more heat, peihjps. than he ha I intended. Hut in the tiptilti'd tin ban and the woman hfnle him he i.nind something on which to renter bis nebulous h.itrrd for tli.se i !y peacoiks who linked them, elves out ill bathers an I mi i rav aged from tbc hod (i oi I eel s helples ereatui e ,,1 III,- w.ld ' Ion a.tiise Ine ol ciil!tv, of unthinking rruiltv," the beside f on i s jtt, ttiat 'lint don't voU thmk that de ll.. .t ntrlu i quite as hud - the other kind.' And you . I. miu ib I In nieb, t ru I with mr " Mi . wn (nll.," n no... mo el. "ir, in t oiiptxt Hit. lii .' s i s its .Hid V i "it bt ke o " him. Ami be r a nlcd the momentary show of timidity in her eyes. "'I he law oi ih'vahy, of tolerance," hr t.dd him, "of (p-iicrosity toward the weak." "Von don't inipiess as weak," lie cuitly informed her. ''lint 1 am a woman " "A woman Mihject to the laws of your land," he ror reeled. "Hut m have so many laws," the protested with a mi ni cotine l.ttle gesture, "And an equally reglettabte frequency of violation," lie amended, net in bin purpose that no feminine blandishment idioiild steer him away from the straight and narrow path ol duly. And that duty seemed plainer than ever .n lu looked up ami daw, a block ahead of him, the blue iiiiifoiin of a policeman mi patrol. "Can't we RO somewhere and talk this over quietly?" the girl suggested, also conscioim, apparently, of the otlicrr' approach. "I imagine we've laid about a'I there in to say," was Cosgravc's altogether unsympath. tie rejoinder. He had been A m A loved you and wanted to be with you." examining her vvitii . him, in a vague sort of ipcronal glance. It annoyed .. ..it, il H ...I v.iu trail bi ill If another .til U ? oi. I i ed !ei ' he d o, .( d i'. i I tiji at In. i t. 4 1 b '' !'e .t i(rH way, to discover Iier crown of interdicted plumage perversely added to her beauty. "And you insist on this public humiliation?" she asked, without looking at him. "I insist that a law which I helped to frame should be i respected," he maintained. And she nodded, comprthend ingly, after turning that statement over for a moment or t wo. "You must hale me very much," she said, with her meditative Mona Lisa smile. He resented that essentially feminine, tendency to reduce everything to the personal. His one desire, he reminded bimelf, was to remain judicial, And he strove to sustain that pose by staring pointedly at her headgear as he re marked: "1 am a member of the auduhon society." "Which .means, I take it, that you love birds much more than you do human beings," she siigested, with out bitterness, "I'm alt aid you w ill be quite unable to argue me out of what I've accepted as a matter of conscience," he au iiouuied to the I'lid stiue in silken hosiery and serge beside nun. i he nine soul she could claim, he began to fee . 1 i. - ii i i i inn sriinuig sum oi one wnicti sue got eveiv from her null ner and her ntasciise. "O, it's cnscieiice " she said, with a small l and ges turrioi enlightenment. And be thished, m .iite himself, as she add. (. "That, of course, leaven it qulie hou hss'" ' el, even as she spoke, she quickened her pace and stepped slightly ahead of linn. teine ,e cniihl fully naiie the iiii.oiuig u that nuiieoiivi r she sloiM'd hoi l b. ioie the appioai hmg figure in the blue uniform. ' Oihur," she promptly proilaimed, ' tbn nun U an. tioving me." the iqiaque Cillic eve leisiirily and nonr Phi ai.proV ing!v uispe i led t u'suir'i person 'I lien it ipnte n b isuie U and nnii h more a.pr..i .nly uispei ted the kul nf.innn ll'i" lierrniai Iurti4ii. ' Il.i vuh know bun'" inquired the (. Iiifiiian. "I in vi r saw him bef .re h. 4crolrd lur bri on lh Uil.' .ia her u,t.., ir,. ld to.rve wmtrj Bi t. . i H it 4 tbf "4n osied" vuh Vi ,m bun rtle. iiuiiod tht t-H'ivr, Ha,. Ii d,. ii . 4ut b in nn..inj me.' iil rtd was morning I ' i "I i tU- u d lb, .1 t. with an. .tiler lutie to flail' ling inspection of the luau be tide lu i . Cosgrave, at that, felt that he bad riidimd about i lioueh. "l In the loliliary, ofii.er, I want this, woman aiH-sted!" "So y ii Ii want her arrested :" repeated ilie sidl'Impai Dive Ccllie xiant. "And Jul why khoiild juli be waiitui' ln-f arrested.'" "l or breaking the law in wearing those egiri feather on her li.it," nnnotmrrd ( osgiave. '1 inmihy s McArthur, the oflicer, inspreled the egret feather. "And how'm I t'know them'a eagh I (eaihers?" ut quired the large bodied mall in blue, "h gret," rorreited losgravc. "Well, whatever you call "rm, they suit the lady fine, to my wav o' tlinikin'l '1 hey may be eaglet teatheii and they may he r'Mistcr feather. Hut yuh've got a divd of a lot to do, you big oinadhaun, wanderin' around and pek in' your long nose into what a gerrl' wearin' on her bead. Yuli' better be getlin' bai k to the millinery department. I don't care who yuh are or what yuh are. Yuli' be on you way. And if yuh speak to this gerrl agj'n I'll Rather yuli in o quick yuh won't know , an eaglet feather from the tail id a Coihin-. China-!" i The one thing Cosgrave noticed was that the oval face under the herring gull tin ban was wear ing the softest of smiles. "Well nie t again perhaps," she said over her shoulder. "I hope that never happens, retorted Co grave, with a glance at the nightstick of the m tervening Celtic giant, implacable as fate, point ing in a direction opposite to that which the girl in the snowy egiet was taking. Hut Cosgrave and the fuiowy egret girl did meet again. They met unexpectedly nil the sec ond evening alter bis lertuie on "The (iulf HirH Sanrtuaries," wdien he was dining at the Woleotts'. He was unaware of her presence there until a footman, going from group to chattering group, passed around the cocktails. She turned on him suddenly as he took a diffident sip of the amber mixture which meant so little to him. "Doesn't your conscience trouble you?" she demanded, with an accusatory eye on the glass in his hand. "Why should il ?" he asked, noticing that she wa; l'oliing lovelier than ever in her dmner gown of nasturtium n il. Hut there was no mistaking the enmity behind her pose of levity. "Don't you know that you are breaking one of the laws of this laud?" she magisterially inquired. "1 never thought much about it," he retorted as he put down his glass. "Hut there are so many who never think much about it," she pointed out with mock solemnity. He was able to laugh a little, but he could see that she was still intent op making him ridiculous. "Few of us are perfect," be observed, though he wa wondering at the time why nothing stood to devastating as the scorn of a beautiful woman. "Yet go many of us demand perfection in oth ers," she proclaimed. She said it light-heartedly enough, but he was not unaware of the saber sheathed- in rose leaves. He stood studying her (ace with an impersonal intentness which brought the faintest touch of color into her cheek. "I 'fancy it' going to be hard for ns to be friends," she observed, with her disconcerting small mile. "I rather imagine it's going to be quite impos sible," he found the brutality to retort. lie was sorry, the next moment, that he bad said it, and he was still sorrier when, a few min utes later, he found himself confronted by the lugubrious pleasure of taking her to dinner. He had tto wish to nurse grudges. But he was not unconscious of the enmity which she necessarily entertained for him. And he hail small liking for the type. He flattered himself that he knew it only too well, the youth fully arrogant and unchallenged, the indulged and sell in dulgent and blightingly derisive jettne hlle of modern America, imperious in her pursuit of pleasure, tiading casii aly on her beauty, and cynically persuaded that both the problems and the laws of this world were for persons other than herself. What began to puzzle him, however, was her sustained air of meekness. It reminded him, in a disturbing sort of way, of the dis.siinulative wounded bird movement of the mother pheasant when frightened from the nest. "It's a small world, isn't it?" she observed toward the end of a dinner which could still show perversely pleasant mo ments to him. "Especially to the evil doer " Ue asked her why she said that. "liecause I've discovered that it's on Lake Trevor yiit have your bird sanctuary. And I find that I'm to spend 4 month with the Wolcott's, almost side by side with it." "I shudder to think of the cotisiqucncrs!" He was able, however, to smile as he said it. "Your fears, I feel, are quite groundless," she countered, with her quiet smile. "I intend, in fa. t, to find out a gie.it deal about bird life," "I trust it will change voiir p .ml of view," he rcniaikrd, wondering why she should sn studying him with such 4 meek and iiieJiUtive eve Yet his sense of triumph in scot iiiit against a too open-banded enemy wj not as enduring as it might have hern, For, a few minutes later, he bad the dubious pleasure of hearing her rente to a yun'h whom shu addressed as "Kennie" the lines of a new- song wiinh l e lightly asked him to et lev liuisie, "It ends up. Kfiiiuf, something like this "Remember, gentle neighbor, t'-en "Ii wroig to ti-aie the bat; Fuibrate ibf ha lifrr in ii ibn, II friendly oh the fit. tol love the bttle t.inliri h Ihry bve you, tit If tl: And nff pluck the ioii wren "In dm. nie , nr t''" t'"S(tt4 tinned !os, h . t nd lo,.ked tl the g'4 tth Hi.h,:. ihrk "Your poem." h lolenmlv mf it ned rrr, 'a nuiili pit tit r than lb ieoii, whh m-fixd it " (' lueii'lv shr.itf tt A 1 Vi .'r bo ibb f nn h'f it itf. iter nirtillrd ((rap ' i .ii ,..' b viou 'y icautkti, ' t'l 1