s JLLUSTAWStS Y &WEJL * COPYRIGHT J9O7 BY MAfUOft - SYNOPSIS. Baraka , a Tnrttir Rlrl.beeamo cnnmorcil ot a. golden bearded stranger who was prospectlnK and studying lierbs In tin- vicinity ot her homo In central Asia , and revealed to him the location of a mini ? of rubles hoplns that the struimer would love her In return for her disclosure. They wore followed to the cave by the Blrl's relatives , who blocked up the i-n- trnncc , and drew oft the water supply , leaving the couple to die. Btmika's cousin Sand , her botrothod. attempted to climb down a cliff overlooking the mine ; but the traveler shot him. The struiiKor was revived from a water gourd Baud cur ried. CHAPTER I. Continued. It was a long time slnco Bho hail heard any sound from the cave ; she went to the entrance and listened , hut all was quite still. Perhaps.the trav eler had fallen asleep from exhaus tion , too tired even to drag himself out Into the air when ho could work no longer. She sat down In the en trance and waited. An hour passed. Perhaps he was dead. At the mere Inward suggestion Baraka sprang to her feet , and her heart beat frantically , and stood still an Instant , and then heat again as if it would * hurst , and she could hardly breathe. She steadied herself against the rock , and then went In to know the truth , feeling her way , and in stinctively shading her eyes as many people do in the dark. A breath of cool air made her open them , and to her amazement there was light before her. She thought she must have turned quite round while she was walking , and that she was going back to the entrance , so she turned again. But in a few seconds ends there was light before her once more , and soon she saw the dry sand , full of her footprints and the travel er's , and then the hollow where the mine was came In sight. She retraced her steps a second time , saw the light as before , ran for ward on the smooth sand and stumbled upon a heap of earth and stones , just as she saw the sky through an irregu lar opening on the level of her face. Scarcely believing her senses she thrust out her hand towards the hole. It was real , and she was not dream ing ; the traveler had got out and was gone , recking little of what might hap pen to her , slnco he was free with his treasure. Baraka crept up the slope of earth as quickly as she could and got out ; If she had hoped to find him waiting for her she was disappointed , for he was nowhere to be seen. He had got clear away , with his camel-bag full of rubies. A moment later she was lying on the ground , with her face lu the stream , drinking her fill , and forgetful even of the man she loved. In order to deprive them of water the men had dug a channel by which it ran down di rectly from the spring to the ravine on that side ; then they had blocked up the entrance with stones and earth , believing that one man's strength could never suffice to break through , and they had gone away. They had prob ably buried or burnt Baraka's clothes , for she did not see them anywhere. . She ate some of the dates from the dead man's wallet , and a bit of the dry black bread , and felt revived , slnco her greatest need had been for water , and that was satisfied. But when she had eaten and drunk , and had washed herself In the stream and twisted up her hair , she sat down upon a rock ; and she felt so tired that she would have fallen asleep if the pain in her heart had not kept her awake. She clasped her hands to gether on her knees and bent over them , rocking herself. When nearly an hour had passed she looked up and saw that the sun was sinking , for the shadows were turning purple in the deep gorge , and there was a golden light on the peaks above. She listened then , holding her breath ; but there was no sound ex cept the tinkling of the tiny stream as it fell ever a ledge at some distance below her , following its now way down into the valley. She rose at last , looked upward , and seemed about to go away when a thought occurred to her , which after wards led to very singular cense quences. Instead of going down the valley or climbing up out of it , she went back to the entrance of the cave , taking the woHet with her , dragged herself in once more over the loose stones and earth , reached the secret hollow where the pool had been , and made straight for the little mine of precious stones. The traveler had broken out many more than ho had been able to carry , but she did not try to collect them all. She was not alto gether ignorant of the trade carried on by the men of her family for gen erations , and though she had not the least Idea of the real value of the finest of the rubles , she know very well that it would bo wise to take many small ones which she could ex change for clothing and necessaries with the first women she met in the hills , while hiding the rest of the sui ply she would bo able to carry in the wallet. When she had made her wise se lection , uho looked once more towards the quicksand , and left the place for ever. Ouco outside she began to climb the rocks as fast as she could , t for very soon it would bo night and Bho would have to lie down and wait uiany hours for the day. since there was no moon , and the way was very dangerous , even for a Tartar girl who could almost tread on air. High up on the mountain , over the dry well where Baraka and the stran ger had been Imprisoned , the vulture perched alone with empty craw and drooping wings. But it was of no use for him to wait ; the living , who might have died of hunger and thirst , wore gone , and the body of dead Saad lay fathoms deep in the quicksand , in the very maw of the mountain. CHAPTER II. There was good copy for the news papers on both sides of the Atlantic In the news that the famous lyric so prano , Margarita dti Cordova , whose real name was Miss Margaret Donne , was engaged to Mons. Konstantin Logothetl , a Greek financier of large fortune established in Paris , and al most as well known to art collectors as to needy governments , would-be promoters , and mothers of marriage able daughters. The engagement was made known during the height of the London sea son , not long after they had both been at a week-end party at Craythew , Lord Crecdmore's place In Derbyshire , where they had apparently come to a final understanding after knowing each other more than two years. Mar garet was engaged to sing at Covent Garden that summer , and the first mention of the match was coupled with the information that she intended to cancel all her engagements and never appear In public again. The re sult was that the next time she came down the stage to sing the Waltz Song in "Romeo and Juliet" she re ceived a tremendous ovation before she opened her handsome lips , aivl another when she had finished the air ; and she spent one of the hnppiest evenings she remembered. Though she was at heart a nice English girl , not much over 24 years of age , the orphan daughter of an Ox ford don who had married an Ameri can , she had developed , or fallen , to the point at which very popular and successful artists cannpt live at all without applause , and are not happy unless they receive a certain amount of adulation. Even the envy they excite - cite In their rivals is delicious , if not almost necessary to them. Margaret's real nature had not been changed by a success that had been altogether phenomenal and had prob ably not been approached by any soprano since Mme. Bonannl ; but a second nature had grown upon it and threatened to hide it from all but those who know her very well Indeed. The Inward Margaret was honest and brave , rather sensitive , and still gener ous ; the outward woman , the prima donna whom most people saw , was self-possessed to a fault , imperious when contradicted , and coolly ruthless when her artistic fame was at stake. The two natures did not agree well together , and made her wretched when they quarreled , but Logotheti , who was going to take her for better , for worse , professed to like them both , and was the only man she had ever known who did. That was one reason why she was going to marry him , aft er having refused him about a dozen times. She had loved another man as much as she was capable of loving , and at one time ho had loved her , but a mis understanding and her devotion to her art had temporarily separated them ; and later , when she had almost told him that she would have him if ho asked her , ho had answered her quite frankly that she was no longer the girl he had cared for , and he had sud denly disappeared from her life alto gether. So Logothetl , brilliant , very rich , gifted , gay , and rather exotic in appearance and manner , hut tenaci ous as a bloodhound , had won the prize after a struggle that had lasted two years. She had accepted him without much enthusiasm at the last , and without any great show of feel ing. ing."Let's "Let's try It , " she had said , and he had been more than satisfied. After a time , therefore , they told their friends that they were going to "try it. " The only woman with whom the great singer was at all Intimate was the Countess Leven , Lord Creedmore's daughter , generally called "Lady Maud , " whoso husband had been In the diplomacy , and , after vainly try ing to divorce her , had been killed in St. Petersburg by a bomb meant for a minister. The explosion had been so terrific that the dead man's Identity had only been established by means of his pocket-book , which somehow es caped destruction. So Lady Maud was a childless widow of elght-and- twonty. Her father , when ho had no prospect of ever succeeding to the title , had been a successful barrister , and then a hard-working member of parliament , and ho had been from boy hood the close friend of Margaret's father. Hence the intimacy that grow up quickly between the two women when they at last mot , though they had not known each other as children , because the lawyer had lived in town and his friend in Oxford. "So you'ro going to try it , my dear- ! " said Lady Maud , when she heard the news. She had a sweet low voice , and when she spoke now it was a little sad ; for sh had "tried It , " and it had failed miserably. Hut she knew that the trial had not been a fair one ; the only man she had ever cared for had been killed In South Africa , and as she had not oven the excuse of having been engaged to him , she had married with Indifference the first handsome man with a good name and a fair for tune who offered himself. Ho chanced to bo a Russian diplomatist , and he turned out a spendthrift and an un faithful husband. She was too kindhearted - hearted to bn glad that he had been blown to atoms by dynamite , but she was much too natural not to enjoy the liberty restored to her by his destruc tion ; and she had not the least Inten tion of over "trying It" again. "You don't sound very enthusiastic , " laughed Margaret , who had no mis givings to speak of , and was generally a cheerful person. "If you don't en courage mo 1 may not go on. " "There are two kinds of ruined gam blers , " answered Lady Maud ; "there arc tliose that still like to watch other people play , and tliose who cannot bear the sight of a roulette table. I'm ono of the second kind , but I'll come to the wedding all the same , and cheer like nind , if you ask me. " "That's nice of you. 1 really think I mean to marry him , and I wish you would help me with my wedding gown , dear. It would bo dreadful If 1 looked Then ho suggests going to Constan tinople and getting it done by the patriarch , who Is his uncle. Really , that would ho rather smart , wouldn't It ? " "Distinctly , " assented Lady Maud "But It you do that , I'm afraid 1 can not help you with the wedding gown. I don't know anything about the dress of a Fanarloto bride. " "Konstantin says they dress very well , " Margaret said. "But of course it is out of the question to do any thing so ridiculous. It will end In the ehnpcl-of-cnse , I'm sure. Ho always has ills own way. That's probably why I'm going to marry him , just be- cauo ho Insists on it. I don't sco any other very convincing reason. " Lady Maud could not think of any thing to say in answer to this ; but as she really liked the singer she thought it was a pity. Paul ( Jrlggs , the veteran man of letters , smiled rather sadly when she met him shopping In Now Bond street , and told him of Margaret's engage ment , llo said that most great sing ers married because the only way to the divorce court led up the steps of the altar. Though ho know the world ho was not a cynic , and Lady Maud herself wondered how long it would be before Ijogothotl and his wife separated. "But they are not married yet , " Grlggs added , looking at her with the quietly ready expression of a man Went to the Entrance and Listened. like Juliet , or Elsa , or Lucia ! Every body would laugh , especially as Ken stantin is rather of the Romeo type , with his almond-shaped eyes and his little black mustache ! I suppose he really is , isn't he ? " "Perhaps just a little. But he is a very handsome fellow. " Lady Maud's lips quivered , but Mar garet did not sco. "Oh , I know ! " she cried , laughing and shaking her head. "You once called him 'exotic/ and ho is but I'm awfully fond of him all the same. Isn't that enough to marry on when there's everything else ? You really will help mo with my gown , won't you ? You're such an angel ! " "Oh , yes , I'll do anything you like. Are you going to have a regular knock-down-and-drag-out smash at St. George's ? The usual thing ? " Lady Maud did not despise slang , but she made it sound like music. "No , " answered Margaret , rather re gretfully. "Wo cannot possibly bo married till the season's quite over , or perhaps in the autumn , and then there will bo nobody here. I'm not sure when I shall feel like It ! Besides. Konstantin hates that sort of thing. " "Do you mean to say that you would like a show wedding in Hanover Square ? " Inquired Lady Maud. "I've never done anything in a church , " said the prlma donnu , rather enigmatically , but as if she would like to. " 'Anything in a church , ' " repeated her friend , vaguely thoughtful , and with the slightest possible interroga tion. "That's a funny way of looking at it ! " Margaret was a little ashamed of what she had said BO naturally. "I think Konstantin would like to have it In a chapel-of-caso in the Old Kent Road ! " she said , laughing. "lie sometimes talks of being married In tweeds and driving off in a hansom ! who is willing that his indifferent words should bo taken to have a spe cial meaning if the person to whom he has spoken chooses , or Is able , to understand them as they may bo un derstood , but who is quite safe from being suspected of suggesting any thing if there Is no answering word or glance. Lady Maud returned his look , but her handsome face grow rather cold. "Do you know of any reason why the marrL-ige should not take place ? " she inquired after a moment. "If I don't give any reason , am I ever afterwards to hold my peace ? " asked Grlggs , with a faint smllo on his weather-beaten face. "Are you publishing the bans ? or are wo think ing of the same thing ? " "I suppose we are. Good-morning. " She nodded gravely and passed on , gathering up her black skirt a little , for there had been a shower. Ho stood still a moment before the shop win dow and looked after her , gravely ad miring her figure and her wall : , as ho might have admired a very valuable thoroughbred. She was wearing mourning for her husband , not be cause any ono would have blamed her If she had not done so. considering how ho had treated her , but out of natural self-respect. Grlggs also looked after her as r.ho went away because ho felt that she was not quite pleased with him for having suggested that ho and she had both been thinking of the same thing. The thought concerned a third per son , and one who rarely allowed him self to bo overlooked ; no less a man , in fact , than Mr. Hufus Van Torp , the American potentate of the great Nickel Trust , who was Lady Maud's most Intimate friend , and who had long desired to make the prlma donna his wlfo. He had bought a place ad joining Lord Creedmoro's , and there had lately been a good deal of quite groundless gossip about him and Lady Maud , which had very nearly become a scandal. The truth was that they were the best friends In the world , , aml nothing more ; the mllllonniro had for Homo time boon Interested In an unusual sort of charity which almost filled the lonely woman's life , and ho hud given considerable sums of. money to help It. During the mouths preced ing the beginning of this tule , ho had also been the object ot ono of those dastardly attacks to which very rich and important financiers are more ex posed than other men , and ho had actually been accused of having done awny with his partner's daughter , who had come to her end mysteriously dur ing a panic in a Now York theater. But his Innocence had been proved in the clearest manner , and ho had re turned to the United States to look after the interests ot the Trust. When Grlggs heard the news ot Margaret's engagement to Logolhotl , he Immediately began to wonder how Mr. Van Torp would receive the intel ligence ; and if It had not already oc curred to I-uly Maud that the million aire might make a final effort to rout his rival and marry the prlma donna himself , the old author's observation suggested such a possibility. Van Torp was a man who had fought up to success and fortune with little regard for the obstacles ho found in his way ; ho had worked as a cowboy In his early youth , and was apt to look on his adversaries and rivals in llfo eith er as refractory cattle or as danger ous wild beasts ; and though ho had some of the old-fashioned ranchcro's sense of fair play In a fight , ho had much of the reckless daring and ruth less savagery that characterize the fast-disappearing western desperado. Logothetl , on the other hand , was In many respects a true oriental , su premely astute and superlatively calm , but imbued , at heart , with a truly eastern contempt for any law that chanced to oppose his wish. Both men had practically Inexhaust ible resources at their command , and both wore determined to marry the prlma donna. It occurred to Paul Grlggs that a real struggle between such a pair of adversaries would bo worth watching. There was unlimited money on both sides , and equal cour age and determination. The Greek was the more cunning of the two , by great odds , and had now the considerable advantage of having been accepted by the lady ; but the American was far more regardless of consequences to himself or to others in the pursuit of what ho wanted , and , short of com mitting n crime , would put at least ns broad an interpretation on the law. Logothetl had always lived in a highly civilized society , even In Constanti nople , for it is the greatest mistake to imagine that the upper classes of Greeks , lu Greece or Turkey , are at all deficient in cultivation. Van Torp , on the contrary , had run away from civilization when a half-educated boy , he had grown to manhood in a com munity of men who had little respect for anything and feared nothing at all , and ho had won SUCCORS In a field where these who compete for it buy it at any price , from a Ho to a llfo. Lady Maude was thinking of these things as she disappeared from Grlggs' sight , for she was a little afraid that she had made trouble. Ten days had passed since she had last written to Rufus Van Torp , and she had told him , amongst other things , that Mme. do Cordova and Logothoti were en gaged to bo married , adding that It seemed to her ono of the most Ill-as sorted matches of the season , and that her friend the nlnger was sure to bo miserable hersolt and to make her husband perfectly wretched , though ho was a very good sort in ills way and she liked him. There had been no reason why she should not write the news to Mr. Van Torp , even though it was not public property yet , for ho was her intimate friend , and she know him to bo as reticent as all doctors ought to be and as some so licitors' clerks are. She had asked him not to tell any ono till ho heard of the engagement from some ono else. else.He He had not spoken of It , but some thing else had happened. IIo had cabled to Lady Maud that ho was com ing back to England by the next steamer. Ho often came out and went back suddenly two or three times at short Intervals , and then stayed away for many months , hut Lady Maud thought there could not bo much doubt ns to his reason for coming now. She know well enough that ho had tried to persuade the prlma donna to marry him during the previous winter - tor , and that If his passion for her had not shown Itself much of late , this was duo to other causes , chiefly to the persecution of which ho had rid him self just before ho went to America , but to some extent also to the fact that Margaret had not seemed in clined to accept any ono else. Lady Maud , who know the man bet ter than ho knew himself , inwardly compared him to a volcano , quiescent just now , so far as Margaret was con cerned , but ready to break out at any moment with unexpected and destruc tive energy. Margaret herself , who had known Logothetl for years , and hud Been him In his most dangerous moods as well an in Ills best moments , would have thought a similar comparison with an elemental force quite ns truly descriptive of him , If it had occurred to hor. The enterprising Greek had really attempted to carry her off by force on the night of the final re hearsal before her first appearance on the stage , and had only been thwarted because u royal rival had caused him to bo locked up , as if by mistake , In order to carry her oft himself ; In which ho also had failed most rldlcu * lously , thanks to the young singer's friend , the celebrated Mme. Bonnnnl. That Was n very amusing story. But on another occasion Margaret had found herself shut up with her ori ental adorer in a room from which she could not escape , and ho had qulto lost his head ; and if she had not been the woman she was , she would have fared 111. After that ho had behaved more like an ordinary human being , and she had allowed the natural at traction ho had for her to draw her gradually to a promise of marriage ; and now she talked to Lady Maud about her gown , but she still put oft naming a day for the wedding , in spite of Logothetl's growing Impatience. This was the situation when the London season broke tip and Mr. Van Torp landed at Southampton from nn ocean greyhound that had covered the distance from Now York In 5 days 12 hours and 37 minutes , which will doubtless seem very slow traveling If any ono takes the trouble to road this tale 20 years hence , though the pas sengers wore pleased because it was not much under the record time for steamers coming east. Five hours after ho land d Van Torp entered I ady Maud's drawing room in the little house In Charles street , Berkeley Square , wlioro she had lived with the departed Levon from the time when ho had been at tached to the Russian embassy till ho had last gone away. She was giving It up now , and It was already half dis mantled. It was to sco Van Torp that she was In town in the middle of August , instead of with her father at Craythew or with friends In Scotland. London was as hot as it could be , which means that a Now Yorker would have found It chilly and an Italian de lightfully cool ; but the Londoners were sweltering when Ynji Torp ar rived , and were talking ot the oppres sive atmosphere and the smell of the pavement , not at all realizing how blessed they wore. The American entered and stood still a moment to have a good look at Lady Maud. Ho was a middle-sized , rather thick-sot man , with rude hands , sandy hair , an over-developed jaw , and sharp hluo eyes that sometimes fixed themselves In a disagreeable way when ho was speaking eyes that had looked Into the barrel of another man's revolver once or twice without wavering , hands that had caught and saddled and bridled many an unrlddon colt In the plains , a mouth like a carpetbag pet-bag when it opened , like a closed vice when it was shut. lr- was not n handsome man , Mr. Rufus Van Torp , nor ono with whom any ono short of a prize-lighter would meddle , nor ono to haunt the dreams of sweet 1C. It was not for his face that Lady Maud , good and beautiful , liked him bettor than any ono In the world , except her own father , and believed In him and trusted him , and It was assuredly not for ills money. The beggar did not live who would dare to ask him for a penny after ono look at his face , and there were not many men on either side of the Atlantic who would have looked forward to any sort of contest with him without grave misgivings. "Well , " ho said , advancing the last step after that momentary pause , and taking the white hand In both his own , "how have you been ? Fair to middling ? About that ? Well I'm glad to see you , gladder than a sitting hen at sunrise ! " ( TO I3G CONTINUED. ) Ruskin on Railways. One can imagine perhaps the feel ings with which Ruskin , had he been alive , would have heard the news that n new Alpjno railway Is now In course of construction. His most withering sarcasms were directed against these "travelers through the Alps by tunnels" who "go to balls in Rome , or hells nt Monaco. " And ho was vehemently opposed to all at tempts to beautify the railway sta tion. "Tho railroad , " he writes , In "Tho Seven Lamps of Architecture , " "Is in nil its relations of earnest busi ness , to be got through as soon as possible. It transmutes a man from a traveler into a living parcel. For the time he has parted with the nobler characteristics of his human ity for the sake of a planetary power of locomotion. Do not nsk him to admire anything. You might as well ask the wind. Carry him safely , dis miss him soon ho will thank you for nothing else. " Real "Homo Body. " Miss Harriet Nlcklln , whoso funeral took place at Folchill , England , re cently , had never , during the 02 years of her life , passed a night out of the house in which she was born , and slept for l-J.OOQ nights in the same bedroom.