10 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE : SUNDAY , AUGUST 21. 1898. fiii vi , The Dciul llody. The splendid success of Lo Breton's rldo gave the millionaire n little relaxation from his agonies of unrest ; for the present , nt least , Wllkclm had bis work cut out , not before but behind him. Vanslttart'a breathing space was short. The frantic en ergies with which the Germans threw them selves Into the task of repairing their shat tered bases warned him that what ho did ho must do quickly. And In order that the victory might bo etrlklng nnd dramatic , ho himself must bo there with the army , commanding It , he , Vansittart. Paris was no place for him. His eagerness to set out became In a few days a fever with him. Iut he could not go. First of nil , there was a whole world of business , a whole cosmos of organization , which his tired brain had to arrange before he could dream of leaving the capital. I Secondly , by some perfectly organized and : determined hostile agency , the chief railway' lines cast of Paris were temporarily ruined by viaducts and bridges being blown up. Thirdly , Just as he was ou the point of leaving affairs to take care of themselves In order to reach the front by a circuitous I route , the body of an unknown man was found floating , all bloated and dlsflgurcd , la the Seine. The body wag found at 9 o'clock on a Tuesday morning. The same night Folllet , the prefect of police , was closotud with a detective In ono of the small Inner rooms of the prefecture. Ills sharp , angular fea tures were bent In eager Inqulsltlvencss close to the face of his aubordlnatc. "Murder ? " ho said. "Oh , I suppose that's It , " answered the other. "No marks ? No wounds ? " "None. And the funny thing Is , the Ar- rondlssemcnt doctor says the body doesn't look to him as It death was duo to drown ing. " "Poison , then ? " "No no poison , that's certain. " "What was he ? " "Ho looks to mo llko a German ; you know those bullet-headed Germans , with the back of the skull all flat like a board. " "Only n llttlo piece of wet cardboard In his pocket , marked in red Ink with a big C. It may bo a C , or it may be a 9 , for that matter. " "This morning a girl came to give notice that Bach , a lager beer seller , No. 1 rue Musette , had disappeared. Bach's a , widower ewer , nnd the girl's his sweetheart. A little before that the body had been found , and wo took the girl to see it. She said it wasn't Bach , though it was like him. " Folllct smiled. "But I must point out that the girl also Bald that Bach never dressed llko that. The clothes were wrong. " "Ah ! The corpse's clothes were peculiar , then ? " "His hat was a little peculiar. " "Then It was this hat the .girl meant. In glancing in disgust at the bloated face ho caught sight of the hat. That's it. Tell mo about the hat. " "It was a cap with a glazed peak , turned down. It was found floating near him. Stuck between the ribbon and the side of the cap was a pigeon's feather. " "And Bach never wore a cap with a pigeon feather stuck In It , didn't he ? But tell mo about Bach ; all the tame ho In terests me. Did anything happen just be fore he disappeared ? " "No it seems not. At 7 on Friday even ing the girl was with him In the parlor behind the shop. Ho didn't seem , she says , quite at case a little fidgety , perhaps rather a nervous kind of man she says Bach is ho kept glancing at the clock. At last ho Jumped up suddenly , and said ho was sorry , but she must leave him that night , as ho had an appointment which he must keep. So she went ; nnd Bach has not since been seen. " "He shut up his shop to go , then ? " "So it seems. Ho lived alone on the premises. It's ono of those tiny liquor shops UD Montmartro way. " "It must have been a deuced important appointment this of Bach's , Carnet ! " said 1 Folllet. "So it seems , sir. " "And in order to keep It , ho found It necessary to put on a cap with a pigeon's feather , eh ? " "Yes If Bach and the corpse are the fame. " "They are , man. " "And nbout " this girl ? "What's her name ? " "Agnes Carbalx. " "Where does nhe live ? " "Hue Plgalle , No. 11. " "Good. You nro to understand , Carnet , that this case is now in my own hands. Come along with me. I am going to have a look at Hcrr Bach. " They proceeded nt once into a room be hind , where the hat hung- among a host of ghastly relics on the wall. Folllct took it , nnd with n magnifying glass from his pocket , commenced to cxamlno the feather and every portion of the surface. Presently an exclamation came from him. Ho had found within the leather lining of the cap a small piece of wet paper folded upon itself several times. "Ah , " ho said , "Bach's cap , you see , was rather too largo for his head.Yet. . surely , this kind of cap will fit almost anybody's head ! If ho took the trouble to stuff It with paper , that chows that It must have been not only too large , but very much too large , and that again shows that M. Bach did not purchase this particular cap for himself. How think you , Cnrnut , that this beer-seller of Montmar.ro came by a cap procured by somebody else ? " "Ah , sir , that I don't know. " replied Car not. not."No "No , nor I cither , " said Folllct , "but that Is what we've got to find out , you see. Let's have a look at the paper. " Fold by fold he opened the damp leaf. It was ruled with red line and looked as though it had been torn from an account book ; on It were written some words whoso blurred outline * were now all but illegible. But by the aid of the glass. Folllflt was ble to read them , nnd when ho read them ho smiled. The words were : "Three casks bock. "Bottled , five dozen absinthe. "Lager. 17 litres. " "This , Carnot. Is a little bill of Bach'e , " aid Folllet. "Suppose I tell you that It Is a bill for beers and spirits will you still doubt that the beer seller and the corpse are the same ? " "Well , no , sir , of course. " "All right , then I do tell you so. And now , the cardboard. " Toll , too , he examined. It was small bout an inch square dry and polling. Out on it , quits legible was the red 9 or 6 with curving tall. Folllct put it Inta his pocket. "And now for Mr. Vansittart , " ho mut tered. CHAPTER VII. Sfo. 11 Hue riKnlte. It was now growing dark. Folllct de scended hurriedly from his Interview with Vansittart and in 'the place de la Concorde sprang Into a flacre. He told the coachcr to drive to the 'rUd PJgallo , No. 11. This street runs northeast and southwest from the place do la T-lnlte , starting from near the fine church of that name. The Jalousled houses arc large , but decayed and somber. There Is a certain mystery , a hint of squalor. No. 11 had a gloomy exterior. It was big and the gray jalousies were every one closed. In the courtyard there was no con cierge. But Folllet , penetrating a few steps be yond the gate , was met by a girl , some 20 years of age , well figured , with dark face and hair In disorder. She was quietly dressed. Her eyes looked as If they had been crying. "I want to have n talk with Agnes Car- hoix , " said Folllet. "But I am she , monsieur , " said the girl. "Good. I am of the police from the pre fecture. You called there this morning , I think. " "Yes , monsieur , but " "I just want to have a talk with you " "Well , monsieur if that Is so " Her eyes dropped. She was contused. "What the devil , " said Folllot to himself , "is the matter ? " "If monsieur will will step this way with mo wo might sit together In the Cabaret au Vrai Bruyant just yonder outside and there talk. " "Can't any one enter the house then , I wonder ? " said Folllet to himself. Aloud ho added : "Really , but it Isn't worth all .that trouble , you know. I wanted merely to ask you a question or two about your sweet heart , M. Bach. I may tell you at once that wo have every hope of finding and re storing him to you , it we can just get a tew facts " The girl's eyes leaped upon him. "Of finding him really , monsieur ? " she said. , "Yes , really why not ? These temporary disappearances are quite common , you know , In a place like Paris. Let us sit in the room here a little and talk the matter over. " Still she 'hesitated a ooment Then turned reluctantly and led 1he way. As Folllet moved to follow her , something slowly falling from above through the air , brushed past his nose. Ho caught It quickly nnd quickly poked it into a pocket. It was a feather. The courtyard In which they had stood was dark : but the room on the ground floor Into which Agnes Carhalx row led him was darker still. Folllet placed his chair so that , while ho remained In absolute shadow , a dim glimmer from the half-open door made her movements and attitude dis cernible. But It was his nostrils and his cars , rather than his eyes , which were busy. He had no sooner entered the room than a singular odor greeted him. He bad no sooner settled himself on the chair than a singular sound fell upon his ears. The odor was the fnlnt , fetid odor of a stable. The sound was a single one , re sembling the stroke of a club thumping upon boards. As It sounded through the loom the girl winced. "Well , now , about Bach , " said Folliet , with every sense on the alert. "You will find that the questions I have to ask you about him are not many , and easily answered. First of all. how long have you been ongagrd to him ? " "I I " 8he said , In evident confusion. "Come , now how long ? " "About about two weeks. " "That all ? " Down In answer come sounding the club upon the boards , a slnjjle blow. "Yes ' " that's all. "And when were you to be married ? " "In In a week. " "So ? Really ? Not a very long engage ment , then , all told. " "No. But what has that to do with the matter , monsieur ? " "Well , in a case of this kind everything Is of Importance , you know. Just answer my questions you will find them easy to answer. How long have you known Bach ? " "About about three weeks. " "That all ? He was anxious to be married quickly , then ? " "O , come , now , if the man Is to bo found , It Is clear that you must let mo know the facts , you know. " "Ah , monsieur , do not torment me ! " She burled her face in her hands. "Well , then , " ho said , "wo start with this fact : That Bach was anxious , for some reason or other , to cet married in frantic haste. Bach or you. Which was it Bach , or you ? " The mysterious sound of the club came pounding In answer upon the boards. The cowering girl was silent. "Ah , you are not open nnd candid , you see , " said Folllctt ; "how do you expect me to find your lover for you ? Well , then , I must nsk you something else. Was the appointment which Bach had to keep on the day ho disappeared an important ono ? " "I suppose so , " " ' ' " "Only 'suppose ? "I believe so. " "Come , now ; that's bettor. You believe so. Well , what has It all about ? " "I don't know. " "Very Well , then I shall leave you to find your lover for yourself , that's all. " "He was going to a meeting. " "Really ? An assemblage of men ? " "I suppose so. " "He told you so ? " "Yes , " In the faintest whisper came from her. her."An "An assemblage of Germans ? " "O , not necessarily Germans. " "How do you know ? " "He did not say they were Germans. Why should you pitch upon Germans ? " "Bach Is a German. " "Yes a naturalized Frenchman. " "And what was the object of this meet Ing ? " "You do not suppose that Mr. Bach told mo his secrets. " "It was a secret meeting , then ? " "I suppose so. " "Why ? " "Because I do not know. I suppose I was secret. " "Ho told you it was secret ? " "Well I suppose yes. " "And you know nothing of Us object ? " "How should I ! " "When did you first meet Mr. Bach ? " "Here , In this house. " "So ? How came he hero ? " "He was brought hero by a friend of his. " "A German I'rimd ? " "Well-yes. " "Who knows you , also ? " "Yes-bo lives here. " "A " lodger ? "Yes. " "Have you any other lodgers ? " "About five. " "All Germans ? " t "Most of thtm , I believe. " "The house IB yours ? " "Mine and my two sisters. " "Havo you always lived here ? " "Nearly always. " "Your father's house ! " "My unole's. " "He Is alive now ? " "He Is lately dead. " "How long ago ? " "Three weeks ago. " "About the same time when you met Bach , then ? " She lowered her eyes. ' "Yes. " Folllet rose. As he did so for the twen tieth time , the club sounded its solitary , strange blow upon the boards. "Well , all I can say , " he said , "Is that you know a great deal more than you choose to tell me. It Is very foolish If you are anxious to find him , you know. I sup pose you ore anxious ? " 'Ah , monsieur , find him. find him quickly for me ! " she walled with hidden face. "Well , " he said , "I won't hide from you that we have a clew that his recovery Is possible soon but " He turned sharply In surprise. There was the swift striking of a match behind who marries flrct. You can guess the re sult. " " 1 seel" cried Folllct. "Jeanne , at tlmo of uncle's death was already engaged to bo married farmer , half German , Lorralnor they say. She at once writes to him to come Immediately ; some thing prevents. Meanwhile Agnes , In great hurry , goes nnd gets engaged ; man named Bach know him well boor seller Mont- martrc. What steps little Marie takes I don't know , But the other two , frantic to bo married , tearing out each Ciller's eyes. " "That all you know ? " "That's about It. " "Thank you , Cazalcs. Shan't forget my promise. Find out anything else of Im portance to mo , and I make the tlmo six instead of three months. Bon solr. " Ho passed out. At the first street lamp ho stopped , nnd drew from his pockut the feather which had brushed past his nose. Ho took out a magnifying glass , and bent to cxamlno It. "Yes , " ho muttered , "It Is a pigeon's feather right enough. But the horse I the horse living llko a Christian In the house ! What the devil can be the meaning of that ? " CHAl'TKIl VIII. Thr Invention. The three sisters Carhatx were very dif ferent one from the other ; Jeanne was ugly ; Agnes was attractive Marie the ; , 17-year- old , had youth and beauty , but she did not know of the clause In the will ; yet she , too , had n lover. Why did not the Lorraine farmer fly as with wings to claim Jeanne and the for tune ? Day after day she wrote letter after letter urging him to come to leave nil , and come , come. Ho answered , promising ROUND FLEW Til E RACING TEAM. him , and the room was flooded with light. There approached him a girl , holding n candlestick. Her face was long , thin and ugly , and on her back was a hump. A look of Intense malice was stamped on her fea tures. Her left fist clenched with rage. Her age was about 30. Folllet guested at once that she had been listening In the dark to the whole of their talk. Her eyes keenly read her somewhat evil face. "Why not tell the gentleman what you know of this man Bach ? " she cried. "Your lover ! Yes , and a flno lover for my father's child was Bach ! " The face ot Agnes was first blanched , then encrlmsoned with rage. "Look , you , Jeanne ! " she hissed , "one word one little word against him and I tell every syllable I know of whence the pigeons come ! " "Come , now , " said Folllet to himself , "this looks not ill. Between two sisters. You are sisters , I suppose ? " he added , aloud. "If you can call any ono your sister who bates you , sir , " Bald Agnes. "It Is you , " replied Jeanne venomously "it li you who began It ! You covetous , greedy , mercenary " She did not go any further ; t this point her Invective was broken in upon by the shrill whinny of a horse a whinny fierce and high , and etrong ; it came from the direction of the room where the club had struck the boards , and where the stable odor had arisen. Both the women started , with blanched faces. Folliet smiled. He bad long since guessed that the soli tary , slow , mysterious sound was duo to the restive smiting upon the bare boards of the hoof of a high-spirited horse. Now he know. < But be was infinitely puzzled. The plot was thickening. He wished to be alone to think. "Well , I won't stay to witness your family quarrels , " he said. "Mile. Agnes , I can only promise that we shall do our best ; 'and I think I can give you the hope of seeing your fiance in three or fo'ur days , at the furthest , " He bowed and passed out of the room : he reached the courtyard and became anx ious ; he reached the gate and despaired ; but as he was bending to pass through the wicket into the street the expected hap pened. Jeanne touched his arm ; she had run otter him. "Come tomorrow at 1 , monsieur , " she said In a thick whisper ; "I will be here alone and may tell you " "Back quick ! " said Folllet. "your sis ter " "At 1 , " whispered Jeanne , and ran back. Folllet looked up and down the street , then turned' to the left and walked Into a small house , which bore on Its door the legend"Knock and one will open. " It was the Cabaret au Vrai Bruyant. Folllct selected a seat in the least noisy corner and ordered a glass of bock. He sat trying to catch the eye of a big , burly fel low with long black hair combed back stiffly from his brow , dressed In black velvet , with Wellington boots and a coarse jersey for shirt. He was the brazen-lunged proprietor of the Vrai Bruyant. Presently Folllet beckoned with a flneer. The great swag gerer approached him. They knew each other. "Sit down here , Cazales ; I want to talk to you. " Cazales sat near. ' 'Who ore these Carhalx young women ? " "Carbalx ? Carbalx ? " sold Caialei , prod ding remembrance. "Yes they live three doors away , on this side of the street , you know. You must know them. " "Ah , yes Carhalx ah. yeg. Three young women. Uncle lately dead. " "Tell me about them ; wby do they hate each other ? " "Hate ! Hate Isn't the word for It ! It's the uncle's fault , too. They were always good friends , till bo died. " "Well , let mo hear It all you know. For tip , I promise you that you shall find the police all round the Cabaret pretty blind for the next , ay , three months. " "Well , you're welcome to what I know about it from a party who should be In the swim over yonder. The whole trouble comes from the last will ot the uncle. An old "hermit he was , crotchety , a ml er kind of dog. There are three of ihem , iMarle , pretty little girl , flaxen-haired , about 17 ; then Jeanne , the eldest , ugly , bitter-tem pered ; and another one , I forget her name " "Agnes. " "That's it. Lived happily , till uncle died. Uncle In bli will left the bouse jointly to the three , and In addition , 40,000 franca , which are to be ( be sole property of the one 1V to be with her soon ; but he did not come. There were affairs of far vaster importance engaging , for the time being , this man's attention. Ho was a German , named Hans Schwartz. Ho occupied , as he had told her , a small farm and homestead In the neighborhood of Gravelotte. A great part of his later lifo had been devoted to the culture and train ing of pigeons. It was a nice question which of the sis ters would marry first. Agnes had only to discover that Bach was really dead in order to seek and find a new and eager lover. An hour after Folllet had left the Jhouso of the girls Marie came In. She was en gaged during the day at .1 vacherlo on the other side ot the river. As she Bat down she glanced at a clock in the room. A lamp was on the table , and by It tat Jeanne sewing with tight lips. She- did not speak when the other entered , but she cast upon her a look suspicious and evil. Marie glanced secretly at the clock ; she said : "Is there anything in the cupboard. May I take something to eat , Jeanne ? " "Hat " off ! "I do not wish to take It off just now. " At this moment Agnes entered the room. "Don't you hear your elder sister talking to you , you little Idiot ? " she said. "It does not take two of you to oppress a poor , miserable girl like me "I am going out. " "Out ! " they exclaimed together , In aston ishment. "Yes , out ! " she answered. "Cannot one go out if one would ? " "Well , this is coming to something ! " said "BACH IS A GERMAN ? " Agnes. "And whore , If you please , are you going to at this hour of the night ? " Marie averted her head. She did not answer. Ten thousand elder sisters would have found It difficult to keep her Indoors that night. She had an appointment. All this tlmo she held ono hand behind her , on the handle of the door. In her pocket was a note which she was longing to finger and feel , and cover with kisses. At the announcement that Marie was going out Jeannle , the shrewder of the two elder sisters , stood still nnd turned slightly pale. Then she stepped near to Agnes and whis pered In her ears these words : "Let her BO. " But the Injunction was useless. Even while Jeannle was whispering Marie , who had slyly and softly turned the handle , slid fugitive- ] through the door. The two women looked into each other's eyes a minute. Then Jeanne , with in air of conviction : "She's , gone to meet a man ! Walt ! " In half an hour Marie was running lightly within the gates of the Buttes- Chaumont. She had seen with alarm that she was a minute late. Behind her , tolling and panting , came Jeanne , running also. The gardens lay sombre and umbrageous under the moonlight. They are a little bit of Switzerland In the heart of Paris. This was not the point of Mario's aim. Rising high from the water Is a bluff cliff , crowned at the summit with a little round temple of open columns of ebony. From the bottom ono ascends eomo rising ground , then over a rather frail and very long wooden bridge , then up some rude clone steps cut through the heart of the rod. , then you are at the top , and the tcmplo is there , with Us circular wooden bench for scat , the very home of Cupid , the sanctuary of Venus. Here the moonlight was uupreme , The silence and the solitude were complete. Marie , when she reached the bridge , knew that she stood exposed to two eyes that watched for her coming. She no longer ran : she even tried to walk slowly , but , In reality , her pace wo * very rapid , In sweet , re luctant , amorous delays , her wild young heart was not yet proficient. Behind her , crouching nnd bending , came Jeanne , "Marie ! Marie ! " said a man's voice. "Aht" In a dying sigh , cjtno fluttering from her lips. She was on his breast. t "My soul ! " ho said. "My llfol" she whispered , but ho did not hear her ; the words perished In their faintIng - Ing utterance. These two people had only known each other a few days. They had met by chance in the street. They leaned together over the parapet of the little temple , and saw the water , nnd the woods , and discovered that heaven can be nothing else than a moonlit earth , where ono is always young and amorous. He , too , was young not 23 yet his forehead was bald at the temples , and down from his chin and cheeks spread a dark-red fan-shaped beard , rough and thick ; nnd his body was heavy and bulky. He was a ne'er-do-weel , a student , a musician , one of the wild , penniless , Latin quartlcr sort , named Armand Dupres. At the conservatoire , everywhere , ho was a marked man ; one said : "Ho will arrive he will bo famous. " But he never knew whence his dinner would come , if It came at all. If ho had known whence It would come , life would have been Intoler able to him , at his age. How the settled , the tame man the clerk , the artisan could endure to live , he could not understand. Armand reposed upon Providence ; God fed him like a bird ; chance took care of him , lest at any time he dashed his foot against a stone. In ono of his wild midnight rev elries with his Bohemian student-friends , when coals failed to keep the fire going , they broke up one of the few old chairs In the room and threw the pieces in thu grate. One after another of the guests would rise and sup standing. Armand called this "moving out by way of the chim ney. " Yet this llght-natured person could , when he was sober , touch a harp or a piano or a violin at chance moments In such a way that some hertvonly dream-Image would hint Itself In melodious loveliness to the soul that heard It. He had a brain as keen and shrewd as lightning. And the whole world was one poem to htm. Of this poem , Marie , lately found , was the climax. Here the poem swelled into song and music was the universe. "Marie , wo must go to the mayor. " "Whatever you will. " "At once , Marie. " "Wo are poor , Armand. Wo have no money. " He laughed. "Why , you housewife ! Money is of no Importance. " "Sometimes , Armand , I knew a grlsctte whoso child died because she bad no money. " "Well , but Marie , I "am so clever ! I can make money whenever I like. Why , last week only I Invented something are you Interested In the war , Marie ? " "I was , " she said. "But not now ? " " 0 , now ! What is anything to me now but you ! " "Sweot ! Well , but the war. I , Marie , for a week was frantic , all excited ; then some thing happened I had a musical fancy It changed the current of my Interest. But during that week I worked , I can tell you ! That Vnnslttart , the American , he seems tome mo so great a man. I said , 'I will invent him something more deadly than death , with which ho shall destroy his enemies. ' And for days , Marie , for days , I kept at home , saw no one , thinking of that one thing. " "And did you Invent the thing ? " she asked , with wide , wondering eyes. "But yes ! It was not so difficult. I made a model , too or half made It. " "And when It Is finished , " she said , rea soning to herself "then I shall know what to do. Leave the rest to me. " "So ? and what will it do , the little sweet manager , then ? " "I will go straight to Mr. Vansittart , and I will tell him ! " Armand caught her to him , laughing , kiss ing her eyes , and ears and hair. Jeanne , who was crouching a little below them at the stone steps , rose to go. She had heard all. CHAPTER IX. The Home. Folllet spent a sleepless night. Ho Bat on a hearth rug In bis own bedroom In the Rue de Maubeuge , with his arms round his knees and bis wrinkled brow sunk low in thought. The day stole Into the room and found him sitting so. He was absolutely certain now that there was a conspiracy , an association probably large probably of Germans with a secret , unlawful , political aim , within the city of Paris. A man with the reasoning shrewd ness of Folllet could hardly have falled.'wlth his present knowledge , to come to that con clusion. His chain of deduction started from Bach or rather , from Bach's cap ; trom the feather in it , especially , and from the cir cumstance that the cap had been so very much too large for Bach. The Inferences which he drew from these facts seemed to him quite clear. And they were these : The cap. with the feather in it. was a badge , a sign of membership , a symbol of associa tion. It was very much too large for Bach , for the simple reason that It had never been specially bought for him at all ; but was merely one of a lot purchased In the gross for the members of the confraternity. A folnt Instinct of all this had passed through his brain from the first sight of the cap. When Agnes Carhalx Informed him that Bach had gone to a "meeting , " and a "secret" one , he was no longer In doubt. But "a secret meeting" of Germans at euch a time ? It could not bo but that its object was political. And the cardboard in Bach's pocket marked with the 6 or 9 was now no longer a matter of mystery ; 6 or 9 was Bach's membership number. But from this fact his mind went on tea a new conclusion. Ho reasoned that an as sociation whoso members were known and admltled by numbered tickets must be a largo and far-reaching ono ono so largo and so far-reaching that Us members were not all known to each other by sight one requiring formality and organization and numerical computation. Another mind would have reasoned : Since Bach was C or 9 , there must be at least six or nine of them. Folllet reasoned : Since Bach was numbered at all , there must bo at least 600 or 900 ot them. But If there were 900 of them they must be powerful , resourceful , strong ! u means to effect their end. It takes many men and much money to destroy railways. With this fact , then , he , the prefect of police In Paris , found himself confronted. But what was their end ? That it was hostile to Franco was certain , but whether this hostility was personally directed against King Henri , or against Vansittart , or merely as a general agent In favor of the kaiser , ho could only guess. All night his excogitation lasted , and at the end , had bo computed the currents of his thoughts , he would have discovered that , In fact , it was the horse raoro than anything else which had occupied and puzzled and excited him. The horse It lay motiveless , like lead , In his brain. One thing only ho decided , that he would see It that day with his own eyes , and discover whatever was the secret associated with It. Sharp at 1 o'clock he was In front ot thft Carhalx gate. Jeanne was waiting In the court yard. "No one In ? " said Folllet. "No. " "Where is Agnes ? " "Shopping. " "This her regular hour ? " "Yes. " Folllet took a mental note of that. They passed inward , near the room where the here had been stabled. Ho listened for the t > ound of the restless hoof , but heard nothing. Jeanne ascended n stairway be fore him. The whole house was dingy and close. "Why do wo ascend ? " ho asked. "Agnes may return , " she salJ. " 1 am taking you to my own room. " She led the way down a passage , and In a rather small triangular apartment , where there was a bed , pointed to a sent. At the moment when Folllet eat , there began on the other side of ono of the three parti tions the troullng sound of some cooing bird , and at once the monody was taken up by another , and presently a perfect chorus went rolling through the air in soft rotcp-joy- ance , with swell and fall and vlbrant\5et volume. * * "Well , now , wo nro In pigeon-land proper , " muttered Folllet. Jeanne sat opposite him , eyeing him with half-suspicious gray underglance. Her long , olive colored face was somewhat pale. "Can you give mo any news of M. Bach , sir ? " she said. "Only this , " replied Folllct , "that wo as good as have our hands on him. It Is only u matter of a few hours now. nnd wo shall bo able to restore him to you and your sister. " Jeanne's pallor Increased. "Restore him to me , sir ? I have nothing to do with the man. I could give you In formation against him , which would mean the guillotine for him the week after you find him. " "Very well , mademoiselle , go on. I am willing to hear , as you see by my presence here. " "I am a patriot , monsieur , " sold Jeanne. " " Folllct with lifted "You are ? replied , eyebrows. " 1 love my country , sir. " "Is that so ? " "What advantage should I derive if we bo beaten by the Germans ? I am a patriot. I prefer , on the whole , that Franco should bo the victor. This man , Bach , is a con spirator , monsieur. " "You don't say that , now ? " "He Is. I can prove it. " "Well , tell mo. " The cooing of the pigeons had somewhat censed , and at this point a gentle sound of some movement , apparently accidental , came from the other side of the partition. They both heard it. Jeanne started and turned white. "Hold ! You heard a sound , sir ? " she whispered. "I ? No. It Is your fancy. Go on. " "I thought wo were alone In the house , but some of the lodgers mav have come back. They have that room there. They are Germans they may listen " "Well , why not open the door and see ? " There was a door in the partition , and the key projected Inward. Jeanne rose at the suggestion , turned the key , and peeped into the next room. At the first sound ot her movements nt the key , two men on the other side had hurriedly slipped into a spacious cupboard. While Jeanne's back was turned to him , Folllet , on his part , with the quickness of lightning drew out the key , which he could reach without rising , and pressed it deep Into a lump of wax from his pocket. With swift skill ho had replaced the key in the lock and the wax in his pocket , before Jeanne again faced him with the words : "There Is no ono there , sir. " "Well , now , about this conspiracy ot Bach's , " be said. "I need not tell you that any information you can give of Importance to the government will not go unrewarded. " "I am not seeking a government reward , monsieur. But I make this stipulation be. fore I go any further : That you promlso me that M. Bach shall not be allowed to marry my sister until after I am myself married. I am quite candid , you see , about the matter. I stipulate that. " "I see. You want him kept In prison , In case be la not guillotined , till " ' "Yes. " "Well , I promise that. " "Then I will tell you. For , why should not I be a patriot , I ? There is n con spiracy of over 1,500 Germans In Paris. I know it , because " She bent her lies close to his car. But she got no further. A violent knocking was heard at the door of their entrance , a door In one of the three partitions ot the room. A cry of Mademoiselle Jeanne ! Mademoiselle Jeanne ! News ! News ! Are you there ? " came from without. Jeanne In a white scare took Folllot by the shoulders. "Quick , monsieur ! " she hissed in flurried fright , "behind the bcdcurtalns later later I will finish " Folllet hurried to tbo hiding place ; Jeanne to the door. She opened it , stepped outside and closed it behind her. Two men were there awaiting her the same two who had run hiding at her opening of tbo other door. To reach this side of the room ( they had made a wide detour through the house. They bad been listening to her promise of disclosure , and hurried round in tlmo to prevent It. They knew the means. One in bis hand carried a pigeon and a narrow strip of paper. "Mile Jeanne , " he said In the lowest whisper , "sorry am I to have to tell you this " "What , what Is it ? " "This pigeon you see here has Just arrived from the Lorralncr , and tied round its leg this slip. " He banded her the slip. She recognized the writing of her loycr , Schwartz. But she could not make out its meaning. It was in German. "What is it ? You know I can't read It , " she said , "Ho says , " replied the man , "that the Five Thousand sent out by Vnn slttart have r Idden In their de vastating career right through his farm , and left the place a ruin ; all is trampled , harried and desolate. He Is left penniless , Schwartz. The message Is In tended for you. For the present ho cannot move , nor think of marriage. " Joanne had heard of the rldo of the Five Thousand ; she did not stop to think that their opera- tlons wore long since over that this mes sage was rather late In coming. She be lieved ; and she tottered backward , with bloodless face. The farm of Schwartz had , In truth , been scorched by the flying flame of the Five Thousand In its meteor course of destruc tion ; but the message mentioning It had boon brought by a carrier pigeon from his colombier many days before to the con- plrators at No. 11 rue Plgallo. They had not so much aa taken the pains to mention it to Jeanne until they saw how it might be useful to their ends. The sisters. Carhalx , were. In fact , permitted to know as little as possible. "My God ! " gasped Jeanne , with clasped hands. All her hopes at that moment per ished. In a few days Agnes would know whether or not she should marry Bach speedily. If she could not marry him. what was easier than the purchase of another husband ? In a moment or two her pallor vanished. Her face flushed with brutal rage. Revenge , above every other passion , swelled In her revenge against the hand that had struck her this 'blow , the hand that had hurled the thunderbolt of the Five Thousand straight at her heart. She bad just been about to do this man a service , and all the tlmo ho bad been crushing her , She bad been about to aid France ! And Franco had been rulnliu ; her. What did zho care for Vanslttart , for France , In comparison with her triumph over Agnes , her laugh of glee. "Curse them ! curse them ! " she hissed through her clenched teeth. She rushed at once toward the room where she bad left Folllct , mad with rage. Folllet had crept from his hiding place mrainshllo nnd had been busy. Ho had taken the key from the door between Jeanne's room and the conspirators' , then crouched peering through the * hole of the lock. Tha nlfihl that met his eye wns , first , a window , open , and looking out nt the back of a house upon nn open space. Then ho saw the sldo walls , crowded from top to bottom with square wooden cages , In every cngo a blnl. Thu place was squalid , Uttered with feathers , crumbs , seeds. As ho looked , there alighted on the window sill in winged urgency , glancing in quick query round the room , a feathered messenger. Wrapped round her leg. bound with nn clastic thread , was n narrow slip of paper. Ono of Wllhelm's pigeons ! Folllet would have given his left hand to know what was written In that far-homo message. But aa he gazed , nil his soul In his peerIng - Ing eye , his quick ear heard a hint ot Jranno's returning steps. Ho slid back be hind the curtains. The woman had lost all control of herself. She deigned no explanation. She simply pounced upon him in Intense exasperation , with the words : "Look Lcre , get out of my house , my good man ! You have no right here , you know. " Folllct was not surprised. Ho was cer tain , beforehand , that ho wns dealing with men of cunning and resource , quite capable of twisting to their own purposes the pas sions of n woman llko Jeanne. "I want you to go away out of my place , I tell you. Will you co ? " Folllet thought a second. Ho would go If Jeanne allowed him to descend the stairs nlone ; ho wanted to Inspect the house. Ho would not go If she went with him. lie made three stcus toward the door to try her. Good ! Jeanne sank upon her knpcs before the bed , hiding away her face llko a wretch without hope. Folllot descended quickly. Ho touched with his flneer the revolver in his pocket. It might bo that the horse was guarded. Ho met no ono In bis descent. The house wns silent nnd seemed deserted. The lower ho went the more the somber obscurity ot the place deepened. Ho came to thu door , feeling his way. For a minute ho stoo'l listening for the tramp of the restive L'iof. But ho heard nothing. A vague fear began to fill hli mind. Ho put out his hand and groped for tht handle. To his surprise ho found the dom unfastened. It was even a llttlo way opuv Ho intruded his head within the aperturtt The reek ot the stable greeted his nostril * strongly , but so dark was the npartmont that for the moment bo could lee nothing. Ho struck a match. Now ho know the truth. The horse was gone ! At the discovery n pang pierced hla bosom , and at the same time- something llko a flash of light illuminated his brain. This fact stood out clear and prominent in his consciousness : That the horse , kept cabined in darkness for ho knew not how long , had been removed on the same day when Vansittart proposed to leave Paris or , perhaps , during tbo night preceding that day. day.Ho Ho rushed from the bouse and pelted him self into a passing cab , shouting to the driver to fly to the Tulllerles. It was already 2:30 : o'clock. This was the day when Vansittart had proposed to Joavo Paris "la the after noon , " When Folllot reached the Tullcrles in the cab , Vansittart bad already gone. He heard the news from a footman. On his brow broke out beads of sweat. A cor * tain definite suspicion ot evil was by this time working within him. Ho bad not de duced , but ho had guessed the truth. Ho rushed at once round in the direction ot the 8tables. He thus lost another- minute , and Vansittart had set out fully five Juln- utes before he arrived. Half way to the stables ho met a jaunty , jockey-llko sort of llttlo man whom ho know. "Tell mo , quick , " panted Folllet , "in what did Mr. Vansittart drive away ? " . " y - - "A brougham. " < t > ( % "Drawn by what ? " ' The two blood Arab * , Tom and Best. " "They all right ? " "So , so , Tom was a bit mad this morn ing. " "Mad , man ? " "Pretty mad. Couldn't make him out- , kept blinking in the light , his nostrils going wouldn't stand in the traces neither. 1 didn't harness him. It was Karl , and Karl Is stupid with horses , aa all Germans " Folllet heard no more. Ho went bound * ing across the quadrangle. Ho took a cab. Through the rather wild traffic of th > Parisian streets went Folllet. Soon , however , bo found himself in a regular Babel of disorder. His cab ran Into the wheels of a backing cart , to be crushed into fragments ; but by an agile leap in time , he saved himself. Ho dived Into the crowd , dashing it aside. He gained the pavement , and recommenced his bawling , shoving and urging bis desperate way among them. The people made way for tbo dis tracted man. In less than a minute n wldo circular space , with a vast columnar monument ment In the center , opened before hfm. It was the Place do la Bastille. Round the circular space ho saw , as ho looked , two frantic , staring , black horse * dajhinn , and behind them a brougham nnd looking from the window of this brougham the astonished face ot Vansittart. Folllct did not now lose his bead. Hli plan of action wns already determined upon. Something llko what ho saw he had ex pected to 'sec. Ho had the revolver In his hand. Out first ho bad to discover which of the two was the untamed horse taken from No. 11 Rue Plgallo and substituted In the stables ot the Tullerlrs for the Arab Tom. Bess , ho knew , was merely following an example and was harmless. Round flow the racing team llko a ( lash of swiftness. Every ono of the wide-eyed onlookers stood paralyzed. They saw that the attempt to stem the avalanche of fury would hav been mcro simplicity of mind. Fcllltt stepped out nlone. The substituted horse wns on the off side. But by the tlmo ho had determlnrd this fact , BO Intense was the Dace , they had shot past him before he could fire. Ho ran the other way to meet them. This was tbo fifth revolution of the brougham , and with every revolution It haJ tended nearer , In a narrowing circle , to thn central monument. Before It came around again the carriage bumped. Vnnslttart , his coachman and the two horses were sprawl ing on the ground. Vansittart lay rleht In the way of the horses , which at once began to flounder and struggle to their feet. But Folllct lodged a bullet In the brain of the Arab and tbo next moment was suportlns Van- slttart. "Ah. M. I'olllct , " said Vansittart , blithely , "you ? Ah , thanks. " He held out his hand to Folllct. The nex' moment ho fainted. The arm ho had held out was dislocated. Just at the corner of the Rue do Rlvolt and the Boulevard Sebastopol someone , who was not known , had struck fiercely at the plunging and restive Arab ilalllon. Be Folllct heard afterward. ( To bo Continued. ) llucUlrii'H Arnlcu halve. THK HKST SALVE In the world for Cuts , BruUou , Sores , Ulcers , Halt Rhuum , rover Sores , Tetter , Chapped Hand * , Chilblains , Corns and all Skin Eruptions , and positively curea Piles , or no pay required. It Is guar anteed to glvo perfect batlsfaction or money refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For Ml < by Kubn & Co.