Jmn 1 ?r-Ns fit JrrT i I By cT oT H."Rafter v J9 V llYS-rmZIIJfiAllViA" I 17 I 11111 1 1 -Basrv. ' iismuii m77i u 1 ni i h 1 1 i 11 s 1 11 mm m I If If S tVf ff ir H a . SIB I Ul Iff 1 I 1 J m i if hi - iiiikvtMAWii um ii nii n HE Kent father and son came to Chicago whn Dan was a small boy, so that the latter Boon forgot about all he knew of Odsburg and It people. If he had been older he might have been gladder to forget It, for there misfortune had overtaken his family, his mother had died, and his vague recollection of the place pictured the one long, dismal street down which he rode In a carriage to the cemetery where the autumn leaves reeked In a cold rain and the clay falling Into a grave sounded like the thump of his old toy drum. Dan Kent, having a merry heart, didn't want to cherish any such dreary memories. So he had grown to manhood without revisiting the home of his Infancy, not so his father. The old man managed to stay away from the scene of his disaster till Joshua Colvtn died. Then he went to the funeral it his old friend and partner, and ever after, up to the time r his death, maintained a habit of periodical visits to the Ul home town. Dan thought this odd at first; then he be Kan to suspect that there was some old, long burled romance 1 t ween his father and the Widow Colvln, " You're right, Dan," said the old man, when his son twitted htm about the Odsburg visits. " I'd marry her now if I wasn't so old and poor, and If you take my advice you'll tro ifter her daughter, Kate." They were like brothers In their frank and loving rela tionship In those days, and Dan, who liked to banter his fnther, was almost glad to "have something" on the old man. But when the elder Kent grew feeble he talked always more and more of the Colvlns. If they were a joke with Dan. they wtre not so with his father. X Tine M3MQ)esiiire9s HeeymdDdDe, i. HQ bartender peered timidly out of the door, like a bather confronting a maximum of spine II cnllling sea with a minimum of clothing and I courage. "Ugh!" he shivered. "Cold, ain't it?" " There's a knife In the air, there is," re plied the policeman, who had been praying for hours for that door to open. Inside there was fresh sawdust on the floor, the urn was steaming, and there was a smell of hot whisky. It was the atmosphere of luxury to the stragglers who wandered in battered hulks of humanity, who, with twitching fingers, scraped out of hidden recesses the toll that admitted them to this haven. A woman was amongst the tittle crowd, though not of them. Some trace of better days, of gentility, differentiated her. But she was falling Into the lowest pit. This was the tirst time she had ever entered a saloon and called for drink. It was gin she ordered a large gin, and she gulped It down hot. When she emerged Into the street again her worldly wealth amounted to a nickel and 'a cent She had had that cent a long time, for she had kept It for luck. And when the nickel was spent ah would still have the penny and the same luck. It was near tbs end of the Journey now. She bad strug rled and had failed, and ah was going to be turned adrift without a root to crouch under. The previous day ber landlord bad sued her for arrears of rent She had gone to the court and told ber story a I itlful story blurted out with all the eloquence of unstudied simplicity. The Judge bad looked severely upon ber, though he had apoken kindly; the landlord had reminded ber of a hungry wolf. There was a sea of faces In a gloomy, dirty room, and she bad stood In a box high up for the view of every one. She remembered this much, and then the picture ass blurred. It appeared that she bad fainted and was ear ned out Her senses recovered, they gave her a quarter and said something about making Inquires. She did not know what they meant; but she knew she had 25 cents and that she was hungry. She was always hungry, but she bad not always a quarter. She went straightway and spent IS cents In on ft U swoop In one riotous Lucullan orglel What a feast It '. After It she crawled hark sated to her garret, east her tewing aside, and slept She awoke In the early morning. "I wish you'd go up and see tbem," he would say. "I can't any more, and Dan I wish you'd see Kate young Kate. Bet you'd fall In love with her In spite of yourself, f wish you would, and marry her." And a few days before he died! " Dan, If anything happens to Kate or her mother, will you do what you can for themT Promise, Dan. You'll write to them, anjhow." When his father died, Dan grieved like a man, and re gained his spirits like the wholesome, olean hearted youth he was; but he forgot about the Colvlns after he bad an swered the widow's letter of condolence. He remembered them again when he saw In the Odsburg Banner the obituary of Mrs. Kate Nlebllng Colvln. He ought to have gone to Odsburg to comfort the orphan girl, but he disliked funeral and he couldn't get over his gloomy Impression of the old town. 80 be wrote a letter to Kate, as he had promised his shivering, and recourse to liquor to something fiery and potent suggested Itself. Now she was going again to her rarret. without a banquet this time; but with the warmth of the alcohol In her veins. In the little squalid room at the top of the creaking stairs she threw herself on the bare mattress, and half sleeping, lialf awake, dreamed the hours away. Was shs still dreaming when there came a knock at the dcor, and a beautiful woman In a rustling gown stepped anxiously towards ber bed? Her face was sngello with the sweetness of youth, and kindliness and concern beamed from her eyes. "You are Mrs. Albert Forshaw?" she said, touching her on the shoulder. " How you frightened me, lying there so still!" The women rose from the bed. No, It was not a dream. " I read of your case In the papers," the visitor went on, "and, O, how glad I am to be able to help, you I In this envelope are five $25 notes, and here Is some loose silver. This Is a letter to a dressmaker who will give you work. No; don't thank me. Mine Is the blessing to be able to give to help. How easily might fate have ordained that you should be In my piece and I In yours. Then you would have done something to help me. wouldn't you?" She laughed brightly, with tears glistening In ber eyes. It was good to look upon her. "Qood-byl I shall hear bow you get on through my dressmaker." The room seemed to go suddenly . dark, the bad gone. The rumble of carriage .wheels came up from the street below. ' II. It was early morning at sea, and sunbeam and breese waged a friendly contest as to which oould be the pleasanter. Otlbert Rhode Jeana. a tall, alert figure In White ducks, stood on ths deck of the great liner, taking a dose, as be said, of the tonla of the scene. "Ill give the prise to the breese," he remarked to the woman who leaned gently on bis arm. " And I to ths sunshine." M You love the sunshine?" " I would thst it was in every one's life as It la. and baa been, In mine." He gased at ber with proud admiration. "You are really happy. Beatrice?" "Really, really." In the bright morning light It was easy to guess their father, sending such words of comfort as a stranger must, but offering to be of any assistance In his power. He scarcely expected a reply, but he got one within a week. It was a stilted, studied letter. She was grateful for kind words from the son of her mother's kind friend. She would do quite well, she thought, when she got back to her work as a school teacher. Her work might help her to forget. It was a dismal let terJust like Odsburg, he thought and he did not answer It. A month later he got another from her. Would he kindly buy for her Klnyon's pedagogical chart? It would cost. about $1, which she Inclosed. " I will be ever so much obliged," she concluded. He found the chart, which cost $3, and sent her a note in which he said he was glad to be of service. He didn't mention that he was loser by $2 In the trans action. Within a fortnight another letter came to him from Kate Colvln In which she said that she had Just learned the chart had cost $3, perhaps more, and that she " would return the balance the moment her salary was paid. " They are In arrears with me for the last two months," the letter said, " but I am sure they will pay us before Christmas." To Dan Kent t.ere was something poignantly sad In the plain, simple, but uncomplaining statement of the country school teacher's poverty. Two dollars! He was making money and spending It as lavishly as a self-respecting young man could. Evidently poor Kate Colvln could not spare $2 from a scanty hoard that might not be replenished for months. He was a generous, tender fellow, and, somehow that bald, almost childlike confession of a girl's lonely struggle for the benefits which he won so easily and re garded so lightly, gave a sharp sting to his gentle spirit and clouded his radiant face. Then he made a natural but a most egregious mistake. He wanted to write a kind, sympathetic, and helpful letter, but he let a lot of sentiment Into It Sentimental passages never look right to a sensible girl who reads them in a ages. Hers you would have fixed at 29, his at 42. Tbey had been married a week, and were on their honeymoon trip to America. He was a British millionaire. "And you, Gilbert, are you happy?" She asked the question placidly, as one confident of the answer. " You are not money making now, you know." " No." he replied musingly, " I am not money making now. And this Is the first week for fifteen years that I have not been. Ah, America!" he exclaimed his eyes were grsve, bis voice bantering" you never had but blows and cuffs for me. But now I've got you on the hip. I can compel you to drop your surliness and smile upon me. The sun shines when It rains dollars." " You are cynical, Gilbert. I don't like to hear you talk like that I don't think It is your true self." , " My dear child, my true self is much worse and was worse still before I met you!" He placed a hand caressingly on hers. "Since I grew to love you, Beatrice, and know the gentleness of your heart It has opened, as It were, a new department In my nature. I never traded in these goods before, but now the demand seems" She held up a warning finger, laughing. "Hush, hush!" she cried. "Cannot you keep commer cialism out of your sentiment?" " No," he answered. " Sentiment Is valueless without commercialism. You. with your soft hearted passion for nelplng people, would have found your sorrow unavailing without the means to give practical assistance. Pity Is a grand thing, but it does not fill an empty stomach." " Which reminds ms that It la time for breakfast," said she. "That Is practical sentiment," be acquiesced, as they went below. In the glow of a hot afternoon sun the same day they leunged on deck chairs. He was reading from a notebook. " And all these are your retainers?" he asked. " Who Is Marcell Brunlere? Quite a romantlo name." " She Is a milliner who would have died but for a for tunate accident She was wrongly arrested for theft and ber whole story csme out" "Sure It was wrongly?" " Yea A case of mistaken Identity. It was fuliy proved." "And Hester Gwynne? Another pretty name." In brief chapter beads she recounted her story, too, and that of half a dosea others whose names appeared In tb book. He kept turning over the leavea and calling tbem out letter from a man she has never seen. Besides. Dan wasn't exactly a master of rhetoric at that time, and what he wrote could have been couched In terms of Infinitely greater tact and delicacy by any second rate romance writer. His worst faux pas, however, was In Inclosing a postofflee order for $50, " a loan, of course," he wrote, " which I trust you will accept until such time," etc.. eto. It was awful, of course, but Dnn was young, and he meant to do a kind office to the orphan girl In Odsburg. When he mailed the letter It dawned upon him that he had rrado an ass of himself. The more he conned over the sen tences which he had meant to be the finest, the surer he was that they were coarse. Impertinent, Idiotic. She would be offended at his tone. Insulted at his offer to loan her money. " I feel that there Is a bond of sympathy between us," etc., had been the best he could think of as " an approach " to the mention of a loan, but now It sounded Inexpressibly silly. He got her answer by return mall, and when he tore open the envelope the 50 fell on the floor. " Serves me right," he gasped, but his eyes began to bulge when he saw the first line of the letter Itself: " Dear, dear friend," It began. " Sad, sad, Indeed, must that heart -e which cannot be cheered by the sweet delicacy and soulful sympathy of a friend like you. O, how my lone ly heart goes out responsive, and yet" " Ratal" That's what Dan said. He could hardly force himself to read It. If his letter had been badly framed, hers was the dregs of gush. A wild hope that Kate Colvln hadn't written It seised him, but the narrowest comparison showed It to be her handwriting. There was nothing absolutely Immodest In her hysterical epistle, but It fairly onsed sentimentality, which Dan was sure he would always despise In a woman. " Olad to get back my fifty, anyhow." he sneered, pock eting the order and tearing the letter with one angry Jerk. Then he paused, put the torn edge of her communication to gether, and reread It " O, how my lonely heart goes out responsive." That line started him, and he laughed till the bookkeeper stared and the stenographer joined In the merriment. By " What a host of them," he commented. " Surely you don't act as banker to them all?" "Ah, nol I could not have afforded it, unhappily. Some are dead, some are doing so well as not to need further help, some I have lost sight of." Hs closed the book and handed It to her. For awhile ha was strangely silent His cigar went out and dropped from his fingers on to the deck. "And Mrs. Forshaw," be asked at last "Mrs. Albert Forshaw, who was she?" "A pitiful case, Gilbert, most pitiful. Her husband bad deserted her, and she had been trying to exist on 50 cents a week. Think of it millionaire, 50 cents a week! A woman of some gentility at one time, too, I should fancy." "She belongs to those who are dead, I suppose?" "Indeed, no; I bops not It was only two months ago that I knew of ber." Outwardly he was quite calm, but there was a deadly sickness In his heart Some one passed by and said that land was In sight "The land and the old luck!" muttered Gilbert under bla breath. His eyes sought the woman by his side. She was Intent upon her needlework, beautiful, young, radiant, happy a woman as " good as gold "; how much better than his gold? " What must I do for her sake?" he thought III. New York Is a great, rambling place, but to Gilbert Rhode ,'eans it wss stifling. At times he contemplated a sudden flight on the pretense of urgent .business. But she was so happy amid the whirl of visits and receptions, and he could not leave ber aide. No; be must wait and meet the blow. He felt It was Inevitable, but faeclnated, he could not retreat And one day It came though It was not exactly the kind of blow he had expected. There was a prelude to Its delivery. It happened In his wife's boudoir, when Mrs. Albert Forshaw, now a sucoesstul dressmaker, came to visit ber old patroness. She fell on her knees and kJssed ber hand, big. earnest tears In her eyes. " Angel," she murmured, " bow can I ever bless and thank you enough!" Her benefactress raised er gently. Could this be tbs wreck of a woman she had seen lying In the garret? The hollow cheeks were filled out, the wasted figure rounded the rags had given place to a neat black gown. A glow of pride ewept through her veins. Yes, shs had rescued this woman; " Til get back at her," thought Pan Kent ss he opened his desk. And he spent two hours that evening trying to outdo the florid periods of his Odsburg proteg. But he didn't send back the fifty. On Saturday he got an answer that fairly scintillated with flashes of Cupid's arrows. He had supposed that his letter rose to every ftlsht of sentimental hyperbole, rut It seemed commonplace and tawdry beside the glittering fabric of her latest epistolary composition. He had to get " The Children of the Abbey " from the publlo library before he could answer that letter, and. In or der to stimulate her to a still more gorgeous effusion, ne wound up his ecstatic billet with a superbly servile petition for her picture. He said "counterfeit presentment " first, but for fear she'd regard that as a mercenary allusion he scratched t ie words away and substituted " fair Image." The photograph that arrived In the next letter wss worthy of the foolish girl's correspondence. A simpering weak smile, evidently calculated to display two pretty dlmplrs and a row of the white teeth; a mass of Huffy blond hair, falling almost to the eyebrows; a white Inwn dress of the style that had been considered "smart" a few years ago; banjjle rings on the dainty fingers! " She looks the part." laughed Dan, " and If I don't send her my picture now this sport will come to a sudden end." The letter suggested an exchange, and Dan, in the exuber ance of what seemed such a capital Joke, determined to send her the picture of his barber, a dashing young gallant with melancholy black eyes and a tightly waxed Wllhelm mus tache. It was Kent's Irrepressible love of fun that had led him Into this thoughtless and, for him, unkind correspondence. But the letters had passed so rapidly and with such increas ing and almost outlandish expressions of romantic emotion that he had not taken time to look at any but the funny Bide of the affair. He had shown the letters to nobody, de stroying them as soon as they were read. Whin he had mailed the barber's photograph to Kate with his autograph on Us back he resolved to make an end of an escapade which was just beginning to cloy. I As he grew serious, he reflected upon the folly " follyt Perhaps It was mean of me," he thought; and this last Idea held him so that ha went home and wrote an honest, manly letter to the girl Irt which he strove to exonerate himself. He knew she would forgive him for returning her photo graph, he s.-.ld, and for asking her to forget the whole epi sode, which, he hoped, had given her as much harmless mer riment ss It had given to him. The tone of this letter was so modest, so sensible, so self-deprecating, and so completely disillusioning that Dan thought as he dropped It In the mail box: "Dad would have liked that letter. I would never have written the others If he had been with me." That was Monday. Thursday was Thanksgiving d-iy. and as Dan Kent was to be the guest at a banquet that even ing, he resolved to get a substantial meal in his favorite cafe. The place was crowded with diners, and he looked In vain for a familiar face. The head waiter found a place for him it a table at which sat a woman alone. She was modestly but quite fashionably attired, young perhaps 20. at ease, with an odd mixture of confidence and shyness. Her black eyes shone with the light of a brave and quick Intel ligence. Her swart hair drooped about her small ears In smooth snd glistening tresses. Her red mouth Dan had got thus far In his subconscious cataloguing of the beautiful woman opposite him when she darted one angry glance at him In which there was ah unanswerable re proof for his fascinated stare. It vanished as quickly as It came. She drew from her reticule a parcel of papers, read a clipping and then unfolded his letter to Kate Clovln with the same photograph of the Odsburg school teacher that he had mailed on Monday! He started, looked again, stood up, and betrayed his curiosity by leaning forward. She glared at him, looked frightened for an Instant and then flushed with anger. "How dare you!" was. all she said, but the emphasis of her low voice helped him. " I beg your pardon, madam," he answered, sitting down. ' I wrote that letter myself to the girl whose picture you have there, and It startled me to see It In your hand. " I am the ' Dan ' of that letter, Daniel Kent " He stopped short. Her face was wreathed In smiles. " Why, Dan," she commenced, In that same sweetly, stinging voice. "No! Are you Daniel Kent? The picture? Anyhow, If you're Daniel Kent, or Just a friend of his who helped him try to make a fool of a country girl, you're both mistaken. I'm Kate Colvln." She began the sentence with a coo and ended It with a rasp. Dan was dumfounded, but he got out his card and gave It to her. " Well, you might have known I wasn't the kind to borrow money from a man I had never seen," she said, smil ing, and her brune cheeks red. " You might have known I wasn't fool enough to write drivel to an utter stranger. As for you, I thought you were a downright Idiot until I got that last letter. That rang true. I came down to Chicago to pay you the $2 I owe you, and to" "But, Kate," asked the delighted Daniel, "what prompt ed you to start the foolishness?" " O, I didn't like your sending that money and well, I didn't want to be pitied, either. I Imagined you were one of those Chicago smarties and well, It was dull In Odsburg; it's always dull there." "And now we've met and found, each other out, Kate" They laughed like children, looking frankly Into one an other's happy faces. "It's Thanksgiving, Dan," she said. " I'll give thanks that this holding out the picture of the pudgy blonde Isn't you," he laughed. , " And 111 give thanks that you couldn't look like this!" And she ..eld out the picture of the dashing barber. , And they dined so merrily together that Dan forgot every- ' thing but Kste, and Kate nearly forgot to pay back the $2. Jesse Norfhlisi. she had picked her out of the morass and put her on the high road to a life worthy of the name. " You must not call me angel," she said, choking back her emotion. " I will have no title except my husband's. I am Mrs. Rhode Jeans." " I read all about your marriage. How I hope you will always be happy!" "Ah! I am happy; I shall always be happy! I have the dearest husband In the world!" She laughed gayly In the fullness of her Joy; then checked herself, remembering the tragedy of the other's life. " Forgive me for parading my happiness. Your fate was so different Have you ever heard anything of of him?" "No, nothing." Her eyes gleamed. "But If I did) Ah, I have dreamed such revenges!" "You loved him?" "Yes, I loved him once; but now" She turned aside, hatred fierce and relentless Imprinted on her face. And ss she turned there was Albert Forshaw, her husband, looking straight at her. It was his portrait on the mantel shelf, and It bora the autograph, " Gilbert Rhode Jeans." Bo the great millionaire was Albert Forshaw, a scamp and a bigamist What a revenge was here! But yes, there was a "but." There was the woman as well as the man the woman who stood near her, the woman through whom she was alive today, through whom she wss well nourished and warmly clothed, through whom she lived no longer In a filthy garret That scene In the garret! Sho saw It all again, and heard that gentle voice saying, "How easily might fate have or dained that you should be In my place and I In yours; then you would have helped me, wouldn't you?" There are moments in life when we seem to go through ages of torment. Here was this woman goaded one way by the cry for revenge, urged the other by the soft voice of gratitude. The contending forces seemed to wsge an enliess battle. And yet weak woman though she was. she beat down the stronger force and gave forgiveness ths victory. Her lips never told of her discovery. It Was the next morning that the blow fell upon blm i.ot the shattering blow be bad anticipated, but a blow that left a wound that would not heal. It came In a long letter. " Your gold Is dross." shs con-, eluded; ' but she Is gold, true gold, and shall not be tar nished. Though I have broken my oath to be revenged; I shall take It gladly again If you blot one speck of sunshine out of ber life."