THE BKK: OMAHA. SUNDAY. FEBRUARY 192 J. "fc C- Rowland TWKLTTH AND LAST INSTU-LMENT. Carte Jrrrr r Tm Tp. THE weather bed undargon on of tho wift and c loriou change of midsum mer la that ration, when th etmoa phr, baring bMn wahd and. purl 04 by th rain, call forth th northwest wind, which drtu and Jnfu" th atmos yhr with ft sort of electrical energy. Looking from Ma window. It eemed to Matt that owry bT and flowar and blad of gr ba4 tmdargon a aort of fairy car which had brought out color o brilliant a to bo prtzrctie, ami that every natural object contributing Ita drop to the flood of beauty waa sweeping the landscape and ace capo with a radlanoo which thrilled, la thl glittering vibration the moat rdl- narjr object too ttpoa tnemaoive mat i quality of beauty which thrill th hearta of children with a aort of exuberant delight aa they ruah out for the drat time In the I morning to abnorb tho aoentw and color of j that gladdest day of all, which should be today. Teaterday I ahot always with ita memory of regret, and wo really never roach tomorrow, which la a doubtful, fleeting thing. Th glorioua day, th wonderful day, ta today, when it la early and beforo wo bav tiad Urn to mar It with our error, great or a mall. Matt, having In many way prcaerved In himself the soul of a child, now profited by '.' that Joyou rush of Juvenile sensation which 1 wbaa the force are on tho upward curve S ef the parabola and the eager mind is aoclng " ono after tho other or lovely Images. He '' waa on of those soldier who haa viewed th aspect of war lees In It horrors than by tho contrast of these rightfulnesses to west and happy things. It la in tho nature of some Individual to be cast down by a ereary aspect, and It Is In th nature of ether to oo by virtue of this dreariness omethlng gladsome and delightful, just aa being whirled In a ewlft train through a vicinity of filth and dirty enow and foul stream and blasted tree and' vegetation decayed by th poisonous products of factory chimney we think less of that than the sweet homeliness of our destination. Th train rushes past and leaves the dirty sub urbs and carries ua to the fresh outer coun try where wo aro to greet the thing which lnot we love. It waa with that feeling that th war had - left Matt, and it waa now with that feeling of expectation with which ha greeted the Xiew day. And, strangely enough, or perhaps naturally enough, because he was young and much In love, it was Impossible for his mind to grasp th Idea of leaving Nancy without some sort of token to cherish. Being rested, he saw their adventure less In the light of a fiasco than In little flashes of sentiment Which mad It bright. ' ' But the best that he could hope for waa a kind word or two and the touch of tho hand and a look from her dazzling blue eyes which might give him a spark of hope for the future. Then finally he went down to find the touring car standing at the door and Murphy with a glowing face such as should be worn by a faithful retainer when washed by a srudden wave of glad events in tho family Which he serves. Murphy was one of the eld time Irishmen whose lexicon of duty contained no such word as bolshevism. Ee Waa pleased and proud to serve " rale qual ity," and he did not bother to prefix an " e " to this latter word. Th family's fortunes Ware Murphy fortunes, and their mlsfor tones would never have sent him seeking mother place. He had driven Uncle Jerry' trotting horses beforo he drove his cars, and In his heart preferred tho former. Uncle Jerry's marriage had not aroused his jealousy because he believed that May had saved the life of the master to whom lie was so devoted, and he was partisan to Kancy because he much approved her own killed driving of the latter day slackers who assisted In the running of the household machinery. "Good morning, sor," said h to Matt, and where to, sor?" " Railroad station, Murphy,' Matt an swered. "My littlo job is finished, and I am off." " Sure, now Mister Matt, you're not lavin' a," said Murphy with concern. " "Fraid so. Murphy," Matt answered. "What with Mr. Gates and Constable Todd and Detective Donovan and Luke Simmons, this place is apt to be too hot to hold me. I can stand abuse, Murphy, but my sensitive aoul shrinks from ridicule." He stepped Into th car. " Then where Is your luggage, sorT " Mur phy asked. "Here,' said Matt, and laid the extin guisher on the back seat beside him. " Step en it. Murphy, before anybody comes." But as had happened once or twice before, be was a little late In obeying his impulse, (or at that moment Kancy, looking rather Ilk one of the large white roses in full bloom, under the break of the stoop, came ailing around the comer of. the house, golden hair shimmering, white arms flashing, Whit stockinged ankles twinkling, and called to Murphy to wait. She shot at Matt a look which waa half defiant and half some thing else. -Well, where are you going now?" she Remanded. Down the road a piece," said Matt. TH go, too," said Nancy. "Where have I heard that song before?" aid Matt, " and where are May and Uncle Jerry?" "Gon over to the Gates'," said Nancy. Uncle Jerry mean to champion Sam, and May has gon along to render first aid to th injured. I'm going to back up Sylvia, you're going, too?" " No, I'm not," Matt answered, aa she tapped in beside him and settled herself non chalantly in the cushions. "But 111 lend yon th extinguisher if you like. Only I've trained out the ammonia and reloaded her ror fir with an extra charge I had. One of the many features in which this admirable invention excels others of the sort is that you carry the makings in powder form, and . ail you have to do is to add water. No bulky tins of fluid contents. Well, I guesa we're all here, now. Unhook her, Murphy." They started off, and as they rolled out on to the turnpike Nancy said: " So you thought you'd sneak off without a word of good-by to anybody?" " I said It last night," Matt answered grim- ly. " You I didn't want to mak you cry gain." "im stronger this morning," Nancy an swered. "So am I." aald Matt. "That' bow I found th courax to beat It, thla way." "You may call it that." said Nancy, "but It Ionics a bit yellow to m." " Welt, I'll tell you a aecret," said Malt ! never could boast of much real courage, Im pul take th place of It, And let m ttll you that ha won many a Distinguished Service Croaa. Hav you heard how Mr. Gate withstood th shock T " managed to stagger through," aaid Nancy, "but Bam bad a clea ahav. II ram nr being an exception to th rul that joy never kills. It cam near being th drath of Sam. You he wa fool enough to tell Mr. Gate th truth, lnatead of th masterly (lrUori which you Invented." flh ahot a slanting look at Mitt. "Now you wouldn't hav don that, would you?" "O. yea," auld Matt "Id have told him Hi truth over th telephone. How about Freddy CrUicom?" " He' gone off mad, Youll probably meet htm on your train. I called him up and told him that I wished to enter a claim for my hare of th reward." " What did he say?" "I couldn't hear It all. Central cut him off. But I should say that we'd have to col lect It through the courts." "Well, that proves him a piker. Sylvia will be much happier with Sam. ' Everybody likes Sam even If he Is a mit rough when riled.'" " Uncle Jerry looked perfectly well thla morning," said Nancy. " The prospect of a light seemed to have a wonderful tonic effect I'm afraid that you inherit your quarrelsome nature from your mother's side." " Your own sweet disposition I not with nut Its dash of tabasco," said Matt "Now May Is kind and gentle. I got an even better slant of her character last night She por trayed two of the most endearing qualities In a wife. First she gave me a kiss, then a long drink. I needed both." " You had already helped yourself to the first with no particular consideration for the feeling of others, said Nancy. - " I sent you an apology for that by May," Matt answered, "and I now repeat it "I put it down to impulse," Nancy aaid. "and nerves and fatigue. I was protty well done up myself. But now that you're leav ing for good and we probably shall not meet again, it does not matter much." There was a peculiar timbre to her voice as she added, " we've said a good many disagreeable things to each other since the beginning of this' ridiculous affair, and of course we weren't at all ourselves last night so what if we just consider all that we've said to each other and others stricken out of the records?" Matt shook his head. "No," said he. "I don't think I'll agree to that I was right enough last night after I got into the house and sat down and had a smoke and a chance to think things over." " And a drink," said Nancy. "I had only tasted the drink to refresh my memory rather than my thirst when I told May what I did. She suggested it would be rather sporty of mo to tell It to you myself and see what happened. , Nancy turned slowly and looked at him with curious lntentncss in her eyes. " Well, why didn't you," she asked, " in stead of turning tali and trying to bolt off this way?" "Because I felt sore and ashamed about the way I've made a fool ot myself since I landed in my sinking launch at the old Putney place. The only thing about the whole business that I'm not sorry for is having squirted that squirt of a secretary." "You brought Sam and Sylvia together," said Kancy. " Yes," said Matt, " but I can't claim much credit for that About as much aa a hunter might if he tripped on a vine and fell down and his rifle went off and the bullet went through tho head of a tiger he didn't know was anywhere about As a matter of fact that joyous event was the result of my doing my level best to tear Sylvia away from him." At this bitter moment tho smoothly run ning car arrived at the Gates place. "If you don't mind," said Matt " I'll let you out at the gate and continue on my way." " I very much mind," said Nancy. " You can let me out at the door." " "I'd rather not go in," said Matt "I fall to see that you have any prior option on this car," said Nancy. "Uncle Jerry pu it at my disposal," said Matt " Please don't interfere with his desire to speed the parting guest But if you insist on being set down at the door I'll get out here and wait Stop, Murphy." " Keep on, Murphy," said Nancy. " Don't stop!" Matt leaned forward. " Murphy, I tell you to stop." Nancy leaned forward and gripped Mur phy by the Bhoulder. " Keep right on," said she. "Stop!" . ' " Keep on!" Under these commands and countermands the car began to perform a series of buck jumps which caused the bodies of Matt and Nancy to Jerk violently back and forth. The bewildered Murphy, in trying to obey both, effected a sort of compromise. But probably finding it impossible to please both, and the vote being a tie, ha may have been in fluenced to some extent by his own judgment in the matter, for, while not flatly disobey- ' ing Matt as the disturbing stoppings and startings testified, yet he kept on going, jerked through the gates, and then, at Nancy's final imperative "Keep on, I tell you!" yielded to superior moral coercion and held more steadily for the porte-cochere, there to fetch up with a final jolt which could not have been good for tires or ma chinery. " There now, Misther Matt" said he, " and phat was I to do? Tis Miss Nancy runnln' the place Just now, under authority of the master and Mrs. .Taylor, and were I to dis obey her she would fire me." " I surely would," said Kancy warmly. " All right," said Matt with a nervous look at the front door, " then please get out aod let me beat it" "But cant you help me out?" snapped , Nancy. Matt sprang down, then turned to assist her, but Nancy took her time about It and as she lingered the big frame of Uncle Jerry loomed up in the front door. "Come in, nephew," he called harshly. " I've been talking to Hiram Gates about this new f angled extinguisher of yours, and he' decided to take an interest in it He wants to see it." "Well some other day. uncle," Matt be gVin weakly, but Uncle Jerry cut him short Insanity dotn't, Uikay," said h. "but nrv do, "I gu that will be about all new," aaid I n ,AV4 . h.iiP th.. thing hen, .no fcf?W '5TSr -fH'tM $XrlH lb bouM nd .lay th.r. J I ft 1 1,hV,IWjW-..V?.;J :. ., X'l-Kl I flnuh my iperimen( r ' S ' Godamightyl" crimd Mr, Gates, and larehtd back. " Come in!" he barked. " You're a hell of a salesman. He wants to see it now and ask you some questions about putting It on the market" Nancy shot Matt a look of malice, and for some reason ba felt suddenly convinced that he wa th victim of a fell conspiracy and that there was nothing to do but fail for It He reached for the extinguisher, then turned and went up the steps with knee that felt a little wabbly. " Thla way," said Uncle Jerry, and shoved him ahead into the study, where a couple ot days before Matt had talked so confidently to Mr. Gates and the policemen. The room was at this moment vacant that is, except for Matt who did not feel that his presence affected the vacancy perceptibly. "Sit down," growled Uncle Jerry, and Matt obeyed, seating himself on the extreme .edge of a chair, with the extinguisher be tween his knees. " Wait a minute," commanded Uncle Jerry, and went out leaving Matt to his reflections. ' Several minutes passed. Matt waited nervously, still sitting on the edge of the chair and slightly toeing in. His hypersensi tive ears seemed to catch the sounds of dis tant laughter. Tho big clock chimed, and Matt thought with despair of the train which he had purposed to catch. Then a heavy step sounded on the parquet of the hall without The doors were flung open and Mr. Gates bulked on the threshold. But it waa a different Mr. Gates from the gentle man whom Matt had Interviewed. With fig ure erect and a glow on his ruddy, face, which was that of an English country squire, and a flash in his eyes, still slightly congest ed, he plunged at Matt with both hands out stretched. "My dear boy!" he' cried in a deep and resonant voice, " I knew you were right You've got a head on your shoulders worth all these fool detectives and reporters. Tou were the only one to give me hope, and, by gad, you Justified your theories by bringing back my daughter," and he gripped both of Matt's nervous hands, the extinguisher fall ing to the floor as Matt rose, with no effort to deny the warmth ot praise which his reason told him to be as untrue as it was unmerited. As he was being pump handled by the joyful parent Uncle 5Jerry appeared in the doorway wearing the sardonic grin which was about as near as Matt had ever seen his uncle come to a smile. "Why don't you kiss him On both cheeks, Hy?" he asked, and then to Matt: "Let's see that darned extinguisher." Matt stooped and picked it up. Uncle Jerry took it from his hands and surveyed with pleasure its polished brass and nickel exterior. Anything mechanical and bright and shiny never failed to make its strong nppeal to Uncle Jerry, Just as it might to a savage or a child. " Is it charged," he asked, " with tho real put-out-the-flame stuff? " He read the trade mark on the side: " Flame Out" "Yes, uncle," Matt answered. "Just now it is all loaded for Its principal function, which is to extinguish fire. But It has oc curred to me that we might also devise a spe cial burglar charge. It would be far better than any pistol. In the first place, you could scarcely miss him, on the principle that it is easier to get on your mark with a hose than with a gun. Also, it would tak him alive. And if by any chance you hap pened to get one of the family by mistake, or a guest walking in his sleep in some part of the house where he had no business, the result would not be fatal. There might even be a mitigated dose to be employed on beg gars, peddlers, summons servers, and duns." Uncle Jerry chuckled. "Do you think It would really nip a bad fire in the bud? he asked. "I know that it would, uncle," Matt an swered warmly, "and without the slightest damage to rugs, carpets, curtains, or clothes. I've seen It demonstrated time and again. A mischievous look came into the deepset eyes of the convalescent "Well, then," said . he, " let' see it demonstrated now. A prac tical demonstration eh, Hy? " "Why er, Yes Oi cou.se." raid Mr. Gates, looking a little startled and uneasy, for he knew the eccentric nature of his boy hood's friend. But neither he nor Matt was quit pre pared tor what followed. With a quickness of hand scarcely to be expected ot one snatched so recontly from the Jaws of death through the arm of a bride. Uncle Jerry struck a match and, before th other two could determine the rash act he was up to, held the flame against the lace curtain of the long window. It flared up with a sudden rush of shooting flame. "Godamightyl" cried Mr. Gates, and lurched back. But Matt that creature of impulse, did not lose his head. With a motion of bis thumb he released the safety catch, took three paces to the rear, and with a deft manipulation of . some graceful exponent of the cue sent a jet ' the length of the blazing curtain. And this one jet sufficed. Aa If by magic, or like the flash of the photographer's magnesium pow der when taking a banquet scene, the bril liant glare went out to leave only some charred fringes of curtain and portiere and a smudge ot darkened woodwork. Uncle Jerry let out a whoop of Joy. " Gosh all hemlock!" he cried, with a slap of his hands, while the badly startled Mr. Gates, io whom the house belonged, breathed softly,1 " Geehoshaphat! " t These exclamations were echoed by others from the doorway, and Matt looked around to see standing there, with eyes a great deal like those of the banqueters aforementioned when the photo of the festal scene Is printed, May, Nancy, Sylvia, and Sam. The latter, of a subdued and chastened yet happy de meanor, rather suggested the habitually faitljful dog which, in a moment of tempta tion, having yielded to the impulse to kill a sheep, has been caught in the act, corrected, and forgiven. Curiosity had drawn them to the open double doors of the study to see what was going on, and they had seen. "Well, of all the mad, crazy, dangerous' stunts," commenced Nancy, who was und?r the impression that it was Matt who had S') radically demonstrated his Invention, when Uncle Jerry cut her short " Shut up, you sassy baggage," he rasped. "I did that." And Nancy shut up, while Matt's eyes went to her with a malicious look which seemed to hold the query: "Who's looney now?" Uncle Jerry was rubbing his hands and beaming at Mr. Gates with all the enthu siasm of a boy who has Just successfully set off a brilliant firework. "There, you see, Hy!" he cried triumph antly. "Didn't I tell you Matt wasn't the fool we all thought him? Now are you sat isfied? " " Satisfied ain't quite the word, Jerry," croaked Mr. Gates, whose mouth was slightly dry. " I'm not quite strong enough for that sort ot crazy stuff Just now." "Well, you saw how the thing works. Are you ready to backbit?" " To the limit," said Mr. Gate fervently. "But I'd have done that anyhow if the damned thing had been loaded with gaso line. You needn't have scared me to death." "Well, I wanted to convince," said Uncle Jerry. "O, all right," sighed Mr. Gates; "don't mind me. Just take it down to the hayloft or th gaa tank or any other darned place." A bright idea seemed to flash across hi sorely tried mind. " Take it down to Sam's shipyard and light the shavings in the plan ing house." " Go as far as you like. Matt" said Sam cheerfully. " Tou have my order now for a full equipment." Uncle Jerry was handling the instrument delightedly. Mr. Gates looked at him with fresh anx iety, then turned imploringly to May. " Take him home, dear lady," said he, " and send for a husky keeper." Nancy looked at Matt then edged a little closer. "Insanity must run in the family," she whispered, but unfortunately for her, a hush had fallen at this moment and Uncle Jerry's quick ears had caught her words. rM pait of It." and without bothering to lak any formal farewvll h went out with May Matt, thus left at th mercy of Nancy and th other, listened In om thlng of da 40 Mr. Gate' appreciation of hi service and rathrr grudging declaration that after all, he gueaaed Kam would mak bl daughter a better hus band than Urtacom, who, when all la said, weighed considerably short of ton. Then Nancy sug gested that they had bet ter be going back. They went out to dlscovar that Murphy, for some my tertoua reason, bad taken hi departure, "Now, where thai Irishman got off to?" Matt demanded. Pyhla offered to send them horn In th Gate car, but Nancy de clined. "No," said she, "after all this excitement I'd like to quiet my nerves by a good walk. It's only about a rail across th neck." She looked at Matt and it teemed to htm that for th first time sine their meeting there wa a softening In her blue eye and a sort of invitation. "Tou can ride horn If you like," aaid she, "but I'm going to walk." " m go, too." aaid Matt So they act out on a path which led through th Gate orchard, then entered a wood which waa rather In the nature of a park with eolemn itately oak co widely spaced that the award grew under them fresh and green, and they passed through area of brilliant light and softly tinted shadow. About halfway they came to a spring which had been cared for and stoned, and was edged about with mossy bank, while cress had been planted in it overflow. " I'm Ured and thirsty," said Nancy, " let s get a drink and sit down and rest for minute. Where' the gourd?" The gourd had disappeared, whether car ried off by boys or picknlckers who bad neg lected to return it, or destroyed by some enemy to society such a unfortunately exist. The surface of the crystal basin waa too far below its coping to admit of leaning down to drink, at least with any comfort or satis faction, and there were no proper leave with which to shape a cup, and Matt's hat was a cloth one. Curious to ee if Nancy would accept such a goblet. Matt rinsed his hands In the overflow, then capped them with woodsman' skill and raised them filled with water. " I don't see how you do that" said Nancy, "my fingers always leak It out," and to Matt's infinite surprise, she bent her ruddy golden head and drank. "Dear, but that's good! Some more, please." Matt for some reason was swept by a sud den warm wave. This Is, apt to happen to a young man very much in love when the object of his adoration, from scorning all service, unexpectedly accepts one of a cer tain intimacy. For there Is unquestionably something very intimate in the act of taking food or drink directly from the hand of an other. " To eat right out of my hand," is no Idle expression of close and friendly rela tionship, old as the ages, and to drink from them means even more. No woman could possibly thus drink from the hands of a man for whom she felt the faintest shade of an tipathy. More than that it is doubtful if a dainty or fastidious woman could thus serve herself from tho hands of one with whom she did not feel herself united by some bond of sympathy. It is in a way more personal than a kiss because that caress might be perfunctory or, to get back to our theme, impulsive. Some powerful emotion, elusive and sweet, swept over Matt as Nancy in drinking from his cupped hands bent her golden head di rectly under his face and so close to it that her hair brushed his cheek. It seemed to him that some intoxicating perfume which had nothing to do with the odor of even the most delicate cosmetic came from it This aroma was rather like that of some fairy flower which, as happens in a fairy tale, might become endowed, not only with a soul, but incarnate in a physical body. If he had not been too much in a maze to analyze this Impression, he might have thought of it as a "Nancy perfume." All lovers will under stand immediately what is meant by this. So would ail dogs, and describe it much better if they had the faculty for descrip tion. For a dog will tell you that Just as no face in any way resembles the face they love, and no voice has the timbre of the voice they love, so can no scent however subtle, have the scent of the one they love. None of this psychology had time to ordi nate in the mind of Matt because at that moment he was feeling rather than think ing. In fact, he felt as though he never wanted to think again, at least cold-bloodedly. He was overwhelmed with delight that Nancy should not only be willing to drink from his hands but even relish doing so, and ask for more. She looked up from her draught and smiled at him, and Matt was conscious of an ex traordinary impression of change in her, as though he bad given her some mystic po tion by which all previous relations between them had been abruptly altered. For gone was the antagonism. Gone was the offensive defensive proportion in which they had previously stood, so that instead of feeling on his guard with her or even the necessity of guarding her against himself, there seemed to have been mysteriously established a comradely sentiment and one from which they might view all things with a mutual instead of a Jealous vision. But it was more than thla The strong. Insistent egos of the pair had passed through a phase which left them and their separate interests, first mutual, then with a sense of duality. Friends may be mutual, but only lovers achieve that divine emotion of duality. There was a forest bird trilling lis soft nesting notes in the tree tops overhead as Matt n4 Nancy sank down n that mi bank to ret, not too oloo together and not too ftr apart, and th ntuald of lhaa liquid pole found II eiho In Malt' heart. II turned and looked at Nancy with th first tal apprrUiion of her lhat h had o far riprrlenerd. Thl bwaua It waa ! for br nvly piquant fc and th phlnl pert of her daiighiful personality than something far deeper which gav to all of thl th Nam-y nul, juat moment b for when drinking from hi hand h bad first bfom ar of lh Nanry perfume. Homeihlng of th am rl must htv entered Nancy' cnnai'lousnra. becau now aa aha looked at Malt with tyt Ilk violet drenched In dew thrlr expreaMon wa that of a lark of recognition, or t lvt the lack of what ah had n fit to rrrognU in Mm befor. At that moment th glance which lli-y eirhanged wa queatloning. It was precisely a though rarh had ald: "Put dear m. I never guessed that you wr you." Follow! that brlrf instant of embarrass ment, a pu In whlrh each mad valiant ffort to adjust th mind to this fresh and wonderful aspect of rarh other. Ther mint have been some potent elixir In that clear spring. Nancy wa the drat to vote thla new rela tion In corns la form. "But, Matt," slio said. "I nvr thought that you could be so nice." "I'm not ery," aaid Matt, "but I found out laat night that you were. I told May to. Did h tell ou?" "No." Naney nwrcd. "Neither May nor I beliov much In repeating what peopl ay." "Well," said Matt, "then I believ Ml follow hr advice, after all, and tell you my elf. I think you are th sweetest, bravest, truest-hearted girl In all th world, I love you to death, and I want you to marry me, nd quirk. Will you, dear?" He reached for the small hand which at about that time th day before had landed with such a solid swing upon his ear. But astonishing changes of sentiment can hap. pen within a day, and this vigorous extrem ity, no longer militant, now nestled flutter ingly In Matt's clasp. Nancy looked into hia eyes with 'that Intense questioning which require a more convincing answer than any framed by th lips alone. She wa trying to read the deeper truths which were inscribed behind Matt' eyes. "How am I to know that this is not another rush of Impulse, Matt?" she asked. , "Well, if It Is, sweetheart" aaid Matt " then it'a one that ha weathered a number of hours ot the hardest thinking I've ver done in my life, though I'm afraid that isn't saying much." " Still," Nancy murmured. " no mer Im pulse lasts that long, does It?" "Mine don't." aaid Matt "Their llf cycles have never been more than a few moments after that the forces set in motion may take any time to blow themselves out" "Then it really isn't impuls at all?" Nancy asked. Matt shook his head. "If so, it's an im pulse that Is going to keep on and on, lik the impulse that makes the tides go up and down." A little smile formed on Nancy's Hps, but It was the smile unlike any which Matt had ever seen before. There was no scornful twist at the end of it and it held a tender, ness such as he could not have guessed thos red, rebellious Hps knew how to wear. " I'll have to consider that a little," Nancy said. "You're sure that you're not thinking about that subsidy your uncle offered for getting rid of me?" " Sure," Matt answered with conviction. " Honestly, Nancy, I'd forgotten all about it. That shows what an improvident beggar I am. I'd even lost sight of the fact that I'v really nothing to offer you but an unpaid income tax." " There's the extinguisher," said Nancy. "O. hang it all." said Matt "the extin gulsher's a perfectly good asset for the re mote future, but I don't see how I can possibly wait for you that long. All th same, I suppose that's the best I can bop for. For all my nerve, it's not quite up t asking you to marry me on th prospect of the extinguisher." He loosed his clasp of her hand, but this, like a kitten clinging to one's ooat, declined to bo dislodged. The small strong finger twined round those of Matt. "The extinguisher is a good side line, Matt," said she, "but we're going to do something better than that You've done it already several times, and you can do It again." "But Nancy," Matt protested, though feebly, " that's not enough for you to go on. I shouldn't have spoken. I didn't mean to speak that Is, right away." "Impulse has Its advantages, Matt" said Nancy softly. " Besides, Uncle Jerry is not the sort to go back on his bargain." Matt looked uncertain and much distressed. " All those material considerations went out of my head after being shipmates with you for a little while," said he. "If you were mine, Nancy, nobody could possibly give me anything else." " Well," said Nancy, " that needn't inter fere with their giving them to me." Matt brightened. " That's so," he an swered. "After all, they do owe you a lot If you hadn't gone out in the launch and dragged me with you, there's no telling what might bave happened. And if only we could once get fairly started, there's nothing In this world could stop us." Nancy drew a little closer, then looked up into his face with a radiant smile and swimming eyes. "Of course, there's not dear boy," said she, "so let's start" Her face was close to his, red lips half parted, and the breath coming in little gasps between them. It was too much for Matt In fact, he would not have been Matt If be had not obeyed that impulse. There hap pened then one of those thing to make a whole lifetime of dreadful misery well worth the living. There is this advantage to a retrousse nos whatever the traits said to accompany it It leaves the lips available at such critical moments as these, and in the kissing of such a girl as Nancy, who does not tak th business lightly, when once engaged upon it becomes a whole souled and perfectly absorb ing occupation. The little bird sang louder, then fluttered lower to look. When presently the bargain was all ar ranged, sealed, signed, and witnessed by the little bird. Matt drew in his breath deeply, tor he had need of air. "After that sweetheart" said he, "I'm all equipped and accoutered to go over th top of things." "Ill go. too," said Nancy. The End. Cevrishl: IV.'.'.