7 THE COURIER. "i.tj been assured that the likeness was only a coincidence, that it could be nothing more; for the photograph it photograph it wac had been in my possession for more than twenty years, while this girl could not possibly be over twenty years old. But, in my surprise and agitation, I did not consider this, and to me she wbb the creature in flesh and blood of my youthful dreams. Tho fakir himself was an old man, thin almost to emaciation, yet of power ful frame. His hair was sparso and gray; his sallow face was half-covered by a straggling beard, and his eyes were deep-sunken, but marvelously brilliant, He wore the American evening dreeB; but this conventionality of attire could not hide the real personality of the man a personality that struck me at once as being sinister and repulsive. He performed numerous feats of leger demain and magic, to which, however, I gave little heed, my attention being ab sorbed by his fair assistant. Finally, he announced, in his broken English, that he would give an exhibition of hia power in telepathy. "Mile. Vaisye," bb he called her, should be put into a trance or hypnotic sleep; if, then, a dozen or more personB in the audience would each write on a slip of paper a number, a name, a date or a sentence, and band the same to him, the young lady, con trolled by his will, and without receiv ing any other communication, would move along the aiBles and reprodure for each 0ii6 the identical number, name, date or sentence that had been written. The girl seated herself in a chair, and be made several passes with his hands before her face in the' approved manner of Mesmer, with the result that her eyss qtrfckly closed. He then went among the audience with a hat, collecting the slipB of paper from nearly a score of persons in various parts of the theatre, myself amoog the number, and reading each slip as received. Standing then i& front of the foot lights, he made a commanding gesture with bis arm, and the girl arose, still with closed eyeB, and descended the steps from the stage. Watching her closely, I noted that her face was pale,' but I could not tell it she were actually in a trance. She moved aB one is sup posed to walk in sleep, listlessly and aimessly. As she advanced along the aisle, she stopped suddenly, as if im pelled by some unseen force, and, em ploying a pencil and a small pad of paper she carried, wrote something which she handed to the person by whom she stood.' Then she continued her way, up one aisle and down another, pausing and writing frequently, actuat ed; apparently, only by an occasional sweep of the armB ou the part of Naka Narayana. When she came aud stood by me my heart beat violently, and I gazed up into her mobile face with an intensity of excitement that could bard ly have escaped the attention of those around me. Without an instant's heBi tation she wrote, handed me the sheet of paper, and paB:ed on. What I read was this, in a free, running hand: . Kismet what mutt be, shall be. They were the same words that I had written on the paper taken by the ma gician. Nevertheless, coming from her to me, they seemed to have a new and tremendous nigniHcance, and in the ex travagance of my delusion I halt fancied that enehad wittingly given them a personal meaning and application. The girl then returned to the stage, and Naka Narayana, taking the slips one by one from the hat, read them aloud, and elicited from each contribu tor to the performance an acknowledg ment of the correctness of Mile. Vaisya'a transcription. She was then awakened, and the curtain fell, amid great ap plause. The magic or trickery of the proceed ing, which so myBtitied and amazed the audience, was lost upon me in the con temptation of tho mystery surrounding log the girl herself, the mystery of her idontity and her subjection to tho odious fakir I had but one concern in 1 fenow, and that was, to mako the ac quaintance of "Mile. Vaisya," whoso af finity to myself I hid never doubted in the worship of ber image, when sho was only an imago, and whoso life, I felt, was designed by fate to bo interlinked hereafter with my own. It noed hari'ly bo said that I wasted no time in tho pursuit of my purpose. As I was personally known to the mana gor of the theatre, I experienced no difficulty in obtaining, on Borne trivial pretext, the private address of Naka Narayana, which, investigation diEcloe rd, was that of a cheap theatrical board ing house not far from Washington Square. I applied there for a room, and secured one at the back of the house, learning, at the same time, by adroit questioning of the none too secretive landlady, that the magician and bia as-' sistant occupied separate rooms on the top floor, that they took no meals in the house, except, perhaps, of their own preparing, and that the girl never went out during the day, and tho man but seldom. During the next week my ingenuity was taxed to the utmost to secure a meeting with the girl. Long hours I sat in my room, watching the hallway, with the door ajar, but she never went out except in the evening, in company with the magician, who never himself left the house save at this time. On every occasion possible I brought myself to her attention, until I congratulated myself that she must be familiar with my features and conscious of my in terest. Finally, one morning. Naka Narayana webt out alone; and I was about making up my mind to resort to bold measures to secure the coveted interview, when one of the servants of the houso brought me a note, in a handwriting that I instantly recognized. It read thus: "I need a friend. Oan I trust youY "Vaisya." My delight waB supreme, and I in Btantly replied that I was hers to, com mand, and that I would await her in the back parlor below, where we could speak undisturbed. She came down almost immediately, in a simply made dress of dark-red India silk. As she entered the room -where I stood, she hesitated, glanced around uneasily, aud then, impulsively, appealingly, came forward with extend ed band. "I have waited for this moment for twenty years," I said, looking into her eyes. She gazed at mo in surprize. "Then then you know my story V she asked. "I know nothing of you," I said, "except that your image has been be fore me all my life." "It is strange I do not understand," she answered. "Tell me bow I can serve you," I went on. "You can confide in me, utterly." She eat near mo, with her eyes down cast for a moment and the color slowly riBiogin her cheeks. 'I do not know why I should have appealed to you," she began, "unlets it was because I read something in your face that reassured me. I fancied a week Ago that you were were interested in me. ' "It was not merely fancied," I inter jected. "From the moment I saw you I devoted myself to making your ac quaintance. You see I am frank, for I wish you to be frank with me. Oppor tunities such as this art- too hard to obtain, to be wasted. Tell me every thing, and whatever you would have me do, shall be done." "You are right opportunities are few," she said. "I am watched nearly all tho time, and when I am not watch ed I am helpless. All my life I have been in tho power of Naka Narayaua, and rarely have I ever parsed a word with any othor human being. I have watted always to escape from this slavery, but if ever a chance presented itself, my will was not my own, and I could not take advantage of it. My story is a strange one, but I can tell it to you in a few words. I was born in India. Who my parents were I do not know, but I think my father was an Englishman and my mother a native I have no other name than Vairya that I have ever heard. When a child I fell into thohandB of Naka Narayana, who was even then an old man, and famed for supernatural powers. From the first he exercised the most absolute control-over my mind. He taught me to read and write in several Inoguages, but allowed me no freedom, and com pelled me to undergo his own rigid regimen of existence. When I was about fifteen he informed mo that it was in his power to keep me young for a very long time. Age, he said, .name from the wasting away of the physical powers of the human body by constant use; this waste was inevitable in con scious moments, and for every day of consciousness a night's sleep was re quired to restore the Inst energies; from this he argued, tha; without conscious ness, and hence, without this vital waBte, eave only at necessary interval, the individual would grow old almost imperceptibly, and live indefinitely. It was his purpose, he declared, to thus preserve my youth. "Hereafter," he said, "except for a few hours at a time, your physical functions will be kept en tirely in abeyance, and your beauty will thus be long in fading. I have experi mented on myoelf, and I have already prolonged my life beyond the age of most men. By this means I shall defy death for perhaps another generation.' "All that he said I do not remember. I was in despair when I realized that my slavery was to be' even more abject and complete than it had been before, and my soul revolt id at the plan he contemplated, But 1 was too thorough ly in bis power to in ke any resistance, and from that' day to this I have been most of the time 'i a state of torpor or trance. How many ) ears have gone by 1 do not know. Twice we have orossed the seas, and given exhibitions on the stage such as we are giving now. Even during the two or three hours each even ing when I am awake, I am still undter hia spell and the slave of his will. At no time, not even now, when he baa left me awake for the first time in months in order that I might repair a stage costume that was torn last night, ami free, physically, from bia influence. I have always wanted to escape from him; but I feel that 1 cannot escape alone I have not the strength; I should not know how to elude him it I were away. At times I think I am going mad; and I have appealed to you, as the only one in whose face I have ever read sympathy, to save and protect me." ''And I will do so," I answered earnestly, "Listen, Vaisya; though 1 never saw you until, by chance, a week ago, I have kaawn and loved you always. Years ago a picture came into my possession the picture of a girl to me the most beautiful girl in all the world, and that girl hfjs) filled my dreams by day and night aver since. It waa you picture I know this now and it is the happiness of my Ufa that I may be the instrtment in the ba'nda of fatatdr rescue you from your abominable slavery.' Let us loae no time; go at once to'yobr' room and secure suck of your belongings'" as you whh to take with you, and we will escape before Naka Narayana re turns," and I seized her hand and precsod it to my lips. ' - 1( i She made no reply for a moment, but atood trembling, as if a struggle wero going oh within hor. Then she said, with a radiant face: "You give mo strength, I trust you . It shall bo as you say." She quitted the room and went up the stair, loaving me thrlllod and intoxicat ed by her beauty and the prospect of joy that was before me. While I wait ed her return I paced the floor in a fever of impatience, pondering over the mar velous etory of her life that she had told me, and 'wondering at the sorcery of Naka Narayana. "It is fate fate," I was saying to myself; "fate has kept her for me all theso years," when I heard the front door of tho house open and shut, and footsteps in the hall. Looking out cautiously I beheld tho magician. lie was holding his hand against his breast and walked unsteadily. In the glimpse that I caught of his face I saw that which startled and shocked me. His sallowness had changed to pallor, his deep-sunken eyes were staring wildly and his age seemed to have doubled since last I looked upon him. Evidently he had been suddenly stricken while on tho street, and, rep rehensible as the feeling may have been, yet something of exultation aucceeded my astonishment and chagrin at bis appearance. "Should he die," flashed through my mind, "theone great daqger the one great obstacle in my road to happiness will be removed." ' I approached the door leading to the hallway and looked after him. Ha clutched the railing of the stairs and tottered as he slowly made hia way up' ward, Once or twice I thought he would fall backward. Winn he reached the top of the first flight he paused an'd rested for a moment before pursuing his way. Presently I could hear bim stumbling up the second flight. Curiosity impelled me to follow him, and when he had reached the top floor. I was on the floor below, where I stopped and listened. I could hear him breathing heavily as he entered the room that I knew to bo Vaisya'a. 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