390 THE WEST SHORE. it does not do to give way to nil her fancies you see, Sig Uolo. lit! Coooo," he cried, iwt if struck by a sudden thought. "Cocco, come with me and hold the lamp; that big door takes two hands to open it." Cecoo loaning against the doorpost a dark silhouette against the light within the cottage laughed mockingly, and ojaculntod "Gruzi'e!" an Italian's more refined method of saying, " I'll bo hanged if I do!" Cecco's elder brother was not so obdurate; he was a Bolomn-lookuig fellow with largo eyes, and a mouth which formed n horizontal line across his face, and which shut up with a peculiarly tight expression. Pietro roso,.soy ing, " 1W Ucmpo! wo won't let hi in ?o alone. I'll raima Ueppe." And ho wont out into tho darkness, overtaking iiio jungiisiiniaii ana his brotlior just as they reached an old gabled gateway, nlxiut twenty yards up tho rough stony lano. lioppo opened this, and they stumbled down some ruuo slops into a courtyard, where a sound of dropping waier cimio through all tho roaring wind, scrambled in tho darkness over wet grass and pebbles, fell across a big Btono table in tho midst, and finally reached an old black oak doorway. " Hero, Pietro, you oiion this." said Iinnnn hnn,, tho key to his brother, and tho lamp and sheets to the iravoior, men winlo rietro struggled with the rusty lock ho softly turned into tho gloom and rim nwnv Piotro's expression "as ho found himself left nlono with tho stranger on tho black threshold of the old villa was a Httuly. lerror and superstition struggled with in digimtion and aiiL-er, while the discomfits! f.mi;., being a dupo predominated over all. Ho run wildly out 10 mo couriyarii to call ins brother, but tho traveler, not wishing to In left nlono outside his inhospitable shelter detained liita, saying, "What does it matter? you know tho way as well as ho does, I supjioso," and so brought in tho unwilling guide, who having ejaculated, "God save us," and crossed himself, let shrugs of tho shoulder mid lifting up of the eyes do tho rest of tho duty in express ing his overpowering feelings. Ho led the way into a largo old room, with quaint oak furniture and faded jxir traiU of tho ciniiw-crnlo stylo on the walls. "Il'm" thought the Englishman, "this looks like civilization at least, if not comfort. Are these family portraits?" he atikod. "Hi. Signoro Inglese-yoH, I will tell you of them to morrow. Hero is the Mroo.ii, sir. I , sorry wo have no comfort- for you." He spoko in a hurried, gaspini; sort of voice, and hastily setting down the lamp, ho com inonoed fussily to spread the coarse sheet ho had brouuht from his mother's cottage. As he did so his eyo fell on it chair placed carelessly i tho middle of the room, as if it had Imsmi lately used. " hat are you staring at?" U1 Arlhur M . " Oil. notion" iiir null. in.. " : i . i J ' ""m ,,,,,, "'( "is mouth till it Wmne a long lino dividing his face. Ho threw the coverlid nil awry, and asked if the Signoro wanted nnvthimr else but, quite forgetting to wait a reply, hi, h.;.y "llHj.py night!" vanished into the darkness, slamming the heavy oak door with a reverberating clang. Mr. MoBtyn, who had severul questions on his tongue stood open-mouthed, gazing into space. As Pietro had done when left by his brother, so our hero did on being deserted in his turn, shrugged his shoulders, and ejacu luted "Humph!" His English sangue freddo, ns the Italians call it, stood him in good stead, and for want of an interlocutor he talked to himself.- " This is queers let us say unusual. "With great difficulty I obtain refuge in a house large enough to shelter an army, but nobody is willing to accord it. An ancient crone mutters warn-' ings, a boy threatens evils, two men refuse to enter, and a third is struck dumb at the sight of an empty chair and Hies! It seems a quiet old house enough. Lot us look round my room." Holding aloft the lamp, he saw that the huge bod stead had antique yellow hancincrs and frinmw ti,t. i. t - u o - mu chairs were high-backed and of carved ook, an autiaue I. .11.. i l ..... ii i i 1 , . . jti ( in tiii hwk)(i neartne beu, ana on the sides of the room woro two huge oak chests, some ten feet long, which served as divans, but without cushions. These chests had feet like lions' claws, and curious old iron hnsps. fn the olden days every Italian familv niaaBaM a.i..h chests, and fillod them with the hereditary store of linens and brocades. Every bride had one to hold her covrvdo. The Englishman put down the lamp. "Nothing very alarming on the outsido. I must confess, unless Mm ukl. oton lives in that musty cupboard in the wall, or the ghost is shut up in ono of those chests: tiorlmns f.lio rrlm.it of Griselda is there," and, half laughing, he opened the one on iuo lott The honvy lid lifted slowly. As he opened it ho fancied ho hoard a sigh or some sound, but on holding tho lamp lower to see well inside there was nolhhuj. ''Black emptiness no more," said Arthur Mortyn, "just what wns to bo expectedso I will wnste no more nine. He left the lllllin btirililifT in pnau nt nno1fr.r if. Unshod across his mind that he had no matches with him. In Spite of tllO discomfort of A hfirl mnrln hv tlin liniirla nt a frightened man, instead of a "neat-handed Phyllis," ho was bo tired that sloop soon came to him, or would have come, only that just as he was passing into oblivion a voice seemed to sav. in trmvl T.mnn shall I do?" Starting u wideawnW bo Dead silence replied, or ratlmr li,l nf. W l..ted round tho room, even shoolc nut. tl.a nnrtninu nt lii side, nnd then returned to aWn nrrnin anvinn rfnRMIir- j"Kly, "A dream-nothing more." Sleep tarried longer, . but at last it npproachod again; Arthur Mostyn's regular breathing announced the fact And now otlior sounds x-cume nmimio. The lamp spluttered and flickered, cast wonderful shadows and fitful lights as the shades of dark ness gathered about it-a hard breath, a half sigh, came from somewhere m,l fmm tlm .ln i i.A v.ll..w- curtained bed. The chest on the right side creoked and lenod slowly; something like the white face of a terri tMM girl peeped out. The sleeper turned uneasily. The