.". -V. 30 THE SUNDAT OREGONIAN. PORTLAOT), APRIL 15, 1900. TZXSIE oftfe WINDS By S.1l,C1lpCK7T Ktlurei by C.A.JHIPLMY Synopsis of Previous Chapters. BIr James Stansfleld. of New Mllns. In com pany with his grandson, young Philip, meet In an lnnhouae hla eon Philip and hla son's para monr. Janet Mark. They quarrel. Sir James roes home, taking his grandson. That night be la murdered by hla dissolute son and Janet Mark. They lay his body outside on an lcs floe, in the effort to lay the crime to omera. But the boy Philip has wlcnessed the crime. He tella hla grandfather's chief tenant, Umphray Spurway, who succeeds In having the real mur derers brought to Justice. Philip Is sentenced to be hanged, and his woman accomplice to be transported. Mysteriously he escapes the sal lows, seeks out his wife, finds her In the com pany of Spurway, and tries to murder her, but does not quite succeed. She Is taken away to Abercalrn for cure, leaving her son In charge of Spurway and with little Anna Mark, who teaches him that In some ways girls are worth Quite as much as boss. Still, they are excel lent friends, even though ehe beats him at her studies In the school to which they go. John Stansfleld. Philip's lawyer-uncle, brings In new teacher. Dominie Rlngrose, a small man. with wonderful eyes. Shortly after his coming the countnslde is shocked and thrilled by a number cf bloody and mysterious murders, evi dently for the sake of robbery. Business call Umphray Spurway from home. In his absence a, big packing case, purporting to be full of Sine Spanish wool. Is delivered, to Will Bowman. Umphray"a clerk, who puts It In the weaving shed. That night Philip, playlrg about It, sees shining through the gauze a pair of eyes. He calls Will Bowman, who counts three, then stabs the case with a. small sword. Bloud flows. They open the case, and And Dominie dUngrose Inside, apparently dead. Shortly after the house Is attacked by robbers, whom Rlng rose had meant to let In. They are beaten oft; but afterwards Philip's mother refuses to let blm spend the .holidays at New Mllns. Return ing from a day's visit to New Mllns. Philip falls In with Saul Mark. Anna's gypsy father, who, under pretense of showing him Sir Harry Morgan's treasure, makes him a. prisoner. Anna, finds out his plight, and leads Spurway on hla track. By the help of his silent partner. Provost Gregory Partan. Saul Mark, super cargo of the ship Corramantee. Imprisons both Anna and Spurway, robbing Spurway of much money and a portrait of Philip's mother. Philip the elder goes out In Spurways cloak to his wife's house, and by threats Induces her aboard the Corramantee: Anna and Philip make friends with Eborra. He snows them the secrets of the Island, and where Sir Harry Morgan's treasure Is, guarded by Fer-de-lance and his hosts. Eborra has scented a boat. In which he plans to escape with Anna. Philip, Mrs. St&nsneld and his mother; also Will lawman, who Is In the clutches of the pirate. The pirates soil away with two or three ships. The boat starts, encounters other pirates, but Is towed safely away by a monster devil fish. The boat reaches Puerto Rico In safety. and Its Inmates approach a convent seeking help. The convent takes in the women. The men go into a chain gang, it is making a road for the pleasure of the goernor"s wife. She chances to pass along, and Will Bowman and Philip dlKxner her to be Janet Mark, little Anna's mother. Janet Mark, now the lady Juanlta Silveda. stands friend to her country men, but they soon And It is a perilous favor. Notwithstanding Janet grows violently Jealous" when little Anna somewhat takes the Gover nor's eye. She Is about to kill the girl, when Philip tells her the truth that Anna Is her own daughter. Another boat comes ashore at Puerto Rico. It holds Saul Mark and Philip Stansfleld. who have been beaten In the en counter with hostile pirates. Saul recognizes his wire. He and Stansfleld rerruade the Gov ernor to fit out a ship, promising to return to the Isle and bring back the Morgan's treasure. He plans to make Philip bring It from the burning lake. The vessel sails with Philip and Will Bowman aboard, and Anna, jwho la dis guised. The expedition reaches the Islands, and they find the volcano active, and Morgan's treasure forever lost. Copyright. IK'S, under the name of "Little Anna Mark." by S. IS. Crockett.) (Copyright. ieS9. by S. II. Crockett.) t CHAPTER XLVIII-(ContInued.) That which fronted us no-- was no cas tellated wall of black basalt. The dry, black eand had grown hot under foot and crumbling- slopes of Ioooe. gray ash sloped steeply up to a hilltop which snorted and roared above us. Subterraneous rum bUngs made our hearts quiver within, and the red light we had seen sprang up ward and anon sank low. We were now near enough to eee that this was not fire, but, as we cay In Scotland, the 'skar row" or reflection of the fiery heart of the mountain thrown upward on the great hooded column of smoke, shaped like Kpa-lm tree or lons-stalkcd mushroom that towered above all Into the &y. The dawn was now coming fast, and the column of smoke or steam changed Its aspect every moment, now growing pink like a roselcaf and anon Hashing Into whiteness, as, rising out of the sea, the sun smote its upper part long be fore It reached us where we stood among the black and blasted growths on the edge of the forest. Eborra came close to us as we stood gazing upward. It was the first time I had ever seen him really unfile, for I do not count the grimacing of Yellow Jack. He pointed toward the mountain we conid see breaking through the Jungle before "Harry Morgan has come himself for his treasure." he said, "and has brought his master along with him! They are both very glad to see Master SauL" And, Indeed, there was something emi nently devilish in the smoking, coughing, spitting, roaring monster before us. I looked across to where Saul Mark stood shading his eyes with his bands and watching the raging Are mountain where he had expected the quiet lake of pitch It must have been a. terrible disappoint ment to him. Yet of that he showed noth ing. "Forward!" he cried, pointing upward to the cone of ashes. And first of all the expedition he started up the wingward side of the fiery mountain. "Bring these lads along!" he cried to our guards, thinking of us even In that moment of disillusionment And so. bent double by the slope of the mountain, and slipping among the loose clinkers of the lava streams, we mounted as best we could after him. Anna came llghtfoot with us. often running a little before and giving us a hand when other wise the weight cf our chains would have brought us to a standstill. It was very near now. The fiery fur nace In which Saul Mark designed that wc should walk. But there was in my heart none of the confidence of the three youths In the book of Daniel and that In spite of both Eborra and Captain Stans field. Suddenly, as wc mounted the cone, the black ashes changed to crystals of sul phur yellow and brown, glistening like the stones which come from off the moun tain colled Cairngorm. Wide black rifts end holes. their sides feathered in bright est red and yellow. led down Into the heart of the mount These continually belched up burning steam and choking odors, which blew in our faces like the breath of demons. If this was Obeah. as Eborra- said. I wished that Obeah had been sosae- what sweeter of throat, for the hot reek blasting In nVface turned me sick and faint, and I swayed upon "Will as- I stood. At last we came out upon the unstable summit It had a lip narrow, crumbling and dangerous. There was, however, a wind here which blew most of the smoke away from us, so that the placo was more favorable than upon the breathless slopes beneath. , I looked over Into the crater, setting my breast to the edge and holding Anna's hand as I did so. My guard would on n account approach nearer, but stood at the limit of the chain, sinking his halbert deep In the ash for a holding post, and indeed I do not blame him, for the Bights and sounds were heart-shaking enough. This is what I saw. Immediately beneath me and so abrupt ly so that one could toss a stone to the bottom, was a lake (as It seemed), no longer of pitch sluggishly turning over In Its sleep, but of fire bubbling merrily. Ilka a great broth pot From this Jets of steam hissed" furiously upward. Blocks of glowing rock spat out viciously, and when a loose stone or bowlder fell from the precipices above Into the caldron It was Instantly dispersed, often exploding with a loud report like a bombshell and casting the fragments high over our heads as we lay and watched. I have listened to pleasanter music than the sound of these black Jags of rock as they snored past us, booming upward like drone beetles In the summer gloaming. Saul Marks stood near us. I could see him biting his Up and clenching his hands as he looked down. But even then and In this place he seemed to know no fear Don Nicholas and one or two of the bolder spirits among the Spaniards had mounted after us. and we stood all close together on the highest part of the crater Up. In every other direction the deadly vapors prevented closer access, and though the stones fell about us like sum mer rain, they were mostly small and did us no great hurt "What of Morgan's treasure now?" said my father, looking at Saul Mark with a kind of grim pleasure on his dark face In a lull of the noise. The -man's features were Instantly con torted with an access of devilish fury. "Morgan's treasure Is. gone," he cried; "but I tell you there is another over yonder (he pointed to the direction of the pirate village)- greater doubtless than Morgan's." "We might have gone thither at once, then." answered Captain Stansfleld: "it was a waste of time to bring us here with so great ceremony, all to see this devil's caldron boll." I could plainly discern that for some reason of his own my father was try ing to irritate Saul Mark. And If such were his intent It Is certain that he suc ceeded. Saul turned upon him with a fierce action of the head. "I will show you. Philip Stansfield. whether I have brought you here only to see a pot boil. Cast off these chains!" he cried to the soldiers. "Now couple the lads together. They are traitors and villains. Their black slave bind also with them. He has deceived us. Fling them all three Into the fire!" The Midlers, obeying a sign from the Commandante. who stood lowering darkly behind Saul, began to do as thev were bidden. And then in spite of comforting and promises. I thought that our hour was truly come. Anna sprang toward her er running so carelessly along the perilous edge and among the rotten sul phur crusts till my very bowels were turned to water to look at her. She caught Saul Mark by the hand and be sought him to spare us. He threw the Bin on wim eucn violence that she had almost fallen and would. I think, have done so If the Commandante had not reached a hand and caught her by the fringes of her hunting dress. "Let alone!" he cried to Saul, "You take too much upon you! Do aa you will with the young heretics, but do not Saul moved his hand with a command ing gesture, without answering the Com mandante. The soldiers set us three close together, coupled at waist and wrist, on a ledge overlooking the fiery furnace be neath. There was a moment's pause as they brought Eborra from below. "Now," cried Saul, as with a leer of triumph, he turned to Captain Stansfield, "I have kept my word. My work is near ly completed. On the day you wronged Saul Mark he promised that he would drag you down to the pit and blot out your name and seed from the earth. Be hold the fire heated seven Umes for your first-born! See how it leaps up. It Is a quick and easy death. Hold back the girl there! Make ready. Fling thtm In!" I could feel the soldiers at my arms and back breathing deeply and retracting their muscles a little as men do who are about to make a mighty effort I. too, firmed mine, that I might not cry out with sheer terror. I saw Will Bowman holding back with his feot stiffened against the black cauldron Up. suddenly Philip Stansfield. who had been (Standing quietly a little beyend Saul Mark, . fprar.K at mm ana caugnt his enemy In his arms. The man with the earrings struggled fiercely, but the grasp was too strong Captain Stansfield pushed him steadily forward till they stood among the last crumbling embers that slip away from them into the burning pit "Tell Mary that It is for her sake!" cried my father, and leaped out Into the abyss, carrying Saul Mark with him. A gust of fiery heat shot upward. A Jet of dense blue vapor shut them from sight ere they reached the bottom. Its poison ous fumes struck us full in the face and sent us reeling, as if stricken by a mighty invisible hand. Fire seemed to rise out of the crater, out of every rift and crevlco and blowhole. The mountain heaved. At this the soldiers turned and fled, leaving the. three of us on the crest Anna came to us bareheaded and pale of face, even in that furnace glare. Then we stood a moment with clasped hands and gazed after the two men whose deeds had changed and marred so many lives. But we saw them no more. Only the flames leaped up and danced merrily beneath in the pit of hell. Silently we turned away and went down again, with no gladness in our hearts. For we knew not yet what should befall us. At the foot Eborra spoke for the first time. "Behold," he eald, "they will be much afraid. I told the black men that a. Judgment would befall, and that all should perish who dared to threaten a hair of your heads! It has come to pass!" CHAPTER XLDC Hansred la Chains. And so Indeed it proved. We found an the Spaniards anxious for a speedy re treat The blacks whom Eborra had ter rified were clamorous for It "d the oth ers shared their alarm. But the Com nmndante. being a brave and determined man, stood out alone. He refused to re- turn to Puerto Klco without something to show for his expedition. "What!" he said, "because two prison ers cast themselves into hell before their time, shall we that are soldiers of the King of Spain slink oft like whipped curs, and leave thousands of gold pieces within a few miles of us. We are on the Isle of tho Winds. The pirates are few In number most of them probably away on their expeditions. We will take them at unawares, root out the murderous nest capture their treasure and obtain great praise and reward from King Ferdinand. But first we shall indeed go back to the shore, in order that we may rest and find .out by means of scouts the way to the village, and the dispositions of the robbers there." "Let one of your men go with me," said Eborra. "to witness that I do not lie. We will spy out the buccaneers, and bring back word within U hours!" The Commandante conferred apart with the Grand Inquisitor, and presently Eborra was sent off with one other in whom they had confidence, an expert woodman who had formerly served with Captain Key on another Island. So upon the edge of the sea, at a place where there is a pleasant sandy bay we were set down to wait Our chains were taken off, and one more kind than the rest gave us a salve and lint for our chafed skin and ankles and where the weight of the belt dragged heaviest above our thigh bones. Anna made broth .for all In the cauldron, and in this fairly good case we waited Eborra's return. It was curious that all rejoiced creatlr that Saul Mark was dead, which may appear strange when one of us was a daughter, and a -maid of tender heart like Anna. But after so many trials and so much evil, both threatened and accomplished by this man, there were no ties of affec tion possible between them. And when Anna brought us broth in tho iron lid of the pot, before beginning to eat we alt clasped hands and said, "God bo thanked!" But in this we thought chiefly we spoke of Saul Mark. For of my father, who had striven to do one great deed at least to wipe away so much evil, I .at least could not think save with gratitude. And I wondered greatly what my mother would say when we told her. Now, though both the Commandanto and the Grand Inquisitor had been sorely disappointed In the matter of Morgan's treasure, yet I could gather, as they stood consulting together, that they were not altogether Ill-satisfied with the turn af fairs had taken. For though at the first Saul Mark had been taken up by the priests and afterward supported by Don Nicholas, I Judge that neither of them was unwilling to bo rid of so dangerous a man and one who threatened to sup plant them In authority. Wo lay all this day on the sea edge among green bushea and under tho shade of wild cotton trees. Immediately be neath us the land crabs were rising mys teriously from the midst of the white coral sand, trundling hither and thither, and. as it were, shaking themselves free of the dust of their holes. We could hear their great claws clicking together like tailors' scissors as they scuttled in and out their warrens. The smaller wcra green In color, but the big warty seniors were as gray and bloodthirsty of aspect as If they had been formed out of the rock Itself. Beneath these again anneared tho fringe of white surf, the deep indigo blue reefs sunk An the azure of the Caribbean i SM. With tin mn hnn nn (a .1. -Am ' sea, with the sun beginning to sink com- lortaDiy in tne west Anna went to and fro among us deal ing out what provender had been landed from the ship. Several of the negro over seers accompanied her, and at the back against a wall of rock a fire was lighted, the smoke of which dispersed itself among the tangled mass of creepers hanging down from the cliff. And so quickly do men In theso out landish places reconcile themselves to death and change that If It were not SHE THREW BACK HER TE3I. WTO and I who ourselves had been, de livered from death. I do not think that any of those who waited the going down of the sun so much as thought of the two men who an hour ago had gone whirl ing Into that fiery gehenna locked in each other's arms. The Commandante and the Grand In quisitor talked together, summoning first this one and then that to assist them, by hla counsel. About an hour before sunset na couaseu aooui axi nour oeiore sunset Eborra. returned with his companion. 4ucj w.wwe. .. a.o.0 wa cj a t ice assault. Anna odu x waiteo. nana m pirates were to be seen, and that the J hand. Will Bowman opened his mouth village appeared to be deserted. I Judged, and Inclined his ear Into the darkness. A however, that Eborra, who knew every gun went off below us, sharp as a signal foot of the Jungle, had not permitted the then the clear notes of a bugle. The man to see more than he wished. There Commandante shouted a loud order In were three ships In the harbor, but each t Spanish. There was a lively rush through of them appeared to be manned only by -the underwood. Crack! crack! crock! a J5R" watch. j The guns were going now with a venge- Wlll and I were exceedingly anxious to anr get speech with Eborra after his return. but the latter kept carefully away from us, busying himself about the fire un- cer the cliff where Anna was cooking. The Grand Inquisitor watched him with his small, twinkling eyes, and the half caste never so much as looked in our di rection. Presently, however, Anna came over to us with some strips of boiled beef laid' upon platters of palm leaf, very fresh and tender. "Eborra bids us keep well In tho rear," he said smiling and pointing to the strips of beef as if asking how we liked them, "then at the first sound of shot we are to drop off and lie close among the under brush until he Jotns"ua!" Will and I each shot a question at her. but she only laughed merrily and nodded her head again as she tripped back again to the fire, making believe all the way that we were greedy 'fellows who were not content with what wo had gotten, but wished for double rations. Half an hour after sundown It was dark, and we started up the side of a creek full of rich, fat mud. From this the miasma rose palpably, the mosqui toes hummed and pinged In cloud-banks like those about Newfoundland. "Zzzzzzz eek!" was what they said. And when they came to "eek-" pronounced with a little upward twirl of their really re markable voices. In went the poisoned stiletto, and we smote the part with cheerful alacrity without waiting for fur ther information. Most of us also of fered remarks In our several vernaculars, but these I need not write down here. As we marched. I desired to assist An na as best I might but she preferred to persevere In her own way, only taking my hand when the ditch or swamp hap pened to be too wide for her to leap. the 3iax wrrn the earrings struggled fiercely. Thus the whole expedition followed Ebor- ra through a kind of parklike savannah country. He was making a long detour In order to avoid the volcano which we could still see flickering beyond the high woods. But the light was not clear and wide like autumnal sheet lightning, as It had been the, night before. The bluish swamp fog which came up from the creeks spread sideways till It was as much as we could do to see the men in front of us. It would have been easy enough to have "dropped off" here and none the wiser. But the prospect of hid- lng all night on rotting leaves in an at- mosphere of pure fever was not Inviting enough. We resolved to wait, according to the half-caste s Instructions, till the guns began to go. The fireflies continually Jetted across us, flying almost Into our eyes and van ishing again Into the pall of mist "I wonder If they know their way or where they are going?" I whispered. For I was ever prone to notice trifles at the wrong times when my thoughts ought to have been upon more serious matters. rnru -- -.In ml. n.l- T1-I11 whose legs were palnlng'hlm. where one . ... ... T . . . . or two 01 me pnexjes nau nroxen on in the flesh. "The fireflies!" said I. But Will did not show any Interest He was sore and mis erable and felt the beginnings of a ten dency to shiver. He muttered a wish with regard Xr the flreflles which consort I ed 111 with his recent confession of Church of England baptism. "I would be content to know where we are going!" he added sharply. About an hour after this, the word was passed along the ranks that now we must AJTD WHITE FOREHEAD BAXD, AJfD be ready to fall on at any moment Eborra had reported that the pirate vil lage was near. We could hear a restless cock crowing every few minutes, and more than once there came & whiff as If hot wood ashes and the unchllled hearths of man. On the bock of this ensued so long & pause that it seemed to have no end. I could hear In the stillness the toads croak- lng. and nearer at hand the whisper of ing. and nearer at hand the whisper of the Commandante arranging his men for "Into the brush with you quick!" said J Eborra. hurrylcr us away to the left "We stumbled over gourds, pricked otar- selves on the bush called flgs-of-the-Bioor, stumbled against fruit trees which sent heavy globes down forthwith to break our heads. Then after a breathing run of a quarter of an hour, having left the attack of the Spaniards well away to the right, we crouched on some open ground at the foot of a clump of tall trees. The rattle of musketry beneath us grew al most continuous. We could hear the Spaniards going bravely at It their bigs screaming shout rising and falling. But what was that which answered? Not the wild pirate yell! It was no, it could not be yet surely it was a cheer the mouth filling, heart-stirring cry which men of English speech make all over the world when they fight for the mastery. The moon had risen and the mist grown luminous about us. Suddenly Anna clutched me and I felt swift fear run courslnglr through her. "What Is that Philip Oh, what art these?" She pointed above our heads. The moon shone a little clearer. We had stopped under a great row of tall forest trees, which stretched their branches stiff ly at right angles. There were so many that the line disappeared into the mist on either hand. Many of the limbs shone gaunt and white, like the arms of skele tons fantastically disposed. But that was not the terror which caused Anna to grasp me by the arm. From every naked bough a dead man dangled, stiff and still, turning only slow ly, some of them, as the rope twisted and untwisted. i We sat still, frozen cold. There was one I almost directly over our heads. Look- J lng up, I could see that he was hung In chains, the scarce-dimmed metal glinting In the cold gray of the mlst-choken moon. Then we heard Eborra laugh. In such a place It was a sound to chill the blood. "For heaven's sake speak Eborra, who are these?" I hardly knew my own voice as I spoke. Light as a blown leaf. Eborra danced a quickstep and clapped his hands. "Pirates buccaneers! Cantaln Ker nnd his men!" he cried. "The English sailors have hanged them. There are three ships I of war In the bay. Now the Spaniards find r much rare treasure. Harken! There they l go. Eborra warn the English Captain, . Plmlcnto red pepper In the pod, the , Spaniards will get tonight No more chains no more slave gangs! The English have taken the Isle of the Winds. We Just wait here a little till the botheration past Then we will go down! Ho, Cap tain Key and your bloody pirates now you swing by the neck! Hitch farther along! Leave plenty room for Don Nich olas and the little black priest!" And again Eborra danced his weird dance in the feeble light of the moon, as the crackling of firearms thinned out and the hurrahs grew louder beneath us. "Now we go down but Eborra first to make all safe!" The half-caste left us down by the east. ern shore, where the liberty men used to take their walks. It was almost day . ureas, inougn as yet mere was no sign I passed and the moon was eclipsed by the j high trees we had left behind us. j Over the reef passages we could see ' the mist beginning to break, and whirl away In rolling cloudlets, as peat reek FELL WEEPIXQ WTO HIS ARMS. does from & low chimney on & windy day. The "wings of sea mews glanced white as they swept low over us. screaming- shrilly for the coming of the morn ing. We waited long. Will was mutter ing to himself. I could not tell what Anna and I kept very close together. Suddenly we heard Eborra's whistle. I answered him. The half-caste bounded Joyously toward us. Soon we could dls- cere him plainly, a Uthe. black figure against the white coral sand. Behind hla strode a tall, stout man. cloaked and hatted from head to foot Something familiar struck me. something- which sent my heart into my mouth. But Anns, sud denly dropped my hand and sprang for ward. With a sharp, breaking cry she flung herself into the tall man's arms. I saw his gray beard drop upon the girl's head. The mist whirled away. There was a vmntit S t. .. t .& "Umohrar Enurwwrr' cried VDl Bowi u and I with one voioe. And Umph ray Spurway It was. CHAPTER L. Tfce Witch's Death Boas;. "Ten the dogs that if so much as & hah- of her head be touched I will twist his wizened popish neck. Higher than Hainan-will I hsjpg htm and all his slave driving, torturing crew! Tall him that!" It is not necessary to say that the words were those of Umphray Spurway. The great Torkshlreman was never care ful of his speech. As soon as he heard where my mother was, he proceeded to the storeroom In which the prisoners were confined with a strong guard of sail ors and marines over them. Don Nicholas was there, also, wounded in the shoulder. but bearing his misfortunes with the phi losophy of a man and the courage of a Spanish gentleman. But the Interpreter was not needed. The little Inquisitor answered for himself In his quaint creaky English. r "Sir," he said, "the lady Is better than well. All day she sings with Sister Aga tha. Every night she prays. Every morn ing she confesses." "I shall soon stop all that nonsense. Poor Mary, that rhe should be turned Into a Papist at the last I will have her on board the ship In half an hour." "Impossible," chirruped the Father In quisitor, "the lady has cast aside this world, renounced Its vanities. She Is now a sister of the Convent of St Mary of Brozas. She has taken the solemn vows! I myself laid them upon her." "Then, by the head of Cromwell, you yourself will take the vows off. or I shall take your head from off your shoulders and level to the ground the Convent of St Mary of Brozas. I swear It by" But he did not finish. The little Jesuit held up his hands. "The vow Is not final It shall be as the sister wills. She has not yet taken the black velL" "White veil or black veil, or green veil, or red veil." cried Umphray, "It shall be as I will, and that right speedily!" While we sailed for the Island of Puerto Rico, Umphray told us all that had passed since we were carried off. and I had left him standing over his own open grave In the limekiln of Provost Partan. He told how by favor of the King's Advocate he had gotten letters of introduction to the Governors of Jamaica and Barbadoes, commanding them to put at hlB disposition all His Majesty's available sea forces within their jurisdiction. Armed with this he hurried to Abercalrn. where he had put Into commission the best and soundest fighting brig that ever cleared from anr Scottish anchorage. Here he had armed under letters of marque, and put a notable crew aboard, all the most dar ing blades of half a dozen ports. He told us how long he had searched before he discovered the whereabouts of the buc caneer's city of refuge, from one of a former crew, married in Barbadoes and settled down to respectability upon his gains. Then he proceeded to recount how he and the commanders of His Majesty's two vessels had arrived too late to capture their prey, but Just In time to take Cap tain Key and his desperadoes after a stiff fight The captain and the ringleaders had been promptly hanged for a hundred enormities, even as Saul Mark and Philip Stansfield would have been and that In spite of Captain Key's quasl-commlsston from the Governor of the New England plantations. They were just about to burn the place and depart when Eborra was brought in with his strange message. The rest we knew. As to those who had been left behind in Scotland. Umphray Spurway had no very recent news. My poor grandmother was dead and my Uncle John In full pos session of all the properties. That was all he could tell me. ''But we will flit him." said Umphray, "and that as soon as we get your mother out of the clutches of those gentry!" He Indicated the poop where the Grand Inquisitor and Don Nicholas were walking up and down In grave converse. It Is not necessary that I should write down the tale of the sack of Puerto Rico by the English. It is written In all the histories of these parts. as well as by Jlr. Champlatn. the Frenchman. In his very entertaining travels. Besides, there are things that it Is not very pleasant to re member as being done by men of our Nation. Yet though an Immense booty was taken, there was no brutality to women and little vlndlctlvenefs, save to the more cruel of the slavedrlvers. whom the ma rines and sailor men chivvied all over the Island as hares are coursed on the holms of Moreham. And they received as little mercy as poor puss when caught As soon as the capture of the castle and town was assured (and they were carried at one charge, aa it were by mere wind of tho assailants attack) Umphray and a strong party hastened toward the Mon astery of St John, and the Convent of St Mary of Brozas. At the first breath of the assault upon the town many of the blacks and mulattoes, thinking that the pirates had come and that a period of universal rapine would begin, made an assault upon the nunnery. They hod even liberated some of the worst of the chain gang, brutal ruffians sentenced for crimes done on the Islands, not heretics from old Spain like Jean Carrel, of Carcassonne, and his brethren. The nuns had barricaded themselves In their chapel, and when we arrived the ruf fians were engaged In smoking them out like bees. We could hear their loud shout ings, and see the reek beginning to swirl up from the gates and door against which the faggots were piled. "Now. let them have It ladst" cried Umphray to his men. and the Scottish muskets went off In a volley. The blacks and convicts ran like caged rats, and were shot down as they fled or bayonet- ted as they crouched In corners. Then we called out that the doors be opened, but the crying of the servitors and the chant ing of the Sisters for a. time prevented them from hearing us. Meanwhile, however. In spite of our scattering It outside, the fire was gaining rapidly, and there was no time to lose. So Umphray Spurway and his ship's cap tain slung a mahogany pole for a batter ing ram and forthwith drove In the doors. We streamed In, and Anna, who knew the place. led us at once to the chapel. I shall never forget tho sight which greeted us when she threw open the doors the whole Interior Ut as for a high festival, the sliver lamps a-swing la the choir, the tall candles shining down on the gold and tinsel of the decorations. And on the floor we saw as It were a crowd of dark forms, the sisters, rank on rank, all kneel ing, with clasped hands, their crucifixes upheld as if to withstand In the name of the Most Merciful the inroads of the brut al mob. In the very midst I discerned my moth er. She was kneeling beside Sister Aga tha. She wore the dress of a neophyte of the order. She did not see either Anna or myself. But when the Yorkshireman's great figure, crowned with his steeple hat. filled up the doorway, ehe rose to her feet with a sudden glad cry. "Umphray Umphray." she cried, "he has come! We axe saved. God has sent me Umphray Spurway, even as I knew he would!" And with her old quick impulsiveness she let beads, crucifix and psalter drop clattering upon the floor. She threw back her veil and 'white forehead band and fell weeping Into his arms. "Ton have been so long. Umphray so very long." she moaned, without lilting her forehead from his breast "I like this better than being a nun." said my mother, some days after, when we- were once more on board tbe ship, and we an stood about her. Umphray had gone below to find a plaid to wrap about her. for the wind of the Atlantic was shrewd from the north. "Nor do I think that Win Locy could have been a very good Catholic, she continued, "for he used to row over to see -my father as often as aver a priest cam to say. mass. Besides, it la beat. to stick to the religion one Is bora and brought up In!" We were an happily on board the Mary, as Umphray had called his vessel that Is. all save Eborra and Janet Mark. The latter welcomed her commandante back with happiness in her eyes, scarcely dimmed by the fact that his majesty's marines had made firewood of the red and gold coach. Tho news of Saul Mark's death (and perhaps also that of my father) had made a new woman of her. From this tlmo forth she went no mors In fear of the mouse In the wainscot. And Don Nicholas, re-established In hU Governorship with little loss, save of th-j household gear that had been stolen. Kissea wun more man nis ancient affec tion the plump hand of Donna Juanlta Silveda. The Grand Inquisitor was shipped back to Spain by the San Esteban. which, having been left on the opposite side of the Isle of the Winds, escaped capture, and came to Puerto Rico three days after the English had taken ship again. Her Majesty's vessels, however, broke Tip the chain gangs and gave all a free passage to Jamaica or New England, where they were to be permitted to settle. Jean Carrel, however, elected to return with Umphray Spurway, having a desire to learn the English and Scottish weaving. And so he came on board with us. Im proving dally, with the sea breezes and the steam Scots' diet or oatmeal three times a day. It was our one unhapplnes3 to leave Eborra behind us. Wo would have given much to have brought him with us. Um phray offered him a livelihood If he would return. But at the thought of a new country and settled habits he de clined. "Eborra wIU die out of tho woods!" he said, smiling. "He will go back to the Isle of the Winds and keep guard over Morgan's treasure." So, since no better might be, Umphray gave him muskets and ammunition, to gether with a half-decked boat, which he bought for htm In Puerto Rico. He would tako no money, but we loaded bis little ship with ell that makes wealth In these parts. Before he bade us good bye. he told us that'hls mother was dead. Sho died tho same night Philip Stans field had leaped Into the fiery abyss with Saul Mark In his arms. She had stood upon a point of rock near the castle nil the evening, muttering Incantations anil stretching her hands out toward the sea. till some of the guard had threatened to shoot her for a witch. But soon after midnight she had broken Into a song, singing In a glad, strong voice, like that of a young woman. No white man knew the meaning of that song, but down in the negro quarters the blacks crouched and sweated with fear In the darkness. "That Is the death song!" they whis pered. "Obeah surely comes now to claim his own!" And from the sea horizon toward tho Isle of the Winds there came a sound of a mighty thundering. In the morning the sentinel looked, and lo! there upon the rock lay the witch woman, dead, prone on her face, even as she had fallen, her skinny arms and clenched hands stretched out toward tbe place of her desire. CHAPTER LT. "" Tutor at Larr. It was night when wo arrived In ths town of Abercalrn. The Mary cast an chor, by a curious chance, almost in tha same place from which the Corraman tee had set soil. It seemed most marvel ously strange to sit on deck In the ear liest morning and sea the glimmer ot tho little whitewashed row of houses about tho quay, and then, as the dawn came on, to listen to the cocks beslnnlr.5 to crow In the scattered landward farm towns. In the morning I was to go to claim my Inheritance without delay. Will Bow man and Umphray Spurway accompany ing me. Anna and my mother were to remain on board till we made things ready for them at the Mlln House, or if my adventure with my uncle should fall out well, at the Great house ot New Mllns. when we landed, there was 1 prodigious gathering of folk on the quay to meet us, and foremost among thess who stood there was Provost Gregory Partan. "Oh. lads, lads," he cried, ere we got up the steps, "saw ye ocht o my bonny ship, the Corramantee that I In mine Innocence delivered Into the hands ot wicked and designing men?" lie cried tho words down to us be fore we had time to grasp a hand or answer any of the warm greetings which were showered upon us. "The Corramantee was a common rl rate, sir." said Umphray, sternly, "and tho men you put In charge ot her were Here he Btopped, as if not willing to say anything against tho dead or per haps because ha thought of Anna and me. "Oh. sirce me. dlnna say that they turned out blackguards tho like was never kenned! And sae muckle o" my guld gear In their handlin. Is there nocht saved nocht ava o' a" my adventurer "Stand out of my way. Provost Par tan I have nothing to do with you." said the Englishman, "the deaths of many are upon your conscience!" "Na. no. guld Master Spurway, say not so." cried the Provost In some distress "I was but as a lamb In the midst oy wolves. I kenned naethlng o only Ill doings beyond the seas!" "Sir." cried Umphray. with decision, "the blood of those young children en trapped Into your foul hole of a llme-klln, sold Into slavery, dead or dying of III usage and cruelty In cane-brake and plan tation shall never cease to lie at your door!" "No at mine no at mine walled tho rrovost "tak tent o your words. It canna be proven that ever I handled a plack o the price. What kenned I o' ony nefarious pracltces? But tell me. guM Malster Spurway. Is there like to be no a farthln' savtt? Is a tint even unto tho uttermost? Aweel aweel. gin that be sae, the Lord's wull bo dune! It is indeed a blessed thing to hae tho consolation in yin's heart aye. a. great and solit com fort!" We three left the Provost to his consola tion and proceeded on our way. The little house in the vennel was empty, the key in the possession of a neighbor who had had the kindness to keep on fires in tho Winter season. But we did not bide there. Much more remained for us to do. And oh. when we had gotten us horses and taken the track over the hills. It was a Joy beyond words to feel the caller air blow la our faces, to discern the Mlln House shining afar among Its willows copses, and to hear the weir singing- and the mill wheel clattering on as of yore. The weavers were all at their tasks as It Umphray had simply stepped out to show hlspltality tc a customer. Yet fielther did we tarry her?, great as our desire was to do so. My uncle was reported at home. He had spent much of his time lately at the great bouse, oftentimes riding all the way from his law business In Edinburgh. It was the deep sllonce of noon, a brooding day sullen with great heat when I turned down the avenue past the lodge yett. where I bad so often playeJ. I could not help looking for the window through which but I had other matters to think upon today. WU1 Bowman was on one side of men. Umphray on the other. I was surely coming to my own at last Then came the turn ot the avenue at which, high above the great beeches. saw the turrets of the hoare of New Mllns. AU was la cxceUent order, better. I think, than In my grandfather's time, "He will show fight" said Will: "surely the man wiU never give up all this with out a struggle!" "Give It np he shall T Judge him to be lawyer enough to know that he must. said Umphray. the corners of his mouth going grimly down. "Philip, lad. are you feared to face htm? We will coxae In with, you if you are!" Z laughed and shook ray bcao. XCsactadea -text- Treekji I -Tl Ju. t4g-A.- x &yfrt3 .ijSt I t-,