T he The By Will Levington Comfort CoDTriffht. 19. h. Win t : ... . CopTrirtt. 1907. b, J. B. L.pp.xcott CHAPTER XVI. (Continued.) Ilow many times the blue eyes of old Ernst rolled back under the lids, and his grip relaxed upon the oars, only to be re called by the pleading voice and the face of tragedy before him; how many times the whipping tongue of Macready mum bled, forgetting its object, while his senses reeled against the burning walls of his brain ; how many times the splendid spirit of the woman recalled her own lowlier faculties to action and the terrible mean ing of the quest only God and these knew. Hut the little boat held its prow to the desolate shore. They gained the Sugar Landing at last, and strange sounds came from the lips of Ernst, as he pointed to the hulk of the launch,' burned to the water line. Gray covered heaps were sprawled upon the shore, some half-covered by the incoming tide, some entirely awash. Pelee had brought down the city ; and the fire-tiger had rushed in at the kill. He was hissing ud crunching still, under the ruins. The Toman moaned and covered her face. "There is nothing alive !" she said with dreadful stress. "Whnt else could, vou Ink fur?" Mac- ready demanded. "Wait till we get over th' hill, and you'll hear th' burnls siug ln' the naygurs laughin' in the fields an' wonderiu' why the milkman don't come." "I can live yes, I can live until I see our house crushed to the hill, all coated with paste, and those heaps lying about on the ground ! 'A woman can't be a friend like a man' ! You will stand and uncover your heads when you see your friend lying upon the ground and I I will die!" She was walking between them, up to ward the market place, fighting back her terrors, which added to the burdens of the men. The opened space was filled with the stones from the houses, hurled there as from a dice box. Smoke and steam oozed forth from every ruin. The silence was awful as the sight of death. Hue Victor Hugo was effaced, the way up to ward the morne undiscernible. A breath ing pile of debris barred every way. It was plain that they must make their way southward along the shore. "If I cud on'y get holt o' that barna cle av a shark's toot,' Pugh if I cud on'y get him here wance bare-futted," Denny gasped "sure I'd lie happy holdin' av him! 11a! don't sthep there!" He pulled her away from a puddle of oncongealed stuff as hot as running iron. Once he had stepped upon what eenied to be an ash-covered stone. It was soft, springy, and vented a wheezy sigh. Hain and rock-dust had smeared all things alike in this gray, roasting shambles. i "Speak won't you pleaBe speak?" the woman cried suddenly. "It luks like rain, ma'am," Macready's quick tongue offered. They were on the shore, nearing the rise of the Morne d'Orange. Saint Pierre , had rushed to the sea at the last. The mountain had found the women with the children, as all manner of visitations find them and the men a little apart. There was nothing to do by the way, no lips to moisten, no voice of pain to hush, no dying thing to ease. Pelee had not fal tered at the last. There was not an in sect murmur in the air, nor a crawling thing beneath, not a moving wing in the hot gray sky. They traversed a shore of death absolute these three and the Ionian was thinking ahead. Prom the shoulder of the morne Lara . turned back one look. Saint Pierre was like a mouth that had lost its pearls. The land ahead was a husk divested of its fruit. Pelee had cut the cane fields, suck ed the juices, and left the blasted stalks In his paste. The plantation house push ed forth no shadow of an outline. It might be felled, or lost in the smoky distance. - The nearer landmarks were gone homes that had brightened the morne in their day, whose windows had flashed the rays of the afternoon sun as it rode down over sealevelled like the fields of cane. There was no balm, no saving grace. Pelee had swept far and left only his shroud, and the heaps upon the way, to show that the old sea-road, so white, so beautiful, had been the haunt of man. The mnngoes had lost their vesture; the palms were gnarled and naked fingers pointing to the pitiless sky. ' She hnd known this highway in the mornings, when joy was not dead, when the songs of the toilers and the laughter of children glorified the fields: in the white moonlight, when the sweet draughts from the sea met and mingled with the spice from torrid lulls, and scent of jas mine and rose gardens. The dark eyes under the huge helmet were staring ahead; her lips were parted and white. Though they had passed the ra dius of terrific heat, she seemed slowly to be suffocating. Macready remembered his voice. . "Things are queer by the sea, ma'am. Now, if I'd ha tuk Pugh be th' froat I'd be intcrtainin Mr. Constable presently in the bottom av th' Bhip, togged out lfcad an' fut in irons fur th' occasion, an' he'd bhv, 'Pinny, why didn't you sthand be th' lady whin I tould you? Perhaps you can stand be th' bunkers bctthcr, me son. Go to thim, ye goat !' Ernst, lad, you're, intertainin', you're loqucnehus." The woman was stepping forward swiftly between them. Words died upon Macready's tongue when he saw her 'face and thought of what she would find ahead. He believed that she would keep Sepulchre Pclec CoM,m. AU right, rerf her word that she would break, brain and body if the mountain had shown no mercy at their journey's end. And Macready did not hope. The man to whom he had tied bis own life would be down like the others, and the great house about him! All that a soft Irish heart could feel of terror and bereave ment had waged in his breast for hours. To let the woman succumb among her dead was more than he could bear. The ruins of the plantation house wav ered forth from the fog. The prayer had not availed ; the day still lived. A swoon had not fallen pitifully upon the woman. He was allowing her to walk forward to her end, this beautiful creature whose courage was more than a man's ! Her fingers were upon his sleeve, pulling him forward. She had no need of words from him now. Life remained In her to reach the place ahead. She did not want more life, if the dead were there. "Wait, ma'am !" he pleaded. "No, not I cannot wait!" "Fur ould Dinny !" "I thank you both. You have been very brave and kind; but, Denny, don't keep nie hnck not now ! "Let me go fiisht!" he implored, har boring the. mad idea that he might put something out of her sight. "No!" she screamed, breaking from him, and rushing forward through the fallen gate. Her cry brought an answer a muffled answer, the voice from a pit. Macready and Krnst plucked at the charred boards in the circle of ruin. "Peter, King Peter ! Where are you, Great-heart?" she called, laughing, cry ing, picking at her hands. "In the cistern in the old cistern," came the answer. "Why did they let you come here ?" "Didn't 1 tell you 'twud take more than a sphit av a mountain t' singe hair av him, ma'am?" Macready yelled, dancing about the rim. "Are you hurted, sorr? Tell me, are you hurted?" He was pushed away, and the woman knelt at the rim, bending far down. CHAPTER XVII. Constable rested and reflected in the cistern. It did not occur to him, save in the most flimsy and passing way, to doubt the efficacy of the distance in the case of Iara. She was safe, eight miles at sea, and watched over by Macready, whom he had learned thoroughly to trust. Here was gladness immovable. Second, for the present and to all intents, his own life had been spared. This was not so impor tant in itself, but was exceedingly vital in consideration of the third point that she loved him, and had said so, His first worry was that Lara might be thinking him dead. The aspect of Constable's mind being touched upon, it may be well to outline the state of affairs as a third party would see it. In the first place, there was a woman in bis arms, a woman whom the fire had touched and in whom con sciousness was not ; the mother of the world's matchless girl. Then he was sit ting upon a slimy stone in a subterranean cell, the floor of which was covered with six inches of almost scalding water, and the vault filled with steam. The volcanic discharge, showering down through the mouth of the pit, had heated the water and released the vapor. An earthquake years before had loosened the stone walls of the cavern, and with every shudder of the earth, under the wrath of Pelee, the masonry lining the cistern tottered. Then, his hand had been torn during the descent of the chain, and the terrific heat in the well livened his bums to exquisite paiu fulness. Hut, as has been stated, these were mere cuticle disorders, and the heart of the man sang again and again its tune ful story. Pelee was giving vent to the after pangs. Torrents of rain were descend ing. The man in the cistern had lost track of time. Though replenished with rain, the water was still too hot to step in ; therefore, he" could not change his position and relieve the tension of his arms. Still, he felt that he owed an as tonishing debt to the old cistern. No sud den impulse had brought him there. Since he had discovered the place in his night's vigil, and examined it more closely the following day, the idea had become fixed in his mind that it might be used at the last minute. The women sighed now and stirred in his arms. The first gripping realization took his mind. lie waited in embarrass ment for her to speak. Wo'uld the fact that he had snved her life stand as ex tenuation for bis rough treatment? Con stable was by no means sure that he was not about to hear her estimate of him on the old footing, with the rage of a manhandled woman added the whole a finished document delivered with Mrs. Stansbury's art and force. But she did not yet awake. ' His brain worked rapidly now. She had lain upon his shoulder during the de scent. Livid dust had fallen-through the orifice. His burns were slight. His eyes strained hi to her face, but the cistern was dark, dark. The fire had touched her hair he knew that. Her bare arm brushed his cheek, and his whole being crawled with fear It seemed that hours elapsed. Where had Uncle Joey been at the last? Did Pelee tolerate any favorites? Brecn, Soronia, Pere Rabeaut, Mondet, the ships Id the inner harbor, the thirty thousand of Saint Pierre were they all wrecked In the mills 1 of the world? But the Madame was eight miles at sea ! Pelee had waited for the woman. His heart of hearts held this joy. The breath of life was returning to his burden. She sighed once more, and then, full pityingly, he felt her wince with the pain which consciousness brought. "What is this dripping darkness?" he heard at last. The words were slowly uttered, and the tones vague. In a great dark room somewhere, in a past life, perhaps. Constable had heard such a voice from some one lying in the shad ows. "We are in the old cistern you and 1, Peter Constable." His tones became glad as he added, "But your daughter is safe at sea !" "Did you forget something, or did Lara send you for her parasol?" "I came for you came to tell you how much we needed you how much we fear ed for your life, and to ask you once more " "What an extraordinary youth !K she murmured. "Was there ever such darkness as this?" The cavern was dark, but not utterly black now. The circle of the orifice was sharply lit with gray. "They will come from the ship to res cue us soon. Please please turn your face to the light so ! Yes, that will do !" "Did you not know that I am blind, boy? How big you seem! I should think you would put me down and rest your arms " Her face had been turned upward In the descent of the chain ! He steeled him self to speak steadily. There was a cumulative harshness In that her face, above nil oi.lii.ri, so fragile, of p-irnit line, should "meet the coarse element, burning dirt. Furies leaped upon him that he had not saved her. "The water is still hot In the bottom of the cistern,' he said. "My arms are not in the least tired." An interminable interval passed before he heard the voice again, slower, fainter: "And so you came back for me and you knew Pelee. better! No, the burns do not hurt terribly. My face feels dead. You were not burned so?" This was the moment of dreadful mem ory. Her body, her face, arms, throat, had covered him, as the rusty chain slip ped through his hand. The molten stuff had not cracked his flesh because she had stood between. "I tried to save you you know that but you kept the fire from me!" His voice was broken with rebellion. Then out of a sigh came the words that lived with him always: "I would have you know that la Montagne Pelee is artistic !" (To be continued.) SHARPENING A PENCIL. In This Act Vou Mar Head Man's Character. No woman should marry a man till she has seen him sharpen a lead pen cil. She can tell by the way he does It whether he Is suited to her or not. Here are a few Infallible rules for her guldnnee in the matter: The man who holds the point to wnrd him and close up against his shirt front Is slow and likes to have secrets. Re Is the kind of man who, when the dearest girl In the world finds out that there are "others" and asks him who they are and what he means by calling on them, will assume an air of excessive dignity. The man who holds the pencil out at arm's length and whittles away at It, hit or miss, la Impulsive, Jolly, good-natured and generous. He who leaves a blunt point Is dull and plodding, and will never amount to much. He Is renlly good natured, but finds his chief pleasures In the commonplace things of life. He who sharpens his pencil an Inch or more from the point Is high strung and Imaginative and subject to exu berant flights of fancy. He will ul ways be seeking to mount upward and accomplish things In the higher re gions of business and art, and his wife's greatest trouble will be to hold him down to earth 'and prevent his flying off altogether on a tangent. The man who shnrpons his pencil nil around smoothly and evenly, as though It was planed off In an auto matic sharpener, is systematic and slow to anger, but he Is so undevlatlng from a fixed principle thnt he would drive a woman with a sensitive tem perament to distraction In less than six months. On the contrary, he who jumps In nnd leaves the sharpened wood as Jugged as saw teeth around the top has n nasty temper and will spank the baby on the slightest provo cation. The nmn who doesn't stop to polish the point of lend once the wood is cut nway has a streak of conrseness in his nature. He who shaves off the lead till tte point Is like a needle is refined, ftoll cate and sensitive. He will not bt likely to accomplish so much as hit more common brother, but he wll never shock you, and Is without doubt a good man to tie to. New York Pres? To ne Rxact. "Gee whiz! Here's the rain coming down-again and somebody's stolen mj umbrella." "Somebody's stolen what?" "Well, the umbrella I've been carry ing for the Inst two weeks." Phil delphla Press. THE HELPLESS FLUFFY, i There Is a sort of woman whom all women despise and most men adore, nnd that Is the bit of fluff who enn't do anything for herself when there Is a man around. She Is not always a pretty woman. If she were, women would forgive her. She Is not always a little woman. If she were, women could stund her. But sometimes she Is old nnd big and fat 'but- helpless. Helpless, too, In maddening ways. She can't get up a flight of steps alone, or over a muddy crossing. She never can swim, so she requires all the men on the beach to pull her up when she falls down In the water. Then she generally weeps and does kittenish things that make other women long to slap her. The men may regard her as a nui sance, but they bear with her nnd wait on her until self-respecting women, who can tie their own shoe laces nnd button their own gloves without calling out the fire department, wonder If It pays to be self-reliant nnd strong. Did you ever take the trouble to watch one of these women? A small, rather pretty woman, I mean, who was of the helpless variety? She watches men as a cnt watches a mouse-hole. She never gets helpless when there are only women about. She enn stir around quite nimbly when she has to. But wait until the mouse pushes his first whisker out of his hole; wait until she enn see a little black speck on the horizon which her Instinct tells her will resolve Itself Into a man. Presto! Both her shoe laees come un tied, she drops her handkerchief, and everything In sight becomes unbuttoned. Yes, I said everything In sight. The mnn appears, nnd no matter how much the other women mny want him, he finds himself hooking and button Ing nnd tying the helpless woman, re trieving her handkerchief nnd parasol, fetching and carrying for her like a white slave, nnd nnd believing what her timid, upward glances tell him of his strength and bigness nnd viking like qualities of mind nnd soul nnd body. Meantime the properly hooked nnd buttoned women hnve to stand around and grit their teeth nnd mnke up their minds never to be cnught -again with everything done. They register a vow that If It Is ns easy ns It looks they will come undone somewhere nnd mnke a man tie 'em up. Oh, the motor veils which hnve to be kept In plnee by n mnn! for the help less womnn ! The wny she can stumble over her own feet. If there are no rocks hnndy, nnd the fool way the men fall Into her traps! Helpless women are regular mnn stinres. They ought to be regulated by the po lice. Chicago Journal. lie Knew Their Secrets. Bishop Donahue, of Wheeling, W. Vn., is n very conservative prelate. He shares the views of mnny other bishops In his communion concerning secret so- cletles, and as n consequence, when the Knights of Columbus was organized In his diocese, he was rather chary In nf fording them official recognition. Final ly, he became convinced that the order was not Inimical to Church or state, nnd ns a proof of his satisfaction ..t tendod one of their annual gatherings. A member of the order attempted to twit hlm on his skepticism, nnd ho promptly retorted : "You young men Imagine that yon belong to n secret society ; but you nre very much deceived. I have- been up In the cupoln of the cathedral, and with the aid of a telescopi? have discovered ; everything that you hnve been doing, jl know all of your signs; I know your passwords, and I even know the eokr of your goat." I'nlntul Memorlea. The best man thought he'd take a look around and see that everything was running as a fastidious bride would wish It, nnd up In the room where the presents were displayed, nlono nnd unhappy looking, he came upon a yuth, seemingly ready, like the wedding guest of the English poet, to "beat his breast." He was wunderlng about, looking at silver, nnd cut glass without seeing them, nnd the best man hardly knew how to nppnmch hlm. "Kr have you kissed the bride?" ho nsked nt last. And the answer told far more than Its two menger words might hnve been expected to. It wus, "Not lately I" Dyer Well, I see Falling Is on his feet again.' Ilyer Yes; he wus obliged to sell his auto. Puck. "Was that you I kissed In the con servatory last night?" "About what time was It?" Philadelphia Inquirer. She Yes, whenever I see a man In a dnrk street I always run. He And do you ever catch one of them? Hurler's Weekly. "I didn't see you In church yester day." "No; Willie didn't shovel u path through the Sunday papers In time." Puck. Polly How do you like my bathing suit? Dolly It must huve lieen per fectly sweet before you outgrew It. Cleveland Leader. Barber Hair getting thin, sir. Ever tried our hulr preparation, sir? Cus tomerNo, I can't blutue It on that Boston Transcript. He Has your fortune ever been told? She No; but I dure say papa will tell you If you really have serious intentions. Sketch. "You seem to manage remarkably well on your housekeeping money. "Yes; the storekeepers haven't sent In their bills yet." Stray Stories. "WIil-u they tike, woman nwny from the co-educational college," said tho speaker, "what will follow?" "I will," cried u voice from the audience. Suc cess. "Ah, I see you nre married!" exclaim ed the merchant. "No, sir," replied tho applicant for a position. "I got this scar In a railroad accident." The Bo hemian. Iioule Uncle, what's chagrin? Un cle Well, It's what a stout man feels when lie runs nnd jumps on a car that doesn't start for half an hour. Chicago Dully News. Tommy Pop, what Is retribution? Tommy's Pop Retribution, my son, Is something that we are sure will event ually overtake other people. Philadel phia Itecord. Mrs. Benham Why does n mnn hnto his mother-ln-luw? Ilcnhum IIo doesn't hate her; he simply hates to think of the way she got into his fam ily. Harper's Weekly. "Do real resourceful nmn," said Un cle Elx'ii, "when some one hands him a lemon Is ready wld do sugar nnd other flxln's to make It tol-lable pleasant to take." Washington Star. "Officer, I appeal for protection. A mnn Is following imsund attempting to make love to me." "Begorry, Oi've been lookin for nn escnied lunatic. Where Is) he?" Kansas City Times. Scott What makes you think that tho trust originated In Rhode Island? Mott Dad used to speak of the trust In Providence us far back as when I was a boy. Boston Traveler. Old Gent Here, you hoy, what nre you doing out here, fishing? Don't you know you ought to be nt school? Small Hoy Then!, now! I knew I'd forgot something. Philadelphia Inquirer. Sparks I wonder why It Is a woman lets out everything you tell her? Parka My dear boy, n woman has only two views of a secret elt her It Is not worth keeping, or It Is too good to keep. Stray Stories. ."You know Miss Strong, don't you?" "Oh, yes; mannish sort of girl." "Is she, really';" "Yes; she used the tele phone to day for the first time In her life, i! nd she didn't giggle once." Phil adelphia Press. She This dress doesn't become' my complexion. I must change it. He More expense? -I can't stand It; you'll ruin me. She You silly ! I don't mean the dress I mean the complexion. Chicago Journal. "Here, Willie!" cried the hoy's fa ther, "you mustn't behave that way. Everybody will he calling you a little glutton. Do you know what that Is?". "I suppose," replied Willie, "it's a big glutton's little boy." 'i have written a book that every body ought to read," said the author. "I am afraid It won't do," answered the publisher. "What the public seems to want now is a book that nobody ought to read." Washington Star. jack Smith asked me to come to his homo this evening. Says he's going to celebrate his golden wedding. Gladys Why, he's been married only three years. Jack That's what I told hlm. Ho said It seemed like fifty. Mrs. llonpock (to her husband) What would you do If I were to die? Heiipeck It would drive me crazy. Mrs. II. Would you marry iigalul Henpeck I don't think I would be na crazy as that. Pioneer Press. "How often docs the trolley run past your li'iuse?" asked a tourist of a farmer. "Wonl, they run by so fre quent nnd so often that I can't keep no track of 'em, but I Jedge the last one passed here two hours ago." IhiC' ptr's bazaar.