THE pREGON SUNDAY -JOURNAL FORI LAND, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 6, 1910 . 4 fZ772&6&C: k j; ; YSOPSIS: Beautiful and dainty Mrs. Fesey-Hilton and her doctor husband m dinner at the Italian em s bassy on account of a fire. Two peoplea woman and a child-were nearly burned in a top-floor room, and the doctor stayed to res cue them. The ambassador is vividly inter- ' ested to hear that the rescued people were an Italian nurse and aristocratic child, tilth papers in their possession bearing the name of Crescenzi. . . The scene changes to the Pans-Rouen express, bearing Honor Molyneux toward Rouen. She would have missed her change at I Rouen if an English passenger had not helped J her by compelling mercenary porters w auena to her. Un the way to Kome tne nam stows down and two mysterious beings dressed as hnonks climb furtively into the carriage. Later the train slows again, and the monks spring out and disappear. After she leaves the train at Rome the gentleman who helped her at Rouen:' runs after her and puts a ring in her hand, saying she haJ left it in the carriage. Arrived at her godmother's house, she finds that Signora Montressor has met' with an accident and has died in the hospital. A ber- r&ar ri'hn irirt in rob her in a lane near the j Colosseum falls on his knees when he sees the I ring, calling Iter 'most gracious, most exaitea signorina," and asking her forgiveness. Meet ing the man who befriended her in the train, she tells him the story of the ring. She tells j htm, too, that she has just seen a face pass in a carriage very much like that of one of the "monks" but the fate in the carriage was that of a woman. The new friend's name is Alaric Vaughan. The ring on Honor's finger has been noticed by strangers once or twice with star tled interest. One of them, Prince Caesar Crescenzi, asked to have the ring in his hand a moment,' but Vaughan made , her refuse, much; to the prince's wrath. (CONTINUED FROM LAST 8UNDAT.) CHAPTER XV (Continued.) ITHOUT waiting for her re ply, lie aomehow placed Jilmaelf between her and the prince, and swept her away with him Into thi room they had lately left. Honor felt half carried off her feet and looked around vaguely, as she found her self once more In the chat tering mob. "What pic ture?" she asked, bewil dered. "I don't remember any I specially wanted to look at." "Oh, that one any one It doesn't matter. In point of fact, you needn't look at any. I only wanted to rid you of that peralatent ass out there. I should have had to kick him In another minute, if he had kept on annoying you. I thought this was the shorter plan." "But why why wouldn't you let me give him the ring to look at?" Her "let me" sounded sweet in Vaughan' ear. It waa as If she conceded him a right to control and guide her actions. There is noth- j Ing more pleasantly tickling to a man's Imagination when j ni be begins to be in love. ,w " I n .Becau,e he llgd n0 rKht to ask It. Why could he , ,s not look at it on your hand? He could see it well enough. That fellow is a bounder, for all his long de li, eeent and famous name. I've heard queer things about Mm. And vou've onlv to look at him to want to knock l"f him down. That flabby face of his. and the eyes he it-il keeps half (shut, and his silky ways. Pah! 1 hate the very atr lies been breathing, l nan to get you out or ' It, or I should have done something I'd better not."" "But he only wanted the ring for an Instant." "I don't know what he wanted, but I know he Wasn't going to have It. What business had the bruie to ask any favor from you? He had no right to see the ring-he confessed as much himself, when he said b; he had not lost It only ownership would have given him any claim. As to Its being an Imitation of any .thlng I'll bet that was all my grandmother! He only wanted to get hold of the thing." ' ' "But you don't imagine he would not have given It back!" cried Honor shocked. "I don't think you ought to suggest that! He Is a gentleman It would have been perfectly safe with him. I don't think you should : hint things against a person Just because you don't ( like them. I didn't rare for him myself." "That's all right!" said Vaughan, with heartiness "I hope you don't! Well, I'd rather not tell you all (. I've heard whispered about Prince Caesar !r'eseenl since I've been about Rome, but none of ft was partic ularly s;ood. He's a gambler and a "bad hat' and tome people ilnt he's mixed up with secret societies That's the White party at the Quirinal. of course. The -Blacks don't breathe a word of such enormities when .- a cardinal's nephew Is concerned." "Is he a cardinal's nephew?" Honor was rather wrri. yes. and a pretty powerful cardinal. inn TUa.. , . , i uiib u ( mr ii urt,.- iM-rn pdjie wneu jeo a i died ''He would, too, I fancy, only the rival set kept him "'out at any cost. It's about the oldest famliv in Home - you Know people with no end of history. They claim" ' descent from the Koman Crescentlus straight down from Auarustus Caesar's time Tbero hav v, . TOW fern ! V popes among them already. T believe they are keen j to have another, and they may mill. 1f the cardinal 1 outlives the present man at the Vatican. Anvway )" fhelr very name spells power, and wealth, and glorv i t. This man is' the last of the line worse luck for it 4 lle'n not a very pretty end to the name." ( 4 ' "jut still I do not understand what he could hav done to the ring, if I had let him have It," persisted j" Honor seriously. j Vaughan laughed almost tenderlv. A laugh can be i half a caress sometimes. "I wouldn't put It past him . a they say in the North, not to give It vou back Iris again. Things get dropped at windows, or made away '. With aotnehow. I don't believe a word of his rubbish about an imitation, if it' a vainuhie OD i. v fJon Caesar would have had a haul most likely to nav jf.hjs gambling debts." ".eiy, io pay w. Honor cut him short with horrified proteit "You ahould not say things like that! Kor shame'" ,,"..?uf Vaughan only laughed once more. "Keen vour . faith in humanity " he said gently. "Even in gambling ,i humanity. I would not snake II for worlds " u"g ,, Through the doorway behind them Honor caujrht a ;,, glimpse at that moment of Prince Caesur . i , T,head of other people, trying to" fight bis way back to iiT-w, Km uie tiuwu ujwcftcu ine narrow way and kept him back. He wag glaring at Vaughan and her .aelf, with a scowl that a little startled her Hls red irUpa drawn back from his white teeth gave him the , look 'of a handsome wolf snarling and his" eyes wer HinP'ea8ant I" thlr eraftv look. J 4 It Was only a minute then the crowd surged and ;''ne'ost tight of him, but she felt as if a cold wind bad blown thr.mg'i the room. "Shall we get out of '4',11 this and go"' she aaked. "It is so crowded and air , less. I think we have seen all we can manage to see " - Vaughan a Merited with willingness. They wert 1 down, the little worn outside staircase together, under the swinging vines of the creeper, and out Into tiie veun-bathed street As was growing his custom he . walked home to her door with her, and they lingered on tnelr Journey througli the city. Honor was glad to . have his company, for life in the flat had grown very dull indeed. As for Vaughan. he would have wished 4 the, walk twice aa long, tad, had he dared, would have asked her to lengthen It. Hut they were as yet too pew friends for him to dare requests. The old woman who sold cherries at the corner on the little barrow with a striped linen cover fiutterlnr . its tatter over two broken sticks that gave her a crap of ahade, looked after them a they paasad. and called out. "Huona Sera!" after Honor, who never passed her without a friendly word. "Aye, aye, they make a pretty couple!" she croaked to her neighbor sitting at hsr door, with a smiling fat bambino on her fip. "Like should wed with like, and they are both foreigners the good Ood pity their misfortune so to be." The neighbor laughed, and the bambino crowed snd sprang, bis round black eyes shining like big beads. - "A letter for vou, signorina," railed out the porters wife shrilly, aa Honor was going In through the gloomy courtyard on her way to the stairs. The porters wife was busy shredding beans into long, thin slivers, and she held a pan full of them on ber knee. They ran over Into her ample cotton-clad lap In a green stream, and now and then she clutched a handful sharply, and thrust them back Into the earthenware bowl with Its yellow and green stripes "For me?" Honor flushed with surprise and eager ness. It must surely bo the letter from Mrs. Montres sor' daughter in India she had waited for so long. It would tell her when she was to be relieved from her care of the things In the fiat here, and would be free to lesve Home. Somehow, she did not want so much to go now as she thought she would have done at first. If there came any answer to that advertisement shu WHS?! ! I W &m ' w!$w 1 Sip had put In the Popolo Romano and she got a post aa compahlon or Knglish governess to children, she would raj tier stay on her than go. She turned the letter oyer in her hand at shn. went up the dusky staircase but it was too dark to read It till she reached her rotmis. Then she saw that It had not the Indian po mark. and for a moment her heart sank a llttlu with the disappointment. It had, in fact, been left by pri vate hand. Hhe broke the thick envelope open. A faint sweet scent of violets seemed to quiver on the air as she drew the folded paper out. There were only a few lines written on the sheet lines in a bold, tirm hand that Honor could not tell to be man's or woman's. The address, Palatzo Lorenio, Via Serpollto, was printed In red on the top. "If the lady who advertised as Inclosed will call tomorrow at the above address, between 4 and 5 o'clock In the afternoon, she may hear of something Important to herselfc" Just below the writing a slip of print cut from a newspaper was .gammed to the leaf. It was the ad vertisement Honor had Inserted 1n the Popolo Komnno. Phe recognlxed the words that ha1 taken hr so much thought to put properly. "A young English lady de sires a position in a family In Koine as companion or governess to little children. She can give good refer ences." So her little ehlp sent out with trembling Angers Into the wide ocean had come back into port with something aboard! Somebody wanted her services which he lud offered so timidly. She would tie able after all to nianage her own support. She felt pleased and elated. The shade of all these weeks of doubt and anxiety seemed to lift as if sunshine had broken through cloud. There was also a pleasurable little thrill of excitement In this unknown summons. It was strange that no name was given- she did not even know whom she was to usk for when she found her way to the Palazzo Lorenzo. CHAPTER XVI The Palazzo Lorenzo. F Olt Honor was fully determined to answer the note In person. If she felt a faint doubt as l'i what Mr. Vaughan would have advised, she put It from her at once. He was certainly unduly careful; 11 seemed to ber lie was almost absurdly aus picious about people, as In the case of Prince fiaesar. He might have said, "Don't go; write," and she might lose the situation by not goliiK- doubt a post in a big house like the Palazzo Lorenzo -palaces were al ways big and Imposing would be eagerly snapped up. If she waited to write some other girl might get there first, and she would be left out in the cold. It might be a little odd that there was no name mentioned In the note, to be sure, but that was most probably an twerslght. It did not affect the mutter at all. She laid (lie note down on the littlo writing-table that she always felt a kind of guiltiness in using, since it was Mrs. Montressor's. and still had her papers and letters in its drawers. Honor had carefully put them out of sight and locked them up. waiting for the unknown daughter to come and take charge of them the daugh -ter who took so long to write. Then, when she had dropped the note on the green leather with -Its' splashes of faded ink spots, she went over to the window, and stood and looked out dream ily, Tho one little scrap of sky she could see oxer the .lagged line or tne worn roonng was nine 93" in pis iaiuJi. The warm red of the tiles lay blushing against 11. me mini or orooniK 01ces came clear tioni ine church hard by. Now the organ rolled, and a bell tinkled. It was all so strange a little while ago. and now It had grown so familiar as familiar as life was once In the old rectory, uder the elms. Honor's sleep that night was tilled with pleasant images. She dreamed of dear little children In the grim old Palazito Lorenzo. She was riuite safe in picturing It grim all Koman palaces were hung with gloom and oppression, lined, so to speak, with black old deeds of past days. Hut the bright faces of little boys and girls and their high-pitched baby laughter would make the grimmest palace gay Somehow, from the first, she had settled in her mind that it was as nursery governess she would be wanted. She loved children, and she thought 01 the little Roman people she had seen in the Borghese gardens and the Pincio with their white-frocked nurses, throwing gaudily painted balls high In the air with shouts of rapture, or riding in the tiny goatcarts. She could hardly wait for her early rolls and coffee her eagerness waa so great to get up and dress. Be tween 4 and 5 o'clock in the afternoon seemed such an Interminable time to have to wait for the ap pointment. She took out her stockings, and sat down to mend them, a thing she cordially hated. There would be little stockings to mend, perhaps. In the palace, and it was as well to get her hand in she said to herself, as she stretched the, black thread stockings across her extended fingers and threaded her loiifr darning neeie. At last It wa half-past 3. and she could begin her dressing- Never had she been more careful to look neat and precise. She tried to recall all the nursery governesses she had seen in her experience, and to model her looks on theirs. But somehow the red brown hair would crisp and crinkle regardless of all her efforts, and. stray out from under the little black-and-white hat. Honor had to let it go at last, after a dozen despairing efforts to keep It smoothed back. And she had an air that was rot at ail that of a girl used to dependence as she w-nt down the hot street with ber little black 'parasol In her hand, carefully keeping to tiie shaded side. She l.ad had no notion where the Palazzo Lorenzo V- . - . l , .- "She came down the room, this radiant figure, suddenly was situated, but when she came to ask a guanlia at the corner of the, Cdisu. Vltoj e Kuianuele he dil uted her to the Via Sc1o?ltA;iihd"he found it was not far from her ownVia Crwe Llanca in the old. old heart of Rome. 8ha made ber way, there slowly, for she had allowed herself tqo ftsuch tlme.'Jt seemed. It was only five minutes pst-4, after a.1!, when she saw the name of Serpolita cut m the square slab of white marble on the corner o! a dark, forbidding street. , It was a try old Ktreel. jnd the houses In It must have gone back to the veiy Middle Ages, at the least. Frowning and repellant they stood, elbowing each 01 Her, ami grimly facing the buildings that stood so near them across tne slit of way. that parted them, that they seemed to be hurling defiance at their very teeth. The line of sky that showed above their high roof edgo was hut a mete thread from below, so close they shouldered, and so lofty were their heights. Down there In the black shudow of the street a chill struck on you, in spite of the heat of the air at midday, there was such gloom and cruelty about the place. Honor went on till she reached a huge doorway standing open to the courtyard within. it was more insolent and self-assertive In its look than Its neighbors. The great square windows that looked into the street, were barred and cross-barred with stout old cages of worn Iron, strong enough to Keep out a besieging army, one would say Over the door arch there was carved deep a coat-of-arms, but the boldly cut carving was smoothed and blurred with time. Above it Honor could read another carving "Palazzo Lorenzo" ran the letters. They seemed to have been freshly renewed, for they were less worn and dimmed. This was the place, then. Perhaps she was to have ber home here. Any one's spirit might have quailed a little, and fell depressed, as one gazed at the gloom, the dreariness, the prison-like aspect of the palace. But Honor rebuked hers-Mf sharply. All Roman palaces wero probably like this. Kvcn the Dorla. and the t'olonna, where she had gine. on free days to see the pictures, una xirucK a cni wnen one saw their gaunt outsides. She went on under the tall archway and found herself In a coriile from which a further one opened under heavy arches again, and in tha Inner court she caught a glimpse of white etatues gleaming through the feathery grjfit of light pepper trees, and the glossy leaves of orange shrubs. There was the faintest trickle of dropping water from a gray old stono fountain, with a basin of led porphyry that had been the tomb of a Caesar, only Honor did not know it then. The court was flagged with stones so broad and square and heavy that the Iron wheels of chariots might have raced over them for ever and left no ruts worn on them or so ona thought. A she stood and hesitated, not knowing which way to go. she saw that there was a porter's lodge under the dark archway to her left; and a man came out Jn a livery more gorgeous than any she had ever seen. His cocked hat was tied with scarlet and yellow ami hlne, and laced with gold He wore a long coat of blue, gold-laced also, and he carried a lonif rilt .staff with a big round head, like a beadle's, hl hair was powdered, and he struck Honor with surprise at his majesty. "I have come in answer to this letter," she said taking out of her pocket the one alio had received ' He looked at it, then bowed low with respect be fore her. "Will it please the eignorina to enter? She is. expected," he said. He stood back to let her pass him. Honor saw the steps of a broad inajblw staircase on the right round an angle of the wall, and walked toward it' Hut he promptly Intercepted ber, blocking the way with another deep bow. "The gracious signorina will pardon. The grand :ipproach is no longer used since the Sardinians ran. e into Rome. If she will have the condescension to take the staircase over in yonder t,"-l"p, below the doorway opposite, she will ascend v uvu. Honor followed his 10I lira a ,1 .1 saw n ,l. Inner courtyard a low. mean rfoorwav. with the lower steps of a winding, narrow brown stair just showing within. She had the curiosity to glance up the great stair that no one used now as alio went on past.lt It was wide enough to drive two coaches up abreast and the steps were broad and shallow enough to have' per mitted it. Wonderful statues of priceless old Greco Roman art stood en It as it ran upward as far as the first turn, that is, one could not send one's glance further on. For across it therm was planted a high ugly barrier of faded red baize, straight across the siair from side to side, stopping all passage. It had been run up tiie day tiie Italian troops and Victor Kmmanuel entered Rome, and the pope retired into the Vatican and shut himself up there. The owners ef the Palazzo I.orenzo were of the blackest set In Rome, the pope's devoted adherents and supporters. AH that set closed their staircases of state, and went Into retire ment the day when the Vatican power was lost to It. They had remained shut ever since. I'p the narrow, steep, winding stair Honor made her way. At the top there Was a closed door at Which she knocked. It opened Instantly, and a man servant in a quiet, yet rich, livery that seemed somehow to strike her with a sense of familiarity, stood bowing deeply- at the entrance. fihe was evidently expected, as the porter had said, and it was well, since she did not know whom to ask for. Without a word, the servant turned and led the way through a small vesti , bule. and at once Honor found herself in a room With a gorgeously painted celling and a floor of colored marble, while pictures lined tiie walls. In it there was no furniture out a few old tables with mosaic tops and legs of carved gilding, and a lall-backed chair or two with crimson brocade seats. He passed on The room beyond was long for its width, and in it there was a kind of raised dais with a faded crimson bro cade canopy standing square above It. fringed and tas seled with gold. A red rope barred it across, and its only ooa-upaht was a great armchair, gilded and stuffed snd covered with the name beautiful old brocade. Behind the chair arms werer worked on the crimson flooding the magnificent, stately room with light." ack of the canopy, worked with gold and color, and with a fatnt thrill Honor recognised that they were the same arms us were cut Into the emerald of her ring. Without a pause the footman went on and Honor followed. They entered another room, more beautiful and lavish to Its adornment,; t All along the one aide ran high mullloned windows. With1 the upper light tilled with old stained g!as,Whoe glowing eolor were dulled . and softened by time.: Under these win dows were ranged sofaa and chair and divan, all covered with white brocade embroidered in delicate silks, and between stood table of precious malachite and alabaster, bearing vases and cup and flagons ana ivories, each of which might have come out of a museum, for their rare beauty and value. The other side of the room was hung with pictures, and below the pictures there were statue, her and there, on marble pedestals. The celling. 0 far up. that one had to crane one's neck to examine It, wa aunk In deep vaults of carved gilding, and lavish paintings lay In the vaults. The floor was of polished Inlaid marble, with (nmlnt old embroidered satin carpets laid down here and there that cracked crisply under the foot. The footman bowed deeply again, and left her. Honor did not take the seat he had respectfully mo tioned her to. She stood and stared about her with an almost bewildered astonishment. Never In all her life had she seen a room so rich, so wonderful never, could he have pictured anything ao ornate, so costly, outside the Arabian Nights. The pictures on the wall were gems, even her Ignorance could discover their glorv. Tke things that littered the tables and cabi nets were the ransom of princes. On the wall )ut opposite there hung a strange carved mask of Ivory and ebony, with eyes so skilfully executed that they were almost lifelike. Honor crossed the polished floor to look closer. Yes, they were wonderful. As he looked she felt her blood thrill In her vein with a sudden shock that was almost fear. The eyes had moved ureiy tney naa 'moved while she looked at them! She turned away, then looked apprehensively again. This time they were gone, and the mask stared blank! CHAPTER XVII A Roman Princess. w HAT marvel wa this? What human eyes were those that peered at her In this mysteriou fashion, while their owner waa hidden from her sight? Honor felt a strange creeping of eerie amazement, mixed with a tinge of terror. Why should any one want to see her, while they themselves were unseen? For what secret purposes, In this gloomy old silent palace, was such a screen for eavesdropper and spies? What use could It have In the twentieth century? Why should she be spied at? Her disturbed mind had hardly done asking these atartled ques tions when she heard the door at the end of the room creak on their gilt hinges, and she turned with a sharp start. Her necves were -In danger of being shaken. She gave a fuick glance to aee if the eyes watched again from the dead mask face, but there were only empty, staring sockets there. She swerved round and faced the great door that was set in one end of the room. It carved and painted leaves parted, and between them atood a bowing cham berlain in green and red brocade, with a long wand of office In his hand. As he stepped back, etlll bowing till his back bent double. Honor saw the space behind him filled with a wonderful figure of girlish grace. Borne one was coming In through the rich decorated "portal who wa not much older than herself. A girl quite young and oh. most beautiful! Honor caught her breat-h as she looked. The exquisite frock of floating white lace and chiffon spelt Paris with every thread of it. From the slender shoulders dan gled a filmy scarf, delicately embroidered with spray of roses. On the white throat that held itself like a little proud pillar flashed and gleamed a long, One chain set with most precious stone. The head above the white, filmy draperies that gave faint pink gleams through of arms and shoulder, as the wearer moved, the head was an enchanting head, worthy of such a setting. Honor gazed with an admiration that forgot where she was. A wealth of hair, as black aa the feathers of a raven, with the same sheen of blue light in It, when It caught the sun hair that was massed In coil and plaits and waves so as to show the email, well-set head to its best advantage, and make a frame for the ivory skin just tinged with cream. Eyes that were black, too, with long lashes eye that spoke without need of the beautiful, smiling rose-red Hps below; eyes that could fcoften to jtenderest gentleness or flash with regal pride and power; eyes that took Honor's heart captive as ahe met them nd made her their slave. She came down the room, this radiant figure, sud denly, flooding the magnificent, stately room with light. It waa as If sunshine had broken in through the gloom and grlmnes of all that sumptuous fitting, or a star had slid down from heaven In 'the middle of night. She carried her little head royally thl apparition that held Honor spellbound as' she came down the long room with a step that seemed to.tread ' the grouna and possess it. Her delicate white throat rose erect, and her chin such a charming chin, with a soft dimple in it was a little In the air. Honor atood speechless, forgetting that Bhe had come there to take a situation, forgetting all her carefully pre- , pared answer to possible questions, forgetting every thing on earth .but that she was gazing at the moat lovely woman ahe had ever looked at In her life. It was not till the vision was close beside her that she recovered her sense and returned the courteous bow It gave. "Mlsa Molyneux? Will' you have th goodness to ttr It was vote aa charming- a on would bar ,f (loked for from uch a mouth. Bhe pok English. and with no raca of accent. One would have believed '' her an Englishwoman but for the Italian face, Honor took the glided chair with Ita brocaded seat that the little white band. motioned her to. It wa a hand , ' laden with rings, whoa diamond and pearl and . . opal flashed a hundred rainbow color a It moved. . "It la very good of -you to come In answer to my " not." The hand, with the ring on It wa playing now With the long gold chain set with- gem that hung almost to her knee a the girl sat. "I am ashamed to have troubled you, but X did not know how el to get to spesk with you, and It waa urgent. You don't mlndT How kind of you." Her eyes- were not fixed on Honor' face a she pok. oddly enough. She was closely scrutinizing- the gloved hand crossed on the other' lap. The right . hand lay uppermost. "I waa very glad." Honor had found her tongue, and the other'a pleasant manner set her at her ease. , Could It be for her children that a governess waa wanted? She knew that Ho man girl married very young sometimes; Hill, to suggest that she had chil dren old enough to need teaching seemed prepos terous. "I It aa nursery governess or companion that I should be wanted? I could undertake either. I had no sisters or brothers at home, but I have alwaya been very fond Of children, and I am aura I could manage them." For Just an Instant the. girl opposite stared and did not answer. She eeemed taken aback. Then she smiled and colored a little, the lovely delicate rose flush climbing up like a stain under her creamy akin. Hhe smiled, and her black eyes danced, though she spok In a voice of reap regret. "Oh, I am aorry! It waa not for either that r wanted to see you. I read your advertisement, and felt sure it mutt be you or, at least, I wanted .to be sure; that la why I , sent. But my business ha nothing to do with that." Perhaps he saw the sudden blank In Honor' face the disappointment she could not quit hide. Not for that I Then she hd come for nothing! All her hope of a tltuatlon had been only mirage. It wa a blow Indeed. Perhaps the other saw, for she went on quickly, "I am truly sorry! I shall be sn vexed If it has put you to Inconvenience. Hut indeed It waa most important that I should see you. I could not wait." 8he leaned a little toward Honor and lowered her voice, as If It were possible she could have been' overheard In that vast room, where they were the only occupants. Honor remembered th carved mask' on the wall and faintly shuddered. The girl wa speaking with a sudden eagerness which she made no sttempt to hide. "1 understuml you have a ring; of mine that Is precious to me a valuable ring that I lost.. I am so thankful to henr that It has been safe in your keeping. Now, I shall be so grateful to have it back from you. Are you wearing It? Have vou brought It? Perhaps I ought to have asked you io do that, but It was safekt not to write about it, I thought " The ring! Was It to be the ring for ever? Honor's hands tightened their clasp of each other Involun tarily. Whe had not expected this. There was no Mr. Vaughan here now to stand between her and those who wanted lo take It. How was she to know whether this were any more genuine than the declaration Prince Caesar had made? "A.rina-'" ih reneated. trvlnir to sneak steadily. In spile of herself, her voice betrayed her onsclous nrss. Honor was not good at subterfuge. "A ring? Put many people have lost rings, I suppose. Why should you think I have what you have lost?" "Because It was seen on your hnnd at the Oesu. One of my servants offered you holy water, and the ring was on your hand. He came home at onoe and told me a confidential ervant who knew and under stood. It was a mercy he saw It, not others. Yes, yes, there Is ho mistake. Of course, 1 hoped you most likely had It, since it had not been heard of anywhere. Only I could not know where you were to be heard of, either. I could not hope you were in Rome. My servant followed you home and came and told the address, but I did not even know your name or if H were really you yourself. When I saw the advertlaement In the paper I thought 1 might chance It and get the lady who advertised t call and see me on the rlfck of It being you, and so it is. I am so obliged to you. It is more than a happy chance. It must be, because V jrayed the blessed St. Anthony to aid me.' He finds things for 11s." She had her pretty pink palm held out. as if Impatient to hold the ring irr it. Honor gripped her fingers still tighter ona over the other. Ber since the girl began to speak she had been haunted by a curious familiarity that. was slowly dawning In her face. Whom did she make one think of? Yrhy was that clear-cut profile like one seen before, ns the little well-poised Head turned? -It baffled Honor, but It troubled, even in the midst of her uncertainty and doubt. "It Is true I have the ring," she said, resolved to act only as her friend would have her, though he was not there to help. "A ring, at least. I cannot tell if It i the one you claim. Just yet. Perhaps, If you have lost one, you would describe It to me. That will let us feel sure whether it is the one I found." "I declare to you that there can he no question," The other's tone was quick, even a trifle haughty, and the little head went up. "But, of course, you are right In wanting to know. I soon-can satisfy you. It was a very remarkable ring an antique, quite unique in appearance. Heavy chased gold setting, deep under a flat, big emerald, with arms engraved on It, an old polaon ring, they say." . "What arms? -Would you tell me?" Certainly the description waa correct so far, but the servant might have told that.- The girl gave a faint movement, too gentle to be called Impatient. Bhe took up a book bound In white vellum and gold from the Inlaid table at her elbow and opened it at the first leaf. "There," she said, holding It out for Honor to see. A book plate sprawled DOldly on the sheet., "Those arms, the arms of the, house of Crescenzi. t am. Prlncesa Flavia Crescenzi. Now you can have no doubt." (CONTINUED' NEXT SUNDAY.)