s THE i OREGON SUNDAY JOURNAL, PORTLAND, SUNDAY MORNING, JANUARY 'lO.J', Out- A Story of the Bachelor and the Elusive Overhead Lodger v By Charles Belmont Davis (Copyright by The North Amtrlcin Company.) fT-HE thought bM eeourrad to roe of late, with aucn , I - frequency and with so much Insistence, that I X m "trdngly inclined to believe that It rout have always Uin dormant lomtwhtri In ene of the : colla of my bram. As a obild, and later as young man, I enjoyed tho Mm moderate exhilaration wWcb ill . cJty-bred. folk seem ! to feet for th clean air, the bluer, eky, tb flowered fields, and tb sheltering forests of tbo country; but aopording to thl theory, of late ao eon tantly before ma, I can not well but believe that the origins Intention of Kate wse that I ehould live ray. little span of yaan on a well-watered, well-woodsd farm; that such- a mind had been' allotted to ma .should ripen under broad skies and a biasing ouh; that my body ehould grow strong! la the open field; that the hora punching bla oata tn hla stall, the fat pink pig n We sty, the chicken and gsess and Che turkeya,in Che farm ' yard, 1 ehould count among' my Intimates. Just a aura ae I am- thac I should have broadened in the pure air and developed on the simple product of the farm, Just ao euro a'm 4 that tinder the sams benign Influences 1 ehould have; mellowed In soul and body and lomi of these data withered away in eh twlligtof, aa it fU over the tiiaiua una crwiiHuif aarMiwi iuvo ins purpie nigni, nut- things do mot always happen aa they were intended, JTuet aa Fate was about to leave roe in peace' at a nice old farmhouse, aomabody ma to have nudged Fate'e elbow, and I waa Inadvertently dropped into a three Worn bachelor flat on a aide atreet between Broadway and Fifth avenue, although I muet confess my Imme diate neighborhood la mora redolent of, Che former tiorpughfare-4ha moral tone of the little street Itflprov'-. log greatly aa It approaches the more aristocratic avenue, Below me, en the street floor, there Is a shop where guests from the nearby hotels and many ladles of the stage have their soiled glove and lingerie shirt waists cleaned,, and just over this there Is a more ornately decorated floor where Madame Uuelqueohose sells' Palis wats and msnteeux to a most exclusive carriage trade. Above me there ta one more three-room apartment, very much like my own, occupied at various times by various . neighbors (name unknown) who glower at me and then burry on through the ill-lit hallways. Across tho street, Just opposite, there Is the stage door of a, theater much given over to comic operas, and In front of this there Is an Iran railing enclosing a small yard Where the aurly doorkeeper lt all day and most of the night playing with a black cat; and here it ,1s that the. chorus girls linger for a last word with the men friends who modestly accompany them afoot or more ostentatiously ' whirl them up in dark, ailent hansoms or in glistening. noisy, brass-bound automobiles. At the Fifth avenue end of phe street there Is a most stately looking and somewhat old-fashioned apartment bouse; next to this two fine examples or the old-time New York, homes still occupied by descendants of the original Dutch families who built them. Both sides of ou street are "faced with shops much Ilka those under my own modest home, and above these there are many hives for men and women bachelors. Of my neighbors I know, or the world at large knows, but little the blinds are down and tave curtains drawn except on euclr occasions as whan a flre-engtne clangs by or a parade with a blaring band passes along Flfith avenue. So far as I can judge, most of us on WO particular aid street, always excepting those at tha two homes of tha aristocrats, lead pretty much the same kind of Ufa --that is, so far as our meals are concerned. For breakfast we depend on our Vvisiting ivalete" and col ored maids, and for luncheon and dinner w go to the HoXbrauhaus or to tho restaurant around the corner on Broadway. Of course tfhere are many and brilliant-ex-captions ;to vthie regime; . quite frequently1 at night a grands dame, usually accompanied by a jeune fllle, from usf of the two exclusive homes, drives away in the TaanUy ooaoh, and hardly a night panes that a hansom or. a glistening brougham does not dash around the corner at our end of the street and atop before one or another of tha dark, foreboding, brownstone fronts. A young man, in evening clothes. Jumps lightly out, throws away hla cigarette, and disappears in the dark vestibule' at the top of the brownstone steps; but we all con-' tlnue to peek out firom behind our green holland shades, for we know that the best part is yet to come. Sometimes she keeps us waiting a Jong Ume, but it Is weli worth the while, for ah Is always looking quite lovely In her diaphanous filmy clothes and a lace ouat hl hat (generally black), a mass of sold trinkets f. lLiwt8t iml square gold purse swinging from her white-gloved hand. Ae they puw we can see the glow of the girls dress and the man's broad shirt front snd the little red light from his cigarette. It is not difficult tor us less fortunate Ones to imagine that we calk even detect the smilintf features of the callow c youth and hear the low laughter of the girl, for we know, that they are off to the gay world of red lamp ahadea and' Hungarian banda. Of vintage wines ana the very best of French cooking- J Of the many lodgers who- have occupied the rooms over my own I cunnot recall any one Who was the im mediate causa of .hansoms or highly burnished broug ham sbloeking our thoroughfare. Of the personality of these various lodgers, I have, as a rule, been wholly ignorant At intervals 1 have met them on the stairway once there was a little child who playod about the hall ways In a loneljr sort of way and with whom I ex changed greetings, but for the most part my acquaint- ' ssce has extended no further than a passing glance at ye new and unknown name over the letter-box next to my own, and the occasional sound of anonymous foot falla overhead. ; I was a little surprised not a little annoyed, too one afternoon, to- have my nap Interrupted by a sharp rapping at my bedroom door.. Although rather Inade quately clad, I opened the door and paw a messenger boy standing in the dimly lit hallway. With one harrd he offered me a telegram and with the other the book which he wished nre to sign. The light was bad. and my eyes were still heavy with sleep, land, at the first glance, 1 failed to see my name on the soiled page at which the record was opened. I -Sign it yourself," I said in a most -peevish manner, and, talking the telegram from him, I slammed the door In his face. Still calling down curses on the correspondent who had so thougrhtlesaly Interrupted my nap, 1 switched en the light and glanced at the writing on the envelope. The name was that of a woman, and one which I had never met with before. 1 hurriedly opened tha door and called down the stairway; but the messenger had dis appeared. , Ae the name on the telegram was hot that of either or the occupants of the two shops below me, 1 ot once reached tht? logical conclusion that it .must be that off my unknown neighbor overhead. Without more eiio 1 got into my bathroom slippers, pulled on a long over coat, and startsdp the stairs leading to the apartment above. In answer to my knock the door waa opened by a jgoung girl, and, in the subdued light of the room back of her. it s-emed to -me the brilliancy of her beauty was quite spt-otacular and almost too wonderful to be of this workaday world. In any case, I know Chat the drowsiness from which I had been Buffering left me as suddenly and as completely as if i bad i been thrust into a cold plunge. T v The girl's costume is not easy for me to describe" but, apparently, it consisted or yards of tumv lace, with many bide bows sewn on it. and endless narrow blue ribbons running through it. On the whole, so far as quantity-went, with the exception of the bare arm and throat, she. was fairly well concealed. I Barring the strip -Of bare ankle,' showing between the bottom of. my over- coat and my' bath slippers. I might safely make the same claim for my own appearance. The girl was quite with out embarrassment, and for a moment stood at the door 'smiling at my confusion. "VVpn t you come In?" she xald at last, and I fol lowed her on to the center of the room. - My neighbor was undoubtedly- an ,artlt, and I had evidently sttftnbled into" her workshop: Through a dim orange light I noted that the tinted walU were par tially draped with pieces of tapestry, ornately embroid ered copes and srtolea from the Italian churches of the early part of the last century were thrown over the backs of some splendid pieces of old - furniture, and many half-flnished sketches and unframed portraits : stood about on easels and against tha wall of tha num.' An great confusion. 1 must confess that the condition' of the room jdid not speak well for my neighbor in her capaoUy J of housekeeper. The pictures, the draperies .the furniture even the floor were covered with a thick layer '-of dust., which apparently had been allowed to accumulate for weeks, and was In the most extraor dinary contrast to the spiritual, almost eery, beauty -f the girl and Wie glisten8g freshness of her. volumi nous lace petticoats. - "I am very sorry to disturb you," 1 said, but I have : brought you a telegram, whioh wm lift me by mistake. You must pardon my drees, or rather the lack of It. but tha messenger Interrupted my forty-winks." "Forty-Winks?" ehe repeated, and shrugged her pretty Shoulders. '."That's what it used to be a long time ago. but pow it is fairly an orgy of sleep. You can not deny that, when you were youns;, an alarm clock suf. fined, but todav it ia neeenaarv tar vnuv man n - Vl0! In time for youri dinner hour." -i y My unknown neiahbor looked at. me with a curious 4Mte wistful smile, as If Phe wera quite out of humor "un. my cacneior ways: mfnta. croel the room to where a h!rh lamp stood, looked at the address, on the telerram, end then carefully tore ofT-tne end for the envelope. She stood under .the broad orange lamp-shade. her small, piquant face, with Its deep, warm coloring, half turned toward ma; tha soft golden light fell full on a great mass of wavy bronze hair, the well-rounded throat, and . tha wonderfully pibk-and-white arms. I could not help wondering If I ahould ever see them again. In all -ways she was the embodiment of youth and health and condition, and yet the very brilliancy of her beauty, seemed to surround her with a certain glow which set her apart from the ordinary human, and waa Immensely impressed, tod, by the fact, bdbh at the time and afterward, that when she walked the soles of bar tiny Turkish slippers left no mark on the dusty floor. When the girl had finished reading the telegram; she put It 'back into Its. envelope and held it toward me. 'TWa is not for m," aJd. . - Then why did you read it?" I gasped, out of pure surprise. . , "Because I wanted to know what was In it" ' "Do you consider it you right to know everything that is In every telegram or latter?" I asked. "I should think your curiosity might lead you Into considerable trouble." - ' She smiled at ma pleasantly enough, but It was tha kind of smile that a mother might vouchsafe her way ward child. "My interest," he said, "extends no father than. Our Street. That IB my province." "If that is your province, than," I said, "where may X find tho lady to whom this is addraaaed?" : "She is a vendeuaa in tho bat shop of Madame Qualqueohoss, on the ssaVnd Boor.". I bowed my thanks, and- as there seemed no further exouso for ma to remain, I started toward tha door, when I conceived what at tha time I considered a splendid Idea and a subtle piece of detective work. "Will you not write 'opened by mistake' on this?" I asked,' "and sigh your name?" t Again she looked at mo with tha same sweet, superior smile, and, with a knowing look in her big eyes, slowly shook her head. , "1 am sorry." she said. "Tou know you were really very kind to bring me the telegram. Ooodby." "Good by," I repeated, "seems hardly neighborly. 'Might It not' rather be au revoir?" "No." Bhe caid, entiling, vl fear it might not. Neighbors are, after ail, but a question of geography, and the result of a certain sameness of in come. An enforced meeting over a stray telegram can hardly ba said to constitute an. introduction." For the first Ume the tone of In difference, the almost severity of her language, brought to mo a painful consciousness of my bare anklea and my otherwise somewhat Informal garb, and I clumsily started to back toward the door.' "Oh, very well," X aaid, assum ing, a manner aa flippant aa I could well master under the circumstances, "if you prefer it that way our nappy meeting will be just as If it never was." . Bhe ' slightly inclined her pretty head, "Just as if it never waa. she repeated- When I reached the door I bowed low, trying my best to be gra cious, and, at the same time, to con ceal my bare anklea. "I can only trust, then," I added aa a parting word, "that fate will be so kind aa to once more throw us together in our very narrow hallway," 1 was wall on my way down; the stairway when I felt conscious of the girl having followed me to her door way. As I turned she leaned over the Smiled banister and whispered: "And you needn't look for my name in the letter-box in the hall; it isn't there, really, Uoodby." I returned to my room, where I found my breakfaet waiting for me, but for the rolls that had atood the test of fifteen years I had no appetite; and the cream too struck me as unusually sour, I read my morning paper, and, although I learned on the very first page that one pear friend had been thrown from his automo bile and another had had hla head cracked open at polo,. I could not switch my thoughts from the young woman overhead Here was beauty and health and condition enougui to make the front page of any newspaper seem dull enough, and I confess that her indifference, which might bsve been construed by the more fastidious as crass rudeness, annoyed me a good deal. Before my cigar was half-finished, I threw aside the papers and, hurriedly finishing my- areesing, went down to the ves tibule on the lower floor. Bhe waa quite right; the little brass lettor-oox next my own bore the name of a man, and, judging from the fact that it waa stuffed full of advertisements of new cheap restaurants and "home" lnundries, it had evidently not been used for a long , time. As soon as I reached my office 1 called up the abent from wrom t rented -my apartment. The agent was a personal friend by disposition,, a cotillon leader, but by mneritanre the owner and agent of many houses, of which mine was ores. "Pardon me. Grayson," I said,, as soon as I could get him to the telephone, "but I believe I have been a pretty good tenant, have paid my rent the first day of every month, and never complained about my neighbors." "You are in all things,'' Grayson drawled, "the per fect tenant." "Good!" said I. "Now, after fifteen years. I am going to ask you a favor." "Is it a plumber or the man with the white enamel paint? It's always one or the other with you tenants." "Neither," said I. "but I want toiknow all you know rbout the beautiful young person that lives in the apart ment over mine?" - ' . "Nothing at all, personally," said Grayson; "but I'll .ask somebody in the office here," , t , There wan a few moments delay, broken by the rumblings ol an indistinguishable conversation 'through the telephone, and then Grayson began again; "That apartment was rented to an artist ohap named Hoffmeyer for six .months on an unexpired lease. He said that, as he was away from town bomeUmea for quite a long while, painting portraits, he would pay in advance, which he did. That' all I know." i "Do you i suppose the beautiful person is Mrs. Hoff meyer?" I Ssked. , '. . "How aaould I know?" said 'Grayeon. "Why don't .you run" upstairs and ask her yourself?" " "Are you aware," I continued, somewhat aggrieved at 'Jrayson' ignoiahce and indifference, 'that the platform of the fire-escape on that top floor extends to the build ings on either side, and, if the rear windows should be ' left unlatched, any one could enter the back room of the partmnt eithnn from the fire-escape or even the roof?" "To you who live there," aid Grayson, with a most aggravating nasal inflection. "I have no doubt that those are most illuminating and stirring facts, but te a com muter from Irving-ton, like myself, believe me, they are wholly without interest. I know or care nothing1 about your beautiful neighbor. However, in a general way, I would take a commuter's advice 'Stop, look, Hsten!' ' I have said that I did not know my neighbors, which is quite true, but I did know something: about one I of them, who happened to live almost directly opposite me. Bhe was employed as a stenographer downtown during the day ana enea out a rauirr miseraDie eiuirnte uy making, neckties for a very limited trade at might.! I. watched for 'her the next afternoon until I 'saw her entei the house opposite, and a few minutes later open one of the windows of her apartment. I hurried . over and wss a : once admitted to her little sitting-room, which looked out over the street. I told her the osten sible object of my visit and the name of the client Who had recommended her. : 1 With a show of much pleasure he brought , Oqt a great variety of silk stuffs from which the ties were to be made. Pleading a lack of light with which to see the colors. I carried the silk to , the window. .Then, casually. I looked at the windows of the apartment over my own. and saw that they were not only closed and the shades down, but apparently the window-sills and the windows themselves were gray with dirt and duet. "I Mve directly opposite," I Udi No. 14. Appar ently my neighbor in the apartment over my own is away. One must cross the etreet to really learn what s going on in one's own house." 'I never thought of that," said Miss Dawson, "but I beTleve I do know more about - my neighbors across the xtre.tt than of my own fellow lodgers. you must be quite aiona at night now in your building those win dows' have not been opened for a long time?" , "You are sore I" T asked. "Oh. yes,' she said, "I am quite sure, because a German-looking young man used to alt there every after-- noon ' smoking a pipe just about this time. I quite miss him." I don't think 1 ever saw him," I said. "He had a wife,' I believe." The girl shook her bead. "Perhaps but I never saw her. I rather imagined he was alone. A colored girl used to clean up and cook for him, I think." . I ehose the silk for several ties, and. having given my Order, Wd Miss Dawson good night. It was quits evi dent that I could learn but 1U tie of the beautiful lady overhead from my neighbors across the street, and it waa equally apparent that, for ope reason pr another, she chosd Ho confine her operations to the rer of the apartment,. For the next few days my ears were forever listening for a noise of. any kind from overbeadV but I could bear nothing. The girl neither seemed to come nor go, at least by the staircase, her ; letter-box re mained stuffed with circulars, and the window-allhi of ber front windows begrimed in dust. If she left or entered the house, at least while I was in it. then X was convinced that she did so bqr way of the flre-eeoape -In the rear. r . " .. The days and nights passed on, and I heard or saw nothing of her, and I admit . that X became restless. and bowed .with much condescension at her reflection' peevish with my friends, and very in at ease. There Were times when a glance and a few words from a pretty - neighbor would have passed almost unnoticed, and have been at once overwhelmed in the swirl of other things. But there was notso much of a swirl to my life these day it was much mora orderly and more carefully regu lated In every way, and not nearly so full of incident or . adventure. I mow preferred a quiet dinner at ray- club to the. noise and gayety of the restaurant: and whereaa I had formerly been a most persistent theatergoer, at present I found it difficult to rit through any play, how ever worthy. Formal calls and parties I had given up entirely, and the women I had. grown up with and knew ' -really well. I found Just a little old and a little too devoted to home interests and their daughters' social successes. Of course aa the mothers were a little too old, the daughters themselves were just a little too young; so there 1 was, a human pendulum swinging between the two generations and the pendulum swinging a little more slowly -every year. It was, perhaps, a week after my interview With my neighbor when 1 saw her again. 1 had returned from a supper party after the-play, and, although it was late, I picked up a book and, dropping Into an easy chair, prepared for an hour's quiet reading before going to bed. I had barely become really interested when I heard the . door of the apartment overhead Close, and, a few moments later, a creak from the shaky banisters told me that soma one Was coming downstairs. As noiselessly as possible I stole across my sitting-room, and. puillng aside the silk curtain a very little, peeped out through the glass In the door leading to the hall, and saw the evl cautiously tiptoeing her way down the stairs. She wa. apparently dressed very much as 1 had seen her before, but - her voluminous and beribboned petticoats were partially concealed by a wonderful pink affair of lace and diaphanous silk a most extraordinary garment, I thought, for a young woman to choose for stEeet wear ; at 1 o clock in the morning, fibs wore no hat, nor head covering of any kind, but the bronze-colored hair had ajFparently been arranged with the greatest possible care. Even In the dim light of the hftfi she appeared most lovely, and from my hiding-place I watched 'her until shs disappeared down the- staircase leading te the shops and the street. The front door Is a heavy one,, wlttj a" stiff lock, and it is impossible to open and abut it without making a considerable noise. I stood in the center of my room, waiting for some moments, but, hearing no noise of any kind, I opened my door and walked down the hallway to the' head of the stairs. They were quite deserted, but a shaft of strong white ligftt fell - across the hallway from the open door of the shop of Madame Quelqueehose. I . cautiously stole down the steps and gently knocked on the door-frame. . "Come In," said the voice of my neighbor from fho far end of the shop. It was a long, narrow room, the walls covered with pink brocade, and at regular dis tances there were white-and-gold showcases, with long' mirrored doors; the floor was carpeted in dark green, - . and standing abowt in carefully arrayed confusion were a number of gilded, spindle-legged chairs and many ta.lL ' delicately stemmed stands, topped by gorgeously flowered and beribboned, -hatsi The girl had already- opened . several of the showcases., and 1 saw bewildering rows of lace coats and cloth wraps of many delicate shades. My neighbor-was- standing- before a mirror; a heavy laoe coat fell from her shoulders, and she was carefully placing on her well-noised head a broad,-black hat With . a great bow of dark green velvet on the side. , v"' "Do you like It?" she asked, sofitly patting the bronze curls over her forehead. i . "Beautif ul! said I, "How did you get In?" "It's very simple. When Madame Quelqueohose stays late at night, she leaves the key under the door-mat, so that the boy can open the shop In-the morning. It Is perfectly safe except from you and me. I stumbled over "the key quite by accident. T. . v I carefully removed several marvelously plumed hats from one or the spindle-legged ' chairs and sat down. "Do you come here of ten' of nighta?" I asked. The girl surveyed herself critically in the glass, and pushed the hat forward over her forehead and the bronxe curls. "Quite often," he said. "It's rather an. amusing g-ame. You see I flay I'm different people on Our Street." . ..... "Splendid!" I aaid. "Who do you think yon are now?" . She glanced in the mirror at the reflection of the spreading hat. with Its dah of brilliant color, and then down at the loosely hanging la.ee coat, reaching almost te her patent-leather slippers. - "Who lo you think I am now? she repeated. "Now I am the Bachelor Gtri across the street hardljr the ' person you would introduce to your mother although, perhaps, you might to your sister.' Respectable, maybe, ; but. after all, 1 am a little young' and a trifle pretty, perhars. to live alone; and. when a girl does that with;.' a famliy in Harlem, the neighbors will talk. And then ' I constantly dine with men alone" tha girl turned -and shook her pretty head at me, but the smile that v played about her red lips seemed jut a trifle knowing and" rather worldly "but you can't blame me, can youf Ever since father lost faia fortune in a wheat deal, the fiat uptown ii to terribly dull and I do like a soon dinner after Bitting about all day really doing; nothing.; And then it isn't aa If I didn't oall on mr people every fw? days and spend a month during the eurmner with them la it?" She sighed at her own filial davetlOn. - 'D you auppeee the people on Our Utreet,' I Mked, "know Just when you are etarting out to visit your f oUs and just when you are off to a matineer' . ' VI -wonder," Bhe aaid, wluh a alight contraction of er delicate eyebrows, 'l wonder. But J do so love these occasional dips Into Bohemia, "The threads whten draw you back to the shores of com paraUve respectability e-fter these dlpaM suggested, 'are, In reality, but eMght. Be careful they don't enap some day, and leave you -floundering about aad calling tor fcelp " ' - " v The girl , smiled moat eheertWly- "I oould get help all right in Bohemia. It's being left to flounder on the eh ores of the dead aea !of respeotabtllty that X fear. They ao love to Bee one 'of their own gaepin for Ufe on the hot sands." . - V r ' .( "Well enougft for the f present," I aaid, Dut how about the future? wow you nave health and beauty and the capacity ; of youth for pleasure, put that won't last always- omo day tbo shadows and theoroWe-ftst and the oreaaea will oome, and 'the young men win stay away that is. If they haven't already married young woman who live with tfcalr foUta. For aome.rea 'son young men seem to prefer young women for wives who live with their folksno?" The girl made . a little grimace at mo by way of the mirror, and swung herself about bo that she oould better see the hang of her lace Boat in "the baok. "ParhapB." ahe aaid, ut, you ate, I've really had no experience. Now, you're awfully old,' and you no doubt have watched the people on Our ftreet grow up. and it hag made you sour and dia pontented nd eysloal. Tou forget the day you eame to 0r street. I wager you you had no thought of crow'a-feet and wrinkles then. I doubt If you knew a natural com plexion from rouge, or even enamel, in those days." , "Quite right, my dear' I aaid and the fact that X aaid "my dear" was admission enough that her sup positions were perfectly, correct "I came here twenty years ago, and every woman waa beautiful then, and every complexion was the work of God. But now!" I threw up my hands in mock horror. Bhe turned and looked down on me, wide-eyed, and slowly shook her head. "Twenty years on a aide street in New York!" ahe aaid. "What a life-wnat a life! You are, of course, the oldest Inhabitant,' and your con stitution must be a marvelous affair to have kept you going all that time. Tou shduld have crawled off to die in your native town long before thla. A refuge for reclaimed women or an inebriates' home should have had your name carved over its door years ago. Just think' of your spending your own money for twenty years it's shocking! Don't you really feel like dying?-1 should think your aches . and pains would be Quite unbear ' able." I slowly stuck my legs out be fore me and stretched my arms above my head. "You see," I said. "I am Still quite-strong. X admit that X am somewhat more temperate in my habits', and now that you mention the fact th& I am awfully old, I don't mind confessing that I have been thinking a great deal of late of moving to a home In the country." The girl turned ' sharply from the mirror to Whioh aha had returned -and looked down at me, ae if to sat isfy herself that I waa quite serious. Finding that X was,' she broke into such loud and merry peals of laughter that the broad bat wabbled on ber head until It was neces sary to hold it on with both hands. "You" ahe said, with real tears of laugftvter glisten ing in hee eyes "a country squire. You would die of ennui in a wee!" 1 admit that her laughter annoyed me, although I confess her. youthful beauty more than made up -for this, tor it seemed to radiate the more brilliantly every new moment I was near her. "You-don't understand," I , said with considerable asperity, "You're only a child and can't appreciate the beauties of nature the paeslon of the middle-aged for the blossoming flower of the fields and the love we feel for the shadows In a crystal stream." Bhe ceased her laughter and eat down on a chair facing my own i and interlaced her long' pink fingers behind the back of her pretty head. "Don't lose your sense of humor," she said "blossoming plants and -crystal streams, fiddlesticks! Of course I can appreciate the beauties of nature, I could leave all. this tomorrow and never come back. X could live on milk and honey and dream away my life under an apple tree, with only the birds and insects for my friends, but I am young and still sensitive to beautiful things; my pulse is fresh and strong and my lungs are yet free from the tainted air of your great city. Should you, for instance, draw a breath of perfectly good air into your lungs, you would probably collapse entirely. And if you didn't, you would grope your way back to thia and and tejuvenate. My dear, good old man" "I am Just turned forty," I interrupted. "My dear, good old man," she continued, "you may dream of blossoming plants and crystal streams, but the poison ot the .town Is in your veins. A man who has driven a racing ear over oiled roads never returns to a top buggy.. The rooms overhead, believe me, will know you until the end." "Knowing thie." X said, "and with your lungs and your heart, no doubt, still so pure, why do you not go at once te your apple tree and your bird and your tnsects?" ' "Why?" she asked me. "Because the power to go Is still mine. 1 am juet looking lit a She door of Our httraet, and t confess that it looks warm and comfort able enough. I am like one of my insect friends if you will, fluttering in a circle about the flame you love eo well, but the circle is yet a large one. my wings are still Intact, and I can fly away should I so will it. Be sides, all the ' woman on Our Street do not wear lace coats." She put aside the broad hat and tho long coat, and going over to the mirrored case, took down a white cloth cape, exquisite in its simplicity, and drew It closely about her slim figure. "And how?" I asked. "Now X ate the Jeune FHle at the end of the street" at the moment it seemed to me that ' her whole ex pression had softened materially, and there was a timid almost shy, look In -the big -eyes "Poor, if you wilL" she continued, "and let behind: ashamed of my address, but still proud of my name. My chance are dimmed of course, by the daughters of the trust kings from the middle west, but I have still a few relatives who live about Washington Square and a few scattered along the right side of tne park. They give me teas when I come out and ask me to their - large dances in winter and ttheir country places in the summer. And I am always carefully chaperoned." 'And you get money presents at Christmas?" I BUg-, ' gested, "and your rich relatives speak of your sovertv as if It was Inherited tuberculosis." . ! The girl sighed, but went back to the mirror and with a smile of pleasure noted how charming her piquant face looked peeping out from" the high braided collar of the white- cloth mantle. - "'It' an awful struggle. I know." she sighed, nod ding her head at the face in the mirror, "to be ao wise in the ways of the world and yet to look on at It all with innocent, meaningless eyes, and then, dear mother Is so difficult. She cannot understand why mosey should rank above beauty and pure worth, and why the price of eggs and butter go up while the morals of the young men go down. She insists that X marry an old - man like youreelf. whose securities have, withstood the panics .of twenty years, and whose wild oats have been garnered long ago and forgotten under the dust of the law of limitations." . "A horrible alternative, I aaid. fuming Just far enough to see myself In the mirror of. a neighborly showcase. "And yet my hair Is net even gray. I admit that 1 have recently regarded marriage as a remote possibility, but-' ' . 'A remote possibility!" she echoed. . "A man so set. In wa ways! You're really too absurd. Wy, I'm Sure you have your bath drawn and your coffee served withr- tn five minutea of the same hour every morning, of the year. You should apply to the nearest hospital for a trained nurse, hot at one of our oldest homee for a child-wife." ' v ' - You're very dlsoouragjng. I said. "You forget that a bachelor's passion for a quiet married life is dearer te him than any Chi Rg, except big love of freedom. Can't yeu play you are somebody else T' "Surely." the girl answered In a most flippant man ners Bhe threw the chaste white cape over the nearest hair, and, returning to the showcase, took down a most bewildering affair, which, with a proper spirit ot awe, I draped about her White shoulders. It was a wrap of great intrinsic worth and of superlative beauty, all of gold-spangled net, over roecolored ehiffon, with very large, ruffled sleeves and an immense flchu of , ohiffon and lace, From one of the stands she took a .broad felt hat .with a heavy binding and drooping' plumes, 'all of the most exquisite shade oC domlngo pink, and. going back to the mirror, placed it with tmioh care ever the mass of bronxe curia. With her hinds on her hips. - ahe ! turned and twisted before the pier-glass, until she was, to all appearances, quite satis fied that, the girl and hat and wrap were a combination of nature and artifice, at its very. best. With a broad sweep of the mantle, a riot ot gorgeous color bewilder ing in Its very audacity, she took a few steps toward the chair to WhWh I had returned, and oourtesled low before me. .There was po further any. attempt to con ceal the knowledge In her soul. It shone brasenly now through the big meaning eyes, and about the arched lips there was the suggestion of a most knowing smile. 'Charming.' I aaid, .'quita dharsalng!" and I drew my coat "over my broad shirt-bosom as it hey very presence ohiHad me. . "But what a wicked, cruel tittle smile. Whom does it belong tor , 'My Idea." she said, looking at herself In the mirror with the most frank smile of adulation over her own ' eauty, "was to be fascinating rather than cruel. It pleases me to think that I am the Show Oirl who hag sublet the apartment from the gisl in No. 87. the one who has gone on the road with The Maid and the Mandarin.' " "A show girl." I mused aloud. "Personally, . i do not like the type. I have often seen you trail the balayeuse of your silken skirts across the pavement on your way to and from your eisctrio cab, but eo far you have been a stranger -to me. I have even been urged to attend your supper parties, and each time X hae refused. So you see. my young friend, there ia one crime on the calendar of Our Street of which l" am still Innocent" - "Still Innocent!" she laughed at me, and I hated her, for her laughter seemed so very hard and had a metallic ring. ''Still Innocent!, Quite right X am a bird of plumage, whose brilliancy daxslea only the un trained eye of the very youngr or the fading sight of the very old. Soggy, middle-aged respectability knowi me for what X am, a mummy dressed by Paquln. Escaped me In your youth perhaps you have, but after all, that long since, and X am a product of the present century. But, X wager you, the swish of these silken skirts will yet be muslo to your faded hearing, and soma day. believe me, you will be a willing and an honored guest at my supper table." "As well say," I protested, "that I will ask the very pretty vendeuse who is forever leaning against the door-frame ot No. tz to dine at Sherry's, or that I will put up at my dub the haberdasher's clerk across the way." 'Pardon me,' said the girl haughtily, tilting her dimpled chin in the most charming fashion, and aa If my 'last .remark bad given serious .offense. "You are quite wrong to mix the social and commercial life of Our Street The Vendeuse and the Haberdasher's ' Clerk, however worthy, have not even the status of the Extra Girl and the Chorus Man who use the stage door opposite; or of, Carlo the bootblack, who 'knows the inside story of every pair of shoes on the block; or even of the Telephone Oirl at the corner drugstore, who can ring any of us up without looking in the book. Believe me, the persons you mentioned have no stand ing whatever and heaven forbid that they should -have any effect on our life. They are but transients, at best and ihave no more, Intercourse with the people f Our Street than they do with the casual shoppers from Broadway or Fifth avenue." "I like that" I said. "Do you consider yourself one of as just because you have subleased an apartment for ,a few months?" In some-nook or corner of the shop Pay beautiful neighbor had discovered a cur tain -rod painted white, and, using it as a Laff, such as the ladies affected at the time of the empire, she proceeded to parade slowly up and down In front of the row -of mirrors, and smile and bow with much condescension at her reflections, just as if shs wre greeting ber lady friends in some royal gardens. She really seemed to have forgotten me entirely, and I found it necessary to repeat my remark, "Because you have rented an apartment In the neighborhood," I said, "during the short run In Mew York of the company of whksn. you are a member, does that make you one of us?" "It makes no difference," she said slowly, stalking with a great manner up and down before the mirrors, "whether 1 or ' another enow girl occupies the room. The character of the tenants never varies on Our Street.' The girt who sublet her apartments to me used the same saohet powder in the bureau drawers as I do. and the same violet ammonia tablets tor her bath the scent waa unmistakable in' both eases. Should your ghost dare ths natural hasarda of Our Street and return here after your .demise, it would find another bachelor - ensconced and very muoh like -yourself. There would, be a different brand of Scotun on the sideboard, per haps, and a new face on the bureau-top, surely, but the general effect would be quite the same' 4 'You are terribly cynical for one so young," I said "Do you even consider yourself a fair example of your , tvpe? Do you really i for one moment think yourself typical of a kind of neighbor with whom I must, one ' day -be neighborly? Even M' flowered fields and run ning brooks are not for roe, surely do not tell me that one day 1 must kneel to yeu and your cape of gold. Because X have tasted sherry in my youth,' must I turn to brandy in my old age? If, from mere exhaustion, one drops out of the rush of a great city, is It necessary to look on such beauty as yours before I can return to action?" , , -.--, - - The giW stopped in front dt a mirror, and. drawing herself to her - full height grasped her staff in both hands and looked steadfastly Into the glass, as !? ae were posing for a portrait by some great master. Then In answer to ray question, she slightly inclined her bead toward the Image in the glees. . "I am typical of ray class, and I am typical of the pleasures of your city. I am for show, and I dine with the one who considers it moot worth his while to pay '- lor- mv presence the pleasure of dlniny opposite so much beauty and suck fine clothes, it is only a ques tion of time when most of you come to paying for your pleasures you love your restaurants better than . your - own dining rooms and your theaters better than your libraries. Believe me. yours is the city of boughten happiness. Yeu ask me if 1 am typical of my class. I am no more typical of my class than you are of yours no more typical then Carlo the bootblack, or the Girl Who Makes Silk Ties for extra money with which to buy theater tickets, or the Jeune Fllle who is . stranded at the end of the block, or the Bachelor Maid acrces the way who doesn't live with her folks, or the Decayed OenUewoman Who runs the lingerie shoo at No. 2, or the Telephone Girl at the corner drugstore, or the other denizens -,of the wide streets, who, behind drawn shades, watch: the I if of the city rush on - inruugu i a .cA- luvruuj-.i bi w any or us OT in? side street ever run for publlo office or corner a wheat deal and become famous in a night Or do any of us fail and hang out the red flag of the auctioneer? Kot we we take the middle courts and live on the safe, : easy banks of the stream, and watch the ebb and flow of the tide and wait." . The girt laid . aside her Improvised wand, took off the plumed hat end hang the spangled Wrap In the " mirrored ease. Togerner - we rearranged the shop as wb hait found It. locked the dene ltiil hM tho itmtr unA- . the mat Slowly 1 followed her up to the landing be- fore my door. With one step on the rtalrway leading to the floor above, she stopped and held out ber hand .'. to': me. , "Gooobyr" sne said, "and for the last time." r- "Surely not Thetr' X urged. "I don't even know your name." "My name, she said, "my name Is Youth." "Youth?" I repeated. ' 'Youth, tf you will," she said. "I'am the spirit of the crors-town streets I am the writing on the wall I am the grist ready for the mill you are the chaff ePAAnw as 41ia eririi' si . i S XW.VJ J V JIS T I She. started tip the stairs, but after she had taken few steps turned, and, with the sams wistful smile nils ber naa iovea eo mucn.- tooxea uacx at - me over shoulder. "Ooodby, old man." he whfn-d; "goodby!" "Good byl youth. X ald. "We've bad me good times together, you and I. Here's God e peed to you, whichever path you choose!" r The girl smiled bark at me. hesitated for a mo ment and then with no mor woro ran lla-htty; up the stairs, and X heard the door close sharply behind her. -?