. if -A - J; Ts "MucLean's attention was deferential, lie had always liked Hardin ; all the fellows did. But he was Jumping oft ,wrong this time. He'd brought it all Ion himself. "He wild something about a levee for Ihe towns. He's got to Investigate that before he goes to the front." "A levee? Well, wouldn't that Jar you?" Hardin addressed the stenog rapher in the transparent shirtwaist 'Does lie tfllnk we're going to have another flood this season? Thinks It's i'oing to reach the hotel and wet his clothes? Take the starch out of his shirts?" He flung out of his chair, throwing the papers back Into the drawer. He stamped out of the ofllce, mad cleiir through. To this crisis they had nent down a dandy, a bookman who wanted to build a levee. Oh, hell I "They'll come crawling after me to help them after this fellow's burled 'himself under river mud, come calling to me as they did after MalUand Mled. Please, Mr. Hardin, won't you come back and finish your gate!" I'll see them dead first. No, I'll be fool enough to do It. I can't help myself. I'm a Hardin. I have to finish what I've be gun." It was not because this was a pet enterprise, the great work of his life, that he must eagerly eat humble pie, take the buffets, the falls, and come whining buck when they whistled to him. He told himself It was because of his. debt to the valley, to the ranchers. The colonlHts were about desperate. Who could blame them? The last year's floods had worked havoc with their crops; this year had been a horror. The district they culled No, 0 was a screaming irony of ruin. The last do luiueh of the river had made great fashes through the ranches, had scoured deep gorges which had under mined the canals on which the water supply for No. C depended, The suits .were piling tip against the D. K dam Jige suits, and they hold up his gate, while he gets the curses of the val ley. And Mr. Klckard thinks he'll build a levee I He flung himself on the couch In the tent, Gerty was laying a careful cloth for supper. A brave, determined smile was arranged on her lips, The noon storm had passed. She hummed a jrny little tune. If there was anything Hardin hated' It was humming. "You'll have your dude to dinner all right," her husband announced. "He's in town." "Yes, I know," rejoined bis spouse. "I had a letter from him yesterday. From Imperial." Tom sat up glaring. "He wroto to you from Imperial?" His wife misplaced the accent. She misunderstood Tom's scowl. It was the old story over again. Whenever those two men enme together the old feeling of Jealousy must be revived hguln! It was unpleasant, of course, ,very unpleasant, to have men enre like that, but it made life exciting. Life bad been getting a little stale lately like a book of obvious, even plot. Itlcltard's entrance Into the story gave u now Interest, a new twist. She hummed nn air from a new opera that bad set the world waltzing. Hardin's thoughts did not touch her at the hem. Ho was at the headgate, bis gate. What the deuce had Klckard pone to Imperial for? If he wasn't tho darnedest ass I . Imperial I And the Sate hung upt "For God's sake stop that buzzing!" The happy little noise was quenched, lnnes, entering at that moment, heard the rough order. She looked Implor ingly at her elster-ln-luw. "Supper's on the table," cried Oerty, the fixed, determined smile still on her lips. CHAPTER X. A Desert Dinner. Inues Hardin was completing her simple toilet. Not even to please Oerty would she "dress up" for the dinner. It would have been easy for Iier sister-in-luw to postpone It. How could she expect Tom to go through with itl She couldn't understand Oerty 1 An hour ago, hearing distinctly tho whir and splash of egg-beating, she Imd run over to the neighboring tent. The clinking of the cake tins had sud denly silenced. "Excuse me, won't you?" Gerty's voice had come from Hie lean-to, the little kitchen shod. "I'm lying down." "Mollis, yes!" grimaced the nardln mouth to its reflection in the mirror. How many times that week had she lieen repulsed by a locked door, a snd ibu curtain of silence or a "Run away tor a while. I'm trying to catch a imp." Ensy now to see why Gerty !iad wanted to "hold the reins" that jveek! SUe didn't need to pierce those can v.4a Wiiils to know that there had liO-a fevcriji, activity to -Usls Jllwux ! If A 1. 7 ' W If 11 (i THE EDMH AIKEN A"new gown "would appear" tonight; made secretly. An exquisite , meal, and no one must comment on its elab oration. Twice Tom and she had been asked to take their lunch at the hotel. "Because of a headache!" A headache ! Tom's wife could not even shop openly ! ' Pundles had always the air of mystery, never opened before Tom or herself. She must have yards of stuff laid away, kept for sudden emer gencies. "She can't help It. It's her disposi tion. She can't help being secretive. Look at your face, lnnes Hardin!" What was it to her, the pettiness of a woman whom an accident of life had swept upon the beach beside her? Gerty was not her kind, not the sort she would pick out for a friend. She was an oriental, one of the harem women, whose business It Is in life to please one man, to keep his home soft, Ills comforts ready, keep him con vinced, moreover, that It is the desire of his life to support her. Herself dis satisfied, often rebellious, staying by him for self-interest, not for love ah, that wus her Impeachment. "Not lov ing!" Soberly she covered her plain bras siere with a white waist of cotton ducking, A red leather belt and crim son tie sho added self-consciously. "Where Is my bloodstone pin?" , Hadn't she spent an hour at least matching that particular leather belt? But he was a man, lu battle. The headgate held up; it was too bad. Silent, Bodefeldt, Wooster, Grant, all of them fighting mad because of the deadlock at the Heading. All up in arms, at last, against Marshall, be cause of this cruel cut to their hero, Hardin, Her eyes glowed like yellow lamps as she recalled their fervid par tisanship. "Only one man who can save the valley, aud that's Tom Hardin." Woos ter had euld that; but they ull be lieved It. The loyalty of the force made her ashamed of her soft woman fears. For there were times when she questioned her brother's ability. He had a large, loose way of handling things. He was too optimistic. But those men, those engineers must know. It was probably the man's way of sweeping ahead, ignoring detail. Tho verdict of those field-tried men told her that the other, the careful, plan ning wuy, was the office method, Klck ard, as a dinner neighbor, she had found interesting; but for great un dertakings a man who would let a Gerty Holmes Jilt him, ruin his life for him I The whole story sprang at last clear from the dropped lnnucndos. She adjusted a barrette in her smoothly brushed hair, Slowly she walked over to the neighboring tent. Gerty frowned nt the white duck. Gerty Frowned t the White Duck. "You might at least have worn your blue!" "You're elegant enough for the two of us. Isn't that something new?" Gerty said carelessly that the had had It for a long time. For she had had the material a long time! It wasn't necessary to explain to her htisoaiul's sister that it had been mado up that week. She hoped that she didn't look "fussed up." Would Mr. Rlckard think she was attaching any importance to the simple little visit? For It was nothing to him, of course, A man of his standing, whom the great Tod Marshall ranked so high, probably dined out several times each week, with white-capped maids and candelabra! If Tom had only made the most of his opportunities, What a gamble, life to a woman! Chn ,.,la thin lii r. ha. hMnm mirror. The lingerie frock would look simple to a man who would never l l,.n,l.n,,l. ,lll.,lt Her glass declared the hand-whipped medallions casual -' : DAILY CAPITAL JOURNAL, a long time ago, a lifetime ago, Klck ard had told her that she always should wear blue, because of her eyes. lnnes from the next room could hear Gerty teasing Tom to-wear his Tux edo. "Isn't one , dude enough for you?" growled her surly lord. lnnes recog nized the mood and shrank from the ordeal ahead. It was the mood of the Hardin in the rough, the son of his frontier mother, the fruit of old Jasper Gingg, whose smithy had been the rendezvous for the wildest roughs. the fiercest cattlemen In Missouri. "I'd let him see you knew what's what, even if we do live like gipsies." The answer to that was another growl. lnnes could hear him dragging out the process, grumbling over eacn detail. That confounded laundry had torn his shirt. He hadn't a decent collar to his name. Where was his black string tie? If Gert would keep his things In the lowest drawer ! Hang that button! Gerty emerged from the encounter, her face very red. lnnes could see her biting her lips to keep the tears back as she put the last touches to the table. "She's tired out," thought the sister of Torn Hardin. "She's probablj fussed herself to death over this din ner." A few minutes later Klckard ar rived In a sack suit of tweeds. Gerty's greeting was a little abstracted. How could she make lnnes understand tc tell Tom to chance his coat? Thf duty of a host, she suddenly remem bered, was to dress down rather that up to the chances of his guest. . She reeretted bitterly her Insistence. Was ever anyone so obtuse ns lnnes? Mr. Rlckard would see that they thought It a big event. She was watching the curtain where Tom would emerge. And his coat was a style of several seasons ago and absurdly tight! She made an unlntelllclble excuse and darted behind the portiere. Tom's face was apoplectic. He was wrestling with a mussed tie; the col lar showed a desperate struggle. Gerty made wild signals for hlra to change his clothes. She waved a hand Indicating Klckard; she pointed to Tom's sack suit lying on the floor where ho had walked- out of It. "What is it all about?" "Ssh," whispered his wife. Again the wild gestures. "Well, aren't you satisfied? Don't I look like a guy" IIo could be heard distinctly in the next room. Gerty gave It up in do- spalr. She dnbbcd some more powder on her nose and went out looking like a martyr -a very pretty martyr! .Klckard praised tho miracles of the tent. Gerty's soft flush reminded In nes of their old relation. "Exit lnnes," she was thinking, when Tom, red and perspiring, brought another element of discomfort Info the room. Gerty ushered them Immediately td the table. She covered the first min utes which might be awkward with her small chatter. Somewhere she hud read that it was not well to make apologies for lack of maid or fare, Besides Mr. Rlckurd remembered Lawrence! That dreudful dlulng room, the ever-set tablet How she had hated It, though she had not known how fearful it wus until slio had escaped. We are simple folk here, Mr. Kick' aid," she aunouueed, as they took their places around tho pretty table, That was her only allusion td deficien cies, but It covered her noiseless move ments around tho board between courses, filled up tho gaps when sho made necessary dives Into kitchen or primitive Ice chest, and set the key (or the homeliness of the meal itself. The dinner was a triumph of apparent simplicity. Only lnnes could guess the time consumed lu "the perfection of detail, details dear to the hostess' lieart. Tho almonds sho hod blanched, of course, herself ; hud dipped nnd salted them. The cheese straws were ber own. She did not make the mis take of stringing out endless courses. An Improvised buffet near at hand made the serving a triumph. Klckard prnlsed each dish ; openly he was admiring her achievement, limes, remembering tho story Oerty had told her In dots and dashes, tho story of the old rivalry, glanced cov ;rtly at Tom sulking nt the bond of his own table, , "Poor sulky Achilles," she thought. 'Dear, honest old bear!" "lnnes!" cried Mrs. Hardin. She turned to find that the guest AOS staring at her. She had not heard ills effort to Include her lu tho con versation. "Mr. Klckard asked you if you like It here?" "Thank you why, of course !" Her inswer sounded pert to herself. Her sister-in-law hastened to ndd ;hat Miss Hardin was very lonely, was really nil alone In tho world ; that they Insisted on her making her-home with . tliem. lnnes had with difficulty restrained denial. After all, what other homo had she? Still the truth hud been de- fleeted. Sho recalled the sacrifice it had been to cut her collego course In order to mako a homo In tho desert for the brother who had always so gently fathered her, who had helped her Invest her small capital that it might spell a small Income. She ro- called his resistance when she had called In a mortgage ; who could watch that mad scapegoat of a river playing pranks with desert homes and not yearn to help? Not a Hardin. She till gloried in remembering that she Imd at least driven one pile Into that .....,. ,,.. -i., left the valley It would be as a bread- winner. She was prepared. & M Htftomn. Kim vnuM til iUJKe.tltlc.e in an architect's ofno. SALEM, OREGON. SATURDAY, MARCH 1, 1919. She had already settled oa the archi tect! , "Are you going to Los Angeles soon?" She heard the new manager address his host. "I'm taking orders!" There was another awkward mo ment when Hardin pushed back his plate declaring he had reached his limit; it was too big a spread for him ! It was the stupid rudeness of the small bad boy ; even lnnes flushed for her slster-ln-Jaw. With resolution Gerty assumed con trol of the conversation. Her role sounded casual; no one could have suspected It of frequent rehearsal. They must not talk of the river; that was taboo. Railroad matters were also excluded. Squally difficult would be reminiscences of Lawrence days. So she began brightly with a current book. - The theater proved a safe topic, and by that netaral route they reached New York. lnnes, who hod never been farther east than Chi cago, was grateful to play audience. Hardin, who knew his New York per haps better than either, refused to be drawn into the gentle stream. Things must be kept sprightly. Had Mr. Rlckard met many of the valley, people? And It was then that she threw her bomb toward the listening, silent Hardins. She would like Mr. Rlckard to meet some of their friends. He said that he would be delighted, but that he was planning to leave shortly for the Heading. "Of course." She did not give her husband time to speak. She meant afterward ! Sho was planning to give something a bit novel In his honor. Sho refused to see the glare from the angry man In his outgrown dinner coat. She did not glance toward the sister. What did Mr. Rlckard think about a progressive ride? "It sounds very entertaining, but what do you do?" There was a loud guffaw from Tom, With deepened color Gerty told her idea. A drive, changing partners, so he could meet all the guests. "I think It will surprise you to find so many nice people In here; It cer tainly did me. One doesn't expect to find congenial people In a new country like this." . Rlckard remembered that he had to get back to his hotel. He had let- tors to write. It had been a splendid dinner t And what a wonderful home sho had made out of a sand-baked lot, out of a tent ! He spoke of the roses and Jhe morning glories. His eyes fell on the open piano, the reading table with the current magazines. Now he couldn't understand why they ever went to that hotel ! Gerty's eyes were shining as deep pools of water on which the sun plays, She looked almost Infantile as she stood by tho two tall men, her head perched birdlike. "Good-by! and I hopo you'll come again!" Of courso he'd come again ! "And you will let me know when you return, so that I may set the date for my party?"'' lnnes did not get his answer. She had been observing that he was not taller than her brother. He looked taller. He was lean, nnd Tom was growing stocky. She wished he would not slouch so, his hands in his pock ets ! In Tucson, before she knew that she must dislike Rlckard, she had had an Impression of virile distinction, of grace, a suggestion of mastered mus cles. He had known that it was her brother he was supplanting did he get any satisfaction from the fact that It was tho husband of the woman who had Jilted him? Anyway, she did not like him. Sho could never forgive a hurt that was done to her own. She was a Hardin. "lnnes! Mr. Rlckard said good night 1" Sho gave him the tips of her cool, browned fingers, ner eyes did not 1 ' Her Eyes Did Not Meet His. meet his; she would not meet that laughing scrutiny. . "Good night, Mr. Rlckard." CHAPTER XI. The Fighting Chance. "Casey's tmck, spying 1" announced Wooster at mess one evening. By that time the feeling against "Marshall's man" was actively hostile. There had been a smudge of slumbering fires be fore Rlckard had left the towns. , nnI bjr talk during bis ab- ! ' " had V.' They were ready to show their resent- !"V .hTwi , " " l"el" I'""- "I j the cause of the desert was as com- ...;,-- .wi - jcu - I ns were ' the lily banners" of France to the" fol lowers of the Little Corporal. Rlckard was not expected. He had been gone less than a week. The ef fect of his return was that of a per son who returns suddenly into a room, hushing an active babel of tongues. He knew what he would find, ample reasons why! He was not given the satisfaction of locating any particular act of disobedience. The men pre sented a blank wall of politeness, rea sonable and Ineffectual. Silent ex plained briefly that he had not been able to collect enough men. Most e the force was busy in the No. 6 dis trict, trying to push the shattered Wis taria through by a new route before that year's crops were entirely ruined. A gang was at Grant's Heading; the floor needed bracing. Another squad. Irish's, was In the Volcano Lake re gion, where they were excavating fsr the new headgate. "No hurry for that" Rlckard was glad to pick a flaw in such a perfect pattern. "Yon might have withdraw those men and put them to work the levee." "I was given no authority to is that" The chief pretended to accept ths reason; else it were a case of chang ing horses In midstream. Whot he had seen at the Heading, his peep at the exposed valley, his gleaning sf the river's history had convinced him that in haste and concentration lay the vaHey's only chance. He must re fuse to see the Insubordination of the engineers, the seasoned desert sol diers. He needed them, must win their confidence if he could. If not, they must save the valley anyway! The imperturbable front of Silent, his bland, big stare, exasperated him; easier to control the snapping terrier of a Wooster. He had told Silent dis tinctly to gather his men and rush the levee. A good soldier had made a bet ter guess than his, and had stopped the casual work at Black Butte, or had found Tndians! Thoughtfully Rlckard followed that last suggestion across the ditch Into Mexlcall. He gatheced all the recruits he needed that morning. The Indians, lazy Cocopahs, crept out of their huts to earn a few of the silver dollars held out to them by the new white boss. A few Mexican luborers were bribed to toss up earth to the west of the town. Estrada, at his request, put a squad of his road force at the service of the manager. He could not spare many men. The railroad had already started the line projected by Hardin to Mar shall the year before, a spur across the desert, dipping into Mexico be tween the lean, restless sandhills, from Calexlco to Yuma. The Mexican government had agreed to pay five thousand dollars a mile were the road completed nt a certain period. Estrada was keplng his men on the Jump to fill the contract, to make his nation pay the price. The completion of the road meant help to the valley; sup plies, men, could be rushed through to the break. . In spite of his haunting sense of ultlmnte failure the growing belief in the omnipotence of the Great Yellow Dragon as the Cocopahs visualized. It, Estrada's work was as Intense as though he were hastening a sure vic tory. . The dauntless spirit of the elder Estrada pushed the track over the pot sands where he must dance at times to keep his feet from burning. Many of the rails they laid at night. "Rlckard's gone bog-wild," Hardin told his family the next morning. "Building a levee between the towns! The man's off his head." "There isn't any danger?" Gerty's anxiety made the deep blue eyes look black. lnnes looked up for Tom's answer. His face was ugly with passion. "Danger! It's a bluff, a big show of activity here because he's buffa loed; he doesn't know how to tackle the Job out there." It had begun to look that way to more than one. It was talked over at Coulter's store; In the outer office of the D. R. company where the engi neers foregathered; among the-chair titters who Idled in front of the Des ert hotel. "The. man does not know how to tackle his Job !" A levee, and the gnte held up 1 What protection to the towns would be that toy levee if the river should return on one of Its spectacular sprees? A levee, and the Intake itself not guarded? He was whispered of as incompetent; one of Marshall's clerks. He was given a short' time to blow himself out A bookman, a theorist. "As well put scntlncl3 a few miles from prison and leave the Jail doors open I" This was Wooster's gibe. All saw the Colorado as a marauder at large. "And a little heap of sand stacked up to scare It off! It's a scream!" Mrs. nardln found It difficult to meet with diplomacy the confidences which Inevitably come her way. As Hardin's wife she was expected to en Joy the universal censure the new man was acquiring. Gerty's light touches. too slight for championship, passed as a sweet charity. Her own position those days was trying. She did not jet know her diplomatic lesson. Appnrently unaware of the talk, Rlckard spent the greater part of his time superintending the levee. He could trust no one else to do It, no one unless It were Estrada, who was rhsbing his steel rails through to the front and was needed there. Things were moving under his con stant goading. The extra pay was showing results. He should be at the Heading now, he kept telling himself, but he wu convinced that the Instant he turned his back, the work on the levee wouia stop; ana an tne reasons excellent i oouie emergency wouia oe fpofcoi,! up to werrent the-withdrawal or the liands." Chafe as he" might" at the situation, it was to be guerrilla warfare. Not a fight in the open, he knew how to meet that, but that baf fling resistance, the polite silence pf the office when he entered "Well, they'll be doing my way pretty soon, or my name isn't Rlckard. That's flat." He was fretting to be at work, to start the wheels of the O. P., its vast machinery toward his problem. He knew that that organization, like well drilled militia, was ready for his call The call lagged, not that he did not aeed men, but there was no place ready for them. The camp, that was another rub. There was no camp ! It was not equipped for a 6udden infla tion of men. The lnefflcrency of the projectors of this desert scheme had never seemed so criminal as when he bad surveyed the equipment at the in take. "Get ready first; your tools, your stoves, your Deds." That was tho training of the good executive, of men like Marshall and MacLean. Nothing t be left to chance; to foresee emer gencies, not to be taken by them uo awsre. The reason of Hardin's down fall was his slipshod habits. How could he be a good officer who had never drilled as a soldier? There was the gap at the Intake, Hardin's grotesque folly, widened from one hundred feet to ten times the original cut ; widening every day, with neither equipment not camp adequate to push through a work of half the original magnitude. Cut ting away, moreover, was the Island, Disaster island f it had received apt christening by the engineers, Its bap tismal water the Colorado. The last floods had played with it as though it were a bar of sugar. There was no rock at hand ; no rock on the way, no rock ordered. Could anyone piece to gether such recklessness? Rlckard knew where he would get his rock. Already he had requisitioned the entire output of the Tacna and Patagonia quarries. He had ordered steam shovels to be installed at the quarry back of old Hamlin's. That rock pit would be his first crutch, and the gravel bed that was a find! As he paced the levee west of the towns, he was planning his campaign. Por ter was scouring. Zacatecas 'for men; he himself had offered, ns bait, free transportation ; the O. P. he knew would back him. He was going to throw out a spur-track from the Head ing, touching at the quarry and gravel pit, on to the main road at Yuma. Double track most of the way ; sidings every three miles. Rock must be rushed; the trains must be pushed through. He itched to begin. It never occurred to him that, like Hardin, he might full. "Though It's no pink tea," he told himself, "It's no picnic." At Tucson he knew that the situation was a grave one, but his talk with Brandon, who knew his river as does a good In dian, made the year a significant, eventful one. Matt Hamlin, too, whose shrewd eyes had grown river-wise, he,- too, naa naa tales to ten or tne incity river. Maldonado, the half-breed, had Maldonado Had Confirmed Their Por. tents. confirmed their portents while they sat together under his oleander, famous throughout that section of the coun try. And powerfully had Cor'nel, the Indian who had piloted Estrada's party across the desert, whom Rlckard had met at the Crossing, deeply had he im pressed him. The river grew Into a malevolent, mocking personality; he could see it a dragon of yellow waters, dragging Its slow, sluggish length across the baked desert sands; dccelv- lng men by its inertness; luring the explorer by a mild mood to rise sud- den y with its wild fellow, the Gila, ispnilinp nnflt" and nnntmen tn tholi , swift doom. Rlckard was thinking of the half- breed, Maldonado, as he inspected the her, at last appealing to her sympa new stretch of levee between the thy or amusement, separating her towns. He had heard from others be- from all those boisterous students, her ' sides Estrada of the river knowledge f thls descendant of trapper and j squaw, and had thought It worth while ' ? rl!,e ?e ?t7,le dow? I tne r'ver talkJlth ,T"6 ma" 8 ' ,s,unv ' hls .n f ts ?' eesJ tte I PS thin and facile, deep lines of cru- .yeueu his visitor. The mystery of the place followed him. Why the 'dobe wall which completely surrounded the small, low dwellings? Why the can- tlous admittance, the atmosphere of suspicion? Bard bad seen the wtfe. a frightened shadow of a woman; had seen her flinch when the brute called V i li rVv ""J1"''"' , nbOTlt the haif.breed. He was remem. i icwRni. j tbrtlnkles of old Indian's "f ace as he"3enverei Km- ' self of an oracular grunt "White man? No. Indian? No ! Coyote!" Though he suspected Moldonado) would lie on principle, though it might be that two-thirds of his glib tissue were false, yet a thread of truth co- ; incident with the others, Brandon and ; Hamlin and Cor'nel, might be pulled out of his romantic fabric. 'When the waters of the Gila runt t red look out for trouble!" He doubt- j ed that they ever ran red. He would : ask Cor'nel. He had also spoken of j a cycle, kuown to Indians, of a hunt- j dredth year, when the Dragon grows i restless', this he had declared was a 1 hundredth year. . Following his talk with Maldonado and the accidental happy chance meet ing with Coronel at the Crossing Rlck ard had written his first report to Tod Marshall. Before he had come to the Heading he had expected to advise against the completion of the wooden headgate at the Crossing. Hamllto had given him a new viewpoint. There was a fighting chance. And he wanted such a bad Idea! He picked up W9 hat, and went out (! CHAPTER XIII. jj The Wrong Man. "j Mrs. Hardin heard from every source but the right one that Rlckard had returned. Each time her tele phone rang, it was his voice she ex pected to .hear. She began to rend a meaning Into his silence. She could think of nothing else than the strange coincidence that had brought their lives again closa. Or was it a coinci dence? That Idea sent her thoughts far afield. She was thinking too much of him, for peace of mind, those days of wait ing, but the return of the old lovcf had made a wonderful break In her Sne Spent M0St 0f Her Days at tho Sewing Machine. life. Her eyes were brighter; her smile was less forced. -She spent most of her days at the sewing machine. A lot of lace was whipped onto lingerie frocks of pale colors. She was a dis ciple of an Eastern esthete. "Women," he had said, "should buy lace, not by the yard, but b the mile." As her fingers worked among' the laces and soft mulls, her' mmd' roved down avenues that should have been closed to her, a wife. She would have protested, had anyone accused her of Infidelity in those days, yet day by day, she was straying farther from her hus band's side. She convinced herself that Tom's gibes and ill-humor were getting hnrder to endure. It was Inevitable that tho woman of harem training should relive tho Law rence days. The enmity of those two men, both her lovers,1 was pregnant with romantic suggestion. The drama of desert and river centered now in the story of Gerty Hardin. Rlckard who had never married 1 The deduction, once unveiled, lost all its shyness. And every one saw that he disliked her hus band! She knew now that she had never loved Tom. She had turned to him la , those days of pride when Riekurd'a anger still held him aloof. How many times had she gone over those unrenl hours! Who could have known that his anger would last? That hour in the honeysuckles ; his kisses ! None of Hardin's rougher kisses had swept her memory of her exquisite delight de lirious as was her Joy, there was room for triumph. She had seen herself clear of the noisy boarding house. Her self, Gerty Holmes, the wife of a pro- 'fessor: able to have tl, thlnL-s ha craved, to have them openly ; no longer having to scheme for them, It was through RlcUard.s eyes tnat she hnd seen the 8hortconlin s of the i . .. . . I colege ooaruing nouse. sne nnd ac quired keen consciousness of those quizzical eyes. When they had isolnted dream of bliss had begun, in those days, she had seen Hardin through the eyes of the young Instruc- tor omZet 8ever"1 '" ! PUP"- Her ' disjoin" d ,.n;;er. dWlke. when the Ace of Hardin peered through the leafy screed To nnve wmtea, prayed for that mo:unt. Bnd to have it spoiled like thai! Tl are had been days when she had wept be- cause she had not shown her an;! How could she know that everything would end there; end. just beginning! Her boarding-house training had taught her to be clvit It was sUU vh-kl to her, her onxletv, her treran- lousness with Hardin talking forever or a play he had Just seen; Rickard growing suffer, angrier, refusing to look at those lips still warm with his klsscsJ (Continued next Saturday) I IWWtTy-- m" -