THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1929 ! The |j I RED ■ I | LAMP I II yfr I $ By jj MARY ROBERTS RINEHART Copyright by Geo. H. Doran Company W NU Service Ju!y 9. 1 made an excuse this morning to Annie Cochran, and she slipped me up the kitchen staircase of the other house and so to the attic. The lamp was as 1 had left it and the closet locked, and today I am asking myself whether, with that curious lack of perspective one finds at night, I did not see instead of the lamp far away, the lighted end of a cigar close at hand. Annie’s report on my tenants is sat isfactory on the whole. She doesn’t much care for the secretary, but the old man’s “bark is worse than his bite.” He comes down in the morn ing, or is helped down, to his break fash and she cuts his* food for him— he seems to dislike the boy’s doing it —reads the paper and then goes to work. “To work?” I asked. “What sort of work?” “He's writing a book.” | I WnJBl fiv A Cby McCorarfekSCooHieo?. 1928 K ILLS—Flies—Mosquitoes—Bedbugs—Roaches—Moths—Ants—Flea* Water bugs—Crickets and many other insects Write for edmcmtiomml booklet, McCormick & Co., Boltimort, Md. S Bee Br^nd Insect Powder or Li Quid Spraii a«u—m—anr h— iti t i imummmjmmmur/yr »AiMaBHMnauiMHauaaMMMHiHH If Tonr dealer cannot furnish, we will k M Liquid —soc, 75c and $ 1.25. Gun— 30c •apply direct by Parcel Post Ifc yi| v* Jgf/ Powder —10c, 25c, 50c and SI.OO at regular price* Gun —25c Q After all’s said and done, the pleasure you get in smoking is what counts Camel fs%; ' • WHY CAMELS ~ V ARE THE BETTER CIGARETTE f Camels are made of the choicest tobaccos The Camel blend of Domestic and Turkish tobaccos has never been equaled. Camels are mild and mellow. They do not tire the taste. They leave no cigaretty after-taste. Camels have a delightful fragrance that is © 1929, Reynolds Tobaccp But it appears that he Is writing ti only in the nonliteral sense. He is dictating a book. And it also appears he has chosen this place because of its isolation, and Annie’s orders are that he receives no visitors. But it also appears that young Gor don is perhaps not as courageous as he made out to me when he came to look over the house, and that he has been “hearing things.” “What sort of things?” “He didn’t say. But he asked me this morning if I’d been in the house last night ‘lf you find me here at night, it’ll be because I’m paralyzed and can’t move,’ I said, ‘and if you take my advice, you’ll not go round hunting if you hear anything.’ ” “That must have cheered him con siderably.” “I don’t know about that. He just looked at me and said, ‘What’s the game, anyhow? I’ll bet a dollar you’re in on it.’*’ 1 Edith has sprung a surprise on us all. I have noticed for a day or two that she has been taking a keen in terest in the mail; yet Edith’s mail, with Halliday here, is largely a matter of delicate paper and the large square handwriting of the modern young woman, and has dealt this summer largely with reports on house parties, summer resorts, and various young men who seem recognizable to her un der such cognomens as Chick, Bud and Curley. This morning, however, her mail in cluded a business-like envelope, and she flung the white, rose and mauve heap aside and pounced on it A mo ment later she got up and coming around the table to me, gravely kissed that portion of my head which is gradually emerging, like a shore on an ebb tide, from my hair. “As one literary artist to another,” she said, “I salute you.” And placed before me a check for twenty dollars. She has written a feature article on our sheep-killing and has sold it. THE CHATHAM RECORD, PITTSBORO, N. C. “And It took me only two hours, she says triumphantly. After that she was rather silent, computing, I dare say, how much she can earn, giving four hours a day to it for six days a week. At the rate, then, of ten thousand a year! “Considerably more than 1 receive, Edith,” I said gravely, and 1 saw I had been right by the way she started. ►She set off at once for the boat house. but came back later consider ably crestfallen, and poured out her i troubles to me. “If he had anything he would give it to me,” she wailed. “If I can write and make money—” “You can’t fight the masculine in stinct, my dear, to support its woman; not be kept by her. Besides, have you considered this? You will not al ways find subjects as salable as this one has been.” “Subjects I” she said scornfully. “Why, this place is full of them.” The result of which has been on my part all day an uneasy apprehension as to what she will choose next. Nor am 1 made easier by a question she asked me just before dinner. ! “What became of the Riggs wom an?” she asked. “Do you suppose she’s still around here?” “I imagine not Why?” “I just wondered,” she said, and wandered to that particular corner of the veranda from which she has a distant but apparently satisfactory view of the boat-house. Perhaps Halliday is right. (Note: In his suggestion that Jane and I take the sloop and go down the coast for a few days.) If any sheep are killed in my absence or anything more serious | should happen, it will serve to rout Greenough’s absurd determination to involve me, and provide a complete alibi. At the same time, it will be j rest and recreation for Jane, and it ; may put me in a better frame of mind. Peter Geiss, he thinks, would go with us as captain and bunk under a pup tent, leaving the cabin to Jane and myself. (On board the sloop) July 10. Amazing, the celerity with which youth thinks and acts. Tonight Jane and I —and Peter Geiss —are rolling gently to our anchor in Bass cove, close enough in to be quiet and far enough out to escape the mosquitos. And yet only yesterday the plan was an amorphous thing, floating in the air between Halliday and myself, a mere ghost of an idea, without material substance. The sloop is tidy. Is even fairly seaworthy. Her bottom has today been scrubbed with a broom, and her sails, slightly mildewed, still present from a distance a certain impressive ness. “What," I shout at Peter Geiss, “Is that small sail in front? Forward, I mean.” “How’s that?” “The sail there, what’s its name?’* I say, pointing. “Name?” “I’ll say it’s a shame,” he says. “Canvas od this boat cost the old gen tleman a lot of money.” By and by. however, I learn the jib and the flying jib. We have a small cabin, with four hunks in it, and two of these are now neatly and geometrically made up. ready for the night. In Jane’s small closet there is food of all sorts, neat rows of tins and wax-paper packages. If we are washed out to sea we can. 1 imagine, live indefinitely on deviled ham, sardines and cheese. And I have always my fishing line. Ah! a tug at it! July 11. My worries are dropping from me. Helena Lear is with Edith, and Uo| doubt Halliday is camped on their doorstep, as vigilant as a watch dog, and certainly more dependable than Jock. I can see, too, with better per spective how absurd my anxiety has been as to Greenough. It is his busi ness to believe every man guilty until he has proved himself innocent. And am I not now in the act of proving my Innocence? But my problem remains. And try ing to solve it is like playing solitaire with a card missing. I have, we will say, lost the knave of clubs out of my pack, and without it the game cannot go on. Halliday, I know, believes that there Is a possible connection between the killer and Uncle Horace’s letter. 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