THE An Uirasoal Love Story By E. PHILLIPS OPPENHEIM 1 ALL the world love? a lover, and all the world chortles with de light when a charming girl fascinates an avowed woman-hater and trains him to eat quietly out of her hand. In the story which we offer here, the charming heroine does nothing so common place as to fascinate one man ; she fascinates dozens. And in the end she has not one woman-hater eating out of her hand, but three of the crustiest bachelors you ever saw following her around like faithful dogs. "The Hillman" is altogether delightful, and we feel sure our readers will enjoy the serial thoroughly. THE EDITOR. CHAPTER I. Louise was leaning back among the cushions of the motionless car. The moon had not yet risen, but a faint and luminous glow, spreading like a halo about the topmost peak of the ragged line of hills, heralded Its approach. Her eyes swept the hillsides, vainly yet without curiosity, for any sign of a human dwelling. Her chauffeur and her maid stood talking heatedly to gether near the radiator. Louise leaned forward and called to the chauffeur. "Charles," she asked, "what has hap pened? Are we really stranded here?" The man's head emerged from the bonnet. He came round to the side of the car. "I am very sorry, madam," he re ported, "but something has gone wrong with the magneto. I shall have to take It to pieces before I can tell exactly what Is wrong. It will take several hours and It ought to be done by day light. Perhaps I had better go and see whether there isn't a farm somewhere near." "And leave us here alone?" Aline ex claimed Indignantly. Her mistress smiled at her reassur ingly. "What have we to fear, you foolish girl? For myself, I would like better than anything to remain here until the moon comes over the top of that round hill. But listen! There Is no neces sity fr Charles to leave us." They all turned their heads. From some distance behind there came, faintly at first, but more distinctly every moment, the sound of horse's hoofs. Louder and louder came the sound. Louise gave a little cry as a man on horseback Appeared in sight at the crest of the hill. The narrow strip of road seemed suddenly dwarfed, an unreasonable portion of the horizon blotted out. In the half light there was something almost awesome in the unusual size of the horse and of the man who rode it. "It is a world of goblins, this, Aline !" her mistress exclaimed softly. "What Is It that comes?" "It is a human being, Dleu mere! J" the maid replied, with a matter-of-fact little sigh of content. A few moments later horse and rider wer e beside the car. "Has anything happened?" the new comer asked, dismounting and raising his whip to his cap. "I have broken down," Louise said. "Please tell us what you would advise us to do. Is there a village near, or an inn, or even a barn? Or shall we have to spend the night In the car?" "The nearest village," he replied, "is twelve miles away. Fortunately, my own home is close by. I shall be very "You Are Indeed a, pleased I and my honor us. I am a . ., U t 1 ttionf " She rose briskly to her feet and beamed upon him. "You are indeed a good Samaritan I" ehe exclaimed. "A roof is more than we had dared to hope for, although when one looks up at this wonderful sky and breathes this air, one wonders, perhaps, whether a roof, after all, is such a blessing." "It fets very cold toward morning," the yorng man said practically. "Of course," she assented. "Aline, you wH bring ray dressing-bag and fol ic w us This gentleman is kind enough u ofttv us shelter for the nljht Deer f in." C J will t offer me, you really are almost as tall as you appeared !" 6he added, as she stood by his side. "For the first time In my life you make me. feel undersized." He looked down at her, a little more at his ease now by reason of the friend liness of her manner, although he had still the air of one embarked upon an adventure, the outcome of which was to be regarded with some qualms. She was of little more than medium height, and his first impressions of her were that she was thin, and too pale to be good-looking ; that her eyes were large and soft, with eyebrows more clearly defined than Is usual among English women; and that she moved without seeming to walk. "I suppose I am tall," he admitted, as they started off along the road. "One doesn't notice it around here. My name Is John Stranrewey. and our house Is Just behind that clumD of trees there, on the top of the hill. We will do our best to make you comfort able," he added a little doubtfully; "but there are only my brother and myself, and we have no women serv ants in the house." "A roof of any sort will be a luxury," she assured him. "I only hope that we shall not be a trouble to you in any way." . "And your name, please?" he asked. She was a little amazed at his direct ness, but she answered him without hesitation. "My name," she told him, "is Lou ise." He leaned down toward her, a little puzzled. "Louise. But your surname?" She laughed softly. . It occurred to him that nothing like her laugh had ever been heard on that gray-walled stretch of mountain road. "Never mind ! I am traveling incog nito. Who I am, or where I am going "well, what does that matter, to any body? Perhaps I do not know myself. You can imagine, if you like, that we came from the heart of your hills, and that tomorrow they will open again and welcome us back." "I don't think there are any motor cars in fairyland," he objected. "We represent a new edition of fairy lor e," she told him. "Modern romance, you know, includes motor-cars and even French maids." "All the same," he protested, with masculine bluntness, "I really don't see how I can introduce you to my brother as 'Louise from fairyland.' " She evaded the point. "Tell me about your brother. Is he as tall as you, and is he younger or older?" "He is nearly twenty years older," her companion replied. "He Is about my height, but he stoops more than I do, and nis hair Is gray. I am afraid that you may find him a little pecu liar." Her escort paused and swung open a white gate on their left-hand side.. Be fore them was an ascent which seemed to her, in the dim light, to be abso lutely precipitous. "It isn't so bad as it looks," he as sured her, "and I am afraid it's the only way up. The house is at the bend there, barely fifty yards away. Xpu can see a light through the trees." "You must help me, then, please," she begged. He stooped down toward her. She linked her fingers together through his left arm and, leaning a little heavily upon him, began the ascent. He was conscious of some subtle fragrance from her clothes, a perfume strangely different from the odor of the -ghostlike flowers that bordered the' steep path up which they were climbing. Her arms, slight, warm things though they were, and great though his own strength, felt suddenly like a yoke. At every step he seemed to feel their weight more insistent a weight not physical, solely due to this rush of un expected emotions. She looked around her almost In wonder as her companion paused with his hand upon a little iron gate. From behind that Jagged stretch of hills in the distance the moon had now ap peared. Before her was a garden, austere-looking with its prim flower beds, the trees all bent in the same direction, fashioned after one pattern by the winds. Beyond was the house a long, low building, part of It cov ered with some kind of creeper. As? they stepped across the last few yards of lawn, the black, oak door which they were approaching suddenly opened. A tall, elderly man stood look ing inquiringly out. He shaded his eyes with his hands. "Is that you, brother?" he asked doubtfully John Strangewey ushered his com panion into the square, oak-paneled hall, hung with many trophies of the chase, a few oil-paintings, here and there some sporting prints. It was lighted only with a single lamp which stood upon a round, polished table in the center of the white-flagged floor. "This lady's motor-car has broken down, Stephen," John explained, turn ing a little nervously toward his broth- er. "I found them in the road, just at the bottom of the hill. She and her servants will spend the night here. I have explained that there is no village or inn for a good many miles." Louise turned graciously toward the elder man, who was standing grimly apart. Even in those few seconds, her quick sensibilities warned her of the His Bow Was Stiff and Uncordial. hostility which lurked behind the tight ly closed lips and steel-gray eyes. His bow was stiff and uncordial, and he made no movement to offer his hand. "We are not used to welcoming la dies at Peak Hall, madam," he said. "I am afraid that you will find us somewhat unprepared for guests." "I ask for nothing more than a roof," Louise assured him. John threw his hat and whip upon the round table and stood in the center of the stone floor. She caught a glance which flashed between the two men of appeal from the one, of icy resentment from the other. "We can at least a(M to the roof a bed and some supper1 and a welcome," John declared. "Is that not so, Ste phen?" The older man turned deliberately away. It was as if he had not heard his brother's words. "I will go and find Jennings," he said. "He must be told about the serv ants." Louise watched the disappearing fig ure until It was out of sight. Then she looked p into the face of the younger man, who was standing by her side. "I am sorry," she murmured apolo getically. "I am afraid that your brother is .not pleased at this sudden intrusion. Really, we shall give you very little trouble." He answered her with a sudden eager enthusiasm. He seemed far more natural then than at any time since he had ridden up from out of the shad ows to take his place in her life. , "I won't apologize for Stephen," he said. "He is a little crotchety. You must please be kind and not notice. You must let me, If I can, offer you. welcome enough for us both." CHAPTER II. Louise, with a heavy, silver-plated candlestick in her hand, stood upon the uneven floor of the bedroom to which she had been conducted, looking up at the oak-framed family tree which hung above the broad chimney-piece. She examined the coatf arms emblazoned in the corner, and peered curiously at the last neatly printed addition, which indicated Stephen and John Strange wey as the sole survivors of a dimin ishing line. When at last she turned away, she found the name upon her lips. t . "Strangewey !" she murmured. "John Strangewey! It is really curious how that name brings with it a sense of familiarity. It is so unusualtoo. And what an unusual-looking person! Do you think, Aline, that you ever saw anyone so superbly handsome?" The maid's little grimace was ex pressive. "Never, madam," she replied. "And yet to think of ft a gentleman, a per son of intelligence, who lives here al ways, outside the world, with just a terrible old man servant, the only do mestic In the house! Nearly all the cooking Is done at the bailiff's, a quar ter of a mile away." Louise nodded thoughtfully. "It is very strange," she admitted. "I should like to understand it. Per haps," she added, half to herself, "some day I shall." She passed across the room, and on her way paused before an old cheval- glass, before which were suspended two silver candlesticks containing lighted wax candles. She looked stead fastly at her own reflection. A little smile parted her Hps. In the bedroom of this quaint farmhouse she was look ing upon a face and a figure which the illustrated papers and the enterprise of the modern photographer had com bined to make familiar to the world the figure of a girl, it seemed, notwith standing her twenty-seven years. Her soft, white blouse was open at the neck, displaying a beautifully rounded throat. Her eyes dwelt upon the oval face, with Its strong, yet mobile fea tures ; its lips a little full, perhaps, but soft and sensitive; at the masses of brown hair drawn low over her ears. This was herself, then. How would she seem to these two men downstairs, she asked herself the dour, grim mas ter of the house, and her more youthful rescuer, whose coming had somehow touched her fancy? They saw so little J of her sex. They seemed, in a sense, to jbe in league against it. Would they nna out mat tney were entertaining an angel unawares? She thought with a gratified smile of her incognito. It was a real trial of her strength, this ! When she turned away from the mirror the smile still- lingered upon her Hps, a soft light of anticipation was shining in her eyes. John met her at the foot of the stairs. She noticed with some sur prise that he was wearing the dinner jacket and black tie of civilization. "Will you come this way, please?" he begged. "Supper Is quite ready." He held open the door of one of the rooms on the other side of the hall, and she passed into a low dining room, dim ly lit with shaded lamps. The elder brother rose from his chair as they en tered, although his salutation was even grimmer than his first welcome. He was wearing a dress-coat of old fashioned cut, and a black stock, and he remained . standing, without any smile or word of greeting, until she had taken her seat. Behind his chair stood a very ancient manservant in a gray pepper-and-salt suit, with a white tie, whose expression, at the entrance of this unexpected guest, seemed cu riously to reflect the Inhospitable In stincts of his master. . . The table was laid with all manner of cold dishes, supplemented by others upon the sideboard. There were pots of jam and honey, a silver teapot and silver spoons and forks of quaint de sign, strangely cut glass, and a great Dresden bowl filled with flowers. "I am afraid," John remarked, "that you are not used to dining at this hour. My brother and I are old-fashioned in our customs. If we had had a little lqjiger notice " "I never In my life saw anything that looked so delicious as your cold chicken," Louise declared. "May I have some and some ham? I believe that you must farm some land your selves. .Everything" looks as if It were homemade or homegrown." "We are certainly farmers," John ad mitted, with a smile, "and I don't think there is much here that isn't of our own production. The farm buildings are at some distance away from the house. - There is quite a little colony at the back, and the woman who super intends the dairy lives there. In the house we are entirely Independent of your. sex. We manage, somehow or other, with Jennings here and two boys." "You are not both woman-haters, I hope?" . Her younger host flashed a warning glanceat Louise, but it was too late. Stephen had laid down his knife and fork and was leaning in her direction. "Madam," he intervened, "since you have asked the question, I will confess that I have never known any good come to a man of our family from the friendship or service of women. Our family history, if ever you should come to know it, would amply justify my brother and myself for our attitude to ward your sex." "Stephen!" John remonstrated, a slight frown upon his face. "Need you weary our guest with your peculiar views? It Is scarcely polite, to say the least of it." The older man sat, for a moment, grim and silent. '"Perhaps you are right, brother," he admitted. "This lady did not seek our company, but it may interest her to know that she is the firSt woman who has crossed the threshold of Peak Hall . for a matter of six years." Louise looked from one to the other half Incredulously. "Do you really mean it? Is that lit erally true?" she asked John. 'Absolutely," the young man as sured her; "but please remember that you are none the less heartily welcome here. We have few women neighbors, and Intercourse with them seems to have slipped out of our lives. Tell me, how far have you come today, and where did you hope to sleep tonight?" Louise hesitated for a moment. For some reason or other, the question seemed to bring with It some disturb ing thought. "I was motoring from Edinburgh. As regards tonight, I had not made up my mind. I rather hoped to reach Kendal. My journey Is not at all an in teresting matter to talk about," she went on. "Tell me about your life here. It sounds most delightfully pas toral. Do you live here all the year round?" "My brother," John told her, "has not been farther away than the near est market town for nearly twenty years." Her eyes grew round with astonish ment. "But you go to London sometimes?" "I was there eight years ago. Since then I have not been further away than Carlisle or Kendal. I, go into camp near Kendal for three weeks every year territorial training, you know.' "But how do you pass your time? What do you do with yourself?" she asked. , "Farm," he answered. "Farming Is our dally occupation. Then for amuse ment we hunt, shoot and fish. The sea sons pass before we know it." She looked appralsingly at John Strangewey. Notwithstanding his sun tanned cheeks and the splendid vigor of his form, there was nothing in the least agricultural about his manner or his appearance. There was humor as well as intelligence in his clear, gray eyes. She opined that the books which lined one side of the room were at once his property and his hobby. "It is a very healthy life," no 'doubt," she said; "but somehow it seems In comprehensible to think of a man like yourself living always in uch an out of-the-way corner." John's Hps were open to reply, but Stephen once more Intervened. "Life means a different thlng'to each of us, madam," he said sternly. "There are many born with the lust for cities and the crowded places in their hearts, born with the desire to mingle with their fellows, to absorb the convention al vices and virtues, to become one of the multitude. It has been different with us Strangeweys." Jennings, at a sign from his master, removed the tea equipage, evidently produced in honor of their visitor. Three tall-stemmed glasses were placed upon the table, and a decanter of port reverently produced. Louise had fallen for a moment or two into a fit of abstraction. Her eyes were fixed upon the opposite wall, from which, out of their faded frames, a rot? of grim-looking men and women, startlingly like her two hosts, seemed to frown down upon her.. "Is that your father?" she asked, moving her head toward one of the portraits. "My grandfather, John Strangewey," Stephen told her. "Was he one of the wanderers?" "He left Cumberland only twice during his life. He was master of hounds, magistrate, colonel in the yeo manry of that period, and three times refused to stand for parliament." "John Strangewey 1" Louise repeat ed softly to herself. "I was looking at your family tree upstairs," she went on. "It is curious how both my maid and myself were struck with a sense of familiarity about the name, as if we had heard or read something about it quite lately." Her words were almost carelessly spoken, but she was conscious of the somewhat ominous silence which en sued. She glanced up wonderlngly and intercepted a rapid look passing between the two men. More puzzled than ever, she turned toward John as If for an explanation. He had risen somewhat abruptly to his feet, and his hand was upon the back of her chair. "Will it be disagreeable to you if my brothersmokes a pip?" he asked. "I tried to have our little drawing room prepared for you, but the fire has not been lit for so long that the room, I am afraid; is quite impossible." "Do let me stay here with you," she begged, "and I hope that both of you will smoke. I am quite used to It." John wheeled up an easy chair for her.' Stephen, stiff and upright, sat on the other side of the hearth. He took the tobacco jar and pipe that his broth er had brought him, and slowly filled the bowl. "With your permission, then, ma dam," he said, as he struck a match. Louise smiled graciously. Some in stinct prompted her to stifle her own craving for a cigarette and keep her little gold case hidden in her pocket. All the time her eyes were wandering round the room. Suddenly she rose and, moving round the table, stood once more facing the row of gloomy looking portraits. "So that is your grandfather?" she remarked to John, wuo had followed her. "Is your father not here?" He shook his head. "My father's portrait was never painted." "Tell the truth, John," Stephen en Joined, rising in his place and setting down his pipe. "We Strangeweys were hillfolk and farmers, by descent and destiny, for more than four hun dred years. Our place is here upon the land, almost among the clouds, and those of us who have realized it have led the lives God meant us to lead. There have been some of our race who : have been tempted Into the lowland 1 1 and the cities. Not one of theT brought honor upon our name. Tbf.J pictures are not here. They are nor' " j worthy to be here." I Stephen set down the candlesticks, and returned to his place. Louise, witl her hands clasped behind her back glanced toward John, who still stood by her side. "Tell me," she asked him, "have none of your people who went out into the world done well for themselves?" "Scarcely one," he admitted. "Not one," ' Stephen interrupted. "Madam," he went on, turning toward Louise, "lest my welcome to you this evening should have seemed Inhospita ble, let me tell you this: Every Strangewey who has left our county, and trodden the downward path of failure, has done so at the instance of one of your sex. That is why those of us who inherit the family spirit look askance upon all strange women. That is why no woman is ever welcome with in this house." Louise resumed her seat in the easy chair. "I am so sorry," she murmured, looking down at her slipper. "I could" not help breaking down here, could I?" "Nor could my brother fall to offer you the hospitality of this roof," Ste phen admitted. "The Incident was un fortunate but inevitable. It is a mat ter for -regret that we have so little to offer you in the way of entertainment." He rose to his feet. The door had opened. Jennings was standing there with a candlestick upon a massive sil ver salver. Behind him was Aline. "You are doubtless fatigued by yourv journey, madam," Stephen concluded. Louise made a little grimace, but she rose at once to her feet. She under stood quite well that she was being sent to bed, and she shivered a little when she looked at the hour barely ten o'clock. Yet it was all in keeping. From the doorway she looked back In to the room, in which nothing seemed to have been touched for centuries.' She stood upon the threshold to bid her final good-night, fully conscious of the complete anachronism of her presence there. Her smile for Stephen was respectful and full of dignity. As she glanced to ward John, however, something flashed in her eyes and quivered at the corners of her Hps, something which escaped her control, something which made him grip for a moment the back of the chair against which he stood. "Those of Us Who Inherit the Fami Spirit Look Askance Upon All Lit Strange Women." Then, between the old manservant. who insisted upon carrying her candle to her room, and her maid.'who walked behind, she crossed the white stone hail and stepped slosvly up the broad flight of stairs. Louise has quite an Interesting little chat with John before she resumes her journey, and in his mind is awakened some'.hin that hasn't been stirred for very long time. (TO BE CONTINUED.) Her Memory Faulty. She was middle-aged, stylishly gowned and apparently sdhe. And she was looking at the paintings in the Corcoran Gallery of Art through a gold-framed lorgnette, that dangled from a jeweled gold chain. Another woman wa s standing before a canvas, and, in a drslre for informa tion, or, perhaps, for the sake of social interchange, the lady of the lorgnette inquired, affably: "Is that a picture of the death of the Lord?" J "No, madam; it represents the mar tvrdnm rf Rf. RphnsN'nn " . "Ah, I see. I have the poorest mem-v ory. I knew that they killed the Lord, of course, but I disrememberefl just how." Washington Star. 1 I ' T, r