REDHAIR Jk J^BLI?E' SEA' jsiL OSBORN fIR ILLUSTRATIONS BY HttjNMT ygJgß Van was silent for a long time; then, unexpectedly, laughed. "As' as good as any," lie said. "As, as good as any," he said. "Go on your raft, and down, stay, starve. What's the difference? As regards her—" he caught his breath in a broken exhalation —'' she's gone." Thurston gazed at him somberly. "You, you mean you won't raise a hand for her?" ' don't," Van answered wearily, "and neither will you. We can't." Thurston's face was resolute. "Per haps you're right," he acknowledged. "Very likely so. But tor me, I pre fer to die—trying. He would have hurried away but the other detained him. "I'm not your kind of an ass," Van said. "You fool, you know there's no hope. Yet, by this Filly work, you can kid yourself into a sort of relief. Me! . . ." It was as if he looked upon the girl lying dead. But he tore himself from this vision, became defiant. "You' still think I'm yellow. Very well, then. I'll show you. I'll help now; and when you sail, I, too, shall go." Thurston urged the men to work as the first color of the dawn touch ed the eastern sky the last of the stores and gear was lashed into place. Thurston stooped over Van, who had fallen in the sleep of exhaus tion, and waked him. "Say the word," he announced. We're ready." Van roused but slowly; then turn ed upon the stronger man in a futile rage at circumstance. "Damn you," he cried, "I'd-rather stay here and die like a gentleman—clean and dry. But a moment later he sprang up with his old laugh. "After all, it's got to be the fish or the birds. I'm a braver man than you, you op timistic ass, because I know . . . " He did not finish his thought. "Come on. Let's get it over." Twenty minutes later they were at sea. Twenty hours later the catama ran was drifting, dismasted. And Van Buren Rutger's the fault. He had been given the steering oar. But, sunk in dejection, he-had, in a moment of inattention, allowed the too-heavy boom to jibe, carrying away the improvised tackle, and snatch the mast overboard. As a re sult Burke's rotten boat had fetched RE DPATH I "An Alpine j Romance" i NOTABLE MUSICAL j PRODUCTION ! Special Scenic and Lighting Effects 3 | A FEATURE NUMBER OF GRAND CONCERT BY j The Famous Fiechtl Yodlers j mmmmmmmammmmmm One of the Many Big 1928 Redpath Features c __ . ' A A Season Ticket for All tKe Attractions of REDPATH WEEK j 5 BIG DAYS | $2.50 I Redpath Week Here Begins May 29 I RE D P AT H i free of its lashings and the raft float ed a wreck. ! Doomed never to rescue Palmyra •from the villain Burke, John Thurs ton had yet gladly staked life itself 1 upon a thousandth chance. The Pigeon of Noah was flying in j to the unknown. The face of the man Burke was a thing to wonder at. Under the ex altation of a master idea it had grown strange, compelling. His eyes gleamed, his tongue stumbled in its eagerness. For the first time in life he was to voice that which long had hidden in his evil mind. What had' been only a vision of power was now to become an actuality. And so much, ~o very much, depended on kindling that wild spark he felt to glow with in the soul of this girl he had seized for his own—his woman. "Tanna!" he cried. "Tanna! Ever hear tell o' that island, Palm?" He laughed excitedly. "Indeed and I've took good care t'make y' acquaint. "Tis for Tanna we'll be laying a course, you and me," he went on, with exuberant gesture acquired from -» natives. "Tanna, where we'll lord t like born king and queen." "What a people! What a people t'work with!" His fingers opened and closed anticipatorily, with a cat-like zestfulness. "What can't we do t'them Papuan wildmen," he cried, "and what can't we make 'em do for us. That's the ticket, Palm: what we can make 'em do for us!" "Why, kid," he was expostulating a moment later, "this here big idea ain't something that popped into m'head just recent. Gosh, no. Had it in mind for years. But. . . He hesi tated, diffident; a thing so foreign to his usual brazen assurance as to seem histrionic. "But the fast is I was a-waiting for, for you!" She was once more aware how very real his infatuation. "I just had t'have a dame for this stunt," he went on passionate ly. "A real dame, a sure enough queen. And then I meets you. The very first watch I sees y'got the shape for it. And when y'lets out about pirate blood, I knows y'got the heart for it. 'Cause yer talk's on the square; more on the square than you yerself realizes." The girl was increasingly under standing how irrevocably, on the THE FOREST CITY COURIER, TH URSDAY, MAY 10, 1928. Rainbow, he had been misled by her caprice. Listening at first in a pleas ed surprise, he had been eagerly self deceived. Sure that the lawless strain, persisting through environment, had at last roused, he was now convinced she was already in love with the life he typified—though she herself did not as yet perceive the fast —and hat, in the glamour this life cast up on himself, she would in time willing ly come to be his own. "And, girl," Ponape Burke was shouting, "there never, never was no King had such a Queen as you. Yer hair!" He exulted in the won der of it. "That's how y'beat 'em all. For, didn't I tell y' the Tannamen saw red? —grabbed at red calico, smeared their faces bright and gay, rouged up the dead warrior gaudy t'meet his maker, wound their own heads all over with red vine t'cover the wool? "Don't y'understand? That's what I was waiting on. The queen o' my devil's own mission had t' have red hair. And, Palm, them Tanna men'll go plumb crazy with pious pagan joy when they sees yer locks a-lighting up, as the sun hits 'em, like a stove full o' coals busting into flame. Hair, I tell you, same as that o' some o' the big buck gods o' Mel anesia themselves. Yes, I say it, girl —heathen hair! "Why, Palm, I wish t'the Lord y'could see yerself. I wish y'could understand yourself. Y'was plain born for the life. When I've waked y'up, you'll be eager for Tanna; for Tanna, where a man can be a man; where there's never a law but the law o' the cookpot and the sun and the wind—and the will o' you and me." Ponape Burke did a jig step or two across the deck. "Say, Palm, girl," he exclaimed; "say—you and yer heathen hair! Did I, or did I not, mention as how I was going t'make y'a real sure enough queen?" > It was Burke's continuing de light in her every show of angry spirit, his self-restraining sense of competence to bring the comedy to an end any moment he chose, that most intimidated Palmyra. "Wait 'till I've tamed you," he would laugh. "Then we'll get along fine. And you'll sure like Tanna when y'get the taste o' power in yer pret ty mouth." Only once had he laid a hand on : ier. That was when, in a fury, she had flown at him, clawing his face. He hacf held her away, loudly hilar ious. "I'd steal a kiss," he cried, "if 'twasn't for my sore arm. But, no ... I can wait till y'come free, poking out yer lips and begging me t'take a smack. 'Twon't be long." Nor was her situation made easier by Burke's evil sense of humor. Pos sibly to hasten her,surrender, more probably in a mere cruel amusement, it played upon her fears. There was, for instances, the oc casion when Olive, for the first time aboard the Pigeon of Noah, spoke to her. Had it not been for those brown shot eyes, always so stealthily upon her, she would sometimes have thought of this savage as a machine. There was a sort of unhuman precis ion about him. And now, in this wise, the mo ment Burke had gone below, the brown man materialized himself at her side. She was never prepared for the exceeding change from his statuesque silences into the gestic ular animation of his speech. He had opened his mouth, apparently for getting as on the Rainbow that they knew no word in common. Then, real izing, he stopped at a loss. The girl shrank back; fled, in pan ic at the very nearness of him, to ward the companionway. But there she recollected that Burke was at the foot of the ladder, and stood help less. Then the white man came climb ing up. "Y' little vixen," he warn ed in a malicious enjoyment of the situation, "push "me overboard . . He interrupted himself with a burst of laughter. "Gad," he cried, "but I'd hate t' give y'the chance! Push me overboard, and I'm gone. But— Olive's left. Remember that. I'm what stands between you. I ain't a saying as how he'd love a red-headed goddess all his own. Oh, no! But I do see he's got his eye on y'like a wolf following a nice fat little lamb off into the timber." The girf shuddered. Burke or Olive? White savage or brown? A cry of despair rose to her lips but she fought it back. Her hand stole up toward the opening of her dress, lingered, fell again to her side. Since that event—it was now her third day aboard the Lupe-a-Noa — she had been wondering whether Ponape Burke really did stand be tween her and his man. She had not forgotten Burke's saying that Olive, if he knew his power, could snap his master's back across one of those big brown knees like a piece of kindling. And she suspected at times that Olive might know this quite well. The day with the disconcerting suddenness of the Equator, had faded and darkness would soon have been upon them. Burke had* waved a hand toward the cabin with kingly gesture. "The royal chamber awaits, Queenie," he had said. "Hot as hell down there and you'll soon be Protect Your V Investment i in Your Model T Ford / / • THE Ford Motor Company is making a new car, but it is still proud of the Model T. 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Sleep impossible, the night drag ged on. Above decks there had been, as it seemed for hours, only the heavy breathing of slumber. At last, like a trapped animal herself, she had begun a futile prying. And then, without warning in that silence, there came, quite close at hand, a sound. The girl, crouched, tense. Again it came, hidden, menacing. (Continued next week) Read The Courier classified ads. | Man So Nervous Gets i Sore When Spoken To "It actually irritated me to have anyone talk to me, I was so nerv ous. Vinol ended this and 1 I feel won derful now," —Wm. Fahy. Vinol is a compound of iron, phos phates, cod liver peptone, etc. The very FIRST bottle makes you sleep etter and have a BIG appetite. Nerv ous, easily tired people are surprised i-ow QUICK the iron, phosphates, etc., give new life and pep. Vinol » istes delicious.—Hall-Rudisill Drug Co. i I Farmers in the Creedmoor section lof Granville County have sold 7,300 • barrels of cured sweet potatoes this ' spring. 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