The Trey CP Hearts A NcW Vtuon t fk- Modo. Piet D. of tke Sum By LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE 4a4W mf'TU Fm Hv.Tlm Bm. " TU Bk ft." I eoBrrtgfat.U14.hr CHAPTER V. j The Hunted Man. That day was hot and windiest wlfn Vn unclouded iky day of brass and ! Long before any tound audible to fenman ears disturbed tbe noonday ftush, a bobcat tunning on a log In a felade to which no trail led, pricked vsrs, rota, glanced oyer thoulder with k marl and of a sudden was no more there. Perhaps two minutes later a succea lon of remote crashing began to bo Hieard, a cumulative volume of sounds tnade by some heavy body forcing by onaln strength through the underbrush, pnd ceased only when a man broke Into the clearing, pulled up, stood for tin Instant swaying, then reeled to a Iseat on the log, pillowing bis head on (arms folded across hit knees and shud dering uncontrollably In all his limbs, i He was a young man who ha I been and would again be very personable. Just now he wore the look of on founded by furies. His face was crim son with congested blood and streaked with sweat and grime; bluish veins throbbed In high relief upon his tem ples; his lips were cracked and swol len, his eyes haggard, hit bands torn lend bleeding. His thirt and trousert ;and "cruisers" were wreckt, the latter jscorched, charred, and broken In a 'dozen places. Woods equipment he 4P1.1. . .til : 1 m&iriiixy It Was a Rose. j ti cone beyond a hunting knife belt ed at the email of his back. All else bad been either consumed In the (or-1 eft fire or stolen by his Indian guide . 'who had subsequently died while at tempting to murder his employer. ' Since that event, the man had sur( Icceded In losing himself completely.; jit seeking shelter from the thunder-j norm, lie naa iosi toucn wun nis amy known and none too clearly located landmarks. Then, after a night passed without a fire In the lee of a ragged 'bluff, he had waked to discover the ,sun rising In the west and the rest of the universe sympathetically upside-j 'town; and aimlessly ever since he had stumbled and blundered In the maze, icf those grimly reticent fastnesses, for t I the last few hours haunted by a fearj Icf falling reason possessed by a no- ;tlon that he was dogged by furtive enemies and within the last hour the puppet of blind, witless panic. But even as be Btrove to calm him-, self and rest, the feeling that some thing was peering at him from behind a mask or undergrowta grew intoler ably acute. At length he Jumped up, glared wild ly at the spot where that something' no longer was, flung himself fran tically through the brush in pursuit of , It, and found nothing. I I With a great effort he pulled him self together, clamped his teeth upon ' the promise not again to give way to J hallucinations, and turned back to the Clearing. j There, upon the log on which be bad rested, he found but refused to (believe he saw a playing card, a tjey of hearts, face up In the sun lare. 1 With a gesture of horror, Alan Law . 4 fled the place. j j While the sounds of his flight were' 'till loud, la grinning half bneed guide ' tole like a shadow to the log,, laughed J derisively after the fugitive, picked up and pocketed the card, and set out In tireless, cat-footed pursuit An hour later, topping a ridge of, rising ground, Alan caught from the! hollow on Us farther side the music ot clashing waters. Tortured by thirst, he began at once to descend la reck ; less baste. ' What was a first a gentle siat cov ered with weist-deep brash and car Jpeted with leaf-mold,' grew, swiftly i more deollvKooe. amosy hillside, as steep as a roof,, bare of underbrush, ,and sparely sown with small cedars through whose ranks cool blue water twinkled far tekiw. I The shelving moss-beds afforded 1 treacherous tooting; Alan was glad now and then of the support of a ce dar, but these grew ever smaller, and more widely seated and, were not al wave; .miFatii Ms hsgL Hs. LoelsJoaeph Vase came abruptly and at headlong pace within sight of the eaves of a cliff and precisely then the hillside seemed to slip from under him. His heels flourished in the air, his back thumped a bed of pebbles thinly overgrown with moss. Tbe stones gave, the moss-skin broke, he began to slide grasped at random a youngish cedar which stayed him Imperceptibly, coming away with all its puny roots caught at another, co more substan tialand amid a shower of loose stone shot ort over the edge and down a drop of more than thirty feet Hs was instantaneously aware ol the sun. a molten ball wheeling mad ly in the cup of the turquoise sky. Then dark waters closed over him. He came up struggling and gasping, and struck out tor something dark that rode the waters near at band something vaguely resembling a canoe. But his strength was largely spent his breath had been driven out Of him by the force of the fall, and he had swallowed much water while the field of his consciousness v. as stricken with confusion. Within a stroke of an outstretched paddle, he flung up a hand and went down again. Instantly one occupant of the canoe, a young and very beautiful wo man In a man's hunting clothes, spoke a sharp word of command and, as her guide steadied the vessel with bis paddle, rose In her place so surely that Bhc scarcely disturbed the nice balance of the little craft, and curved her lithe body over the bow, head foremost into the pool. Mr. Law had, in point of fact en dured mora than he knew; more than even a weathered woodsman could have borne without suffering. Forty eight hours of such heavy woods walking as ho had put In to escape the forest firo, voulJ have served to prostrate ali::ost any man: add to this (Ignoring a dczon other mental, nerv ous and physical strains) mroly tuo fact that he had beeu half-drowned. He t'xptrW nctd a little f- vi r, a little delirium, thuu biauk slumbers ot ex- l.uUblioU. Ho uwoUo i;i ilark cf niht, wholly unaware tliat thirty-six hours had passed sinco his fall. This last, how evtr, and t vents that had gono before, Lo recalled vith tolerable cleanups allowing for the sluggishness of a drowsy nilnd. Other memories, more vague, of gentle ministering hands, of a face by turns an angel's, a flower's, a fiend's, and a dear woman's, trou bled him even less materially. He was already sane enough to allow he had probably been a bit out of hit head, and since It seemed he bad been saved and cared for, he found no rea son to quarrel with present circum stances. Still, ho would have been grateful for some explanation of certain phe nomena which still haunted him euch aa a faint elusive scent of roses with a vague but Importunate sense ot a woman's presence in that darkened room things manifestly absurd . . . With some difficulty, from a dry throat, he spoke, or rather whis pered: "Water!" In response he heard someone move over a creaking floor. A sulphur match spluttered Infamously. A can dle caught fire, silhouetting Illusion, ot course! the figure ot a woman In hunting shirt and skirt. Water splashed noisily. Alan became awar. of someone who Btood at his side, ona hand offering a glass to his lips, the other gently raising his bead that he might drink with ease. Draining the glass, ho breathed his thanks and sank back, retaining bit grasp on the wrist of that unreal hand. It suffered blm without re sistance. The hallucination even went so far as to say, In a woman's soft accents: "You are better, Alan!" He sighed Incredulously: "Rose!" The voice responded "Yes!" Then the perfume of roses grew still more strong, seeming to fan his cheek like a woman's warm breath. And a mir acle came to pass; for Mr. Law, who realized poignantly that all this was sheer, downright nonsense, distinct ly felt Ilps'llke velvet caress his fore head. He closed his eyes, tightened his grasp on that hand of phantasy, and muttered rather Inarticulately. The voice asked "What la it dparr 'He responded: "Delirium . . . But I like it . . . Let me raVel" Then again he slept CHAPTER VU Disclosures. la a tittle corner office, soberjy fur nished, on the topmost floor of one of lower Manhattan's loftiest office-towers, a Utile mouse-brown man sat over a big mahogany desk; a littje man of big affairs, sole steward of one ot i . 1 , . 1 j 1. 1 a , .. America uwh luriutuauiv lunuuea. Precisely at eleven minutes past coon (or at the identical instant chos en by Alan Law to catapult over tho edge of a cliff In northern Maine) the muted signal of, the little man's desk telephone clicked and.' eagerly lifting receiver to car, he sodded with a smile and said In accents ot some relief: "Ask her to come In at once, please." Jumping up. he placed a chair in in timate juxtaposition with his own; and the door opened, and a young woman entered. The mouse-brown man bowed. "Miss Rose Trine?" he murmured with a great deal ot deference. The young woman returned his bow with a show of perplexity: "Mr. Dig hyr "You are kind to come in response to my ah unconventional Invita tion," said the little man. "Won't you ah sit down?" She said. "Thank you." gravely, and took the chair he indicated. And Mr. Dlgby. with an admiration he made no effort to conceal, examined the fair face turned so candidly to him. "It is Quite comprehensible," he said diffidently "if you will permit me to say so now that one sees you. Miss Trine, it is quite comprehensible why my employer ah feels toward you as he does." Tbe girl flushed. "Mr. Law haa told you?" "I have th honor to be his nearest friend, this side the water, aa well as his man of business." He paused with an embarrassed ges ture. "So I have ventured to request this ah surreptitious appointment In order to ah take the further liber ty of asking whether you have recent ly sent Alan a message?" Her look of surprise was answer enough, but she confirmed it with vig orous denial: "I have not communi cated with Mr. Law In more than a year!" "Precisely as I thought" Mr. Dlgby nodded. "None the less, Mr. Law not long since received what purported to be a mesfngo from you; In fact a rose." And as Miss Trine sat for ward with a start of dismay, he aded: "I have the information over Mr. Law's signature a letter received ten days ago from Quebec." "Alan In America!" the girl cried In undisguised distress. "He came In response to ah the message of the rose." "But I did not send it!" "I felt sure of that, because," said Mr. Digby, watching her narrowly "because of something that accompa nied the rose, a symbol of another sig nificance altogether a playing card, a trey of hearts." Her eyes were blank. lie pursued with openly sincere reluctance: "I must tell you, I Fee-, that a trey of hearts invariably forrsignaled an at tempt by your father on tho life of Alan's father." With a stricken cry the girl crouched back In the elrir and covered hor fi'.co with 1:l r Laud. "That Is why I pent for you." Vr. IViby l ursu-'d hastily, ns if In hopo of getting quickly over a most unhap py business. "Alan's letter, written and posted on tho steamer, reached me within twenty-four hours of his arrival In Quebec, and detailed bis scheme to enter the I'nited States secretly as he puts It, 'by tho back door,' by way of northern Maine and promised ad vice by telegraph as soon as he reached Moosehead Lake. Ho should have wired me ere this, I am told by those who know the country he was to cross. Frankly, I am anxious about the boy!" "And I!" the girl exclaimed pitifully. "To think that ho should be brought Into such peril through me!" "You can tell me nothing?" "Nothing as yet. I did not dream of this much less that the message of tbe rose was known to any but Alan and myself. I cannot understand!" "Then I may tell you this much more, that your father maintains a very efficient corps of secret agents." "You think he spied upon me?" the girl flamed with Indignation. "I know ho did." Mr. Dlgby per mitted himself a quiet smile. "It bas seemed rrtf business, In the service of my employer, to employ agents of my own. There Is no doubt that your father sent you to Europe, for the sole purpose of having you meet Alan." "Oh!" she protested. "Hut what earthly motive ?" "That Alan might be won back to America through you and so " There was no need to finish out bis sentence. The girl was silent, pale end staring with wide eyes, visibly mustering her wits to cope with this emergency. "I may depend on you," Mr. Dlgby suggested, "to advise me If you find out anything?" "For even more." The girl rose and extended a hand whose grasp was firm (Continued on page eight.) l-O-DO-LAX BANISHES 1'IMTLES Bad Blood, Timples, Headaches, BUousness, Torpid Liver, Constipa tion, etc., come Indigestion. 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