iThe Trey A fcoveEaed Version of the Motloa Produced by tha . By LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE Atiff"Tl Ftlam Hunkt.-'TIm Bra BcL""T!a Black Ay.-. Dlutrated with Photograph froa th Pictart Prodactioa Copyright, IStl. t7 Thia Installment Will Be Shown at The Dixie, Friday, November 0, CHAPTEH XV. T"$$f The Maaksd Volco. For a matter of twelve horns th ;fog, leaden, dank, viscous, ae Inexor able as the dominion of evil, had wrapped the world In an embrace as foul and noxious as the coils of some great, gray, alimy serpent Through lta sluggish folds the pon derous, power-Impelled lifeboat crept at a snail's pace, its stem parting and rolling back from either flank a heavy hearted eea of gray. In the bows a young woman rested 1n a state of semi-exhaustion, her eyes closed, he head pillowed on a cork belt life-preserver, her sodden gar ments modeled closely to the slender body that was ever and again shaken, from head to feet with the strength of a long, shuddering respiration. . Seated on the nearest thwart, Alan Law, chin in hand, watched over the rest of this woman whom he loved with a grimly hopeless solicitude. He was in no happier case than she, so far as physical comfort went he was In worse, since he might not rest. Premonition of misfortune darkened his heart with Its Impenetrable shadow. In the stern Tom Barcus presided morosely over the steering gear; and Law was no more Jealously heedful of his eweetheart than Barcus of the heavy-duty motor that chugged away bo purposefully at its business of driv ing the boat heaven-knew-where. Lacking at once a compass, all no tion whatsoever of the sun's bearings, and any immediate hope of the fog lifting or chance bringing them either to land or to rescue by some larger and less comfortless craft, Barcus steered mainly through force of habit the ealt-water man's Instinctive feel ing that no boat under way should ever in any conceivable circumstance be without a hand at the helm. It had seemed impossible that it could long escape repetition of the disaster, but somehow, it always did escape, and that by a wide margin; never once had it passed near enough to another vessel to see it. And now for more than an hour the silence had been uncannily constant, broken only by the rumble of the mo tor, the muted lisp of water slipping down the side, the euck and gurgie of the wake. Forebodings no less portentous than Law's crawled in the mind of Barcus. It was as likely as not that the life boat was traveling straight out to sea. And gasoline tanks can and oftentimes do become as empty as an official weather prophet's promise of fair weather for a holiday. More than this, Mr. Barcus was a confirmed skeptic in respect of ma Tine motors; on terms of long and intimate experience with the ways of Delivered Into the Hands Enemy. of tho the demon of perversity that tenants them one and all, he knew that the present sweet-tempered performance ef the exhibit under consideration was no earnest wfeytsoever of futtre good behavhy tav when such a com plicated co .aption was concerned there was never any telling ... In view of all of which considera tions he presently threw open the batr tery switch. And the aching void created in the silence by the cessation of that uni form drone was startling enough to rouse even Rose Trine from her state of semi-somnolence. With a look of panic she sat np, thrust damp hair back from her eyes, and nervously Inquired: ; "What's the matterr Nothing." Barcus told her. "I shut Jhe engine off that's alL" Tempera, were short in that hoar, and Alan was annoyed to think that the rest of his beloved should need lessly have been disturbed. , -- -"What di4 yon do that totr he d fid rt.A'Vi ' .1J '81 " . act r2ara ,i O Hearts Picture Drama of the Sam Nazeo Universal rum Co. Loala Joatpli Vance nxandereharply Because I Jolly well wanted to," Barcus returned In a tone as brusque. , "Oh, you did eh?" "Yes, I did eh! 1 happen to be bossing this end of the boat and to hate sense enough to realize there's no sense at all in our wasting fuel the way we are cruising nowhere!' "Well," Law contended, struck by the fairness of this argument, but un- kble to calm bis uneasiness "Just the same, we might " "Ye; of course, we might," Barcus snapped. "We might a whole lot We might, for instance, be heading for Spain, tor all you or I know to the contrary. And id such case, I for one respectfully prefer to have gas enough to take us home agMn if ever tola dn Uessed iog lifts r And for several seconds longer the stillness strangled their spirits in Its ruthless grasp. Then of a sudden a cry shrilled through the fog, so near at band that It seemed scarcely more distant than over the side: "Ahoy! Help! Ahoy there! Help!" Bo Insistent so urgent was Us ao - cent tnat coupiea witn tne surprise, It brought the three as one to their feet all a-tremble, their eyes seeking one another's faces, then shifting un easily away "What can it be?" Rose whispered, aghast, shrinking into AJan's ready arm. "A woman," Barcus put in harshly, "Judith," the girl moaned. Alan shook himself together. "In possible!" he contended. "I saw her go down . . ." "That doesn't prove she didn't come up," Barcue commented acidly. "Ahoy! Motorboat aho-o-oy! Help!" "And that," Barcus pursued sadly, "Just proves she did come up blame the luck! Alive she i3, and kicking; stand clear. An able-bodied pair of lungs was back of that hail, my friend; and you needn't tell me I don't know the dulcet accents of that angelic con tralto!" Without heeding him, Alan cupped bands to mouth and sent an answer ing cry ringing through the murk: "Ahoy! Where are you? Where away?" "Here on the reef half-drowned perishing with chill" "How does my voice bear?" Alan called back. "What the dickens do you care Barcue interpolated suspiciuosly. "To port," the response rang through the fog. "Starboard your helm and come in slowly!" "Right-o! Half a minute!" Alan re plied reassuringly. "Like hell!" Mr. Barcus muttered in his throat as he jumped down into the engine pit and bent over the fly-wheel. Leaping on the forward thwart and balancing himself perilously near the gunwale, Alan strained his vision vainly against the opacity of the fog. "Can't make out anything," he grumbled, looking back. "Start her tip but slow's the word and Nvare reefl- "Nothing doing," Barcus retorted curtly. "The motto is now 'Full speed astern!' as you must know." "O come! We can't leave a woman out there in a fix like that!" "Can't we? You watch!" Barcus grunted malevolently, rocking the heavy flywheel with all his might; for the motor bad turned suddenly stub born. "Alan!" Rose pleaded, laying a hand upon his sleeve. "Think what It means! I know it sounds heartless of me and it's my own sister. But you know how mad she is wild with ha tred and Jealousy. If you take her into this boat, it's your life or hers!" "If we leave her out there," Alan retorted, shaking his arm impatiently free, "it's her life on our heads!" At this juncture the motor took charge of the argument, ending it in summary fashion. With a smart ex plosion in the cylinder, it started up unexpectedly, at one and the same time almost dislocating the arm of Mr. Barcus and precipitating Alan overboard. It was not given him to know what was happening until he found himself in the water; he struggled to the sur face Just in time to see the bows of the lifeboat back away and vanish into the mist. CHAPTER XVI. v The Island. Not more than twenty seconds could have elapsed before Barcus recovered from the shock of the motor's treach ery sufficiently to reverse the wheel, throttle down the carburetor and Jump out of the engine-pit But in that small space of time the lifeboat and Alan Law bad parted com pany as definitely as though one of them had been levitated bodily to the tar side of the earth. It could not have been more than a minute after the accident before Barcus was guiding the boat over what going on his sense of location I and judgment of distance, he could hare awora waa iu precis a pot where Alan had di,nn...rrrf hni.ttk.""' mb-i upon me aanca. n out discovering a alga of him. And for the next twenty minutes he divided bis attention between at tempts to soothe and reassure the half-distracted girl and efforts to educe a reply from Alan by stentorian hailing with as little success in the one as in the other. "Alan!" he shrieked at the top of his lungs. "Alan! Give a hail to tell us you're safe!" mere wbb a nine pauso; he was racking his brains for some more mov' ing mode of appeal when the answer came In another voice In the voice Of Judith Trine, clear, musical, effer vescent with sardonic huraor: oe oi peace, nine one bleat no more! Mr. Law is with us and safe oh, quite, quite safe!" in flumb consternation Barcus sougnt me countenance of Rose. Her eyes, meeting his, were blank with despair. He shook his head helplessly and let his hands dangle idly between nia knees. Hlta no way oa her. the lifeboat drlrtea wiit u current of unknown set and strength. What cat we do!" Rose implored. we must do oomcthlng. We can't leave nlm . . . Oh, when I think of him there, In her hands, I could go maa i ' u on l nsjT," Barcus protested: K... .... I .1- . . uui uij i.uuua sre ilea, my wits are is helpless as my eyes are blind. There's nothing to go by except the Dare possibility that the rf nh spoae or may be Norton's. It doesnt seem possible, but we may have made tnat much southing. In that case Vfe're about three miles off the main land, somewhere in the neighborhood of Katama island, a little, rocky, deso- l late bump of earth. Inhabited mainly I oy nsnermen The girl wrung her hands. "But how could Judith get there and with her men and ammunition?" Dont ask me. Going on my expe rience with the lady. I'd be willing to bet that she was picked up by the steamer that ran ue down, and pro ceeded to make a prize of it or try to. One thing's certain she must have found or stolen a boat from somebody; they couldn't have made Norton's reef by swimming it's fcw far. That's the answer; they were picked up, stole a boat, and piled it up on the reef." "And there's no hope !" "Only of the fog relenting. If wo could make the mainland and get help . . His accents died away into a discon solate silence that was unbroken for upwards of an hour. So slowly the current bore the life boat toward the beach and so still the tide that Barcus never appreciated they were within touch of any land until the bows grounded with a slight jar and a grating sound. With a cry of incredulity he leaped to his feet "Land, by all that lucky!" and stooping, lent a hand to ihe girl, aiding her to rise. Hardly had Rose had time to cor Drehend what had happened, when Barcus was over the 6ide and wres tling with tho bows, dragging the boat farther upon the shoals. She was, however, more than one man could manage; ana v.nen ner stem had bitten a little more deeply Into the sands, Barcus gave over the attempt and, lifting Rose down, set her on dry land, then climbed back Into the vessel, rummaged out her anchor and cable, and carried them ashore. planting the former well up toward the foot of the cliff. And as he rose from this last labor he was half blinded by the glare of the westering sun as it broke through the fog. In less than five minutes the miracu lous commonplace was an aeom- plished fact; the wind had rolled the fog back like a scroll and sent it spin ning far out to sea, while the shore on which the two had landed was delueed with sunlight, bright and beautifully warm. He showed a thoughtful and consid erate countenance to the girl. "You're about all in?" She nodded confirmation of this, which was no more than simple truth. "Where are we?" ehe added. He made her party to his own per plexity. "You're not able to travel," he pur sued. "Do you mind being left alone while I take a turn up the beach and have a look round? We can t be far from some sort of civilization; even if it's an island there are no desert isles along this coast. I'll find some thing soon enough, no fear." By tacit consent both avoided men tion of Alan, but each knew what thought was uppermost in the other's mind. "There's a niche among the rocks up here," Barcus indicated, "almost a cave. You II be warm ana dry enougn, and secure from observation overhead. Maybe you can even snatch a few winks of sleep. . . ." She negatived that suggestion with a weary smile; no sleep for her until sheer exhaustion overpowered her, or she knew of Alan's fate. And so, reiterating his promise to be gone no longer than absolutely might be needful, he left her there. CHAPTER XVII. This Mortal Tide. She was very certain she would nsver sleep before her anxiety was assuaged by word of Alan's fate; but she reckoned without her host of trials thai had bred in her a fatlgttl anodynocs even to her mental an guish. For a. time after E arc us had Ian , ,, ... , tat mouth of the shelter he bad ch iseled for her, staring hungrily out on the shimmering sea that, now wnolly divested of its shroud, smiled up to tne heavens, whose sapphire face it mirrored, as fair and sweet of seem ing as though It had never veiled a heartless tragedy. Blowly It darkened as the sapphire above grew darker, blending Insen sibly into rare ultramarine with the slow decline of the sun, by whose al titude above tho horizon the day had not more than ninety minutes to run. And she thought drowsily that If that sun sank without her learning that her lover lived, it would not rise again upon a world tenanted by Rose Trine, It was not true, she told herself, that people never die of broken hearts. She knew that, were he taken from her, she could no longer live. . . , And sleep overwhelmed her sud' denly, like a great dark cloud . . , But its dominion over her faculties was not of long duration. Slowly, heavily, mutinously, she was rescued from its nirvana came to her senses with an effect of one who emerges from some vast place of blackness and terror, to find Barcus kneeling over and gingerly but persistently shaking her by the shoulder. And then she sat up with a cry of mystified compassion; for in the brief time that he had been absent it bad not been more than an hour Mr. Bais I CU8 bad most unquestionably been se- verely used ' He had acquired a long eat over one eye, but shallow, upon which blood had dried, together with a bruised and swollen cheek that was badly scratched to boot. And what simple articles of clothing remained to him, after his strenuous experiences of the last forty-eight hours, had been re duced to even greater simplicity; his shirt, for example, now lacked a sleeve that had been altogether torn away at the shoulder. "No!" he told her, as soon as he saw her wits were awake once more "don't waste time pitying me. I'm all right and so is Alan! That's the main thing for you to understand; he's still alive and sound " 'But where is he? Take me to him!" she demanded, rising with a movement of such grace and vigor that it seemed hard to believe she had ever known an instant's weariness. "That's the rub," Barcus confessed, squatting on the sands and knuckling his hair. "I dassent take you to him. Judith might object. Besides, you can see for yourself it Isn't safe to mingle with the inhabitants of this tight little island and you can't get to where Alan is without mingling con siderably. Sit down, and I'll tell you all about it, and we'll try to figure out what's best to be done. Maybe we can manage a rescue under cover of night" And when the girl had settled her self beside him he launched into a detailed report. It's Katama island, all rlfiht," he announced, "but a change has come over the place since I visited it some years ago. Then it was a community of simple-hearted villagers and fisher men; now, unless all signs fail, It s a den of smugglers. I noticed a num ber of Chinese about; and that, taken in connection with the fact that, when I ventured to Introduce myself to tho village ginmill and aek a few Inno cent questions, the entire population, to a child, landed on me like a thou sand brick the two circumstances made me think we'd stumbled on a settlement of earnest vorkers at the gentle art of helping poor Chinamen evade the exclusion laws." With a wry smile, he pursued: "As for me, I landed out back of the joint. on the nape of my neck, and took the count, surrounded by a lot of unsym pathetic boxes and barrels that had seen better days. And when I came to and started to crawl unostentatiously away, I was Just in time to witness the landing of your amiable sister, that gang of cutthroats she keeps on the payroll, and Alan in company with as choice a crew of scoundrels as you'd care to see. I gathered from a few words that leaked out of the back door of the barroom, that it was as I had thought Judith had stolen a boat from the ship that picked her up, and rammed it on Norton's reef; and after she gathered Alan In the schooner of these smugglers happened along, and she hailed it and struck a bargain with the captain and signed co-partnership. articles, or something like that. Any-, way, her lot and the islanders were, soon as thick as thieves, and tanking up so sociably that I actually got a chance to whisper a word to Alan and tell him you were all right, and that he'd find us both down here on the beach, if luck served him with an es-i cape. Tnat wae all I got a chance to say, for Judith marched up Just then and yanked him off to his cell. I meant to say, he's locked up now in a little stone hut on the edge of the cliff, with the door guarded and the window over looking a sheer drop of thirty feet or so to the beach. When I'd seen that much I calculated It was about time for me to get quit of that neighbor hood, before Mam'selle Judith nicked me with the evil eye." You don't think she saw you?" the girl cried. "I dont think so," Barcus allowed gravely; and then, lifting his gaze, he added as he rose in a bound: "I Just know she did that's all. In another Instant he was battling might and main with three willing ruf fians, who had come suddenly into view round a shoulder of rock; but his efforts were shortlived, foredoomed to failure. He was weakened with suffer ing and fatigue and the three were trezh and had the courage at least of their numbers. He was overborne in a twinkling, and had his face ground brutally into the aand whilo his hands were made last with stout rope behind bis back. And when he rose, it was to find, as ne bad anticipated, that hose's resistance had been as futile as his own; she, too, was captive, ber hands bound like bis, the huge and un clean paw of one of Judith's crew cru elly clamped upon her shoulders. They were granted time to exchange no more than oue despairing glance when a curt laugh fairly chilled the Mood in Mr. Barcus, and he swung sharply between his two guards to confront Judith Trine. The woman he saw at first glance. was in one of her most dangerous moods if, Barcus mentally qualified. there was a pin to choose between ber moods. But now, beyond dispute, she exhibited a countenance new in his experience with ber, and one well cal culated to appall. Her face was bloodless, even ae her Hps were white with the curb she put upon her passion. Her eyes were lurid with the glare of rage approaching mania. Her hands trembled, her lips quivered, all her actions were abrupt with nervousness. Ho was by no means poor-spirited, but be shrank openly from the look she gave him, and wae relieved when she, with a sneer, passed him by and planted herself squarely before ber sister. "Well?" she demanded brusquely. "How much longer do you think I'm going to tolerate your interference you poor little fool! How many more lessons will you require before realis ing that I mean to have my way, and that you'll cross me only to suffer for it?" The courage of the other girl won the unstinted admiration of Mr. Bar cus. Far from cringing, she seemed to find fresh heart in her sister's chal lenge. Her head was high, her glance level with illimitable contempt as she replied: "So you've tried again?" she in quired obliquely, with a tone of pity. "You've offered him your love yet an other time, have you?" "Silence!" Judith cried in fury. "Only to larn once more that he would rather death than you?" Rose persisted, unflinching. "And so you come to take your spite out on me, do you? You pitiful thing! Do you think I mind knowing as I do now that he could never hold you In any thing but compassion and contempt?' For an Instant there was silence; by the scorn of her sister the heat of Judith's fury had been transformed into a cold and malignant rage. She controlled herself and her voice mar- velously. "You will see," ehe said In even and frigid accents. And the light of her mania leaped and leaped again in her eyes like a living flame. "I have pre pared a way to make you understand what opposition to me mesns . . She waved a hand toward the nearer point of rocks. "Take them along she commanded. The understanding between her and her men was apparently complete; for these last, without hesitation or fur ther instructions, marched P.ose and Barcus down to the end of the spit and on, Into the water. It was nearly knee-deep before Bar cus was halted with a savase 1erk backed up to a rock, forced despite his frenzied resistance to sit down in tha water, and swiftly, with half a dozen Already the Waters Had Risen Over an Inch. deft hitches of rope and a stanch knot, made fast in that position sub merged to his chest. This accomplished, the men turned attention to Rose, lashing her in simi lar wise at Barcus' side. ! Standing just above the water-line, 1 with every sign of complete calm and sanity other than that ominous flicker ing In her eyes, Judith superintended the business till its conclusion, then waved the men away, i Quietly, like well-trained servants, they turned their backs and marched I off. And again, after a brief wait the woman laughed her short and mirth less laugh. "The tide will he high." she said, "precisely at sunset You may time your lives by that When the sun dips Into the sea, then will your lives go down with it" ! Phe turned on her heel and strode swiftly away, with not so much as a backward glance, overtook her men, and pasfid quickly from sight around Cm farther point cf rocks. or some Urns Barcus struggled TV PAGE THREE vainly with his bonds.. As for Rose, she wasted no strength in struggling- perhaps had none to waste. When he looked her way he saw her exquisite profile unmarred by any line of fear or doubt, sharply relieved against tha darkness of the riutng flood. Her level gaze without a tremor traversed tho shining flood to Its far horizon. He noted that already the waters had risen more than an inch. Humbled even In his terror by that radiant calm that dwelt upon her, he ventured diffidently: "Rose Mies Trlno " She turned her head and found the heart to smile. "Roee," she corrected gently. "I'm sorry," he said which was not at all what he bad meant to say, "I've done my best I suppose it's wrong to give up but they've made it too much for me, this time." "I know," she said gently. "You" he stammered "you're not afraid?" "There is nothing to fear," she said, "but death. . . ." "Then," he said more bravely, after a time the water now was near his chin "good-by good luck!" "Not yet dear friend," she returned. not yet." But the sun wae perilously close upon the rim of the world. But a little time, and it would be night He closed his eyes to shut out the vision of its slow, implacable descent The water was now almost level with his lips; it seemed strange that They Fought tike Madmen. his throat could be so dry, sa parched ... He opened his eyes, shuddering. , "It's good-by now," he faltered. "Not yet!" her voice rang beside him, vibrant. "Look up there along; the cliff!" He lifted his gaze . . . Two men were running along tho cliff and the man In the lead was Alan. But his lead was very scant and the man who pursued was one of Judith's, and stuck to the trail like a blocd-hound fresh from the leash. And now the water was at his lips Barcus could no more speak without strangling. Of a sudden ho groaned in his heart? though there was no passable way down the cliff, still the sight of his friend alive and unharmed had brought with It a thrill of hope; now that hope died as he saw Alan stumble and go to his knees. Before he could rise the other was upon him,' with the fury of a wolf seek ing the throat of a stag. For an instant they fought like mad men; then, in a trice, the eky line of the cliff was empty; one or the other had tripped and fallen over the) brink, and falling had retained hold of his enemy and carried him down as well. By no chance, Barcus told himself, could either escape uninjured. Yet, to his amazement he saw one man break from the other's embrace and rise. And he who lay still, a crumpled, inhuman heap upon the sands, was Judith's man. With a violent effort Barcus lifted his mouth above water and shrieked: "Alan! Alan! Help! Here at the end of the point In the water help!" A precious minute was lost 'before Alan discovered their two heads, so barely above that swiftly rising flood. Then he ran toward them as he had never run before, and as he cams whipped out a jack-knife and freed its blade. Even bo since it was, of course. Rose whom Alan freed the first Barcus was half-drowned before Alan helped him in turn up to the beach. And as this happened the last blood- red rim of the sun was washed under by the waves. Two minutes later the lifeboat waa afloat, and Mr. Barcus, already recov ered, was laboring with the flywheel of the motor, stimulated to supreme exertion by the sight of a party, led by Judith, racing madly down the beach. But it was not until well out from shore and on the way to the safety promised by the mainland now read ily discernible on the horizon that any one of them found time for speech. Then Mr. Barcus straightened np from bis assiduous attentions to tha motor, and observed: "You bear a charmed life, my ad venturous friend. I want to tell yon that when I saw you go over that cliff I made np my mind your usefulness. would be at least permanently Im paired. As It Is, I dont mind telling ycu trat if ever I get oat of this affair alive, I'm going to have a try at your Ufo myself. Just once, for luck!" ' ,i i i i i iLi. 1 ,1 '