Mary Roberts Rinehart — —— - = BE (Copyright, by McClure Publications, Inc.) (Continued from last week.) SYNOPSIS. CHAPTER I—At her home in the Street, Bidney Page agrees to marry Joe Drums mond ‘“‘after years and years’ and talks to K. Le Moyne, the new roomer, CHAPTER I11-Sidney’s aunt Harriet who has been dressmaking with Sidney’{ mother, launches an independent modiste’s arlor. Sidney gets Dr. Ed Wilson’s in- uence with his brother, Doctor Max, the successful young surgeon, to place her ir the hospital as a probationer nurse. CHAPTER III-K. becomes acquaintec in the Street. Sidney asks him to sta) on as a roomer and explains her plans foi Snancing her home while she is in the school. CHAPTER IV—Doctor Max gets Sidney into the hospital school. CHAPTER V—Sidney and K. spend ar afternoon in the country. Sidney falls into the river. CHAPTER VI—-Max asks Carlotta Har. rison, a probationer, to take a motor ride with him. Joe finds Sidney and K. af the country hotel, where Sidney is drying her clothes, and is insanely jeaious. CHAPTER VII—While Sidney and K are dining on the terrace, Max and Car- lotta appear. K. does not see them, but for some reason seeing him disturbs Car- lotta strangely. CHAPTER VIII—Joe reproaches Sidney She confides to K. that Joe knows now she will not marry him. CHAPTER IX—Sidney goes to training school and at home relies more and more on K. Max meets K, and recognizes him as Edwardes, a brilliant young surgeon who has been thought lost on the Titanic K.’s losing cases lost him faith in him- self and he quit and hid from the world CHAPTER X—Carlotta fears. Sidney Christine Lorenz and Palmer Howe are married. The hard facts of her new life puzzl. Sidney. CHAPTER XI—Max continued his fiir. tation with Carlotta, who beeomes jealous of Sidney. K. coaches Max in his work, but remains a clerk in the gas office. CHAPTER XII—Palmer and Christine move into rooms in Sidney’s home. Sid. ney’'s mother dies. Palmer neglects Chris. tine. CHAPTER XIII—On a joy ride witk Grace, a young girl, Palmer is hurt anc Johnny, the chauffeur, seriously injured CHAPTER XI1V—Sidney nurses Johnny. Carlotta changes the medicine that Sid: ney is to give him. CHAPTER XV—Johnny nearly dies. K. who has brought Johnny’s mother to him, saves the boy and comforts Sidney. . _ Her world was in pieces about her, and she felt alone in a wide and empty place. And, because her nerves were drawn taut until they were ready to snap, Sidney turned on him shrew- ishly. “I think you are all afraid I will eome back to stay. Nobody real wants me anywhere—in all the world! Not at the hospital, not here, not any place. I am no use.” “When you say that nobody wants you,” said K., not very steadily, “I—I think you are making a mistake.” She scanned his face closely, and, reading there something she did not gndersiand, she colored suddenly. “I believe you mean Joe Drum- mond.” “No; I do not mean Joe Drummond.” If he had found any encouragement in her face, he would have gone on recklessly ; but her black eyes warned him, “If you mean Max Wilson,” said Sidney, “You are entirely wrong. He's not in love with me. Anyhow, after this disgrace--" . “There is no disgrace, child.” “He’ll think me careless, at the least. And his ideals are so high, K.” “You say he likes to be with you. What about you?” Sidney had been sitting in a low chair by the fire. She rose with a sud- den passionate movement. In the in- formality of the household, she had visited K. in her dressing gown and slippers; and now she stood before him, a tragic young figure, clutching the folds of her gown across her breast. “I worship him, K.,” she said tragi- cally. “When I see him coming, I want to get down and let him walk on me. When I see him in the oper ating room, cool and calm while ev- eryone else is flustered and excited, he —he looks like a god.” : Then, half ashamed of her outburst, she turned her back to him and stood gazing at the small coal fire. It was as well for K. that she did not see his face. “It’s real, all this?” he asked after 1 pause. “You're sure it’s not just— zlamour, Sidney?” “It's real—terribly real.” Her voice was muffled, and he knew then that she was crying. She was mightily ashamed of it. Tears, of course, except in the privacy of one’s closet, were not ethical on the street. “Perhaps he cares very much, too.” “Give me a handkerchief,” said Sid- aey in a muffled tone, and the little gecene was broken into while K, searched through a bureau drawer, Then K. questioned her, alternately soothing and probing. “Who else had access to the medi- cine closet?” “Carlotta Harrison carried the keys, of course. I was off duty from four to six. When Carlotta left the ward, asked Sidney to marry him. the probationer would have them.” “Have you reason to think that ei- ther one of these girls would wish you harm?’ “None whatever,” began Sidney ve. aemently ; and then, checking herself, “‘unless—but that’s rather ridiculous.” “What is ridiculous?” “I've sometimes thought that Car- lotta—but I am sure she is perfectly fair with me. It would be murder. “Murder, of course,” said K., “in in tention, anyhow. Of course she didn" do it. I'm only trying to find out whose mistake it was.” Soon after that she said good-nigh' and went out. She turned in the door way and smiled tremulously back a: him. “You have done me a lot of good You almost make me believe in my self.” “That's because I believe in you.” With a quick movement that was one of her charms, Sidney suddenly closed the door and slipped back intc the room. K., hearing the door close. thought she had gone, and dropped heavily into a chair. “My best friend in all the world!” said Sidney suddenly from behind him. and, bending over, she kissed him on the cheek. The next instant the door had closed behind her, and K. was left alone to such wretchedness and bliss as the evening brought him. Joe Drummond enme to see Sidney the next day. She would have avoid- ed him if she could, but Mimi had ushered him up to the sewing-room boudoir before she had time ‘to es- cape. She had not seen the boy for two months, and the change in him startled her. He was thinner, rather hectic, scrupulously well dressed. “Why, Joe!” she said, and then: “Won't you sit down?” He was still rather theatrical. He dramatized himself, as he had that night the June before when he had He stood just inside the doorway. He offered no conventional greeting whatever; but, after surveying her briefly, her black gown, the lines around her eyes: “You're not going back to that place, of course?” “I—I haven’t decided.” He stared at her incredulously. “You don’t mean that you are going to stand for this sort of thing? Every time some fool makes a mistake, are they going to blame it on you?” “Please don’t be theatrical. in and sit down. You explode time.” : Her matter-of-fact tone had its ef fect. He advanced into the room, but he still scorned a chair. “I guess you’ve been wondering why vou haven't heard from me,” he said, “I've seen you more than you've seen me,” Sidney looked uneasy. The idea of espionage is always repugnant, and tc have a rejected lover always in the offing, as it were, was disconcerting. “I wish you would be just a little bit sensible, Joe. It's so silly of you. really. It’s not because you care for me; it's really because you care for yourself.” “You can’t look at me and say that, Sid.” He ran his finger around his collar— an old gesture; but the collar was very loose. He was thin; his neck showed it. “I'm just eating my heart out for vou, and that's the truth. And it isn’t only that. Everywhere I go, people say, “There's the fellow Sidney Page turned down when she went into the hospital” I've got so I keep” off the Street as much as I can.” Sidney was half alarmed, half irri- tated. This wild, excited i,oy was not the doggedly faithful youth she had always known. It seemed to her that underneath his quiet manner and care- ” Come I can’t talk to you if iike a rocket all the “I'm Just Eating My You.” Heart Out for fully-repressed voice there something irrational, could not cope with. She looked up at him helplessly. “But what do you want me to do} You—you almost frighten me.” “You're going back?” “Absolutely.” “Because you love ihe hospital, or because you love somebody connected with the hospital?” Sidney was thoroughly angry by this time, angry and reckless. She had lurked something she Why, K., she wouldn't! ; come through so much that every nerve was crying in passionate pro- test. “If it will make you understand things any better,” she cried, “I am going back for both reasons!” She was sorry the next moment. But her words seemed, surprisingly enough, to steady him. For the first time, he sat down. “Then, as far as I am concerned | it’s all over, is it?” “Yes, Joe. ago.” He seemed hardly to be listening His thoughts had ranged far ahead Suddenly :— “You think Christine has her hands full with Palmer, don’t you? Well, if you take Max Wilson, you're going tc have more trouble than Christine ever dreamed of. I can tell you some things about him now that will make you think twice.” But Sidney had reached her limit She went over and flung open the door. “Every word that you say shows me how right I am in not marrying you Joe,” she said. “Real men do nol say those things about each other un der any circumstances. You're be having like a bad boy. I don’t want you to grown up.” He was very white, but he picked up his hat and went to the door. “I guess I am crazy,” he said. “I've been wanting to go away, but mother raises such a fuss—I'll not annoy you any more,” He left her standing there and ran down the stairs and out into the street. At the foot of the steps he almost collided with Doctor Id. “Dack to see Sidney?” said Doctor Ed genially. “That's fine, Joe. I'm glad you've made it up.” The boy went blindly down the street. CHAPTER XVII. Winter relaxed its clutch slowly that vear. March was bitterly cold; even April found the roads still frozen and the hedgerows clustered with ice. But it midday there was spring in the air in the courtyard of the hospital, con- valescents sat on the benches and watched for robins. The fountain, which had frozen out, was being re- paired, Here and there on ward win- dow sills tulips opened their gaudy petals to the sun. Harriet had gone abroad for a flying trip in March, and came back laden with new ideas, model gowns, and fresh enthusiasm. Grace Irving, hav- ing made good during the white sales, had been sent to the spring cottons. She began to walk with her head high- er. The day she sold Sidney material for a simple white gown, she was very happy. On Sidney, on K. and on Christine the winter had left its mark heavily. Christine, readjusting her life to new conditions, was graver, more thoughtful. She was alone most of the time now. Under K.’s guidance, she had given up the “Duchess” and was reading real books. She was thinking real thoughts, too, for the first time in her life. : Sidney, as tender as ever, had lost a little of the radiance from her eyes; her voice had deepened. Where she had been a pretty girl, she was now lovely. She was back in the hospital again, this time in the children’s ward. K., going in one day to take Johnny Rosenfeld a basket of fruit, saw hei there with a child in her arms, -and a light in her eyes that he had never seen before. It hurt him, rather— things being as they were with him When he came out he looked straight ahead. K. had fallen into the habit, after his long walks, of dropping into Chris- tine’s little parlor for a chat before he went upstairs. Those early spring days found Harriet Kennedy busy late in the evenings, and, save for Christine and K., the house was practically de- serted. The breach between Palmer and I told you that long | come back until you have, Christine was steadily widening. She was too proud to ask him to spend more of his evenings with her. On those occasions when he voluntarily stayed at home with her, he was so discontented that he drove her almost to distraction. Although she was con- vinced that he was seeing nothing of the girl who had been with him the night of the accident, she did not trust him. Not that girl, perhaps, but there were others. There would always be others. | Into Christine's little parlor, then, K. turned, one spring evening. She was reading by the lamp, and the door into the hall stood open. The little room always cheered K. Its warmth and light appealed to his esthetic sense; after the bareness of his bed- room, it spelled luxury. And perhaps, to be entirely frank, her evident pleas- ure in his society gratified him. Chris- tine’s small coquetries were not lost on hin. The evenings with her did some- thing to reinstate him in his own self- esteem. It was subtle, psychological, but alse it was very human. “Come and sit down,” said Christine, “Here's a chair, and here are ciga- rettes and there are matches. Now!” Behind him, Christine stood watch- ing his head in the light of the desk lamp. “What a strong, quiet face it is,” she thought. Why did she get the impression of such a tremendous re- verve power in this man who was a clerk, and a clerk only? Behind him she made a quick, unconscious gesture of appeal, both hands out for an in- stant. She dropped them guiltily as Ik. turned to her. “I wonder if you know, K.,” she said, “what a lucky woman the woman will be who marries you?” He laughed good-humoredly. “lI wonder how leng I could hypno- tize her into thinking that.” “Ive had time to do a little think- ing lately,” she said, without bitter- ness. “Palmer is away so much now. I've been looking back, wondering if 1 ever thought that about him. I don’t believe I ever did. I wonder—" She checked herself abruptly and sat down. After a moment: “Has it ever occurred to you how terribly mixed up things are? ~~ Take this Street, for instance. Can you think of anybody on it that—that things have gone entirely right with?” “It’s a little world of its own, of course,” said K,, “and it has plenty of contact points with life. But wher: ever one finds people, many or few, one finds all the elements that make up life—joy and sorrow, birth and death, and even tragedy. That's rath er trite, isn’t it?” Christine was still pursuing het thoughts. “Men are different,” she said. “To a certain extent they make their own fates. But when you think of the women on the Street—Harriet Ken- nedy, Sidney Page, myself, even Mrs. Rosenfeld back in the alley—some- body else molds things for us, and all we can do is to sit back and suffer. I am beginning to think the world is a terrible place, K. Why do people so often marry the wrong people? Why can’t a man care for one woman and only one all his life? Why—why is it all so complicated?” “There are men who care for only one woman all their lives.” “You're that sort, aren’t you?” “I don’t want to put myself on any pinnacle. If I cared enough for a wom- an to marry her, I'd hope to— But we are being very tragic, Christine.” “I feel tragic. There's going to be another mistake, K, unless you stop i” He tried to leaven the conversation with a little fun. “If you're going to ask me to inter- fere between Mrs. McKee and the deaf-and-dumb book and insurance agent, I shall do nothing of the sort. She can both speak and hear enough for both of them.” “I mean Sidney and Max Wilson. He's mad about her, K.; and, because she’s the sort she is, he'll probably be mad about her all hig life, even if he (Continued on page 7, column 1.) | | AY user will tell you that Michelin age. Why? Because these unequalled tires contain more quality rubber and fabric. Prove this by having us weigh a Michelin in comparison with other non-skids. You will find the Michelin from 12to 15 % heavier than the average. You owe it to yourself to give these high-quality, imoderate-priced | tires a trial. GEO. A. BEEZER Universals give remarkable mile- AGENT, Bellefonte, Pa. Dry Goods. Dry Goods. LYON & COMPANY. 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