J (Continued from last week). SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I.—Winton Garrett, twen- ty-five and just out of college, calls by appointment on Archie Garrett, his New York cousin and executor, to receive his inheritance of $100,000. Archie, honest, an easy mark and a fool for Juck, assures Winton that he is prac- tically a millionaire, as he has invested all but $10,000 in a rubber plantation in either the East or West Indies and in a controlling interest in the Big Malopo diamond mine, somewhere or other in South Africa, sold him as a special favor by a Dutch promoter mamed De Witt. . CHAPTER IIL—Winton, en route to Bis mine, finds the town of Taungs wildly excited over a big strike at Malopo, including the 95-carat “De Witt diamond.” Two coach passengers are a disreputable old prospector, Daddy Beaton, and his daughter Sheila. On the journey a passenger, who turns out to be De Witt himself, insults Sheila. Winton fights De Witt and knocks him out. Sheila tells him to turn back. She says that her father is a broken Eng- lish army officer, who has killed a man and is therefore in De Witt's power, that De Witt is all-powerful, being backed by Judge Davis, president of the diamond syndicate and also the resident magistrate and judge of the native protectorate. CHAPTER IIL.—Winton finds Malopo fn a turmoil, both over the strike and the theft of the De Witt diamond. Win- ton foolishly discloses his identity to Sam Simpson, a Jamaican negro, sub- editor of the local newspaper. He more wisely confides in Ned Burns, watch- man at the Big Malopo, who tells him that the syndicate has planned to take control of the mine the next morning. CHAPTER IV.—Winton finds that Sheila is cashier at the restaurant. He offers his friendship. She rebuffs hii. Van Vorst, a notorious diamond thief, . one of De Witt's men, slips the stolen De Witt diamond into Winton's pocket and two policemen club Winton and arrest him. He escapes them and when at his last gasp Sheila takes him into her house, bathes his wounds and saves him from his pursuers. CHAPTER V.—The next morning Sheila offers Winton help in escaping from Malopo. He convinces her with difficulty that he did not steal the De Witt diamond and that he is president of the Big Malopo company. Bruised and blood-stained he runs across town, breaks by force into the company meet- ing, and aided by a popular demonstra- tion proves his identity, blocks the re- organization and takes control, He asks Sheila to marry him. She laughs hysterically and refuses him. CHAPTER VI.—Winton hires Seaton as compound manager and develops Big Malopo. Judge Davis, a philosophical old hypocrite of unknown past, offers him the syndicate’s co-operation. “Oth- erwise, he says, ‘we'll smash you, you d—d young fool.” Somewhere far back in Winton's memory a voice was saying: “As you go through the world you'll find it doesn’t pay to blurt out your mind. Try to have a little reticence.” It was Archie's voice, and Archie's bland and childlike face came vividly fnto Winton’s mind. But he went on, -heedless of the words which rang in his head: “I own nearly all the shares in the company, and Mr. De Witt hardly any. He has been planning to get control of the concern, thinking that since I was supposed to be in America and was unrepresented by any proxy, it would be easy to oust me. “Then he learned that I was in Malopo, and that it was I who thrashed him for his behavior to you in the coach. He set to work at once, pre- tended that the diamond had been stolen, and planted it on me, through the medium of a short man whom I met on the porch of the Continental last night. The police set upon me and took the stone from my pocket. I had never dreamed that it was there. I escaped them and ran, because I can't afford to go to jail, even for a few days, with so much at stake.” She looked at him in doubt and won: der. “A short man,” she said, “planted the stone on you. A short man with black eyes and a heavy mustache?” “Yes. You know him?” “Everybody knows him,” answerec Sheila. “He is Van Vorst, the most no torious diamond thief in South Africs 20 ommow eseaned the breakwater He has never been caught yet. If he s 2. lung enough, no doubt VICTOR. ROUSSEAWL COPYkGHT, 2 WG.CHAPMAN lie will become a millionaire and ¢ pillar of society. On account of hit iagenuity the big men, being unable tc punish him, buy him. They use him t¢ trap other thieves, and in crooked deal: of all kinds. That explains Var Vorst’s freedom in Malopo. Mr. Dt Witt used him to trap you. Oh, Mr Garrett, I am sorry for having sus pected you. I should have known; bu indeed in my heart I did know that you were a good man.” ! With the realization that she had mis- judged him there came upon her vividly i a ~Nense of overwhelming shame ut her situation with Winton in the little house. Her face was hidden by hands, but her throat was scarlet. “I shall go this morning,” said Win- ton. “The company meets at ten to and I have to be on hand—" She started and fear. “At ten, did you say?” she cried. “It is ten o'clock now!” She drew a little cheap watch from the front of her dress and held it out. Winton saw that the hands were almost upon the hour. With this the pain left him, he felt his old vigor in all his limbs; the ter- rible emergency nerved him. He looked round for his hat, found it; then Sheila was holding him by the arms. “Wait a moment!” she cried half hys- terically. “You can’t go like that, Mr. Garrett. Wait only one moment!” She darted into her room, seized the towel, wrung it out in water, and, running back, snatched off his hat and began washing his forehead. A stain of blood came away. She looked at “Now you can go, she said. it is right; God be with you.” Winton was outside and running across the court. The Chamber of Commerce was situated at the south- east corner of the market square. He had seen it on the preceding day, a handsome block, one of the finest build- ings in Malopo. It might take him ten minutes to reach it. It was question- able whether he would arrive in time. He ran on, panting, choosing the shortest way, which fortunately did not lead past the Continental, where he would almost certainly have been rec- ognized. On he raced, through the narrower streets, alive with fruit ped- dlers and old-clothes men, who stopped and stared in wonder at the sight of the wild-looking man with blood on his face and dusty clothing, and screamed in shrill abuse as he hurled their carts right and left and cleared a passage down the middle of the road. The market square lay before him, a tangle of transport wagons and oxen. Winton dodged here and there, thread- ing the mazes, panted across, and saw the Chamber of Commerce building in front of him, He heard men shouting behind him. A crowd was collecting, following him. He looked like a madman, unless he was the bearer of desperate news of some rising in the outlying districts. A policeman tried to intercept him. Winton hurled the man aside, dashed into the building, and ran with sure instinct up the cement steps to the second story. Upon a door in front of him he saw the name of the Big Malopo, painted in small lettering among the names of twenty other com- panies, yet staring at him as if he alone were there. A man rushed at Winton from some- where in the passage and collared him, Winton thought he recognized him as one of the coach passengers. There was no doubt that De Witt had placed him there on guard. He was larger than Winton and powerfully built, but Winton got the door partly open and wedged himself there. He saw a number of men, who had been seated about a table inside the room, leap to their feet. At the head was a tall, lean old man with a short, square white beard. Near him was De Witt, still carrying on his face the bruises of the fight. The others were obviously nonentities. Winton saw what was happening, and his fury lent him new strength. He sailant, and the chief shareholder in the Big Malopo company, entangled room at the feet of the astonished small shareholders, De Witt, who had been speaking, smashed his fist down on the table. “Throw that lunatic out, and let's put this business through!” he yelled. “The proposition is that this company g0 into voluntary liquidation for the purpose of reconstruction and the issue of preferred stock. I declare the mo- tion—" “I oppose it!” shouted Winton, leap- ing to his feet and fighting off De Witt's man. “I am Winton Garrett, owning 80 per cent of the stock. My certificate—" He tried to get his hand into his pocket, but his assailant was dragging She broke down in complete distress, | her | : Judge Davis, stepped forward. He was ! turn over the property to the syndicate, i looked at him in! him almost as tenderly as a mother. | “I know | struggled madly in the grasp of his as- | with De Witt's spy, rolled into the ! the room. have been flung down the stairs, and the control! of the Big Malopo would have passed into the syndicate’s hands, either forever, or pending complicated legal processes. But a sudden diver- sion completely changed the situation. Out of the crewd stepped Ned Burns, white-haired, white-bearded, waving his arms furiously. “You let Mr. Garrett go!” he shouted. “I know him, and I know you, Mr. De Witt. I've worked eight years for you?” “Bravo, Ned!” shouted the crowd. “ti0 it, old cock ™ “The motion is carried!” De Witt. “That don’t make no difference,” said Ned, planting himself before him. “Maybe you think because I was fool enough to work for you eight years that I don't know the law, Mr. De Witt! You may be purser, but the law of the Colony requires that all proposals for liquidation must have the assent of a majority. Mr. Garrett owns the ma- jority, and he hasn't voted yet.” “Well done, Ned!” cried the mob. “Colony law don’t run in Malopo i” shouted De Witt. “This is a native protectorate. You think because I've shouted | sme you out of your job for finefh ciency that you'll come here and inter ' fere with this meeting, do you?" “Let's hear Mr. Garrett!” cried the crowd, A tall old man, looking much like Van Beer, the head of an association of independest claimholders, and at the gight of him the noisy crowd became silent. “] don’t know what this is about, Mr. De Witt, but I take issue with you on the point you raise,” he said. “You know that the credit of the diamond companies rests on the belief that Colony law is valid here. If you are basing any action upon a negative of this belief, it will send diamond shares shooting down to— Well, Judge Davis, vou know how low they’ll fall if you take away the security of Colony law from Malopo. Is there any other hasis of credit, here, judge?” “Gentlemen,” cried Judge Davis in a tremulous voice, “what is all this guarrel about? Whether or not Colony law runs here has yet to be passed on by the Colony courts. We care noth- ing for that. We act according to our "lights, believing in justice and fra- ternity.” : “Then why don't you allow Mr, Gar- rett's vote?’ shouted Ned Burns. “If this gentleman is Mr. Garrett, let him produce proofs of his identity,” gquavered the judge. Winton took his certificate and letter of introduction from his pocket, and handed them to the judge, who donned a pair of spectacles and examined them, finally handing them back to Winton. Ie approached De Witt and murmured something in a low voice. “Speak up, judge!” shouted a man in the crowd. “1 think the meeting had better Le adjourned pending a private confer- ence,” said Davis. “1 adjourn this meeting!” yelled De Witt furiously, and began to make his way through the crowd, which broke into ironical applause. Ned turned to Winton. “You win, Mr. Garrett,” he said. “And you've got the best diamond claim this side of Kimberley.” Winton gripped the old man's hands, and his voice broke as he tried to thank him. “That’s all right, my boy,” he an- swered. “It was along about mid- night when I got the message that vou’d be in danger this morning at the meeting. So I opened the Book, and, sure enough, there it was written down In black and white about Eglon, King of Moab, being stabbed in his summer house. So I saw you were Eglon, and this was the summer house, and you can bet I didn’t sleep too much last night from worrying over it.” The crowd, which had increased until it filled the room and the greater part of the passage, showed in unmistak- able ways where its sympathies lay. It surrounded Winton, patting him on the back and throwing out promiscuous in- vitations to drink. De Witt made for the passage. Judge Davis went up to Winton. “This has been a very unfortunate misunderstanding, Mr. Garrett,” he quavered. raternal regrets for the mistake due to the unceremonious manner of your appearance in the board room. I trust you will not feel any prejudice against the Diamond Fields Syndicate on ac- count of it. We aim at the harmonious development of all local interests, for the common good. It is my ambition, and the ambition of our fellow citizens assembled here, to make Malopo a center of fraternity and brotherhood, and to enlist your aid in fighting for peace, purity, and temperance.” “Three cheers for Judge Davis! Hats off to the judge!” shouted the crowd. ’ Amid ironical applause, which seemed in nowlise to disturb or discon- cert him, and had its visible effect only in the tightened lip and in an in- creasing unctuousness which he seemed ‘to diffuse, Judge Davis followed De | Witt. Winton turned to Ned. “I'll never forget,” he said, “and you can count on a job with me as long as | you want one.” Gripping the old man’s hand again, ! he tried to make his way through the crowd. But by this time the enthus- .lasm had passed all restraint. He | found himself seized and hoisted upon | the shoulders of two men. Struggling | Retactively, he was carried down the | stairs and into the bar of the nearest hotel, where he was deposited upon i In another moment Winton would : Discharge me, will you, after I Sheila | Winton him toward the door. There came a the counter. Somebody bad ordered scuffle of feet in the passage, and the champagne, and in a trice the corks policeman, heading the mob, burst into were popping and all were drinking | Winton's health. “You've done a good day's work for Malopo in keeping the independent mines out of the clutches of the syndi- cate,” said Van Beer, who had followed in the wake of the crowd. “Take care that Davis doesn't get the Big Ma- lopo away from you. We heard he'd been cursing himself for having un- loaded on a bunch of asses in America, but that you should turn up at the nick of time, certificate and all—it’s like a play, sir. Here's health to you!® And he drained his glass. Presently Winton managed to slip away from his admirers and escape into the street. And the insistent :hought of Sheila pressed upon him— Sheila, awaiting to learn the news, zager for his success; Sheila, who had risked everything for him. Winton went back as fast as he ould walk toward the wretched house in the ontskirts. He felt sick and weak new that the reaction had come apen him, but kis heart was uplifted at che thought of Sheila; her faith, her ‘oyalty. and her bitter fight. It was nerhaps inevitable that men like Van Boer should misunderstand her. He felt no rancor on account of this: but he meant to take the ipl ont of her fp, ectallizh her with her fothnr in a house on the claim, where the old man should tind the employment that had been promised him by De Witt. opened the door instantly when he tapped; she scanned his face eagerly. “I've won.” said Winton, and he saw the color fade out of her face. She leaned against the frame of the door, looking down. glanced out across the desert, The clean air seemed to rush through him, bringing vitality and strength and resolution. Far away he saw the blue mountains toward which Sheila and he had traveled out of the squalor of Taungs. They seemed now to be a symbol. At that moment the girl appeared to him like a wild bird, caught in the thin wires of a hundred conventions: her father's need of her, her utter dependence upon that society which outraged her pride and trod her heart under its feet, and yet held her in secure servitude. He knew the long- ing for freedom in her heart; he knew, too, that physical bondage had never quenched the freedom of her spirit. He turned toward her, and she looked up and came quickly toward him and put her hands in bis of her ac- cord, “I have heen ungrateful to you,” she ! said. “I want to speak plainly now. Last night when I asked you not to see : me again it was because of many thing which made it seem right that you should not: my father, and your pity, whieh I could not bear. And you are a gentleman, and I—I am not well edu- cated, and—" She was breaking down, but she struggled on bravely. “But - now you know why we must be stran- gers forever, after what has happened here and what people would say if they knew.” “No,” answered Winton. know.” He drew her toward him. The sun- light lay like molten gold about them. “I love you, Sheila, and I want you to be my wife.” She recoiled as if his words stupe- fied her. Then she began laughing hysterically. “You ure very generous and very kind,” she said. “I understand your goodness. You are sorry for me from the depths of your heart, and y2u think you owe me reparation. No! That is final. Never! Never!” She turned, as with an effort, and ran into the house. Winton stood look- ing after her until the door of the inner room was closed. He knew that only love could heal her $hirit; was it not love that had woven the threads which had so strangely bound them since that morning when they looked “I do not ' at each other before the coach office in “I wish to tender you my Taungs? As he stood there, undecided, there came across the court the hiccuped chant of a popular song. Winton looked round. Daddy Seaton was coming stumbling home. CHAPTER VI Judge Davis Shows His Hand. Winton’s proposal of marriage had been in nowise an act inspired by the sense of having placed the girl in a false position. He loved Sheila. When he was away from her he realized the folly of his precipitancy; he knew nothing of her, and his sense of pru- dence reproached him. But in her pres- ence he felt that without her existence would be hardly endurable. He loved her, present or absent; only, absent, the conventions of his up- bringing fenced in his mood and bade him wait. He resolved to wait, and he was confident that he could win her. As soon as work began on the Big Malopo he meant te give her father the position of compound manager and to establish them near him. Meanwhile he moved from the Continental to an- other hotel of the same type, on the opposite side of the market square, where he slept and took his breakfast and supper. The rest of the day he spent on the claim. On the day following the meeting in the chamber of commerce Judge Davis formally acknowledged Winton's claims. Winton's first act was to dis charge De Witt and to appoint himself purser. He was thus in complete con- trol of the Big Malopo. Looking through the cost book in ! Judge Davis’ oftice, he found that of the twenty shares not held by himself, Davis owned eight, and Hanson, the editor of the Chronicle, five. De Witt, who was simply the syndicate’s dummy, had one share only. The remaining six were distributed among four local men, one of whom held three and the others a single share apiece, Banking upon their ownership of the claim, the syndicate had obligingly re lieved the purser of a large amount of trouble. They had been incredibly active since the discovery of the big diamond. Machinery had been or- dered, the local brick field was turning out bricks for them, and a dozen trans. port wagons were already on their way from Taungs, loaded with timber, Agents were at work in the native ter ritories securing gangs of laborers, Winton appointed Ned Burns general overseer under him. The old man was very grateful for the position, which was better than any he had held in his life, and he was of the greatest aid to Winton in posting him as to the de: tails of the work. He cautioned him against Judge Davis’ friendliness as much as De Witt's enmity. Neither man would forego his hopes of obtain: ing the claim on behalf’ of the syndi cate, he said. Native labor was the chief problem the pick of the tribesmen being drawr off to the Kimberley fields and the Johannesburg gold mines. However the syndicate had agents scouring Bechuanaland, and tle contracts held good. The compound was being con structed rapidly, nol on the claim it self, which was too small and much tog : valuable, but on about three acres or land which had been acquired just be- : vond the diamond-bearing tract. Here the natives would be housed. On either side were the compounds ot the larger claims, flanking the diamond clay as far as the eye could see, an endless line of brick cottages and na- tive stores, fenced in with barbed wire, a desolation of refuse, tin cans, dust, and sand. Just outside the compound Winton was having a cottage for the com- pound manager constructed, entailing no great labor in a country where plas- | interiors and heating tered are un- — Winton appoint- ed Ned Burns general over- seer under him. necessary and almost unknown. He pictured Daddy Seaton there—and Sheila. But Winton did not let his mind dwell on these dreams overmuch, | for he was of a practical nature, and the work in hand engrossed him. Every moment of his day was oc- cupied. ' He was building a small brick strue- ture for himself also. It was near the shack in which Burns lived, and was to serve for living quarters and for an office. The diamond, which had been restored by the police, with many apologies for the misunderstanding— though Winton knew the police had been quite aware of his identity and privy to De Witt’s scheme—now rested in a safe inside. This might have appeared rash to the uninitiated, but, while there was a good deal of buying of stones comn- veyed illicitly out of the compounds, | there had never been the theft of a recorded stone, except for the pseudo | theft from the bank. Public opinion rendered such an act almost impos- sible. Diamonds were the one com- | modity that were safe from robbers in Malopo. The machinery arrived as soon as the building was finished. Then fol- lowed a week of the hardest kind of work, at the end of which Winton had a clear idea of the process of diamond mining. All operations at Malopo were of a crude and primitive kind, even his own, since the grounds had not yet proved themselves sufficiently to justify the introduction of expensive ap- paratus. In substance, the clay was simply dug up and sent to the surface in| buckets, hoisted by whims, or vertical § winches, consisting each of a drum rotating on a shaft, on which the hoist- ing rope wound. The material was then carried in large barrows to the distributing grounds where, after some disintegration had been effected by ex- posure to sun and air, it was crushed and fed into the washing troughs, in | which the stones and heavy minerals were separated from the lighter de- posits by revolving toothed arms, The refuse was then picked over by the na- tives in the compounds. Winton entered into a contract with | a local concern that controlled the water supply by means of shafts sunk into the river bed two or three mnilles outside the town. This wes the most important feature of the working of the claim. Without water he would be unable to begin operations or to continue them. At last, stopping to take breath, Win. | ton found that nothing was needed for , the beginning of the mining work ex- cept the arrival of the natives. Three gangs were expected, and might arrive any day. Ha turned his thoughts again to Seaton. A compound manager was, of : | a combine broke him. . hour ' wide open and supposing that Seaton course, necessary for the overseeing of the workers, and he resolved to offer old Seaton the position which he had mentally reserved for him. Seaton was known as a man eminently qualified for the position, but owing to his habits none would employ him. It was nearly three weeks since Win. ton had seen Sheila. He did not know for certain that the girl and her father were still in Malopo. He was thinking of inquiring for the old man when he was surprised by a visit from him at an early hour in the morning. Daddy Seaton was wearing a new suit, he was perfectly sober, and looked almost respectable. “Mr. Garrett, I don’t suppose you'll know who I am,” he began; “but every- body in Maiopo knows me, and they'll tell you that there ain’t a better work: man than Stanford Seaton when he leaves liquor alone. That's been my bane—but, then, I've had a heap of trouble, sir.” “Looking for a job?’ asked Winton. “And employers fight shy of me be. cause of my weakness,” continued Sea: ton frankly, determined to put his story in his own way. “But I can say there isn’t a man in Malopo understands the natives better. I heard you wanted a compound manager, and if you'll give me a chance you won't regret it. 1 shall never torch drink again. I've had enough of it, sir” : “I'll try you, Seaton,” answered Win- ton. *‘Report for work tomorrow morn- ing; and you can move into that cot- tage as soon as you like.” It was on the tip of his tongue to aad “and your daughter.” But Winton cautiously refrained. When he set about a thing he had all the method and prudence of his father, who had been a financial power in New York berore Winton was re- solved either to win Sheila or to probe the situation and discaver the secret of the girl's fascination over him, His heart cried out for her, but his head warned him of his unwisdom. And Winton, like most men, was swayed by both; only with him they were in unusual equipoise. He unlocked the cottage door and left Seaton inspecting the inside, re- turning to work in his office. About an later, seeing the cottage door had left the key in the lock, he went over to close the place. He looked in- side and saw the old man lying upon ' the floor hopelessly drunk, an empty bottle of trade gin beside him. Seaton had certainly not had the bot- tle about him when he arrived. There was only one place where he could have got it, and that was on the adjoin- ing claim. This was one of a block owned by the syndicate. It ran its own native ' store, which was in charge of a fellow nanied Kash, an Armenian, a little, blear-eyed, scoundrelly-looking maraud- er who, Ned Burns had said, made most of his revenue froin the sale of . liquor to the natives in defiance of the prohibitory law. Saturday afternoon was a half holi- day in the compounds, and at noon the gates were thrown open until midnight. As most of the natives were Bechuun»s, the formal challenges, folio ved Ly murderous itiertribal fights with knob- kerries, which were a regular Satur- day afternoon performance ou the goll fields at Johannesburg, did not take place at Malopo. During the week-end, however, drunkenness and brawling were universal, the length of the recs was a scene of uproar and riot, to which nobody paid any attention, and the cause was the trade gin sold by every storekeepe . It was the current belief that the native could not be stopped from procuring liquor, and the syndicate winked at Kash’s activities. Winton had looked on the matter dif- ferently from the first. While deter- mined to go slowly, the sight of Sea- ton, lying dead drunk upon the floor, roused him to furious anger. Burning with indignation, he crossed the syn- dicate claim and entered the store. It was one of the filthiest places that Winton had ever seen. The front was hung with second-hand clothing and gaudy-colored blankets with lions and heads of women woven patchily into their surfaces. Canned foods, put up years previously and probably con- demned, twists of tobacco, cheap sweets exposed to the innumerable flies, rolls of soiled calico in white and blue 1it- tered the shelves, with beads and imi- tation jewelry which the natives took home to adorn the wives bought with the earnings of their apprenticeship. Behind the counter stood Kash, blink- ing like an owl out of the ‘darkness. “You've been selling liquor to my compound manager,” cried Winton an- grily. Kash flung up his hands in horror at the suggestion. ‘No, sair!” he pro- tested. “I sell no drink to any one) Never, sair! I'm good merchant, hon- est merchant!” He had just finished speaking when, before Winton could reply, a trap-door in the floor opened, and there emerged the head of a yellow Hoitentot, and a hand wiping the mouth in evident sat- isfaction. As the man saw Winton his eyes rolled with fear. His head van- ished and the trap-door fell with a clang. Winton was upon the spot in an in- stant, pulled up the door, and saw bhe- neath him a short flight of steps, lead- ing into a tunnel dimly lit by a smail electric bulb. ‘As he ran down he heard the Armenian screaming wildly behind him. He reached the passage just as the light went out. An electric bell be- gan ringing. There was a scurrying of feet at the end of the passuge, where a faint gleam of daylight showed. When Winton reached it he saw a second flight of steps, and, ascending these, he found himself in the syndicate com- pound, with a gang of half a dozen na- tives flying before him in all directions. (Continued next week). y