aw (Continued from last week). SYNOPSIS CHAPTER I.—Winton Garrett, twen= 8y-five and just out of college, calls by pointment on Archie Garrett, his New ork cousin and executor, to receive # inheritance of $100,000. Archie, nest, an easy mark and a fool for uck, assures Winton that he is prac- tically a millionaire, as he has invested 11 but $10,000 in a rubber plantation n either the East or West Indies and mn a controlling interest in the Big alopo diamond mine, somewhere or ether in South Africa, sold him as a special favor by a Dutch promoter mamed De Witt. CHAPTER IIL.—Winton, en route to fis 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 disreputable old prospector, Daddy Brin 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 s that her father is a broken Eng- i army officer, who has killed a man nd is therefore in De Witt's power, fat De Witt is all-powerful, being cked by Judge Davis, president of the diamond syndicate and also the resident magistrate and judge of the mative protectorate. CHAPTER III.—Winton finds Malopo fn a turmoil, both over the strike and the theft of the De Witt diamond. Win- on foolishly discloses his identity to am 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 eontrol of the mine the next morning. CHAPTER IV.—Winton finds that Sheila is cashier at the restaurant. He flers his friendship. She rebuffs him. Can Vorst, a notorious diamond thief, me of De Witt's men, slips the stolen Be Witt diamond into Winton’s pocket end two policemen club Winton and arrest him. He escapes them and when at his last gasp Sheila takes him fato her house, bathes his wounds and saves him from his pursuers. CHAPTER V.—The next morning eila offers Winton help in escaping om Malopo. He convinces her with ifficulty that he did not steal the De itt diamond and that he is president of the Big Malopo company. Bruised d blood-stained he runs across town, Bo by force into the company meet- ing, and aided by a popular demonstra- tion proves his identity, blocks the re- erganization and takes control. He asks Sheila to marry him. She laughs hysterically and refuses him. CHAPTER VI—Winton hires Seaton compound manager and develops Big ir 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 young fool.” CHAPTER VIL—Winton, infuriated Py a scurrilous newspaper article about Sheila and himself, knocks Sam down and publicly threatens Judge Davis. He finds Sheila about to elope with De Witt, 0 save her father. He horsewhips De itt. Sheila again refuses to marry him and says she is going away, never to see him or her father again. CHAPTER VIIIL.—Winton hires Sam as night watchman. Van Vorst's gang steal the De Witt diamond. Winton Pursues Van Vorst, who escapes with he big stone. CHAPTER IX.—Winton is rescued by Sheila, on her way to a native village. There she kisses an old woman, only partly white, and says, “This is my mother.” He again asks her to marry him. She refuses him, because of the race bar. Heartsick, he sets out for Malopo with a native guide. CHAPTER X.—Winton succumbs. His guide robs and deserts him. Sam res- cues him. Burns's brain is affected; he cannot tell what happened. The work- ers in the mine return no stones. Win- ton is forced to borrow money from the syndicate, agreeing to pay in a month or lose the mine. CHAPTER XI.—The syndicate makes further plans to oust Wintor. His men search the native workers snd secure many large diamonds. Seaton appears, eonfesses the plot and says he's come to take his medicine. CHAPTER XIl.—Seaton is tried for diamond buying from the natives be- fore Judge Crawford, who has suc- ceeded Judge Davis. The crowd re- rd De Witt as the real criminal and Believe Davis to be behind De Witt. aton confesses everything. He tells how he shot a man and how De Witt, knowing about it, forced him to do all kinds of crooked work. De Witt, think- jog Davis has abandoned him to his fate, voluntarily testifies that Davis is the man whom Seaton mistakenly thought he had killed and that Sheila is Davis’ daughter. Davis drops in a faint. De Witt flees from Malopo. Sea- ton is acquitted. CHAPTER XIIIL—Davis, much broken, is anxious to find Sheila and deter- mined to kill Seaton. Davis and Win- ton find Sheila and her mother: and Seaton in a native village. Davis and his wife recognize each other and go temporarily insane, talking as if twenty vears had been obliterated. Seaton flees on horseback. Davis regains his mental balance and »ursues Seaton. The two men race “ide by side. Davis trying to get his hands on Seaton. Then the narrow valley fills up with an enormous herd of migrating spring- buck. Part of the herd plunges over a precipice, burying both men under a mountain nf dead antelope. Winton can find nothing of the two men but some brown stains on the rocks below. Hor- ror-stricken, he returns to the village to find Sheila crouching beside her dead mother. But as he spoke he heard a crackling sound above him and thin wreaths of smoke began to coil through the roof. The mob had withdrawn a little space and howled in triumph around the cot- tage. The structure was of brick, but there was a wooden roof, baked so dry by the sun that the rains had hardly af- fected it. Burning brands had lit on it in half a dozen places. As Winton looked wildly about him he caught sight of Sam going through extraordinary antics. He had began to tear off his clothes as fast as he was able, until he stood up bare to the waist. In spite of their desperate sit- uation Winton was shocked at the negro's action. Y VICTOR ROUSSEALL COPYRIGHT sy W.G.CHAPMARN “Have you gone mad, Sam?’ he de- manded angrily. But Sam, not satisfied, snatched up a knife and began ripping off the legs of his trousers at the knees. He picked up the spear. The transforma- tion was astounding. Sam Simpson had evolved into one of the wild ne- groes of the compound. : The roof was blazing. There came another rush against the door. The yells were deafening. Winton caught Sheila to him and tried to reassure her in the brief interval of recharging his revolver. But the girl was terror- stricken, and she could hardly hide her fears. She clung to Winton, trembling. “The tunnel!” gasped Sam, ging Winton by the arm. drag- And the thought of this had not en- tered Winton’s mind. The safe had stood over the hole ever since the robbery. They pulled it aside. Be- neath it gaped the excavation. “Get down, Sam,” cried Winton as the savages, believing that Winton was cowed, or had no more ammuni- tion, made a concerted rush. The door began to splinter. Sam lowered himself, Winton swung Sheila down and followed. He meant to try and replace the safe from below, but his feet had hardly touched the soft earth before the door crashed from its hinges. He dived after his companions, and heard the mine boys’ shouts of discovery. Their feet, which seemed immediately overhead, made the walls of the tunnel tremble. Fine dust from the concussion set the three to choking. “Go on with Miss Sheila, whispered Winton, He leveled hls revolver along the tunnel. It was quite dark, but urp- less his ears failed him it would Le impossible to miss his mark, He heard the natives whispering to- gether above, and the sudden silence Sam,” made the. tunnel eerier than ever. They were at an immense disadvan- tage, for it was impossible to hurl a spear within the narrow passage, though one could be used for thrust- ing with deadly effect. But first the thruster would have to assume a prone position, and Winton knew that his revolver would have thus several sec- onds’ start of the spear. He waited, hardly breathing, until there came to his ears, very faintly, the touch of bare feet upon the ground, followed by the suppressed breathing of a man not far away. One of the negroes was evidently at the bottom of the excavation, but the excavation immediately beneath the safe was wider than the tunnel itself, and a projecting angle of soft earth afforded shelter. The man—or men—might therefore be out of the direct line of fire. Winton drew a match softly from his pocket and struck it suddenly along the side of his revolver butt. The little flaring light revealed the white eyeballs and peering face of one of the savages, not a dozen feet distant. Another face was looking over the shoulder. Everything above was deathly still, The man’s arm was drawn back, the Spear, with a murderous shovel-blade, held ready to thrust. Winton fired point-blank into the open mouth. The match went out simultaneously with the discharge. There followed a choking cry and the sound of blood bubbling from the threat. An out- burst of yells from above rolled in a hideous echo along the tunnel. The second savage turned and began scrambling back like a mole, but Win- ton fired again and heard the shuffling stop, as if the bullet had been instan- taneously fatal. A shéwer of earth came rattling down. And now the faint, reflected flare that came into the tunnel, and the roaring from above told Winton that the cottage was ablaze. The sounds of shouting grew fainter. The negroes | - Winton raised the body of the man | nearest him and set it in the tunnel ! in such a way that it formed an ob- stacle to anyone approaching from | the rear, He would hear the sound of | its dislodgment if the attack were renewed. But the savages had had enough of the tunnel. Winton loaded his re- volver with his last handful of car- tridges and began scrambling after Sam, calling in a low tone. He heard Sam’s distant answer, and made his way as fast as he could along the tunnel. Would the natives be | walting at the other end? They could | must have been driven out by fire. | | | | make the distance above ground mdre swiftly than they could. But Winton doubted whether their minds would work in that manner, with plunder to be had in every compound store along the diamond ridge. He was right in his presumption, for presently he saw Sam and Shella silhouetted against the faint light at the other end of the tunnel, He caught Sheila to him flercely. “Keep up your courage,- dear!” he whispered. “We are going to be free. . Stay here with Sam, while I go for: ward and explore.” : { For a moment she clung to him and ' pleaded with him not to expose him- self to danger, but it was wonderful . how brave she was. Instrueting Sam : to stay with Sheila, Winton began to ; creep forward along the ground. { But in a moment he saw Sam beside him. “Mr. Garrett, I'll go,” said the negro. “I guess it's safer for me, looking like this.” That was a fact. Reluctantly—for he would have preferred to face the : danger—Winton went back and al- : lowed Sam to proceed upon his scout- ' ing mission. | All along the fields the stores were burning fiercely. Against the light of ; the leaping flames could be seen the | bodies of the savages, struggling to ' carry off their plunder. Bales of cot- tons and cloth, blankets, packing cases of comestibles were being borne on naked black shoulders. The store on the compound into which the fugi- ERR tives had emerged was, however, al- ready gutted, and there were no na- tives immediately at hand. It was the old story, repeated a hun- dred times in the bloody history of South Africa, of the untamable nature . of the aborigine reasserting itself Winton, a few yards from Sheila, | suddenly perceived the body of a man He saw Sam worming his away along the ground upon his stomach. lying face downward upon the grouira immediately inside the barbed wii. which separated the compound i. which he was from that adjoining. He recognized it as that of Josephs. it was pinned te the earth with two upright spears. ‘Death must have been instantaneous. Winton's inws elamped with a So of fury. He sprang to his feet. bu! rementhering the urgent need of cau tion, lay down again beside Sheil: watching Sam, ? He saw the negro worming his way along the ground upon his stomach. Suddenly Sam turned toward him with an imperative gesture to lie still Looking up, Winton perceived a Katir sentry, armed with a spear and shield. on guard at the desert road behind the devastated and smoldering store thar had belonged once to Kash. The presence of this man was omi- nous. ‘If the outbreak had been con- fined to the diamond compounds, no sentry would have been set. The fact of his presence betokened a precon- certed rising, guided by shrewd minds from outside. It betokened something more. For the man who had placed him there must have had a personal interest in Winton's capture. Yet Winton wus no object of hatred on the part of the natives—rather he was one of the more popular among the claim-holders. But Winton realized only the first part of the purpose, not its implica- tions. He watched Sam spring to his feet and advance boldly toward the sentry, brandishing his spear. There was nothing to show that Sam was other than one of the marauders. He was just as black, and in the night he looked just as ferocious as any of them. The sentry turned and looked at Sam in inquiry, then went forward to meet him. Sam’s muscular arm went back, and the spear, driven unerringly, by some atavistic impulse, went home through the Kafirs’ throat. The sentry dropped without a word or sound, the spear-point sticking into the ground behind him, supporting the falling corpse grotesquely for a mo- ment, till the body, collapsing side- wise, rolled into the road and lay still. Sam came back slowly. “I've killed him,” he began to whimper. “A good thrust, Sam” “I've killed a human being. God forgive me!” whispered Sam, shaking as if he had an attack of fever. “Come along,” said Winton, must make the desert now. work round toward Malopo. “We We can If need for a day or two. We must hurry.” The tears were streaming down the negro's cheeks. With a gulp Sam pulled himself together. Winton raised Sheila to her feet, and the be we'll hide in the bed of the stream . three raced across the road, crossed the ridge, and saw the desert before them, It was beginning to grow light. From where they halted to get their breath they could see the long line of . blazing stores and hear the distant shouting. A sudden outburst of rifle firing from the direction of the town gave the hope that Malopo had been warned in time and was putting up a defense. They hurried on, keeping below the ridge, going a little distance into the : hin ' rearing horses, dashed at Sam. against white supervision grown lax, ° tom De Sam roll on the ground ané i = yk ea desert, then turning to strike the bed of the winding river, now a succession of pools, with a freeway of stones and boulders. Once between the banks they would be in reasonable security. There were numerous caves and excavations there, in one of which a temporary refuge could be found. But as they halted upon the bank Sam uttered a cry and pointed toward the desert. Three men were riding toward them, with the evident intention of inter- cepting their flight. They were just visible in the twli- light, which made their figures, and those of their horses, at once enor- mous and shadowy. Two of them, from their firm, stir rupless seat, were obviously Hotten- tots. The third was a white man. There seemed nothing to fear and much to hope. The Hottentots were never on friendly terms with the Bechuanas, whom they despised as savages, and the presence of their master was still more reassuring. The three spurred their horses and came. galloping up abreast. They were within five and twenty paces when Winton recognized the white man as De Witt. Before he realized the man’s hos tile intentions De Witt had ridden straight at him. The Hottentots, with Win: then he himself was down in a tangle of plunging hoofs. He had a dim knowledge of firing his revolver, and then the scene faded out of his consciousness as quietly as if it were some moving-picture with drawn from the white screen. CHAPTER XV Pursuit in the Desert, “Mr. Garrett—wake up! sake, open your eyes, sir!” Winton obeyed. The river bank: were swimming around him. He was lying on the stones in the bed of the: stream, and Sam was kneeling beside | him. “Sheila!” Winton muttered. “He's got her, Mr. Garrett.” Winton struggled into a sitting pe sition and tried to collect himself “Who—when?”’ he mumbled. “De Witt—half an hour ago. horse kicked you on the head ang stunned you. I was knocked down too. You shot one of the Hottentots and they snatched up Miss Sheila anc put her on his horse and rode away with her.” - Winton got on his feet, and, witli Sam's aid, staggered up the bank. was quite light now. From Malopc came the Intermittent outbreaks os rifle firing, but there were no negroe: in sight. The flelds were totally de serted, the gutted stores were bura ing out in smoke. of the desert lay before Winton's eyes the risen sun dancing on the horizou. The body of the dead Hottentot lay a few yards away, but there wus uo living thing in sight. “We must get horses, Sam,” said Winton. “Yes, sir. There's a horse feeding: down the river.” “What's that?’ cried Winton increu- ulously. “It's one of the Malopo Deeps horses, Mr, Garrett. It’s that gray. He's a fast goer. He's saddled, too. The boys must have tried to capture him, but he broke his halter and got away.” “We must catch him, Sam.” “I've caught him, sir. I saw y.u'd be coming to in a few minutes, and I went after him and tied him te a tree.” “Sam,” cried Winton bYrokeniy, “I can’t thank you enough-—not now. Get him, Sam! Get him!" Sam came back in five minutes, leading the horse. Winton knew it very well. It was not so fust as De Witt’s, but it had won prizes at the local handicaps. It was in first-class condition. Sam had put one foot into the stir- rup when Winton dragged him down. “Let me go, Mr. Garrett. Let me go!” he pleaded. “You're not fit, sir.” “I'm going, Sam. I'll be back with Miss Sheila—or I'll not be back. No use, Sam. Leave it to me. It's my job, confound you!” Sam took his foot out of the stir- rup with a sigh. The tears were streaming down his black face. “You're right, sir,” he said humbly, “I But neither man could speak, and Winton, wringing Sam’s hand, mount- ed and rode away. His burning anger gave him strength. The thought of Sheila’s danger, of De Witt's trick at the end, nerved him to desperation. Within two days the wheel of his fortunes had made a coun- plete revolution. Only the thought of Sheila in De Witt’s power enabled him to maintain his mental equilibrium. And for a while, as he rode over the lonely desert, touched here and there with the green of the young grass, he felt like a shadow moving in a phantom world. He tried to concentrate his attention on the tracks of the three horses, which were distinct in the rain-soaked ground. So long as these were plain In sight he felt that he was nearing Sheila every moment, in spite of the fact that he could see no one. Ie discovered that what his horse lacked in speed it made up in staying powers, and hours passed without any slacken- ing of the easy “triple” pace. . But the morning wore away, and it became clear to Winton that De Witt had at least maintained his lead. It was almost midday when he discov- ered that the tracks had disappeared. For some time they had been grow- ing less distinct, for the sandy earth For God’, i Thu | I The broad expanse : of the desert had- yielded to flinty ground. Winton went back, found them, and discovered that the horses had struck off at an angle leading far away from the headquarters of the tribe. Hitherto the horses had been travel- ing almost immediately toward the hills. Yet it had seemed improbable that De Witt could have allied him- self with the Bechuanas. They would have rejected overtures from any white man; and De Witt, scoundrel though he was, would hardly have made them. Winton’s suspicions now became a certainty in his mind. The Dutchman, who was well known throughout the desert country, had gathered about himself a few wander- ing Hottentots, probably old servants or cattlemen, by whose aid he hoped to strike across the desert into an- other territory. The tracks led due west, toward the heart of the almost unknown Kala- | hari, the desert of salt pans, inhabited only by a few wandering Bushmen and the antelope on which they lived. Winton knew that there was no set- tlement of any kind, not even a native one, for hundreds of miles in this di- rection. If one went far enough, how- ever, and knew how to live on the wild melons thit send their tap-roots hundreds of feet into the ground and draw up water, one would enter Ger- man territory, where the Herrero , tribesmen lived among the infrequent oases. Thence one could strike the western shore, And Winton suddenly began to think that Van Vorst must have taken this route. Probably the same Hottentots who had accompanied De Witt had helped Van Vorst across the desert, They might even have cached food and water in some lonely spot. Winton’s heart sank as he followed the faint tracks mile after mile, often reduced to a slow walk in order not to lose them. Sometimes only a tuft of downtrodden, withered grass, or a ! few displaced pebbles showed him i his route. And then even the wisps | of grass vanished, and the flinty desert | lay smooth before him. It was early afternoon. Winton had been guiding himself more by instinct and judgment than by any visible traces. He realized now that he had lost the trail, and lost it half an hour | before, and had been deluding him: self with signs which were nonexist- ent. Worse than that, it was impos- : sible to pick up the spoor by going back. His horse had gone gamely, but it | was gradually giving out. He dis- mounted, and the beast stood panting, with drooping head. It had ceased to 8weat—an ominous sign. He left it end began to cast about in a wide elrcle in the hope of hitting the tracks. But he found nothing; and, standing under the blistering sun, he knew that | he was himzelf lost, that he had coe i ered some five and thirty miles whicn, if rciraced, must be retraced afoot. | He went back. The animal had not i moved. He looked about him. In the far distance were the faintest blue outlines of hills. It occurred to him that De Witt might have been making for these. And he might as well go forward as turn back. He trudged on endlessly, leading the horse, the sun a grilling fire above him. His boots were burned through from contact with the hot stones. i 1 his tread. The sun, even in its descent, seemed to grow hotter. Winton was half dead from thirst. The panting horse was becoming a burden. At last it stood still and dropped slowly upon its knees. It looked at him and whinnied. As Winton glanced hopelessly over "the plain his eyes were arrested by | the sight of a dark object lying an indefinite distance away. It was too ‘large for a man—too black for a rock. | And there were no rocks anywhere, for the whole plain seemed to have been crushed flat by a giant steam- roller. Winton made his way toward it. It began to take form; it was a dead horse. It had dropped in its tracks, and its sufferings had been ended by "a bullet through the head. But there | were no signs of a rider, and it was | impossible to distinguish any foot- ! tracks on the stones. It was no doubt the horse that had been ridden by one of the three. It was not De Witt’'s. Probably it was ' the Hottentot’s. Winton’s spirits soared upward. He set his teeth grimly and went back to his animal. He must go on now, even if he had to leave the beast be- hind him, He stood looking at it. It had fallen upon its stomach, and crouched thus, with its legs bent under it. It raised its head and whinnied again faintly. | It was past saving, unless water could be procured immediately. Winton drew his revolver, took care- ful aim behind the ear, and fired. The - beast’s head went down—it quivered, rolled on its side, and died. And he went on. journey became automatic, so that he was hardly conscious of his surround- ings. He saw only the distant hills and the western sun descending with tantalizing slowness. His tongue, swollen and numb, seemed to distend his cheeks. Sometimes the stony desert yleldel for a few steps to sparse patches of flinty earth, indicat- ing the hope of some fertile region | beyond, but it always began again. | The sun dipped into the west, and "still the man staggered onward The significance of the patches of thorn scrub was lost to him, of the rugged and broken terrain, of the foothills about him, with their straggling mi- Loose shale and flints slipped under By degrees his ! mosas. But suddenly Winton stopped, trembling. Ireen grass was. at his feet, and out of a fissure in the ground there bubbled a little spring, unguessed at by the map-makers. It was a tiny unknown oasis in the vast wilderness. De Witt had evidently possessed the secret, and had planned to make this his headquarters until the hue and cry had been dropped. Winton flung himself upon the earth beside the spring, and, burying his face in the water, drank until his shriveled veins seemed to pulse with new blood. The sun had set. and the intense heat was changing to the icy cold of the desert night when he arose, rested, and with all the grimness of his reso- lution nerving him to action. He knew that Sheila could not be far away. He looked at his revolver. To his con- | sternation he discovered that only two | shots remained. However, these ! should be enough—one, at least, would save Sheila from De Witt; the other— He would not face the possibilities " that unfolded themselves before him, but rose to his feet, and was about to follow the spring through a valley into the hills when something lying upon the ground attracted his attention. It was Sheila's handkerchief. He snatched it up and pressed it to his lips. He felt that Sheila had dropped it for an indication, knowing that he would follow. Lightly he stepped forward into the bush-clad hills, among the boulders. The valley opened. The scene grew desolate again. All round Winton were hills of a precipitous character, which gradually grew steeper until he found himself in a sort of level am- phitheater, apparently inclosed, save at the end through which he had come, Thin tufts of grass and sparse vege- tation grew around the bases of the cliffs, but the central portion of the valley was of a dazzling whiteness, as if incrusted with salt or alkali. Alengz one side were numerous trails, showing the sharp edges of the spoo of beasts. : After a while Winton discovered that the white floor, on which he now walked, was not composed of mineral but of animal matter. It was a layer of pulverized bones, thousands upon thousands, picked bare by jackals and vultures, bleached by the sun and dis- integrated by the passage of years. Gradually the bones grew larger until Winton was stumbling on that nneven floor. It was one of those death places of the wild beasts of the veld, often described but seldom en- countered. It was a natural resting- place for the antelope and creatures of prey, which, feeling the approach of aeath, drank their ast drink at the suring and turnea aside among tiie clifis to die unmolested. It had heen nsed for countless generatont \Win- ron saw the nmnrensely lenz tiugn- bones of the giraffe, exceeding tha height of a man, though the beast had long since been driven northward. There were the skulls and horns of springhok, koodoo, hartebeeste and guu, with their varying forms and spirals. Gaunt ribs stood out like tl.» framework of old, rotting bo.is; teeth gaped in skulls, and in one lonely piace, in a cluster of grass, an aged hyena, whose last hunting was done, crouched, belly flat against the groun’, with open chops, and snarled in its decrepitude. : Winton hurried on, trying to make the end of the valley, where he | thought some pass might exist, before ‘darkness held him a prisoner. He had nearly crossed this desolate region when he caught sight of a tiny twinkle of red light on the cliff above him. | He stopped, hardly able to believe it true. Another light appeared. Then ‘came a series. Winton realized that these were sparks blown from a camp- fire upon the summit, | His heart began to thump wildly. He stumbled forward over the bones. Darkness had fallen by the time he reached the narrow trail at the val- ley's end, and he had many narrow escapes among the boulders with which | the way was strewn, On each side of him the cliff rose vertically, and the pass itself, hardly wide enough to per- mit a horse to ascend, seemed like a fissure in the mountain side made by some natural cleavage of the rocks. He had ascended to within a few feet of the summit when some instinct halted him abruptly. Then a sudden drfit of smoke toward him showed him that the camp-fire was just at the crest. The sound of voices reached his ears, : (Continued next week). ——Subscribe for the “Watchman.”