HE WAS ONLY A CLERK By H. M. EGBERT (Copyright by W. G. Chapman.) IL €C CAN'T stand this any longer, Dick. I'm going to leave you." I Edith Kane faced her hus- band of eight months defiant- ty. The setting for the tragic out- break was commonplace; a city flat. In the tiny living room the two clashed In that age-long confiict. “Because I am poor?’ inquired Kane quietly. He had long expected the culmination; now that it had come he felt cooler than he had thought would be possible. His wife looked with contempt upon the little figure in the shabby clothes, “Because you are a clerk,” she an- swered. ‘Because you are content to be a clerk. You have a clerk's soul, and 1—I was born for something bet- ter than to be a clerk's wife.” “You knew my occupation you married me,” sald Kane, “I did,” she answered. “And I thought I'd make something of you, But you're satisfied to work for Jer- rold "day after day, on thirty a week, while he piles up his millions, Oh, I'm tired of it all” She sank into a chalr, put her face in her hands, and burst into hysteri- cal weeping. Kane stood for a mo- ment watching her. Then he walked to her and raised her head from her hands, flinging it back almost bru- tally. “How me!” “Never mind that. I want to ask you a question. Are you leaving me . for Jerrold?” “What if I am? Have you any right to ask, you who have made me slave for you, slave for a clerk?” Her breath came and went quickly, ghe rose to her feet and looked at him with all the disdain she felt. “I Insist on knowing” Kane. “You Insist? Well—yes. For a bet- ter man. For your employer, Mr, Jer- rold. The man thousands where you have pennies, “Thank you,” sald Kane, He left her and went into his room. Immediately, before the deflant anger had left began hurriedly to pack a suitcase. She cast the few when dare you use violence to answered who has » her, she Away her hus for her. temptuously things band had and went Kane, in heard the door of the hall hind her. been able to buy out, his IT. Harvey Jerrold, the millionaire bro- ker, was quite willing to see his un- derpaid his apartment on why Kane had not been for three days. Edith had telephoned him from her hotel the next morning, him quarrel. He employee In bachelor the drive, He telling about the refused to see him till he had his quarrel out with Kane, together, but worldliness, the man and his employee's Edith Kane, despite her was prudent and, In a honorable, She had held Jerrold length, and, when he talk her she had refused to let him embrace her Jesides, as every woman knows, if you really mean a man to marry you, with discretion. eared nothing for liane was resolved to spending of his millions, had been on needles because Kane did He had even meditated therefore, wife, way, at arm's began to even about divorce yon must go about It And, though Jerrold, Edith have the Jerrold she pins and not appear, going to him; when Kane was announced by the Japanese butler, he feit his heart triumphantly. He had squared all accounts with money, and be had fio doubt that he could square Kanne in the same way. He stood In his room waiting for fit with an uneasy but yet confident smile. And Kane wasted no time In eoming to the point. “You know what 1 have come about,” he cried, an absurd little fig- ure confronting the six-foot college athlete, “About Mrs, rold blandly. “T'tl have leap Kane?" inquired Jer it from your own lips.” cried Kane, “S8he has left me be- cause she loves you-—you or your money. What are you going to do about 1t?” “I can't cateh her and drag her back to you, ean I, Mr. Kane? drawled the other, “Are you going to marry her?’ “That depensls largely on the de- cision of the Reno court,” sald the millionaire. “1 guess there won't be any diffi culty about that,” sald Kane. “Your money will get anything. - Are you go- ing to marry her when the court has decided 7” “1 hope 80.” answered Jerrold. “See here, Kane, I'm-—I'm sorry. But in this life the riches and the women go to the strong. You've lost her. But I'I make good to you. I'll give you"— he hesitated—"thirty thousand dol- lars for your wife. What do you say?” “You scoundrel!” shouted Kane, shaking his fist at the other's face, “You contemptible blackguard!™ “It's more than any court would give. Take it or leave it, Kane,” sald derrold quietly, “JI accept,” sald Kane suddenly, IL. Three years lator he saw his wife again, Was over, | pearance. Jerrold could not have been as kind a companion as she had expected, to judge from the sadness of her expression, haunted look upon her face, across the alsle, next station, but, when he the platform, she had followed him. “I want to tell you, Dick, that I—I am sorry,” she sald In a low voice, old longing over longed to he only bowed and stood aside, sweep case—" she began, mortification, his selves into his brain like fire, knew he could never forget that place, in Wall street. with rold’s office, he had wealthy. But she could not know that the one purpose for which he lived wag nearing accomplishment. He had pursued the secrets of his pgvate speculations and made good usé of them. The month of wild speculation that had just ended had been a hard one for Jerrold. millionaire, IV. Jerrold sat in his office, ntterly bro. ken. of the man who had ruined him. He had learned too late, His own place of power had fallen to the clerk. He had lost seven million dol- lars, and Kane must have made three imes that sum. A sense of Irony was “A gent, sir, wants to see you—" “Ph “I think you'll see me, Mr gee nobody ” Jerrold,” “It's five years since you saw me before” he added, quietly Jerrold sprang up with a snarl flinch; he transformed, and it was he who pos- sessed the ease, the confidence “Yes, I have your money, Jerrold™ he said. “In this life, Jerrold, the and the go to the You blackguard,” he hurst out But seemed women strong. Now tell her wedding millions, wife and husband's millions, take that's your dirty them to your her first present to her second.” And he flung a check upon the other man's desk. Jerrold stared at It, man already stared at the him, who Shddenly he felt him choking: he realized that the had eaten into Kane's soul, had branded it indelibly with shame “Kane!” he muttered huskily, "See here! Didn't you know?” “Know what?" cried Kane. “Why that she didn’t I haven't seen her since that day. She went West and-—and thought bet. ter of it, Kane, Lord, didn’t know! The money-—" *D—n the money!” yelled Kane rushing from the office. And In the heavens, dancing In lurid red on thelr blue background, he saw the number of the house on Mor timer street, who had bested was Relics of Past Ages in Western Ireland Near Quintin castle, on the Ards peninsula, In western Ireland, in the grounds of Rock cottage stands a cally as a “gallaun.” Local legend has it that this was an execution stone of the chiefs of Tarn, who had their dun, or lis-—for it seems to be a combination of both on the summit of Tara hill The stone is In view of the hill is sald, could see the executions at or on it from this hilitop fort, If he did not want to be present at the stone itself. 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