@ Ben Ames Williams, SYNOPSIS Barbara Sentry, seeking to sober up her escort, Johnnie Boyd, on the way home from a party, slaps him, and attracts the attention of a policeman, whom the boy knocks down. As he arrests him, Professor Brace of Harvard comes to the rescue and drives Barbara home. On the way they see Barbara's father driving from the direction of his office at 12:45, but when he gets home he fells his wife it is 11:15 and that he's been playing bridge at the club. Next day Sentry reports his office has been robbed and a Miss Wines, former tempo- rary employee, ki’od. The evening papers luridly confirm the story, and Sentry takes it hard. Mary, elder daughter, in love with Neil Ray, young interne at the hospital where she works, goes off to dinner at Gus Loran’s, Sentry’s partner, with Mrs. Loran’s brother, Jimmy Endle. Mr. and Mrs. Sen- try call on old Mrs. Sentry, and Barbara, alone, receives Dan Fisher, reporter, who advises her not to talk. Phil Sentry, son at Yale, is disturbed at the possible implica- tioi's and suspicion of Miss Wines’ absence from her rooms for three days during Aug- ust. He goes home to help. Sentry is ar- rested and booked for murder. Dan Fisher explains the evidence against: him-—that the robbery was a fake, the safe opened by one who knew the combination, changed since Miss Wines’ employment there—that a back door key, a duplicate of Sentry’s, was found in the girl's purse, and that Sentry, too, had been away those three days in August. Brace calls, and backs up Barbara in her denial that Sentry could have done it, because of the discrepancy of time be- tween the slaying and their seeing Sentry on the road. Phil, showing the police over the house, finds his strong box forced open and his gun, which only his father knew of, gone. Meanwhile, the police find the stolen money burned in the furnace. Mrs. Sentry sees her husband, who swears his innocence, and tells her he had known of the robbery and murder the night before, but failed to call the police, and came home at 12:30. Phil and his mother are doubtful of Sentry’'s innocence, but keep silent, CHAPTER V 11 While they were at lunch, a little later, Dean Hare telephoned to say that Inspector Irons had decided to postone his interrogations, so for the afternoon they were free. Mary was to see Neil Ray when he went off duty; and as they finished lunch, Linda came to propose that Phil go for a drive with her. “I have to go out to those mills in Norwood to get some homespun,” she explained, “and I hate to go alone.” Phil looked to his mother for con- sent. “Go along,” she said. ‘“‘Bar- bara and grandmother will be here.” So Phil went, and found a measure of peace and forgetfulness in being thus with Linda. But when she brought him home, in late after- noon, he was reluctant to face them all; instead of going directly in- doors, he walked around the house. He heard voices by the muddy stream beyond the pergola and went to look down over the bank. Police- men were there in boats with things like hinged rakes, dragging up debris from the bottom of the stream. One of them saw him and spoke quietly to the others, and they all looked up, silently. Phil went back toward the house, trembling. He found his mother alone. “Mary's dining with Neil,” she ex- plained, “and I sent Barbara in to stay overnight with grandmother. Professor Brace called, drove them in.” She smiled reassuringly. “So we'll have dinner together, you and 1” “Professor Brace?” he echoed. He remembered warily that the Dis- trict Attorney had questioned Pro- fessor Brace, but he did not say so. “Funny for him to—hang around.” “1 suppose he’s naturally interest- ed. The scientific mind, you know." Her tone was edged. ‘‘We're under his microscope, like insects.” “He introduced himself to the re- porters,” Phil recalled. “Almost as if he—wanted publicity.” “1 see you don't like him either.” “Oh—I like him all right.” Dinner was served and they went in; and since they might here be overheard they spoke of other things. Phil talked at random, steadily, fighting down his thoughts: that his father had taken his gun, that his father had tried to burn money in the furnace, that his fa- ther was a murderer! He must not let his mother guess his dreadful certainty. And she, as intent to hide her thoughts from Phil as he was to conceal his from her, helped him keep talk alive; but when they left the table and went into the living- room and were alone, silence crushed them; and Phil noisily light- ed a fire, and Mrs. Sentry tele- phoned old Mrs. Sentry’s apartment to say good night to Barbara. She reported to Phil, when she left the phone, that Professor Brace had stayed to dinner with them. “I suppose he’s taking notes,” she reflected. ‘‘Like that German tutor at the foot of the table in ‘War and Peace.” Remember? There's just a paragraph about him, but he’s per- fectly clear cut, a complete char- acter in your mind afterward.” Phil did not remember. “But speaking of Russians,” he suggest- ed, “how about some Russian Bank?” So they played till Mrs. Sentry said at last that they might as well go to bed. The house seemed very big and empty when they went upstairs, and parted for the night. Later, Mrs. Sentry, still awake, heard Mary come in; but the girl did not come upstairs, so her moth- er went down, a dressing-gown over her night garments. She found Mary in the living-room, standing by the hearth, her lips bitten red, her hands twisting. And Mrs. Sentry tried in an awk- ward way—they were not a demon- strative family—to take the girl in her arms, but Mary said, ‘Don't, please!" So Mrs. Sentry sat down. ‘Shall we talk for a while?” she suggest- ed. “Or are you sleepy?” “Sleepy!” The word was flerce with scorn. “How is Neil?’ ’ “Very sensible!” Mrs. Sentry said, would—help you.” “Oh—help? Of course!” ‘‘He didn't, then?” Mary said: “Don’t worry about Neil! We were practically engaged, but I told him tonight we must for- get that. That after all this, I was hopelessly disqualified to be a mis- sionary’s wife, even in China!” Mrs. Sentry waited. Mary said in a flat voice, passionless as ashes, ‘“‘He agreed with me.” After a while her mother spoke, “lI knew he On the homeward way-—Barbara returned with them-—they heard mewsboys calling late editions, and one bawling youngster jumped on the running-board when they stopped for a traffic light to thrust a paper before their eyes. A head- line, inches high. “Sentry Indicted.” Mrs. Sentry closed her eyes, and the light changed, and the car leaped ahead. At home a knot of people scat- tered from the entrance to the drive, gaped at them as they drove in. Phil saw that one woman had broken off a branch of rhododen- dron, and he thought bitterly: For a souvenir! Indoors, Barbara asked in a shak- en whisper, ‘“Mother, what does ‘in- dicted” mean?” Mrs. Sentry sald, ‘““Hush, dar- ling!" And she asked, ‘Do you know where Mary is, whether she'll be home to dinner?’ She felt cold as iron. Barbara shook her head. “I think Mary's rotten!’ Phil said angrily. “We've got to—stick to- gether!” “She's pretty unhappy, Phil" tentatively. “I wish I could—hold you in my lap, dear, as I did when you were little and were hurt.” “No, thanks. I'm not little any more.” The girl stood before the hearth, rigid and still, her eyes fixed, her hands clasped behind her. Mrs. Sentry thought of a martyr at the stake surrounded by flames, burned without being consumed. She began to talk, of casual, healing things. “Some people called this after- noon,” she said. “Mrs. Harry Murr, bulging with questions she wanted to ask and didn’t quite dare. And Mrs. Furness brought Miss Glen. You could see her memorizing ev- ery stick of furniture, every picture on the walls, to use in her next novel" The girl cried: “Mother, don't! How can you stand it?” “And that young professor, Mr, Brace, dropped in,” Mrs. Sentry persisted. ‘‘He took mother and Barbara to town.” “You're driving me crazy!” Mrs. Sentry sighed wearily, sur- rendering. “I'm sorry about Neil, Mary. Yet—if he couldn’t—stand the gaff, isn't it a good thing to know?" “No it isn’t!” Mary cried. “What does that matter, if you love a man? What does it matter if he's weak, a sniveling coward, a drunkard, a thief?” Her eyes widened. "Even a murderer,” she whispered. “You go on loving him just the same.” And she cried: “Oh, why is love so deep a part of women, mother? Why can’t we be reasonable, sensi- ble!” She spat the word. “Like men!” And suddenly, seeing the old- er woman's face, she stopped, said then curtly: “Good night! I'm going to bed.” The still room ached when she was gone. When Mrs. Sentry came down- stairs in the morning, Mary had de- parted, leaving no message; and the older woman felt a deep con- cern that was half despair. But she hid it from Phil. They stayed at home, together and yet each one alone. Phil wondered whether his mother knew that the Grand Jury might act today; he thought of a group of strange men, in a secret room somewhere, hear- ing evidence against his father, and trembled as though he were ill. He thought his mother might suggest that they go again to see his fa- ther, and knew that he himself had no strength to face the older man and to pretend he did not know what he did know. But his mother did not make the suggestion; and after lunch they drove in to see old Mrs. Sentry, and heard newsboys shouting the name of Sentry, and Mrs. Sentry shivered at last and said with a weary smile: “I think we'd better stay at home hereafter, Phil.” Mrs. Sentry explained. ‘Neil Ray broke their engagement.” “Engagement? I didn't know they were engaged.” “They would have been, in time. Mary loved him.” “I'd like to knock his block off!" Mrs. Sentry said: “Don’t be a child, Phil. I'm afraid you'll find a good many people take the same at- titude. Now get ready for dinner, both of you.” She thought at dinner, while Phil and Barbara talked to her, bravely cheerful, that the world of which they were a part must be just now full of buzzing tongues. Her own tongue had never been under a curb. From the security of an assured position she had spoken as she chose, rigorous toward those who transgressed her code. Now others would have their turn. She tried to imagine what people would say, what their attitude would be. Would they speak to her of Arthur? Pro- testing they believed him innocent, professing friendship and sympathy while they watched her with sly, av- idly curious eyes? She shuddered, and she thought: I might take the children abroad, live the rest of our lives abroad, perhaps assume an- other name. But someone who knew them would find them out; there would be whispering, whispering . .. She tried to tell herself: He did not do it! Of course, he had lied to her about the time, that night, know- ing she was too sleepy to recognize after that dreadful moment at the office when he found the dead girl. to herself that Arthur did find the girl dead as he had told her, refus- came skulking home, And Mrs. Sentry hoped suddenly covery and craven flight. was better than that shame. She thought that if he did not speak murder occurred. That crime at least would be robust, masculine; not weakly cowardly . . . But of course anything, any story convicted of murder. pened, she could never lift her head again, worth fighting for. dinner, and Mrs. Sentry welcomed her, bridge. She clung to Linda's friend- ly loyalty. bara would not: “I'm sorry,” she said, trying to smile. “I'm afraid this is my were tremulously brave. myself and cry for a while.” ‘No, Phil. Let her go!” They heard Barbara's door close, upstairs. ran somehow, and a little after nine, a car grated on the drive. out laying aside her hat. try realized that the car had not girl was flushed. incredulously, drinking. Mrs. Sentry saw, defiant. She said to Linda, curtly. *“This is carelessly, “Oh, stay if you like, of course." talk like that! drunk!” She laughed derisively. not it's not for lack of trying.” And she asked Linda: “Going? ashore that's going ashore! ship's sinking!” Linda said quietly: “No, Mary. I'll stay.” passion; sion bound her tongue. “Mary, ly shrill way. “Myself? Who am I? Who are you? Who are any of us?" And she said furiously: “Oh, I thought I knew! I thought we were so secure, and settled, and decent, and good.” Her laughter rang mad- deningly. “Decent? Good? No de- us now." “Mary!” (TO BE CONTINUED) Quartz, which looks like glass and is a sort of glass, is the last mate- rial most of us would use to make a spring. But the scientists in the General Research laboratories find nothing but quartz will do for springs in making precise measure- ments, says a writer in the New York Times. Steel springs rust; quartz springs don't. Steel springs are affected by changes in humidity; quartz springs are not. Steel springs begin to lose their temper at about 250 degrees Centigrade (482 degrees Fahren- heit); quartz springs never lose their temper except at temperatures not attained in ordinary practice. A quartz spring has a sensitivity of one milligram. In other words, it can detect a difference of weight as little as one 28,350th of an ounce. And it always snaps back, after stretching, to exactly the original point of rest. Suppose it becomes necessary to measure the amount of moisture absorbed by cotton or cellulose. The cotton is suspended at one end of the spring and the weight of the sample determined by the stretch of the spring. By introducing more and more water at varying pres- «rag it becomes possible to deter- mine just how much moisture cotton can absorb. Making a quartz thread is some- thing of a fine art. The first step is to spin a fine thread no more than six one-thousandths of an inch in diameter. This is done by heating a fused quartz rod to more than 3,000 degrees Fahrenheit and pulling threads from the rod. The threads are measured by calipers. All with- in a quarter of a mil of the desired six-mil size are saved. (A mil is a unit used to measure the diameter of a wire. It is equivalent to a thousandth of an inch.) The final step is to place the thread in a long brass trough which leads to a mandrel (technical term for a drum of the right diameter). As it passes over the mandrel the thread is heated to 1,800 degrees Fahrenheit. The mandrel makes GETTING OVER IT Pat was being shown over a new house by the estate agent, who was, perhaps, a little more inclined to candor than some of his tribe. agent, ‘“‘that there is one drawback to this house. Still, I'm notice it.” said: “Sure, an’ ye needn’t worry. Oi'll DON'T BELIEVE SIGNS “What do I do when I go to the “You be careful about the zoo,” “You'll see foine ani- It's a fraud, and it's to look at STEAM-ROLLERED “Welcome home, Bob, 1 suppose you?” “Well, as they flattened me com- pletely, no doubt I've gained in breadth." Our Censorious Civilization “Why do people find fault with a mistake and so seldom encourage good deeds?” “It's due to natural requirements answered Mr, “A traffic cop, for in- He wouldn't be any good at around to compliment cautious driv- ers.” Observation The witness was on the stand dur- ing an important trial. attorney, The witness shrugged. Among the ‘Mizzen' the sea. asked: “Where's the mizzenmast?” man. zen?” IN PLAIN VIEW po. Ss >) — was love at first sight, eh?” “" es." “Why didn't you marry her?” “The second sight was a close- up.” Modern Idea “How did Tom manage to get so much of his uncle's estate?” “He married his lawyer's only daughter.” 8 A Friendly Warning “1 realize I owe a lot to my coun- try,” declared the orator. “Not too much of that, mate,” Crochet This Set and Tot Will Be Delighted Pattern 6224 She'll be proud as a peacock to for decoration. The muff is a grown-up and stylish! 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