EVENING LEBGEB-PHILABEIilPHIA, BATTIRDAY, NOVEMBEB 18, 1910 ismiiiiesiissln SKniidsjSfB WfnHiWrf W V 'WieYACA M, Kr i' fiy Geonfe cAlJan Endland (Cetxrthl. !. br Ft"'' A. Mutiny Co.) CHAPTER I The Awakening DIMLY, llko Ihe daybreak glimmer of a iky Ionic wrapped In ' 'in of eonsetousnem began to dawn In the fnca of Once more the breath of life began to Rtlr In thst full bosom, to which again a vital warmth had on this day of days crept lowly back s And as he '" th'rfl Prone upon the lJ?,y floor, her beautiful face burled and kh!ldel In the hollow of nor arm, a nigh tiled from her lips. iriif was flowing back again t Tlu f- ftltacle of miracles was growing to reality. t Fwalntlr now she breathed; vaguely her Start began to throb once more. She stirred Ehe moaned, stilt for themoment powerless lo cast off wholly tho enshrouding Incubus If that tremendous, dreamless sleep. Then her hands closed, Tho finely tapered lingers tangled themsolves In tho masses of thick, luxuriant hair which lay out tpread all over and about hr- The eyelids And. a moment later, Beatrice Kcndrlck vis sitting up, dazed and utterly uncom prehending, peering about her at the .. n.eFllon which since tho world bo- ran had ever been tho lot of any human creature to behold tho vision of a placo ' transformed beyond nil power or mo Intel , Jed to understand. For of the room which she remembered, ' which had been her last sight when (so " Mas4, so very long, ago) hT eyes had closed With that sudden and unconquerable drows iness, of that room, I say, remained only walls, celling, door of rust-red steel and crumbling cement Quite gono was all tho plaster, as by jnsglc. Hero and thcro a heap of whitish fluit betrayed whero somo of Its detritus Oone was every picture, chart nnd map which but an hour since It seemed to her had decked this ofllco of Allan Stern, con sulting engineer, this nerlo up In tho forty eighth story of tho Metropolitan Tower. Furniture, there was none, Over tho stlll intact glass of the windows cobwebs wero draped so thickly ns almost to exclude tho light of day a strange, fly-Infested cur tain where onco neat green shade-rollers fead hung, ... ETtn as tho bewildered girl sat there, lips parted, eyci wldo with amnzo, a spider lelied his buzzing prey nnd scampered Lack Into a hole In tho wall. A huge, leathery bat, suspended upside gown In the far corner, cheeped with dry, repliant sounds of Irritation. Beatrice rubbed her eyes, i What?" sho said, quite Blowly. "Drcam I tog? How singular I I only wish I could remember this when I wako up. Of all tho dreams 1'vo ever had, this one's certainly the strangest. So real, so vivid I "Why, I ' could Swear I was awake and yet " ' All at onco a sudden doubt Hashed Into htr mind An uneasy expression dawned across her face. Her eyes grow wild with a ret fear; tho fear of utter and absolute Incomprehension j Something about this room, Itha weird , , awakening, bore In upon her consciousness 'a the dread tidings this was not a dream I ( i siSomethIng drove homo to her tho fact 1 I Oat It was real, objective, positive I And t f With a gasp of f r ght sho struggled up 1 1 amid the litter and tho rubbish of that un- ' ciany room '"Oh!" sho cried In terror, aB a huge scor- Mon. ihnlevolent. and with Its tall raised jdftfto strike, scuttled away and vanished ' .tx through a gaping oll whero onco tho cor- ., A?. 1 mtJtm ., - U-.l ., KHh l.l Whip y JUU( UUUI IIUU otvuiit,. Wt, w,, I,,.u.w Un I? What what has happoncd?" , Horrified beyond all words, pale and ''tiring, both hands clutched to her breast, ' whereon her very clothing now had torn ' and crumbled, oho faced about. To her It seemed as though some mon strous, evil thing wero lurking In the dim corntr at her back. She tried to scream, but could utter no sound, savs a choked gasp. , Then sho started toward tho doorway. Even as she took the first few steps her ' gown a mere tattered mockery of raiment "fell away from her l And, confronted by a new problem, she topped short About her she peered In vain for something to protect her disarray. There was nothing! "Why Where's whero's my chair? My desk!" she exclaimed thickly, staring to ward the place by tho window whero they "should have been, and were not Her He,,, shapely feet fell soundlessly In that strange j ( and Impalpable dust which thickly coated "My typewriter? Is can that bo my typewriter? Great Heavens! What's tho matter here, with everything? Am I mad?" St There before her lay a somewhat larger 1 Vile of dust mixed with soft and punky ' splinters of rotten wood. Amid all this decay she saw soma bits of rust, a cor roded typebar or two, even a few rubber ! keycaps, ttfill recognizable, though with tho letters quite obliterated. . All about her, veiling her completely In a mantle of wondrous gloss and beauty, her lustrous hair fell, as Bhe stooped to see this trange, Incomprehensible phenomenon. 6he tried to pick up one of the rubber caps. i M her merest touch It crumbled to an Im- Palpable white powder. Back with a shuddering cry the gtrl Prang, terrified. "Merciful heavens I" aha Buppllcated. "Whit what does all this mean?" For a moment ahe stood there, her every Power of thought, of motion, numbed. Jreathlng not she only started In a wild Una of cringing amazement, as perhaps you might do If you should sea a dead man Z30V, Then to the door she ran. Out Into the aall she peered, this way and that down a dismantled corridor, up the wreckage , the stairs, all cumbered, like the oflica "lf, with dust and webs and vermin. Aloud she hallsh: "Oh! Help, help, S 1" No an,wer. Even the echoes flung Bftex only dull, vacuous sounds that deep nd her sense, of awful and Incredible Iso lation. What? No nolsa of human life anywhere be heard? Nonel No familiar hum of tae metropolis now roso from what when at had fallen asleep, had been swarming Hreets and miles on mile's of habitations. Instead, a blank, unbroken leaden sl nee, that seemed part of the musty, chok JUJ atmosphere a silence that weighed Sown on Beatrlco like funeral palls. Durofounded by all this, and by the uni versal crumbling of every perishable jr. tho girl ran, shuddering, back Into offlee. There in the dust her foot struck enwthing hard, ult lrtoope,1 ,De caught Jt up and.stared ,. "My glass Inkwelll What? Only such wags remain r No dream, then, but reality? She knew length that some catastrophe, incredibly Ir ft 80m disaster cosmic In the tragedy iS weP. had desolated the world. Oh, tny mother!" cried she. "My mother JesdT Dead, now, how long?" tm did not weep, but Just stood cower- chill of anguished horror racking r. All at once her teeth began to chat " her body to shake as with an ague. Thus for a moment dazed and stunned W remained there, knowing not which a to turn nor what to do. Then her Mrror-au-icjtea eal0 fen 0n the doorway onur trom, her outer office to the Inner hsre Stern had had hU laboratory M cowaiitatlon room. UM QA, Mnw I... MM A . .AVOTJt(l ftfl etrww . . --- unrrw iiuua, at rf m wm- .- Toward It she staggered. About her she drew the sheltering masses of her hair, like a QodlVa Of another ni; nn.l In hoi- va 1 womanlike, the hot tears mounted. As she ...7 crlea m a V0,C9 of horror. Mr. Stern! Oh Mr. Stern! Are are you dead, too? lou can't be It's too frightful 1" She renched, tho door. The mere touch of her outstretched hand disintegrated It Uown In a crumbling mass It fell. Thick dust bellied up In a cloud, through which a single sun lay that entered the cobwebbed pane shot a radiant arrow. Hesitant fearful of even greater ter tors In that other room, Ucatrlco peered through this du.t hazo. A sick foreboding of evil possessed her at thought of what sho might nnd thore yet moro afraid was she of what she knew lay behind her. An Instant she stood within the ruined doorway, her left hand resting on the moldy Jam. Then, with a cry, she started forward a cry In which terror had given place to Joy, despair to hope. Forgotten now tho fact that save for the shrouding of her massy hair, she stood naked. Forgotten the wreck, the desola tion everywhere. "Oh thank heaven!" gasped she. Thcro, In that Inner omce. half rising from tho wrack of many things that had been nnd wero now no more, her startled eyes beheld the flguro of a man of Allan Stern! Ho lived I At her ho peered with eyes thnt saw not. ot; townrd her he groped a vague, un steady hand. Ho llvod! Not qulto alona In 'this world-ruin, not all nlono was sho I CHAPTER II Realization THU Joy In Hcatrlco's eyes gave way to poignant wonder as she gazed on him. Could this bn ho? Yes, well sho knew It wns. Sho recog-' nlzcd him even through tho grotcsquery of his clinging rags, oven behind tho mask of a long, red, dusty beard nnd formidable mustache, oven desplto tho ulld nnd staring Incohcrenco of his wholo expression. Yet how Incrcdlblo the mctnmorphoslst To her Unshed a memory of this man, her othcr-tlmo employor keen and smooth shaven, nlort, well dressed, self centered, dominant, tho master of a. hundred complox problems, the directing mind of engineering works Innumerable. Faltorlng and uncertain now he stood there. Then, at the sound of tho girl's voice, he staggered toward her with out flung handa. Ho stopped, and for a moment stared at her. For he had had no time as yet to correlate his thoughts, to pull himself together. And while ono's heart might throb ten times. Beatrlco saw terror In his blinking, bloodshot eyes. But almost at onco the engineer mastered himself. Even ns Beatrice watched him, breathlessly, from tho door, Bhe saw his fear die out, sho saw lih courage well up fresh and strong. It was almost as though something tangible wero limning the man's soul upon his face Sho thrilled nt Bight of him. And though for a long moment no word wbb spoken, whllo tho man nnd woman stood looking nt each other like two chil dren In Rome drond nnd unfamiliar attic, an understanding leaped between them. Then, uomanllko. Instinctively as Bhe breathed, tho girl ran to him. Forgetful of overy convention nnd of her disarray, sho seized his hand. And In a voice that trembled till It broke she cried "What Is It? What does all this mean? Tolt mo!" To him she clung. "Tell me the truth and eavo met Is It real?" Stern looked at her wonderlngly. He smiled b. strange, wan, mirthless smile. All about him he looked. Then his lips moved, but for the moment no sound came. Ho mado another effort, this time suc cessful "There, there," eald'he huskily, as though the dust and dryness of the Innumerable years had got Into his very voice. "There, now, don't be afraldl "Something seems to have taken place hero while we've been asleep. What? What la It? I don't know yet I'll And out Thero's nothing to be alarmed about at any rate." "But look!" She pointed at the hideous desolation. "Yes, I see. But no matter. You're alive. I'm alive. That's two of us, any how. Maybe there are a lot more. We'll soon see. Whatever It may be, we'll win." Ho turned and, trailing rags and stream era of rotten cloth that ones had been a business suit he waded through the con fusion of wreckage on the floor to the window. If you have seen a weather-beaten scare crow Happing In the wind, you have some notion of his outward guise. No tramp you ever laid eyes on could have offered so preposterous an appearance. Down over his shoulders fell the matted, dusty hair. Ills tangled beard reached far below his waist Even his eyebrows, naturally rather light, had grown to a heavy thatch above his eyes. Save that ho was not gray or bent, and that he still seemed to have kept the resilient force of vigorous manhood, you might have thought him some Incredibly ancient Itlp Van Winkle come to life upon that singular stage, there In the tower. But little time gave he to Introspection or the matter of his own appearance. With one quick gesture he swept away the shroud ing tangle of webs, spiders and dead flies that obscured the window. Out he peered. "Oood heavens I" cried he, and started back a pace. She ran to him. . "What Is It?" she breathlessly exclaimed. "Why. I don't know -yet But this Is something big) Something universal! It's It's no; no, you'd better not look out not Just yet" "I must know everything, trst me seer Now she was at his side, and, like him, staring out Into the clear sunshine, out over the vast expanses of the city, A moment's utter silence fell. Quite clearly hummed the protest of an Imprison ed fly In a web at the top of the window. The breathing of the man and woman sounded quick and loud. . , "All wrecked T" cried Beatrice, "Bur then" "Wrecked? It looks that way," the en gineer made answer, with a strong effort holding his emotions in control. "Why not be (rank about this? You'd better make up your mind at once to accept the very worst I tee no signs of anything else, "The worst? You mean" "I mean Just what we see out there. Ton can Interpret It as well as'l." Again the alienee while they looked, with emotions that could find no voicing In word. Instinctively the engineer passed an arm about the frightened glri and drew her close to him. i "And the last thing I rememher," whispered she, "was Just Just after you'd finished dictating those Taunton Bridge specifications. J suddenly felt oh, so sleepyl Only for a minute I thought I'd close my eyes and rest, and then then" "This?" , She nodded. "Same" here," said he. "What the deuce can have struck us? Us and everybody and everything? Talk about your prob-. Umt Lucky I'm cane and sound, and , and He did not onun, but reu once more to .jGt&Wffift ifW iix-iz-K&swrj i f gj'i,ve.vii i i ;'M.vfit.'iixiy.'j-TjLs -."" 2'j-ir:irt.xAv7-Ci7i-ijfra'r.ii ll&fiisy ,rhor. Jn that innor offtcc. hn" rising ir tho wra& Sfe startled eyes beheld tho flguro of a man Allan Stern. wav enTs. TH . .... I.. .,. ,1 I I. I J . , I . , I . II -I I .....-! II ..I Ill II I I I H H . Their view was townrd the east, but over the river and tho reaches of what had once upon a time been Long Island City and Brooklyn, ns familiar a scene In tho other days as could be possibly Imagined. - But now how nltored an aspect greeted them! "It's surely all wiped out, all gone, gone Into ruins," said Stern slowly nnd carefully, weighing each word "No hallucination about that." Ho swept tho sky-lino with his eyes, that now peered keenly out from benenth those bushy brows. Instinctively he brought his hand up to his breast He started with surprise. "What's this?" ho cried. "Why. I I've got a full yard of whiskers. My good Lord I Whiskers on me? And I used to say " He burst out laughing. At his beard he plucked with merriment jthat Jangled hor ribly on the girl's tense nerves. Suddenly he grew serious. For the flrst time he seemed to take clear notice of his compan ion's plight "Why, what a time It must have been!" cried he. "Here's some calculation all cut out for me. all right But you can't go that way, Miss Kendrlck. It It won't do, you know. Got to have something to put on. Great heavens, what a situation I" He tried to peel off his remnant of a coat but at the merest touch It tore to shreds and fell away. The girl restrained him. "Never mind." Bald she, with quiet, modest dignity, "My hair protects me very well for the present If you and I are all that's left of the people In the world, this Is no time for trifles." A moment he studied her. Then he nodded, .and grew very grave. "Forgive me," he whispered, laying a hand on her shoulder. Once mors he turned to the window and looked out "So then. It's all goner he queried, speaking as to himself. "Only a skyscraper standing here or there? And the bridges and the Islands all changed. "Not a sign of life anywhere; not a sound; the forests growing thick among the ruins? A dead world If If all the world Is like this part of It I All dead, save you and met" In silence they stood there, striving to realize the full Import of the catastrophe. And Stern, deep down In hla heart caught some glimmering Insight of the future and was glad, CHAPTER III On the Tower Platform SUDDENLY the,' girl started, rebelling against the Evidence of her own senses, striving again to force upon herself the be lief that, after all, t could not be so, "No, no, nol" she cried 'This can't be true. Jt mustn't be. There's a mistake somewhere. This simply must be all an Illusion, a dream I "If the whole world's dead, how does It happen we're alive? How do we know It's dead? Can we see It all from here? Why, all we see la Just a little segment of things. Perhaps If we could know the truth, look farther, and know " , He shook bis head. "I guesa you'll And It real enough," he answered, "no matter how far you look. But, Just the same, it won't do any harm to extend our radius of observation. "Come, let's go up on top of the tower, up to the observation platform. The quicker we know all the available facts the better. Now. It I only had a telascoper !" Be thought hard a moment, then turned mdjstrode eye ""'?j " fci dWo- i. . ,j. . o j-e. i i i ii i i - ir - 1IW.JSJ1; iTJ !v t.. )UL,:jr.n..fc J r" w Wu .-r."ttTf-V. "IT.. !. .iiVI T. .f f IT I '.Tin tt.eee-IT'La. tegratlon that lay where once his Instru ment case had stood, containing his sur veying tools. Down on his ragged knees he fell; his rotten Bhreds of clothing tore and ripped nt every movement like so much water soaked paper. A strange, hairy, dust-covered figure, he knelt there Quickly he plunged his hands Into the rubbish nnd began pawing It over and over with eager haste. "Ah!" he cried with triumph. "Thank heaven, brass and lenses haven't crumbled yet!" Up he stood again. In his hand the girl saw a peculiar telescope. "My 'level,' see?" he exclaimed, holding It up to view. "Tho woodoh tripod's long since gone The fixtures that held It on won't bother me much. "Neither will the splrlt-glass on ton. The main thing Is that the telescope Itself seems to be still Intact Now we'll see." Speaking, he dusted oft the eyepiece and the objective with a bit of rag from his coat sleeve. Beatrice noted that the brass tubes were all eaten and pitted with verdigris, but they still held flrmly. And the lenses, when Stern had finished cleaning them, showed an bright and clear as ever. "Come, now; come with me," he bade. Out through the doorway Into the hall he made his way while the girl followed. As she went she gathered her wondrous veil of hair more closely about her. In this' universal disorganization, this wreck of all tho world, how little the con ventions counted I Together, picking their wuy up the broken stairs, where now the rust-bitten steel showed through the corroded stone and cement In a thousand places, they cau tiously climbed. Here, spider webs thickly shrouded the way, and had to be brushed down. There, still more bats hung and chlppered In pro test as tho Intruders passed. A fluffy little white owl blinked at them from a dark niche ; and, well toward the top of tho climb, they flushed up a score of mud swallows which had ensconced themselves comfortably along a broken balustrade. At last, however, despite all unforeseen Incidents of this sort they reached- the upper platform, nearly a thousand feet above thosearth. Out through the relics of the revolving door they crept, he leading, testing each foot of tho way before the glrL They reached the narrow platform of red tiling that surrounded the tower. Even here they saw with growing amaze ment that the hand of time and of this maddening mystery had laid Its heavy Im print "Lookl" he exclaimed, pointing. "What this all means we don't know yet How long It's been we can't telL But to Judge by the appearance up here, It's even longer than I thought See, the very tiles are cracked and crumbling. "Tllework Is usually considered highly recalcitrant but this la gone. There's grass growing In the dust that's settled between tho tiles. And why, here's a young oak that's taken root and forced a dozen slabs out of place " "The winds and birds have carried seed up here, and acorns," she answered In an awed voice. "Think of the time that must have passed. Years and years. "But tell me," and her brow wrinkled with a sudden wonder, "tell me how we've ever lived to long? I can't understand It "Not only have we escaped starvation, but we haven't frozen to death tn all these bitter winters. How can that have hap pened?" "Lot It all go ns suspended animation till wo learn tho facts, If we ever do," he replied, glancing about with wonder. "You know, of course, how toads have been known to llvo Imbedded tn rock for centuries? How fish, hnrd frozen, have been brought to llfo ngaln? Well" "But wo are human beings." "I know. Certain unknown natural forces, however, might have made no more of us than of nonmammallan and less highly or ganized creatures. "Don't bother your hesd about these problems yet a while. On my word, we've got enough to do for the present without much caring about how or why. "All we definitely know Is that some very long, undetermined period of time has passed, leaving us still alive. The rest can wait" "How long a time do you Judge It?" she anxiously Inquired. "Impossible to say at once. But It must havo been something extraordinary prob ably far longer than either of us suspect "See, for example, tho attrition of every thing up here exposed to the weather." He pointed at tho heavy stono railing. "See how that la wrecked, for Instanco." A whole segment. Indeed, had fallen In ward. Its debris lay In contusion, blocking all the southern sldo of the platform. The bronze bars, which Stern well re membered two at each corner, slanting downward and bracing a rail had now wasted to mere pockmarked shells of metal. Threo had broken entirely and sagged wantonly awry with the displacement of the stone blocks, between which the vines and grasses had long been carrying on tbelr destructive work. "Look out!" Stem cautioned. "Don't lean against any of those stones." Firmly he held her back as she, eagerly Inquisitive, started to advance toward the ratling. "Don't go anywhere near the edge. It may all be rotten and undermined for any thing we know. Keep back here, close to the wall." Sharply be Inspected It a moment "Facing stones are pretty well gone," said he, "but, so far as I can see, the steel frame Isn't too bad, Putting everything to gether, I'll probably be able before long to make some sort of calculation of the date. But for now we'll hare to call it "X, and let It go at that" "The year XI" she whispered under her breath. "Oood heavens, am I as old as that?" He made no answer, but only drew her to hlra protectlngly, while all about them the warm summer wind swept onward to the sea, out over the sparkling expanses of the bay alone unchanged tn all that universal wreckage. In the breeze her heavy masses of hair stirred lurtngly. He felt Its silken caress on his half-naked shoulder, and In his ears the blood began-.to pound with strange in sistence. Quite gone now the daze and drowsiness of the first wakening. Stern did not even feeUweak or shaken. On the contrary, never had life bounded more warmly, more fully, in hla veins. The presence of the girl set his heart throbbing heavily, but he bit his Up and restrained every untoward thought Only bis arm tightened a little about that warmly clinging body. Beatrice did not shrink from him. She needed hla protec tion a never since the world begto had v'" nce44 man, WA To her It seemed that come what might, his strength nnd comfort could not fall. And, desplto everything, she could not for the moment find unhnpplness within her heart Quite vanished now,evon In those brief mlnufts slnco their awakening, was all con sciousness of tholr former relationship omployer and employed. Tho self-contained, courteous yet unap proachable engineer had disappeared. Now, through all the extraneous disguise of his outer self, there lived and breathed Just a man, n young man, thewed with the vigor of his plenitude. All else had been swept clean away by this great change. Tho girl Vas different too. Was this strong woman, eager-oyed and brave, the quiet, low-voiced stenographer he remem bered, busy only with her machlno, her file boxes and her carbon copies? Stern dared not realise the transmutation. He ventured hardly fringe It In hla thoughts. , To divert his wonderlngs and to ease a situation which oppressed him he began adjusting the "lever' telescope to his eye. With his back planted firmly against the tower, he studied a wide section of the dead and burled World so very far below them. With astonishment he cried: "It Is true, Beatrice I Everything's swept clean away. Nothing left, nothing at all no signs of life! "As far ns I can reach with these lenses, universal ruin. We're all alone In this whole world, Just you and I and every thing belongs to us I" "Everything all ours?" "Everything I Even the future the future of the human race I" Suddenly he felt her tremble at his stds. Down at her he looked, a great new ten derness possessing him. He saw that tears were forming in her eyes. Beatrice pressed both hands to her face and bowed her head. Filled with strange emotions, the man watched her for a moment Then In silence, realizing the uselessness of any words, knowing that In this mon strous Bagnarbk of all humanity no ordi nary relations of life could bear either cog ency or meaning, he took her In hla arms. And there alone with her, far above the ruined world, high In the pure air of mid heaven, he comforted the girl with words till then unthought-of and unknown to him. CHAPTER IV The Cltu of Death PRESENTLY Beatrice grew calmer. For though grief and terror still weighed upon her soul, ahe realized that this was no fit time to yield to any weakness now When a thousand things were pressing for accomplishment, If their own lives, too, were not presently to be snuffed out Jn all this universal death. "Come, come," said Stern reassuringly. "I want you, too, to get a complete idea of what has happened. From now on ypu must know all, share all, with me." And taking her by the hand he led her along the crumbling and uncertain platform. Together, very cautiously, they explored the three sides of the platform still un choked by ruins. Out oyer the incredible mausoleum of civ ilization they peered. Now and again they fortified their vision by recourse to the telescope. Nowhere, as he had said, was any slight est sign, of life to be discerned. Nowhere a thread of stsopke arose ; no whs re a sound eeho4 upward- Dead lay the oily, between Its r!vrs, wherein now no sail glinted In the sunlight, no tug puffed vehemently with plumy J eta of steam, no liner Idled at anchor or nosed Its slow course out to sea. The Jersey shore, the Palisades, the Bronx and Long Island all lay burled In dense forests of conifers and oak, with only hero and there some skeleton mockery of a steel structure Jutting through. The Islands In the harbor, too, ware thickly overgrown. On Ellis no sign of the Immigrant station remained. Castle William was quite gone. And with a gasp of dismay nnd pain, Beatrice pointed out the fact that no longer Liberty held hut bronze torch aloft Save for a blaok, misshapen mass pro truding through the tree-tops, the huge gift of Franco was no more. Fringing the water-front, all the way around, the mournful remains of the docks and piers lay In a mere sodden Jumble of decay, with an occasional hulk sunk along side. Even over these wrecks of liners, vegeta tion was growing, rank and green. Alt the wooden ships, barges and schooners had utterly vanished. Tho telescope showed only a stray, lolling mast of steel, here or yonder, thrusting up from the desolation, like a mute appeal ing hand raised to a heaven that responded not "See," remarked Stem, "uptown almost all the buildings seem to have crumbled: In upon themselves or to have fallen out ward Into tho streets. What an Inconceiv able tangle of detritus those streets mutt be I "And, do you notice the park hardly shows at all? Everything's so overgrown with trees you can't tell where It begins or ends. Nature has her revenge at last, on man I" "The universal claim, mads real." saM Beatrlco. 'Those rather clearer lines of green. I suppose, must be the larger streets. Soe how tho avenues stretqh away and away, like ribbons of green velvet! "Everywhere that roots, can hold at all, Mother Nature has set up her flags again. Hark I What's that?" A moment they listened Intently. TJp to them, from very far, ross a walling cry, tremulous, long-drawn, formidable, "Oh I Then there are people, aftsr all?" faltered the girl, grasping Stern's arm. He laughed. "Nol hardly 1" answered he. "I see you don't know the wolf-cry. I didn't till I heard It In tho Hudson Bay country last winter that Is, last winter, plus X. Not very pleaaant. Is lt7" "Wolves I Then there are r "Why not? Trobably all sorts of game on tho Island now. Why shouldn't there be? All In Mother Nature's stock-in-trade, you know. "But come, come, don't let that worry you. We're safe, for the present Tlme enough to consider hunting later, tet'a creep around here to the other side of the tower and see what we can see." Silently "kho acquiesced. Together they readied tho southern part of the platform, making their way as far as tho Jumbled rocks of the fallen railing would permit Very carefully they progressed, fearful every moment lest the support break be nenth them nnd hurl them down along tho sloping side of'the, pinnacle to death. "Lookl" bndo Stern, pointing, "That very long green lino there used to be Broad way. Quito a respectable Forest of Ardon now, Isn't It?" He swept his hand far out ward, "See those steel cages, those tiny, far-off ones with daylight shining through? You know them tho Park How, the Singer, tbs Woolworth and all the rest And the bridges, look nt those 1" She shivered at the desolate sight Or tho Brooklyn Bridge only the towera were visible. Tho watchers, two Isolated castaways on their Island In the sea of uttermost desola tion, beheld a dragging mass of 'wreckage that drooped from these towers on either Bhore, down to tho sparkling flood. Tho other bridges, newer and stronger far, Btlll remained standing. But even from that distance Stern could quite plainly see, without the telescope, that the Williams burg Bridge had "buckled" downward and that the farther span of the Blackwell's Island Bridge was tn ruinous disrepair. "How horrible, how ghastly la all this waste and ruin I" thought the engineer. "Yet, even In their overthrow, how wonder ful are tho works of man I" A vast wonder seized him as he stood there gazing: a fierce desire to rehabilitate all this wreckage, to set It right, to start the wheels of the world-machinery running once more. At the thought of his own powerlessnea a bitter smile curled his lips. Beatrice seemed to share something of hla wonder. "Can It be possible," whispered she, "that you and and I are really like Macaulay's lone watcher of the world-wreck on London Bridge? "That we are actually seeing the thine so often dreamed of by prophets and poets? That 'All this mighty heart is lying still.' at .asi roroverr The heart or the world, never to beat again?" He made no answer, save to shake his head; but fast his thoughts were running. So then, could he nnd Beatrice, Just they two, be In stern reality the sole survivors of the entire human race? That race for whose material welfare he had, once on a, tlme, done such tremendous work? Could they be destined, he and she, to witness the closing chapter In the long, painful, glorious Book of Evolution? Slightly he shivered and glanced around. Till he could adjust his reason to the facts, could learn the truth and weigh It, he knew, he must not analyse too closely ; he felt he must try not to (hlnk. For that way lay madness I Far out she gazed. The sun, declining, shot a broad glory all across the eky. Purple and gold and crimson lay the light bands over the breast of the Hudson. Dark blue the shadows streamed across the ruined city with its crowding forests. Us blank staring windows and sagging walls. Its thousands of gaping vacancies where wood and stone and brick had crum bled down the city where once the tides of human life had ebbed and flowed, roar ing reststlessly. High overhead drifted a few rosy clouds, part of that changeless nature which ajone did not repel or mystify these two be leaguered waifs, these chance survivors, this man. this woman, left alone together by the band of fate. They were dased, fascinated by the splendor of that sunset over a world devoid of human life, for the moment giving up all efforts tQ Judge or understand. Stern and hrs mate peered closer, down at the Interwoven Jungles of Upton Square, the leafy frond-massel that marked the one-time course of Twenty-third street, the forest in Madison Square, and the trun cated column of the tpwer where no longer Diana turned her huntress bov to every varying breeze. They heard their own hearts beat Tfe intake of their breath sfunded stranger loud. Above them, on a broken cornice, some resting swallows twittered. CONTINUED IN MONDAY'S IZueniug (4 Htbntt 'i'-DU JWllj? m MM