LUCILLE LOVE. The Girl of MgsWs JkJoulthrilling Storu of£ove, .Danger and Jntriaue :By the "MA.STEH PEJV" Copyright, 1914. All moving picture rights reserved by the Universal Film Manufacturing Company, who arm now exhibiting this production in leading theatera. Infringements will be vigorously prose- cuted. SYNOPSIS OF THE FOREGOING CHAPTERS. While students together at West Point, and in tovm with the same girl, Sumpter Love proves Hugo Loubeque a thief, and Loubeque is dishon orably discharged. Love wins the girl. The en mity thus begun finds outlet in later years at Manila, when a butler thief in the employ of Loubeque, now an international spy, steals valu able papers from the Government safe of Gen eral Love. Loubeque sails with them on the Steamship Empress and General Love accuses Lieut. Gibson, his aide and the sweetheart of his daughter Lucille, of the crime. Loubeque sends a wireless message cleverly insinuating that Gen eral Love had sold the papers to a foreign power. To save the honor of the man she loved and to erase the stigma from her father's name, Lucille prevails upon Harley, a Government aviator, to take her out to the ship, in his aeroplane. To foil Lucille, Loubeque destroys the wireless apparatus on the Empress and is hurt in the resulting ex plosion. In her search for the papers, Lucille be comes his nurse, and when the ship takes fire, se cures them. The vessel is burned to the water's edge and Lucille drifts to a strange island on the oar of a crushed lifeboat. Lucille is rescued by friendly savages. She is given an amulet for curing the Chief's daughter, and it proved potent against the machination of Hugo Loubeque, who likewise cast on the island, plans to get the papers. He burns Lucille's hut, but she escapes with the precious papers. He sends a decoy mes sage asking her to come to the home of a neigh boring chief, whose wife is ill and in need of nursing. On the way there she falls into a covered pit, dug by Loubeque across her path. Her guide, an old crone, takes the papers from Lucille, and gives them to Loubeque, who goes with them to the jungle. His guide and servant steals them, but is killed by a lion, and Lucille, who had trailed them three days, recovers them from the body. Lucille meets a strange cave dwelling peo ple, is attacked by monkeys, escapes in a canoe, and is carried into an underground whirlpool. CHAPTER XX. The Mysterious Other Passenger. f ASTER, faster, in ever shortening circles the creamy foiim of savage waters drew the frail catamaran toward the ugly, black rock that rose from out its center, leering upon the helplessness of the deli cate morsel being brought him. And Lucille, the useless, broken paddle in her hands, fought des perately against her fate, though knowing the bit of wood could do .nothing in calm water much less against this whirlpool. lessness of her efforts quickened every faculty, tuned up her natural instinct for life. Quite llbruptly a sudden calm visited her, a calm that fested upon her spirit like a soothing balm, Quieting and easing without being soporific. She desisted from her efforts, drawing the paddle handle from the water with an effort. Her eyes were alert, burning in their intensity as she looked before her, staring at the rock that seemed so inevitably for her gravestone without the slightest perturbation. Round and round in the circles of waters the frail craft sped. The nose of the catamaran spurned the grasping whirlpool aside, seeming to leap joyously at this opportunity for a mag nificent annihilation against the rock instead of being slowly rent to bits by the water it had always conquered. For a brief fraction of a sec ond the circular progress was halted, the canoe being held steady, quivering as another force seized it and tried to fight against the whirl pool. Lucille held her breath, measuring the length of time a new hope arrived in hours in stead of the seconds it really was. Then the craft shot out of the current and continued upon its wild chase toward the rock. It was now a matter of but two revolutions at best before the end. Lucille saw this with eyes that flinched not, yet that refused to hold any dTead. Half way round the circle some in stinct from within caused her to lift the paddle end. thrusting it out even as she closed her eyes against the contact with the rock that seemed Inevitable. The stout wood splintered in her hands as it crushed against the monster rock, tearing it from her grasp with such force that an involuntary cry issued simultaneously from her lips. » She crouched back a-shudder, her eyes closed against seeing the end, her lips opening and clos ing without the blessed relief of words. Once more the current that had withheld the craft reached out and fought against the whirlpool. Lucille knew it was useless but even this brief respite seemed worth while. Something slashed against her cheek and her hands instinctively reached up, clutching, grasping, clinging to the thick tangle of creepers let down from the en circling jungle. The canoe whirled out from under her while ■he clung there, the savage water lc-aping, snap ping at her feet. Came a crunching to her ears, a sound that made her hold tighter upon the wines. She looked up, reaching at a higher point in the vine-tangle, a place where the suction of the wateir might be avoided. Desperation loaned her strength. Times it xeerned she could not draw herself another inch, but one look at the white whirlpool beneath gave fresh energy to her arms. Reason came to her aid aa she caw her progress was taking her to ward land as well as in the air. For just a sec ond she rested, the® bravely reached out and clambered along the thick vine until she saw the earth beneath, then dropped and lay panting upon the ground, shaking with a nervous chill as • t£e reaction seized her. Loud voices wakened her from the state of pity which followed the chill. She looked Mp nviftly, now that the dense fastnesses encir icling hei were really pregnable, fearing a new enemy. A moment before she in her loneliness and tniseay would have sacrificed almost any thing for the sight of a human beiing. Now that she knew men, and men who spoke her own ton £ie, were within hearing distance she shrank »ek, afraid. Fate had been so kind to her and man so rnkind that she realized her chief danger sim ultaneously with the recollection of what she had to guard. She clutched at the little sack, thrilling at the rustle of the papers she had fought so bard to gain, at thought of what they meant to her sweetheart in Manila. The diary told her tihat Hugo Loubeque had thousands of men working to do his will. She must be very wary of whom she trusted. Better the jungle than Loubeque again. The shrill protesting creak of oar locks rove away her fear, supplanting it with one of wild alarm. The men were going away, were! learvijjg her alone here. She had chosen this Jungle where she knew Hugo Loubeqoe to be in preference to a fairly certain chance of escape. 0' tbe millions of inhabitants of the globo why •book* she think every man a worker of the spy s that madness had induced her to hang back be fore this opportunity which was slipping with every faint creaking sound that reached her ears. She flung herself wildly through the tangle of thick vegetation tihat barred her way from the sound, crying aloud at the top of her voice for assistance even though she knew no sound could carry to the men. She found herself stand ing upon a pebbly little beach that snatched a serene crescent of water from the ocean. Strain ing her eyes she could dimly see a large row boat at the tip of the crescent, its objective point being obviously a beautifully slender yacht anchored well out to sea. Lucille waved her arms in the air wildly, running up and down the beach in desperation as she saw her opportunity for escape from the terrible jungle receding. Her throat was racked from the dry sobs which escaped her, sobs of rage and chagrin at her own cowardice and folly. The papers were in her possession, the papers for which she fought so hard and which were so useless here. And, at the first opportunity to get away, get where they might do some good, her courage had failed her. Suddenly she stopped dead in her tracks, her fists tightly clenched as she pressed them against her breast, frightened for fear what she had seen might turn out nothing more than an optical illusion. Then, with a gasp of delight she made out that the. boat had stopped, that the man standing in the bow was no chimera of her brain, and that it was being turned and was coming toward her. Was coining toward her. Over and over again she repeated its She had been seen at the last moment and was going to be taken away. She lifted her eyes in an un spoken prayer, a prater that included a promise never again to allow hardship to so weaken and blind her as it had done this time. And the prayer wan* not even finished before the boat grounded lightly at her feet and she found her self speaking to a heavy-featured, youngish man who was evidently in command of the yacht. There was something sinister about the man, something she could not define and which she set down to be a freakish feminine mood, that made her distrust him even while she told her story. She noticed that he was paying but slight atten tion to her words but that his eyes were fast ened upon her face in such bold admiration that she instinctively drew away from him. Suddenly he turned to his men, roughly or dering them to prepare for the row out, then assisted Lucille to a seat alongside himself. Try though she would she could not feel the joy that seemed natural as the boat slipped through the water, propelled by the sturdy oarsmen. She studied them keenly. Rough, powerful men they were, but she was woman enough to know them to be the sort easily handled by a beautiful woman, the weaker the easier. Something told her before she was done with the captain of the yacht there would come the necessity for ap pealing to them. And she saw that this man was heartily disliked, that his arrogant manner, his gruff commands were not pleasant to his crew. She noticed also that two of the oarsmen had faces that showed signs of recent battering. The intuition that had served her so well before told her Captain Wetherell, for such wart the name he used in introducing himself, had been a party to this. It was the sixth day out that, for the first time, she saw the man upon the deck in day time. Captain Wetherell was scanning the sky, his brow clouded and his heavy jaw thrust for ward! like an angry bull-dog. Lucille was stand ing beside the old boatswain, questioning him and whiling away the long sultry day by listen ing to the 'stories he loved to tell her. She was suddenly aware of the keen, lowering scrutiny of her host and, as was her custom, immediately started toward her cabin. She heard a swift step across the deck and hurried the faster, only pausing to look back when she reached her door. A little cry of pity and rage came from her lips when, with an ugly oath, Wetherell lifted his great fist and floored the old seaman, grin ning maliciously down at the man", then, with a shrug of the shoulders starting to turn away. Every womanly impulse rose up within her at the outrageous, uncalled-for attack. Forgetful of her own precarious position, forgetful of every thing save the pain of the old man upon the deck, she started to his assistance, when the door of the Chinaman's state-room slapped open and the occupant strode across the deck toward Weth erell. And then Lucille halted stone-still, her eyes widening with amazement and terror. She could not analyze her sensation, did not attempt to do so, but there was something about the move ments of the man, a commanding mastery, a control of self-evident rage as he spoke with Wetherell in low tones of suppressed passion that struck a chill to her heart. The captain eyed the man angrily for a mo ment, then' turned and slipped away, his verv back dropping like that of a whipped cur. Lucille turned to enter her cabin but something caused the door to stick open a scant inch or so. She felt an inclination to scream for aid but amaze ment at recognition of the man who stepped into the cabin behind her, softly closing the door, held her dumb. For, under the yellow coloring, the made-up slanting eyes, the Mon ogolian mask he had so cunningly assumed* fear loaning clarity to her vision, she recognized Hugo Loubeque and instinctively both hands clasped at the little bag about her neck which held the precious papers. The spy smiled at the impulsive gesture. "You have guessed the reason for this in trusion, Miss Love," he murmured gravely, his rich voice holding a note of deference and apol ogy which she recalled as so much a part of him, which was continually checking her hatred for the man. "I am sorry but you surely must see by now that there is no escape from me; you must understand that this pursuit is most un pleasant but that you have no chance to thwart me. The papers, if you please." The terror-widened eyes of the girl nar rowed slowly as her gaze traveled from the in domitable face to the outstretched hand. No chance, he said 1 But there was a chance, always had been a chance; always would be, so long as she retained the courage to fight him! The game was in her hands, had been equal up to now. Her lips parted in a smile as she moved toward the door and held it open for him to leave. He frowned Impatiently, shaking his head as though at the stubbornness of a child. "Miss Lucille," he continued, his tones sharp er, "you must appreciate my forbearance toward you so far. It cannot continue forever. Un doubtedly you know my power. Does it not startle you to find me in a position of authority upon this yacht. It is always so. Everywhere I find my assistants. Forty years of my life has been spent in ordering events so that such ob stacles as you have encountered would be at my command. Till now, I hove refrained from se curing the documents you hold by violence. You know the reason for my forbearance. But, un dei'stand now, that it can continue no longer. The papers, if you please." She quailed before the lightning that darted HARRISBURG TELEGRAPH from his sombre eyes. Common sense, the in stinct for self-preservation, everything urged her to obey. Yet when her hands sought her bosom the feel of the precious little bag renewed her courage, gave her strength to meet his eyes with a courage greater even than his own assurance. Her eyes held to his with an effect of fright ened fascination. It was the change in his tone, the difference in his wording of the demand that told Hugo Loubeque's patience had been finally frayed to the breaking point, that craft and diplomacy would be things of the past did she not relinquish the papers to him now. Yet Duty, ' After Making Her Way Through hick Tangle, Lucille Is Men's Voices. Love—twin shadows, wraith-like, yet of iron strength—held her back from obedience. The spy recognized the spirit in the girl and stepped to ward the port-hole, motioning 1 with his hand to ward the dancing 1 waves without, his voice low pitched yet surcharged with ominousness. "Think, Miss Love, think of our positions. Match my strength, brute strength, against your own; measure the strength of any one of the ■thousands who implicitly obey me. Those waters tell no tales, up no ghastly secrets. See how the waves reach up toward us; think how the body of each wave is but a mouth, large enough and speedy enough to gulp any object thrown toward it. Think of that, Miss Love, I beg of you, then give me the little bag you wear about your neck." His voice was full of pleading yet his eyes held) a death message which made her shudder as she realized) the sincerity of his threat. "You seek to save the ones dear to you, child, from the one I hate. You think me wicked, cruel, relentless, and I am all of these things. You fight me on the impidse of love and I fight back with the poison of a hate that is my very life, my heart and soul and my body. Forty years ago I might have done as you do now, but all the impulses of that time are dead, killed by your father; all the love I ever had, the only love, has been dead for forty years, killed by your father; all the ambition of that time of youth, the happiness of hope, the pride of father land, is dead, has been dead for forty years, killed by your father, General Sumpter Love. And you—you think that I would stop at vio lence to prevent your thwarting me; you think I would trade those forty years of hate for the faint splash of a girl's body on the waters of this great waste. TYue, the sound would din in my ears of nights—but the forty years have been filled with just such sounds; true, there would be regret for one who recalls memories I thought quite dead—but the forty years have supplanted those memories with active dreams of hate—hate—hate." The while his tones grew lower, they carried a "ibrant thrill that struck at her very heart. His face was flinty, as, wi„h passionate pleading she lifted her eyes to his. Instinctively she re coiled as a shadow fell between them. Loubeque frowned as Captain Wetherell joined them, his eyes flashing a questioning glance at the pallid face of the girl. Lucille watched the two men breathlessly, realizing as she looked at them, that they hated each other, realizing also that she was the cause of this hatred. Like a battle of dogs it was, the two, silent, motionless men. Then the spy bowed gravely and stepped on the deck, followed closely by the captain of the yacht. Cold the waves were to the eye where, be fore, they had been warm and inviting; heart less the splash against the yacht's frail sides where before it had soothed her weary brain to slumber and to pleasant dreams. And after all, was she not foolish in attempting to combat this giant of a man? Was she not absolutely in his power? How had he come aboard the boat, dared speak to Captain Wetherell as he had, were he not speaking the truth regarding his position here? Her question was partially answered by the whispers of the men growing louder and louder until she could distinguish the angry voice of Wetherell, lifted now in surly rebellion. Lucille shrank back against the wall visualizing from the man's tones the expression on his face. A greater horror than the waves came leaping to her mind. Hugo Loubeque was her protection from this brute. She knew it was true. And the man's voice showed now that he was out from control, that he was in rebellion against the iron hand of the spy. There flashed across her mental vision every lineament of the man as he struck down the old bosun, and, as though the picture subconsciously developed there called up the actual individual, Captain Wetherell stepped inside her cabin, with out the formality of knocking, closing the door cautiously behind him, his every movement fur tive, his face wearing a sheepishly leering ex pression as he stood there, regarding the girl who faced; him, her eyes dilated' with » horror she tried_ vajLnly to conceal and 1 cover under the guise of indignation at the intrusion. "What—what do you want?" Immediately the question pawed her lipi +8 she realized she had made a mistake, that her tones showed fright. She tried to correct the error by drawing herself haughtily erect but knew the man had recognized her mind. The captain laughed aloud, eyeing her keenly the while. "Don't be alarmed," he said softly. "I have settled with Mr. Loubeque. You need have no further fear of him, my dear." Fear! Lucille felt a great yearning for the spy, a need of his protection even as a moment before she had thought it impossible to be in such mortal terror of anyone as she had been of Hugo Loubeque and his crafty manner. "No fear; I don't understand!" Her voice quavered. "J. mean he understands who is master of this beat now. He attempts to give me orders, to bribe me to force you to give up some papers, to threaten me—" Wetherell broke off with a laugh, coming a bit closer to her even as she retreated before him. "As though anyone could force me to harm you," he leered. "What do you want?" Even as she spoke a thrill of conscious triumph surcharged her as she realized the tremble had left her voice and with its departure had come again that strange feeling of self-assurance. Wetherell halted uncertainly, held back by her change. Then the helplessness of the small tense figure crouching in the shadows, her eyes dark pools of defiance set in a face of pallid determination gave him courage and again he moved closer. His voice was hoarse now, his great hands clasping and unclasping. "Want?" he repeated, then with a short, barking laugh, "I want the papers and I want you." "I don't understand—" though her voice was steady, her expression showed his meaning to be clearer to her than anything else in the world. He leaped forward, clasping her about the waist with his great arms, the right hand mov ing toward her mouth, closing over the delicate lips and smothering her cry of wild alarm. "Want you," he cried. "I want you and I want the papers. Loubeque knows it, but he's out of the way now. Give me t,he papers and I will keep them away from him. Give me the papers " He sprang back with a low-toned oath of surprised incredulity even as her brittle laugh echoed through the cabin. Slowly, a step at a time, inch by inch, Lucille forced the man to ward the door. In smothering her screams he had freed her light arm and her tiny fist, fight ing against his, beating at his body had encoun tered his revolver which she deftly abstracted and had pressed against his chest. "The papers are quite safe where they are," she murmured sweetly, the. glint in her eye 3 belying the tbnes. "Come, captain, don't try to take this gnn away from me. That would be foolish. Remember I am accustomed to firearms and that you have placed me in a position where I should not hesi tat« to use a bullet. Come, cap tain, lets see how the men you have bullied like the sight of you now." Wetherell opened his lips to curse but there was an exp:.e<all sped across their bows. The proximity of their danger threw the men into • panic. All thoughts of injustice, of chivalry dis appeared instantly before the omnipresence oi the menace that threatened thedr lives. They rushed upon Wetherell in a body, pleading, fair ly on their knees, for him to take command and avert the disaster that was upon them. Of them all, he alone knew the position of the yacht, the fine points of navigation, tha crooks and turns of the ocean in this vicinity. And they recognized only too well now that they were between the Devil and the deep, blue sea. Mutiny—capture by the pursuing warship. Both meant death. Wetherell appeared to be considering, to hesitate about resuming command. Suddenly h« straightened as another cannon ball hurled acrosf the path of the yacht. His voice rose, stentorian, as he whirled, pointing a finger toward the girL "Take that passenger's revolver from her, Bring the Chinese passenger on deck. They must not be found aboard if we are captured. Lowei a life boat from the davits and set them adrift with provisions for three days and a cask oi water." He clasped his hands smartly together to emphasize the urgency for haste. Lucille felt arms about her, the pistol whirling from hei grasp and ricochetiting toward Captain Wetherell who, with a malicious smile, picked it up and thrust it in his pocket. She did not protest —there seemed no use foi protest., for anything. In a haze she found her self in the tiny boat that was being lowered. Ai through a thicker haze she glimpsed the face oi Hugo Loubeque, facing her. The creaking of thf davits ceased and the tiny craft bobbed about on the bosom of the waters. She did not move. II seemed a dream, a nightmare. A great hoi© aip< peared suddenly in the wave not ten feet from them and the spray splashed against her cheeks. Hugo Loubeque silently, grimly, seized an o&r\ motioning her toward the second. "We must get out of the firing zone," he mil quietly, reassuringly, almost gently. Singularly enough, as she irtggei at the great oar, ah* tV most felt kindly toward the spy. (Continued Next Week.)