" But tell me about this girl, with whom, as you say, I am in love. Is she beautiful, very beautiful ?" " That I cannot say," she answers. " Is she slender and brunette, and has she the prettiest of hazel eyes ?" he inquires, eagerly, bending forward to catch the ex pression of her face. " Yes," she replies, blushing. " And her hair," he pursues, " is a golden brown ?" "Yes," again, just loud enough to be audible. " And you say that I love her ?" " Yes," she whispers. " More than you yourself knoW." " Then tell me," he pleads, " does she love me ?" The averted face is. slowly turned toward him and two soft bright eyes are raised to'his, In their limpid depths he reads his answer, and is happy. After several minutes of blissful silence Theo. again speaks. " Tell me, Maude, who was that dark young fellow with you last night? I was terribly jealous of him." "Of him ?" she exclaims. " Oh, Theo., how could you ? Why that was my brother Ned, just returned from Gcettingen." And they laughed softly at what had been a groundless fear. It was Christmas eve. Outside, in the street, gay crowds came and went through the silently falling snow, frequently accosting each other with cries of " Merry Christmas." Within her humble cottage, Barbara Ford sat before an open fire and smiled sadly as she heard these expressions of goodwill. She hoped that all might have a " Merry Christmas," and she herself expected it. One Christmas eve, five long years ago, had come the turning point in her uneventful life. For it was then that Philip Lansford had told her the old, old story, and she had believed him implicitly. A short time later he had left for foreign lands to carve his fortune, as he said. And ere he went he promised to return when fortune had smiled upon him and fulfill the vow he had made. But Christmas had come and gone many times and she had heard no tidings of the wanderer. Yet through all those many The Free Lance. " MERRY CHRISTMAS." A SKETCH P [DECEMBER,