— Love Insurance! By | | EARL DIR? BIGGER Author of SEVEN KEVS TO BALDPATE Copyr i, the Bobbs-Merrill npany 1 lis 5 in ti. 1 fi aemoriain’ let them 1... { 1 my headstone. And the story of me that I guess will be told longest after I am gone is the one about the grape juice that I'"'— He paused. His audience was not listening; he felt it intuitively. Mr. Minot sat with his eyes on the Lileth. In the bow of that handsome boat a red light had been waved three times. “Mr. Trimmer,” Minat said, “your tales are more interesting than the classics.” He stood. “Some other time I hope to hear a continuation of them. Just at present Lord Harrowby, or Mr., if you prefer, is waiting to hear what arrangement I have made with you. You must pardon me.” “I can talk as we walk along,” said Trimmer, and proved it. In the mid- dle of the deserted plaza they sep- arated. At the dark stage door of the opera house Trimmer sought his propo- sition. “Who d’yer mean?’ asked the lone stage hand there. “George—Lord Harrowby,” insisted Mr. Trimmer. “Oh, that bum actor! Seen him go- ing away awhile back with two men that called for him.” “Bum actor!” cried Trimmer indig- nantly. He stopped. “Two men! ‘Who were they?” The stage hand asked profanely how he could know that, and Mr. Trimmer hurriedly departed for the side street boarding house where he and his fallen nobleman shared a suit. About the same time Dick Minot blithely entered Lord Harrowby's apartments in the Hotel de la Pax. “Well,” he announced, ‘“you can cheer up. Little George is painlessly removed. He sleeps tonight aboard the good ship Lileth, thanks to the efforts of Martin Wall, assisted by rs truly.” He stopped and stared awe at his lordship. “What's the matter with you?” he inquired. Harrowby waved a hopeless hand. “Minot,” he said, “it was good of You. But while you have been assist: ing me so kindly in that quarter anoth er and a greater blow has fallen.” “Heavens! What?” cried Minot. «“It is no fault of mine”’— Harrow- by began. “On which I would have gambled my fmmortal soul.” Minot said. #1 thoucl' + was all over and dore with five Q. 1 wis vol zt Ih 1 1 t $ i a1 “Yes, cia 2 “Now s'¢': Livre. Gabrielle lluse is here. She's lere—with the letters.” “Oh, for a Bunker's ink eraser!” Mi- mot groaned. On the same busy night when the Yhleth flashed her red signal and Miss @abrielle Rose arrived with a package of letters that screamed for a Bunker's two strangers invaded San Marco by means of the 8:10 freight south. Fray- od, fatigued and famished as they were, it would hardly have been kind ‘e pever lidve A i Various coruc 3 of wie date tovuid globe, they hac known prosperity, the weekly pay vi ‘elope and the buyer's erook of the finger summoning a Waiter. One of the strangers was short, with gaming red hair and in his eye the twinkle without which the collected Werks of Rornawrd fihow are 88 sound: | ' instead he stepped over and entered bh a pager er rp EE TE .< brass. He twinkled about him as he walked at the bright iights and spurious gayety under the spell of which San Marco sought to forget the rates per day with bath. “The French,” he mused, “are a volatile people, fond of light wines and dancing. So. it would seem, are the inhabitants of San Marco. White flannels, ‘Harry, white flannels—they should ‘incase that leaning tower of Pisa you call your manly form.” The other—long, cadaverous, im- mersed in a gentle melancholy— groaned. “Somme day,” said the short man dreamily, “when I am back in the haunts of civilization again 1 am going to start something—a society for melt- ine the stone hearts of editors. Motto, ‘Have a heart, have a heart!” Emblem, a roast beef sandwich rampant on a cloth of linen. Ah, well, the day wil come.’ ™ d ‘n the plaza. In the ro ' previded the town al- lic Above him hung a wi 0 Not Feed or Other- w Alligator.” read and drew back | wit dik Hie woe annoy!” he cried. | sIleaV ons, salary. is that the way they look at it bere? This is no place for | 18. 1. ¢'d better be moving on to the next town.” Put the lean stranger gave no heed. | into earnest converse with a citizen of San Marco. In a moment he returned to his companion’s side. “One newspaper,” he announced; “the Evening Chronicle. Suppose the office is Jocked for the night, but come along, let's try.” “Feed or otherwise annoy,” mutter- | ed the little man blankly. - “For the love of Allah—alms!” They traversed several side streets and came at last to the office of the Chronicle. . It was a modest structure verging on decay. One man sat alone in the dim interior, reading exchanges under an electric lamp. “Good evening,” said the short man genially. “Are you the editor?” “Uh-huh,” responded the Chronicle man without enthusiasm from under his green eye shade. “Glad to know you. We just drop- ped in—a couple of newspaper men, you know. This is Mr. Harry Howe, until recently managing editor of the Mobile Press. My own name is Rob- on the same sheet.” sake why did you leave them?” “1 suppose,” ventured O’Neill, most of the flash gone from his manner, “there is no other newspaper here?” “No. there isn’t. There's a weird thing here called the San Marco Mail —a morning outrage. It’s making mon- ey, but by different methods than I'd care to use. You might try there. Yau look unlucky. Perhaps they'd take you on.” He rose from his chair and gave them directions for reaching the Mail office. CHAPTER IX. Two Birds of Passage. N the dark second floor hallway where the 2ail fie was sus- I pevielns Bul they groped aboui ce.eqaninedly. No sign 0. any natile iu. .«i.cd an Marco's only moin.ug pi. A noditary light, shining thict: h a Laason, beckoned. Boldly O'Neill pushed open the door. To the knowing wu strils of the two birds of pas .o¢ wax wafted the odor they loved, Li unique inky odor of a news no. ~ Their eyes beheld a raver . 4 typewriter or two, ad «inter of the room was a. ..er an electric lamp. On : a bottle and glasses, and »nt men played poker. Gite , was burly and beard- ed; ti 5 slight, pale, nervous. From an iinuer room came the click of linotypes—lonesome linotypes that native haunts. The two men finished playing the hand and looked up. “Good evening,” said O'Neill, with a net draws steel in many odd corners. “Gentlemen, four newspaper men meet on the table a greeting unquestionably suitable.” : The bearded man laughed, rose and discovered two extra glasses on a near- by shelf. “Draw up,” he said heartily. “The place is yours. You're az welcome as pay day.” “Thanks.” O'Neill reached for a glass. “Let me introduce ourselves.” And he mentioned his own name and Howe's. “Call me Mears,” sald the bearded one. “I'm managing editor of the Mail, and this is my city editor, Mr. Elliott.” “Delighted!” breathed O'Neill. “A pleasant little haven you have found here. And your staff? 1 don’t see the members of your staff running in and out.” “Mr. O'Neill,” sald Mears impressive- ly, “you have drunk with the staff of the Mail.” “You two? O'Neill's face shone with jo “{ilory be—do you hear hat These gentlemen all t ariel ie leaned ut eloquently the | diz from Mobile. } he finished “Here | or tor work. and we adi Of 4 i ‘or he had seen a sickly spe “That is exactly what I would Ge You are my friend.. You serve me. I I have give you this. Fifty dollars. That" giving it to you. Note the weave. Only in my”— : “Good night,” interrupted Misot. “And take my advice. Hurry!” Gloomy. discouraged, he turned back toward his own hotel. It was ‘true, Gabrielle Rose's husband at the time of the letters was in San Marco. The emissary of Jephson was serving a cause that could not lose. That after noon he had hoped. Was there any- thing dishonorable in that? Jephson and Thacker could command his sery- fo, they could not command his heart T— esl ri el RE ol IRL teh Sov ty ph pl Yi ped Pei OR uh