CYotinsrerSet I SYNOPSIS OK PRECEDING CHAPTER; CiiAr. 1 Returning from Manila. Captal! Selwyn, formerly of the army. Is welcom Jl me by bis sls.cr. Nina Gerard, her wealthy Husband Austin, and their numerous cui ren. Eileen Krroll. ward of Nina and Austin is part of their household. Selwln hasbeei divorced, without guilt on hi? part, by hi wife. Alixc. who Is now the wife of Jail Ruthven, with whom she ran away frpi Selwyn. II Eileen, who Is very fond of he br tber. Gerald. de3plte the young man's neglect of her. makes friends with Selwy IlT-Ocrald is worried about young Errolr mingling in the fast set. Gerald Is employ iil by Julius Neergard. a rcale state opcratp ma large way. Selwyn promises Eileen b will look after her brother. He tells he about Roots Lansing, bis army chum it Manila, who is coming to New York. In the liark Eileen and Selwyn ride past Allxe. IV Eileen's deceased father was an archaeol ogist, and she has Inherited some of hi scholarly qualities. Selwyn helps Gerald to settle a gambling debt and determines U undertake his reformation. V Allxe and Selwyn meet and discuss their altered rela tions. He Is Introduced to Mrs. Rosamund Fane, leader of the fast set and Allxe'sclos t friend Heappeals toAlUc tobelnbim keep Gerald from gambling. VI-Tbe friend ship of Eileen and Selwyn progresses. VII Gerald promises Selwyn he will stop gambl ing. Ncergard discloses to Selwyn. who Is Interested In his office, a plan to control the Slowltba Country club by baying up farms essential to the club's existence. The plan does not appeal to Selwyn. and be consults Austin, who denounces Neergard and, his methods. VII At night In his room Selwyn answers a knock at his door. IX The caller Is Allxe.. who Is very unhappy with Ruthven and wants to talk with Selwpn. For a mo ment their old love flashes up. but at the mention of Eileen he knows that it is past resurrection. X Rosamund distresses El ken by telling ber society is gossiping about Allxe and Selwyn. Allxe gets from Gerald, who has again lost heavily, a promise not to Iilay again at ber bouse. XI Allxe and tuthven quarrel over the gaming by which he lives, and be reveals his knowledge of her visit at night to ber ex-husband's room. XII Gerald's increasing Intimacy with Neer gard displeases Selwyn. who breaks with the real estate man over roe aiowunu iimiier. Neegard Is trying to break Into society. XIII Lansing invites Selwyn to make his home with htm In the modest bouse he has bought. Selwyn declares he will no longer let the past mar bts chance of happiness, and Nina declares her belief that Eileen has fallen In love with him. Nina fears that Alixc, restless and disgusted with Rutbvcn, will make mischief. Selwyn Is experimenting with chaoslte. his discovery is explosive. XIV Eireen asks Selwyn to remove Gerald from Neergard's influence. XV Through Rutbvcn and the Fanes. Neergard forces himself a little way Into society and tries to compel the Siowltna to elect him. Gerald loses more and more at cards, sinking Eileen money as well as bis own. Trying to save him. Selwyn quarrels with him and then ap peals In vain to Neergard. Rosamund and Ruthven. He almost kills Ruthven, whose heart is weak, when the latter hints at a ikjs alble divorce snit, withSelwynascorrespond ent. XVI Correspondence between Allxe and Selwyn seems to conllrni Nina's beiiei that Sclwyn's ex-wife is. as her late father was. mentally unsound. Selwyn makes up with Gerald and helps him out financially seriously impalringhis own resources. XVII At SUverstdc. the Gerards' country place. Eileen declares she cares for Selwyn. but Fhewlll not cay that she will marry him. Her brother Is now turning over n new leaf. k RIKA'S relations with Lan sing afforded infinite I amusement to the Ge rards. It had been a des perate case from the very first, and the child took it so seriously and considered her claim on Boots so absolute that neither that young man nor anybody elsej dared make a jest of the affair within her hearing. Otherwise she was the same active, sociable, wholesome, Intelligent child, charmingly casual and inconsistent, and the list of her youthful admirers at dancing school and parties required the alphabetical classification of Mr. Lansing. But Boots was her own particular possession. lie was her chattel, her thing, and he and other people knew that it was no light affair to meddle with the personal property, of Drlna Gerard. Eileen, one bare arm around her brother's shoulders, strolled houseward across the lawn, switching the sharen cod with her tennis bat. "What are you doing this afternoon?" che Bald to Selwyn. "Gerald" she touched her brother's smooth cheek "means to fish. Boots and Drlna are keen on It, too, and Nina Is driving to "Wyossett with the children." "And youi" he asked, smiling. "Whatever you wish," confident that he wanted her, whatever he had on hand. "I ought to walk over to Storm head," he said, "and get things straightened out" "Your laboratory?" asked Gerald. "Austin told me when I saw him in town that you wore going to have the cottage on Storm head to make pow der In." "Only in minute quantities, Gerald," explained Selwyn. "I Just want to try a few things. Anddf they turn out nil right what do you say to taking a look In if Austin approves?" "Oh, please, Gerald," whispered his sister. "Do you really bcllovo there is any thing In It?" nsked the boy. "Because, If you are sure" "There 'certainly is If I can prove that my powder Is able to resist heat, cold and moisture. The Lawn people stand ready to talk matters over aa aeon as I am satisfied. There's plenty f time, bnt keep the suggestion In the tMck of your bead, Gerald." The boy smiled, nodded Importantly and went off to remove the stains of tennis from his person, and Eileen wont; too, turning around to look back at Belwyn. JTbtnk you for asking Gerald! I'm, 'mm be will loro to to Into anything . .'tm think safe." j, .fWfl job, join 8f, too?" be called Mjif miMiMMiMa? faWFtt Baaw ejaAsl AjBtassf FJvOsb VbVRbbjsT f JJ W BmWj saWVCs- py tar (2$ UL 8 By ROBERT W. CHAMBERS, Author of "THE FlOHTINa CHANCE," Etc Copyrighted, 1007, by Robert W. Chambers. i ii remember that!" she said, and, turning once more as she reached the landing, "Goodby until lunchconl" ind touched her lips with the tips of ber fingers, flinging him a gay salute. In parting and meeting, even after the briefest of intervals, it was always the same with her; always she had for blm some informal hint of the formal ity of parting, always some recognition of their meeting In the light touching of bands as though the symbol of cere mony at least was dne to him, to her self and to the occasion. . At luncheon Nina and Eileen talked garden talk they both were quite mad about their fruit trees and flower beds. Selwyn, Gerald and Boots discussed stables, golf links and finally the new business which Selwyn hoped to de velop. Afterward, when the children had been excused and Drlna bad pulled her chair close to Lansing's to listen and after that, on the veranda, when the men sat smoking and Drlna was talking French and Nina and Eileen had gone off with baskets, trowels and pruning shears Selwyn still continued In conference with Boots and Gerald, and it was plain that his concise, mod est explanation of what ho had ac complished In his experiments with chaoslte seriously Impressed the other men. Boots frankly admitted It "Besides," he said, "if the Lawn people are so anxious for you to give them first say in the matter I don t see why we. shouldn't have faith In it enough, I mean, to be good to ourselves by offer ing to be good to you, Phil." "Walt until Austin comes down and until I've tried one or two new Ideas," said Selwyn. "Nothing on earth would finish me quicker than to get anybody who trusted me Into a worthless thing." "It's plain," dbserved Boots, "that although you may have been an army captain you're no captain of Industry you're not even a noncom.!" Selwyn laughed. "Do you really be lieve that ordinary decency is uncom mon?" "Look at Long Island," returned Boots. "Where does the boom of worthless acreage and paper cities land investors when it explodes?" Gerald had flushed up at the turn in the conversation, and Selwyn steered Lansing Into other and safer channels until Gerald went away to find a rod. And, as Drlna had finished her French lesson, she and Lansing pres ently departed, brandishing fishing rods adorned with the gaudiest of flies. In the rose garden and along that section pf the wall included in It the rich, dry, porous foil glimmered like gold under the bum, and hero Selwyn discov ered Nina mid Eileen busily so licitous over the tender shoots of favorite bushes. A few long stemmed early rosebuds lay lu their baskets. Selwyn drew one through his buttonhole and sat down on a wheelbarrow, the rose garden. amiably disposed to look on and let the others work. "Not much:" said Nina. "You can start In and 'pinch back' this prairie climber do you hear, Phil? I won't let you dawdle around and yawn while I'm pricking my fingers every Instant! Make him move, Eileen." Eileen came over to him, fingers doubled Into her palm and small thumb extended. "Thorns and prickles, please," she said, and he took her hand in his and proceeded to extract them while she looked down at her almost lnvisble wounds, tenderly amused nt bis fear of hurting her. "Do you know," she said, "that peo ple arc beginning to open their houses yonder?" She nodded toward the west. "The Minsters are on the way to BrooUm luster, the Orchils have al ready arrived at Hltherwood nouse and the coachmen and horses were housed at Southlawn last night. I rather dread the dinners and country formality that always Interfere with the jolly times we have, but It will be rather good fun at the bathing beach. Do you swim well? But of course you do." "Pretty well. Do you?" "I'm a fish. Gladys Orchil and I would never leave the surf if they didn't literally drag us home. You know Gladys Orchil? She's very nice. So Is Sheila Minster. You'll like ber better in the country than yon do In town. Kathleen Lawn Is nice too. Alaal I see many a morning where Drlna and I twirl our respective thumbs while you and Boots are off with a gayer set "Ob, don't interrupt! No mortal man U proof against Sheila and Gladys and Kathleen, and you're not a demigod, are yon? Thank 70a for your surgery upon my thumb." She naivety placed ,tb tip of It between ,'fceY Hps and looked at him, standing" tKe. Mke a schoolgirl In her fresh tt&fn, fcuriiekea htMHni --er)h' la riotous fcfitx JH cheeks and ears. no had stated himself oa the wheel barrow again. She stood looking down at blm, bands now bracketed on ber narrow hips, so close that the freak fragrance of her grew faintly percep tible, a delicate atmosphere of youth singling with the perfume of the roung garden. Nina, basket on her arm, snipping lway with her garden shears, glanced yrcr her shoulder and went on snip ping. They did not notice how far lway ber agricultural ardor led her lid not notice when she stood a mo ment nt the gate looking back at them r when she passed out, pretty head Sent thoughtfully, the shears swing ing loose at her girdle. "Yon are very like a boy some Umes," said Eileen "as young as Ger ild, I often think, especially when your hat Is off. You always look so per fectly groomed. I wonder I wonder ivhat yon would look like if your hair were rumpled." "Try it" he suggested lazily. "I? I don't think I dare." She raised her band, hesitated, the gay larlng In her eyes deepening to an laclty. "Shall ir "Why not?" "T-touch your hair rumple It as I would Gerald's? I'm tempted to only -only" "Whatr "I don't know. I couldn't I it was nly the temptation of a second." She laughed uncertainly. Tbe sug gestion of tbe Intimacy tinted ber ;hceks with its reaction. She took a ihort step backward. Instinct blindly itirrlng, sobered ber, and as tbe smile faded from eye and Up his face chang ed 100. And far, very far away In tbe tllent cells of his heart a distant pulse iwoke. "Have you misunderstood me?" she isked in a low voice. "How, child?" "I don't know. Shall we walk a lit tle?" When they came to the stone fish jond she seated herself for a moment n"a marble bench, 4hen, curiously .-estiess, rose again, and again they noved forward at hazard, past the ipouttng fountain, which was a driven sell, out of which a crystal column of water rose geyser-llke, dazzling in the westering sun rays. "Nina tells me that this water rises a the Connecticut hills," he said, "and lows as a subterranean sheet under :hc sound, spouting up here on Long Island when you drive a well." She looked at the column of flash ng water, nodding silent assent. They moved on, the girl curiously re lervcd, noncommunlcative, head slight y lowered, the man vague eyed, :houghtful, pacing slowly at her side. Behind them their long shadows trail id across the brilliant grass. Traversing the grove which encircled :he newly clipped lawn, now fragrant with sun crisped grass tips left in the wake of the mower, he mentioned moonlight. She glanced up, then away from him. "You seem to be enamored of the moonlight," she said. "I like to prowl in it." "Alone?" "Sometimes." "And at other times?" He laughed. "Oh, I'm past the ipooulug age. NAre you glad?" She halted. "Yes, because I'm quite sure of you if you are; I mean that I :an always keep yon for myself. Can't I?" She was smiling, and her eyes were ;lear and fearless, but there was a wild rose tint on her cheeks which leepened a little as he turned short in ils tracks, gazing straight at her. "You wish to keep me for your self?" he repeated, laughing. ."Yes, Captain Selwyn." "Until you marry. Is that it, Eileen?" "Yes, until I marry." "And then we'll let each other go. ts that It?" "Yes; but I think I told you that I would never marry. Didn't I?" "Oh! Then ours Is to be a lifelong md anti-sentimental contract!" "Yes, unless you marry." "I promise not to.'l he said, "unless roti do." "I promise not to,!' she said gayly, "unless you do." "There remains," he observed, "but Dne way for you and I ever to marry mybody. And, ns I'm hors coucours. svon that hope is ended." She flushed; her Hps parted, but she :hecked what she had meant to say, md they walked forward together In silence for awhile until she had made I np her mind what to say and how to express ir. "Captain Selwyn, there are two things that you do which seem to me unfair. You still have at times that Taraway, absent expression which ox :Iudcs me, and when I venture to break the silence you have a way of inswerlng, 'Yes, child,' and 'No, child,' is though you were Inattentive and I bad not yet become an adult. That Is aiy first complaint! What are you laughing at? It Is true, and It con fuses and hurts me, because I know am Intelligent enough and old iiiougu to to be treated as a woman 1 woman attractive enough to be reck oned with! But I never seem to be wholly so to you." The laugh died out as she ended, Tor a moment they stood there con fronting one another. "Do you imagine," he said in a low rolce, "that I do not know all that?" "I don't know whether you do. For III your friendship for all your liking ind your kindness to me somehow I -I don't seem to stand with yon as jther women do. I don't seem to stand their chances." "What chances?" "The the cons! deration. You don't call any other woman 'child, do you? You don't constantly refitted other wo Dies of the difference In yoar agwe, de ron? You doa't feel wHfc other wsaat that ZlM.BIX.at Jtm please tt H M; of the raaatBX. And soaaehow with me It hswlHates, because, evea If I ta the eort of girl who never means to marry, you youi attitude Bcems to take away the pos sibility of my changing my mlad. it dictates to me, giving me no choice, nc liberty, no personal freedom in the matter. It's as though you considered me somehow utterly out of the ques tionradically unthinkable as a wom an. And you assume to take for grant ed that I also regard you as as hors concours. Those aro my grievances. Captain Selwyn. And I don't regard yon do. And I and it troubles me to be excluded to be found wanting, In adequate In anything that a woman should be. I know that you and I have no desire to marry each other, bnt but please don't make tbe reason for it cither your age or my physical Immaturity or Intellectual Inexperi ence." One of those weather stained scats of Georgia marble stood imbedded under the trees near where she had halted, and she seated herself, out wardly composed and Inwardly a little frightened at what she had said. As for Selwyn, he remained where he had been standing on the lawn's velvet edge, and, raising her eyes again, her heart misgave her that she had wantonly strained a friendship which bad been all but perfect, and now be was moving across the path toward her, a curious look In his face which she could not interpret She looked up as be approached and stretched ont ber hand. "Forgive me, Captain Selwyn," bj said. "I am a child a spoiled one and I have proved It to yon. Will you sit here beside me and tell me very gently what n fool I am to risk strain Ing tbe friendship dearest to me In the whole world? And will you fix my penance?" "You have fixed It yourself," be said. "How?" "By the challenge of your woman hood." "I did not challenge. "No; yon defended. You are right The girl I cared for tbe girl who was there with me on Brier Water so many, many centuries ago the girl who, years ago, leaned there beside me on the sundial has become a memory." "What do you mean?" she asked faintly. "Shall I tell your "Yes." "You will not be unhappy If I tell you?" "N-no." "nave you any Idea what I am going to say, Eileen?" She looked up quickly, frightened nt the tremor In his voice. "Don't don't say It Captain Sel wynl" "Will you listen as a penance?" I no. I cannot." He said quietly: "I was afraid you!nlwaJ's wltn sreat respect for the could not listen. You see, Eileen, that.l nwful stuff he bandied with such ap after all, n man does know when'he is1 parent carelessness. There was a black, douc for." 1 sea Boakd rock Jutting out above the "Cantaln Kelwvn!" She turned and l waves. Selwyn pointed at It, poised caught his bands In both of hers, jjerj I eyes bright with tears. "Is that the. , penalty for what I said? Did yon .think I invited this?" 1 v "Invited! No, child," he said gen I tly. "I was fool enough to believe In , I myself; that is all. I have always 1 been on the edge of loving you. Only In dreams did I ever dare set foot, across that frontier. Now I have dared. I love you. That Is all, and it mnsf nnt ilistrxia vnn." "But it does not." she said. "I havo' "I havo always loved you dearly, dearly. Not in that way. I don't know how. Must It be In that way. Captain Selwyu? Can we not go on In the other way that dear way which I I have almost spoiled? Must we be like other peo plemust sentiment turn it all to com monplace"? Listen to me. I do love you. It Is perfectly easy and simple to say it. But It Is uot emotional; it is not sentimental. Won't you take me for what I am and as 1 am a glii. stilt young, uevoteu to you wun an uer soul, happy with you, believing lin nllHtlv In vnn i1wnl-r. ilopnlv fipnsililit of your goodness and sweetness and "-f"" loyalty to her? I am not a woman.' But Se wyn said: "I want more time I was a fool to say so. But you-you ' ,a tnIs 1 want to know what it nro so overwhelmingly a man that if it I docs to,the Interior of loaded shells and were In me to love-ln that way-It , m flxed ammunition when it is stored would bo you! Do you understand I for, a 'ear- 1 want know whether me? Or have I lost n friend? Willi",18 "J?"",1 t0 use a solvent after you forgive my foolish boast? Can you! fl5In UT,ln hi &aa- As11a,burstI"? still keep me first In your heart, as you I'm Practically satisfied with are in mine, ami pardon in me nii that I am not? Can you do these things because I ask you?" "Yes," he said. Chapter 10 EKALD cauio to Silver side two or three times during the early sum mer, arriving usually on Friday aud always re maining until the follow ing Monday morning. All his youthful admiration and friendship for Selwyn had returned. ! That was plainly evident, and with II , something less of 'callow self sufficien cy. Ho did not appear to be as cock suro of himself and tbe world as he bad been. There was less bumptious ness about him, less aggressive com placency. Somewhere and somehow somebody or something bad come Into collision with blm, but who or wbnt this bad been be did not offer to con fide In Selwyn, and the older man, dreading to disturb tbe existing accord between them, forbore to question him or Invite, even Indirectly, aqy confi dence not 1 offered. Selwyn and Eileen also noticed that he became very rest less toward tbe end. of bis visits at Rib TersId,tU though something Jn the etty awaited him tome duty or re (eMlbMIr set entirely jnleagaat There was. too. something of sober ness, amounting nt moments to discon tented llstlessness, not solitary, brood ing, for at tmnh nrViinents he stuck ti Selwyn, following him about and re malnlng rather close to him, ns thoug! the elder man's mere presence was a comfort, even a protection. So their relations remained during the early summer, and everybody sup posed that Gerald's two weeks' vaca tion would be spent there at Stlversldc. Apparently the boy himself thought so, too, for he made some plans ahead. and Austin sent down a very hand' some new motor boat for blm. Then at the last minute a telegram arrived saying that he had sailed for Newport on Neergard's big yacht And for two weeks no word was received from him at Silvcrslde. One day in September Selwyn wrote Gerald, asking him to bring Edgerton Lawn and como down to Silvcrslde for the purpose of witnessing some exper iments with the new smokeless explo sive, chasolte. Young Lawn came by the first tram. Gerald wired that he would arrive the following morning. He did arrive, unusually pallid, al most haggard, and Selwyn, who met him at tbe station and drove him over from Wyossett ventured at last to give the boy a chance. But Gerald remained utterly unre sponsive, stolidly so, and the other in stantly relinquished the hope of any confidence at that time, shifting the conversation at once to the object and reason ofGcrald's coming and gayly expressing his belief that the time was very near at hand when chasolte Would figure heavily In tho world's list of commercially valuable explosives. It was early In August that Selwyn had come to the conclusion that his chaoslte was likely to provo a commer cial success. And now, In September, his experiments had advanced so 'far that he had ventured to invite Austin, Gerald, Lansing and Edgerton Lawn of tbe Lawn Nltro Powder company to witness a few tests at his cottage lab oratory on Storm head, but at the same time he informed them with characteristic modesty that he was not yet prepared to guarantee tbe explo sive. Ho froze chaoslte and boiled it and baked it and melted it and took all sorts of hair raising liberties with it. and after that he ground it to a pow der, placed a few generous pinches in a smau nana grenade and affixed a primer, the secret composition of which he alone knew. That was the key to the secret the composition of the prl- mer charge. "I used to play baseball in college," he observed, smiling, "and I used to be a pretty good shot with a snowball." They followed him to the cliff's edge. himself and, with the long, overhand. straight throw of a trained ball player. sent the grenade like a bullet at the rock. There came a blinding flash, a stun ning, clean cut report but what the others took to be a vast column of black smoke was really a pillar of dust all that was left of the rock. And this slowly floated, settling like mist ,ver ,ue waves- saving noming wnere 1C rock Ila n. "l think," sold Edgerton Lawn, wip- ing the starting perspiration from his forehead, "that you have made good. Captain Selwyn. Dense or bulk, your chaoslte and Impact primer seem to do tho business, and I think I may say that the Lawn Nltro Powder company Is ready to do business too. Can you como to town tomorrow? It's merely a matter of figures and signatures now, If you say so. It is entirely up to you." But Selwyn only laughed. He looked at Austin. "I suppose," said Edgerton Lawn good naturedly, "that you Intend to make us sit up and beg, or do you " --" it acts on steel in storage or on the bores of guns when exploded as a pro pelling charge. Meanwhile," turnlug to Lawn, "I'm tremendously obliged to you for coming and for your offer. You see how it Is, don't you? I couldn't risk taking money for a thing which might nt the end prove dear at any price." "I cheerfully accept that risk," In sisted young Lawn. "I am quite ready to do all the worrying, Captain Sel wyn." But Selwyn merely shook his repeating, "You see how It Is, don't you?" The matter of business arrangements apparently ended then and there. Lawn's company sent several men to Selwyn and wrote him a great many letters unlike tho government which had not replied to his briefly tentative tuggestlon that chaoslte be condition ally examined, tested and considered. So the matter remained in abeyance, and Selwyn employed two extra men and continued storage testa and ex perimented with rifled and smoothbore tubes, watchfully uncertain yet as to Iho necessity of Inventing a solvent to aeutralbse possible corrosion after a propelling charge had been exploded. Everybody In, the vicinity bad heard about hts experiments. Everybody pre tended interest, but few, ware, sincere, and ot tha alnearn faw warn tinsalftab- ly interested hi eisWr, .Meen, 'Drlna ua Lansing acta maype oae or two eyre- .... 1 However, tae younger set bow pre- dominant from Wyossett to Wonder head, made np parties to 'visit 81 wyn's cottage, which had become known as the Chrysalis, and Selwyn good natnredly exploded a pinch or two of tbe staff for their amusement and never betrayed the slightest an noyance or boredom. In fact he be haved so amiably during gratuitous In terruptions that he won- the hearts of the younger Bet who presently came to the unanimous conclusion that there was romance In the air. And they sniffed it with delicate noses uptilted and liked the aroma. Ono man, often the least suitable, Is usually the unanimous choice of the younger sort where, In' the disconcert ing summer time, the youthful congre gate in garrulous segregation. Their choice they expressed frankly and innocently. They admitted cheer fully that Selwyn was their idol. But that gentleman remained totally un conscious that he had been set up by them upon the shores of the summer sea. On tbe sunlit sands dozens of young people were hurling tennis balls at each other. Above the beach, under the long pavilions, sat mothers and chaperons. Motors, beach carts and victorias were still arriving to dis charge gayly dressed fashionables, tor the hour was early, and up and down the Inclined wooden walk leading from the bathing pavilion to tho sands a constant procession of bathers passed with nod and gesture of laughing salu tation, some already retiring to the showers after a brief ocean plunge, tho majority running down to the shored eager for the first frosty and aromatic embrace of the surf rolling In under a cloudless sky of blue. As Eileen Erroll emerged from the surf and came wading shoreward through the seething shallows she taught sight of Selwyn sauntering across tbe sands toward the water and halted, knee deep, smilingly expectant certain that he had seen ber. Gladys Orchil, passing her, saw Sel wyn at the same moment and her clear ringing salute and slender arm aloft arrested bis attention, and the next moment they were off together, swim ming toward the sponson canoe which Gerald had just launched with the as sistance of Sandon Craig 'and Scott Innls. For a moment Eileen stood there motionless. Knee high the flat ebb boiled and hissed, dragging at her stockinged feet ns though to draw her- 1 seaward with the others. Yesterday sne WOuld have gone without a thought to Join the others, but yesterday is yesterday. It seemed to her as she Btood there that something disquieting- , Something disquieting had come Into the world. had suddenly come into, the world,, something unpleasant, but indefinite, yet sufficient to leave her vaguely ap prehensive. Somebody threw a tennis ball at her. She caught It and hurled It in return, and- for a few minutes the white, felt covered balls flew back and forth from scores of graceful, eager hands. X moment or two passed when no balls came her way. She turned and walked to the foot of a dune and seated her celf cross legged on the hot sand, her serious, beautiful eyes flxed steadily on a distant whlto spot the sponson canoe where Gladys and Selwyn sat, their paddle blades flashing In tbe sun. How far away they were! Gerald was with them. Curious that Selwyn -had not seen her waiting for him, knee deep In the surf curious that he bad seen Gladys instead! True, Gladys bad called te him and signaled him, white arm uptlung. Gladys was very pretty with her heavy, dark hair and melting, Spanish eyes and her softly rounded, olive skinned figure. Gladys had called to him, and she had not. That was true, and lately for the last few days or perhaps more she her self had been a trifle less Impulsive In her greeting of Selwyn a little less sans facon with him. After all, a man comes when it' pleases him. Why should a girl call him unless she un less unless Perplexed, her grave eyes were fixed on the sea where now the white canoe pitched nearer, close on now. When the canoe suddenly capsized, Gladys Jumped, but Selwyn went with it, boat and man tumbling Into tho tumult over and over. As Eileen looked she saw a dark streak leap across hlo face saw him stoop and wash It off and stand, looking blindly about, while again tbe sudden dark line crisscrossed his face from temple to chin and Bpread wider like a stain. "Philip!" she called, springing to her feet and scarcely knowing that sbo had spoken. Ho beard ber and came toward'her in a halting, dazed way, stopping twice to cleanse his face of tho bright blood that streaked It. "It's nothing," he said. "The Infer nal thing hit me. Oh, don't use that!" a sbo drenched her kerchief in cold tea water and held It toward, him with both hands, "Take It, I I beg pf you," she stam mered. "Is It B-serious?" "Why, bo," he said, his senses clear ing. "It was only a rap. on the head, aad this blood Is mereJy-.a aaisaaee. Thcak yomM.wttl us yow,krhlf if yen Insist If II stop la 4 meaaaat uy way," , ..... Contbuud on pare.7.