ST of CI ANCE ; dm JP0W-SA'M1 CO.. t 8YNOP8I3. At a private vlnw of ths Chatworth per sonal rHtntti. to he Hold lit auction, the Chatworth rltiK myjili'iiounly dlfliipppiim. Harry Cn-Nsy, who win pnwnt, dcm-rlli the ring to lit tltinr', Kloni (IttHoy, nml her chnperon, Mi-h. Clara Itrllton. n ba rns' llkn a hi'iithcn Rod. with a bcnullful sapphire not In the hi'iul, Flora illm-ov em nn unluinllliir mood In Harry, spu clully when the ring Ik dlscusmd. CHAPTER II. Continued. The picture gnllcry wns new, nn ad dition; and tho plain, narrow, unex pected door in this place, where all wns high, arched, elaborate and flour ished, was like a loophole through which to Blip Into a foreign atmos phere. This atmosphere was roRlnouH of fresh wood; the Unlit was thick with drifting motes; the enrpets harshly new, slipping lienenth tho feet on tho too pollHhed floor; the bare bones of the place yet scarcely cov ered. Hut Its quiet wns after all com parative. There were plenty of people lingering In groups in the center of the gallery, which was dusky, eclipsed I by the great reflectors thnt circled I bright band of color around the walls. People leaning from this bor der of light back Into the dusk to murmur together, vanished and reap peared with such fascinating abrupt ness that Flora caught herself guess ing what sort of face, Where this nearest group stood Just on tho edge of shadow, would pop out of the dark next. 6he was ready for something ex traordinary, but now, when it came, he was taken aback by It. It gave her a start, that tOBS of black hair, that long, irregular, pale face whose clntillnnt, sardonic smile was merci lessly upon the poor. Inadequate picture-face fronting him. Ills Rtoop above the rail was so abrupt that his long, lean back was almost horizontal, yet even thus there wns something elegant in the swing of him In the careless twist of his head, around, to peak to tho woman behind him. The light above struck blind on the glass In one eye, but the other danced with genial, a mnd scintillation. The light of It caught like contnglon, and touched the merest glnncer at him with the spark of its warm, Ironic mirth. The question which naturally rose to Flora's lips "Who In the world ' is that?" she checked; why, she didn't ask herself. She only felt as she followed Clara, trailing away across the floor, that tho Interest of the evening which had promised so well, beginning with the Chatworth ring, had born raised even a note higher. Her restive fancy was begin ning agnin. All the footlights of her ' little secret stage were up. Clara turned to tho right, following a beckoning fan, and Flora, dallying with her anticipation, reasoned that now they must circle the room before they should f ace him the Interesting apparition. It was a pilgrimage of which he on the other side was per forming bis half. Perfunctorily talk ing from group to group, conscious -Who In the now anil again of tho lagging Clnra or llnrry, she could nevertheless keep a sly eye on the stranger's equal prog ress. Tho flash of Jet, and tho volu ble, substantial shoulders of tho lady so profusely Introducing him, were an assurance of how that pilgrimage would terminate, since It was Ella Duller who was parading him. bhe even wondered before which of the florid pictures at the far, other end of the room, as before a shrlno, the cere mony would take place. She kept her eyes fixed on the paintings before her, nnd as she moved down from one to another, and the voices of the approaching group drew nearer, ono separated Itself from the general murmur, so clenr, so res onantly carried, so clean-clipped off tho totiguo, thnt It stood out In sylla bles on tho blur of sound which wns Klla lluller's conversation. It nnd color, that voice; it had a quality so sharp, so Individual that It touched her with a mischievous wondor thnt ho dared spenk so differently from all the world about him. Then, six pic tures away, she heard her own name. "Why, Flora Ollsey!" It was Kiln's huaky, boyish note. "I've boon look ing for you all tho evening! How d'y'do, Harry?" She waved hor hand nt him. "Why, how d'y'do, Mrs. Brlt ton? (J wouldn't let papa go to sup per until I'd found you. 'Papa,' I said, 'wnlt; Flora and Harry will bo hero.' Ilesldes," she had quite reached Flora's side by this time and commu- nicntcd It in nn Impressive whlnpnr, "I want you to meet my Englishman." She looked over her shoulder, nnd largely beckoned to where tho blunt and florid Tluller nnd his companion, with their backs to what they wero supposed to be looking at, wero ex changing an anecdote of Infinite amusement. riuller's expression came around slowly to his daughter's beckoning hand, but the lOnglishman'a face seemed to flash at the Instant from what he was enjoying to what was expected of him. In the flourish of In troductions, across and across, Flora found herself thinking the reality less extraordinary than she had at first supposed. Now that Mr. Kerr was fairly before her, presented to hor, and taking her In with the same lively, Impersonal interest with which he took In the whole room, "as If," she put It vexedly to herseli, "I were a specimen poked at him on the end of a pin," It stirred In her a vngue re sentment; and Involuntarily she held him up to Harry. Tho comparison Bhowed him a little worn, a little bat tered, a little too perfunctory In man ner; but his genial eyes, deep under threatening brows, made Harry's eyes seem to stare rather coldly; and the fine form of his long, plain face, and the sensitive lino of his long, thin lips made Harry's beauty look well, how did It look? Hardly callous. This mixed Impression tho two men gave her was disconcerting. She was all the more ready, to bo wnry, of tho stranger. She had begun with him In the way she did with every one In stinctively throwing out a breastwork of conversation from behind which she could observe tho enemy. Cut though be had blinked at It, he had not taken her up, nor helped her out; but had merely stood with his head a little canted forward, as If he watched her through her defenses. Werld It ThatT" "Hut Ban Francisco must seem so limited after London," the bad wound up; and the way he had considered It, a little humorously, down his long nose, mode hor doubt the Interest of cities to be reckoned In round num bers. "It's all extraordinary," he said. "You're quite aa extraordinary In your way as we In ours." "Oh," she wondered, still vexed with his Inventory, "I had always supposed us awfully commonplace. What Is our way, plenae?" "Ah," he said, measuring his long step to hers aa they sauntered a lit tle, "for one thing, you're so awfully good to a follow. In London" and he nodded back, as If London were mere ly across tho room "they're awfully good to the somebodies. It's tbo way you take In the nobodloa over here that Is so astonishing the stray leaves that blow In with your 'trade,' nnd can't show nny credentials but a letter or two, and their faces; and those" his dlnblerle dunced out again "sometimes such deucedly damaged ones." It was almost Indecent, this parade of his nonentity! She wnnted to say: "Oh, hush! Those are the things one only enjoys never talks about." Hut Instead, somewhere up at the top of her volco, she said: "Oh, we always lock up our silver!" "Hut even then," ho quizzed her, "I wonder how you dare to do It?" "Perhaps we have to, because we ourselves are nil" ("without any credentials but those you mention,") she had been about to say but there she caught herself on the very edge of giving herBelf nnd all the rest of them away to him; "all so awfully bored," she mischievously ended with the daintiest, faintest possible yawn be hind her spread fan. Ho looked as If she had taken him by surprise; then laughed out. "Oh, that Is tho way they don't do here," be provoked her. "You mustn't, when I'm not expecting It." "Then what are you expecting?" sho Inquired a little roolly. "Well," ho deliberated, "not expect ing you to get me ready for a sweet, and then pop in a pickle; and present ly expecting, hoping, nnxlously antici pating, what you really care to say." Ho was expecting, she looked mali ciously, more than he wan llkoly to get; but the fact that he did ' see through her to that extent was at once delightful and charming. She swayed back Into the shadow beyond tho dazzling line of light. She wanted to escape his scrutiny, to be able to look him over from a safe vantage ground. Put he wouldn't have It. An instant ho stood under the torrent of white radiance, challenging her to see what she could then followed her In to her retreat. "Shnll we sit here?" be said, and sho found herself hopelessly cut off and Isolated with the enemy. Sho couldn't withhold a llttlo grudg ing pleasure In tho sharpnesB with which he had turned her maneuver and the way It had detached them from the surrounding crowd. For there, In the dusky center of the room, It was as if they watched from safe covert the rest of their party exposed In the glare of light; though not, as Flora presently noted, quite escaping j observation themselves. For an In stant Harry turned and peered toward them with a look In his intentneas that struck Flora as something new In him and made her wonder if he could be Jealous. She turned tentatively to see If Kerr had noticed It, and sur prised his glance In a quick transi tion back to hers. "By your leave," he said, and took away her fan, which in his hand pres ently assumed such rhythmic motion that it ceased to be any more present to her than a delicate current of air upon her face. He was not, she felt sure, in spite of bis light manipulation of her fan, a person who cared to please women, but one of that devastating sort who care above everything to please .them selves, and, who are skilful without practice; too skilful, she feared, for her defenses to hold out against If he Intended to find out what she real ly thought "Aren't we supposed to be looking at the pictures?" she want ed to know. He turned bis back on the wall and Its attendant glare. "Why pictures," he Inquired, "when there are live peo ple to look at? Pictures for places where they're all half dead. But here, where even the damnable dust In the street Is alive, why should they paint, or write, or sculpt, or do anything but live?" His Irascible brows shot the query at her. Again the proposition of life what ever that was was held up before her, and as ever she faltered In the face of It "I suppose they do It here," she murmured, with a vague glance at the paintings around her, "because people do it everywhere else." His disparagement was almost snarl. "That's the rotten part of It because they do It everywhere else! Aa If there wasn't enough monotony In the world already without every chap trying to be like the next Instead of being himself!" "But If you have to be what people expect?" "People don't want what they ex pect if you care for that" He waved it away with his quick white hand. "But you hare to care, unless you want to be queer." Her poor little se cret was out before she knew, and he looked at It, laughing Immoderately, yet somehow delightfully. "Ah, If you think the social gume Is the game that counts! I had expected braver things of you. Tho game that counts, my girl," he preached It at hor with bis long white hand, "tho game that Is going on out here ts the big, red game of life. That's the only one that's worth a guinea; nnd there's no winning or toning, there's no right or wrong to It, and It doeBn't matter what a man Is In It as long as he's a good ono." "Even If he Is a thief?" The qnes Hon was out of Flora's lips before she could catch It. It was a challenge. She had meant to confound blm; but he caught It as If It dollghted him. "Well, what would you think?" He throw It tmck at her. What hadn't sho thought! How per sistently her fancy had played with tho question of what sort of man Hint one might be who had bo wonderful ly put his linnd under a glass case and drawn out the Chatworth ring. "Oh," she laughed dubiously, "I sup pose bo Is a good ono us long as he Isn't caught.-' "What!" His fnco dlsownrd hor. "You think bo's a renegade, do you? A chnp In perpetual flight, taking things because he has to, more or less pursuod by the law? Huh! It's a guild as old, and a deal more honor able, than the beggar's. Your good thlof Is born to It It s his caBto. It's In his blood. It Isn't money that be wants. If he hnd a million he'd bo the same. And It Isn't a mania eith er. It's a profession." The English man leaned back and smiled at her over the elegance of IiIr long, Joined finger-tips. Hhe looked at li 1 114 with a delighted alarm, with an Increasing elation; but whether theso nroso from his lawless declarations and the singular way they kept setting before her more vividly moment by moment the pos sible character of the present keeper of the Chatworth ring, or whether It was Just the sight of Kerr hluiBolf ns he sat there that stirred her, she didn't try to dtstlngulNh. "Hut Biippose he was your own thief," she urged; "took your own things, I mean," she hastily amended, "and suppose he turned out to be some ono you knew and liked" Sho hcRltated. She had come at lust to what Bhe really wanted to say. She had brought out a question that hud been teaBlng her fancy at Intervals all the while bo had been talking, nnd he hnd not even heard It. He wasn't even look ing at her. She had caught him off his guard. He was looking across her shoulder straight down the dim vista of the room to the llttlo hlazo of bor dering light Ho wns looking at Har ry. No, Harry was looking at blm. Harry was looking with, a steady, nn intent gaze, and Kerr meeting It It might have been merely the blunk glare of his monocle seemed, to Flora, to meet It a little insolently. Sho fancied In tho instant something to pass between the two men, some thing which, this time, she did not mlBtake for Jealousy a Rhade too dim for defiance or suspicion, a deep scrutiny that struggled to place some thing, some one. Flora felt a sudden wlHh to break that curious scrutiny. It had broken her little moment It had shattered the personal, almost Intimate note that had been sounded between them. The look Kerr turned back to her was vague, and stirred In her a dim re sentment that he could drop It all so eaBlly. "Shall we Join tho others?" It was the voice with which she had begun with him, but her eyes were hot through their light mist of lashes, and he threw her a comprehending glance of amusement. "Oh, no," he assured her, "we can't help ourselves. They are going to Join us." Ella Buller, In tbe van of her pro cession, was already descending upon them. Her approach dissipated the last remnant of their personal mo ment Her presence always Insisted that there was nothing worth while but instant participation In her gen iality, and whatever subject it might at the moment be taken up with. This conviction of Ella's bad been wont to overawe Flora, and It still overwhelmed ber; so that now, as Bhe followed In the trail of Ella's marshaled force, she had a guilty feel ing that there should be nothing In her mind but a normal desire for sup per. Yet all the way down the great stair, "the Corridors of Time," where the white owl glared bis glassy wis dom on the passings and counter passings, she was haunted with the thought that Harry bad seen tbe ex traordinary Kerr before; not shaken hands with him, perhaps perhaps not even heard his name; but somewhere, across some distance, once glimpsed him, and had never quite shaken the memory from his mind. For there was something marked, notable, unfor getable In that lean distinctiveness. Against the sleek form of the men they met and shook hands with, he flashed out seemed In contrast fairly electric. She saw him, Just ahead of her where the crowd was thickening In tbe door of the supper room, mak ing way for Clara through the press with that exasperating solicitude of his that was half Ironic. The room, hot, polished, flaring re flections of electrlo lights from Its glistening floor, announced Itself the heart of high fastlvlty, through the midst of which their entrance made an added ripple. The flushed faces of the woman under their flowers, un der their pale tinted hats, with their smiling recognitions to Clnra, to Flora, to Kiln, smiled with a Hhnrponod In terest, it proclulmed thnt Kerr was a stranger, and, In a circle which found Itself a little stale for lack of Innovations, a desirable one. Apparently the dominant note of their party was Ella's clamorous se lection for the supper; but to Flora the more real thing wns the atmos phere of excitement and mystery she had been moving In all tho evening. Hhe wns pursued by the obseRslon of something more about to happen something imminent though, of courso, nothing would; nt leaHt, how could any thing happen hero, to them? And by "them," sho meant herself nnd these people nround her so stupld ly talking the eternal repetition of the story Bhe lind read out that even- Ing to Clara, nnd not ono glimmer of' light! Hhe wondered ir her obsession wns all her own or did It roach to ono of them? Certainly not Ella; not Judge Duller, Bottled Into his collar, choosing chnmpiignes. Clara? Sho hnd to Bklp Clnra. One never knew whether Clara had not more bohlnd her smooth prettlness tlmn evor she brought to light? Kerr? Perhaps. With blm she felt potentialities enormous. Harry? Never. Hurry was being appealed to by all the wom en who could got at him as to his part In the affair what had been his sen satlous and emotions? Hut Flora know perfectly well he had hud none. He wns only oppressed by tho atten tion bis fnnio in the matter, nnd tho central position of their table, brought htm. Protesting, he made his part as small as poRslble. "Oh, con round It, If I can't get at my oystern!" ho complained, leaning back Into his group again with a algh. "You divide tho honors with tho mysterious unknown, eh?" Kerr In quired ncroRs tho table. "Hang It, there's no division! I'd offer you a share!" Harry laughed, and It occurred to Flora how much Kerr could have made of It. "Purdlo'd llko to Rhare something," Buller vouchsafed. "He's been paw ing tho air ever since Crew cabled, and this has blown him up complete ly." "Crew?" Flora wondered. Here was something more happening. Crew? She bad not heard that namo before. It mudo a stir among them all; but If Kerr looked shnrp, Clnra looked sharper. Bhe looked at Harry and Harry was vexed. "Who's Crew?" said Ella; and the Judge looked around on the silence. "Why, bless my soul, Isn't It Oh, nnyway, It will all be out to-morrow. Hut I thought Harry'd told you. Tho Chatworth ring wasn't Hesnle's." It bad the effect of startling them all apart, and then drawing them closer together again around the table over the uncorked bottles. "Why," Judgo Iluller went on, "this ring is a celebrated thing. . It's the 'Crow Idol!'" He throw the nnmo out an If that In Itself explained every thing, but the three women, at least were blank. "Why colebrated?" Clara objected. "The stones wero only sapphires." Kerr smiled at tbe measure of fame. "Quite so," he nodded to ber, "but there are several sorts of value about that ring. Its age, for one." "Even If He lie hnd the attention of the table, as If they sensed behind his words more even thnn Judge Duller could have told them. "And then the superstition about It It's rather a pretty tale," said Kern looking at Flora. "You've soon the ring a figure of Vishnu bent back ward Into a circle, with a head of sapphire; two yellow stones for the cheeks and the brain of him of the ono blue. Just as a piece of carving it Is so fine that Cellini couldn't have equaled It, but no one knows when or where It was mnde. The first that la known, tho Shah Julian had It In his trensuro house. The story Is he stole It, but, however that may bo, he gatf ' It ns a betrothal girt to bis wife possibly the moBt beautiful" his eye brows signaled to Flora his uncer tainty of that fact "without doubt tho best-loved woman In the world. When she died It was burled with her not In the tomb Itself, but In the Taj Mahal; and for a century or so It lay there and gathered legends about It as thick as dust. It was believed to be a talisman of good fortune es pecially In love. "It had age; It had Intrinsic value; It hnd beauty, and that one other quality no man can reslRt It was the only thing of Its kind In the world. At all events, It was too much for old Nevlllo Crew, when he saw It there some couple of hundred years ago. When he left India the ring went with Mm. Ho never told bow be got It, but lucky marriages came with It, and tho Crews would not take the house of lords for It. Their womea havo worn It ever since." For a moment the wonder of tbe tale and the curious spark of excite ment It hnd produced In the teller kept the listeners silent Clara was was the first to return to facts. "Then DcrrIo " she prompted eagerly. Kerr turned his glass In meditative fingers. "Hhe wore It as young Chat worth's wlfo." He held them all In nn IncrenBlng tension, as if he drew them toward him. "The elder Chatworth, Lord Crew, Is a bachelor, but, of course, the ring reverted to him on ' Chatworth's death." "And Lord only knows," the u6kj broke In, "how It got shipped with Bessie's property. Crew was out of England at the time. He kept the wires hot about It, and they managed to keep the fact of what the ring was quiet but It got out to-day when Pur dio found It was gone. You see he was showing It and without special permission." (TO I1R CONTINUED.) Cling to Inherited Tongue, After years of effort to spread the English language, tbe home tongne of tho full-blooded Hawaiian Is his aboriginal Jargon. Exclusive of the half-whites In these Islands there Is but one family that talks tbe English language In Its borne. All the rest are as true to their Inherited tongue as they are to their racial hue. Is a Thlafr