of CEMKGE IS 8YN0P8I3. At a private view nf the Chalworth (personal estate, to be sold at auction, the Crew Hoi mysteriously disappears. Hurry -Cressy, who was resent, describee the Tins to his fiancee, Klm-tt litlscy, nnd tier x-hapernn. Mm. Clara Hrltton. in belli iiK 11 heathen k). with a beautiful sap phire set In the head. Klnra meets Mr. Kerr, an KiiKllslinmn. In discussing: the -disappearance of the Hint, the exploits of an KiikIIsIi thief, Kurrell Waml, are. re called. Kerr tellH Klora that he haa met Harry si vewhcre, but cannot place him. $1),0iHI reward In offered fur the return of the rlnR. Hurry take Klora to a Chinese nldsmlth'a to buy an cnKUKemcnt rlnif. An exquisite sapphire net In a hoop of brftHH Is selected. Hurry lU'KeH her not to wear It until It la reset. Tim possession of the rlna; aeems to rust a spell over Klora. Bho becomes uneasy anil appre hensive. Klora Is startled by the effect on Kerr when he gets a allmpse nf t lie apphlrti. The possibility that the stone le part of the Crew Idol enuses Klora much anxiety. I'nsecn, Klora discovers Clara runsackliiK her dressing room. Flora refuses to give or sell the stone to Kerr, and suspects lilm of hcliiK the thief. Blie decides to return the rlna- to Harry, but lie tells her lo keep It fur a day or two. K!lu Tluller tells Klora that Clara Is setting her cap for her father. Judge Huller. Klora believes Harry sus pects Kerr and is waltlnu- to make sure of the reward before unniuskliiK the thief. Kerr and Clara confess their love for -each other. Clara Is followed by a China- CHAPTER XIX Continued. "Well, for a foot, I know It Is eitolen!" He loaned toward her; and his arms, still flung out with the hands open as argument had left them, -seemed to her frightened eyes all read? for her, ready with his last ar gument, his strength. She pressed back against the glass until she felt It hard behind her. "Harry," she whispered, "If you care anything. If you ever want me for yours, you'll take your hands away." She meant It; she was sincere In that moment, for all she shrank from him. ! Her body and mind would not have "been too great a price to give him for the sapphire. Then all at once she felt his arm around her neck. 8he couldn't move Iter body. She could only turn her lead from his hot breath. Tor a mo ment he held her, and yet another moment; and then, terrified at what this strange Immobility might mean, he raised her eyes and saw he was not looking at her. Though he held Iter fast be was not conscious of hen Straight over her head he looked, through the window and down into toe garden. Her eyes followed. It lay beneath, the wonder of Its morn ing aspect all blanched nnd dim. She iiaw the silhouette of rose branches in black on the sky, She saw the flowers and bushes all one dull time. Hut In the midst of them the oval of the path -shone white; and there, as In the aft ernoon, standing, looking upward, was the dark figure of a man. Her heart gave a great leap. Just -so she'd been summoned once before that day, but what Infernal freak had fetched him back to repeat that dan gerous sally, and brought him finally into his enemy's grasp? She tried to make a gesture to warn him, and lust there Harry released her, dropped her so that she half fell upon the window seat, and made a dash across the it All Her Household Wat Still i Step room for the light. In a moment they were In darkness. In a moment, to Flora pressed against the window, the garden sprang clear, and on the form less figure below the fine appeared, white in the starlight looking up. She cried out In wonder. It wus not Kerr. It was the blue-eyed Chinaman. After her haunted drive, after her escape, after Bhlma'a search, he was there, still Inexorably there; small, di minished by the great facade of the house, but looking up at It with his calm eye, surveying It, measuring Its height, numbering Its doors, trying Its windows. Harry wns beside her again. He was tugging frantically at the window. It resisted. She saw bis hands trembling while be wrestled with It. Then It went shrieking up and he leaned out. "What do you want?" he called, and. though he used no name, Flora saw he knew with whom he wa peaking. The Chinaman stood Im mobile, lifting his round, white face, whose mouth seemed to gape a little. Harry leaned far out and lowered his voice. "Go away, Joe! Don't come here; never como here!" There was a quiv er In his volt. Anger or apprehen sion, or both, whatever his1 passion was. for the moment It overwhelmed him. nnd as the Chinaman stood un moved,, unmovlng, at his commands, Harry turned sharp from the window nnd dashed out of the room. Flora heard him running, running down the stairs. She hung there breathless, waiting to see him meet the motion less figure; but while she looked and waited that motionless figure sudden ly took life. It moved, it turned, It flitted, It mixed with shadows, became a shadow; and then there was noth ing there. In her turn she ran, up and up a twisted side stair, shortest passage to her own rooms. At least lock and key could keep her safe for the next few hours. After that she must think of something else. CHAPTER XX. Flight. lly five o'clock In the morning she was already moving softly to and fro, so softly as not to rouse the sleeping Marrlka. lly seven her lightest bag was packed, herself was bathed. bruHhed, dressed even to hat and gloves, and standing at her window with all the listening alert look of one In a waiting room expecting a train. She was watching for the city to begin to stir; watching for enough traffic below In the streets to make her own movement there not too no ticeable. Yet every moment she wait ed she was In terror lest her fate should tnke violent form at last and assail her In the moment of escape. She listened for a foot ascending to her room with a message from Clara demanding an audience. She listened for the peal of the electric bell tinder Harry's hasty hand Harry, arrived even at this unwarranted hour with heaven knew what representative of law to force the Bapphlre from her. Kut all her household was still un stirrlng when at last nho went, soft step after step, down the broad and polished stair and across the empty hall. She went quiet, direct, deter mined, not at all as she had fled on her other perilous enterprise only yes terday. She shut the outer door after Un stirring When i Last She Went by Step. her without a sound and with great relief breathed In the fresh and faint ly smoky air of morning. She walked quickly. It was a cross town car bound for quite another lo cality that Hhe climbed abonrd. It was filled only with mechanics and workmen with picks and shovels. She sat crowded elbow to elbow among odors of stule tobacco, stale garlic, stale perspiration, and looking straight before her through the car window watched the aspect of the city, still gray, grow less gleaming and formal and Anally quite dirty, and quite, quite dull. This was all as she had Intended, very much In the direction of ber er rand, and Bare. Hut In Mnrket street the car line ended, and she was turned out again In this broad artery of commerce where she was In dan ger of meeting at any moment people she knew. She made straight across the thoroughfare to Its south tide, turned down Eighteenth and In a mo ment was hidden In Mission street. It was ten o'clock In the morning, three hours since she had left her house and a most reasonable time of daylight, when Flora turned out of the flutness of "south of Market street" and began to mount a slow-rising bill. As she neared the hilltop she glanced at a card from her chatelaln, consulting the address upon It. Then anxiously she scanned the house fronts. It was not this one, nor this; but the square white mansion she came to now stood so far retired at the end of Its lawn that she could not make out the number. As she peered a young girl came down the steps be tween the dark wings of the cypress hedge, a slim, fair, even-golted crea ture dressed for the street and draw ing on her gloves. As she passed Flora made sure she had seen her be fore. ; There was something familiar In the carriage of the girl's head and hands; something also like a pale re flection of another presence. Pale as It was. It was enough to reassure her that this was the house she wanted. This appearance of the place began to bring before Flora the full enormity and Impertinence of ber errand, but though her heart beat on her side as loud as the brass knocker upon the door, she had no mind for turning back. A high, cool, darkly gleaming Inter ior, mellow with that precious tint of time which her own house so lacked, received her. And here, as well as out of doors, all' the while she sat waiting she felt that protected peace was still the deity of the place. To Flora's eager heart time was stream ing by, but the tall clock facing her measured It out slowly. Its longest golden finger had pointed out Ave niln utes before the sweeping of a skirt coming down the hall brought ber to her feet. Mrs. Herrick came In batless, a honeysuckle leaf caught In her gray crown of hair, geraniums in her hand. Flora had never Been her so informal and so gay. Flora apologized. "I knew If I came at t'..:s hour I should Interrupt you, but really there was no help for It." She glunced down at her satchel. "1 had to go this morning, and before I went I had to see you about the house. I'm going down to look at It and and to'stop a while. ' i MrB. Herrick hesitated, deprecated. "Hut you know Mrs. Brltton wasn't satisfied with the price I asked." "Oh," said Flora promptly, "but I shall be perfectly satistled with it, and I want to take possession at once." The positive manner In which she waved Clara out of her way brought up In Mrs. Derrick's face a faint flash of surprise; but It was gone In an Instant, supplanted by her ques tioning, puzzled consideration of the main proposition. "Oh, I hope you haven't como to tell me you want It changed," she pro tested. "You know It's quite absurd in places quite terrible indeed. It's 1870 straight through, and French at that; but even such whims acquire a dignity If they've been long cherished, You couldn't put tn or take out one thing without spoiling the whole char acter." , "Hut I don't want to change It, I want It just as It Is," Flora explained. "It isn't about the house itself I've come, it's about going down there. You see there are some people, some friends of mine. I haven't promised them to show the house, but I have quite promised myself to show it to them, and they are only here for a few days more. They are going Immediately. She was looking at Mrs. Herrick all the while she was telling her wretch ed lie, and now she even managed to smile at her. "I thought how lovely it would be if you could go there with me. I should like so very much to be in It first with you, to have you go over It with me and tell me how to take care of it, as it's always been done. I should bate to do it any dis respect." Her hostess smiled with ready an swer. "Of course I will go down. I should be glad, but It must be in a day or two. Indeed, perhaps It would be better for you to have your people first, and I can come down, say Mon day afternoon or Tuesday." Flora faced this unexpected turn of the matter a little blankly. "Ah, but the trouble la I can't go down alone.1 - It was Mrs. Herrlck's turn to look blank. "But Mrs. Brltton?" "Mrs. Brltton isn't going with me; she can't." "I see." Mrs. Herrick with a long, soft scrutiny seemed to be taking In more than Flora's mere worda repre sented. "And you wouldn't put it off until s!ie can?" "I couldn't put it off a moment," Flora ended with a little breathless laugh. "I do so wish you would come down with me this morning, for I must go, and you see I can't go alone." Mrs. Herrick, sitting there, com posed, In her cool, flowing, white and violet gown with the red flowers In her lap, still looked at Flora' Inquir ingly. "Hut aren't there some wom en In your party old enough to make It possible and young enough to take pleasure In It?" Flora shook her bead. "Oh, no," she said. Her bouse of cards was tot tering. She could not keep up her brave Bmlllng. She knew ber distress must be plain. Indeed, as she looked at Mrs. Herrick she saw the effect of it. Her heart sank. If only she had told the truth even so much of It as to say there was something she could not tell. Whnt she had said was un worthy not only of herself but of the end she was so desperately balding out for. Now In the lucid gate con fronting her she knew all her Inten tions were taking on a dubious color, stained false, like her words, under the dark cloud of her own misrepre sentation. Yet they were not false, she knew. Her motives, the end she was struggling for, were as austere as truth ltseir. She could not give up without one bold stroke to clear them of this accusation. "Do you think there's anything queer about It?" she faltered. "Queer?" To Flora's ears that sounded the coldest word she hnd ever beard. "I hardly think I understand what you mean." "I mean Is It that you think there's more In what I'm asking of you than I have said?" The two looked at each other and before that flut question Mrs. Herrick drew back a little In her chair. "I have no right to think about It at all." she said. "Well, there Is," Flora Insisted. "There's a great deal more. I am sor ry. I should have told you, but I was afraid. I don't know why I was afraid of you, except that In this matter I've grown afraid of every one. It's true that there may be peoplo going down at least, a person. But It Isn't, as I let you think It, a house party at all. It's for something, something that 1 can't do any other way something," she had a sudden flash of Insight, "that, If I could tell you, you would believe In, too." Mrs. Herrlck's look had faded to a mere concentrated attention. "You mean that there Is something you wish to do for whoever Is going down?" "Oh, something I must do," Flora Insisted. Mrs. Herrick considered a moment. "Why can't he do It for himself?" she threw out suddenly. It made Flora start, but she met It gallantly. "Because he won't. I shall have to make him." "You!" For a moment Flora knew that she was preposterous In Mrs. Herrlck's eyes and then that she was pathetic. Her companion was looking at her with a sad sort of humor. "My dear, are you sure that that is your re sponsibility?" Flora's answering smile was faint. "It seems as- strange to me as It seems absurd to you, hut I think I have done something already." "Are you sure, or has he only let you think bo? We have all at some time longed, or even thought It was our duty, to adJuRt something when It would have been safer to have kept our hands off," Mrs. Herrick went on gently. "Ob, safer," Flora breathed. "Oh, yes; Indeed, I know. Hut If something had been put Into your hands without your choice; If all the life of some one that you cared about depended on you, would yeu think of being safe?" Flora, leaning forward, chin In hand, with shining eyes, seemed fairly, to Impart a reflection of her own pas sionate concentration to the woman before her.. Mrs. Herrick, so calm In her re poseful attitude, calm as the old por trait on the wall behind her, none the less began to show a curious sparkle of excitement In her face. "If I were sure that person's life did depend on me," she measured out her words de liberately. "But that so seldom hap pens, and It Is so hard to tell." "But If you were sure, sure, sure!' Flora rang It out certainly. Mrs. Herrick In her turn leaned for ward. "Ah, even then It would de pend on him. And do you think you can make a man do otherwise than his nature?" Flora answered with a stare of mis ery. "I know what you must be think ing what yon can not help thinking," she said,-'tbat the whole thing is un heard of outrageous especially for a girl so soon to to be " She caught her breath with a sob, for the words she could not speak. "But there is nothing in this disloyal to my engage ment, even though I cannot speak of It to Harry Cressy; and nothing I hope to gain for myself by doing what I am trying to do. If I succeed it will only mean I shall never see him the other one again." Mrs. Herrick rose. In her turn be seeching. "Oh, I can't help you go Into it! It 1b too dubious. My dear, I know so much better than you what the end may mean." - "I know what the end may mean, and I can't keep out of it." "But I cannot go with you." There was a stern note In Mrs. Herrlck's voice. "I'm afraid I didn't quite realize how much I was asking of you. Yon have been very good even to listen to me. It's right, I suppose, that I should go alone." Mrs. Herrick looked at her In dis may. "Rut that Is Impossible!" Then, as Flora turned away, she kept her hand. "Think, think," she urged, "how you will be misunderstood." "Oh, I shnll have to bear that from the people who don't know." "Yes, and even from the one for whom you are spending yourself!" Flora gave her head a quick shake. "He understands," she said. "My dear, he Is not worth It." Flora turned on her with anger. "You don't know what be is worth to me!" . Mrs. Herrick looked steadily at this unanswerable argument. Her hold on Flora's hand relaxed, but she did not release It. Her brows drew together. "You are quite sure you must go?" Flora nodded. She was speechless. "Did Mrs. Brltton know you' were coming to me?" "No. She doesn't even know that I am going out or (own. She must not," Flora protested. ' "Indeed she must. You must not place yourself In such a false position. Write her and tell her you are going to Snn Mateo with me." "Oh, If you would!" Tears sprang to Flora's eyes, "nut will you, even If 1 can't tell you anything?" "I shall not ask you anything. Now write her Immediately. You can do It here while I am getting ready." She had take authoritative command of the details of their expedition, and Flora willingly obeyed her. She was still trembling from the stress of their Interview, and she blinked back tears before she was able to see what she was writing. It had all been brought about more quickly and completely than she had hoped, but It was In her mind all the while she Indited her message, to Clara, that Kerr, for whom It had been accomplished, was not yet In formed of the existence of the scheme, or the part of guest he was to play. Yet she was sure that If she asked he would be promptly there. Shu wrote to him briefly: At flan Mateo, at the Herrlcks'. J want ynu there to-night. I have made up my mind. As she was sealing It she started at a step approaching in the hall. She hud wanted to conceal that betraying letter before Mrs. Herrick came back. She glanced quickly behind her, and saw standing between the balf-open folding doors, the slim figure of a girl slimmer, younger even than the one who hnd passed her at the gate but like her, with the same large eyes, the same small Indeterminate chin. Just at the chin the likeness to Mrs. Herrick failed with the strength of her last generation but the eyes were perfect; and they, gazed- at Flora wondering. With the sixth sense of youth they recognized the enactment of something strange and thrilling. Another Instant and Mrs. Derrick's presence dawned behind her daugh ter and her voice "Why, child, what are you doing there?" and her hands seemed apprehensive In their haste to hurry the child away, as If, truly, In this drawing-room, for the first time, something was dangerous. "Oh, I'm Afraid I Shall," Flora CHAPTER XXI, j The House of Quiet. The day which had dawned so still nnd gloomy was wakening to some thing like wlldness, threatening, brightening, gusty, when they stepped out of the train upon the platform of the San Mateo station. Clouds were piling gray and castle-like from the east up toward the tenlth, and dark fragments kept tearing off the edges and spinning away across the sky. But between them the bright face of the sun flashed out with double splendor, and the thinned atmosphere made the sky seem high and far, and all form beneath It clarified and Intense ' ;r There upon the narrow platforni Mrs. Herrick hesitated a moment, looking at Flora. "What train do you want to meet?" she asked. "' Mora stood perplexed, "I hardly know. You see I can't tell how soon my letter would reach would be re ceived." j "Then we would better meet tbern all," the elder woman decided. They drove away Into the face ofr the wet. freBh wind and flying dropat of rain. Flora, loaning back In tha carriage, looked out through the win dow with quiet eyes. The splrltedf movement of, the sky, the racing oft -Its shadows on the grass, tbo rolling: fttllnge of the trees, ssen tempestuous agninst flying cloud, were alike to her consoling and Inspiring. She bad' never felt so free as now, driving through the fitful weather, nor so safe as with this companion who was site ting silent by her side. She was driv ing away from all her complications. The house, when finally It loomed', upon them, with Its Irregular roof s topped by curious square turrets,.' with its deep upper and lower ver andas, looked out upon by a multlude of long French windows, seemed too large, too strangely Imposing for a structure of wood. Hut whatever of original ugliness had been there was hidden now under a splendid tapestry of vines, and Flora, looking up at the rose and honeysuckle that panoplied Its front, felt her throat swell for sheer delight. For a moment after tbey had left the carriage they stood together In the porte-cochere, looking around them,. Then half wistfully, half humorously, Mrs. Herrick turned to Flora. "I dsv hope you won't want to buy it!" "Oh, I'm afraid I "shall,"- Flora mur mured, "that Is, if" She left her sen-. tence hanging, as one who would have said "if I come out of this alive," and' Mrs. Herrick, with a quick start ofi protection, laid her hand on Flora's arm. "If you must," she said lightly, "Ifr you do buy It, then at least I shall) know It is in good hands." (TO BH CONTINUED.) Exceeding Rapid. "Were the colors fast on the neer goods you bought?" "Fast? My dear, they fairly ran int one another, they were that fast." Murmured; That Is If- k A