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Show "Roy Cardenhe." "Mine is Ysonde. I carved these diagon-flies on the stone, these fishes and shells and butterflies vfu see." "You! They are wonderfully delicate deli-cate but those are not American dragon-Hies." "No they are more beautiful. See, I have my hammer and chisel with me." She drew from a queer pouch at her side a small hammer and chisel and held them toward me. "You are very talented," I said; "where did you study?" "I? I never studied I knew how. I saw things and cut them out of stone. Do you like them? Some time I will show you other things that I have done. If I had a great lump of bronze I could make your dog, beautiful beauti-ful as he is." Her hammer fell into the fountain and I leaned over and plunged my arm into the water to find it. "It is there, shining on the sand." she said, leaning over the pool with me. "Where," said I, looking at our reflected re-flected faces in the water. For it was only in the water that I had dared, as yet, to look her long in the face. The pool mirrored the exquisite oval of her head, the heavy hair, the eyes. I heard the silken rustle of her girdle. I caught the flash of a white arm, and the hammer was drawn up dripping with spray. The troubled surface of the pool grew calm and again I saw her eyes reflected. "Listen," she said in a low voice, "do you think you will come again to my fountain?" "I will come," I said. My voice was dull; the noise of water filled my ears. Then a swift shadow sped across the pool; I rubbed my eyes. Where her reflected face had bent beside mine there was nothing mirrored but the rosy evening sky with one pale star glimmering. I drew myself up and turned. She was gone. I saw the faint star twinkling above me in the afterglow. after-glow. I saw the tall trees motionless in the still evening air. I saw my dog slumb'ing at my feet. The sweet scent in the air had faded, leaving in my nostrils the heavy odor of fern and forest mold. A blind fear seized me, and I caught up my gun and sprang into the darkening dark-ening woods. The dog followed me, crashing through the undergrowth at my side. Duller and duller grew the light, but I strode on, the sweat pouring pour-ing from my face and hair, my mind a chaos. How I reached the spinney 1 can hardly tell. As I turned up the path I caught a glimpse of a human face peering at me from the darkening thicket a horrible human face, yellow yel-low and drawn with high-boned cheeks and narrow eyes. Involuntarily I halted; the dog at my heels snarled. Then I sprang straight at it, floundering blindly through the thicket, but the night had fallen swiftly and I found myself panting pant-ing and struggling in a maze of twisted twist-ed shrubbery and twining vines, unable un-able to see the very undergrowth that ensnared me. It was a pale face, and a scratched one that I carried to a late dinner that night. Howlett served me, dumb reproach re-proach in his eyes, for the soup had been standing and the grouse was juiceless. David brought the dogs in after they had had heir supper, and I drew my chair before the blaze and set my ale on a table beside me. The dogs curled up at my feet, blinking gravely at the sparks that snapped and flew in eddying showers from the heavy logs. "David," said I, "did you say you saw a Chinaman to-day?" , "I did, sir." "What do you think about it now?" "I may have been mistaken, sir " "But you think not. What sort ot whisky did you put in my flask today?" to-day?" "The usual, sir." "Is there much gone?" "About three swallows, sir, as usual." "You don't suppose there could have beeu any mistake about that whisky no medicine could have gotten into it, for instance?" David, smiled and said: "No, sir." "Well," said T, "I have had an extraordinary ex-traordinary dream." When I said "dream," I felt comforted com-forted and reassured. I had scarcely dared to say it before, even to myself. my-self. "An extraordinary dream," I re-i re-i peated: "I fell asleep in the woods about five o'clock, in that pretty glade where the fountain I mean the pool is. You know the place?" "I do not, sir." I described it minutely, twice, but David shook his head. "Carved stone did you say, sir? I never chanced on it. You don't mean the New Spring " "No, no! This glade is way beyond that. Is it possible that any people inhabit the forest between here and the Canada line?" "Nobody short of Ste. Croix: at least ; I have no knowledge of any." "Of course." said I, "when I thought I saw a Chinaman, it was imagination. Of course I had ben more impressed than I was aware of by your adventure. adven-ture. Of course you saw no Chinaman, China-man, David." "Probably not, sir." replied David, dubiously. i TO BE CONTINUED.) fsERIAL 12 STORY j f THE MAKER : OF MOONS ' "'- I v 4 ROBERT W. CHAMBERS : Illustrations by J. J. Sheridan ; f (Copyright, G. P. Putnam's Sons..) SYNOPSIS. The story opens in New York, Roy Car-Atnhue, Car-Atnhue, the story-teller, inspecting a queer reptile owned by George Godfrey of Tiffany's. Tif-fany's. Roy, and Barrls and Pierpont. two friends, depart on a hunting trip to Cardinal Woods, a rather obscure locality. local-ity. Karris revealed the fact that he had Joined the secret service for the purpose of running down a gang of gold makers. Prof. T,aGrange, on discovering tin-gang's tin-gang's formula, had been mysteriously killed. Karris received a telegram of instructions. in-structions. He and Pierpont set out to locate the gold making gang. A valet reported re-ported seeing a queer Chinaman in the supposedly untenanted woods. Roy went hunting. CHAPTER III. Continued. The dog sprang to the front, circled once, zigzagged through the ferns around us and, all in a moment, stiffened stif-fened stock still, rigid as sculptured bronze. I stepped forward, raising my gun, two paces, three paces, ten perhaps, per-haps, before a great cock-grouse blundered blun-dered up from the brake and burst through the thicket fringe toward the deeper growth. There was a flash and puff from my gun, a crash of echoes among the low wooded cliffs, and through the faint veil of smoke something some-thing dark dropped from mid-air amid a cloud of feathers, brown as the brown leaves under foot. "Fetch!" Up from the ground sprang Voyou, and in a moment he came galloping back, neck arched, tail stiff but waving, wav-ing, holding tenderly in his pink mouth a mass of mottled bronzed feathers. Very gravely he laid the bird at my feet and crouched close beside it, his silky ears across his paws, his muzzle cm the ground. I dropped the grouse into my pocket, held for a moment a silent caressing communion with Voyou, then swung my gun under my arm and motioned the dog on. It must have been five o'clock when I walked into a little opening in the. woods and sat down to breathe. Voyou came and sat down in front of me. "Well?" I inquired. Voyou gravely presented one paw which I took. "We will never get back in time for dinner." said I, "so we might as well take it easy. It's all your fault, you know. Is there a brier in your foot? Let's see there! it's out, my friend, and you are free to nose about and lick it. If you loll your tongue out you'll get it all over twigs and moss. Can't you lie down and try to pant less? No, there is no use in sniffing aud looking at that fern patch, for we are going to smoke a little, doze a little, and go home by moonlight. Think of Howlett's despair when we are not in time! Think of all the stories you will have to tell to Gamin and Mioche! Think what a good dog you have been! There you are tired, old chap; take 40 winks with me." Voyou was a little tired. He stretched out on the leaves at my feet, but whether or not he really slept I could not be certain, until his hind legs twitched and I knew he was dreaming of mighty deeds. Now I may have taken 40 w-inks, but the sun seemed to be no lower when I sat up and unclosed my lids. Voyou 'V E "The Figure a Woman's Turned Slowly to Me." raised h-s head, saw in my eyes that I was not going yet. thumped his tail half a dozen times on the dried leaves, and settled back with a sigh. I looked lazily around, and for the first time noticed what a wonderfully beautiful spot 1 had chosen for a nap. It was an oval glade' in the heart of the forest, level and carpeted with green grass. The trees that surrounded sur-rounded it were gigantic; they formed one towering circular wall of verdure, blotting out all except the turquoise blue of the sky-oval above. And now I noticed that in the center of the greensward lay a pool of water, crystal crys-tal clear, glimmering like a mirror in th meadow grass, beside a block of granite. It scarcely seemed possible that the symmetry of tree and lawn and lucent pool could have been one of nature's accidents. I had never be-foreseen be-foreseen this glade nor had I ever heard it spoken of by. either Pierpont or Banis. It was a marvel, this diamond dia-mond clear basin, regular and graceful grace-ful as a Roman fountain, set in the gem of turf. And these great trees they also belonged, not in America but in some legend-haunted forest of France, where moss-grown marbles stand neglected in dim glades, and the twilight of the forest shelters fairies and slender shapes from shadow-lalnd. I lay and watched the sunlight showering show-ering the tangled thicket where masses of crimson cardinal-flowers glowed, or where one long dusty sunbeam tipped the edge of the floating leaves in the pool, turning them to palest gilt. There were birds, too, passing through the dim avenues of trees like jets of flame the gorgeous cardinal-bird that gave to the woods, to the village 15 miles away, to the whole county, the name of Cardinal. I rolled over on my back and looked up at the sky. How pale paler than a robin's egg it was. I seemed to be lying at the bottom of a well, walled with verdure, high towering on every side. And as I lay, all about me the air became sweet scented. Sweeter and sweeter and more penetrating grew the perfume, and I wondered what stray, breeze, blowing over acres of lilies, could have brought it. But there was no breeze; the air was still. A gilded fly alighted on my hand a honey-fly. It was as troubled as I by the scented silence. CHAPTER IV. Then, behind me. my dog growled. I sat quite still at first, hardly breathing, breath-ing, but my eyes were fixed on a shape that moved along the edge of the pool among the meadow grasses. The dog had ceased growling and was now staring, star-ing, alert and trembling. At last I rose and walked rapidly down to the pool, my dog following close to heel. The figure, a woman's, turned slowly toward us. She was- standing still when I approached ap-proached the pool. The forest around us was so. silent when I spoke the sound of my own voice startled me. "No," she said, and her voice was smooth as flowing water. "I have not "I Saw Her Eyes Were Fixed on My Forehead." lost my way. Will he come to me, your beautiful dog?" Before I could speak, Voyou crept to her and laid his silky head against her knees. "But surely," said I, "you did not come here alone." "Alone? I did come alone." "But the nearest settlement is Cardinal, probably 19 miles from where we are standing." "I do not know Cardinal," she said. "Ste. Croix in Canada is 40 miles least how did you come into the Cardinal Woods?" I asked amazed. "Into the woods?" she repeated a little impatiently. "Yes." She did not answer at first but stood caressing Voyou with gentle phrase and gesture. "Your beautiful dog I am fond of, but I am not fond of "being questioned." ques-tioned." she said quietly. "My name is Ysonde and I came to the fountain here to see your dog." I was properly quenched. After a moment or two I did say that in another an-other hour it would be growing dusky, but she neither replied nor looked at me. "This." I ventured, "is a beautiful pool you call it a fountain a delicious de-licious fountain! I have never before seen it. It is hard to imagine that nature did all this." "Is it?" she said. "Don't you think so?" I asked. "I haven't thought: I wish when you go you would leave me your dog." "My my dog?" "If you don't mind," she said sweetly, and looked at me for the first time in the face. For an instant our glances met, then she grew grave, and I saw that her eyes were fixed on my forehead. Suddenly she rose and drew nearer looking intently at my forehead. There was a faint mark there, a tiny crescent, cres-cent, just over my eyebrow. It was a birthmark-. "Is that a scar?" she demanded drawing nearer. "That crescent-shaped mark? No." "No? Are you sure?" she insisted. "Perfectly." I replied, astonished. "A a birthmark?" "Yes may 1 ask why?" As she drew away from me, I saw that the color had (led from her cheeks. For a second she clasped both hands over her eyes as if to shut out my face, then slowly dropping her hands, she sat down on a long square block of stone which half encircleie basin, and on which to my amazement I saw carving. Voyou went to her again and laid his head in her lap. "What is your name?" she asked at length. |