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GLORIA'S ROMANCE
(Ooatiauod from I*«t Issue)
(Chapter XVII. Continued.)
Gloria paused at her window and.
seeing Doctor Royce just stepping
t*to hie car, she mused on him.
He was an Increasingly interesting mys
tery to her, very much at her beck and
call in some ways, and absolutely beyond
her control in other a
He looked back and waved his nand.
She thought he waved to her and she
answered his aaluta Then she saw that
he was signaling to someone else and
had not seen her. It was a woman he
was signalling to. for he lifted his hat
wondered who it was and felt an
odd quirk of jealousy. It needled her
like a stitch in the aide.
She would have felt a sharper stab if
she had known that Doctor Royce was
waving at Lola Lola was with Casimir's
wife, reading to her and comforting the
sick woman as best she could. The
eight had startled Doctor Royce, as
much as it pleased him.
The wild and ruthless Lois had given
up her perilous intrigues, indeed, if she
could give herself the monotony of mm
isterlng to the lonely and the sick and
take pleasure and pt ide in such service
as a substitute for the amorous lawless
ness that had made her hateful in
Royce’s eyas.
Aa he rode on into the city he felt a
great elation. He was not a religious
rr.Sn. but ho loved a wholesome, health
ful soul as well as a body that was
clean and veil. He had kept Gloria
from learning of Lois’ affair with Fre
neau for Gloria’s own eate. Now he
believed that under cover of the decep
tion Lot** own .had been enabled to re
deem itself.
He felt that Lois had earned the right
to have back the letters she bad sent tn
Freneau. Whether she should wish to
destroy them or keep them as a re
minder and warning from her evil past,
they belonged to her and to no one else.
Certainly Royce had no further right in
them.
When he reached his office and gath
ered up his instruments he took the
package of letters from the safe and
rut them in his pocket. Then ho re
turned to the motor and sped back to
the Stafford country home.
It was a long ride and he was troubled
about many things, about Gloria’s de
termination to probe into the secrets
thatacould mean only a cruel disillusion
ment for her, about the chances for
Trask’s recovery, and the dangers that
threatened the Staffords if the newspa
pers or the police learned with what in
dependence of the law the prisoner
Trask had been captured and held. He
wondered at hie own connivance In the
matter, and he shuddered to think how
many illegal acts are constantly com
mitted by the moat respectable people.
When he reached the Stafford estate he
stopped the driver of his car and got
(Art. telling the man to take the case of
instruments up to the house. Royce
had seen Lois strolling about the lawn
In a mood of solemnity. He felt 3hat
the time was appropriate for the bur
render of the letters. He wondered it
he had the right to deliver them over
to her. Yet he knew that he had no
right to keep them. It seemed that he
bed so tangled himself in the net of the
Freneau affair that anything eoever he
did was bound to be wrong.
Mr. Royce hurried to Lola and call
ed to her. She turned to him sad
ly and wiakly He knew too much
about her for her to face him without
shame. He brought a little s™***
relief to her along with a swift slush
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(Advt.t
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XXpt S3B. Cartoon Bt£Q, atetoewre
of guilt when he said:
“Lois. I have decided to give back to
you the letters you sent to Freneau. 1|
read only one of them, and 1 have for- j
gotten. 1 think, what it said, i think 1
you have earned them back, and 1 ad- j
vise you to burn them up at the first
opportunity.”
He took the long envelope from his
pocket and her hand was just moving
forward to take it when he saw her
bluah vanish in a flash of pallor.
“My husband!” she whispered. Royce
thrust the envelope back in his pocket
just before he felt David's hand on
his shoulder and turned to look into
David’s smile of comradeship.
Royce had to play-act with all his
might to pretend a cheer that he was
far from feeling. Once more the loath- |
some phase of deceit was uppermost.
He could not control himself under Da
vid's eyes and he made an excuse to
move on.
“I was looking for Gloria,” he said.
“She’s over by the marble pool,"
David answered. Royce moved on,
knowing that he was watched. Ho did
not want to meet Gloria with those let
ters in his pocket, but he must go on
with the role.
Gloria seemed a figure in a painting
as she stood at the edge of the blue wa
ter in its white frame, with the formal
shrubbery and the graceful colonnade
back of her. The boy Stas was on
one knee at her feet. He was sailing
a tiny sloop on the tiny ocean.
As scon as Gloria saw Roy ce she beck
oned to him with a cordiality that she
regretted at once, remembering that
someone else had waved to him before.
Having just seen him speak to Lois,
she felt sure that it was to Lois that
he had waved when he left the house.
Gloria was miserable in this thought and
angry at herself for giving It any im
portance.
When Stas saw Doctor Royce he left
the sloop to its fate and ran whooping
to him. Royce caught the child in his
hands and tossed him high, then brought
him to the level of his shoulders for
a hug and kiss. He loved children and
children loved him.
He did not notice that the little grop
ing hands of Stas had happened on the
envelope full of Frenau’s letters and
lifted it stealthily from' his pocket. When
he set the boy’s feet on the ground
again Stas ran away, brandishing the
envelope and challenging Royce to a
game of tag.
Royce’s heart bounded with alarm. If
the child had carried a stick of dyna
mite in his hand it would hardly have
been more dangerous.
“Give me the letter, my boy,”Royce
said, putting out his hand.
Stas laughed and ran a little farther
off. Royce followed, demanding. The
more anxious Royce was the more Stas
liked the game. He edged closer and
ploser toward Gloria.
' Royce was in mortal terror lest the
letters fall from the envelope and some
how Gloria would learn their nature.
•He made a dash for Stas. Stas whisk
ed behind a jumper and circled it. Royce
chased him through a clump of rhoddo
dendfona Stas kept just beyond his
grasp.
Gloria began to laugh and to encour
age Stas. At length Royce made a fran
tic rush for the boy. and Stas, grow
ing breathless, made for Gloria’s arms
and flung himself into them, panting:
Take It! take it! quick!”
He placed the envelope in Gloria's
hands. She was about to return It to
Royce without a glance. But the heavy
seals on the back caught her eye and
she looked down.
Instantly she recognized the envelope.
It was the one that had fallen from
Freneau’s pocket the night he came to
bid her goodby. It was the one that
she had seen the crouching figure take
from Freneau’s pocket after Trask had
murdered him and run away! •
, CHAPTER XVTIL
The distress of jealousy that Gloria
felt at the thought of Doctor
Royce's smiling and waving at
someone else nad had a pleasant tang,
for jealousy is a phase of love. But
now Gloria stared at Royce with abhor
rence. He was repulsive in her eyes as
he ran toward her in pursuit of the boy
Stas, then checked himself and watched
her with guilty apprehension when ho
saw she recognized the enevelope in her
hands. Gloria sent the boy away, told
him to run to his mother. She wanted
to be rid of him for the time.
"Give me the envelope, Gloria,”
Royce pleaded. ' ,
“Give it to you" Gloria cried. "What
right have you to it? I know whose
it was. I know that it was Dick's.
Therefore it is mine and I'm going to
keep it-”
“Better not,” he stammered, his fac
ulties in such a panto that bis hat f
from his hand. He stooped to pick up,
his back to Gloria.
The enevelope she held had suddenly
revived her memories as clear as reality.
,-ler first memory was of the scene in
her room when she snatched the envel
ope from Dick Freneau and teased him
with it, never dreaming what it contain
ed. Next she saw anew that scene in
front of the Soldiers’ and Sailors' moni
ment which she had witnessed through
the binoculars. Once more she beheld
the monument in the moonlight and the
snowlight; the man In evening dress
with his collar up and his hat down
skulking in the shadows; then the ap
pearance of Trask, the unexpected com
ing of Dick Freneau, his pause to light
his cigarette while Gloria from afar*
healplessly watched the assassin creep
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(Advt.)
THE ATLANTA SEMI-WEEKLY JOURNAL. ATLANTA, GA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1916.
-- -1 1
Overworked I
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''i i ? and the family well fed and the constant struggle g
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. II ji/tiwS' / ders for me and I would not heavy buckets of water to the horses dren’s loud talking and romping would
'-'-I' '//h/pm I i K H I had a dis- and cows. I would help set, replant, make me so nervous I could just tear
» Ift I placement bearing down pains hoe and cut tobacco, and help to hang everythinglo pieces and
i\ I Ml / and backache and was thor- it in the shed by handing it up to the all over and feel so sick that I would
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up on hltn and throttle him to death.
Trask vanished and the skulker camel
by again, stumbled over Dick's body,
knelt, listened to his heartbeat, then,
satisfied of his death, ghoullshly rifle';
his pockets and took from them thia
very envelope that had cotne back into
her hands so curiously through the
prank of a mischievous child.
Into the vivid tableau of that memory
the kneeling figure of Doctor Royce
fitted to perfection. Gloria had a sud
den intuition that she understood the
truth at last. Doctor Royce had told
her that her vision was delirium because
it was himself that she had seen.
All his devotion took on a new and
hideous look. He had not cared for
her. He had meant only to blind her
and divert her from her revenge. He
had nearly succeeded. She had frittered
away her time. She had believed the
Indian chief who said that it was Royce
and not Freneau who battled for her and
saved her She had allowed herself to
think disloyally of her dead lover. Sne
would exact double vengeance for that.
Gloria advanced at once on the kneel
ing Royce and cried out upon him:
"It was you, then! You of all the
people in the world! I see you now as
plainly as I did that night, only 1 was
too foolish to suspect you.”
"What do you mean, Gloria?" Royce
asked hoarsely.
"I mean that you had a share in the
murder of my poor lover. You hired
that beast Trask and you went there to
make sure he did his work well."
"Gloria Gloria!" Royce sighed, so deep
and honest a sorrow in his face that
Gloria was staggered. But only for a
moment. Her wrath carried her on:
"You made a fool of me for a long
time, but you were too clever too long,
and now I know—l know a little at
least, and I’m going to know more. Why
did you kill my Dick?"
"I didn't want to kill him, Gloria
I knew how you loved him and I would
have given my life to keep you from
pain, then as now. You’ve got to believe
me."
"Believe you? When you told me that
all I saw was a delirium? When you
drugged me that night in the hope that
I would forget? When you dragged his
body away and threw it in the river?
Ugh. the horrible brutality of It!"
"That’s too false even for you to be
lieve, Gloria” Royce protested. “I did
not drag his body away, and you know
it.”
"I know nothing of the sort. I fainted
as you stole this envelope from his body.
Do you deny that you did that?"
Royce.stood trembling wtlh confusion.
Gloria took his silence for a confession.
She quivered before the confirmation of
her charge. From her weak hand the
envelope slipped As she bent to recover
it one of the enclosed letters fell out and
the breeze blew It crisply away, opening
It as it fluttered. She caught it at the
edge of the pool. She could not help
reading it at a glance.
The handwriting she recognized with
out the aid of a signature. Her brain
almost refused to accept what her eyes
beheld:
“Beloved Dick: Don’t hate me for
compelling you to make this trip, but
I am frantic wtlh Jealousy of Gloria,
and if you fall me I will do something
desperate. Your adoring and /once
adored LObS.”
Gloria dropped on a marble bench
while the ground seemed to be shaken
beneath her. So Freneau had planned to
make a journey wtlh Dois! It was plain
ly at Lois’ demand, yet he had consented
and arranged to go. The story Frank
Mulry told her had been a He, too. Fre
neau had had an affair with Ix>ls, with
the wife of Gloria’s own brother!
This treachery In her own household
was like a nausea; It sickened her. She
turned to Royce, no Jpnger demanding,
but appealing: "In heaven’s name tell me
the truth.” •
Joyce felt that the time was over for
deception. The truth could not hurt
Gloria worst than appearance.
"You shall have the truth, Gloria, or
as much of it as I know. I tried to
;eep It from you because you were 111
’.nd you were young and I was afraid
hat the ugly reality would kill you.
Vhlle you were still very ill with pneu
nonla I stumbled on the fact that
reneau was carrying on an affair with
—with the woman, the wretched woman
who wrote that letter. I happened to
>verhear him tell her to meet him at
nldnlght at the pavilion near the monu
uent. I had known that he was a scoun
rel, and had always been a roue. But
you had loved him, so I had begged him
.o play fair with you. And he had prom
sed
"When I heard him make that rendea
. ous with—with that woman, I went
right to him and told him that I knew
of his vile scheme. I demanded that he
break off the affair. Besides, the wo
nan’s husband was one of my dearest
friends and I wanted to protect his
tome as well as your heart.
"Freneau laughed at my earnestness
rnd ridiculed me, resented my interfer
•nce, called me a meddler and a busy
body. I tdld him I would prevent his
reachery at all costs. I took my re
volver with me. I didn’t mean to kill
.Um. The revolver was not even loaded.
But I Intended to frighten him with it.
"I never dreamed, of course, that the
binoculars I gave you to amuse yourself
with would give you a sight of the
whole tragedy. I waited and waited for
•’’reneau to appear. At last I walked
down' the drive expecting to meet him.
I found his body lying in the snow. I
melt down and listened to his heart. It
was still. He was dead beyond all res
cue.
"I saw that envelope in his pocket.
I didn't know what was In it. but was
afraid of what It might contain. I Imag
ined the police discovering him and
the newspapers publishing what was
.ound on his person. Before I realized
vvhat I was doing I took the envelope. I
,aw somebody coming along the drive. I
dn’t know who it was. I don't know
now. but I ran away.
"When I got back to my office I got
word that your nurse had called me. I
ran to your house. You told me you had
seen the murder done- You had seen
me without recognizing me. I told yoir
it was a delirium like the other you had
had. I looked through the binoculars
when I went out on the drive. Fre
neau's body was gone. I was dumfound
ed. I almost believed that I had imag-
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Atlanta. Ga.—'(Advt_)
ined the whole thing myself.
"I went to the pavilion. Ther. I saw
a woman, the woman, waiting for Fre
neau. I told her that he had been kill
ed. She was frantic with grief. I
sent her home and went back to you.
You were in a state of hysteria. 1.
gave you a drug to Keep you from los
ing your mind.
“I ought never to have tried to de
ceive you, even for your own good. The
truth is a dangerous thing to tamper
with. I see it now, but my only guilt
was a longing to protect you. It was
my love that led me to hoodwink you,
and now my love must bear the punish
ment."
Gloria’s mind was not too busy with
its own thoughts to heed the profound
devotion of his tone. Her heart soft
ened toward him a little, and once,more
Freneau was on trial before her soul.
But all she said was:
“The night court! Judge Freeman
let Trask go. He tried to persuade me
not to pursue him again. What reason
did he have? He must have known
Trask. He's got to tell the truth.”
Royce disclaimed all knowledge of
Judge Freeman’s knowledge, or his mo
tives. He saw Judge Freeman coming
into driveway in his car. He saw the
judge's daughter, Lois, greet him.
Gloria saw him, too, and she did not
wait. She glared at Lois with savage
distrust and curtly demanded a word
from the judge. She beckoned to him
and walked away, and the old jurist fol
lowed her like a guilty lad going to his
punishment.
(Continued Next Issue.)
AMERICANS AT PARREL
ALL REPORTED SAFE
(By Associated Press.)
ED PASO, Tex., Nov. 15.—American
and other foreign mining men of Par-,
ral are safe and are making their way
toward the west coast of Mexico, a
Mexican refugee who arrived here]
from Parral last night reported. He
left Parral on November 8. He re
ported that General Herrera evacuated
Parral November 4, and said the town
vyas occupied November 5 by Vill.il
vandits. I
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(Special Dispatch to The Journal.)
FORT VALLEY, Ga.. Nov. 14.—With
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The Presbyterians of the city have
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Wilson Congratulated
Gain for Democrats
(By Associated Press.)
PITTSBURG, Pa., Nov. 14.—The df
flcial count of the vote cast in the
Thirty-second Pennsylvania congression
al district had covered two city wards
at noon with a net gain of fourteen
votes for Guy E. Campbell, Democrat,
who declares he has been elected over
Representative A. J. Barchfleld by 215.
The unofficial count gave the election
to Barchfleld by a small margin.
7