Jasper County Democrat, Volume 17, Number 51, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 3 October 1914 — The Hollow of Her Hand [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

The Hollow of Her Hand

By GEORGE BARR McCUTCHEON

Aafhortf “ Greustirh’ "Trvrton King," etc.

Illustrations by Ellsworth Young

Copyright. 1912, by Georye Barr McCutcheon Copyright. 1912. by Dodd. Mead a Company (Continuation of Chapter XVII) "I came upon her In the road on that wild night, Brandon, at the place I pointed out Can you picture her as I have described her? Can you picture her despair, her hopelessness, her misery? I have told you everything, from beginning to end. You know how fihe came to me, how I prepared her for the sacrifice, how she left me. I have not written to her. I cannot She must hate me with all her soul, just as I have hated the Wrandalls, but with greater reason, I confess. She would have given herself up to the law long ago, if it had not been for exposing me to the world as her defender, her protector. She knew she wae not morally guilty of the crime of murder. In the beginning she was afraid. She did not know our land, our laws. In time she came to understand that she was in no real peril, but then it was too late. A confession would have placed me in an impossible position. You see, she thought of me all this time. She loved me as no woman ever loved another. Was not I the wife of the man she had killed, and was

not I the noblest of all women in her ©yes? God! And to think of what I had planned for her!” This was the end of the story. The words died away in a sort of whimpering wail, falling in with the wind to be lost to his straining ears. Her head drooped, her arms hung limply at her side. For a long time he sat there in silence, looking out over the darkening water, unwilling, unable indeed, to speak. Hie heart was full of compassion for her, mingling strangely with what was left of scorn and horror. What could he say to her? At last she turned to him. “Now you know all that I can tell you of Hetty Castleton—of Hetty Glynn. You could not have forced this from me, Brandon. She would not tell you. It was left for me to do in my own good time. Well, I have spoken. What have you to say?”

“I can only say, Sara, that 1 thank God for everything,” he said slowly. “For everything?” "I thank God for you, for her and for everything. I thank God that she found him out in time, that she killed him, that you shielded her, that you failed to carry out your devilish scheme, and that your heart is very sore today." “You do not despise me?” “No. I am sorry for you.” Her eyes narrowed. “I don’t want you to feel sorry for me.” “You don’t understand. I am sorry for you because you have found yourself out and must be despising yourself.”

“You have guessed the truth. I despise myself. But what could be expected of me?” she asked ironically. “As the Wrandalls would say, 'blood will tell.’ ” “Nonsense! Don’t talk like that! It is quite unworthy of you. In spite of everything, Sara, you are wonderful. The very thing you tried to do, the w-ay you went about it, the way you surrender, makes for greatness in you. If you had gone on with it and succeeded, that, fact alone would have put you in the class with the great, strong, virile women of history. It—” "With the Medicis, the Borgias and —” she began bitterly. “Yee, with them. But they were great women, just the same. You are greater, for you have more than they possessed: a conscience. I wish I could tell you Just what I feel. I haven’t the words. I—” "I only want you to tell me the truth. Do you despise me?” “Again I say that I do not I can only say that I regard you with—yes, with awe.” "As one might think of a deadly serpent" <• "Hardly that” he said, smiling for

the’ErsFTline. He crossed over and laid his hand on her shoulder. “Don't think too meanly of yourself. I understand it all. You lived for months without a heart, that's all" “You put it very gently." "I think I am right. Now, you've got it back, and it’s hungry for the sweet, good things of life. You want to be happy. You want to love again and to be loved. You don't want to pitied. I understand. It's the return of a heart that went away long months ago and left an empty place that you filled with gall. The bitterness is gone. There is something sweet in its place. Am I not right?" She hesitated. "If you mean that I want to be loved by my enemies, Brandon, you are wrong,*' she said clearly. **l have not been chastened in that particular.” “You mean the Wrandalls T’ “It is not in my nature to love my enemies. We stand on the same footing as before, and always ehall. They understand me, I understand them. I am glad that my project failed, not for their sake, but for my own.” He was silent. This woman was beyond him. He could not understand a nature like this.

“You say nothing. Well, I can't ask you to understand. We will not discuss my enemies, but my friends. What do you intend to do in respect to Hetty?” “I am going to make her my wife,” he said levelly. She turned away. It was now quite dark. He could not see the expression on her face. >- "What you have heard does not weaken your love for her?’ “No. It strengthens it.’’ “You know what she has done. She has taken a life with her own hands. Can you take her to your bosom, can X>u make her the mother of your own children? Remember, there is blood on her hands.” “Ah, but her heart is clean!” “True,” she said moodily, “her heart is clean." “No cleaner than yours is now, Sara." She uttered a short, mocking laugh. “It isn’t necessary to say a thing like that to me.” “I beg your pardon.” Her manner changed abruptly, She turned to him, intense and serious. “She is so far away, Brandon. On the other side of the world, and she is full of loathing for me. How am I to regain what I have lost? How am I to make her understand? She Went away with that last ugly thought of me, with the thought of me as I appeared to her on that last, enlightening day. All these months it has been growing more horrible c to her. It has been beside her all the time. All these months she has known that I pretended to love her as—” “I don’t believe you know Hetty as well as you think you do,” he broke in. “You forget that she loved you with all her soul. You can’t kill love so easily as all that. It will be all right, Sara. You must write and ask her to come back. It—" "Ab, but you don't know!” Then she related the story of the liberated canary bird. “Hetty understands. The cage door is open. She may return when she chooses, but—don’t you see? —she must come of her own free will.”

“You will not ask her to come?” “No. It is the test. She will know that I have told you everything. You will go to her. Then she may understand. If she forgives she will come back. There is nothing else to say, nothing else to consider.” “I shall go to her at once,” he said resolutely. She gave him a quick, searching glance. "She may refuse to marry you, even now, Brandon.” “She can’t!” he cried. An instant later his face fell. “By Jove. I—l suppose .the law will have to be considered now. She will at least have to go through the form of a trial.” She whirled on him angrily. "The

law? What has the law to do with it? Don’t be a fool!” "She ought to be legally exonerated,” he said. Her fingers gripped his arm fiercely. “I want you to understand one thing, Brandon. The story I have told you was for your ears alone. The secret lives with us and dies with us.” He looked his relief. "Right! It must go no farther. It is not a matter for the law to decide. You may trust me.” “I am cold,” she said. He heard her teeth chatter distinctly as she pulled her thick mantle closer about her throat and shoulders. "It is very raw and wet down here. Come!” As she started off along the long, narrow pier, he sprang after her, he £ a ™L She leaned rather

heavily against him for a few steps and then drew herself up. Her teeth etill chattered, her arm trembled tn his clasp. “By Jove, Sara, thia is bad,” he cried, in distress. "You're chilled to the marrow.” "Nerves,” she retorted, and he somehow felt that her lips were set and drawn. "You must get to bed right away. Hot bath, mustard, and all that. I'U not stop for dinner. Thanks just the same. I will be over in the morning." "When will you sail f she asked, after a moment. “I can’t go for ten days, at least My mother goes into the hospital next week for an operation, as I've told you. I can't leave until after that’s over. Nothing serious, but—well, I han’t go away. I shall write to Hetty tonight and cable her tomorrow. By the way, I—l don’t know just where to find her. You see, we were not to write to each other. It was in the bargain. I suppose you don’t know how I can—” “Yes, I can tell you precisely where she is. She is in Venice, but leaves there for Rome, by the Express.” “Then you have been hearing from her?” he cried sharply. “Not directly. But I will say this much: there has not been a day since she landed in England that I have not received news of her. 1 have not been out of touch with her. Brandon, not even for an hour.”

> “Good heaven, Sara! You don't mean to say you've had her shadowed by—by detectives,” he exclaimed, aghast. “Her maid is a very faithful servant,” was her ambiguous rejoinder. (TO BE CONTINUED.)

He Dropped Suddenly Upon the Trunk.

This Woman Was Beyond Him.