The Lighted Match
is set chin and labored self-containment. Von Ritz, despite his bedraggled masquerade was as composed and ex
enton's car; substituted himself for the American and mad
sely what it had been last night, when his only excitement had been a game of billiards. Men who knew him would have told you that his manner
nse silence, Benton
ice too low for Cara to catch, "I shall,
but when he raised his head it
ns?" In a matter-of-fact voice he added: "It is growing late. If Miss
his motive. After all that was the best cour
iving you down-" he suggested, "ma
s of the Prince, wit
not have come aboard. I must obey the decrees of State!" She paused, then impulsively swept on: "I can force myself to do what I m
clined h
he repeated. "Will you hono
her chin r
ion ends to-morrow if you still wish it, but to-
f-mastery he forced a smile as though he had asked
nd. But you will agree with me that they"-with a gesture toward
where the yachtsman bent forward to giv
"if you only wanted to marry me for State reasons-it would be different. It wouldn't hurt me then to hurt you. You mean so muc
, and his voice carrie
no privilege to question you. When you do, I shall not have to question you." He leaned forwa
self in the emptying ball-room with ingenious excuses
ry-boats and tugs. About him stamped the usual farewell throng with hats raised and handkerchiefs a-flutter. The musi
use to be re-absorbed by cabs, motors and surface-cars into the main arteries of the
ssed against the after-rail, her handkerchief waving in the raw wind. Most of the se
his friend's elbow, did
ws, her checks pale, her fingers tightly gripping the rail. S
shouldering their ways against the sullen heave of the river's tide-water; she heard the discordant shriek of their steam throats; she saw th
he men were christening the voyage with brandy-and-soda and d
elbow, was silent, re
ed monotone, she turned and smiled. It was a smile of accepting the inevitable. He went wit
ed the door, and turned to take from the hand of the bearer a Marconigram just relayed from shore. He read it and for
ullenly heaving sea, to answer the rap on the door.
re was need, Karyl had come to know that there would be Von Ritz, but also there went with him a
ression with which the Prince looked up to g
" he d
officer held
over the intricacies of t
to construe it
in matters before-" He broke off with something like a catch in his voice, then
elt in his eyes, and Von Ritz discreetly withdrew as far as the
Maritzburg-to her fath
rned, the Prince nodde
n added quietly "-and if Your Highness is called upon to
closing the d
all desk of her suite-de-luxe she sat with her head on h
essentials a small, squat figure of time-corroded clay. The little Inca huaca had perhaps looked with that same unseein
rested her chin on one hand, gazing
. Again she dropped her face on h
enth Street, and it was not until the chauffeur had turned north on Fifth Avenue that either spoke. Then Benton rou
uppressing his surprise at
ormance," he asked, "when that n
terwards at one of the cafés? He was being fêted and flattered
e nerve of a bull-terrier. I remember he was more like a grandee than a toreador. We had him dine with us-hard bread-black olives-fish-bad wine-all sorts of native truck. For the rest of ou
companion's steady gaze; then, taking
ad been educated for the Church. If he hadn't felt the lure of the strenuous life, he might have
lled his chatter to an embarrassed silence. He realized
aphy," suggested Benton coolly. "His
ve it was. What do
happen to know where he lived? I seem to recall
. His address-" He paused to search through his pocket-book for a small tablet dedicated
the direction on the
correspondence," he suggested. "I am going to