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the rest of the time, not offensively, but with the assurance of a favored lover, torturing the poor girl who could not bear to wound his feelings, but whose reserved and distrait manner did not discourage his persistent gallantry, for he stood his ground, debarring the lovers from any pleasure in each other's society.

      Once Hawthorne whispered to her, fiercely:

      "There comes that cad back. He is annoying you. I see it by your altered looks. Will you not allow me to pitch him out of the window?"

      "No—oh, no, you must not make a scene!" she shuddered, apprehensively.

      "Then tell him yourself that you are weary of his persistent following," he urged.

      "Oh, no, I cannot wound him so. He has been kind to me, and means no harm," she said, trying to make excuses that she felt he did not deserve.

      But she escaped from the ball as soon as she could, glad to be rid of him, and spent a restless night, repenting the encouragement she had given Standish before she met Hawthorne.

      "They both love me, and I can see that they will be bitter foes," she thought, in terror of some unknown evil.

      The next morning Standish came at an early hour to call. He was acquainted with the girls, and they tried by merry banter to drive the threatening gloom from his brow; but all their efforts were dismal failures. He had eyes only for Geraldine, who was pale and perturbed under his reproachful glances, that seemed to say, bitterly:

      "You are a cruel little coquette. You encouraged me to love you until you met that other fellow, and now you wish to throw me over."

       CHAPTER VI.

      FORTUNE, THAT FICKLE GODDESS, FAVORS STANDISH

      "Her winsome, witching eyes

      Flash like bits of summer skies

      O'er her fan,

      As if to say, 'We've met;

      You may go now and forget—

      If you can.'"

Samuel M. Peck.

      It was a great relief to Geraldine when Harry Hawthorne arrived with a cab to take her to the boat. Now at last she could escape her angry lover.

      He rose, indeed, to take leave of the family, but he said to her:

      "I shall see you again, Miss Harding. I go back to New York on the same boat."

      He did so, but he did not judge it prudent to incur the wrath of Hawthorne by too persistent attentions. He preserved a coolly courteous demeanor toward both, devoting himself to some other friends whom he met on the boat.

      But, toward the last, he approached Geraldine again, murmuring, pleadingly:

      "I should like to call on you this evening, if you will permit me."

      She blushed, and stammered:

      "Please excuse me, as I have another engagement."

      He saw her timid glance turn toward Hawthorne, and readily guessed that she had made an engagement with him.

      Stifling an execration between closely drawn lips, he muttered:

      "To-morrow evening, then?"

      "Oh, yes, certainly," she answered, but with an air of restraint that made him furious.

      "She would like to refuse if she dared, the little flirt," he thought, and when Geraldine and Hawthorne left the boat together, he looked after them pale with rage.

      At that moment Cameron Clemens, one of the actor-friends he had met on the boat, slapped him on the shoulder, and said, teasingly:

      "Hallo, Standish! that was a stunning little beauty! But what are you glowering at, man? Jealous, eh?"

      "Jealous of a beggarly fireman? Bah, no! The little coquette will throw him over to-morrow."

      "And pick you up again, eh? Consolatory, by Jove! But who is she, anyhow?"

      "Oh, nobody but a salesgirl from O'Neill's. She scraped acquaintance with me in the store some ten days ago, and has been begging me to get her in my company ever since. You know how the pretty girls always run after actors, Clemens."

      "And how ardently the actors encourage their attentions; oh, yes," smiled the other, who was a very handsome young fellow himself. He added, after a moment: "Is the girl stage-struck?"

      "Yes, decidedly—member of an amateur dramatic society, and all that, you know. Wild to go on the stage, and I intend to get her in our company, just before we go on the road next week."

      "But there's no vacancy."

      "I'll get that little soubrette turned off. I owe her a grudge anyhow. She slapped my face when I tried to kiss her in a dark corridor one night."

      "Oh, don't take revenge for that. She's a good little girl, that Bettie," said Cameron Clemens, who, although he was the villain in the play where Standish had the part of hero, was kind and generous at heart.

      But Clifford Standish could not be brought to relent.

      "She can get another place," he said, carelessly. "The manager can't afford to displease me. I'm drawing full houses every night. So out goes prudish Bettie, and in comes pretty Geraldine!"

      "You don't think you can kiss her in a dark corridor, do you?"

      "I shall kiss her when I please. In fact, I intend to marry the little beauty; so no attentions in that quarter, my friend."

      "All right. I'll keep off the grass," returned the young actor, slangily, and turning to his friend, Charlie Butler, they went away together, leaving Standish to some bitter reflections, for his bravado was all put on. He feared that Geraldine was lost to him forever.

      "He will be with her this evening, that villainous fireman, while I am plodding away on the stage," he thought, angrily.

      But a most untoward fate helped him on when he feared that the game was lost to him forever—helped him on, and blighted all the springing hopes of poor Harry Hawthorne.

      A morbid curiosity over his rival led him to stroll down on Ludlow street that afternoon, in the neighborhood of the engine-house, and he saw the horses dashing out attached to the engine, and the hated Hawthorne on the driver's seat, handling the reins with consummate skill, his handsome face aglow with excitement. An alarm of fire had come in, and he was hastening to the scene.

      Clifford Standish hated his manly rival more than ever at this moment, but he impulsively joined the crowd that was running after the engine, intent on seeing the fire.

      On went the engine in splendid style, the horses obeying Hawthorne's hand lovingly, their sleek sides shining, their manes streaming, their fine heads erect, their large eyes flashing, a sight to win the admiration of every gazer. Flying like the wind, their hoofs striking fire from the pavement, they turned the corner, and– Alas! what was that shriek that went up from hundreds of throats?

      Their splendid onset was defeated. In turning the corner the wheels struck a car track at an angle, and the engine was overturned, the gallant steeds struggling in the dust with their noble driver.

      Clifford Standish rushed forward with demoniac glee, muttering:

      "My rival is dead beneath the engine! I am free of him forever!"

       CHAPTER VII.

      THE POWER OF LOVE

      "To look for thee—sigh for thee—cry for thee,

      Under my breath;

      To clasp but a shade where thy head hath been laid,

      It is death.

      "To long for thee—yearn for thee—burn for thee—

      Sorrow and strife!

      But to have thee—and hold thee—and fold thee,

      It is life, it is life!"

      It almost seemed as if Clifford Standish was destined to realize his diabolical hopes of his rival's death.

      When

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