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    Chapter 1 - Page 2

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    slipped aside from his position of vantage, and the pressure of the crowd brought the girl against the rail. Thereupon the Seven Saltatory Devils possessing the frame of the frantic and fashionable dock-dancer deserted it, yielding place to a demon of vocality.

    "I think he's calling to you," said the Tyro in the girl's ear.

    The girl shook her head with a vehemence which imparted not so much denial as an "I-don't-care-if-he-is" impression.

    Stridently sounded the voice of distress from the pier. "Pilot-boat," it yelled, and repeated it. "Pilot! Pilot! Come--back--pilot-boat."

    Again the girl shook her head, this time so violently that her hair--soft, curly, luxuriant hair--loosened and clouded about her forehead and ears. In a voice no more than a husky, tremulous whisper, which was too low even to be intended to carry across the widening water-space, and therefore manifestly purposed for the establishment of her own conviction, she said:

    "I wo-won't. I won't. I WON'T!!!" At the third declaration she brought a saber-edged heel down square upon the most afflicted toe of a very sore foot which the Tyro had been nursing since a collision in the squash court some days previous. Involuntarily he uttered a cry of anguish, followed by a monosyllabic quotation from the original Anglo-Saxon. The girl turned upon him a baleful face, while the long-distance conversationalist on the dock reverted to his original possession and faded from sight in a series of involuted spasms.

    "What did you say?" she demanded, still in that hushed and catchy voice.

    "'Hell,'" repeated the Tyro, in a tone of explication, "'is paved with good intentions.' It's a proverb."

    "I know that as well as you do," she whispered resentfully. "But what has that to do with--with me?"

    "Lord! What a vicious little spitfire it is," said he to himself. Then, aloud: "It was my good intention to remove that foot and substitute the other one, which is better able to sustain--"

    "Was that your foot I stepped on?"

    "It was. It is now a picturesque and obsolete ruin."

    "It had no right to be there."

    "But that's where I've always kept it," he protested, "right at the end of that leg."


    "If you want me to say I'm sorry, I won't, I won't--I--"

    "Help!" cried the Tyro. "One more of those 'won'ts' and I'm a cripple for life."

    There was a convulsive movement of the features beneath the heavy veil, which the Tyro took to be the beginning of a smile. He was encouraged. The two young people were practically alone now, the crowd having moved forward for sight of a French liner sweeping proudly up the river. The girl turned her gaze upon the injured
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