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    Chapter 15

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    The Broken Motor-car.

    Out where the trail from Kenmore intersects the one leading from Laurel to and through King's Highway, I passed over a little hill and came suddenly upon a big, dark-gray touring-car stalled in the road. In it Beryl King sat looking intently down at her toes. I nearly fell off my horse at the shock of it, and then my blood got to acting funny, so that my head felt queer. Then I came to, and rode boldly up to her, mentally shaking hands with myself over my good luck. For it was good luck just to see her, whether anything came of it or not.

    "Something wrong with the wheelbarrow?" I asked her, with a placid superiority.

    She looked up with a little start--she never did seem to feel my presence until I spoke to her--and frowned prettily; but whether at me or at the car, I didn't know.

    "I guess something must be," she answered quite meekly, for her. "It keeps making the funniest buzz when I start it--and it's Mr. Weaver's car, and he doesn't know--I--I borrowed it without asking, and--"

    "That car is all right," I bluffed from my saddle. "It's simply obeying instructions. It comes under the jurisdiction of my private Providence, you see. I ordered it that you should be here, and in distress, and grateful for my helping hand." How was that for straight nerve?

    "Well, then, let's have the helping hand and be done. I should be at home, by now. They will wonder--I just went for a--a little spin, and when I turned to go back, it started that funny noise. I--I'm afraid of it. It--might blow up, or--or something."

    She seemed in a strangely explanatory mood, that was, to say the least, suspicious. Either she had come out purposely to torment me, or she was afraid of what she knew was in my mind, and wanted to make me forget it. But my mettle was up for good. I had no notion of forgetting, or of letting her.

    "I'll do what I can, and willingly," I told her coolly. "It looks like a good car--an accommodating car. I hope you are prepared to pay the penalty--"

    "Penalty?" she interrupted, and opened her eyes at me innocently; a bit too innocently, I may say.

    "Penalty; yes. The penalty of letting me find you outside of King's Highway, alone," I explained brazenly.

    She tried a lever hurriedly, and the car growled up at her so that she quit. Then she pulled herself together and faced me nonchalantly.


    "Oh-h. You mean about the black velvet mask? I'm afraid--I had forgotten that funny little--joke." With all she could do, her face and her tone were not convincing.

    I gathered courage as she lost it. "I see that I must demonstrate to you the fact that I am not altogether a joke," I said grimly, and got down from my horse.

    I don't, to this day, know what she imagined I was going to
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