Flood Tide
that June evening he casually shuffled the cards of fate, little suspecting that already a factor in his destiny stronger than any of his arguments was soon to make its influence felt and transform Wilton into a magnet so powerful that against its spell he would be helpless as a child. 

 He was aroused from his meditations by the voice of Willie. 

 "Didn't you hear a little bell?" demanded the inventor.  "A sort of tinklin' noise?" 

 "I thought I did." 

 "It's the box comin' from Jan's," explained he.  "Can you kitch a sight of it?" 

 "I see it now." 

 Rising, the old man tugged at the string, urging the reluctant messenger through the tangle of roses. 

 "By his writin' a note, I figger he ain't comin' over," he remarked, as the object drew nearer.  "I wonder what's stuck in his crop! Mebbe Mis' Eldridge won't let him out. She's something of a Tartar—Arabella is. Jan has to walk the plank, I can tell you." 

 By this time the cigar box swaying on the taut twine was within easy reach. Willie raised its cover and took from its interior a crumpled fragment of paper. 

 "Humph! He's mighty savin'!" he commented as he turned the missive over.  "He's writ on the other side of my letter. Let's see what he has to say: 

 "'Can't come. Busy.' 

 

 "Well, did you ever!" gasped he, blankly.  "Busy! Good Lord! Jan's never been known to be busy in all his life. He don't even know the feelin'. If Janoah Eldridge is busy, all I've got to say is, the world's goin' to be swallered up by another deluge." 

 "Maybe, as you suggested, Mrs. Eldridge—" 

 "Oh, if it had been Mis' Eldridge, he wouldn't 'a' took the trouble to send no such message as that," broke in Willie.  "He'd simply 'a' writ Arabella; there wouldn't 'a' been need fur more. No, sir! Somethin's stepped on Jan's shadder, an' to-morrow I'll have to go straight over there an' find out what it is." 

 

 

 CHAPTER V 


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