The Green Door

 Imagine you are walking down Broadway after dinner. You have ten minutes to smoke your cigar while deciding whether to see a tragedy or a comedy. Suddenly a hand is laid on your arm. You turn to look into the thrilling eyes of a beautiful woman wearing diamonds and a fur coat. She quickly puts an extremely hot donut in your hand, pulls out a tiny pair of scissors and cuts off the seconds button of your overcoat. The she yells one word, “Parallelogram!” and runs away down a side street.

 That would be pure adventure. Would you accept it and run after her? Not you. Your face would turn red with embarrassment. You would drop the donut and continue down Broadway, feeling for your missing button. This is what you would do, unless you are one of the lucky few who still have the spirit of adventure.

 True adventurers have always been rare. The ones we read about have been mostly businessmen. They have gone looking for things they wanted – golden fleeces, holy grails, lady loves, treasure, crowns and fame. But the true adventurer goes out without any aim or goal. just to see what happens.

 Half-adventurers – brave and impressive people – have been many. They have changed history. But each one of them had a prize to win, a goal to achieve – so they were no true adventurers.

 In the big city there are twin spirits called Romance and Adventure. They are always out looking for worthy people. As we walk the streets Romance and Adventure secretly watch us, and they challenge us in many different ways. Without knowing why, we might look up suddenly and see a face in a window – a face that we seem to have known forever. In a sleepy street we hear a cry of agony and fear coming from a dark and empty house. A cabdriver drops us at the wrong door, which is opened with a smile. A piece of paper with writing on it falls down to our feet from a high window. We exchange glances of instant hate, affection, and fear with passing strangers in a crowd. A sudden shower of rain – and our umbrella may be protecting a beautiful woman. At every corner fingers beckon and eyes plead, but all the joyful, mysterious and dangerous clues of adventure pass by us. We grow stiff from routine. Some day we come to the end of a very dull life, and we will then realize that our adventure was a boring one – a marriage or two, an expensive house, and a lifelong battle with a vacuum cleaner.

 Rudolph Steiner was a true adventurer. Most evenings he went out in search of the unexpected. To him the most interesting things in life seemed to be around the next corner. He sometimes ended up in strange situations. He had spent two nights in a police station, and he had been robbed several times. But he didn’t care, he kept looking for adventure.

 One evening Rudolph was walking down a street in the old part of the city. There were two streams of people. Some were going home, the others were going out.

 Rudolph moved easily and watched things closely. He worked as a salesman in a piano store. Well, that was what he did in the daylight. At night he was a young adventurer.

 He heard a sudden noise, and saw a pair of false teeth in a glass case. The teeth were opening and closing very quickly. He saw that there was an electric sign above the teeth advertising a dentist. A giant negro, strangely dressed in a red coat, yellow trousers and military cap handed out cards to the passing crowd.

 Rudolph had often seen dentist’s cards given out like this. He usually didn’t take one. But the African very skilfully slipped one card into his hand.

 When he had travelled a few meters down the street  he glanced at the card. One side of the card was blank. On the other was three words written in ink: “The Green Door.” And then Rudolph saw, three steps in front of him, a man throw away the card the negro had given him as he passed. Rudolph picked it up. It was printed with the dentist’s name ad address, and the usual stuff about “fillings” and “braces” and “painless operations.”

 The adventurous piano salesman stopped at the street corner. Then he crossed the street, walked back down a block, recrossed the street and joined the stream of people again. He pretended not to notice the negro as he carelessly took a card passed to him. Ten steps later he looked at it. It was the same handwriting that was on the first card. It said, “The Green Door.” Three or four cards were dropped onto the ground by people walking near him. Rudolph picked them up. They were all dental advertisements.

 The spirit of acventure had beckoned to Rudolf Steiner twice. He slowly walked back to the place where the negro stood by the case of rattling teeth. This time he was not offered a card. He saw that the African only offered the cards to some people. He did not offer Rudolph another card. In fact, he seemed to give Rudolph a look of cold disapproval.

 The look hurt the young adventurer. It felf like a silent accusation that he was not good enough. So he stood back from the people hurrying past, and looked at the building where he thought his adventure must wait.

 It was five stories high. A small restaurant was in the basement. The first floor, now closed, was a hat shop. The second floor, by the electric sigh, was the dentist’s. Above this were many signs – of furtunetellers, dressmakers, musicians, and doctors. Still higher there were flats.

 Rudolf walked quickly into the building and walked up three flights of carpeted steps. Then he stopped. The hallway was a little dark. He saw a green door. For a moment he hesitated, then he walked straight to the green door and knocked on it.

 The moment he spent waiting for the door to open was pure adventrue. What might be waiting for him behind that green door! Danger, death, love or ridiculre?

 He heard a soft sound, and the door was slowly opened. A girl of about eighteen or nineteen stood there white-faced and weak. She swayed, then fainted. Rudolph caught her and laid her on an old couch inside. He closed the door and looked around the room. It was neat, but she clearly had little money.

 The girl lay still. He began to fan her with his hat. That was successful because he accidentally hit her nose, and she opened her eyes. And then the young man saw that her face was the one he had always been looking for The honest gray eyes, the little nose turned cutley up, and the rich brown hair. It seemed the perfect reward for all his wonderful adventures. But her face was very thin and pale.

 The girl looked at him calmly, and then smiled.

 “I fainted, didn’t I?” she asked weakly. “Well, I’m not surprised. I haven’t eaten anything for three days.”

 “Heavens!” cried Rudolph, jumping up. “Wait till I come back.”

 He ran out the green door and down the stairs. In twenty minutes he was back again. He knocked on the door with his toe because both his arms were full of bags of food. He laid the food on the table – bread and butter, cold meat, cakes, pies, pickles, oysters, a roasted chicken, and a bottle of milk.

 “It’s ridiculous,” said Rudolph, “to go without eating. Dinner is ready.” He helped her to a chair at the table. “And now, if you’ll allow me to be your guest, we’ll have supper.”

 Her eyes shone eagerly and she began to eat. She ate like a cute, starving animal. She seemed to think that it was natural that Rudolph was there with all his food. Gradually, the brightness returned to her eyes, and the color to her face. She began to tell him her little story. It was a very common story in the big city. She had worked in a shop for low wages, became sick and lost her job, then lost her hope. Then came the knock of the adventurer upon the green door.

 “You have suffered so much,” exclaimed Rudolph.

 “It was terrible,” said the girl, sadly.

 “Do you have any friends or relatives in the city?”

 “No, not one.”

 “I am all alone in the world, too,” said Rudolph.

 “I am glad of that,” said the girl quickly. And that pleased Rudolph.

 Suddenly her eyelids dropped and she sighed deeply.

 “I’m very sleey,” she said, “and I feel so good.”

 Rudolph rose and took his hat.

 “Then I’ll say good-night,” he said. “A long night’s sleep will be good for you.”

 He held out his hand and she took it, and said, “good night.” But her eyes silently asked a direct and hopeful question.

 “Oh, I’m coming back tomorrow to see how you are.”

 Then she asked, “How did you know to knock at my door?”

 He looked at her for a moment, remembering the cards. She must have written on them, because she was desperate for help. He decided he would never tell her the truth, so that she would not be embarrassed.

 “One of our piano tuners lives in this building,” he said. “I knocked at your door by mistake.”

 The last thing he saw in the room before the green door closed was her smile.

 At the top of the stairs he stopped and looked around. He walked to the end of the hallway and back. He went up to the floor above and came dack down. Every door in the building was painted green.

 He went outside. The African was still there. Rudolph walked up to him and showd him the two cards in his hand.

 “Will you tell me why you gave me these cards and what they mean?” he asked.

 The African gave a huge smile. His teeth were like a dental advertisement.

 “There it is, boss,” he said, pointing down the street. “But I think you are too late for the first act.”

 Rudolph saw a little theater. The electric sign advertised its new play, “The Green Door.”

 “I’ve been told it’s an excellent play, sir,” said the African. “The producer gave me a dollar to give out a few of his cards along with the dentist’s. May I offer you one of the dentist’s cards, sir?”

 Rudolph went to a bar for a glass of beer and a cigar. When he came out, he stopped in front of a lamppost and said to it:

 “All the same, I believe it was Fate that led me to her.”

 This conclusion proves that Rudolph Steiner was one of the true followers of Romance and Adventure.
 

The Cop and the Anthem

 

 Soapy moved uneasily on his park bench. When wild geese honk high at night as they fly overhead, and when women without fur coats become kind to their husbands, and when Soapy moves uneasily on his park bench, you know that winter is coming.

 

 A dead leaf fell in Soapy’s lap. That was winter’s business card. Winter is kind to the citizens of the park – he gives plenty of warning that he is coming.

 

 Soapy realized he had to do something about the cold weather. And so he moved uneasily on his park bench.

 

 He did not have high ambitions. There were no thoughts of Mediterranean cruises, or warm Sourthern skies. He wanted three months in Blackwell prison on the Island. Three months of a warm bed, regular food, and good company semmed perfect.

 

 For years the prison had been his winter home. Just as rish New Yorkers bought their tickets to Palm Beach and Hawaii each winter, so Soapy made his simple plan to go to the Island. And now the time had come. On the night before, three fat Sunday newspapers had not kept him warm oh his bench. So the Island was the most important thing in Soapy’s mind. He could have gone to the Salvation Army or some other charity, but he preferred prison. The chaities made you take baths. And they asked too many questions at meal times. Prison was better, it was more private.

 

 Having decided to go to the island, Soapy thought about the best way to get there. It was to eat at an expensive restaurant, then declare he had no money. He would be handed quietly to the police, then a nice judge would send him to prison.

 

 Soapy left his bench and walked over to Broadway. He stopped before a glittering restaurant. It promised to have the best wine, food, and silk tablecloths. Now he just needed to get past the waiters to a table.

 

 Soapy’s trousers and shoes were bad. But he was confident about his appearance from the waist upwards. He had shaved, and his coat was clean. He even had a tie, which had been given to him by a missionary. So, if he could sit at a table he would look fine. The part of him the waiters could see would not be suspicious. Then success would be his. Soapy decided he’d order roasted duck, a bottle of champagne, then cheese and a cigar. One dollar for the cigar would be enough. He didn’t want to upset the restaurant’s manager. The meal would leave him full and happy for the trip to his winter home.

 

 But as Soapy stepped into the restaurant the head waiter saw his torn trousers and ancient shoes. Two waiters quickly turned him around and led him back outside.

 

 He needed to think of another way to get to the Island. On the corner of Sixth avenue he picked up a stone and threw it through a shop window. A policeman came running around the corner. Soapy stood still, with his hands in his pockets, and smiled.

 

 “Where’s the man that did that?” asked the officer.

 

 “Don’t you think it was me?” asked Soapy, in a friendly voice.

 

 The policeman didn’t think Soapy had broken the window. Any man who breaks a window would not talk with policemen. He would run away. Then the policeman saw a man half way down the block running to catch a cab. He drew his gun and ran after the man. Soapy was disgusted. He’d failed twice now.

 

 Across the street was another restaurant. It was a cheap place, for hungry people with little money. Soapy’s shoes and trousers were not a problem. He sat down and ate steak, potatoes, donuts and pie. And then he told the waiter he had no money.

 

 “So please call a cop,” said Soapy, “and quickly.”

 

 “There’ll be no cop to protect you,” said the waiter, who had eyes as red as cherries. “Hey, Bulldog!”

 

 The two waiters threw Soapy a long way. He landed in the street on his head. It took a long time for him to get up and brush the dust off his clothes. A policeman standing nearby laughed. Getting arrested was like an impossible dream. The Island seemed very far away.

 

 Soapy walked slowly for five blocks before he had the courage to try again. He saw a golden opportunity. A pretty young woman was looking in a shop window. Ten meters from her stood a large and grumpy policeman.

 

 All he had to do was say something rude to the woman. Then he would be sent straight to his winter hotel.

 

 “Hey baby, do you want to play some games at my house?”

 

 The policeman was still looking. Soapy imagined the warmth of his cell. But the young woman smiled and grabbed his arm.

 

 “I’d love to,” she said. “If you buy me a beer first.”

 

 The young woman joyfully put her arm through his as they walked past the policeman. Soapy was filled with sorrow. He was destined to be free.

 

 At the next corner he ran away from her. He ran until he came to a romantic part of town. The street was filled with happy couples. The women wore fur, and the men wore greatcoats. A sudden fear hit Soapy. What if some magic spell had made it impossible for him to be arrested? He began to feel panic growing inside him. He saw another policeman, and began to yell nonsense as loud as he could. He pretended he was drunk. He danced and yelled.

 The policeman turned his back to him, and said to one passer-by,

 “He’s one of the Yale University students celebrating their defeat of the Hartford College. Noisy but harmless. The chief told us to leave them alone.”

 Soapy became quiet. Would he ever be arrested again? In his mind the Island became a kind of paradise. He buttoned up his thin coat against the chilly wind.

 In a cigar store Soapy saw a well-dressed man lighting a cigar. The man had left his silk umbrella by the door. Soapy stepped inside, picked up the umbrella, and walked off slowly. The man followed him out.

 “My umbrella,” he said.

 “Oh, is it?” said Soapy. “Well, why don’t you call a policeman? There’s one over there.”

 The man slowed down. Soapy also slowed down. He had a horrible feeling that he’d be unlucky again. The policeman looked at them both curiously.

 “Yes, well, mistakes happen,” said the man. “I – if it’s your umbrella – I’m sorry. I picked it up this morning in a restaurant. If it’s yours, why – I hope you’ll…”

 “Of course it’s mine!” said Soapy angrily. And he walked away.

 As soon as he got around the corner he threw the umbrella away. He cursed quietly against the police as he walked. They were treating him like a king who could do no wrong.

 Soapy gave up. He was in a quiet area near the park, so he began to walk towards home – his park bench.

 But on an unusually quiet corner Soapy stopped. Here was a nice old church. Through one stained window a soft light glowed. The sweetest organ music came out of it. It held him. He leaned against an iron fence and listened.

 The moon was above, bright and calm. There were no people or vehicles. A bird sang sleepily in a tree. It was like a country churchyard. And the anthem the organist played glued Soapy to the iron fence. For he knew it well, from the day when his life was different. From the days when his life held thing like mothers and roses and ambitions and friends and clean thoughts and shirts. He felt a sudden and wonderful change in his soul. He realized, with horror, that he had fallen into a dark hole. His life was filled with wasted days, dead hopes, and worthless desires.

 In a moment his heart changed. He had a powerful desire to battle his desperate fate. He would pull himself out of the gutter. Make a man of himself again. He would conquer the evil that had possessed him. There was enough time – he was still quite young. The sad but sweet organ notes had caused a revolution in him. Tomorrow he would go onto the busy downtown district and find work. A man there had once offered him a places as a driver. He would find that man tomorrow and ask for the job. He would be somebody in the world. He would…

 Soapy felt a hand laid on his arm. He looked up into the face of a policeman.

 “What are you doing here?” asked the officer.

 “Nothing,” said Soapy.

 “Come with me,” said the policeman. “I don’t want you to burgle that church.”

 “Three months on the Island,” said the judge in the police court the next morning.

 

The Pendulum

 John walked slowly towards his flat. Slowly, because there are no surprises for a man who has been married for two years and lives in a flat. There was no “perhaps” in his life. As he walked John Perkins gloomily imagined the end of his boring day.

 Katy would meet him at the door with a kiss flavored with mint. He would take off his coat and sit on the couch. He would read the evening newspaper. For dinner there would be sausages and salad. After dinner Katy would show him the sewing she had done that day. At half-past seven the fat man  upstairs would thump and bump as he did his exercises. Then at eight the gentleman downstairs would get out his flute. This was the start of the routine at Frogmore flats.

 John Perkins knew these things would happen. And he knew that at a quarter past eight he would get up and put on his hat. And his wife would be upset and say,

 “Now where are you going, John Perkins?”

 “I think I’ll go up to the bar,” he would answer, “and play a couple of game of pool.”

 Lately, this had been John Perkins’s habit. He would return home at ten or eleven. Sometimes Katy would be asleep. Sometimes she would be awake and annoyed. John sometimes felt that his marriage was like prison.

 Tonight John Perkins met a huge change when he reached his door. No Katy was there with her affectionate minty kiss. The three rooms were in a mess. All her things lay scattered around. Shoes in the middle of the floor. Combs, dresses, and make-up mixed together on the bed and chairs. This was not normal. With a sinking heart John saw a comb with a curl of her brown hair stuck in it. Something unusual and awful must have happened.

 Then John saw a note on the table from his wife. He ran to it. It said:

 Dear John,
 I just got an express letter saying mother is very sick. I am going to take the 4:30 train. My brother is going to meet me at the station there. There is cold mutton in the ice box. She was sick last spring. I hope she’s OK. Pay the milkman 50 cents. Don’t forget to write to the gas company. Your best socks are in the top drawer. I will write tomorrow.

 Katy

 John and Katy had never been separated for a night in two years of marriage. He read the note over and over in a confused way. Here was a change in the routine, and it made him bewildered.

 There on the back of a chair hung the red apron with black dots that she wore while cooking the meals. Her clothes had been thrown everywhere in her hurry to leave. A little packet of her peppermints lay on the floor. Next to them was a newspaper with the train time table cut out of it. John Perkins stood in the middle of the room with a strange sadness in his heart.

 He began to tidy up the flat. When he touched her clothes a feeling of something like terror went through him. He had never imagined life without Katy. She was a part of him. She was like the air he breathed – necessary but hardly noticed. Now, without warning, she was gone. She’d disappeared as if she had never existed. Of course Katy would be gone only for a few days, or at most a week or two – but it seemed to him that the hand of death had touched his safe and quiet home.

 John took the cold mutton from the ice-box, made coffee, and had a lonely meal. After that he looked out the front window.

 He did not feel like smoking. Outside, the city roared to him. It invited him to it’s bars and pool halls. The night was his. He could go anywhere as free as any bachelor. He could drink and dance until dawn if he liked, and there would be no angry Katy waiting for him. He could play pool all night. The chains that tied him to Frogmore flats were loosened. Katy was gone.

 John Perkins did not often think about his feelings. But as he sat alone by the window he realized something – Katy was necessary for his happiness. His feelings for her, that were lost in boring routine, had been awakened by her absence. He remembered the proverb: We never value the music until the bird flies away.

 “I’ve been an idiot,” said John Perkins, “the way I’ve been treating Katy. I go out every night to play pool instead of staying home with her. Poor Katy, she has been here all alone with nothing to do. I’ve been terrible! I’m going to make it up to her. I’m going to take her out and we’ll have some fun. I’ll never play pool again.”

 There was an empty chair next to John. Katy’s blue shirt was on it. The shirt still held some of her shape. Halfway up the sleeves were wrinkles, made by her arms as she worked to give him comfort and pleasure. A delicate smell of flowers came from it. John held the silent and cool shirt for a long time. Katy had never been silent and cool. Tears – yes, tears – came into John Perkins’eyes. When she came home, things would be different. He would treat her better. What was life without her?

 The door opend. Katy walked in carrying a small suitcase. John stared at her stupildy.

 “Oh, It’s good to be back,” said Katy. “Mother wasn’t really sick. My brother met me at the station and said she just had a cold. She got better right after they sent me the letter. So I took the next train back. I’d love a cup of coffee.”

 Nobody heard the click and rattle of the cogwheels in their apartment in Forgmore flats. It buzzed its machinery back into the Usual Routine. And everything slipped back to normal.

 John Perkins lookd at the clock. It was 8:15. He picked up his hat and walked to the door.

 “Now where are you going, John Perkins?” asked Katy.

 “I think I’ll go up to the bar,” said John, “and play a couple of games of pool.”
 

Witche’s Loaves

 Miss Martha Beeecham owned the little bakery on the corner. One where you go up three steps and a little bell tinkles when you open the door.

 Miss Martha was forty, her bankbook showed the savings of two thousand dollars, and she had two false teeth and a kind heart. Over the years Miss Martha had many opportunities to get married but she never did.

 Two or three times a week a man came into her bakery. She began to take an interest in him. He was middle-aged, wore glasses, and spoke with a strong German accent. His clothes were a little worn and wrinkled but he looked neat and had very good manners.

 He always bought two loaves of stale bread. Fresh bread was five cents a loaf. Stale ones were two for five. He never bought anything but stale bread.

 Once Miss Martha noticed a red and brown stain on his fingers. She decided he must be an artist and very poor. He probably lived in a small rented room, where he painted pictures, ate stale bread and dreamed of the good food in Miss Martha’s bakery.

 Often when miss Martha sat down th eat her dinner she would sigh. She felt sorry for the artist. She wished that he would share her delicious meal instead of eating his stale bread in his cold little room. Miss Martha’s heart, as you have been told, was kind.

 One day she decided to test her theory that he was an artist. She bought a painting at a sale and hung it on the wall behind the bread counter.

 It was a painting of Venice. There ware beautiful marble buildings, water with boats in it, and a lady sitting in one of the boats admiring the sunset. An artist would certainly notice it.

 Two days later the customer came in.

 “Two loafs of stale bread, please,” he said in his strong accent. “You have a fine picture here madam,” he said while she was putting the bread in a bag.

 “Yes?” said Miss Martha, smiling to herself. “I do admire art and…” No, she thought. It was too early to say “artists”… “and… paintings,” she said instead. “Do you think it’s a good picture?”

 “That palace has not been drawn correctly,” said the customer. “The perspective is not accurate. Have a good morning, madam.”

 He took his bread, bowed and hurried out.

 Yes, he must be an artist. Miss Martha put the picture in her room.

 How kind and gentle his eyes shone behind his glasses! He had such an intelligent mind! He could judge perspective in a second – and he lived on stale bread! But great artists often have to struggle before they become famous.

 What a great thing it would be for the art world if a talent like his was helped by two thousand dollars, a bakery and a kind heart. These were Miss Martha’s daydreams.

 He began to stop for a chat when he came into the bakery. He seemed to enjoy Miss Martha’s company.

 He continued buying stale bread. He never bought a cake or pie or any of the other delicious food.

 She thought he began to look thinner and a little sad. She desperately wanted to give him something good to eat, but she couldn’t. She knew that artists were proud people, and she didn’t want to hurt his pride.

 Miss Martha began to wear her favorite blue dress in the bakery. She also bought a special face cream to improve her complexion.

 One day the customer came in as usual, put his five cents on the counter, and asked for two loaves of stale bread. While miss Martha was reaching to get them a fire truck went past.It was tooting its horn and ringing its bell. The customer hurried to the door to look, as anyone would.

 At that moment Miss Martha had an idea. She quickly made a deep cut in both the loaves, and put in a big piece of fresh butter in each one. Then she pressed the loaves tightly together again.

 When the customer turned around she was putting the loaves in a bag. Then they had a very pleasant little chat. After he had gone Miss Martha smiled to herself, and felt her heart beating faster.

 She wondered if she had been too bold. Would he be offended? But surely it was all right for a baker to give some butter to a customer.

 For a long time that day she thought about her gift. She imagined what would happen when he discovered the butter.

 He would put down his paintbrush and paints. The picture he was painting would have perfect perspective. He would be hungry. He would slice into his stale loaf and – ah!

 Miss Martha blushed. Would he think of the hand that placed the butter there while he ate it? Would he…

 The front door bell rung loudly. Somebody was coming in making a lot of noise. Miss Martha hurried to the front.

 Two men were there. One was a young man she had never seen before. The other was her artist. His face was very red, his hat was on the back of his head and his hair was messy. He shook both his fists furiously at Miss Martha.

 “You idiot!” he shouted very loudly. And then he shouted some other words in German which she didn’t understand.

 The young man tried to lead him out of the bakery.

 “I will not go!” he said angrily, “until I have told her.” He hit the top of Miss Martha’s counter with his fist.

 “You have ruined my life,” he cried, his blue eye burning behind his glasses. “I will tell you how, you silly old cat!”

 Miss Martha leaned weakly against the shelves. The young man took him by the collar.

 “Come on,” the young man said, “you’ve said enough.” He dragged his angry companion out the door to the street, and then came back.

 “I guess I should tell you, madam, what the problem is,” he said. “That’s Mr.Blumberger. He’s an architect. We work in the same office.

 “He’s been working for three months on a plan for the new city hall. It was a prize competition. He finished drawing the lines in ink yesterday. You know that a draughtsman always draws his lines in pencil first. When the drawing’s finished he rubs out the pencil lines with handfuls of stale breadcrumbes. It works better than any eraser.

 “Blumberger’s been buying the bread here. Well, today – well, you know, madam, that butter… Blumberger’s drawing has been ruined.”

 Miss Martha went into the back room. She took off her favorite blue dress and put on the old brown one that she used to wear. Then she picked up her special face cream and dropped it out the window.

Hearts and Hands

At Denver many travellers got on the express train. It was heading east. In one coach there sat a very pretty young woman dressed in stylish clothes. She was surrounded by expensive suitcases and bags, and looked like an experienced travellers. Among the crowd of newcomers on the train were two young men. One was handsome, and well-dressed, with a confident and open manner. The other was an untidy, overweight, unhappy-looking person. The two were handcuffed together.

 They walked down the aisle of the coach. The only vacant seats were facing the attractive young woman. Here the two men sat down. The young lady glanced at them briefly, then her face brightened into a lovely smile. She held out a small, gloved hand. When she spoke, her voice was warm and sweet.

 “Well, Mr.Easton, if you will make me speak first, I suppose I must. Don’t you recongnize old friends when you meet them in the West?”

 The younger man looked up quickly in surprise. He seemed slightly embarrassed for a moment, then took her fingers with his left hand.

 “It’s Miss Fairchild,” he said with a smile. “Please excuse my other hand, it’s a little busy at the moment.”

 He slightly raised his right hand, bound at the wrist with a shining handcuff to the left hand of his companion. The happy look in the girl’s eyes changed to confused horror. The glow faded from her cheeks. Her chin trembled as if she might cry. Easton gave a little laugh and was about to speak again when his companion interrupted him. The sad-looking man had been watching her face closely.

 “Please excuse me for speaking, Miss, but I see you know the marshal here. He’s taking me to Leavenworth prison. I’ve been sentenced to seven years for counterfeiting money. I wonder if you could ask the marshal to say a good word for me at prison – it would make things a little easier for me there.”

 “Oh!” said the girl, and the color returned to her face. “So that is what you’re doing out here. You’re a marshal?”

 “My dear Miss Fairchild,” said Easton, calmly. “I had to do something. It takes money to keep up with our crowd of friends in Washington. I saw this job advertised, and well – a marshal isn’t quite as good a job as an ambassador, but…”

 “The ambassador,” said the girl, a little angrily, “doesn’t call me any more. And he should never have called me. I didn’t like him. You ought to know that. And so now you are one of those brave western marshals who rides horses, shoots guns and gets into all kinds of danger. That’s much different from the Washington life. Our old crowd has missed you.”

 The girls eyes went back to rest on the shining handcuffs.

 “Don’t you worry about them, Miss,” said the other man. “all marshals handcuff themselves to their prisoners to stop them from getting away. Mr.Easton knows his business.”

 “Will we see you again soon in Washington?” asked the girl.

 “Not soon, I think,” said Easton. “My days of parting in Washington are over, unfortunately.”

 “I love the West,” said the girl. Her eyes shone softly as she stared out the coach window. She began to speak truly and simply, without any high class Washington manners. “Mamma and I spent the summer in Denver. She went home a week ago because father had bad cold. I could live and be happy in the West. I love the weather. Money isn’t everything. But people always misunderstand things, and remain stupid…”

 “Say, Mr. Marshal,” growled the sad-faced man. “This isn’t fair. I need a drink, and I haven’t had a smoke all day. Haven’t you talked long enough? Take me to the smoking coach, will you? I’m dying for a cigarette.”

 The joined travellers stood up. Easton smiled.

 “I can’t deny a prisoner’s request for tobacco,” he said lightly. “It’s the only friend they have. Good-bye Miss Fairchild. I have a job to do.”

 “It’s too bad you’re not going East,” she said, slipping back to her usual manner and style. “But you must go on to Leavenworth, I suppose?”

 “Yes,” said Easton, “I must go on to Leavenworth.”

 The two men walked slowly down the aisle toward the smoking coach.

 The two passengers in a seat nearby had heard most of the conversation. One said, “That marshal’s a good man. Some of those Westerners are all right.

 “He’s pretty young to be a marshal, isn’t he?” said the other.

 “Young!” exclaimed the first speaker, “Why – didn’t you see what happened here? Have you ever known a marshal to handcuff a prisoner to his right hand?”