been very different.

'Good morning,' she called, as Old Timer smiled back at her. 'Did you sleep in that awful position all night?'

'It wasn't so bad,' he assured her; 'at least I slept.'

'You fixed such a nice place for me; why didn't you do the same for yourself?'

'You slept well?' he asked.

'All night. I must have been dead tired; but perhaps what counted most was the relief from apprehension. It is the first night since before my men deserted me that I have felt free to sleep.'

'I am glad,' he said; 'and now we must be on the move; we must get out of this district.'

'Where can we go?'

'I want to go west first until we are below Bobolo's stamping grounds and then cut across in a northerly direction toward the river. We may have a little difficulty crossing it, but we shall find a way. At present I am more concerned about the Betetes than about Bobolo. His is a river tribe. They hunt and trap only a short distance in from the river, but the Betetes range pretty well through the forest. Fortunately for us they do not go very far to the west.'

He helped her to the ground, and presently they found a trail that seemed to run in a westerly direction. Occasionally he saw fruits that he knew to be edible and gathered them; thus they ate as they moved slowly through the forest. They could not make rapid progress because both were physically weak from abstinence from sufficient food; but necessity drove them, and though they were forced to frequent rests they kept going.

Thirst had been troubling them to a considerable extent when they came upon a small stream, and here they drank and rested. Old Timer had been carefully scrutinizing the trail that they had been following for signs of the pygmies; but he had discovered no spoor of human foot and was convinced that this trail was seldom used by the Betetes.

The girl sat with her back against the stem of a small tree, while Old Timer lay where he could gaze at her profile surreptitiously. Since that morning smile he looked upon her out of new eyes from which the scales of selfishness and lust had fallen. He saw now beyond the glittering barrier of her physical charms a beauty of character that far transcended the former. Now he could appreciate the loyalty and the courage that had given her the strength to face the dangers of this savage world for-what?

The question brought his pleasant reveries to an abrupt conclusion with a shock. For what? Why, for Jerry Jerome, of course. Old Timer had never seen Jerry Jerome. All that he knew about him was his name, yet he disliked the man with all the fervor of blind jealousy. Suddenly he sat up.

'Are you married?' He shot the words as though from a pistol.

The girl looked at him in surprise. ''Why, no,' she replied.

'Are you engaged?'

'Aren't your questions a little personal?' There was just a suggestion of the total frigidity that had marked her intercourse with him that day that he had come upon her in her camp.

Why shouldn't he be personal, he thought. Had he not saved her life; did she not owe him everything? Then came a realization of the caddishness of his attitude. 'I am sorry,' he said.

For a long time he sat gazing at the ground, his arms folded across his knees, his chin resting on them. The girl watched him intently; those level, grey eyes seemed to be evaluating him. For the first time since she had met him she was examining his face carefully. Through the unkempt beard she saw strong, regular features, saw that the man was handsome in spite of the dirt and the haggard look caused by deprivation and anxiety. Neither was he as old as she had thought him. She judged that he must still be in his twenties.

'Do you know,' she remarked presently, 'that I do not even know your name?'

He hesitated a moment before replying and then said, 'The Kid calls me Old Timer.'

'That is not a name,' she remonstrated, 'and you are not old.'

'Thank you,' he acknowledged, 'but if a man is as old as he feels I am the oldest living man.'

'You are tired,' she said soothingly, her voice like the caress of a mother's hand; 'you have been through so much, and all for me.' Perhaps she recalled the manner in which she had replied to his recent question, and regretted it. 'I think you should rest here as long as you can.'

'I am all right,' he told her; 'it is you who should rest, but it is not safe here. We must go on, no matter how tired we are, until we are farther away from the Betete country.' He rose slowly to his feet and offered her his hand.

Across the stream, through which he carried her despite her objections that he must not overtax his strength, they came upon a wider trail along which they could walk abreast. Here he stopped again to cut two staffs. 'They will help us limp along,' he remarked with a smile; 'we are getting rather old, you know.' But the one that he cut for himself was heavy and knotted at one end. It had more the appearance of a weapon than a walking stick.

Again they took up their weary flight, elbow to elbow. The feel of her arm touching his occasionally sent thrills through every fiber of his body; but recollection of Jerry Jerome dampened them. For some time they did not speak, each occupied with his own thoughts. It was the girl who broke the silence.

'Old Timer is not a name,' she said; 'I cannot call you that-it's silly.'

'It is not much worse than my real name,' he assured her. 'I was named for my grandfather, and grandfathers so often have peculiar names.'

'I know it,' she agreed, 'but yet they were good old substantial names. Mine was Abner.'

'Did you have only one?' he bantered.

'Only one named Abner. What was yours, the one you were named for?'

'Hiram; but my friends call me Hi,' he added hastily.

'But your last name? I can't call you Hi.'

'Why not? We are friends, I hope.'

'All right,' she agreed; 'but you haven't told me your last name.'

'Just call me Hi,' he said a little shortly.

'But suppose I have to introduce you to some one?'

'To whom, for instance?'

'Oh, Bobolo,' she suggested, laughingly.

'I have already met the gentleman; but speaking about names,' he added, 'I don't know yours.'

'The natives called me Kali Bwana.'

'But I am not a native,' he reminded her.

'I like Kali,' she said; 'call me Kali.'

'It means woman. All right, Woman.'

'If you call me that, I shan't answer you.'

'Just as you say, Kali.' Then after a moment, 'I rather like it myself; it makes a cute name for a girl.'

As they trudged wearily along, the forest became more open, the underbrush was not so dense, and the trees were farther apart. In an open space Old Timer halted and looked up at the sun; then he shook his head.

'We've been going east instead of south,' he announced.

'How hopeless!'

'I'm sorry; it was stupid of me, but I couldn't see the sun because of the damned trees. Oftentimes inanimate objects seem to assume malign personalities that try to thwart one at every turn and then gloat over his misfortunes.'

'Oh, it wasn't your fault,' she cried quickly. 'I didn't intend to imply that. You've done all that anyone could have.'

'I'll tell you what we can do,' he announced.

'Yes, what?'

'We can go on to the next stream and follow that to the river; it's bound to run into the river somewhere. It's too dangerous to go back to the one we crossed back there. In the meantime we might as well make up our minds that we're in for a long, hard trek and prepare for it.'

'How? What do you mean?'

'We must eat; and we have no means of obtaining food other than the occasional fruits and tubers that we may find, which are not very strengthening food to trek on. We must have meat, but we have no means for

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