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12 SUNDAY MAGAZINE m JULY 3. IMS 'HE two voting people sat under the tall oaks on the outsldrt PLAYING AT TRUTH of the pasture. His hat was tilted back from his forehead, showing his sunbrown hair and laughing blue eyes to advantage. So thought the "girl who sat near him. In her hand she held his cold-rimmed eve-glasses. She was saying emphatically: "" You know you are fibbing. Dolph! I know what I will do strip youreyesof these truth-coveringglasses and make you play honest, as we used to say." "Are you, you little fraud? Have you been playing honest" this whole afternoon? You began by pretending to lie alcep in the hammock: then, when caujjht opening your eyes, said you were too tired to go for a walk, but finally consented to go, if it was for llacklcrries that you were berry hungry. You did not want the berries, for you don't seem to care for them, now you liave found some. You have tried to keep me at a resectablc distance, at another bu.sh, all the time, scratched your little white hands, and made a big rent in your leeve. I have a zigzag oening down my only respectable light coat woe is me! After all this damage, are you satisfied?" " Perfectly." she replied calmly. "You like to give a man a jieck of trouble, don't vou?" "Yes." " You don't seem the least bit remorseful alwut it look as cool and unconcerned as ever, and as tantalizingly sweet as you were that last night at the senior's ball, when you refused me that last waltz. I thought all that spirit of yours would have dimmed by now." " You did? Well, there have lieen others to keep it alive, if you did go oil to Montana, after the lall, without as much as an au nivir to me." "Oh, I supxse there have Iwen others. You are growing to le quite a college widow, aren't you?" "I am; not going to le. But we are off the track. 1 maile you take off your glasses so that you might look straight into my eyes." " I could do tliat for a lifetime." "IVrhiqw. if I'd let you. You know I mean so that I may find out the truth." "Then you should look into my eyes. .,ave you forgotten your psychology so soon1 It is not the fear of looking into the truth-seeker's eyes that tin man's one. but of letting the truth-seeker look into the culprit's." "You are fine on distinctions this afternoon. Well, let me look into your eyes. Xow!" She placed herself in front f him among the dad oak leaves and gazed into his eyes. He did not flinch: but she did. and so gave an impatient little jerk at his straw hat. "Oh. I can't tell that way you are looking at A Little Woodli Gave Cupid Hi: d Game That Opportunity Br CATHERINE FRANCES CAVANAGH me! Let's play at truth, and then I can find out what I want to, for certain." "How do you play at truth?" "This way: You put your hand down so. Ill put mine on" top of it, and well do that altcrnately until the number we choose is exhausted. If the number we choose is sixteen, and you come down on sixteen, then you have to answer truthfully to any three questions I put to you." "I sec: but you'll choose an odd number and make it come to me." "No. 111 play fair. We shall take some word for instance. "'United States.' Now 111 put my hand down first. Here goes! U-n-i-t-e-d S-t-a-t-e-s there, you have it!" she cried as his hand came down at the last letter. "Now I can ask those questions, and I want you to tell me the honest truth." "Very well, sweetheart." "Dolph! You mustn't! But never mind. Ill cure that. First : What 1 rought you to Green Spring Hotel?" "You." "This is the truth, mind." "Yes. the honest truth." "Well, why did you want to sec me? Was it to renew the old friendship, and" "Hold! You arc asking too many questions in one. Yes. it was to renew the old sweet friendship." "What was your object in so doing?" "To see if you were the same girl I once knew." "Three years ago. so it was. Well, precious little satisfaction I have for your truth-telling. Let's play again, and take the word 'California.'" They tried, and she was captured this time, and squirmed a little as he laughingly looked into her soft brown eyes. "Xow I will have a good interview!" he said, settling himself easier in the leaves. "Whom do you love best of all in the world?" "No one," too promptly, it seemed to him. "Which of the old set did you prefer in college, I mean?" " Bert. Fred and you." "Didn't you care for me a little better than for those other two?" " It's too far lwck. I do not remember." "Oh. I'll catch vou yet. Let's play again, and take 'University.'" She settled herself gleefully to catechize htm as he came down on the Y. "How many girls have you proposed to since vou did to me at the senior's ball?" "Two," he replied, coloring. She winced. "Did you care for them as much as you pretended to care for me?" "I thought so: but" Again she winced. She felt as if she was pulling her own hair. " Which means you did. Well, didn't you come here for the express purpose of paying me back for flirting with you during the last term? Aren't you making believe you love me. just to see how III take it?" " You talk too fast. You ask toomany questions." He saw that she was getting excited, and his heart gave a delighted little leap. After all those long months of waiting he would capture her yet. " I'll reply to the first: Yes." "I've found out all I want to know. I don't want to play at truth any more." She rose from the dead leaves. He felt half sorry for being so cruel, as she seemed unhappy. But all is fair in love and war. and women have to le treated to the little skirmishes that lielong to the greatest of cam fiaigns. "Oh. but we will play at truth!" he said, catching hold of her dress to draw her lock to her oak-leaf seat. "And I want to catch you." They played, and he succeeded in his wish. "Would you like me lietter if I had not come here with the intention of paying you for your mean treatment of me in the last term?" She hesitated, and then desierately replied in the affirmative. "Don't you think we are a couple of simpletons?" "Yes." she smiled through the tear-welling eyes. "Don't you think we had lietter kiss and make up and vow to love, cherish and tell the truth to each other all our lives hereafter, and so avoid all misunderstanding?" Don't you know that you do love me letter than you do any other man? That I have always loved you from the first night I saw you? Have we not lied to our hearts, and so made ourselves miserable? Aren't the biggest simpletons on the face of the earth two people rich in love and youth who try to set by these gifts? Can't we lie honest to each other, and so set a late example to all lovers who torment their hearts with too much striving to get away from the sweet, honest truth?" He sjioke fast and excitedly, for getting that he was taking more than his share of questions, no more than she rememWred when her heart was touched a little while prckmly. The little bird that told me this summer story forgot to tell what the girl replied, but those two lying lovers went over the sunburnt fields together and left the half-filled lil of blaeklierries lehind them. The pail was returned by the farmer's lad the next day. No questions were asked. "O-O-O-O-O H!" By Grace G. Wiederseim If .bbbw :MkL- .AinLJ --5-C V jr tfH it .bbbbbw .jav .BsssssiBKfL i r- ,bbwjbm .bbbbV iAv,. ,'ia'''Bi I .PwtfBiH .bbbbbbbbbbbY .bbbbbbbbbbbbiC:? .bbbbbbWtvbbbbbw bbbB . bbbRVvv5KJTBH wj- iA. ''M'bwKibbV -" HawiStsiiBalKtKaaV HalaV aw W .bk-bBL"bbBKbbHR" aWHilSrBwIsEW aafeP 0,Q EdtflfifSJaVr ?SL jKQmEMk ' IhHCS BBBHBBHiSfel&tBfl IBBBBBH UTlKsJQ&y bVLt 'JL-CHBESSJ BkgBJBuifiBHBBau-13Br. JBBm. 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