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pocket and cogitated. Gretchen had brought about a new order of things. A philosophical barmaid was certainly a novelty. That Gretchen was philosophical I had learned in the rose gardens. That she was also used to giving commands I had learned in the onion patch. Hitherto I had held the onion in contempt; already I had begun to respect it. Above all, Gretchen was a mystery, the most alluring kind of mystery--a woman who was not what she seemed. How we men love mysteries, which are given the outward semblance of a Diana or a Venus! By and by, my journalistic instinct awoke. Who are those who fear the newspapers? Certainly it is not the guiltless. Of what was Gretchen guilty? The inn-keeper knew. Was she one of those many conspirators who abound in the kingdom? She was beautiful enough for anything. And whence came the remarkable likeness between her and Phyllis? Here was a mystery indeed. I had a week before me; in that time I might learn something about Gretchen, even if I could solve nothing. I admit that it is true, that had Gretchen been plain, it would not have been worth the trouble. But she had too heavenly a face, too wonderful an eye, too delicious a mouth, not to note her with concern. I did not see Gretchen again that day; but as I was watching the moon climb up, thinking of her and smoking a few pipes as an incense to her shrine, I heard her voice beneath my window. It was accompanied by the bass voice of the inn-keeper. "But he is a journalist. Is it safe? Is anything safe from them?" came to my ears in a worried accent, a bass. So the inn-keeper, too, was a Socialist! Said an impatient contralto: "So long as I have no fear, why should you?" "Ach, you will be found out and dragged back!" was the lamentation in a throaty baritone. Anxiety raises a bass voice at least two pitches. "If you would but return to the hills, where there is absolute safety!" "No; I will not go back there, where everything is so dull and dead. I have lived too long not to read a face at a glance. His eyes are honest." "Thanks, Gretchen," murmured I from above. I was playing the listener; but, then, she was only a barmaid. "And it is so long," went on the contralto, "since I have seen a man--a strong one, I wish to see if my power is gone." "Aha!" thought I; "so you have already laid plans for my capitulation, Gretchen?" "But," said the bass voice once more, "supposing some of the military
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