On the high hills, up above the villages, a couple stood. No G.o.d and G.o.ddess: just a man and a woman. And the woman looked down past the huts, down to the great Terai Forest lying like a vast billowy sea of foliage far below them. Then, as her husband's arm stole round her, she turned her eyes from it and gazed into his and whispered:
"I love it more than even you do. For it gave you to me."
A crashing in the clump of hill bamboos at their feet attracted their attention; and with a smile he pointed down to the great elephant with the single tusk who was dragging down the feathery plumes with his curving trunk.
But Noreen looked up at Dermot again and said:
"I love you more than even Badshah does."
And their lips met.
THE END
_A Selection from the Catalogue of_
G.P. PUTNAM'S SONS
Complete Catalogues sent on application
Rosa Mundi
By
Ethel M. Dell
Author of
"The Top of the World," "The Lamp in the Desert," "The Way of an Eagle,"
etc.
Some of the finest stories ever written by Miss Ethel M. Dell are gathered together in this volume. They are arresting, thrilling, tense with throbbing life, and of absorbing interest; they tell of romantic and pa.s.sionate episodes in many lands--in the hill districts of India, in the burning heart of Africa, and in the colonial bush country. The author's vivid and vigorous style, skillfully developed plots, her intensely sympathetic treatment of emotional scenes, and the strongly delineated character sketches, are typical of Ethel M. Dell's best work, and this volume will be found to contain some of the most remarkable of her shorter romances.
G.P. Putnam's Sons
New York London
Prairie Flowers
By
James B. Hendryx
Author of "The Texan"
When Tex Benton said he'd do a thing, he _did_ it, as readers of "The Texan" will affirm. So when, after a year of drought, he announced his purpose of going to town to get thoroughly "lickered up," unsuspecting Timber City was elected as the stage for a most thorough and sensational orgy.
But neither Tex nor Timber City could foresee the turbulent chain of events which were to result from his high, if indecorous, resolve, here set down--the wild tale of an untamed West.
A well-known writer, who has served his apprenticeship in the cow country, said the other day, "I like Hendryx's stories--they're real. His boys are the boys I used to work with and know. His West is the West I learned to love."
G.P. Putnam's Sons
New York London
The Ivory Fan
By
Adrian Heard
When Lily Kellaway makes the observation, "It is better to be a slave to a man, which is natural, than to a woman, which is intolerable," she recites the text upon which the author of _The Ivory Fan_ has built up a novel that is at once humorous in its cynicism and cynical in its humor. At the same time he gives us a pastel of certain phases of life comprehensive in its coloring and bitterly uncompromising of line.
This is an unconventional book, full of incident and plenty of clever dialogue.
G.P. Putnam's Sons
New York London
Too Old for Dolls
By
Anthony M. Ludovici
The story of a "flapper" too old for dolls, scarcely old enough for anything else, but capable of enraging her older sister and even her mother by the ease with which she secures the admiration of their male friends.
"From a Mohawk, from a s.e.xless savage with tangled hair and blotchy features, she had, by a stroke of the wand, become metamorphosed into a remarkably attractive young woman." And with the change came a disconcerting knowledge of power.
A very real, very tense, and very modern novel.