Page 46 (1/1)

"He!" I exclaimed "Why, he does not know me--he can have no intentions towards ravely, "if you will think again of the last of your three dreams, you will not doubt that he HAS intentions towards you As I told you, he is a PHYSICAL ELECTRICIAN By that is reat deal He knows by instinct whether he is or will be needed sooner or later Let me finish what I have to say You are ill, mademoiselle--ill from over-work You are an ienius ofunfettered by rules, and utterly ardless of cost; you suffer, and you will suffer row, so will your health decline Go to Heliobas; he will do for you what he did for me Surely you will not hesitate? Between years of weak invalidisht, there can be no question of choice"

I rose from my seat slowly

"Where is this Heliobas?" I asked "In Paris?"

"Yes, in Paris If you decide to go there, take o alone You can easily ive you the address of a ladies' Pension, where you will be made at home and comfortable May I do this?"

"If you please," I answered

He wrote rapidly in pencil on a card of his own: "MADAME DENISE, "36, Avenue du Midi, "Paris," and handed it todeeply I had been impressed and somewhat startled by Cellini's story; but I was in no way alar myself to the hands of a physical electrician such as Heliobas professed to be I knew that there werecured by means of electricity--that electric baths and electric appliances of all descriptions were in ordinary use; and I saw no reason to be surprised at the fact of ain existence who had cultivated electric force within himself to such an extent that he was able to use it as a healing power There see extraordinary in it The only part of Cellini's narration I did not credit was the soul-transration he professed to have experienced; and I put that down to the over-exciteination at the tiht to reat desire of my life was to be in perfect health, and I deter Cellini watchedbefore him in silent abstraction