Read Ruth Fielding on Cliff Island; Or, The Old Hunter's Treasure Box Page 15


  CHAPTER XV

  OVER THE PRECIPICE

  Under the soft snow that had fallen the day before was a hard-packed layerthat had come earlier in the season and made a firm footing for theexplorers. Ruth and her chum, with Ann Hicks, were quite as good walkersas the boys. At any rate, the three girls determined not to be at the endof the procession.

  The constable and his unwilling helpers (for none of the men about theTingley camp cared to see Jerry Sheming in trouble) were hunting the banksof the stream higher up for traces of the trail the boy had taken when heran away from Rufus Blent the previous afternoon.

  Therefore the girls and boys who had started for the rendezvous at thelone pine, were able to put the wooded ridge between them and theconstable's party, and so make their way unobserved toward the western endof Cliff Island.

  "They may come back and follow us," growled Tom. "But they'll be some waybehind, and we'll hurry. I have a note in this tin box warning Jerry whathe must look out for. As long as that Lem Daggett is on the island, Isuppose he will be in danger of arrest."

  "It is just as mean as it can be!" gasped Helen, plodding on.

  "The boys wouldn't leave much o' that constable if they caught him playin'tag for such a man as Blent, at Bullhide," Ann Hicks declared, withwarmth.

  "This Blent," said Bobbins, seriously, "seems to have everybody aboutLogwood buffaloed. What do you suppose your father will say to theconstable taking the men with him this morning to hunt Jerry down?"

  This question he put to Ralph Tingley and the latter flushed angrily.

  "You wait!" he exclaimed. "Father will be angry, I bet. I told mother notto let the men have anything to do with the hunt, but you know how womenare. She was afraid. She said that if Blent and the constable were withintheir legal rights----"

  "All bosh!" snapped Isadore Phelps.

  "I do not think Mrs. Tingley would have let them go with Daggett if she'dhad the least idea they would be able to find Jerry," observed Helen,sagely.

  "And they won't," put in Ruth, with assurance. "I know he can hide away onthis island like a fox in a burrow."

  "But he'll find it mighty cold sleeping out, this weather," remarkedBobbins.

  "He sure will!" agreed Tom.

  The party went ahead as rapidly as possible, but even the stronger of theboys found it hard to climb the steeper ascents through the deep snow.

  "Crackey!" exclaimed Isadore. "I know I'm slipping back two steps to everyone I get ahead."

  "Nonsense, Izzy," returned Helen. "For if you did _that_, you had betterturn around and travel the other way; then you'd back up the hill!"

  They had to wait and rest every few yards. The rocks were so huge thatthey often had to go out of the way for some distance to get around them.Although it could not be more than five miles, as the crow flies, from thelodge to the lone pine, in two hours they still had the hardest part ofthe journey before them.

  "I had no idea we should be so long at it," Tom confessed.

  "It's lucky Heavy didn't come with us," chuckled Helen.

  "Why?"

  "She would have been starved to death before this, and the idea of goingthe rest of the distance before turning back for home and luncheon wouldhave destroyed her reason, I am sure."

  "Then," said Ruth, amused by this extravagant language, "poor Heavy wouldhave been first dead and then crazy! Consider an insane corpse!"

  They came out at last upon the foot of the last ascent. The eminenceseemed to be a smooth, cone-shaped hill. On it grew a number of trees, butthe enormous old pine, lightning-riven and dead at the top, stood muchtaller than any of the other trees.

  Here and there they caught glimpses of chasms and steep ravines thatseemed to split the rocky island to the edge of the water. When the snowdid not cover the ground there might be paths to follow, but at this timethe young explorers had to use their judgment in climbing the heights asbest they might.

  The boys had to help the girls up the steeper places, with all theirindependence, and even Ann admitted that their male comrades were "ratherhandy to have about."

  The old pine tree sprang out of a little hollow in the hill. Behind it wasthe peak of the island, and from this highest spot the party obtained anunobstructed view of the whole western end of Tallahaska.

  "It's one big old lake," sighed Isadore Phelps. "If it would only justfreeze over, boys, and give us a chance to try out the iceboats!"

  "If it keeps on being as cold as it was this morning, and the wind diesdown, there'll be all the ice you want to see to-morrow," declared RalphTingley. "Goodness! let's get down from this exposed place. I'm 'mostfrozen."

  "Shall we stop and make a fire here, girls, and warm up before we return?"asked Tom Cameron.

  "And draw that constable right to this place where you want to leaveJerry's tin box?" cried his sister. "No, indeed!"

  "We'd better keep moving, anyway," Ruth urged. "Less danger of frost-bite.The wind _is_ keen."

  Tom had already placed the box of food in a sheltered spot. "The meat willbe frozen as solid as a rock, I s'pose," he grumbled. "I hope that poorfellow has some way of making a fire in his hide-out."

  They began to retrace their steps. Instead of following exactly the samepath they had used in climbing to the summit, Tom struck off at an angle,believing he saw an easier way.

  His companions followed him in single file. Ruth happened to be the lastof all to come down the smooth slope. The seven ahead of her managed totramp quite a smooth track through the snow, and once or twice she slippedin stepping in their footprints.

  "Look out back there, Ruthie!" called Tom, from the lead. "The snow musthave got balled on your boots. Knock it off----"

  His speech was halted by a startled cry from Ruth. She felt herself goingand threw out both hands to say her sudden slide.

  But there was nothing for her hands to seize save the unstable snowitself. She fell on her side, and shot out from the narrow track hercompanions had trod.

  "Ruth!" shrieked Helen, in the wildest kind of dismay.

  But the girl of the Red Mill was already out of reach. The drifting snowhad curled out over the brink of the tall rock across the brow of whichTom had unwisely led the way. They had not realized they were so near theverge of the precipice.

  Ruth's body was solid, and when she fell in the snow the undercrust brokelike an eggshell. Amid a cloud of snow-dust she shot over the yawning edgeof the chasm and disappeared.

  Several square yards of the snow-drift had broken away. At their very feetfell the unexpected precipice. The boys and girls shrank back from theperil with terrified cries, clinging to each other.

  "She is killed!" moaned Helen, and covered her face with her mittenedhands.

  "Ruth! Ruth!" called Tom, charging back toward the broken snow-drift.

  But Bobbins caught and held him. "Don't make a fool of yourself, old man!"commanded the big fellow. "You can't help her by falling over the cliffyourself."

  "Oh! how deep can that place be?" gasped Ralph Tingley.

  "What will mother say?" cried his brother.

  "Ruth! Ruth!" shouted Ann Hicks, and dropped on her knees to crawl to theedge.

  "You'll be down there yourself, Ann!" exclaimed Helen, sobbing.

  "A couple of you useless boys grab me by the ankles," commanded thewestern girl. "Come! take a good hold. Now let me see----"

  She hung half over the verge of the rock. The fall was sheer for fiftyfeet at least. It was a narrow cut in the hill, with apparently unscalablesides and open only toward the lake.

  "I--I don't see a thing," panted the girl.

  "Shout again," urged Helen.

  "Let's all shout together!" cried Isadore. "Now!"

  They raised their voices in a long, lingering yell. Again and again theyrepeated it. They thought nothing now of the possibility of attracting theconstable and his companions to the scene.

  Meanwhile nothing but the echoes replied to their hail. Down there in thechasm Ann Hicks saw no sign of the lost girl
. The bottom of the placeseemed heaped high with snow.

  "She plunged right into the drift, and perhaps she's smothered downthere," gasped Ann. "Oh! what shall we do?"

  "If it's a deep drift Ruth may not be hurt at all," cried Tom. "Do let melook, Ann. That's a good girl."

  The western girl was drawn back and the boy took her place. Bobbins andRalph Tingley let Tom slide farther over the verge of the precipice thanthey had Ann.

  "She went down feet first," panted Tom. "There isn't an obstruction shecould have hit. She must have dropped right into the snowbank in thebottom--Ruth! Ruth Fielding!"

  But even his sharp eyes could discover no mark in the snow. Nothing of thelost girl appeared above the drift at the foot of this sheer cliff. Shemight have been smothered under the snow, as Ann suggested. And yet, thatscarcely seemed probable.

  Surely the fall into the soft drift could not have injured Ruth fatally.She must have had strength enough to struggle to the surface of the snow.

  Her disappearance was a most mysterious thing. When Tom crept back fromthe brink of the precipice and stood on his feet again, they all staredat one another in growing wonder.

  "What could have happened to her down there?" groaned Helen, her ownamazement stifling her sobs.