Read The Phantom Violin Page 20


  CHAPTER XX AID FROM THE UNKNOWN

  As Greta called for the second time, "Florence! Florence! Where are you?"an answer came floating up to her.

  "Here! Down below. I--I'm coming up." There was a suggestion ofsuppressed pain in Florence's voice. "Wait, you wait there."

  Greta had never found waiting easy. To wait now, with a hundred greeneyes focussed upon her was all but impossible. And yet, what more was tobe done? Florence, having fallen down the hillside in the dark, had takenthe flashlight with her. And the darkness all about was intense. Withoutwilling it, again and again she fixed her eyes on those small glowingorbs of green. "If I only knew!" she whispered, and again, "If I onlydid!"

  She heard her companion's panting breath as she struggled up theuncertain slope. "Must be half way up," she whispered finally.

  There came the sound of tumbling rocks. "She--she slipped!" Catching herbreath, she waited. Yes, yes, she was climbing again.

  And then as she was about to despair, a bulk loomed beside her, a strongarm encircled her.

  "Greta," a voice whispered, "I've sprained my ankle; not too badly. Theflashlight is broken. We must try to find our way back."

  Two hours of groping and stumbling, with many a fall; two hours offighting vines and brambles, then the dull glow of their burned outcampfire greeted their tired eyes.

  "Home!" Florence breathed. "Home!" And to this girl at that hour thehumble six-foot-square tent, which they had set up that evening, was justthat--nothing less.

  It was Florence who could not sleep that night. The throbbing pain in thesprained ankle defied repose. The strange events of that day and thosethat had gone before had at last broken through her staunch reserve andentered her inner consciousness.

  "Sleep!" she exclaimed at last in a hoarse whisper. "Who can sleep?"

  * * * * * * * *

  Strangely enough, at that moment in a little cabin at Chippewa Harbor,Vincent Stearns, the young newspaper photographer who had given Greta thewhite flares, lay on his cot looking away at the moon and wondering in avague sort of way what was happening to his dark-eyed friend up there onGreenstone Ridge.

  "Hope she finds some rare greenstones," he said to the moon. "Hope she isfinding adventure, happy adventure.

  "Happy adventure." He repeated the words softly. "Guess that's what weall hope to have in life. But so few adventures are happy ones.

  "And if that little girl's adventures are not happy ones, there will comethe white flare in the night.

  "The white flare." He found himself wishing against the will of hisbetter self that he might catch the gleam of that white light against theskyline. "What an adventure!" he murmured. "Racing away to Lake Ritchie,paddling like mad, then struggling up the ridge in the night to find--"

  Well, what would he find? What did he expect to find? He did not know.Yet something seemed to tell him that perhaps at some unearthly hour theflare would stand out against the sky.

  * * * * * * * *

  Adventure. Having given up thoughts of sleep, Florence was going over inher mind the events of that day.

  "The hydroplane," she whispered. "Who can be coming up here to hide awayon the shore of that narrow lake? And why?

  "How simple it is after all, coming up here in a plane without attractingattention! The plane from Houghton comes and goes at all hours. Thepeople at Rock Harbor hear it. If it does not land at their door, theysay, 'It has gone to Tobin's Harbor or Belle Isle.' The folks at Tobin'sHarbor and Belle Isle think it has gone to Rock Harbor. The strange planemay come and go up here as its pilot wishes, and no one the wiser.

  "After all," she sighed, "we are not officers of the law. It's really notour affair. And yet--"

  She was thinking of the scream Greta had heard, and of the apparentlyhelpless one carried to a boat and then to land, and after that of thescream they had both heard in the night.

  "Life," she told herself, "all human life is so precious that it is theduty of all to protect those who are in danger.

  "Probably nothing very terrible," she assured herself. "Nothing to beafraid of. We--"

  She broke her thoughts square off to lean forward and listen with all herears. Had she caught some sound from without, the snapping of a twigperhaps?

  "Some prowling wolf or a moose passing."

  Not satisfied with this, she opened the flaps of the tent and peered intothe moonlight.

  The moon was high. The silence was uncanny. Every object, trees, bushes,rocks stood out like pictures in fairyland. Shadows were deep wells ofdarkness.

  Some ten feet from their tent was a large flat rock, their "table." Thisstood full in the moonlight. That they had left nothing on this "table"she knew right well. She had washed it clean with a canvas bucket full ofwater from a spring. And yet--

  She rubbed her eyes to look again. No, she was not mistaken. Two objectsrested on that rock, one white as snow, the other dark and gleaming.

  "Well," she sighed, "have to see."

  Creeping from the warm blankets, she stepped on the cold, damp floor ofnight. "Oo!" she shuddered. Next instant her hands closed on themysterious objects.

  "How--how strange!" She shuddered again, but not from the cold, then beata hasty retreat.

  Inside the tent, she turned the objects over in her hands. One was alarge roll of bandages, the other a bottle of liniment.

  "Who--" she whispered, "who can that have been?"

  The answer came to her instantly. "The one who lowered the rope into thecopper mine. And, perhaps, the one who plays the violin so gloriously.And who is he?" Here was a question she could not answer.

  "'Take, eat,'" she whispered the words of a half forgotten poem.

  "Take, eat, he said, and be content. These fishes in your stead were sent By him who sent the tangled ram To spare the child of Abraham!"

  At that she rubbed the liniment over her swollen ankle vigorously, boundit tightly, then crept beneath the blankets once more.

  Though the bandage relieved her somewhat, she was still conscious ofpain. Our waking thoughts as well as our dreams are often inspired byphysical sensations. Pain awakens within us a longing for some spot wherewe have known perfect peace. To Florence, at the moment, this meant thedeck of the unfortunate _Pilgrim_. There, with the waves lapping the oldship's sides, the gentle breezes whispering and the gulls soaring high,she had found peace.

  As she allowed her mind to drift back to those blissful days, she wastempted to wish that she and the slender, dark-eyed Greta at her side hadnever set foot on Greenstone Ridge.

  "And yet--" she whispered. The words of some great prophet came to her."'There is a destiny that shapes our ends, rough-hew them how we may.'"

  "It was written in the stars that we should be here," she told herself."And, being here, we shall do what we can for those who are nearest us.

  "But, God willing, we shall go back. And then?"

  She thought of the narrow camping grounds on the shores of Duncan's Bay."There is treasure hidden there," she told herself. "How can it beotherwise? It is the only bit of level land on that side of Blake'sPoint. Countless generations of men have camped there. We will go backthere and dig deep.

  "And when I am weary of digging--" she laughed a low laugh. "I'll go backand get that monster of a pike. I'll go all by myself. And will I landhim? Just you wait!"

  A shadow passed over her brow as she thought of the head hunter."Terrible man! Where can he be now?"

  She thought of the strange black schooner with a deep-sea diver on board."Some treasure on that old ship. When I'm back I'll try diving to seewhat's there. Might be more important than the wreckers, who stripped theship, knew.

  "All we need," she whispered dreamily as the drugging odor of balsam andthe silence of night crept over her, "all we need is a barrel of gold.One barrel of--"

  She did not finish. She had fallen asleep.