<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br/> <small>IN THE CAVERN</small></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THE passage continued of limited width
for a number of rods. The floor lay
almost level, smooth enough to make going
easy. The light from the torch showed only
walls of bare rock on either side, and once,
when Margaret turned the rays upward, the
narrowing slant to an apex far above their
heads. The two explorers went in silence.
Saxe thought the footing safe enough so that
he could content himself with watching the
girl, whose every motion was a delight to him,
seen dimly in the glow that penetrated from
without. He was not minded to waste many
glances on barren cliffs, while so much of living
beauty went in buoyant grace there before him.
Margaret, however, gave no apparent attention
to aught save the immediate business of
the moment, which was holding her gaze to
the path lighted by the torch. And so they
came presently into a spacious chamber within
the earth.</p>
<p>As the two entered here, Margaret halted,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</SPAN></span>
and Saxe eagerly stepped to her side. The girl
flashed the torch here and there, to reveal the
nature of the place. Saxe guessed that the
room had a diameter of about fifty feet. The
walls of ragged rock formed an uneven circle.
They bent inward in the ascent, with a dome-like
effect, to a height of hardly two score feet.</p>
<p>Margaret wasted no time. After one examination
of the walls by the torch, she fixed the
light on a portion of the side opposite them, a
little to the left. Saxe, peering intently in
this direction, thought that he detected two
patches of shadow, a little denser than the surrounding
dark, which might be the openings
into other tunnels. The girl’s words proved
his surmise right.</p>
<p>“There are two passages over there, close
together,” she announced. “As I remember,
the one we followed was that on the right. Of
course, the money might be hidden anywhere.
But we might go a little way in that passage
first, so that you’ll understand how it runs
downward.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Saxe agreed. “The place in which
to search is narrowed by the statement in the
cipher about the bottom of the lake. Does the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</SPAN></span>
other passage, too, run downward?”</p>
<p>The girl shook her head instinctively,
although the action was not visible, since the
outdoor light did not penetrate thus far, and
the beam cast by the torch was directed from
her.</p>
<p>“I know nothing of the second passage,” she
explained. “We didn’t enter it. Come.”</p>
<p>They set out across the chamber, walking
side by side, and so came to the passage-way of
which Margaret had had experience. This
proved to be somewhat broader than that
through which they had come. They had
advanced but a very short way, when the floor
began to slope sharply downward. Saxe realized
that this rate of descent need not be continued
long to bring them to the level of the
lake’s bottom. He knew that the highest point
of the island could have hardly more than a
hundred feet of elevation above the surface of
the lake. Indeed, he was sure that the entrance
to the cavern was only a little distance above
the level of the water. They had climbed the
bluff that lined the shore, and had afterward
ascended a few slight rises, but the total vertical
height could not have been more than fifty<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</SPAN></span>
feet. The inclination of the passage downward
was enough to overcome this speedily, if
it should continue. And it did continue, for
such a long way that at last Saxe was sure the
waters of the lake lay above them.</p>
<p>The two wayfarers within this secret place
of the earth spoke little, and that for the most
part of the things immediately about them.
The floor of this passage-way here was not
free from rubble, as the other had been. It
was littered everywhere with fallen fragments,
so that there was need to watch each step with
care. Saxe experienced a new happiness when
the difficulties of the path became so serious as
to justify him in taking the hand of Margaret
to help her in surmounting a fallen boulder.
As the pulse of her blood touched his, it
throbbed a rapture in his heart. In this dark
vault of the earth, he forgot the first object of
the subterranean wandering—forgot in worship
of the woman at his side; Margaret herself
sharply recalled him to the prosaic.</p>
<p>“Do you notice the difference in the light?”
she asked. “I’m sure it’s dying out. It must
need recharging. We must hurry back.”</p>
<p>A note of apprehension in the speaker’s voice<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</SPAN></span>
aroused Saxe to instant concern. He gave a
quick glance toward the circle of light cast by
the torch, and perceived that its radiance had
in fact grown less.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he answered, “it’s failing. We must
turn. Anyhow, I’ve seen enough to understand
that this is the likeliest place in which
to hunt for the gold.”</p>
<p>As he spoke, they turned about together, and
began the ascent with hastening steps, for the
thought that the torch might die out while
they were still within the cavern was far from
pleasant to either of them. The girl’s anxiety
was revealed in the next question:</p>
<p>“Have you matches?”</p>
<p>With a start of dismay, Saxe recalled that
he had left his match-safe in the pocket of his
coat, which remained in the canoe. Nevertheless,
he made a perfunctory search.</p>
<p>“No,” he admitted reluctantly; “I left them
in the canoe.” He heard the girl sigh; but she
said nothing more, only hastened her steps.
The dimming of the torch was very apparent
now.</p>
<p>The two scrambled over the unevennesses of
the passage with what haste they might. Saxe<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</SPAN></span>
congratulated himself on the fact that there
had been no other passages branching from
that in which they had made the descent, for
the turns, while never sharp, had been frequent
enough to breed perilous confusion were
there need of choice. In the next instant, however,
he remembered the abstraction of his
thoughts during the traversing of the route,
and he was filled with self-reproach at the
realization that, after all, there might have
been such branches. And, just then, the two
halted abruptly, arrested by a sudden consciousness
of the truth. They were descending!</p>
<p>For a moment, neither spoke. In that little
interval, the feeble glow of the torch died out
altogether.</p>
<p>There came a gasp of dismay from Margaret.
Saxe’s clasp on her hand tightened in
the instinct of protection. Then he essayed a
cheerful laugh, albeit there was small merriment
in it.</p>
<p>“Now,” he declared briskly, “we must stop
right where we are until we’ve planned a campaign.
This is a real adventure.” Even as he
spoke, miserably aware of the serious predicament<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</SPAN></span>
into which the going out of the torch had
plunged them, he was conscious of the delicate
fragrance of her hair, so near his lips, and the
vague, yet penetrant, perfume that exhaled
from her to the ravishing of his senses. He
fought manfully against the temptation to
draw her to his breast, as every fibre of him
besought. Under the stress of desire denied,
his voice came with a ring of imperiousness.
“I had a lot of experiences in caves, when I
was a boy. This thing will be easy.”</p>
<p>“But we’re going downward,” Margaret
faltered. The mystery of the event had sapped
courage.</p>
<p>“Exactly!” Saxe conceded. “Somewhere,
we turned off into a branch passage. Did you
know of any branch?”</p>
<p>“No,” came the answer. The inflection of
distress gave new strength to the temptation
that beset him.</p>
<p>“I should have noticed it on the way down,”
Saxe confessed, in great bitterness of spirit;
“but my mind was wool-gathering.”</p>
<p>The girl ventured no question. Perhaps she
guessed the nature of that distraction.</p>
<p>“Anyhow, we’ve managed to leave the passage<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[264]</SPAN></span>
in which we came down. We couldn’t
have turned around in it, without knowing the
fact. It seems to me that we’ve only to face
about, and make our way upward again—merely
watching out that we don’t get switched
off another time. The ascent will surely take
us back by one or the other of the two corridors
into the big room above.”</p>
<p>“But—if it should not!” Margaret stammered.
The woe in her voice was pitiful.
“Why, we might—here in the dark—no light—no
food—oh!”</p>
<p>Saxe spoke with a manner of authority:</p>
<p>“Stop! Don’t imagine things. Worry
wastes strength. Save yours for this exciting
climb through the dark. There’s no danger—that
I know.” The calm confidence with
which he contrived to charge his voice soothed
the girl, and restored to her some measure
of courage. From his position on the left side
of her, he put out his free hand, and touched
the wall. “Put out your right hand,” he bade
her, “until it reaches the wall. Now, we’ll turn
round, and begin the journey in the right direction.
Keep in touch with the wall, please.
Move slowly, using your feet in place of eyes,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</SPAN></span>
to avoid stumbling.”</p>
<p>In this fashion, they set forth through the
blackness of the cavern. It was slow and tedious
going. It had been tiresome enough when
the torch made plain the obstacles strewn over
the floor. Now, the difficulties were multiplied
an hundredfold by the absence of light. They
could only shuffle a foot about cautiously until
it secured a firm place, then by like clumsy
feeling choose the next step. Often, one or
the other stumbled, was near to falling, but,
since these mishaps occurred rarely at the same
instant, the one still in balance gave sufficient
support. Yet, slow as was their progress, Saxe
found heart to be content with it. Always it
was upward, until he dared believe that they
were actually in either the passage by which
they had descended, or in that which opened
near it in the big room. He told his faith to
Margaret, and she strove her best to throw off
the gloom bred of this hateful environment, but
could not; nevertheless, despite her fears, they
won through at last to the great chamber.</p>
<p>“Hurrah!” cried Saxe. His guiding left
hand swept suddenly into emptiness—another
step, and still there had been no contact<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</SPAN></span>
to his roving fingers. It was then that
he halted, and gave a shout of triumph.
“There’s no wall on your side?” he
demanded.</p>
<p>The girl put out her hand, but there was
nothing within reach. With a pang of compunction,
she realized that she had been
remiss in the duty appointed her, for she had
not felt the wall even once in a long while.
She made admission of her guilt, with charming
contrition.</p>
<p>“It’s no matter,” Saxe declared. Profound
relief sounded in his words. “We’ve come
safe to the big room, and nothing else
counts.” In sheer exuberance over their
escape, he pressed the fingers that lay so
lightly within his.</p>
<p>The girl thrilled in answer to the clasp.
The announcement of their return to the
chamber came to her overwrought mind as
a reprieve from fearful doom. With the joy
now possessing her, there came relaxation
of the tension that had sustained her. In
the warm pressure of his hand over hers was
a comfort that loosed the self-control in
which she had held herself hitherto. Without<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</SPAN></span>
any warning, she drooped as she stood;
her form grew limp. She would have fallen,
had not Saxe, in terror for her as he felt the
yielding of her muscles, drawn her to his
breast. He held her close there. It seemed
strange to him, as she lay motionless within
his embrace, the while his lips touched softly
a strand of the wonderful hair, that the glory
of those tresses should not make all things
visibly radiant in the blackness of the cavern,
even as the nearness of her made a golden
sunlight in his heart. He did not utter a
word or venture aught beyond the kiss on
that lock which kindliest fate had laid across
his lips—only rested motionless, holding her
firmly, reverently, what time she wept softly
on his bosom. Surely, there needed no
clumsy vehicle of words between those two
embraced in the solitary dark. Twain pulses
throbbed as one. In their rhythm ran a song
of heavenly things.</p>
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