<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[359]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVI<br/> <small>IN THE DARK</small></h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">MARGARET, as she let herself down into
the chimney, held the torch so as to
show her surroundings. She still clung to the
rock above with her right hand, while the left
was occupied by the torch. As yet, she had
found no footing. The light revealed that this
opening through the ridge was the result of
the lodging of one huge block of stone, which
had left the angle between it and the other
rock empty. A clutter of fragments formed
the third side of a triangle, which extended
downward steeply as far as she could see. A
feeling of sick apprehension swept over her
when she perceived the manner in which some
of the stones hung, seemingly poised to a fall.
Then, in the next instant, she recalled the reason
of her presence there, and conquered dread
in the need of action.</p>
<p>She saw a jutting bit of rock a few inches
below her feet. She let herself down to the
extreme limit of reach, and found herself just
able to touch the support with a toe. She<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[360]</SPAN></span>
released her hand-hold, and thus remained,
half-standing, half-lying in the hole. She
searched out other points to which her fingers
might cling, at the height of her breast.
Clenching these, she bent her knees, and finally
came to a crouching posture on the tiny ledge
that had been under her feet. In the like
tedious, slow fashion, she continued the descent,
for a distance of perhaps twenty feet,
without mishap, though in constant danger
of a fall. But, at this point, new difficulties
threatened. Though she took long to search,
she could find nothing to afford a foothold,
even the tiniest. To make the matter worse,
just here the smoothness of the walls was such
that her hands could secure only a doubtful
grip. She studied the situation painstakingly
by means of the torch, making sure that nowhere
a projection of the stone escaped her
observation. She was distraught by this ill
fortune, which threatened the ruin of her
hopes. Finally, however, she perceived by the
light of the torch that, two yards or more
below the point to which her feet reached, the
chimney bent a little, toward the horizontal.
At the sight, Margaret’s courage sprang to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[361]</SPAN></span>
new life. Without a second of delay in which
fear might grow, she loosed her hold, and let
herself slip downward.</p>
<p>The steepness of the chimney was so great
that her movement was rather a fall than a
slide. In the very second of the start, she felt
the violent impact of her feet against the stone
as they struck the bend. Nor was the change
of direction sufficient to overcome the impetus
of the drop, as she had hoped. Her body shot
onward down the rough slope. She caught at
the walls with her fingers, but, though the
ragged surface tore the skin from her flesh,
she could get no clutch strong enough to stay
the flight. The torch had slipped from her
grasp without her even being aware of its loss
at the time. In the darkness, she went hurtling
on. Her spirit broke in those seconds of
dreadfulness. She felt that death waited at
the end of the fall. Saxe’s name was on her
lips when she crashed into pause.</p>
<p>For a long time she lay without any movement,
her sole consciousness a dazed suffering
from bruised flesh and aching bones. Her
senses all but failed, yet did not quite. A
vague, incoherent necessity beat upon her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[362]</SPAN></span>
brain, though she could by no means understand
what that need might be. Her one
clear realization was of pain—pain pervasive,
deadly. But, little by little, the torment of
racked nerves lessened. It seemed to her ages
after that hideous drop through the black
when, at last, her mind grew active again. On
the instant, she was a creature transformed.
She contrived with infinite pains to sit erect,
alert to know the truth as to her own condition—for
she still had work to do. To her
relief, she found that, despite the complaining
of her beaten body, she had been spared broken
bones or other hurt that might disable. There
was misery in each movement, but she could
move, and with that she was content, grateful
to providence that her plight was no worse.
She looked back, and saw, a long way off, a
feeble, pallid light, which came, she made certain,
from the foot of the shaft at the bend.
Now, from its remoteness, she was able to
make some estimate of the distance through
which she had sped beyond it, and she was
fain to wonder that she should be indeed alive.</p>
<p>It was easy to determine that she was lying
on a shelf of rock, which was almost level.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[363]</SPAN></span>
She felt about this, and even ventured to crawl
a short way. Then, her groping hand struck
on emptiness, and, shuddering, she drew back
from the invisible void. Nevertheless, weakness
gave ground to desire. She must press
onward, somehow, to the rescue. At once, she
began creeping forward, bearing to the right,
on which side she felt the sheer wall of a cliff.
She judged that, by proceeding thus, she would
be safe from the gulf as far as the ledge might
run. She had gone perhaps twenty yards in
this tortoise manner, when a sudden thought
halted her in anger against the folly of having
neglected the simplest expedient. Saxe—the
others—might be about anywhere, and she had
not called to them! Forthwith, she gathered
her strength—such as was left to her—and
sent out a cry, a pitiful, passionate cry.</p>
<p>“Saxe! Saxe!”</p>
<p>She listened in breathless suspense ...
there came no answer.</p>
<p>Then, after a time, she called again; and
again there came no answer, yet she refused
to lose hold on faith. She sought comfort in
the thought that she was still too far from him
for her voice to carry. So, she set forward<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[364]</SPAN></span>
anew on hands and knees, her fingers groping
over the rock on which she crawled, to make
sure that the way was safe for her passing.
Physical suffering rent her, but an indomitable
spirit spurred the jaded body. By sheer
strength of will, she persisted in that pitiful
progress through minute after minute, until at
last she deemed the distance traversed enough
to warrant a second calling into the dark:</p>
<p>“Saxe! Saxe!” sounded the repetition of
her summons. Followed an instant of profoundest
silence, as the last echoes of the shrill
cry died.</p>
<p>Then, of a sudden, the air was shattered
with clamors. A din of shouts roared in her
ears, multiplied by the reverberations of the
cavern, chaotic, deafening. Out of all the
cacophony, her strained sense caught a tone
that thrilled the heart to rapture. Her voice
rose in a scream—hysterical, triumphant—in
answer.</p>
<p>“Saxe! Saxe!” And then a weary murmur:
“Oh, thank God!”</p>
<p>A little silence fell. It was broken by her
own name, spoken in his voice.</p>
<p>“Margaret!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[365]</SPAN></span>“Yes, Saxe,” she answered, simply. It was
evident that the distance between them was
not very great. She wondered that her calling
should have remained unheard in the earlier
effort. It occurred to her that perhaps in the
first attempt she had not really cried out with
all her might—as was, indeed, the case.</p>
<p>“You—you, Margaret—you came for us!”</p>
<p>“Yes.” There was no need to explain that
she had come for him, for him alone. Oh, she
would be very glad that the others should win
to life—but she had come for him, for him
only. “You are safe?” she added.</p>
<p>“Yes.” The others were silent, giving the
dialogue to the girl and Saxe, for they understood
how it was between the two. “You came
by the other entrance, of which you told me?”</p>
<p>“Yes—through the chimney, on the ridge by
the shore. May is there, watching and waiting
for Jake to come. We shall need help to get
out. It is hard to climb. I slipped coming
down.”</p>
<p>“You are hurt!” The lover’s voice was
harsh with fear.</p>
<p>But Margaret laughed blithely. What matter
a few bruises now?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[366]</SPAN></span>“It shook me up a bit,” she confessed. “But
I’m all right. The worst of it was that I lost
my torch. Can you come to me here? I know
how to find the way back in the dark.”</p>
<p>Billy Walker deemed it time that he should
assume direction of the affair.</p>
<p>“Do you know how high above the water
you are there, Miss West?” he demanded. The
gruff voice was very gentle, for gratitude to
this girl burned hot in him, as in the others.
She had brought the gift of life to dead men.</p>
<p>“No,” Margaret answered.</p>
<p>“You are on a ledge, of course,” the sage
continued. “Please get to the edge of it, and
reach down with your hand, and find if you
can touch the water.”</p>
<p>There was a little delay before the reply
came.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Be careful!” The sharp admonition was
from Saxe.</p>
<p>“It’s almost level with the shelf I’m on,” the
girl continued.</p>
<p>“Good!” Billy’s tone was full of satisfaction.
“That makes it very simple. We shall
swim across to you, and then you will guide<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[367]</SPAN></span>
us from these Plutonian shades back to the
upper world.” He turned toward the companions
whom he could not see, and addressed
them with crisp authority. “You will go first,
Saxe. Her voice will guide you—she’s directly
across the chamber from us. Be ready afterward
to help us with David when we get there.
We shall allow you ample time to—er—climb
out before we start to tote Dave. Go ahead.”</p>
<p>“I’m off,” Saxe answered, promptly. Then,
he called to Margaret, “Talk a bit, please,
while I’m in the water, so that I’ll know the
direction. I’m just starting.”</p>
<p>There was a slight splash as Saxe lowered
his body into the water, and the soft swish
from his strokes as he swam away.</p>
<p>“Here, Saxe! Here I am! This way!” The
girl continued the calls with joy in her tones.
Then, a minute later, she heard him speak her
name softly, at her feet. In another instant,
he was beside her on the ledge—she was in his
arms, their lips met. He had no thought of
his dripping garments, nor had she. They had
no knowledge of anything save heaven.</p>
<p>Billy Walker’s voice went thundering across
the cavern:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[368]</SPAN></span>“Are you there, Saxe?”</p>
<p>There was no reply. The sage chuckled
aloud.</p>
<p>“The exercise of reason teaches me,” he
explained in a voluminous whisper, “that our
dear young friend is not drowned—oh, no! As
a matter of fact, at this moment, he has already
got clear of the water, and doesn’t know where
he is, but is happier than he ever was before
in his life. When he awakes from the trance,
he will address us.”</p>
<p>So, in truth, it came to pass. Presently, the
call came from Saxe, and the progress of the
three across the cavern was safely accomplished.
Arrived, they pressed about the girl,
who was standing, supported by her lover’s
arm, and mightily embarrassed by the fervor
of their gratitude for the boon of life bestowed
on them by her intrepidity and resource.
Finally, the five set forth along the ledge, following
it as Margaret had come, by groping
on the sheer wall from which it jutted. And,
now, the girl no longer went with painful slowness
on hands and knees, but walked bravely,
upheld by the lover at her side. So, at last,
they came to the spot where Margaret’s fall<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[369]</SPAN></span>
had ended. To their left, seemingly a great
way off, and high above them, showed the
pallid gleam from the bend of the chimney—blessed
harbinger of God’s light above.</p>
<p>Billy Walker surveyed the dim vista of
ascent with extreme disfavor.</p>
<p>“Jake must bring ladders,” he declared.
“Luckily, he’s to fetch along help—a whole
crew for the rescue work. Oh, yes, I’ll wait—I
don’t mind waiting. The water was warm,
and the cavern’s warm, and, anyhow, wet
clothes don’t bother—if one doesn’t think of
them. But I wish I had a dry cigar and a
match.”</p>
<p>Roy thrust himself forward resolutely.</p>
<p>“Nonsense!” he exclaimed. “I’ll climb up in
a jiffy.” He had pulled off his shoes before
starting for the first swim with David across
the chamber, and now stood up in his stockinged
feet. “I’m fond of cliff-climbing. The
only trouble with this is, it’ll prove too easy.”
Without more ado, he scrambled upward
through the darkness. The others waited anxiously,
and breathed a sigh of relief when they
saw his form at last silhouetted against the
pale light at the bend. His voice came to them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[370]</SPAN></span>
muffled.</p>
<p>“The rest will be quicker, I can see, now.”
Forthwith, he vanished.</p>
<p>It was May on the solid earth above who
heard him, and the happiness of it made her
almost fainting. But she held herself sternly,
and even managed a quavering call of his
name—for which, when he heard, Roy climbed
the faster, and soon these two were in each
other’s arms, glad beyond measure of gladness.
The girl was in terror over the blood-stained
bandage about her lover’s head, and cried when
she learned of the treacherous shot that had
wounded him. She cried again, with content,
that it had been no worse. Most of all, she
cried for the exquisite bliss of his being alive
and holding her in his arms—ruining the
daintiest of summer frocks with his sodden,
rock-stained clothes.</p>
<p>The strangeness of the spectacle thus presented
by the ardent pair arrested the attention
of Jake and his crew, who chanced just then
to arrive in the launch. So great became the
boatman’s curiosity that he resolved to investigate
before marching his company into the
cavern. To this fact, and not to any alertness<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[371]</SPAN></span>
on the part of the lovers in looking out for the
coming of the launch, was due the quickness
with which measures of relief were undertaken
for those left in the depths. Ropes were hurried
to the scene; a lantern was lowered. It
was then discovered that the descent was not
so very difficult. With the way lighted, and a
rope by which to cling, the various members
of the party contrived to climb safely to the
mouth of the chimney. Margaret went first,
with Saxe behind to aid as best he might.
David Thwing was next, and last of all, by his
own choice, Billy Walker.</p>
<p>“If I go last,” he explained to David, “I’m
saved the discomfort of feeling that I ought
to be hurrying to get out of somebody’s way.”</p>
<p>After the rescue had been effected, a watch
made up from men trusted by the boatman was
set over the chimney, at Roy’s suggestion.
Then, the four young men, with the two girls,
entered the launch to be taken to the cottage,
for a change of clothing and luncheon. Billy
chuckled contentedly, while the other men appeared
sheepish, when it was learned that noon
remained still an hour distant.</p>
<p>“But the chances are poor of ever getting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[372]</SPAN></span>
that gold, after all,” Saxe said ruefully, when
they were under weigh.</p>
<p>Roy uttered an indignant exclamation.</p>
<p>“Nothing of the sort!” he declared. “David
and I had the tackle fastened, all right, with
a knot on the rope to save it from slipping
through the block. And we had it hauled
tight, too.” He laughed amusedly. “Why, do
you know? That treasure-chest has started up
the slope already! I’ll bet what you like the
shrinking of the rope has brought it out of the
pit. A good gang of men can get that chest
out in less than a half-day.” He spoke with
the sureness of one having knowledge drawn
from experience. That he was right the issue
proved, for the gold was taken out very easily,
and stored safely in the bank before nightfall.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>That evening in the music-room, Saxe sat
playing the miser’s song of gold. Still drumming
the harsh phrases, he turned, and spoke
to his friends with a whimsical smile.</p>
<p>“You know, I rather apologized to you for
asking your help in this affair, because it didn’t
offer anything much in the way of real adventure,
but it did turn out a bit lively after all!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[373]</SPAN></span>Came a chorus of laughing assents.</p>
<p>“We owe Masters gratitude for some
thrills,” David said cheerfully. “And anyhow,
he’s got his deserts.”</p>
<p>Roy was on the point of saying something
candid anent the dead engineer. But his eyes
met those of May Thurston, and he forgot
hate, and remembered only love.</p>
<p>Saxe spoke again presently, with a meditative
air, though Margaret thought that she
could detect a twinkle deep in the gray eyes.</p>
<p>“Roy was right in his idea about the solution
of the mystery coming by psychic impression.
It did. The curious part is that the one to
receive the subtle suggestion from the world
beyond was the last person to be suspected of
anything of the kind—a kind so contrary to
pure reason.”</p>
<p>“What’s that?” Billy Walker demanded.</p>
<p>“Why, about the cipher,” Saxe explained,
placidly. “Billy, tell us the truth. Search
your memory well. Didn’t you first have the
idea that the music had something to do with
the hiding-place of the gold, and then didn’t
you dig out the reasons to justify that idea—after
you had it?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[374]</SPAN></span>“Of all the preposterous—” the sage began
stormily.</p>
<p>But Saxe interrupted ruthlessly:</p>
<p>“Carefully! Search your memory, Billy.
Didn’t the idea come first, the reasons afterward?
Aren’t you psychically sensitive, Billy
Walker? Confess!”</p>
<p>“Psychic—I!” the seer boomed, outraged.
Then, his brow became furrowed with thought.
His expression changed to one of dismay.
Little by little, this wore away, a dawning
satisfaction grew in its stead. Finally, he
spoke aloud to himself, unconsciously. “Psychic—I?
Well, well!” And Billy Walker
smiled.</p>
<p>Saxe smiled in answer to the smile that was
in Margaret’s eyes as her glance met his. Then
he turned once again to the piano. The rhythm
of the miser’s song of gold rang out. But now,
the player touched the harsh measures with a
certain grateful gentleness. In and over and
about the grim chords, he wove daintier harmonies,
lingered often for cadences of passion,
wrought a counterpoint of basic love, set above
all an exquisite melody, the unison of two
hearts. The improvisation welled to a chorale<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[375]</SPAN></span>
of magnificent praise for that lonely and unhappy
man to whose morbid intrigue the player
owed not merely a fortune, but something
infinitely more—the meeting and the winning
of the woman he loved.</p>
<p>“It’s the only tune I ever cared for,” quoth
Billy Walker, complacently.</p>
<p> </p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<div class="transnote">
<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE:</p>
<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
<p>The cover image for this eBook was created by the transcriber
and is entered into the public domain.</p>
</div>
<p> </p>
<hr class="full" />
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