The at Long Lake Part 7 (2/2)
”It was me!” exclaimed Dolly, weakly, between gasps of laughter, forgetting her grammar altogether. ”I learned that trick last summer. They call it ventriloquism. It just means throwing your voice out so that it doesn't seem to come from you at all, and changing it, so that people won't recognize it.”
Bessie stared at her, in wonder and admiration. ”Why, Dolly Ransom!” she said. ”However do you do it? I never heard of such a thing!”
”I don't know how I do it,” said Dolly, recovering her breath. ”No one who can does, I guess. It's just something you happen to be able to do.”
”You certainly frightened them,” said Bessie. ”And you saved us with your trick, Dolly. I think they've run clear away. We can follow them down the trail; they won't stick to it, and I think we can go right back to Long Lake, now, without being afraid any more. Come on, we'd better start. I don't want to stay here.”
CHAPTER XII.
OUT OF THE FRYING PAN.
”Stay here? I should say not!” exclaimed Dolly. ”I'm almost starved--and, Bessie, they must be terribly worried about us, too. And now tell me, as we go along, how you ever found me. I don't see how you managed that.”
So, as they made their way down the trail, Bessie told her of all that had happened since her rude awakening at the camp fire, just after the gypsy had carried Dolly off.
”Oh, Bessie, it was perfectly fine of you, and it's only because of you that we're safe now! But you oughtn't to have taken such a risk! Just think of what might have happened!”
”That's just it, Dolly. I've got time to think about it now, but then I could only think of you, and what was happening to you. If I'd stopped to think about the danger I'm afraid I wouldn't have come.”
”But you must have known it was dangerous! I don't know anyone else who would have done it for me.”
”Oh, yes, they would, Dolly. That's one of the things we promise when we join the Camp Fire Girls--always to help another member of the Camp Fire who is in trouble or in danger.”
”Yes--but not like that. It doesn't say anything about going into danger yourself, you know.”
”Listen, Dolly. If you saw me drowning in the water, you'd jump in after me, wouldn't you? Or after any of the girls--if there wasn't time to get help?”
”I suppose so--but that's different. It just means going in quickly, without time to think very much about it. And you had plenty of time to think while you were tramping along that horrid dark trail after me.”
”Well, it's all over now, Dolly, and, after all, you had to save both of us in the end.”
”That was just a piece of luck, and a trick, Bessie. It didn't take any courage to do that--and, beside, if it hadn't been for you I would never have had the chance to do that. I wonder why Lolla let you have her knife to cut those cords about me?”
”I think she's a regular actress, Dolly, and that she wanted to make me feel absolutely sure she was on our side, so that we would both be there in that trap when she and Peter came back.”
”It's a good thing he was such a coward, Bessie.”
”Oh, I think he'd be brave enough if he just had to fight with a man, so that it was the sort of fighting he was used to. You see it wasn't his plan, and when I said I'd use that knife he couldn't see why he should run any risk when all the profit was for the other man.”
”And when you played that trick with your voice he was frightened, because he'd never heard of anything of that sort, and he didn't know what was coming next. I think that would frighten a good many people who are really brave.”
”Bessie, why do I always get into so much trouble? All this happened just because I changed those signs that day.”
”Oh, I don't know about that, Dolly. It might have happened anyhow. I've got an idea now that they knew we were around, and that John planned to kidnap one of us and keep us until someone paid him a lot of money to let us go. Something Lolla said made me think that.”
”Then he was just playing a joke when he said he wanted to marry me?”
”Yes, I think so, because I don't think he was foolish enough to think he could ever really get you to do that. I did think so at first, but if that had been so I'm quite sure that Lolla wouldn't have helped him.”
”She'd have been jealous, you mean?”
”Yes, I'm quite sure, you see, that she saw him and talked to him when we went over to their camp that time, so that she could take orders from him to Peter. He knew he'd be watched, so he must have made up his mind from the first that he would have to have help.”
”I wonder what he is doing now, Bessie.”
”I certainly hope he's still over there at the camp, sitting near that guide. The guide said he would shoot him if he tried to get away, you know.”
”My, but I'll bet there's been a lot of commotion over this.”
”I'm sure there has, Dolly. Probably all the people at the hotel heard about it, too. I'll bet they've got people out all through the woods looking for us.”
”I wish we'd meet some of them--and that they'd have a lot of sandwiches and things. Bessie, I've simply got to sit down and rest. I want to get back to Miss Eleanor and the girls, but if I keep on any longer I'll drop just where we are. I'm too tired to take another step without a rest.”
”I am, too, Dolly. Here--here's a good place to sit down for a little while. We really can't be so very far from Long Lake now.”
”No,” said a voice, behind them. ”But you're so far that you'll never reach there, my dears!”
And, turning, they saw John, the gypsy, leering at them. His clothes were torn, and he was hot and dirty, so that it was plain that he had had a long run, and a narrow escape from capture. But at the sight of them he smiled, evilly and triumphantly, as if that repaid him amply for any hards.h.i.+ps he had undergone.
”Don't you dare touch us!” said Bessie, shrilly.
She realized even as she said it, that he was not likely to pay any attention to her, but the sight of his grinning face, when she had been so sure that their troubles were over at last, was too much for her.
She sank down on a log beside Dolly, and hid her face in her hands, beginning to cry. Most men, no matter how bad, would have been moved to pity by the sight of her sufferings. But John was not.
”Don't cry,” he said, with mock sympathy. ”I am not going to treat you badly. You shall stay in the woods with me. I have a good hiding place, a place where your friends will never find you until I am ready. You are tired. So am I. We will rest here. It is quite safe. A party of your friends pa.s.sed this way five minutes ago. They will not come again--not soon. I was within a few feet of them, but they did not see me.”
Bessie groaned at the news. Had they only reached the place five minutes earlier, then, they would have been safe. She was struck by an idea, however, and lifted her voice in a shout for aid. In a moment the gypsy's hand covered her mouth and he was snarling in her ear.
”None of that,” he said, grittingly, ”or I will find a way to make you keep still. You must do as I tell you now, or it will be the worse for you. Will you promise to keep quiet?”
Bessie realized that there was no telling what this man would do if she did not promise--and keep her promise. He was cleverer than Peter, and, therefore, much more dangerous. She felt, somehow, that the trick which had worked so well when Dolly had used it before would be of no avail now. He might even understand it; he was most unlikely, she was sure, to yield to superst.i.tious terror as Peter and Lolla had done. And, leaning over to Dolly, she whispered to her.
”Don't try that trick, Dolly. You see, if the others had dared the voice to do something they would have found out that there was really nothing to be afraid of--and I'm afraid he'd wait. It may be useful again, but not with him, now. If we tried it, and it didn't work--”
”I understand,” Dolly whispered back. ”I think you are right, too, Bessie. We'd be worse off than ever. I was thinking that if only some of the other gypsies were here we might frighten them so much with it that they'd make him let us go.”
”Yes. We'll save it for that.”
The gypsy was still breathing hard. He looked at the two girls malignantly, but he saw that they were too tired to walk much unless he let them rest, and, purely out of policy, and not at all because he was sorry for them, and for the hards.h.i.+ps he had made them endure, he let them sit still for a while. But finally he rose.
”Come,” he said. ”You've been loafing here long enough. Get up now, and walk in front of me--back, the way you came.”
They groaned at the prospect of retracing their footsteps once more, but he held the upper hand, and there was nothing for it but obedience. That much was plain. Desperately, as they began to drag their tired feet once more along the trail, they listened, hoping against hope for the sounds that would indicate that some of the searchers they were sure filled the woods were in the neighborhood.
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