Part 19 (1/2)

”There may not be more than a dozen threads here,” he said, ”but I found 'em sticking to a thorn bush not twenty yards away. A half hour ago they were a part of a woman's dress. A thorn bush grows among the cedars above. She was in a hurry, and when her dress caught in it she jerked it loose.”

”But how do you know it was only a half hour or less ago?” asked d.i.c.k.

”Because she broke two 'or three of the thorns when she jerked, and it was so late that their wounds are still bleeding, that is, a faint bit of sap is oozing out at the fractures.”

”That sounds conclusive,” said d.i.c.k, ”but likely it was a mountain woman who lives somewhere along the slope.”

The sergeant shook his head.

”No, sir, it was no mountain woman,” he said. ”When I found the cloth on the thorns I knelt and looked for a trail. It's hard ground mostly, but I thought I might find the trace of a footstep somewhere. I found several, and not one of them was made by the flat, broad shoe that mountain women wear. I found small rounded heel prints which the shoes worn by city women make.”

”If any city woman is on this mountain she's a long way from home,” said Warner.

”But I'm quite sure of what I say, sir,” said the sergeant.

”And so am I,” said Shepard, who had been listening with the keenest attention. ”Will you mind letting me lead the way for a little while, sir?”

”Go ahead, of course,” said d.i.c.k. ”In such work as this we rely upon the sergeant and you.”

”Then I'd like to take a look at those heel prints also.”

d.i.c.k thought he detected a quiver of excitement or emotion in the voice of Shepard, always so calm and steady hitherto, and he wondered. Nevertheless he asked no questions as he led the way out of the ravine.

The sergeant showed the heel prints to Shepard, and beyond question they had been made by a woman. By careful scrutiny they found a half dozen more leading in a diagonal direction up the side of the mountain, but beyond that the ground was so hard and rocky that they could discover no further traces.

”You agree with me that the tracks have just been made?” said the sergeant to Shepard.

”I do,” replied the spy, his voice showing growing excitement, ”and I think I know who made them. I didn't believe it at first. It seemed incredible. I want to try a little experiment. Will all of you remain perfectly still?”

”Of course,” said d.i.c.k.

He took a small whistle from his pocket and blew upon it. The sound was not shrill like that of Slade's whistle, but was very low, soft and musical. He blew only a few notes. Then he took the whistle from his lips and waited. d.i.c.k saw that his excitement was growing. It showed clearly in the spy's eyes, and he felt his own excitement increasing, too. He divined that something extraordinary was going to happen.

Out of the cedars to their right and a little higher up the slope came the notes of a whistle, exactly similar, low, soft and musical.

”Ah, I knew it!” breathed Shepard. He waited perhaps half a minute and then blew again, notes similar and just the same in number. In a few moments came the reply, a precise duplicate.

”We'll wait,” said Shepard. ”She'll be here in a minute or two.”

d.i.c.k and his comrades looked eagerly toward the point from which the sound of the second whistle had come. This was something amazing, something beyond their experience, but the excitement of Shepard seemed to have pa.s.sed. His face had become a mask once more, and he was waiting with certainty.

d.i.c.k's sharp ear caught the sound of a light footstep approaching them, evidently coming straight and with confidence. He realized that until now he had not really believed, despite the footprints, despite everything, that a woman was on the mountain. But he knew at last. He even heard the swish of her skirts once or twice against the bushes. Then she came through the dwarfed cedars, stepping boldly, and stood before them.

The stranger stood full in the moonlight, and d.i.c.k saw her very clearly. She was thin, small and elderly, clothed in a gray riding suit, and with a sort of small gray turban on her head. But despite her smallness and thinness and years there was nothing insignificant in her appearance. As she stood there looking at them, she showed a pair of the brightest and most intelligent eyes that d.i.c.k had ever seen. Her small, pointed chin had the firmness of steel, and figure, manner and appearance alike betokened courage and resolution in the highest degree.

All these impressions were made upon d.i.c.k in a single instant, as if in a flash of light, and he also noticed in her face a resemblance to some one, although he could not recall, for a moment, who it was. But the silence that endured for a half minute, while the men regarded the woman and the woman regarded the men, was broken by Shepard, who uttered a low cry and strode forward.

”Henrietta,” he exclaimed, ”you here at such a time!”

He put his arms around her and kissed her.