Part 31 (2/2)

Ralestone Luck Andre Norton 29910K 2022-07-22

”You mean the piles holding up your cabin platform?” Val asked.

He nodded. For a second Val caught a glimpse of forlorn loneliness beneath the sullen mask Jeems habitually wore.

”But there's nothing you can do now--”

”It ain't the cabin. Ah gotta git the chest--”

”The one in the cabin?”

His black eyes were fixed upon Val's, and then they swerved and rested upon the wall behind the young Ralestone.

”Ah gotta git the chest,” he repeated simply.

And Val knew that he would. He would get out of bed and go into the swamp after that treasure of his. Which left only one thing for Val to do.

”I'll get the chest, Jeems. Let me have your key to the cabin. I'll take the outboard motor and be back before I'm missed.”

”Yo' don't know the swamp--”

”I know how to find the cabin. Where's the key?”

”In theah,” he pointed to the highboy.

Val's fingers closed about the bit of metal.

”Mistuh,” Jeems straightened, ”Ah won't forgit this.”

Val glanced toward the downpour without.

”Neither will I, in all probability,” he said dryly as he went out.

It had been on just such a night as this that the missing Ralestone had gone out into the gloom. But he was coming back again, Val reminded himself hurriedly. Of course he was. With a shake he pulled on his trench-coat and slipped out the front door unseen.

CHAPTER XIV

PIRATE WAYS ARE HIDDEN WAYS

The rain, fine and needle-like, stung Val's face. There were ominous pools of water gathering in the garden depressions. Even the small stream which bisected their land had grown from a shallow trickle into a thick, mud-streaked roll crowned with foam.

But the bayou was the worst. It had put off its everyday sleepiness with a roar. A chicken coop wallowed by as the boy struggled with the knot of the painter which held the outboard. And after the coop traveled a dead tree, its topmost branches bringing up against the plantation landing with a crack. Val waited for it to whirl on before he got on board his craft.

The adventure was more serious than he had thought. It might not be a case of merely going downstream and into the swamp to the cabin; it might be a case of fighting the rising water in grim battle. Why he did not turn back to the house then and there he never knew. What would have happened if he had? he sometimes speculated afterward. If Ricky had not come into the garden to hunt him? If together they had not--

While Val went with the current, his voyage was ease itself. But when he strove to cut across and so reach the mouth of the hidden swamp-stream, he narrowly escaped upsetting. As it was, he fended off some dark blot bobbing through the water, his palm meeting it with a force that jarred his bones.

But he did make the mouth of the swamp-stream. Switching on the strong search-light in the bow, he headed on. And because he was moving now against the current, it seemed that he lost two feet for every one that he advanced.

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