Part 1 (1/2)
Northern Diamonds.
by Frank Lillie Pollock.
CHAPTER I
It was nearly eleven o'clock at night when some one knocked at the door of Fred Osborne's room. He was not in the least expecting any caller at that hour, and had paid no attention when he had heard the doorbell of the boarding-house ring downstairs, and the sound of feet ascending the steps. He hastened to open the door, however, and in the dim hallway he recognized the dark, handsome face of Maurice Stark, and behind it the tall, raw-boned form of Peter Macgregor.
Both of them uttered an exclamation of satisfaction at seeing him.
They were both in fur caps and overcoats, for it was a sharp Canadian December night, and at the first glance Fred observed that their faces wore an expression of excitement.
”Come in, boys!” he said. ”I wasn't going to bed. Here, take your coats off. What's up? You look as if something was the matter.”
”Is Horace in town?” demanded Peter.
Fred shook his head. Horace was his elder brother, a mining engineer mostly employed in the North Country.
”He's still somewhere in the North Woods. I haven't heard from him since October, but I'm expecting him to turn up almost any day now.
Why, what's the matter?”
”The matter? Something pretty big,” returned Maurice.
Maurice Stark was Fred's most intimate friend in Toronto University, from which he had himself graduated the summer before. He knew Macgregor less well, for the big Scotch-Canadian was in the medical school. His home place was somewhere far up in the North Woods, but he had a great intercollegiate reputation as a long-distance runner. It was, in fact, chiefly in a sporting way that Fred had come to know him, for Fred held an amateur skating champions.h.i.+p, and was even then training for the ice tournament to be held in Toronto in a few weeks.
”It's something big!” Maurice repeated. ”I wish Horace were here, but--could you get a holiday from your office for a week or ten days?”
”I've got it already,” said Fred. ”I reserved my holidays last summer, and things aren't busy in a real estate office at this time of year. I guess I could get two weeks if I wanted it. I'm spending most of my time now training for the five and ten miles.”
”Could you skate a hundred and fifty miles in two days?” demanded Macgregor.
”I might if I had to--if it was a case of life and death.”
”That's just what it is--a case of life and death, and possibly a fortune into the bargain!” cried Maurice. ”You see--but Mac has the whole story.”
The Scottish medical student went to the window, raised the blind and peered out at the wintry sky.
”No sign of snow yet,” he said in a tone of satisfaction.
”What's that got to do with it?” demanded Fred, who was burning with curiosity by this time. ”What's going on, anyway? Hurry up.”
”Spoil the skating,” said Macgregor briefly. ”Well,” he went on after a moment, ”this is how I had the story.
”I live away up north of North Bay, you know, at a little place called Muirhead. I went home for a little visit last week, and the second day I was there they brought in a sick Indian from Hickson, a little farther north--sick with smallpox. The Hickson authorities wouldn't have him at any price, and they had just pa.s.sed him on to us. The people at Muirhead didn't want him either. It wasn't such a very bad case of smallpox, but the poor wretch had suffered a good deal of exposure, and he was pretty shaky. Everybody was in a panic about him; they wanted to s.h.i.+p him straight down to North Bay; but finally I got him fixed up in a sort of isolation camp and looked after him myself.”
”Good for you, Mac!” Fred e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed.
”Oh, it was good hospital training, and I'd been recently vaccinated, so I didn't run any danger. It paid me, though, for when I'd pulled him around a bit he told me the story, and a queer tale it was.”
Macgregor paused and went to look out of the window again with anxiety.
Fred was listening breathlessly.