Part 49 (1/2)

”That's natural, isn't it? The idea that I'm most impressed with just now is that Millicent might believe it her duty to stick to Clarence more closely because of a tale that was merely damaging. She would never allow herself or anybody else to credit it, unless she had absolutely convincing proof.”

”Yes,” agreed Lisle; ”I guess you're right. That's precisely why we have got to get there first.”

A thicket of th.o.r.n.y vines and canes barred his way, but he went straight at the midst of it and struggled through, savagely smas.h.i.+ng and rending down the brush. The clothes he had borrowed from Carew looked considerably the worse for wear when he came out; and then he recklessly leaped across a dark cleft the bottom of which he could not see.

Presently they left the ridge and headed away from the river, which flowed round a wide curve, and toward dawn they were brought up by a ravine. The roar of water rose hoa.r.s.ely from its depths. The moon was getting low and the silvery light did not reach far down the opposite side, but they could see a sheer, smooth wall of rock, and the width of the chasm rendered any attempt to jump it out of the question.

”No way of getting across here,” decided Lisle. ”At the same time, it looks as if Gladwyne must be held up on the same side that we are. We'll follow the canon; down-stream, I think.”

The moonlight was getting dimmer, but, at some risk of falling into the rift, they pushed on along the brink, looking down as they went. They could see no means of descending, but at length, when rocks and trees were getting blacker and a little more distinct in the chilly dawn, they made out a fallen trunk with broken white branches lying upon a tall ma.s.s of rock below.

”I've an idea that the top of that tree reached across to this side when it first came down,” Lisle said. ”Have you got a match?”

Nasmyth had brought a few carefully-treasured wax matches with him, and he lighted one. It was very still, except for the roar of the hidden torrent, and the pale flame burned steadily in the motionless cold air.

It showed a couple of hollows, where something had rested, close to the edge of the rift, and one or two fresh scratches on a strip of rock.

Lisle stooped down beside them.

”Hold the thing lower!” he exclaimed sharply. ”It's as I suspected--this is where Gladwyne got across; though he has better nerves than I thought he had. The broken end of a branch or two rested right here, and he was smart enough to heave the b.u.t.t off the other bank, after he'd crawled over. Looks to me as if it had broken off yonder stump. Guess there'll be light enough to look for a way across in half an hour.”

Sitting down he filled his pipe, and shortly afterward he raised one hand as if listening. For a while, Nasmyth could hear nothing except the roar of water; there was not a sound that he could catch in the thin straggling bush behind them where few trails of mist were stretched athwart the trees. Then he started as a faint crackling and snapping began in the distance.

”Can it be a bear?” he asked.

”No; it's a man!”

Nasmyth was somewhat astonished. They had not seen a human being except those of their party for a long while, and it seemed strange that they should come across one now in the early dawn in those remote wilds.

”He's wearing boots,” he said diffidently, as the crackling drew nearer.

”Yes,” Lisle responded; ”he's making a good deal more noise than a bushman would.”

The sound steadily approached them. Nasmyth found something mysterious and rather eerie in it, and he was on the whole relieved when a dark figure materialized among the trees near by. He could barely see it, but Lisle called out sharply:

”What has brought you on our trail, Batley?”

The man came toward them with a breathless laugh and sat down.

”It isn't your trail but Gladwyne's I'm interested in, and I can't say that I've succeeded in following that. I merely pushed on, until I struck this canon and as I couldn't get across, I followed it up.”

”You're not easily scared,” Lisle commented. ”You might have got lost.

Guess you had some motive that made you take the risk.”

”I felt pretty safe. You see, I knew I could strike the river, if necessary. At the same time you were right about the motive--in fact, there's no use in trying to hide it. I may as well confess that I'd sooner keep Gladwyne in sight.”

”Out of regard for his welfare?” Nasmyth asked.

Batley laughed.