"I think," he said with mock severity, "it was mean of you to leave Mr. Mappin on my hands, particularly as I don't suppose his visit was made on my account."
"Did he bore you very badly?" Geraldine inquired.
"We have had guests here whom I'd rather entertain; but for your aunt's sake I try to be civil. After all, we have known the man for a long while."
"I feel that we have been very patient in putting up with him! He's insufferable!"
"Ah!" said Frobisher, taking out a cigar. "Then you didn't happen to be here by accident? Sit down and we'll have a talk."
Geraldine took the chair he indicated.
"I have something to tell you," she said with an effort. "Mappin asked me to marry him a little while ago."
"It strikes me as curious that this is the first I've heard of it."
"I was ashamed to tell you," Geraldine admitted, shyly. "I felt degraded. Besides, you must have guessed——"
"Yes. I had some idea of the man's ambitions; in my opinion, he's too cold-blooded to be influenced by[Pg 204] any more tender sentiment. We'll take it for granted that you refused him. Nowadays it seems to be a father's business to sanction and not to interfere1; but I really think if you had wanted to marry the fellow I'd have been as firm as adamant2. However, this is not to the purpose. Why do you tell me about it now?"
"You'll see presently. But try to remember that he has other feelings than avarice3. The man's unscrupulous and full of savage4 cruelty."
"Well?"
"To begin with, will you read this? It's from Ethel Hillyard, whom I met in London. You have heard me speak of her."
She gave him a letter containing sufficient information about the house of Allinson to explain why Andrew had gone to Canada. His character and his relations with Hathersage and the rest of the family were cleverly sketched5. Frobisher studied it carefully before he looked up.
"All this is not exactly new to me, though Miss Hillyard, who seems to be a shrewd young lady, speaks strongly in Allinson's favor. From odd things he let fall, I'd formed a pretty good idea of the situation. Now that you have cleared the ground, you had better go on."
"Father," said Geraldine, "so far, you have done nearly everything I asked you, and that is why I'm not afraid to ask for something else. I want you to send up a party to look for Mr. Allinson. He and the others are in danger of starving in the snow."
Frobisher looked at her searchingly, and she met his gaze for a moment, though a flush crept into her face.
"Well," he said simply, "he is a straight man."
[Pg 205]"And a friend of yours. But you will send him help at once?"
"First of all, tell me why you think it is needful."
Geraldine spent some time over the explanation and concluded:
"You must see that their safety depends on their finding the provisions, and Mappin has had the caches made at the wrong places."
For the next few minutes Frobisher sat silent, the smoke curling up from his neglected cigar, while Geraldine watched him in suspense6.
"You have reasoned the matter out remarkably7 well," he said, "and it strikes me that you're near the truth. However, I don't understand how you led Mappin into making the dangerous admissions that gave you a clue; he's a brute8, but I thought him a cunning one. Perhaps I'd better not inquire."
Geraldine's embarrassment9 was obvious and there were signs of amusement on her father's face.
"After all," he resumed, "when you play a game for high stakes with a man like Mappin, you can't be fastidious."
"But what about the relief party?" Geraldine asked.
"I think the situation is serious enough to need one. I'll drive over to the Landing and see about it the first thing to-morrow."
He got up, and as he reached the door Geraldine, following, put her arms about his neck and kissed him. Then she went past swiftly and vanished down the passage.
The next morning Frobisher learned that Mappin had gone east by an early train and that there was not a man capable of undertaking10 a difficult journey into the[Pg 206] wilds disengaged. Mappin had hired all the available choppers and packers and sent them into the bush to cut some lumber11 he required for his railroad contract. Frobisher could not determine whether this had been done with the object of preventing their being employed on a relief expedition, but it looked suspicious. Being in a difficulty, he called on the owner of the sawmill and told him as much as he thought advisable.
"As it happens, I can help you," said the lumber-man. "There are two or three fellows on our pay roll whom we haven't much work for at present, though we'll need them later. They're good bushmen, and I might raise one or two more by sending up to our logging camp."
"Thanks," said Frobisher; "it will be a favor. It's lucky I thought of coming to you."
"Never mind that. I feel that I ought to help Graham out: he's an old and valued servant. But I don't see how you are interested in the thing."
Frobisher smiled.
"It's one's duty to help a fellow creature who's in serious danger. Then I believe I may call myself a friend of Allinson's."
"There's a point to be considered. The most likely place to meet the party would be in the neighborhood of the food caches. You intimate that there's a risk of Allinson's missing them; but he must have a rough idea as to about where they are. As Mappin's out of town, wouldn't it be well to wire and ask him exactly where they were to be made?"
"On the whole, I'd rather get the information from Mrs. Graham. No doubt she knows her husband's plans."
The mill-owner gave him a searching glance. He was[Pg 207] a shrewd man and suspected that there was a good reason for his visitor's preference.
"There may have been some misunderstanding about the precise location of the caches," Frobisher explained. "Mrs. Graham will know where her husband meant them to be made—which of course is the most important thing."
"Just so," agreed the other. "Excuse me for a few minutes."
He went out, and returning a little later announced that three men would be ready to start up-river during the afternoon and that some more from the logging camp would follow in a few days. Frobisher left him and, after calling on Mrs. Graham, went to the store, where he ordered a quantity of provisions to be prepared. It was evening when he reached home. Finding Geraldine waiting for him, he smiled at her as he took off his furs.
"You have found men to take up provisions?" Geraldine asked eagerly.
"Better than that," replied Frobisher. "I've sent them off."
Seeing the pleasure in his daughter's face, he nodded reassuringly14 and left her.
The relief expedition had orders to lose no time. Two of the men, as it happened, had themselves narrowly escaped starvation in the wilds, and their experience led them to urge the pace. It was afterward15 admitted that they made an excellent march, which was fortunate, because a few hours meant much to the starving men.
[Pg 208]As Andrew crouched16 at the side of the rock, half-dazed with fatigue17 and want of food, it was a moment or two before he could believe that he was not the victim of a disordered imagination as he stared at the three figures on the hillslope. But the figures moved and grew more distinct. He could not doubt that they were men, and they were coming up the hill! With his heart beating painfully fast, he staggered up and raised a wild, hoarse18 cry.
It was answered. One of the men waved to him. They came on faster, though he could see that they were heavily loaded, stumbling now and then in their haste. He could not imagine what had brought them into the wilds, but they were obviously well supplied, and he could purchase their provisions and recompense them for an abandoned journey. When they were close to him, the leader stopped a moment and called back to the others:
"We've struck it right! It's Mr. Allinson!"
Andrew, recognizing the man, whom he had seen at the Landing, stumbled forward and shook hands with him.
"I'm uncommonly19 glad to see you; but what brought you here?" he cried.
"Where's the rest of you?" the other asked.
"Carnally's down the hill somewhere; Graham's in camp beyond the gap."
The man looked relieved.
"That's good. We felt scared when we saw you were alone. Thought we might have come too late, though we hurried some."
"Then you knew we were here?"
"Sure! Frobisher sent us up with provisions for you. We made a few caches as we came along, and there[Pg 209] ought to be three more of the boys on the trail behind us. You don't want to worry; we'll see you down."
Andrew felt shaky. Relief had come so unexpectedly; his troubles were over. But there was more than this. Frobisher had despatched the men; he might have done so at his daughter's request; at least it showed a very friendly feeling. Andrew began to wonder how Frobisher could have known he needed help; but this was a matter of much less importance, and he turned to the packers.
"If one of you would go down the next spur and look for Carnally, I'd be glad," he said. "I expect he's near the river and he's pretty hungry."
A man threw off his load and set off rapidly downhill, while Andrew climbed with the others toward the neck, scarcely able to keep on his feet. His companions slackened their pace and glanced at him compassionately20. Crossing the gap, they saw the light of Graham's fire in the gathering21 dusk, and when they neared the belt of timber Andrew waved his hand to a dark figure that appeared in an opening among the trunks.
"No more trouble!" he cried. "Help has arrived!"
A few minutes later Graham shook hands with the newcomers, whom he knew.
"Boys," he said hoarsely22, "now that I see who you are, I know you made good time; and you hadn't much to spare. When did you leave?"
One of them told him, and he and Andrew looked astonished, while the packer laughed.
"We certainly hustled," he said with a deprecatory air. "But I've been four years at the mill and never had trouble over charging my time. Your pay-sheet was square."
"That's so," agreed his companion. "They might[Pg 210] have laid me off a while last summer when we ran out of logs, but Mr. Graham fixed it so I kept my job."
Andrew smiled at Graham, who looked confused.
"If you do these things, you must take the consequences; but I've met people with shorter memories."
"Anyhow, we've got here ahead of the logging crowd and I'm mighty23 glad," said the first packer. "Those fellows think nobody can break a trail unless he lives in the woods. Now you sit by quiet while we get supper."
Before the meal was ready Carnally arrived with the man who had gone to look for him, and the party feasted royally. When they had finished, Carnally sighed with deep content.
"I just don't want to move," he remarked. "I feel most too good to talk; but if the rest of you have anything to say, I'll try to listen."
"What's your program?" one of the men asked. "We have food enough to take us down, going easy."
"I want two days' rest," said Andrew. "Until they're up, we'll do nothing but eat and lie about the fire and smoke."
Carnally looked up lazily.
"That sounds nice, but I'm going to locate Mappin's cache before we start."
The others began to talk to Graham, but Andrew did not know how long they continued, for he was soon fast asleep.
They broke camp on the third morning and when they crossed the neck Carnally divided the party, which had been joined by the loggers. Some he told to follow down one or two ravines at a distance, which he had not searched, and then meet the others, who would work along the ridge24. Toward evening a man[Pg 211] hailed him and Andrew from a slope some way off, and when they joined him he led them into a deep hollow. In the middle of it a small, barked fir projected from a snowy mound25.
"It's the kind of place you'd break a trail up if you were trying to make the neck," the packer explained.
"It looks a good road from here," Carnally assented26. "We didn't get so far along, but we'll climb up a piece."
The hollow died out into a snow slope, and when they had walked on farther they lost sight of it. Then Carnally stopped and carefully looked about.
"We might have struck that gulch27 first shot, but the chances were against it; you can only see it from below. You want to remember that the line the fellows who made the cache would take would depend on where they left the big loop of the lower river. Mappin was smart enough to see that. Now we'll have a look at the provisions."
They proved to be sufficient in quantity and in excellent order when the cache was opened; but Carnally had expected that.
"I wonder how Mappin will feel when he sees us come marching in?" Andrew said lightly. They could laugh now.
"Not very comfortable, I'll promise you!" Carnally declared with a glint in his eyes.
点击收听单词发音
1 interfere | |
v.(in)干涉,干预;(with)妨碍,打扰 | |
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2 adamant | |
adj.坚硬的,固执的 | |
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3 avarice | |
n.贪婪;贪心 | |
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4 savage | |
adj.野蛮的;凶恶的,残暴的;n.未开化的人 | |
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5 sketched | |
v.草拟(sketch的过去式与过去分词形式) | |
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6 suspense | |
n.(对可能发生的事)紧张感,担心,挂虑 | |
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7 remarkably | |
ad.不同寻常地,相当地 | |
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8 brute | |
n.野兽,兽性 | |
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9 embarrassment | |
n.尴尬;使人为难的人(事物);障碍;窘迫 | |
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10 undertaking | |
n.保证,许诺,事业 | |
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11 lumber | |
n.木材,木料;v.以破旧东西堆满;伐木;笨重移动 | |
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12 pointedly | |
adv.尖地,明显地 | |
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13 fixed | |
adj.固定的,不变的,准备好的;(计算机)固定的 | |
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14 reassuringly | |
ad.安心,可靠 | |
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15 afterward | |
adv.后来;以后 | |
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16 crouched | |
v.屈膝,蹲伏( crouch的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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17 fatigue | |
n.疲劳,劳累 | |
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18 hoarse | |
adj.嘶哑的,沙哑的 | |
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19 uncommonly | |
adv. 稀罕(极,非常) | |
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20 compassionately | |
adv.表示怜悯地,有同情心地 | |
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21 gathering | |
n.集会,聚会,聚集 | |
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22 hoarsely | |
adv.嘶哑地 | |
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23 mighty | |
adj.强有力的;巨大的 | |
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24 ridge | |
n.山脊;鼻梁;分水岭 | |
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25 mound | |
n.土墩,堤,小山;v.筑堤,用土堆防卫 | |
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26 assented | |
同意,赞成( assent的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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27 gulch | |
n.深谷,峡谷 | |
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