“Did you hear that, Jean?”
David’s voice sunk to a sibilant whisper.
He was trembling violently as he asked the question.
For answer, Jean raised shaking hands
to his mouth. Again the call of the Elf’s
Horn shrilled above the murmuring rain, and again,
this time clearer and louder, came the answer.
“Le bon Dieu hav’
hear!” came the hunter’s reverent exclamation.
Stopping only to make the sign of the cross, the old
man plunged down the perilous steep, David Nesbit
at his heels. How they had come safely into the
valley, neither was afterward able to explain, nor
did they stop to remark it, once they had descended.
Both men were intent only on reaching the spot from
whence had emanated that blessed call.
“There’s only one person
up here who could answer that call, Jean.”
David’s tones were vibrant with emotion.
“It’s Tom Gray! I know it, and he’s
in that hut.”
Stumbling desperately on in the greater
darkness of the valley, they reached the hut at last.
“Tom!” shouted David at
the top of his lungs. “Tom Gray! Are
you there?”
“Yes,” sounded the unbelievable
reply from within the hut. “Is that you,
David! I was sure of it when I heard the Elf’s
Horn and answered the call. I knew you’d
come for me some day.”
“Yes, old fellow; it’s
David,” rang out the triumphant cry. “Thank
God, you are alive! Jean is with me.”
“Le bon Dieu hav’
hear,” was Jean’s muttered repetition,
as the two men made a concerted dash upon the shack,
in a wild effort to locate the door. Finding
it by the aid of their flashlights, they made a determined
onslaught upon it, but it stubbornly resisted their
importuning hands.
“Hello, Jean! It’s
too good to be true. I might have known I could
count on you, though,” came the welcome salutation
from within. More anxiously Tom Gray added:
“You’ll have to break the door down, if
you can. It’s locked from the outside.
He carries the key. Hurry or he may come
back.” Tom’s voice quivered with dread.
David groaned. His mind on this
unexpected obstacle, which now confronted them, he
did not stop to consider who the mysterious “he”
in the problem might be. Tom’s very tones
indicated the hovering near of some great danger.
“Isn’t there a window in the cabin?
Can’t you climb out of it?” he shouted
desperately. Inwardly he marveled that stalwart
Tom Gray should be caught in such a trap.
“There are two windows, or rather
holes in the cabin, but they are too high up.
I can’t reach them. My leg was broken and
it’s not strong enough yet to risk such a climb.”
This response was made in despairing tones.
At the mention of windows, Jean had
begun to circle the cabin. Turning his flashlight
on the strong-timbered walls of the hut, he soon made
out one of those windows. “M’sieu’
David,” he called, “come. You will
lif’ me an’ I will clim’ in this
hole. Then we ‘urry an’ get M’sieu’
Tom out, mebbe.” Jean’s “mebbe”
indicated uncertainty. The situation did not look
hopeful and there was evidently no time for questions
regarding the how, when and why of the affair.
Helped by David, Jean’s sinewy
fingers soon clutched the lower part of the primitive
window. Being thin and wiry, he had no difficulty
in drawing himself up to it. With the skill of
an acrobat he swung one leg over the opening.
The task of drawing himself through was much harder
to accomplish. But the will to do so was paramount.
Emitting a jubilant shout of accomplishment, he dropped,
landing lightly on the cabin floor.
Before he could bring his searchlight
into play, an indistinct form had seized him in a
feeble but affectionate grip. “Jean good old
Jean!” Tom’s broken utterance held a sob
of relief and thankfulness.
“Oh, M’sieu’ Tom,”
Jean’s own voice overran with emotion, “is
it of a truth that we hav’ fin’ you at
las’?” Tears of joy were rolling down his
weather-beaten cheeks, as he added with sublime faith,
“Le bon Dieu hav’ hear!”
In the overwhelming joy of reunion
all else was for the moment forgotten. David’s
stentorian tones asking, “Are you all right,
Jean?” brought back swift realization of the
situation. “Can’t you manage between
the two of you to do something to that door? I’ll
help all I can from this side.”
“Yes; all right,” returned
Jean. Then to Tom: “Hav’ you
not then the axe, to chop him into splinter’?
This very queer way to fin’ you, M’sieu’
Tom. But now we not stop to ask question, we ’urry,
get you out. Go ‘way an’ then talk.
It is to see that you are the prisoner.”
“Prisoner!” Tom’s
exclamation vibrated with bitterness. “You
can’t believe what I’ve been through.
You’re right about hurrying to get me out.
There’s no time to be lost. No, there’s
neither an axe or a hatchet here. He’s
too cunning for that. But in one corner of the
room is a heavy iron bar. It hasn’t done
me any good. I’ve been too weak to use
it. Is your rifle outside, Jean? If he should
come back before we can get away, you’ll need
it. Two sturdy men and one poor excuse like myself
couldn’t handle him. He’s the strongest
fellow I ever saw.” His voice rising he
called warning to David. “Keep a sharp watch,
old man. If you see or hear anyone coming, give
us the signal.”
“I’m on the job,”
floated back David’s reassuring response.
“Show to me the bar,”
ordered Jean with the brevity of one whose mind is
set on swift action.
Without replying, Tom limped a straight
course in the dark to a corner of the one-room shack.
“I’ve looked at that bar so often and so
longingly I could find my way to it if I were blind,”
he commented with grim wistfulness. “There’s
not much else in the room, except a bench and a bough
bed.”
Following at his heels, Jean used
one hand to train his light on the bar. Soon
the other hand had fastened itself firmly around it.
“He very strong,” was his terse observation.
“If you will ’old the light, I try him.”
Raising his voice he shouted, “M’sieu’
David, we hav’ foun’ very strong piec’
iron. Now we try smash open the door. You
stan’ by, ready. Then soon we go ‘way
from here with M’sieu’ Tom.”
Limping ahead of the old hunter, Tom
flashed the searchlight directly on the heavy door.
“There’s the door, Jean,” he said,
his tones thrilling with new hope. “Wait
a minute until I limp out of your way. I’m
not going to risk further accident. Now; go ahead
and strike hard!”
Jean needed no second bidding.
Resolutely gripping the bar, he raised it on high
and dealt the stubborn obstruction to Tom’s freedom
a reverberating blow. Three times he brought
it down upon the opposing portal. Half a dozen
more swings of the bar and splinters began to fly
from it.
Outside the shack, David Nesbit’s
eyes and ears were busy obeying Tom’s warning
instructions. Whom Tom feared and why he was afraid,
his chum had not the remotest idea. Every crashing
blow which Jean dealt the door, sent a thrill of joy
to David’s heart. He would have liked to
shout his jubilation, but refrained for fear his friends
within the shack would misinterpret his loud rejoicing
as a danger signal.
For at least fifteen minutes Jean
continued to batter the door, resting briefly at intervals.
At the end of that time, he had demolished it sufficiently
to make room for a man to crawl through. To break
it down completely would have taken too much precious
time.
“It is don’!”
he panted at length. “Now we go ’way
soon. First I try him. If still you hav’
the coat an’ ‘at, M’sieu’ Tom,
put him on; but ’urry.”
“I’ve already done so,”
assured Tom with fervor. “It’s lucky
for me that lunatic didn’t see fit to hide my
clothes.”
Jean pricked up his ears at the word
“lunatic,” but said nothing. “Careful,”
he cautioned solicitously, as Tom, essaying to make
his exit from the hut, drew back, uttering a faint
moan of pain. “It is for me to ’elp
you.” Secretly marveling at Tom’s
light weight, Jean lifted him in his arms. Bidding
him straighten his legs, Jean called to David to stand
by to receive his burden. Then the old hunter
passed him through the opening to David as though
Tom had been a bag of meal. Hastily scrambling
through after him, Jean was just in time to witness
the affecting meeting which took place between the
two young men. Tom’s first words after
greeting David were: “Tell me quickly, how
are Grace and Aunt Rose?” And in the darkness
no one saw the flood of emotion that mastered Tom
Gray as he learned the deep, abiding belief of his
loved ones that he would return.
Though the night lay black around
them, the rain had ceased falling. Directing
the rays of his searchlight on Tom, David gave a horrified
gasp at the sight of his chum’s pale, emaciated
features.
“I don’t look much like
myself, do I?” asked the prisoner with a short
laugh. “The fact is, I don’t know
just how I do look, but I guess it’s pretty
bad.”
“But how in the world did you
ever come to be ” began David.
“No time for talk now,”
broke in Jean. “We mus’ ‘urry,
an’ get way off from here. You can walk
a little, M’sieu’ Tom? Not far?
We ’elp you. There is easy way out of valley.”
Yet it was not an easy matter, even
with the combined force of the two men, to conduct
Tom Gray out of the valley in which he had spent so
many weary, hopeless weeks. His left leg, which
had been broken above the knee, was far from strong.
It was only within the past week that he had been
able to limp painfully about the narrow confines of
his jail. Once outdoors, the darkness of the
night and the roughness of treacherous, rock-strewn
ground made progress barely possible. Neither
did Jean nor David dare to undertake carrying him.
Burdened with Tom, a single misstep on the part of
either was likely to prove disastrous to all three.
“We mus’ tak’
the chance,” declared Jean gravely to David,
when at last the arduous ascent from the valley had
been stumblingly accomplished. “’Bout
four mile ‘way we cache the t’ings.
Only I hav’ the rifle an’ the blanket
of us two, an’ M’sieu’ David hav’
the knapsack. In that we hav’ the supper.
We go little furder. W’en we fin’
the big rock, we lie on it the blanket, an’
on him we lie M’sieu’ Tom. Then, you
an’ me, we stay up an’ watch. W’en
morning com’, then we mak’ litter an’
carry M’sieu’ Tom. I hav’ hear
him speak of wil’ man. If wil’ man
com’, Jean will be ready to shoot at him the
rifle. You are satisfy?”
“I don’t see that we can
very well do differently,” was David’s
rueful reply. “At least we shall have a
chance to find out from Tom just what has happened
to him.”
“No; M’sieu’ David.”
Jean shook a respectful but decided head. “For
to-night we mus’ say no much. M’sieu’
Tom is too tire’ to talk. Also we mus’
keep the quiet. No much nois’; no fire to
cook the supper. The ear of a wil’ man
hear far off. It is good if we miss him.
You hav’ hear M’sieu’ Tom say the
wil’ man is very strong. Jean is not ’fraid.
But many year he hunt, an’ never shoot the rifle
at any man. Now he pray lé bon Dieu that
he never may hav’ it to do.”