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The Girl Detective Megapack: 25 Classic Mystery Novels for Girls

Page 56

by Mildred A. Wirt


  “Yes, I think you can,” said Marian. “But what was that?” She gripped her companion’s arm.

  “What?” said Lucile.

  “I—thought—yes, there it is; out there to the right. Some dark object moving among the ice-cakes.”

  “Yes, now I see it. And there’s another and another. Yes, perhaps twenty or more. What can they be?”

  “Men—and—dogs,” said Marian, slowly. “The tribe is coming home.” There was a little catch in her voice. Every muscle in her body was tense. They were far from their homes, not knowing where they were; and these people, a strange, perhaps wild, tribe of savages.

  Then there came to Marian the words of the great bishop: “Humanity is very much the same everywhere,” and for a time the thought comforted her.

  They remained there standing in full view in the moonlight, watching until the men could be distinguished from the dogs; until the whole company, some fifty or more people, left the ice and began to climb the slope that led to the village.

  But now they all stopped. They were pointing at the cabin, some of them gesticulating wildly.

  After a time they came on again, but this time much more slowly. In their lead was a wild-haired man, who constantly went through the weird dance motions of these native tribes; weird, wild calisthenics they were, a thrusting out of both hands on this side, then that, a bowing, bending backward, leaping high in air. And now they caught the sound of the witch song they were all chanting:

  “I—I—am—ah! ah! ah!

  I—I—I ah! ah! ah!”

  As they neared the cabin Lucile turned away.

  “I—I think,” she said unsteadily, “we had better bar the door.”

  At that she lifted the heavy bar and propped it against the door.

  CHAPTER XVIII

  A NEW PERIL

  Long hours in the cranny of the cliff Phi was wrapped in heavy slumber. Dressed as he was in deerskin and sealskin garments, he did not feel the cold. The bed was soft, his “house” well sheltered from the wind.

  He awoke at last to start and stare. The sun was painting the peaks of distant ice-piles with a touch of pink and gold. He experienced a strange sensation. For one brief moment he fancied himself on the mainland of Alaska. This, he realized, was not entirely impossible; the ice-floe might have circled about to carry him near to the coast again.

  So possessed was he with the idea that he grew impatient at the slow broiling of their one remaining bird. Once the meal was over, having hidden the bird net in the crevice, that he might return to it in case of necessity, he hurried away. With Rover at his heels, he crossed the uneven surface of the plateau, keeping well toward the edge of the rocky cliff that he might discover a path, if there should be one, leading down to a village or a miner’s cabin.

  In his mind’s eye he pictured himself sitting down to a meal of “mulligan” and sourdough flapjack in some friend’s mining shack, and, if this dream came true, how quickly he would shape his course toward the spot he had been directed to by the ciphered note in the blue envelope!

  “I’d walk in on them like old Rip Van Winkle.” He smiled and glanced at his dog.

  “You look the part of Rip’s dog, old fellow,” he laughed; “you surely do.”

  Yet, as he thought more soberly, he realized that there was really no reason for supposing that the ice-floe had returned him to the mainland of America.

  “Might be a point of the mainland of Asia,” he reasoned. “The people who come here hunting may be Chukches.”

  Had his mind been less occupied with these speculations he might have taken note of some movement off to the right of him. As it was, he walked straight on.

  Suddenly a small, dark object flew past his head. Before he could turn to investigate, a second, better aimed, struck him in the side. Caught off his balance, he went crashing to the ground. The next moment the dog gave a yelp of pain. He too had been struck by one of these flying missiles which proved to be rocks.

  Stunned, but not seriously injured, Phi rose upon hands and knees and made all haste to fortify himself behind a massive boulder. Growling defiance, the old dog crouched by his side.

  It was a moment of suspense. What could this mean? Into the boy’s mind there crowded many questions. Had he been carried to the shore of some island of the far north where the white man had never set foot? Was he about to be attacked by a murderous band of superstitious natives? He had seen no one. How many were there and why did they use only stones for weapons? The bow and arrow are known to the most ignorant savage.

  To these questions he could form no answer. He could only crouch there and wait.

  He did not have long to consider what his next move should be, for a rock grazed his ear. A quick glance in the direction from whence it came showed him the form of a single native. Instantly the man vanished, but a moment later a second rock flew through the air. It came from exactly the same spot.

  “May be only one,” he murmured.

  Encouraged by this thought, he proceeded to stalk his enemy by hurrying around the boulder and peering out at him from the other end.

  The ruse worked. He found the man standing in full view, craning his neck to look around the side of the rock which the boy had just left.

  Presently the native took a few steps forward. Phi thought he walked with a kind of stagger.

  “It’s strange he’d have the courage to attack me alone, armed only with rocks,” he murmured.

  A yelp from the old dog roused him to action. The native’s rock had found a mark. His back was turned to the boy and with a sudden, swift rush Phi leaped out and landed full upon his back. The two of them went crashing to earth.

  For a moment the man struggled with almost demoniacal strength, then suddenly he crumpled in the boy’s grasp and sank lifeless to the ground.

  Fearing a trick Phi turned the man over and sat upon his chest, pinning his hands to the ground. But he was unconscious; there was no mistaking that.

  “That’s queer,” perplexedly. “I didn’t do anything to him that I know of. Wasn’t thrown hard or anything.”

  He bent over to gather up a handful of snow with which to rub the native’s brow, when he caught an old, familiar odor.

  Just then the dog came limping up. “Rover, old boy,” Phi smiled a queer sort of smile, “we’re not beyond the reaches of the civilized white man. This fellow’s drunk. Hooch. In other words, moonshine; I smell it on his breath. That’s why he was throwing stones at us. Crazy drunk, that’s all. Now he’s gone dead on us, like a flivver run out of gas.”

  The dog smelled of the man and growled.

  “Don’t like it, do you? Most honest men and dogs don’t. Moonshine’s no good for anybody. And now, just for that, we’re in for something of a task. This fellow’d lie here until he froze stiff as a mastodon tusk if we’d let him, but we can’t afford to let him, even if he did pelt us with rocks. We’ve got to get him on his feet somehow and make him ‘walk the dog’ till he sweats some of that hooch out of him.”

  As he looked the man over for a knife which might prove dangerous once he was roused from his stupor. Phi realized that he was not on the mainland of America. This man’s costume was quite unlike that of the Diomeders. He wore a shirt of eiderduck skins such as was never seen on the Little Diomede, and his outer garments of short-haired deerskin, instead of being composed of parka and trousers were all of one piece.

  “Wherever we are,” he said to the dog, “we’ll know what’s what in an hour or two.”

  * * * *

  After witnessing the strange actions of the group of natives as they clustered in about the boarded-up house, with wildly beating hearts Lucile and Marian took their places back a little in the shadows, where they could not be seen but could still watch the wild antics of their strange visitors.

  “What does it mean?” whispered Marian.

  “I can’t even guess,” Lucile whispered back. “Something terrible though, I am sure.”

  By this t
ime the entire group were circling the house, and their wild shrill cadent song rose high and loud:

  “Ki—yi—yi—um—Ah! Ah! Ah! I—I—I!”

  The single dancer tore his hair again and again, and repeated his mad gesticulations.

  Only one figure stood back impassive—not singing and not taking any part in the weird demonstration.

  Suddenly, at a sign from the wild-haired leader, all the singing ceased. He uttered a few words apparently of command, then waved his scrawny arms toward the house.

  A wild shout rent the air. All the natives, save the impassive one, sprang to their feet and started toward their village. But now the impassive one leaped up and tried to check them, to drive them back. As well attempt to stop a torrent with the open hand. They pushed him aside and hurried on.

  The next moment the girls heard a pounding at the door, but dared not open it.

  “What does it mean? What can it mean?” They kept asking one another.

  Presently the mad group came racing back. Some bore on their shoulders poles and boards hastily torn from their caches. Two others were staggering under a load which appeared to be a sealskin filled with some liquid.

  “Seal-oil!” said Lucile. “What—” and then the full meaning of it came to her like a flash. “Marian!” she said in an almost inaudible whisper, “they mean to burn the cabin. That’s what the wood and oil are for—to start the fire!”

  The words were hardly out of her mouth when Marian gripped her arm. “Look!” she cried.

  A dense black smoke was rolling past the window.

  Roused by her cry, the crippled Eskimo boy sprang upon his one well foot and came hopping toward them.

  One look at the smoke, at the madly dancing old man, and he hopped for the door. Throwing the pole to the floor, he hopped outside and away.

  “He’s gone! Deserted us!”

  “What does it matter now?” Lucile covered her face with her hands.

  “But look!” cried Marian.

  The boy had hopped out into the howling, dancing circle. The howling had ceased. He had tumbled to a sitting position on the snow, but was speaking and motioning with his hands. Once he pointed at his bandaged foot. Twice he put his hands to his mouth, as if to mimic eating. Then he sprang nimbly upon his one foot and would have leaped toward the now raging fire, but the one who had been first impassive, then had attempted to restrain the mad throng, restrained him, for the others, leaping at the fire, threw it hither and yon, stamping out with their feet the blaze that had already begun eating its way into the building.

  It was all over in a minute. Then the two girls sank down upon the floor, dizzy and sick, wondering what it was all about.

  * * * *

  Phi found that to rouse the native from his drunken stupor was no easy task. After rubbing the man’s forehead with snow, he stood him on his feet and attempted to compel him to walk. Finding this impossible, he worked his arms back and forth, producing artificial respiration.

  At last his efforts were rewarded; the man opened his eyes and stared dully up at him. For some time he lay there motionless. Then, with a wild light of terror in his eye, he struggled to his feet and attempted to flee. His wobbly legs would not support him. He tumbled to the earth, only to try it again. Rover ran barking after him.

  “Let him alone,” smiled Phi. “As long as he is not in danger of harming himself, let him work. He’s doing as much as we could do for him. He’ll work it out of his system.”

  In spite of his muddled state the fellow appeared to possess a sense of direction, for the boy soon found that he had come upon a narrow path leading along the cliff at a safe distance from its edge.

  As he stumbled forward, the native’s falls became less frequent. “Sobering up,” was Phi’s mental comment. “We’ll soon strike a place where the path leads down the side of the cliff. I wonder if he can make that alone or will he break his neck?”

  Suddenly the man disappeared from view.

  “That,” said Phi to the dog, “means there’s a path leading directly down, probably to some village. If it is a village there are natives there—perhaps hundreds of them. They have seen white men at one time or another. They may have been badly treated by them and may be hostile to them. If one were to judge by the action of this fellow he must conclude that they are.

  “But that cannot influence our action in any way. If we stay up here and live on birds they’ll find us sooner or later. Might as well go down; the quicker the better, too, for this drunken fellow will doubtless give a weird and terrible account of us.”

  At that he raced along the cliff-top path and the next moment found himself slipping and sliding down a zigzagging trail which led down the hillside.

  He was halfway down before he caught the first glimpse of the village. Beneath him lay some brown cubes which he knew to be boxlike upper stories to the houses of the natives.

  “That settles one thing,” he murmured. “They’re islanders. The natives of Russia build their homes of poles, deerskin and walrus-skin, tepee fashion; the American natives use logs and sod. Only islanders build them of rocks.”

  For a moment his courage failed him. He was a boy on an island somewhere in the Arctic, his only companion an old and harmless dog, his only weapon a hunting knife; and he was about to enter a village filled with natives.

  “Perhaps,” he said slowly, looking down into the trusting eyes of the dog, “we had better wait. They may all be on a grand spree. And if they are it won’t be safe. Whatever they may be when they’re sober, they’ll be dangerous enough when drunk.”

  But the peaceful quiet of the village, as it lay there some hundreds of feet below, reassured him.

  “Come on, old boy,” he said at last, “we’ll chance it.”

  CHAPTER XIX

  MYSTERIES EXPLAINED

  There was little time left to the girls for wondering after the fire against the boarded-up house had been extinguished, for the entire throng burst in upon them. This time, apparently as eager to welcome them as they had been a few minutes before to destroy them, they rushed up to grasp their hands and mumble:

  “Me-con-a-muck! Il-e-con-a-muck!”

  Soon they all filed out again, two of them bearing the boy with the crushed foot.

  Only one remained. He was a young Eskimo with a clean-cut intelligent face. Lucile, by his posture, recognized the one who had championed their cause from the first.

  “Perhaps you wonder much?” he began. “Perhaps you ask how is this? Sit down. I will say it to you.”

  The very sound of their own tongue, badly managed though it might be, was music to the two worn out and nerve-wrecked girls. They sat down on the sleeping-bag to listen, while the yellow light of the seal-oil lamp flickered across the dark, expressive face of the Eskimo.

  He bent over and drew imaginary circles on the floor, one small and one large, just as the boy had done with charcoal.

  “Here,” he smiled, “one island. Here one. This island one house. Here—”

  “Where is this island?” broke in Lucile, too eager to know their position on the shore of the Arctic to hear him through.

  “Yes,” he smiled, “this island is here, very small. This one is here, very large.” Again the imaginary circles were drawn.

  Lucile smiled and was silent.

  “This one large island,” the native went on, “this one plenty Eskimo. Come to visit some Eskimo. Some live here, these Eskimo.

  “Pretty soon come big ice-floe. Wanna cross, these people. Can’t. Wanna cross, one boy. Try cross. Broke foot. You see. Come house. Fell down. Think die, that boy. Wanna come in. Pretty soon, open door, white women, you. See white women; scared, that boy, too much scared. Wanna run, that boy. Can’t. Pretty soon see white woman good, kind, that one boy. Plenty fix up foot. Plenty eat, that boy. Wanna stay.

  “Pretty soon come plenty wind; plenty ice. Wanna cross ice all time, those Eskimo. Now can cross. Cross plenty Eskimo, plenty dog-team. Come this island, one lit
tle island. See?”

  “Where is this island?” Lucile broke in again.

  “Yes,” the speaker smiled frankly, “one big island, one little island. Wanna cross people. All cross people.”

  Again Lucile was silent.

  “Pretty soon,” he resumed, “see light in Alongmeet’s (white man’s) house. Wanna know who come island. Look. See two white face in window; two white women. Then pretty much scared. One witch-doctor, old man, hair all so,” he rubbed up his hair. “Say that witch-doctor, ‘No come white women this island; too much ice, no come. Spirits come; that’s all.’ Say that one witch-doctor, ‘Must kill white woman spirits; must burn house. Wanna burn house quick.’

  “I say, ‘No burn; no spirits mebbe. White women mebbe.’

  “He say, that witch-doctor, he say, ‘No white woman, white spirit, that’s all.’ All people say, ‘Spirit! Spirit! Burn! Burn!’ All wanna burn.

  “Me, I wanna stop burn. No can do. Wanna burn. Bring wood, bring oil, all that Eskimo. Pretty soon fire. Wanna come in mine. No can do.

  “By and by come that one boy, rush outa cabin; wanna tell no burn house. No spirit; white woman, that’s all. No burn. He say, that boy, ‘No burn. See white woman eat fish. Spirits no eat fish.’

  “Then all the people say quick, ‘No burn! No burn!’ So no burn. See? That’s all.”

  The Eskimo smiled frankly, as he mopped the perspiration from his brow.

  “They wanted to burn us because they thought we were spirits,” Lucile said slowly; then suddenly, “What do they call this island?”

  “This? This one island?” The Eskimo pointed to the floor.

  “Yes.” The girls learned forward eagerly.

  “This one white man call ‘Little Diomede.’”

  The two girls stared at one another for a moment. Then they laughed. In the laugh there was both surprise and great joy. They were surprised that in all the drifting of their ice-floe they had been carried about in a circle, and at last landed only twenty-two miles across-ocean from their home, on Little Diomede Island, the halfway station between the mainland of America and Russia.

  “We live at Cape Prince of Wales,” said Lucile. “How can we go home?”

 

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