The Lost Valley Part 28
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"Hurting, h.e.l.l!" he said impolitely. "Of course it is."
"How did you do it? Was it an accident?"
"I don't look as if I did it just for amus.e.m.e.nt, do I?" he snarled.
"It hasn't improved your temper, my lad," I said under my breath. Aloud I remarked: "We're all in much the same boat. Miss Drummond's had a stiff time of it, and I've got all my bruises where you can't see them, but I can a.s.sure you that they hurt all the same."
At the mention of Moira a shadow pa.s.sed over his face. Frankly I could not quite understand his att.i.tude towards her. At first I was rather of the opinion that he was in love with her, but latterly I hadn't been so sure, for he had had the decency to suppress his feelings once he found how the land lay. The mere mention of her name calmed him down wonderfully. He even seemed a little ashamed of his outbursts of temper.
"I might have remembered that I wasn't the only one in the party," he said. "But then I came a fearful cropper, and on top of it I've been out in the rain all night."
"We were a little luckier." I told him. "We found an overhang and that kept off most of the rain. All the same I wouldn't mind a chance of drying myself."
"And we're likely to get that," he said with some asperity. "All our goods are G.o.d knows how many miles behind. I've got a box of matches in my pocket, but they're just about as useful here as they would be at the bottom of the sea."
"Come now," I said, "it's not as bad as all that. We've got a lady to take care of, and we've got to shuffle our brains about a bit and see what we can do. We'll never get anywhere by standing still railing at our fate."
"Well, you're in charge, Carstairs," he told me. "It's up to you."
"It is," I admitted, "and as the first step towards success I might point out to you that the mist is lifting."
He wheeled round at that with greater agility than I expected, seeing that by his own account he was still feeling pretty d.i.c.ky. The mist was lifting in truth, and yellow spears of sunlight were thrusting themselves through like hat pins run through cloth.
"It'll be the better part of half an hour before the place's clear," he a.s.serted, with one eye c.o.c.ked at the sky and the other watching me.
"In the meanwhile we'd better go back to Miss Drummond and set her mind at rest," I suggested.
He trudged along at my elbow with a step that lacked its usual buoyancy, but the sidelong glances I stole at him every now and then showed me that he was fast recovering his spirits. The bruise on his forehead, seen now close at hand and in a better light, was not the fearsome thing I had at first taken it to be. True, it lent him an air of general disrepute, but then none of us were quite fit for the drawing-room. Even Moira, sheltered as she had been, showed very much the worse for wear.
She greeted c.u.mshaw with a cheery smile, the bravest thing about her I thought, and a ready question as to his adventures. But he could tell her little more than that he had gone over the edge with us and rolled away until he brought up against the stone or whatever it was that had bruised his face so nicely. Our own story, what there was of it, was soon told, and a few glances about us showed that in the murk of the night and rain we had missed our footing and shot off the track a dozen feet or so to the level ground below. Above us waved the tall shapes of kingly gums, and below us lay vast s.p.a.ces of bracken. Beyond that we could form little idea as to our position, though the mist was slowly drifting away now.
"The best thing to do, I suppose," I remarked, "is to get back to last night's camping-place and see what we can find of the stores. Of course we shouldn't have left them, but it's no use being wise after the event.
We've to go back as quick as we can now, and maybe we can dig up something warm. That's supposing that everything isn't too wet to be used."
"As I remarked before, it's up to you," c.u.mshaw threw at me. "Lead on, Carstairs."
"If you can show me any way back to the main track, I'll lead on with pleasure," I told him. "There's none visible that I can see, and I don't fancy that my eyes are over dull."
c.u.mshaw said something under his breath, but before I could drop on him for it Moira interposed. "How about walking round at the foot of this ridge and seeing where it'll lead us to?" she suggested.
"That's as fine a plan as any," I answered. "We'll try it."
We did. We sauntered along listlessly for the best part of an hour, and then it struck me all of a sudden that we were rising rapidly.
"We're on the wrong track," I said, stopping short. "We didn't come down as steep a slope as this last night."
"You're right there, Carstairs. We didn't," c.u.mshaw said, stopping short and looking about him with a puzzled air.
"Why not keep right on?" Moira advised. "It's just possible that we're working back to the track."
"We'll give it a chance," I said, after chewing the suggestion over in silence for a few minutes. "We'll keep on for ten minutes or so, and if it gets any worse we can always go back."
The ground became rougher at every step and finally in despair I called a halt. The sun was well up by this and the mist had cleared away from the hills, though filmy vapors still lingered in what I knew must be the hollows. In front was a causeway, strewn with boulders, and beyond that what I took to be a sea of wattles. I could see no use in progressing further in that direction, and I said so as succinctly as I could.
c.u.mshaw was inclined to argue, but the consensus of opinion was against him. The outcome of it was that we decided to retrace our steps. Before we did so I suggested looking about for something that would give us an indication of our present position.
I stumbled on it quite by accident. Another step further and I would have fallen down the funnel-shaped opening that gaped at my feet. I drew back just in time to save myself, and for the second time that morning my heart gave a jump. To think that we had gone so close to missing it altogether! The thing, so to speak, had lain at our feet all the time. I turned about and searched the landscape for my companions. Moira was visible in the near distance; the wattles had swallowed c.u.mshaw.
"c.u.mshaw, Moira, I've found it!" I called at the top of my voice.
Moira whipped round at the sound of my voice. I waved to her and she came running towards me. A second later I saw c.u.mshaw come out of the shadows, and I yelled at him with all the power of my lungs. I don't know what he must have thought of the yelling, dancing, frantically waving figure that caught his eye. He must have fancied for a moment that I had gone mad. Then, in a flash, so he says, the truth dawned on him, and he in his turn sprinted towards me, the one idea uppermost in his mind being that the valley must have been found. At the same instant my soul was singing "Eureka!" and Moira was weeping and laughing at the same time.
"c.u.mshaw," I cried, as he came within speaking distance, "if that's not the funnel that your father and Bradby left the valley by you can call me a goggle-eyed Chinaman."
And then somehow we all seemed to be talking together.
"That must be the valley down under the wattles."
"I knew we'd find it."
"It only shows that one should never give in."
"If we hadn't fallen down that slope last night...."
"If I hadn't kept going when you all wanted to turn back, you mean."
"It's found now and that's the best part of it."
I must confess that I lost my head just as the others did. I should have known better, I suppose, than to go yelling out our discovery at the top of my lungs, but knowing's one thing and doing's altogether different.
I've seen miners on the Lakekamu shouting themselves hoa.r.s.e over even less of a discovery, seasoned men who knew how and when to hold their tongues. Could tyros like ourselves be blamed for what we did? I don't think so.
"That's the funnel right enough," c.u.mshaw said. "There can't possibly be two of the same kind in the same district. I'm sure this is the one; it's been described too often to me for there to be any mistake about it. But what's puzzling me is the valley. There doesn't seem to be much of one here. All I can see is wattles, wattles whichever way I look."
"There's one way to settle it," I said in an aside to him, and I looked at Moira.
He gathered from my warning glance that I had something to say I didn't want her to hear, so he s.h.i.+fted out of earshot with me.
"There's things you don't want a girl to see," I explained as we walked off; "but if this is the valley the skeletons of those two horses should be down there somewhere," and I pointed over the edge of the funnel.
"I'll go down," he said with alacrity. "I guess it's my go. It's time I took some sort of a risk."
"You surely don't expect there'll be anything wrong?" I queried.
"I can't say," he answered with a shrug of his shoulders. "Anyway, I think you'd better get back to Miss Drummond. She's looking over this way, and in a minute or so she'll be asking awkward questions, if you don't go and tell her something."
"All right," I agreed. "Look as slippy as you can, but be careful. An injured man is always more or less of a nuisance, you know."
He grinned cheerfully at that, and then, without another word, turned on his heel and made off towards the funnel. I walked back to Moira.
"What are you going to do now?" she asked me suspiciously. "What's Mr.
The Lost Valley Part 28
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The Lost Valley Part 28 summary
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