i * lTrt 7\ , j. : * * * * " TF' V " " " w " * * " - * . iv > ' - ' ' -'wiaBVTHc'succtas co " > - . 11 Simply Clung to Him. SYNOPSIS. Philip Cayley. accused of a crime of rblch he Is not jjullty , resigns from the army In disgrace and his affection for hia friend , Lieut. Perry Hunter , turns to hatred. Cayley seeks solitude , where he perfects a flying machine. While soaring over the Arctic regions , he picks up a ooriously shaped stick he had seen In the assassin's hand. Mounting again , he dis covers a yacht anchored in the bay. De scending near the steamer , he meets a girl on an Ice floe. He learns that the girl's name is Jeanne Fielding and that the yacht has come north to seek signs of her father , Captain Fieldjng , an arctic explorer. A party from the yacht Is ma king search ashore. After Cayley departs Jeanne finds that he had dropped a cu riously-shaped stick. Captain Planck and the surviving crew of his wrecked whaler are in hiding on the coast. A giant ruf fian named Roscoe , had murdered Field Ing and his two companions , after the ex plorer had revealed the location of an < mormous ledge of pure gold. Roscoe then took command of the party. It develops that the ruffian had committed the mur der witnessed by Cayley. Roscoe plans to capture the yacht and escape with a oig load of gold. Jeanne tells Fanshaw , owner of the yacht , about the visit of the ky-mam and shows him the stick left by Cayley. Fanshaw declares that it is an Eskimo throwing-stick , used to shoot darts. Tom Fanshaw returns from the earching. party with a sprained ankle. Perry Hunter Is found murdered and Cayley is accused of the crime but Jeanne beMeves him innocent. A relief party goes to find the searchers. Tom professes his love for Jeanne. She rows ashore and enters an abandoned hut , and there finds Her father's diary , which discloses the ex plorcr's suspicion of Roscoe. The ruf fian returns to the hut and sees Jeanne. He Is Intent on murder , when the sky man swoops down and the ruffian flees. Jeanne gives Cayley her father's diary a 1 to read. The yacht disappears and Ros- ooe's plans to capture it are revealed. Jeanne's only hope is In Cayley. The seriousness of their situation becomes ap parent to Jeanne and the sky-man. Cay- ley kills a polar bear. Next he finds a clue to the hiding place of the stores. CHAPTER XV. Continued. "Why , I found an unmistakable ref erence to it , and though the exact lo cation wasn't given , it was plain that three or four hours' exploring by day light would enable us to find it. But yen if I hadn't minded leaving you aaleep here , unprotected , in the hut , I doubt very much if I could have found It at night But what's the mystery yon were about to reveal to me ? " "No. " she said ; "tell me more about your discovery first. What was the reference in the journal ? " He rose and took down from the shelf the big leather-bound volume which was proving itself , with every hoar , their greatest treasure. "It's over here , toward the end , " he said , "in that last winter when the Walrus came oh , here we are. " He seated himself on the bunk be- aJde her , and began to read. "March 10th. We have just spent an arduous and fearful week upon the taslc of unloading the wreck of the whaler. The weather has been severe bitterly c61d ( 10 degrees Fahren heit being the mildest ) and three- qnarters of a gale blowing most of the time. The men are Inclined to be re- "belllous over my driving them out to T > > work in such weather , but I dared not wait for it to moderate. "When the Ice opens round the whaler , she will go down like a plum < net ; and if that event should have happened before we unloaded her of her stores , our plight would have been utterly desperate. Of stores in the ordinarily accepted sense , she had nut a scanty supply , and those of a mis erably inferior description ; but she contained half a cargo of whale oil in barrels , which now that they are landed will settle the problem of fuel for us as long as the last survivor of our company can hope to remain alive. And fuel is , after all , the only neces sity which this land itself does not supply us with. Of course we shall have to forego the delights of bear steak when our ammunition gives out , but walruses we can kill with har poons. And with these and scurvy- grass , which twe gather in the valley every summer , there is no danger of actual starvation. "We hoisted the barrels of blubber out of the whaler's hold with a hand tackle , sledged them ashore along the floe and the crown of the glacier to Moseley's cave , which -seemed to be the most convenient place to store them temporarily. " Cayley laid down the book and turned to the girl. "That's the place , I'm perfectly sure , " he said. "It evidently faces the glacier , but it must be very near the beach , for they wouldn't have hauled those barrels any further than necessary. " "Is that all he says about it ? " "It's all he says directly , but there's a reference just a little further along which made me all the surer I was right . . . Let's see. " He opened the book again and ran his eye down the page. " ' A hundred weight or so of spermaceti and two barrels of sperm oil we took directly to the hut * here , this is what I was looking for. " 'The knowledge we get by experi ence often conies too late to be of any great service to us. I made some mistakes in stripping the Phoenix , which I should not repeat now. For instance , carrying her pilot house , with infinite labor , up to the cliff- head for an observatory. It is thor oughly impracticable for this purpose. I doubt if I have visited it three times since Mr. Moseley's death ' " "He was the astronomer and botan ist of father's expedition , " said the girl. girl.Cayley Cayley read on : " 'But now that I have learned my lesson , I have but little to apply the knowledge to. The Walrus is , I believe , the most utterly wretched hulk that ever sailed the seas ill-found , detestably dirty and literally rotting to pieces. We shall , however , get enough planks and tim bers out of her to build a shed or two near the hut , for the more convenient storage of our supplies. ' " Again he closed the book. "That's what I was looking for , " he said. "You see they brought that stuff down from the cave to these sheds ; so the cave .would . be almost inevitably the first hiding place they would think of when the sight of the Aurora drove them to hustle everything out ol sight. " "Whereabout on the cliff is the ob servatory , Philip ? " "I was wondering about that I've flown across the cliff a number ol times , but have never seen anything of it He may have wrecked it ; ' taker it down and used it for some othei purpose. " "No , " she said ; "he'd hardly have had time for that There weren'1 many more pages to write in the jour nal when he made that entry. " She fell then into a little abstracted silence , which the man did not kno\v how to break. But presently she roused herself and came fully back to the pres ent , back to him. "Did you succeed In accounting foi the thing you askefl me about last night , the mark on the map right here where they built the hut afterward ? " "I didn't find anything about it in the journal , but this morning , before breakfast , when I went outside the hut , one glance at the fact of the cliff accounted for it fully. The cliff is split right here , from top to bottom , by a deep , narrow fissure. The fissure is full of ice , which I suppose hasn't melted fqr a thousand years. No sum mer that they could have in a high lat itude like this would ever melt it , cer tainly. " The girl laughed and rose from her place at the rude table. "Well , " she asked , "are you ready for my discovery now ? " She took down his pocket electric bull's-eye from the shelf behind her , held out a hand to him and , on tip toe , led him , with a burlesque exag geration of mystery , out into the store room. As completely mystified in reality as she playfully pretended to want him to be , Cayley followed. She went straight across the store room to the rear wall of the hut , the wall that backed squarely against the sheer surface of the cliff , flashed on the bull's-eye for a second , apparently to make sure that she had chosen the right point in the wall , then , letting go hia hand , she stooped and picked up a stick of fire-wood which lay at her feet. With this she struck pretty hard upon the planking. The sound which the blow gave forth was as hollow as a drum. Cayley started. "A cave ! " he ex claimed. "A cave here ! Oh , I see. It's a cold cellar they made by cutting a hole in the ice that filled the fissure. And why do you suppose they boarded It up ? " The girl laughed delightedly. Evi dently she had not , as yet , developed the whole of her discovery. She flashed on the light again. "Look ! " she commanded. In the center-of a little circle of wall which the bull's-eye now illum inated Cayley saw the barrel of a rusty hinge. "You see , " she went on , "it's a door , and they only nailed it up the other day. There's a nail-head somewherfe here that's quite bright. I caught the lint of it while I was rummaging be fore breakfast , and that was what made me look. " Cayley darted back into the living oem , returning almost Instantly with the broken-handled pick. In less than a minute , with a pro- esting squawk , the rude door swung open , and they saw before them just what Cayley had predicted. A rather high , but narrow cavity , the sides of which were the naked rock of the cliff , but the floor and ceiling solid ice. Despite the fact that the girl's ex citement over the discovery of vthe cave had , for a moment , carried Cay ley along with it , he was not greatly surprised , and not at all cast down when , at the 'end of five minutes of hasty exploration , it was made evi dent to them that the ample supply of stores which they sought was not to be found here. Jeanne herself would not , perhaps , have entertained so high a hope had she learned of the reference to the other cave which Cayley found in the journal before she herself had chanced upon the mouth of this one. As it was , his theory that the stores were to be found in a cave vaguely situated along the glacier , made little impres sion upon her , she was so sure that they had been right here , und r their hands. When their investigation made it clear that whether he was right or not , certainly she was wrong , she was bitterly disappointed. Cayley was aware of that , even as they stood here , side by side , with no light to see her face by. She said nothing , or very little , but he knew , nevertheless , that for just this moment all the life and courage had gone out of her ; knew that the slight figure there , so close beside him , was drooping , trembling ' bling a little. He laid a steady hand upon her shoulder. Almost instantly , under his touch , she turned to him , caught with both hands at the unbottoned edges of the rough woolen jacket he wore , and , sobbing a little now and then , but oth erwise In silence , simply clung to him. He did not offer , with his arms , t * ) draw her any closer , to turn what was a mere Instinctive appeal to the protec tion of his strength and courage , into an embrace. He kept a hand on each of her shoulders , more by way of sup port than anything else , and waited a moment before he spoke. "After all , " he said at last "what we've got here is just so much clear gain , and it will be immensely valu able to us , though it isn't what we ex pected. The fact that It is their super fluity , the things they hadn't any par ticular or immediate use for , doesn't make what we've found here any the less valuable to us. That pile of bear skins there will supply what is , at this moment , the most vital of our wants. That big sack appears to contain feathers ; and those walrus tusks will serve any number of purposes forks and spoons for one thine. As to that i great lump of spermaceti , it will kee ] us supplied with candles all througl the winter. I can't imagine why the ] didn't use it themselves , except 01 the theory that the longer they livet here , the more they grew like beasts ; the more content 'with the beast'i habit of life , and the more inert aboui taking the trouble to provide them selves with such of the comforts ant decencies of life as they might hav ( had. So you see , we may find among the things they had no use for the very ones that will help us most" The cutting in the ice did not gc very far back in the fissure , and thej were soon at the end of it , and with out having made any new discovers of importance , either. There was t little of cast-off articles of various sorts , chiefly clothing which future privations might make useful to them There was a great frozen lump oJ brownish-green vegetation , which thej afterward identified as the edible scurvy grass to which Captain Field ing had referred in his journal. That was all , or they thought-it was but just as they were about to re trace their steps to the hut , Cayley happened to glance up. The roof ol the cave was not very much higher than it had to be to permit him tc stand erect in it , something under sev en feet ; but here at the further end of it he saw a circular , chimney-like hole , about two feet in diameter , lead ing straight upward through the solid ice in the fissure. CHAPTER XVI. Footprints. Nature had nothing to do with the formation of it , so much was clear enough. It had been cut out by hand , and evidently with infinite labor. ' Flashing his bull's-eye over it did not enable him to see the end of it , but it did reveal a series of notches running straight up the two opposite surfaces. The only purpose they could serve would be to make possible the ascent of the chimney. Jeanne followed his gaze , and then the two looked at each other , com pletely puzzled. "Some one must have made it , " she said ; "and it must have been fright fully hard to make a tunnel right up through the ice like that. But what in the world can they have made it for ? " "I've no idea , " he confessed , "but it goes somewhere , and I mean to find out where. " "Don't follow it too far , " she cau tioned. "It would only need one foot slip off one of those icy notches to bring about a dreadfully ugly fall. " "One couldn't fall far down a tube of that diameter , unless he had com pletely lost his nerve , for there's al ways a chance to catch one's self. And you're to remember that I'm used to falling. No , I'll be as safe up there as I would on a turnpike. Yes , really. " With that and a nod of reassurance , he scrambled up into the mouth of the long chimney. He had taken his. bull's-eye with him , so' the girl was left in the dark. She dropped down on the heap of bear skins to wait for him. him.She She had no means of measuring the time , and it seemed a perfectly in terminable while before she heard Cayley returning down the ice chim ney. Had she known how long it real ly was , she would have been justified in feeling seriously worried about film , but not knowing , she attributed the seeming duration of his delay to the tedium of sitting in the dark , with nothing to do. Even at that , she was conscious of a feeling of relief when she heard him call out to her once more , cheerfully , albeit somewhat hollowly , from the chimney's mouth : "Jeanne , where are you ? " "Here , just where you left me. " "Here ! All the whilej You must be half frozen. I've been gone the better part of an hour. " "I didn't know how long it was , and I kept thinking you'd be back any minute. . . . But where in the world have you been ? " By the time , she asked that question they had groped their way back into the storeroom and thence into the liv ing room of the hut , and by now she was looking at him in the full light of flay. flay.He He dropped down , with a rather ex plosive sigh , upon one of the bunks , ind poked tentatively at his thighs and shoulders as if they were numb svith fatigue. "I think by a reasonable estimate , " le said , "that chimney Is five miles aigh. I kept going and going and go ng , till began to believe that there ivasn't any end to it ; or that , by some magic or other , I slipped down a rard as often as I went up one. But : did get to ther end at last ; and I'll jive you a thousand guesses as to vhat I found there. " "The observatory , " she hazarded. 'Oh ! but not really ? I did not mean hat for an honest guess at all. It was ust the first thing that came into my lead. But how could they pull the ) ilot house of the Phoenix up through hat little hole in the ice ? " "Well , to tell the truth , I dan't be- ieve they did , " he answered with necking seriousness. "It's more like- y that they took it to pieces , and then Igged a boom and tackle up at the : liff-head and hauled it up outside. 3ut when they got It up there they mt It together again right across the Issure , and then tunnelled down , or ip , the whole depth of the clifr. It nust have taken them weeks to do It , md when it was done they had an In- iide connection between it and the mt so that they were quite indepen- lent of the weather. And it must tave been a great place to make ob- ervations from. " "Have been ! " she echoed question- ngly. , "Isn't it now ? " "No , because it's all snowed and rozen in. It's buried , I don't know LOW many feet deep by this time , and iark. of course. a a pocket But i So He Set Off Alone. everything inside is quite undisturbed I doubt if a single member of the "Wai rus' crew ever saw It , or even sus pected that such a place existed. " He unbuttoned his jacket and tool from an inner pocket a scrap of pa per. "Being a methodical person , " he ex plained , "I made an inventory. It's really quite a respectable list. " She seated herself beside him on the bunk as if to read the paper. "I imagine you will need an inter preter , " he said. "I've half forgotten what these tracks mean myself. My hands were so stiff with the cold it wasn't very easy to write. But that first word is telescope. And then there are the meteorological instru ments , barometers , thermometers , and so on , and the Phoenix's compass , sex tant and chronometer , a microscope , a paraffine' oven and a big chunk of paraffine , an oil lamp , a five-gallon can about half full of oil , and a small stove. There was a providential treas ure for me in the form of a razor , which they used , I suppose , for cutting microscopic sections with. I'm glad they hadn't a microtone to do it prop erly. " "You didn't find a comb for me , did jrou ? " she asked. "Because , unless you did , or until you do , you won't be allowed to use the razor. " "I suppose I could make you one , or a sort of one. It would be genuine ivory , anyway. " He had come , apparently , to the end of the list. "Well , " she said , "I suppose we might find something to do with al most any one of those things ; some of them will be useful , certainly. And it's pleasant , somehow , to think of our little pilot house , all snowed in , up there on the cliff-head , and of our in side passage leading up to it. " "That's quite true , " he said. "I sup pose it's all romantic nonsense , but it does give one a certain feeling of se- security. . . . However , " he went on , "we're not reduced as yet to any thing as intangible as that as a sub ject for giving thanks. You haven't seen the whole of my list yet. I're saved the best till the last. " He turned the paper over In his hand as he spoke. She did not attempt to read what he had written , but sat there beside him , her hands clasped about one knee , her eyes upon the booted foot which was poised across the other , and waited rather tensely for him to tell her. "It's not so very much , but it will mean an immense lot to us. What people die of in the arctic is not so often disease or accident , or even , di rectly , cold or starvation. They die more often of disgust and weariness and exhaustion. Your father knew that , and he set apart from his gen- sral stores some luxuries and delica cies , or things that would seem to be such to men in their plight , to be used against emergency. I'm sure that's why he took them up there and hid : hem away. Part of them are left. I wish he could have known to whom iey were going to be of use. There's i little cask with brandy In it , a good- sized pot nearly full of beef extract , a | ar of dried eggs , three tins of con- lensed milk , a big ten-pound box of Albert biscuit " His voice broke off there sharply , jut without the downward inflection she would have expected had he eached the end. So she looked quick- y and curiously up Into his face. As luickly , her. eyes sought the bit of pa- ) er which still lay open in his hand. "You didn't finish , " she said. "There vas something else. " "I thought too late. Oh ! it's noth- ng , but it vcaught me rather , and I nought I would spare you the twinge : hat finding it had given me. I might > etter have read it right out It was i big plum pudding , in a tin , you | mow Cross & Blaokwell's. But there . it was , waiting , I suppose , to lend some sort of an air of festivity to their next Christmas. " The girl rose from her seat beside \ him and going over to the window , stood for a while gazing up the beach. It was just about the same time in , the afternoon that it had been yester day when he set out , a-wing , to find her , and had come flying down out of the sky to drive away the sudden nameless terror which had beset her. That thought led him , now to visua lize some sticks of wood , rather too large to carry , which had b.een lying on the beach near where he had found her. Thinking that it would be a good time to get them and drag them In , he got a harpoon line , and It was the girl's question what he meant to do with the rope , which caused him to tell her what part of the beach he In tended to visit He asked her then if she cared to come with him , but , after a moment's hesitation , she declined. "It will be high time for supper be fore you can get back , " she said , "and I'd better stay here and get it ready , that is , unless I can help you. " So he set off alone. For awhile the occupation of setting their disordered living room to rights and getting the supper started were sufficient to take the whole of the girl's attention. But later , when it was a question merely of waiting for the pot to boil , and of not watching it so that it would boil sooner , she moved restlessly to the door and stood there , before the hut , gazing down the beach in the direction Cayley had taken. He was already out of sight around the headland. She wished she had gone with Philip , and she gazed with straining eyes toward the narrow bit of slant ing beach around the base of the head land which was the place where he must appear. He was not to be ex pected yet , not for a long time , prob ably , for his progress , dragging Ihose great sticks he had set out to bring home , must be slow. And then , even as she looked , she saw him , not moving slowly with his burden , but running running at his topmost speed , like a man in fear of something. Instinctively she moved forward to meet him , and this move of hers en abled him to see her. He slackened his pace instantly , and waved her back toward the hut. She obeyed that imperative gesture of nis , without hes itation , but still remained in the door way , watching'him as he rapidly drew nearer. When he had got near enough so that she could see his face and read , more or less , what she saw there , she again moved forward to meet him , and this time he did not wave her back. When he came within arm's reach of her , he caught her and held her tight in his two hands. "What is it , Phjlip ? " she asked , searching the depth of his eyes and trying to plumb the horror she sa-w in them. "What happened out there ? " "Nothing happened. But I saw something there that made me anx ious for your safety. . . . It's all right now you're safe. Nothing has happened here , has there , while I have been gone ? " "Nothing. What could have hap pened , Philip ? . It can't be anything that you're afraid to tell me , " she went on , for he had not answered her. "There can't be anything you'd be afraid to tell me now not after yes terday. " "Oh , no ; It'sjiot so bad as that , but [ saw that I had been wrong to leave you , even for that little while. You see the sight of the place brought back to my mind what you had told me yesterday of the terror you had telt there , and of the thing that yon jaw In the twilight And so I looked CTO BE CONTINUED. )