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"Yes; but don't you see that the rock where that, water runs is all covered with a fine green powder?"
"Yes, it's sea-weed," said Josh contemptuously.
"No; it's copper," cried Will excitedly; "that's a salt of copper dissolved in the water that comes out there, and some of it is deposited on the stones."
"Yah! nonsense, lad! That arn't copper. Think I don't know copper when I see it? That arn't copper."
"I tell you it is," said Will; "and it proves that there's copper in the rock about that old mine if anybody could find it; and the man who discovers it will make his way in the world."
"You do cap me, you do indeed, lad. I shall never make anything of you.
Well, and do you mean to go down that gashly hole."
"I do; and you are going to manage the rope!"
"And s'pose you falls in and gets drowned, what am I to say to your uncle?"
"I'm not going to fall in, and I'm not going to be drowned," said Will quietly. "I'm going to try and find that copper; so now come along."
There was not a nice suitable piece of stone for Josh to use in polis.h.i.+ng his nose, so he contented himself with a rub of the back of his hand before squeezing himself through the narrow pa.s.sage between the ma.s.ses of rock, and following his companion to the ledge where the old adventurers had spent their capital in sinking the shaft, and had given up at last, perhaps on the very eve of success.
"It's all gashly nonsense," cried Josh as they reached the mouth of the shaft once more; "if there'd been copper worth finding, don't you think those did chaps would have found it?"
"They might or they might not," said Will quietly; "we're going to see."
He went to another crevice in the face of the cliff and drew out a good-sized iron bar shaped like a marlinspike but about double the size, and throwing it down with a clang upon the rock he startled a cormorant from the ledge above their heads, and the great swarthy bird flew out to sea.
"Lay out that line, Josh," said Will, who, after a little selection of a spot, took up the bar and began to make a hole between two huge blocks of granite, working it to and fro so as to bury it firmly half its length.
The crevice between the stones helped him in this; and he soon had it in and wedged tightly with a few sharp fragments that had been dug from the shaft.
"Going to fasten one end o' the line to that?" sang Josh.
"Yes."
"What's the good? I could hold it right enough with a couple such as you on the end."
"But I want the rope to be round that, Josh, and for you to lower me down or haul me up as I give signals."
"Oh yes!" growled Josh; "only we might as well have had a block and fall."
"If we had brought a block and fall up, Josh, it would have been like telling all Peter Churchtown what we were going to do; and you're the only man I want to know anything about it till I've found the copper lode."
"Ho!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Josh, rubbing his nose meditatively with the line.
"How much is there here--five-and-thirty fathom?"
"Thirty," said Will, smiling, as his companion pa.s.sed the cord through his hands with the skilful ease of a seaman. "Will it bear me?"
"Two of you," said Josh gruffly.
"Well, I'm going to trust you to take care of me, Josh," said Will, taking a box of matches from his pocket, and lighting a piece of candle, which he stuck upon one of those little points known as a save-all, and then, bending down, he thrust it into a square niche about a foot below the surface of the mine-shaft--one of several carefully chiselled-out holes evidently intended for the woodwork of a platform.
"Oh! I'll take care of you."
"Lower me down quite slowly, and stop whenever I shout. You're sure you can haul me up?"
"Ha, ha! haw, haw!" laughed Josh. "Can I haul you? What do you take me for--a babby?"
As he spoke he caught the lad by the waistband with one hand, lifted him from the ground, and stiffening his muscles held him out at arm's-length for a few seconds before setting him down.
"That will do, Josh," said Will quietly; and taking the end of the line he made a good-sized loop, round part of which he twisted a piece of sailcloth to make it thicker; then stepping through the loop as though it had been one prepared for an ordinary swing, he turned to Josh:
"Ready?"
"Ay, ay!" was the laconic answer as the fisherman pa.s.sed the line over the round iron bar, which seemed perfectly safe, took a good grip of the rope, and then stood looking at his young companion.
"I tried to stop you when you wanted to dive down," he said, "and I s'pose I ought to try and stop you now. It looks a gashly sort of a hole. S'pose I was to let go?"
"But you would not, Josh," said Will confidently, as he lowered himself slowly over the edge as calmly as if only about to descend a few feet, with perfect safety in the shape of solid earth beneath him, though, as he moved, he set free a little avalanche of fragments of granite, that seemed to go down into the shaft with a hiss, which was succeeded by the strange echoing splashes--weird whispers of splashes--as they reached, the water below.
It would have daunted many a strong man; but so intent was the lad upon his task that he paid no heed to the sounds, and directly after, taking the candle from its niche, he began to scan the walls of the shaft.
"Lower away, Josh, steadily and slowly," he said, as his head disappeared from the fisherman's sight. "I'll shout to you when I want to stop."
The face of the fisherman seemed to undergo a change as his companion pa.s.sed out of his sight--from looking stolid and soured it suddenly became animated and full of excitement; the perspiration stood out upon it in a heavy dew, and muttering to himself, "I sha'n't let him go down far," he slowly lowered away.
For the first few yards of his descent Will could easily scrutinise the walls of the carefully-cut square hole by the light of clay, the flame of his candle looking pale and feeble; but as he sank lower, swinging to and fro with a pendulum-like motion, which now took him to one side of the shaft, now to the other, so that it needed little effort on his part to be able to carefully examine fully half of the cutting, the light from the candle grew more clear and bright, and he thrust it here and there wherever there was a glitter in the time-darkened stone.
Lower and lower, with now his elbow chafing against the rough wall, now his boots, but nothing to reward his search. There was a bright glitter here, but it was only the large flakes of mica in the stone. Lower down there was a sign of ore--of little black granules bedded in deep-red stone, and before this he paused for a minute, for he knew that there was here a vein of tin; but as far as he could tell it looked poor, and not so good as some that miners had told him hardly paid for crus.h.i.+ng.
"All right, Josh; lower away!" he cried; and his words went echoing up to where the fisherman slowly allowed the strong line to glide through his hands.
Some twenty feet lower Will shouted to his companion to halt, for there was a broad band of glittering-yellow metallic stone crossing the shaft-wall diagonally.
The lad's heart beat wildly for a few moments, but he calmed down as he felt that had this been of any value the old adventurers would not have pa.s.sed it by.
"Only mundic," he said, as he inspected it more closely. "Lower away, Jos.h.!.+" and the band of sulphuret of iron was left behind.
Lower and lower, with the top of the shaft looking a comparatively small square hole, and as the lad glanced up at it for a moment the first symptom of fear that he had felt attacked him. For as he saw how frail was the cord by which he hung, and realised that he was depending entirely upon his companion's strength of arm, his brain swam, his eyes closed, and he clung tightly with both hands to the rope.
The attack pa.s.sed off directly.
"Josh thinks I'm a coward," he muttered, "and I suppose I am; but I won't show it;" and shouting a cheery order to the fisherman to lower away, the lad descended farther and farther, with the right of his candle flas.h.i.+ng now from the walls, which were wet and s.h.i.+ning with the oozings of the surrounding rock. This moisture had gone on coating the walls in patches for many a long year, so that in these places it was impossible without sc.r.a.ping for the keenest of eyes to detect even the composition of the stones, and with a sigh of dissatisfaction the searcher shouted to Josh to lower away.
"Here, you've gone down far enough," cried Josh. "I'm going to haul you up now."
"No, no!" shouted Will, the excitement of being in antagonism with his helpmate driving away the last particle of nervousness. "Lower away!"
Josh hesitated for a moment, and made a movement as if to rub his nose, but his hands were engaged, and he got over the difficulty by bending down his head and applying the itching organ to the rope, after which he shook his head fiercely, but went on lowering.