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"Oh, my!" screamed Grace, as she clutched Betty. "We are going to upset."
"No, we're not!" declared Allen, as he loosed the halyards, letting the sail come down on the run. "I guess we'll have to abandon the _Spider,"_ he went on, "and tramp it. The snow is too heavy. We may upset."
"Well, the girls are good walkers," observed Frank.
"Which is a blessing," spoke Will. "Out of the _Spider_ into the--frying-pan. Don't you ask me to carry you, Sis," and he looked at his sister.
"No danger!" she retorted, haughtily.
The storm, though continuing steadily, had so far lessened in severity that the sh.o.r.es of the river could be made out, standing grim and dark with their fringes of trees.
"We'll just run the _Spider_ over to sh.o.r.e," said Allen, "and leave it there. We can come for it to-morrow, or whenever the storm lets up."
"What about the blankets and robes?" asked Will.
"Take them with us. We--oh, well, take them along. They may blow away,"
and Allen corrected himself.
The girls and boys climbed out of the boat, loaded themselves with the wraps after the craft had been tied close to sh.o.r.e, and started off down the river.
"What were you going to say about the blankets and robes?" asked Will, when he got a chance to speak to Allen alone. "Was it that we might need them--in case we didn't get back to camp?"
"It was."
"Don't you think we have a very good chance?"
"Not extra good--to-night. Of course we'll get there to-morrow, but it will be too bad if the girls have to stay out all night. Perhaps they won't, but if they do we can make a shelter of the robes and blankets."
"That's so," agreed Will.
On they tramped through the storm. It was hard work, for the snow clogged their steps and the wind made the carrying of the heavy blankets an additional burden. But no one murmured.
They kept to the river, and thus were a.s.sured of a straight road to camp. It was not like being lost in the wood. The only danger was that they were quite a distance from their cabins, and that night was coming on, and that a big storm was raging. Long since it had pa.s.sed from the cla.s.s of a mere squall, in which it seemed to be at one time.
"Did anyone bring the sandwiches we left?" asked Grace, when they had gone on for perhaps a mile.
"I did, and your chocolates, too," said Allen. "Will you have them now?"
"Divide the candy up," said Grace. "They say that persons lost in the snowy Alps eat chocolate."
"You eat it--lost or not," laughed Will. "But pa.s.s it around, Allen."
There was a sandwich each, and also a few pieces of candy for each one, as Allen divided them, and the eating of the bread, meat and sweets did really put new energy into them. They trudged on in better heart now.
"But we're still a good way from camp," said Allen, as he peered as best he could at the landmarks on the sh.o.r.e. "It will take us another hour."
"And it will be dark then," said Amy in a low voice.
"Never mind," advised Betty. "The snow on the ground will make it light, and we can't miss the river. We'll be all right."
Darkness did not bring them in sight of their camp, and they were beginning to lose heart, when Will cried:
"I see a light! It's Franklin's cabin. We're at camp! We're all right now!"
"Are you sure?" asked Grace.
"Certainly. I knew we were near it some time ago."
He gave a hail, which was answered, and soon the young people heard the welcome call of Mr. Franklin, who demanded to know where they had been, and what had happened.
"There's a light in our cabin!" exclaimed Will, as he saw the gleam in the window. "Who's there, Mr. Franklin?"
"A friend of yours--he says."
"A friend of ours!" exclaimed Allen. "Is it Mr. Jallow, masquerading under that name, and trying to get possession of this land as well as the other valuable strip?"
"No, it isn't Jallow," replied Mr. Franklin. "I know him. This is a young fellow you've been expecting, he says. He come up in a hired rig from the village. Blackstone--Blackrock--some such name as that he give."
"Oh, Mr. Blackford, yes. We were expecting him. So he has arrived? I hope he made himself at home."
"I told him to," said Mr. Franklin, "and I guess he did. He had quite a time of it in the storm, and I reckon you folks did, too."
"We did!" exclaimed Will. "But we're all right now. Come on, girls, get in and make yourselves comfortable, and we'll bring Blackford over as soon as we feed him."
The girls went to their cabin, the boys to theirs. The latter found Mr.
Blackford making himself perfectly at home.
"Well, what brings you up here?" asked Allen, when greetings had been exchanged.
"Boys, I've got good news!" cried the young business man. "I've found the missing piece of paper that tells me what sort of a birth mark my sister has--the sister I have been searching for so long. I could hardly wait to tell you!"
CHAPTER XIV
AN ICE BOAT RACE
"The girls will want to know this!" cried Will, when he had grasped the import of the news.
"Yes, and I want to tell them," said Mr. Blackford. "Somehow or other I have an idea that they can help me to find my sister. I don't know why I feel so, but I have--all along. They have always been so lucky."
"They surely have," agreed Allen. "From the time they first set out----"
"And found my five hundred dollar bill," interrupted Mr. Blackford. "And then----"
"Un-haunting the mansion of Shadow Valley," added Will.