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PAGE 8

The Cave On Thunder Cloud
by [?]

Well, that was true, of course. I crawled out and, going over, prodded at Aggie with my foot.

“Aggie,” I said, “it is raining and Tish is going on anyhow. Will you go on with her or start back home with me?”

But Aggie refused to do either. She was terribly stiff and she had slept near a bed of May-apple blossoms. In the twilight she had not noticed them, and they always bring her hay-fever.

“I’b goi’g to stay right here,” she said firmly between sneezes. “You cad go back or forward or whatever you please; I shad’t bove.”

Tish was marking out a route on the road map by making holes with a hairpin, and now she got up and faced us.

“Very well,” she said. “Then get your things out of the suitcase, which happens to be mine. Lizzie, the canned beans and the sardines are yours. Aggie, your potato salad is in those six screw-top jars. Come, Modestine.”

She untied the beast and, leading him over, loaded her sleeping-bag and her share of the provisions on his back. She did not glance at us. At the last, when she was ready, she picked up her rifle and turned to us.

“I may not be back for a week or ten days,” she said icily. “If I’m longer than two weeks you can start Charlie Sands out with a posse.”

Charlie Sands is her nephew.

“Come, Modestine,” said Tish again, and started along. It was raining briskly by that time, and thundering as if a storm was coming. Aggie broke down suddenly.

“Tish! Tish!” she wailed. “Oh, Lizzie, she’ll never get back alive. Never! We’ve killed her.”

“She’s about killed us!” I snarled.

“She’s coming back!”

Sure enough, Tish had turned and was stalking back in our direction.

“I ought to leave you where you are,” she said disagreeably, “but it’s going to storm. If you decide to be sensible, somewhere up the valley is the cave Charlie Sands hid in when he ran away. I think I can find it.”

It was thundering louder now, and Aggie was giving a squeal with every peal. We were too far gone for pride. I helped her out of her sleeping-bag and we started after Tish and the donkey. The rain poured down on us. At every step torrents from Thunder Cloud and the Camel’s Back soaked us. The wind howled up the ravine and the lightning played round the treetops.

We traveled for three hours in that downpour.

III

Only once did Tish speak, and then we could hardly hear her above the rush of water and the roar of the wind.

“There’s one comfort,” she said, wading along knee-deep in a torrent. “These spring rains give nobody cold.”

An hour later she spoke again, but that was at the end of that journey.

“I don’t believe this is the right valley after all,” she said. “I don’t see any cave.” We stopped to take our bearings, as you may say, and as we stood there, looking up, I could have sworn that I saw a man with a gun peering down at us from a ledge far above. But the next moment he was gone, and neither Tish nor Aggie had seen him at all.

We found the cave soon after and climbed to it on our hands and knees, pulling Modestine up by his bridle. A more outrageous quartet it would have been impossible to find, or a more outraged one. Aggie let down her dress, which she had pinned round her waist, releasing about a quart of water from its folds, and stood looking about her with a sneer. “I don’t think much of your cave,” she said. “It’s little and it’s dirty.”

“It’s dry!” said Tish tartly.

“Why stop at all?” Aggie asked sarcastically. “Why not just have kept on? We couldn’t get any wetter.”

“Yes,” I added, “between flowering hedgerows! And of course these spring rains give nobody cold!”

Tish did not say a word. She took off her shoes and her skirt, got her sleeping-bag off Modestine’s back, and–went to bed with the worst attack of neuralgia she had ever had.