CHAPTER XVII THE PHANTOM OF SUPERIOR
"Jeanne," said Florence, "do you remember that man over at Rock Harborlodge who was always talking about fishing?"
"Yes. Why?"
"He's got me all excited. Let's celebrate our wonderful luck getting thatGovernment contract by going fishing."
"I--" Jeanne murmured, "I only wish to sit on the rocks and dream thehours away."
It was the next day. Several hours were at their disposal. They wereanchored at Tobin's Harbor. The _Iroquois_ was due at sunset with aboat-load of supplies for fire-fighters. The _Wanderer_ was to helpdistribute these, so for the time they were standing by.
"You would desert me?" said Florence with a laugh. "Katie will go. Won'tyou, Katie?"
"Fishing?" Katie's eyes shone. "Absolutely."
A half hour later the two girls were on their way to the fishing grounds.Florence was in her element. For her there was nothing quite like the"living water" of old Superior. In a rowboat you are so close to it. Eachdark blue wave as it lifts you, then pushes you gently forward, seemsreluctant to let you go.
"The water is _so_ blue!" she exclaimed. "Must be the copper in theserocks that makes it."
"Yes," said Katie.
"Or the blue of the sky."
"Yes," Katie agreed once again.
Truth is, Katie had scarcely heard. She, too, was in her element. She wasenjoying perfect physical activity, and that, to her, was life. L I F E,spelled with big round letters. With a rhythmic motion, keeping pace withthe waves, her strong arms moved slowly back and forth while the oarsflashed in the sun.
"Yes," she repeated as if something more had been said.
"Wait! Stop!" Florence cried. Her line had been given a sudden pull.
"A fish," said Katie.
"A big one!" Florence enthused, reeling in.
"Not so big," said Katie.
Katie was right. It was not so big, perhaps three pounds. A fine fish forall that and Florence thrilled at landing it.
"And yet," she thought, as they rounded a rocky point to cut across a gapto a small rocky island beyond, "there must be a fifteen poundersomewhere, just must be."
"Yes," said Katie as if reading her thoughts.
There was not for all that. No fifteen pounder rose to their lure aroundthe far end of Edward's Island. Six times they worked their way along thepoint, crossed it and circled back, but only one small fish brought thema moment's thrill.
"Look!" Florence exclaimed as once more they headed out from the point."There's that lone fisherman, the mysterious one who is always there.Jeanne calls him the Phantom."
"Yes," said Katie. "He's out at what the fishermen call Five Foot."
"How far is it?" Florence's voice was eager.
"One mile," said Katie.
Lifting the field glasses to her eyes Florence studied the lone fishermanas he glided across the blue waters, then turned and glided back again.There was something about the waters on this day that seemed to lift himup above the surface.
"Looks as if he were floating through air."
"Yes," said Katie, showing all her fine teeth in a smile.
"There! He--he's got one!" Florence exclaimed, quite forgetting her ownline. "Must be a big one. How he pulls!"
The lone fisherman was standing up in his boat. He was pulling in a handline, yards and yards of it. To Florence, who waited breathlessly, theline seemed endless. And yet, when the end did come it was with suddenshock, for the fish seemed immense.
"A whopper!" she exclaimed. "A regular whale. Katie, we're going outthere! We must!"
"Might be too far," Katie suggested half-heartedly. She, too, was a bornfisherman.
"He's there," Florence argued. "His boat is no larger than ours."
"Motor boat." Katie suggested. For all her protests she was not turningback. Instead she was heading straight out over the blue-black surface ofSuperior.
"A mile," Florence thought with a sudden intake of breath, "a mile fromanywhere."
She thought of the _Wanderer_ tied up there at the dock in Tobin'sHarbor, of Dave and all the rest. All that seemed dreamy and far away.What did it matter today?
Had she but known it, today had but begun and what a day it was to be!
It was with a feeling almost of guilt that she sat there watching thewaves pass them one by one. With an all but silent swish, each seemed towhisper a warning.
"I won't hear," she told them defiantly. "Five Foot and big fish."
Ah, yes, Five Foot. How often she had heard fishermen speak of it. There,a mile from anywhere, the rocks rose within five feet of the surface.That was why it was Five Foot. Beneath this giant submerged boulder, afull quarter mile long, scaly monsters lurked.
"We'll get 'em," she thought.
Was it conscience that whispered, "Yield not to temptation!" Florence didnot believe in conscience, at least, not too much. So Katie rowed on andFlorence, watching a bank of beautiful blue and black clouds roll alongthe horizon, thought, "What a grand old world this is."
"Soon be at the spar," Katie broke into her day-dreams.
"Reef begins there."
"Al-all right," Florence gripped her rod. "I--I'm ready.
"But look!" she exclaimed. "The Lone Fisherman is gone."
"Gone?" Katie seemed startled.
"Oh, no!" her face broadened into a smile. "Over there."
It was true. Out some distance further, perhaps a mile, the same smallboat circled and bobbed, bobbed and circled again.
It was then that Florence began to believe in Jeanne's strange notion,that this Lone Fisherman was no real fisherman at all and his boat noreal boat, but that it was a phantom boat manned by a ghostly fisherman.
"More than one small craft has vanished," she thought with a shudder."The Flying Dutchman of Superior," she whispered. She laughed at her ownsuperstitious imagination, but the laugh was followed by a shudder. Andat that moment the sun went under a cloud.