Third Warning
CHAPTER VIII MYSTERIOUS YOUTH
Early next day, Florence and Jeanne rowed across the bay to a small dockmarked, "Monument Rock Trail."
After tying up their boat they took up the trail that, now windingbeneath sweet smelling cedar and balsam, and now passing over a swampspanned by shaky logs, at last brought them to the foot of a ridge. Herethey started climbing toward the crest.
Some half-way up they made an abrupt turn, to find themselves facing amass of towering rock that, like the tall chimney of some burnedbuilding, rose to the very tree tops.
"Monument Rock," Jeanne whispered. Something of that spell cast over herby the "Dean of the Island" recurred now. "It's like a headless man, thatrock," she said in awed voice. "A man with hands folded across hisknees."
"That's just like the legend!" Florence exclaimed.
"Oh, do you know it?" Jeanne was pleased.
"It goes like this," Florence began. "In the early days Indians seldomcame to live here. It was, they said, the home of all island gods. If mencame here to live they would meet with disaster."
"Did any of them ever try it?" Jeanne asked.
"Yes," Florence smiled and nodded. "This one! 'Sitting Cloud' they calledhim. He's still sitting, you see."
"Sitting Cloud," Jeanne said in a small voice.
"Yes. You see, like lots of other people, he didn't believe in gods, sohe came here to live. The hunting was good. There were caribou, lynx andbeaver in those days. He traded lumps of copper to others of his tribeand got on very well indeed."
"And then?" Jeanne breathed.
"Then he began to believe in the gods. Sometimes, in a night of fog, hethought he saw them creeping upon him. So he took to hiding in a smallcave that opened out right at this place."
"And then?" Jeanne repeated.
"Then he hunted very little. He did not crack away rock to get copper.Indians who came to visit the island found him shuddering in his cave.You see, Jeanne," Florence said soberly, "that's what comes of believingin island gods, fairies, gnomes, and all such."
"Or, in not believing." Jeanne was quite serious. "Perhaps the island was_not_ meant to be lived upon," she went on. "Perhaps it will all beburned over. Then no one can live here."
"Oh, but no!" She sprang to her feet. "It is so beautiful! It is alwaysso cool! The air is so delightful! It must not be destroyed! It trulymust not be!
"But this Indian, Sitting Cloud?" Her voice changed. "What happened?"
Florence looked toward the great rock towering to the sky. "Just what yousee. Sitting Cloud was a giant. Perhaps he had grown since coming to theisland. Anyway, so the story goes, one spring his friends came to lookfor him and all they found was this rock. Even his cave was gone. Thegods had turned him to stone."
"The gods had turned him to stone." Jeanne whispered.
"Perhaps," said Florence.
"I am sure it was so!" Jeanne declared. "But come!" She seized Florenceby the hand. "Let us go to the very top."
Once again they took the upward trail. They came at last to the crest ofthe ridge. There, standing on a platform of rock known as "LookoutLouise," they stood in silence, while their eyes took in the gloriousview.
It was a clear day. At their feet lay Duncan's Bay. On the little campingspot at its entrance, more than once in the days that had gone they hadpitched their tent.
"Happy days," Jeanne whispered.
If Florence heard, she made no reply. She was looking away toward theCanadian shores where Sleeping Giant, Pie Island, and Thunder Bay seemedto call to her.
At that Jeanne broke in with three magic words: "The Phantom Fisherman."
"Oh, no!" Florence exclaimed. "You only see him in a fog." The fact is,the big girl scarcely believed in this phantom at all.
"See for yourself!" Seizing her arm, Jeanne pointed away over theshimmering water to a spot well beyond the last jagged end of the island.
"There!" she exclaimed, "there he is!"
"Sure enough. Let's have a look." Florence dragged a pair of heavy fieldglasses to her eyes.
"Seems real enough," she murmured. "White boat with a red gunwale, sortof short and chubby. I'd know that boat anywhere. What a powerful motorhe must have! How he does dart about!"
"If we were there he would vanish," Jeanne insisted.
"Jeanne, you're a dreamer." Florence let the glasses drop to her side."But then, what is one to expect from a gypsy, you--"
At that instant a cry escaped her lips. "Look! Only look, Jeanne!" Shehad turned half-about. "Smoke everywhere! The whole island is on fire!"
This seemed indeed true. To judge distances was difficult but it lookedas though the nearest fire must not be more than ten miles away. Beyondthat the whole island was hidden by smoke.
Even as Jeanne looked, Florence exclaimed again, "Look!"
Once again, dragging the heavy fieldglasses to her eyes, she studied amass of rocks that at some distance rose above the treetops.
"A man," she murmured, "A man in a bright red sweater. Must be five milesaway, where no one lives."
The man had been leaping from rock to rock. Now he paused to turn andlook away. Did Florence see a fresh column of smoke rise from theevergreen forest? She thought so. She could not be sure.
"He's young," she thought. "Perhaps only a boy. Not even a middle-agedperson could go over the rocks like that. Can he be a firebug? Are thesefires being set by him?"
To these questions there could be no answer for the present. One thingwas certain. If she saw him again close by and he wore that sweater, shewould know him, for surely there was but one such flash of red on theisland.
Two hours later the girls were having lunch with Edith Mateland, the wifeof one of the fishermen. She was a small person, and Florence thoughtrather frail for such a life.
"Edith," Florence said, "do people ever set forest fires?"
"Oh, yes. Many times!" was the startling reply.
"But why?"
"Perhaps they do not like the people who own the timber."
"Revenge?"
"Yes. And perhaps they just want work."
"Work?" Florence stared.
"Oh, yes," Edith explained. "These days there are many who have no work.If there is a very terrible fire men will be hired to fight it. Thousandsof men."
"Oh! but these wouldn't do that!"
"It has been done many times." There was a ring of truth in Edith'svoice. She was of the North. She knew.
Florence thought of the hundreds of men being brought to the island tofight this fire. One thing was certain. If there was a firebug on thisisland he must be caught. She would ask questions of people here andthere about the mysterious youth in the crimson sweater. She would searchfar and wide for him. If he seemed to avoid her she would hunt him down.He should not escape. So, fired by a new resolution, she rowed back tothe _Wanderer_.