Old Fires and Profitable Ghosts eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about Old Fires and Profitable Ghosts.

Old Fires and Profitable Ghosts eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about Old Fires and Profitable Ghosts.

Within the hut the sick man cried softly to himself.  Faed, the Snipe, and Cooney slept uneasily, and muttered in their dreams.  The Gaffer lay awake, thinking.  After Bill, George Lashman; and after George? . . .  Who next?  And who would be the last—­the unburied one?  The men were weakening fast; their wits and courage coming down at the end with a rush.  Faed and Long Ede were the only two to be depended on for a day.  The Gaffer liked Long Ede, who was a religious man.  Indeed he had a growing suspicion that Long Ede, in spite of some amiable laxities of belief, was numbered among the Elect:  or might be, if interceded for.  The Gaffer began to intercede for him silently; but experience had taught him that such “wrestlings,” to be effective, must be noisy, and he dropped off to sleep with a sense of failure . . .

The Snipe stretched himself, yawned, and awoke.  It was seven in the morning:  time to prepare a cup of tea.  He tossed an armful of logs on the fire, and the noise awoke the Gaffer, who at once inquired for Long Ede.  He had not returned.  “Go you up to the roof.  The lad must be frozen.”  The Snipe climbed the ladder, pushed open the trap, and came back, reporting that Long Ede was nowhere to be seen.  The old man slipped a jumper over his suits of clothing—­already three deep—­reached for a gun, and moved to the door.  “Take a cup of something warm to fortify,” the Snipe advised.  “The kettle won’t be five minutes boiling.”  But the Gaffer pushed up the heavy bolts and dragged the door open.

“What in the! . . .Here, bear a hand, lads!”

Long Ede lay prone before the threshold, his out-stretched hands almost touching it, his moccasins already covered out of sight by the powdery snow which ran and trickled incessantly—­trickled between his long, dishevelled locks, and over the back of his gloves, and ran in a thin stream past the Gaffer’s feet.

They carried him in and laid him on a heap of skins by the fire.  They forced rum between his clenched teeth and beat his hands and feet, and kneaded and rubbed him.  A sigh fluttered on his lips:  something between a sigh and a smile, half seen, half heard.  His eyes opened, and his comrades saw that it was really a smile.

“Wot cheer, mate?” It was the Snipe who asked.

“I—­I seen . . .”  The voice broke off, but he was smiling still.

What had he seen?  Not the sun, surely!  By the Gaffer’s reckoning the sun would not be due for a week or two yet:  how many weeks he could not say precisely, and sometimes he was glad enough that he did not know.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Old Fires and Profitable Ghosts from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.