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CHAPTER IV PLUMDUM
"But Jeanne!" Florence exclaimed a half-hour later. "You can't come withus! You truly can't!"
"Oh! Can I not?" Jeanne stood up slim and straight as a silver moonbeam.
"Of course not!" Florence tried to be firm. "We are going into a battle.The island is on fire. It will be a battle of storm, flame and smoke. Butwe must save our beautiful island."
"And is it not my island?" Jeanne demanded. "Did I not live in a wreckedship off its very shores? And were you not my very good companion?"
"Yes," Florence agreed, "but now you belong to France."
"France," the little French girl's voice dropped, "In my so beautifulFrance everyone is poor again. No rich American will rent my gloomycastle. So--" she breathed, "So here I am!"
"You have rich friends," Florence suggested, nodding toward the yacht.
"Oh these!" Jeanne tossed her fair head. "Yes, these are friends. Theyare very kind indeed. They like me to dance so they bring me with them.
"Good people they are, too," she added, more quietly. "Some are veryfamous. One writes books, one paints pictures of great rocks, one goes tocold, cold, countries to explore and one he is very rich.
"But you!" she exclaimed, "You are my friend of many, many days. It is inthe lines of our hands, it is written in the stars, that we shall betogether. Always and always!" Her voice rose.
"All--all right," Florence surrendered. "Have you any clothes?"
"But yes!" the little French girl exclaimed, "I am prepared. In my lockerare slacks of midnight blue. And my blouses, they are orange. Like aflame of fire are these."
"Like a flame," Florence laughed. "All too soon they will be like smoke.Look!" Springing to her feet, she pointed down the bay, "See! There isyour flame!"
At that moment the red threat against the sky flared anew. Jeanneshuddered. As for Florence, she was thinking of the boys back therefighting the flames in the night, thinking, too, of the gay party on therich man's yacht, of young men in white flannels and girls in eveninggowns. Then, down deep in her heart, a great wonder possessed her.
Of a sudden her thoughts were brought back to her immediate surroundings.Bobbing up and down in the low bushes beneath the rock some creature cameracing toward them.
"Wha-what on earth is that?" Florence exclaimed.
"Oh! that's Plumdum," Jeanne cried. Sliding off the rocks, she gatheredsome wriggling, woolly creature in her arms.
"We don't let him out when I dance. He wants to dance and doesn't knowhow."
"But Plumdum?" Florence exclaimed. "What is he?"
"Just my dog," said Jeanne, holding him up to view. "My very good friendPlumdum."
"Funny name," said Florence. "How do you spell it?"
"Oh, that," Jeanne giggled, "I didn't give him the name. It was a redcapin a railroad station who gave it to him, though I guess he didn't meanto. He's the one who told me how to spell it too. But I guess he didn'treally know how, not really--"
"Jeanne," Florence exploded, "What you're saying doesn't make sense!"
"I'm sorry," Jeanne apologized, "I'll tell you how it was. I had fallenin love with this dog; saw him in a pet store window. He--he sort ofwinked at me, so I just went in and bought him."
"Of course," Florence agreed.
"And then," Jeanne heaved a sigh, "he didn't have any name. Well I wentinto the railway station and the redcap took the beast and tried to steerhim through the crowd. He kept dodging between people and under theirfeet. At last the redcap got disgusted and said, 'Miss, that thar dorg isplumdum!'
"'Is he?' I asked. I was all excited. I thought that was his real name.Guess _I_ was dumb. But I said, 'How do you spell it?' He said, 'WhatMiss?' I said, 'Plumdum.' He said, 'Miss, I ain't never been no spellin'champeen, but near as I can figger it's P-l-u-m-d-u-m.'"
"He was trying to tell you your dog was plumb dumb," Florence laughed.
"Yes, to be sure," Jeanne answered. "All the same, that's his name!"
"And does it fit?" asked Florence.
"Not always," Jeanne replied slowly. "Sometimes he's almost human." Thislast Florence was to learn in the days that were to come. In the drama ofone crowded hour Plumdum was to play an important role.
But now Florence sprang to her feet, "Come on!" she exclaimed. "If you'regoing with us you'll have to get your things together, dark blue slacks,orange blouses--everything. We're going to Tobin's Harbor."
"Tonight?" Jeanne demanded.
"In an hour."
"_Bon! Mon cher. Tout de suite!_" Jeanne was off the rocks and away.
Following slowly, Florence at last reached the docks. There among theshadows she came upon a young man, little more than a boy. He wasstanding there looking away at the midnight fire.
She had time to think, "Interesting profile," then he turned around andsaw her.
"Hello, sister," he said in a friendly voice. "Where did you come from?What do you do here?"
"We take people from here to there and back again," she laughed quietly."And," she added, "sometimes we fight fires. Today we had a terrificbattle."
"Fire? Where?" The young man seemed surprised.
"Look." She led him to the opposite corner of the dock, "See that redspot?"
"Fire, all right," the other agreed. "Will they get it out?"
"Who knows?" There was a sombre note in the girl's voice. "Just think!All this beauty, and that fire!"
"I am thinking," said the young man soberly. "Tell me about it."
Florence did tell him, told of the day's battle, told it with all thedrama and feeling of her emotional nature.
"Say-e-e!" the young man exclaimed. "That will be a grand spot on myprogram! Will you come to New York?"
"New--New York!" she stammered, "On your program!"
"Sure," he laughed, "I'm Tim O'Hara. I plan and prepare radio programs.Just now I'm working on one to be called 'Adventurers' Club of the Air.'Many people who have had a real adventure will get a trip to New York,all expenses paid, and a grand chance to tell the story of theiradventures to the nation, coast to coast, seventy-nine stations. You'vehad a real adventure, why not come?"
"Oh!" Florence gasped. Then, "No--no--I couldn't. Not now. Perhaps notfor months. There's going to be a battle, a terrific battle. I'm sure ofit, and we--we must do our part."
"Say! That's the spirit!" Tim voiced his approval in no uncertain tones."But you'll come, in the end--I know you will. New York. Ever dream ofthat great city?"
"Yes, yes, often."
"And the radio? Coast to coast?"
"Yes, that too."
"Then you'll come and you'll have much more to tell."
"Will I?" The girl wondered and shuddered.
"Here's my card." He thrust a pasteboard square into her hand. "Guard itwith care."
"Next to my heart!" she laughed as she thrust it deep into her blousepocket.
Then she caught Jeanne's call, "Florence, where are you?"
"I'm off," she breathed. "We sail at once--'Ships that pass in thenight.'"
"Sometimes they meet again!" His voice was low. "Here's hoping!"
At Tobin's Harbor Florence experienced a new thrill. Though the hour wasnear midnight, the small dock was crowded. "What of the fire? What aboutthe fire?" they demanded anxiously.
Close beside her, as she stood on the dock telling of the fire, was aslender woman--a fisherman's wife--listening intently. In her arms sheheld a child. A second child tugged at her skirts. Her all, Florence knewwell, was on Isle Royale. Across the narrow bay was her spotless cabinand before the cabin a neat fish house and many nets on reels. She andher husband had toiled hard to build their happy home, and now, if thefire came, all would be lost.
Standing on the other side of her, leaning on a cane, was a man well pasteighty. Every summer for forty years he had made a pilgrimage to IsleRoyale. His cabin stood overlooking the rocks on the Point.
"There are scores like him," the girl thought. "
Some young, some old. Ifthe fire reaches their cabins, their joyous summers will be at an end."Her gaze moved slowly across the placid waters of the long, narrow bay.Primeval forest, dark spruce and fir, beautiful white birch ghosts in themoonlight lined the shores. Suddenly something catching her eye causedher to start. Beyond the dark fringe of evergreen that lined the distanthorizon was a long, thin line of red. From time to time, like a finger offate, a pencil of this red glow shot skyward, then faded into the night.
"Dave, look!" she sought his attention. "The fire!"
"Beauty and a threat!" he murmured with feeling. "We must do what we canfor these people and their island."