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  CHAPTER V NIGHT SIGNALS

  Three days later the _Wanderer_ was at Houghton on the mainland. Eventshad moved rapidly. A strong gale had driven the fire on the now flamingisland beyond the control of the small band of camp workers who hadvolunteered anew to fight it. Rapidly formed plans for a battle on alarge scale had already been laid. The _Iroquois_ had been taken off therun to the island. It was to carry fire fighters and their supplies tohastily constructed camps on Isle Royale shores.

  "That gives us a break," Florence, a born optimist, exclaimed.

  "It would," Dave said, "if anyone wanted to go to the island, but thisfire will scare them away. Besides--" he hesitated.

  "Besides what?" Florence demanded.

  "Nothing much," Dave looked away, "only, do you remember that big man whowas angry because we went into Siskowit?"

  "Yes, what--"

  "I met him on the street today. He said, 'I hear you've only a sixty-daytemporary permit.' I said, 'They'll renew it,' and he said, 'Oh, yeah?That's what you think!'"

  "And now you don't think you'll get it?" Florence asked soberly.

  "I don't know what to think," Dave replied. "One thing's sure, if theydon't renew it, we're sunk."

  The moment they arrived at Houghton, Florence wrote her grandfather.

  "We've been betrayed. We've been led into an unwise investment, and it was your money. Even in good times there are few passengers to the island. Now there is a fire, and no one will come. I can't tell you how sorry I am. There isn't a chance that we shall more than break even. Of course, with this threat of fire there is opportunity for service. And how it will be appreciated!"

  Continuing, she wrote of the kindly fisher-folk whose cabins nestledamong the trees, and of the old time cottagers who made the island theirsummer home.

  "If we stand by to help them off the island in case disaster threatens, it will be, I think, a great service. But will it pay? What shall we do? It's your boat. You must decide."

  The answer came by return mail. "Stand by to serve," her grandfatherwrote.

  "An opportunity to serve where service is appreciated is a gift of God.

  "Just now something is happening to you and, if I read your letter correctly, you are taking it just as it should be taken. And that is all that matters. Might I add that life need never be a bitter struggle. It may always be a glorious adventure!"

  There his letter ended.

  Florence read it, her heart swelling, "Good old granddaddy," shemurmured. "I only hope we may yet find a way out." She was thinking nowof money.

  The very next day, just as darkness was falling, the _Wanderer_ and hergallant crew found themselves once more in a precarious situation on IsleRoyale. They were at Chippewa Harbor. Here a brave little fishing familyhad taken its stand against all sorts of adversity and had won. Theirneat home, their stout little dock, and three tiny tourist cabins showedall this. Of all the people on the island, the Carlsons of ChippewaHarbor had interested Florence most. Perhaps this was because, unlikeother fisher-folk of the island, they did not leave when winter's icethreatened to close their harbor. Instead, they ordered many sacks offlour, sugar and potatoes. To these were added hams and slabs of bacon,cases of milk, fruit and vegetables and all else that might be needed.

  Then, with bleak winter winds blowing, they settled down to six months ofisolation. During all that time, boats neither came nor went. They werethere alone. Isle Royale was their home.

  Working like beavers, they cut logs for tourist cabins, mended their netsand made all needed preparations for a successful season.

  Besides the fisherman and his wife there were Ve and Vi, as they calledthemselves, girls of Florence's own age, and some younger brothers--ahappy family.

  Chippewa Harbor, too, was a spot that had made many a heart beat faster.A break in the Island's rocky wall, it stretched back through a narrowchannel to a broader bay, where giant spruce trees towered above massivepalisades. Here, in the still hour of evening, one might rest on his oarsto watch the sun go down over the dark green treetops and dream,transported to another world.

  Ah, yes, Florence was ready to fight for Chippewa Harbor. And at thismoment it was in great need of a champion. For by great misfortune, thiswould be the first tiny settlement to be reached by the fire if it came,and at that moment it was coming fast. They could see it crawling,leaping, rushing along the ridges. They could hear it snapping androaring not two miles away. So sudden had been its advance that no firefighters had yet arrived. Only the _Wanderer_, with her one small pump,was standing by.

  The entrance to Chippewa Harbor is narrow and rocky. A storm was roaringin from the lake. In an hour it might be impossible for the _Wanderer_ toleave the harbor. Perhaps, too, in that hour, the roaring fire would beupon the fishing village.

  "I think," said the fisherman, scanning first the fire, then the sky,"that you better put out into open water."

  "But your home, your cabins, everything you have!" Dave protested. "Ourpump may save them!"

  The fisherman shrugged his shoulders, but did not speak. About him wasgathered his family--his wife, Ve and Vi, and three small sons. They,too, were strangely silent.

  "No," said Dave. "We stay!"

  Darkness fell. Only the leaping flames lighted the dark waters of theharbor. It was a dramatic moment. Even Jeanne, always so full of life andchatter, was silent. Indeed, during the days that had passed, Jeanne hadseemed a little strange. She took small part in their planning for thefuture. It was almost as if she were an honored guest aboard the_Wanderer_. The time was to come, however, when she and Plumdum would dotheir bit. But for the moment, even the curly-haired dog, awed by theroaring lake waters close by and the glare of the fire some distanceaway, was silent.

  "Look!" Florence exclaimed in sudden consternation, as she pointed towardthe crest of Greenstone Ridge that, rising a full three hundred feet,extends from one end of Isle Royale to the other. "Look up there! A freshfire is starting!"

  "Another fire," the fisherman murmured hoarsely, "how do they start?"

  At once Florence recalled those mysterious words spoken in thedark--"'Dese fires dey iss bein' set.'" Were they?

  "It seems to blink," said Dave. "Strange sort of fire, I'd say.That--why, that's not a fire!" he exclaimed excitedly. "At least not aforest fire. It's a campfire. Looks like a signal fire as well. Watch!It's gone. Now it's there again. Watch! And now--say! They're signalingin Morse code. Wait! Let me see if I can get their message!"

  And so with the forest fire not two miles away creeping toward them androaring at them, the little group, unable for the moment to do anythingto save themselves or property, stood silent, watching, completelyforgetting their own troubles because of their interest in others whomight be in distress.

  As for Florence, she was thinking of that message which had become deeplyimpressed upon her mind. The message, as you may recall, had beenconcerned with a red-and-black boat, a gray-haired man, and a girl ofsixteen.

  This message once more passed through the girl's mind, "Important! To alllodgekeepers and captains of ships touching at Isle Royale. Be on thelookout for a red-and-black boat. Tall, gray-haired man, girl of sixteenon board. Important! Be on the lookout!"

  "Is this their campfire up on that rocky ridge?" she asked herself.

  "Yes." It was Dave who spoke. "They must be in trouble. Their message isjust one word, 'Help!'"

  "But what could have happened?" demanded Vi Carlson, one of the daughtersof the fisherman. "All they've got to do is come down the ridge."

  "Yes, but if one of them were sick or injured," Florence's brow wrinkled."And see!" she cried in fresh alarm. "There _is_ a tongue of flamefarther down the ridge. There is a second fire after all. If no one goesto help them they may be trapped."

  "We might go, you and I," Dave suggested. "I'll get a square of canvas.Might need it to make a stretcher. Then we'll be off." He hurried away.

  "There's
a trail to Lake Ritchie and a moose path up the ridge," VeCarlson, the other daughter of the fisherman volunteered. "I--I'll showyou the way. You'd never find the way by yourselves. Come on," Ve wasoff.

  For a time, guided by the gleam of a flashlight, they marched along insilence. Once a moose sprang from the trail to go crashing through thebrush. "A thousand moose on the island," Florence thought. "They may allbe destroyed by the fire."

  "Isle Royale has always been my home," Vi broke the silence at last.

  "Always, winter and summer?" Florence asked.

  "Two winters we went to the mainland. Since then, fish have been cheap.Times have been hard. We couldn't afford to go. They sent us a teacher,so we stayed here. We've graduated from high school," Vi laughed low, "mysister and I, in a log cabin school.

  "We go up here," she said at last. "The moose trail is terrible, butwe--we'll make it."

  And they did. With the beacon campfire as their guide, they climbed untilat last, with a cry of victory, they burst in upon the astonished andoverjoyed campers.

  "A red-and-black boat, a gray-haired man and a sixteen-year-old girl,"Florence quoted, scarcely realizing what she was saying.

  "You've got our number," laughed a tall, thin, gray-haired man. "But howdid you know all this?"

  "They've been broadcasting about you for days," said Florence.

  "See, Grandfather!" the strange girl exclaimed. "I told you they'd findus."

  "Yes, and for once I'm glad to be found." The man laughed low. "This isgrowing a bit thick--a fire to the right of us, one to the left of us,and I not able to walk a step. Badly sprained ankle," he explained.

  "You see," he went on, "Beth and I decided to make a secret visit to thisbeautiful island."

  "Grandfather's always so busy," the girl put in. "So we just ran away."

  "Today was the first time we knew of the fire," said the gray-haired man."Been on the other side of the island. When we saw it we got all excited,and I took the wrong kind of step. So here we are. Looks dangerous to me.Think we'd better get going?"

  "No-o," Dave looked away to the southwest. "It's going to storm. Gettingdown's going to be slow. The fire won't get here for three hours atbest."

  "So we'd better weather the storm in the little tent I carried on my backfor just this purpose." The old man smiled.

  "That's it," Dave agreed.

  "You may have been wondering," the gray-haired man said, after the tenthad been set up and they were comfortably seated inside, "why Beth didn'tgo for help, when she found I could not walk properly. Truth is, sherefused to go." He chuckled.

  "Why should I?" the girl demanded, "The fire was coming our way. Therewas no one on our side of the island. We had been alone there. I did seea light down on your side but knew nothing about you people. Besides,these trails are terrible."

  "Mostly no trails," Florence agreed.

  "I might have been lost in some swamp. The fire might have come while Iwas gone," the girl shuddered. "So, I stayed. At long last, I might havebeen able to help him down."

  "Brave girl," the old man placed a hand on her shoulder.

  The changing scenes that passed before the eyes of the small group onGreenstone Ridge during the next hour would never be forgotten. Belowthem, seeming so near that they could reach out and touch them, were thelights of the _Wanderer_ and the fisherman's cabin shining through thedarkness. At a greater distance, brilliant and menacing against theblackness of evergreen forests and water, was the fire. Creeping slowly,flaring up here, dying down there, but ever moving forward, it threatenedin time to destroy Chippewa Harbor's little world. Back of all this,rolling in across the waters, was a storm. Now faint flashes of lightwere seen. Low rumbles were heard.

  "If only it would rain hard!" Florence wished.

  But what was this? Across the waters, slowly moving lights approachedChippewa.

  "Hurray!" Dave shouted, as he read their meaning. "It's a ship. It mustbe Captain Frey and his boys! Reinforcements!" Fresh hope shone in hiseyes.

  Scarcely had the lights of the newly-arrived ship blended with those ofthe _Wanderer_ than there came a vivid flash, a roar of thunder, andlarge, cold raindrops began to fall.

  "It's the end," breathed Florence, "the end of our battle with the fire."

  "No," said the gray-haired man, wiser in these things than the girl knew,"it is not the end, only a truce. The battle will be renewed."

  How right he was the girl was soon to know. The rain did not last long.It made little impression on the blazing spruce trees. The wind changed,however, driving the fire back, and for the time being, Chippewa Harborwas safe.

  Two hours later, after a hard but successful struggle to bring thecrippled man back to civilization, Florence climbed wearily into her bunkfor a few snatches of sleep.