Rod did not finish. Mukoki lifted his shoulders to a level with his chin, and Wabi whistled as he looked straight at him.

“Not a hard guess, eh?”

“You mean—”

“That it's a man! Only the arms and legs of a man going up and down that stub hundreds and thousands of times could have worn it so smooth! Now, can you guess who that man is?”

In a flash the answer shot into Rod's brain. He understood now why this old stub had drawn his companions away from their search for gold, and he felt the flush of excitement go out of his own cheeks, and an involuntary thrill pass up his back.

“The mad hunter!”

Wabi nodded. Mukoki grunted and rubbed his hands.

“Gold in bullet come from here!” said the old pathfinder. “Bad dog man ver' swift on trail. We hurry get canoe—cut down tree!”

“That's more than you've said in the last half-hour, and it's a good idea!” exclaimed Wabi. “Let's get our stuff down here and chop this stub into firewood! When he comes back and finds his ladder gone he'll give a screech or two, I'll wager, and then it will be our chance to do something with him. Here goes!”

He started to climb the stub, and a minute or two later stood safely on the rock above.

“Slippery as a greased pole!” he called down. “Bet you can't make it, Rod!”

But Rod did, after a tremendous effort that left him breathless and gasping by the time Wabi stretched out a helping hand to him. Mukoki came up more easily. Taking only their revolvers with them the three hurried to the birch bark, and in a single load brought their possessions to the rock. By means of ropes the packs and other contents of the canoe, and finally the canoe itself, were lowered into the chasm, and while the others looked on Mukoki seized the ax and chopped down the stub.

“There!” he grunted, as a last blow sent the tree crashing among the rocks. “Too high for heem jump!”

“But a mighty good place for him to shoot from,” said Wabi, looking up. “We'd better camp out of range.”

“Not until we know what we've struck,” cried Rod, unstrapping a pan from one of the packs. “Boys, the first thing to do is to wash out a little of that river-bed!”

He started for the creek, with Wabi close behind him bearing a second pan. Mukoki looked after them and chuckled softly to himself as he began making preparations for dinner. Choosing a point where the current had swept up a small bar of pebbles and sand Wabi and Rod both set to work. The white youth had never before panned gold, but he had been told how it was done, and there now shot through him that strange, thrilling excitement which enthralls the treasure hunter when he believes that at last he has struck pay dirt. Scooping up a quantity of the gravel and sand he filled his pan with water, then moved it, quickly back and forth, every few moments splashing some of the “wash' or muddy water, over the side. Thus, filling and refilling his pan with fresh water, he excitedly went through the process of “washing' everything but solid substance out of it.

With each fresh dip into the stream the water in the pan became clearer, and within fifteen minutes the three or four double handfuls of sand and gravel with which he began work dwindled down to one. Scarcely breathing in his eagerness he watched for the yellow gleam of gold. Once a glitter among the pebbles drew a low cry from him, but when with the point of his knife he found it to be only mica he was glad that Wabi had not heard him. The young Indian was squatting upon the sand, with his pan turned toward a gleam of the sun that shot faintly down into the chasm. Without raising his head he called to Rod.

“Found anything?”

“No. Have you?”

“No—yes—but I don't think it's gold”

“What does it look like?”

“It gleams yellow but is as hard as steel.”

“Mica!” said Rod.

Neither of the boys looked up during the conversation. With the point of his hunting-knife Rod still searched in the bottom of his pan, turning over the pebbles and raking the gravelly sand with a painstaking care that would have made a veteran gold seeker laugh. Some minutes had passed when Wabi spoke again.

“I say, Rod, that's a funny-looking thing I found! If it wasn't so hard I'd swear it was gold? Want to see it?”

“It's mica,” repeated Rod, as another gleam, of “fool's gold” in his own pan caught his eyes. “The stream is full of it!”

“Never saw mica in chunks before,” mumbled Wabi, bending low over his pan.

“Chunks!” cried Rod, straightening as if some one had run a pin into his back. “How big is it?”

“Big as a pea—a big pea!”

The words were no sooner out of the young Indian's mouth than Roderick was upon his feet and running to his companion.

“Mica doesn't come in chunks! Where—”

He bent over Wabi's pan. In the very middle of it lay a suspiciously yellow pebble, worn round and smooth by the water, and when Rod took it in his fingers he gave a low whistle of mock astonishment as he gazed down into Wabigoon's face.

“Wabi, I'm ashamed of you!” he said, trying hard to choke back the quiver in his voice. “Mica doesn't come in round chunks like this. Mica isn't heavy. And this isboth !”

From the cedars beyond the old cabin came Mukoki's whooping signal that dinner was ready.

CHAPTER XV. THE TREASURE IN THE POOL

For a few moments after Rod's words and Mukoki's signal from the cedars Wabigoon sat as if stunned.

“It isn't —gold,” he said, his voice filled with questioning doubt.

“That's just what it is!” declared Rod, his words now rising in the excitement which he was vainly striving to suppress. “It's hard, but see how your knife point has scratched it! It weighs a quarter of an ounce! Are there any more nuggets in there?”

He fell upon his knees beside Wabi, and their two heads were close together, their four eyes eagerly searching the contents of the pan, when Mukoki came up behind them. Rod passed the golden nugget to the old Indian, and rose to his feet.

“That settles it, boys. We've hit the right spot. Let's give three cheers for John Ball and the old map, and go to dinner!”

“I agree to dinner, but cut out the cheers.” said Wabi, “or else let's give them under our breath. Notice how hollow our voices sound in this chasm! I believe we could hear a shout half a dozen miles away!”

For their camp Mukoki had chosen a site in the edge of the cedars, and had spread dinner on a big flat rock about which the three now gathered. For inspiration, as Wabi said, the young Indian placed the yellow nugget in the center of the improvised table, and if the enthusiasm with which they hurried through their meal counted for anything there was great merit in the golden centerpiece. Mukoki joined the young gold seekers when they again returned to the chasm stream, and the quest of the yellow treasure was vigorously renewed in trembling and feverish expectancy.

Only those who have lived in this quest and who have pursued that elusiveignis fatuus of all nations—the lure of gold—can realize the sensations which stir the blood and heat the brain of the treasure seeker as he dips his pan into the sands of the stream where he believes nature has hidden her wealth. As Roderick Drew, a child of that civilization where the dollar is law as well as might, returned to the exciting work which promised him a fortune he seemed to be in a half dream. About him, everywhere, was gold! For no moment did he doubt it; not for an instant did he fear that there might be no more gold in the sand and gravel from which Wabigoon's nugget had come. Treasure was in the very sandbar under his feet! It was out there among the rocks, where the water beat itself angrily into sputtering froth; it was under the fall, and down in the chasm, everywhere, everywhere about him. In one month John Ball and his companions had gathered twenty-seven pounds of it, a fortune of nearly seven thousand dollars! And they had gathered it here! Eagerly he scooped up a fresh pan of the precious earth. He heard the swish-swish of the water in Wabigoon's and Mukoki's pans. But beyond this there were no sounds made by them.

In these first minutes of treasure seeking no words were spoken. Who would give the first shout of discovery? Five minutes, ten, fifteen of them passed, and Rod found no gold. As he emptied his pan he saw Wabi scooping up fresh dirt. He, too, had failed. Mukoki had waded out waist deep among the rocks. A second and a third pan, and a little chill of disappointment cooled Rod's blood. Perhaps he had chosen an unlucky spot, where the gold had not settled! He moved his position, and noticed that Wabigoon had done the same. A fourth and a fifth pan and the result was the same. Mukoki had waded across the stream, which was shallow below the fall, and was working on the opposite side. A sixth pan, and Rod approached the young Indian. The excitement was gone out of their faces. An hour and a half—and no more gold!

“Guess we haven't hit the right place, after all,” said Wabi.

“It must be here,” replied Rod. “Where there is one nugget there must be more. Gold is heavy, and settles. Perhaps it's deeper down in the river bed.”

Mukoki came across to join them. Out among the rocks he had found a fleck of gold no larger than the head of a pin, and this new sign gave them all fresh enthusiasm. Taking off their boots both Rod and Wabi joined the old pathfinder in

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