<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_282'></SPAN>282</span>CHAPTER XXXVIII</h2>
<p>Tuesday was a day that was not soon
forgotten at the mills. Scarcely waiting
for the smoking timbers to cool, swarms
of workmen attacked the ruins and attempted to
clear their way to the point where Spencer and
McGinnis had last been seen. Fortunately, that
portion of the building had only been touched by
the fire, and it was evident that the floors and roof
had been carried down with the fall of those nearest
to it. For this reason there was the more hope
of finding the bodies unharmed by fire—perhaps,
even, of finding a spark of life in one or both of
them. This last hope, however, was sorrowfully
abandoned when hour after hour passed with no
sign of the missing men.</p>
<p>All night they worked by the aid of numerous
electric lights hastily placed to illuminate the
scene; and when Wednesday morning came, a
new shift of workers took up the task that had
come to be now merely a search for the dead. So
convinced was every one of this that the men
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_283'></SPAN>283</span>
gazed with blanched faces into each other’s eyes
when there came a distinct rapping on a projecting
timber near them. In the dazed silence that
followed a faint cry came from beneath their feet.</p>
<p>With a shout and a ringing cheer the men fell
to work—it was no ghost, but a living human
voice that had called! They labored more cautiously
now, lest their very zeal for rescue should
bring defeat in the shape of falling brick or timber.</p>
<p>Ned Spencer, who had not left the mills all
night, heard the cheer and hurried forward. It
was he who, when the men paused again, called:</p>
<p>“Frank, are you there?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Ned.” The voice was faint, but distinctly
audible.</p>
<p>“And McGinnis?”</p>
<p>There was a moment’s hesitation. The listeners
held their breath—perhaps, after all, they had
been dreaming and there was no voice! Then it
came again.</p>
<p>“Yes. He’s lying beside me, but he’s unconscious—or
dead.” The last word was almost inaudible,
so faint was it; but the tightening of
Ned’s lips showed that he had heard it, none the
less. In a moment he stooped again.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_284'></SPAN>284</span></p>
<p>“Keep up your courage, old fellow! We’ll
have you out of that soon.” Then he stepped
aside and gave the signal for the men to fall to
work again.</p>
<p>Rapidly, eagerly, but oh, so cautiously, they
worked. At the next pause the voice was nearer,
so near that they could drop through a small hole
a rubber tube four feet long, lowering it until
Spencer could put his mouth to it. Through this
tube he was given a stimulant, and a cup of strong
coffee.</p>
<p>They learned then a little more of what had
happened. The two men were on the fourth floor
when the crash came. They had been swept
down and had been caught between the timbers
in such a way that as they lay where they had
been flung, a roof three feet above their heads
supported the crushing weight above. Spencer
could remember nothing after the first crash, until
he regained consciousness long afterward, and
heard the workmen far above him. It was then
that he had tapped his signal on the projecting
timber. He had tapped three times before he had
been heard. At first it was dark, he said, and he
could not see, but he knew that McGinnis was
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near him. McGinnis had spoken once, then had
apparently dropped into unconsciousness. At all
events he had said nothing since. Still, Spencer
did not think he was dead.</p>
<p>Once more the rescuers fell to work, and it was
then that Ned Spencer hurried away to send a
message of hope and comfort to Mrs. Merideth,
who had long since left the great house on the
hill and had come down to the Mill House to be
with Margaret. To Margaret Ned wrote the one
word “Come,” and as he expected, he had not
long to wait.</p>
<p>“You have found him!” cried the girl, hurrying
toward him. “Ned, he isn’t dead!”</p>
<p>Ned smiled and put out a steadying hand.</p>
<p>“We hope not—and we think not. But he is
unconscious, Margaret. Don’t get your hopes
too high. I had to send for you—I thought you
ought to know—what we know.”</p>
<p>“But where is he? Have you seen him?”</p>
<p>Ned shook his head.</p>
<p>“No; but Frank says——”</p>
<p>“<em>Frank!</em> But you said Frank was unconscious!”</p>
<p>“No, no—they aren’t both unconscious—it is
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_286'></SPAN>286</span>
only McGinnis. It is Frank who told us the story.
He—why, Margaret!” But Margaret was gone;
and as Ned watched her flying form disappear
toward the Mill House, he wondered if, after
all, the last hours of horror had turned her
brain. In no other way could he account for her
words, and for this most extraordinary flight just
at the critical moment when she might learn the
best—and the worst—of what had come to her
lover. To Ned it seemed that the girl must be
mad. He could not know that in Margaret’s little
room at the Mill House some minutes later, a girl
went down on her knees and sobbed:</p>
<p>“To think that ’twasn’t Bobby at all that I was
thinking of—’twasn’t Bobby at all! ’Twas never
Bobby that had my first thought. ’Twas always——”
Even to herself Margaret would not
say the name, and only her sobs finished the
sentence.</p>
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