The Romance of Elaine Sequel to "Exploits of Elaine" by Reeve, Arthur B. (Arthur Benjamin), 1880-1936
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A word from our supporters: File extension MST | "I can't stand it any longer," cried Elaine. "I'm going down there to see what has become of them." Aunt Tabby and Joshua tried to stop her, but she broke away from them and went down the ladder. Rusty leaped down after her. Joshua tried to follow, but Aunt Tabby held him back. He would have gone, too, if she had not managed to strike the spring and shut the door, closing up the passageway. Joshua got angry then. "You are making a coward of me," he cried, beating on the panel with the butt of his gun and struggling to open it. He seemed unable to fathom the secret. Elaine was now making her way as rapidly as she could through the tunnel, with Rusty beside her. . . . . . . .It was just as Long Sin had raised his knife that the sound of her footsteps alarmed him. He paused and leaped to his feet. There was no time for either to retreat. He started toward Elaine, and seized her roughly. Back and forth over the rocky floor they struggled. As they fought,--she with frantic strength, he craftily,--he backed her slowly up against the prop that upheld the roof. He raised his keen knife. She recoiled. The prop, none too strong, suddenly gave way under her weight. The whole roof of the chamber fell with a crash, earth and stone overwhelming Elaine and her assailant. . . . . . . .By this time Joshua had left the house and had gone out into the garden to get something to pry open the fireplace door. Of a sudden, to his utter amazement, a few feet from him, it seemed as if the very earth sank in his garden, leaving a yawning chasm. He looked, unable to make it out. Before his very eyes a strange figure, the figure of Long Sin in his oxygen helmet, appeared, struggling up, as if by magic from the very earth, shaking the debris off himself, as a dog would shake off the water after a plunge in a pond. Long Sin was gone in a moment. Then again the earth began to move. A paw appeared, then a sharp black nose, and a moment later, Rusty, too, dug himself out. Joshua had run into the house to get a spade when Rusty, like a shot, bolted for the house, took the window at a leap and all covered with earth landed before Joshua and Aunt Tabby. "See!--he went down there--now he's here!" cried Aunt Tabby, pointing at the fireplace, then looking at the window. Rusty was running back and forth from Joshua to the window. "Follow him!" cried Aunt Tabby. Rusty led the way back again to the garden, to the cave-in. "Elaine!" gasped Aunt Tabby. By this time Joshua was digging furiously. Rusty, too, seemed to understand. He threw back the earth with his paws, helping with every ounce of strength in his little body. |



