“Killed! No. He’s all right,” he called back to her. “I can see him move. Don’t be frightened. He’s not in the water. It was only about a thirty-foot fall. You stay there, and I’ll tell you what to do,” he added.
A few moments later, the boy called up: “He’s all right, but his leg is broken. You go to my father’s camp—it’s near. People are sure to be there, and maybe father too. You bring them along.”
In an instant the girl was gone. The boy, left behind, busied himself in relieving the deformed broken-legged habitant. He brought some water in his straw hat to refresh him. He removed the rocks and dirt, and dragged the little man out.
“It was a close call—bien sur,” said Denzil, breathing hard. “I always said that place wasn’t safe, but I went on it myself. That’s the way in life. We do what we forbid ourselves to do; we suffer the shames we damn in others—but yes.”
There was a pause, then he added: “That’s what you’ll do in your life, M’sieu’ Carnac. That’s what you’ll do.”
“Always?”
“Well, you never can tell—but no.”
“But you always can tell,” remarked the boy. “The thing is, do what you feel you’ve got to do, and never mind what happens.”
“I wish I could walk,” remarked the little man, “but this leg of mine is broke—ah, bah, it is!”
“Yes, you mustn’t try to walk. Be still,” answered the boy. “They’ll be here soon.” Slowly and carefully he took off the boot and sock from the broken leg, and, with his penknife, opened the seam of the corduroy trouser. “I believe I could set that leg myself,” he added.