This was done, Prescott and the paddlers keeping a sharp lookout. No body of a drowned man was seen, however, either on the surface or under the water.
"I don't believe anyone was drowned," re marked Dick at last. "There is no wind today, and hardly any such thing as current on this placid water. Whoever the man was, he got ashore."
"That's my belief," agreed Reade.
"Where's that brush arrangement?" asked Dan suddenly. "That frame all trimmed with green boughs."
Nor was this to be seen, either, though an object of that size would have been visible at any point on the water within half a mile.
"The man got ashore, all right, and he took care of the bush-trimmed frame as well," was Prescott's conclusion. "Whoever the man was, whatever happened, I don't believe that anything tragic happened in the water. For that matter, fellows, isn't it possible that, in the gathering gloom, and with the sky somewhat overcast, you were deceived about the ghastly, haunted look in that face? Isn't it likely that the look you thought you saw in the man's face was merely an effect of the unusual light of late yesterday afternoon?"
Tom shook his head emphatically.
"Why don't you ask us," demanded Dan ironically, "if it weren't just imagination on our part that we saw the face at all?"
"I don't doubt your having seen the face," Dick replied. "That wasn't anything that the light supplied."
"Then where is the man?" quizzed Dalzell.