The snowflakes were smaller now, hard and sharp as needles. They pelted the girls from every direction, and the wind seized their breath.
“I see something ahead!” gasped Connie a moment later.
She hoped it might be a car, but instead it proved to be a small bridge which arched over a frozen creek.
“We never passed this before,” said Veve in despair. “Oh, Connie, we’re truly lost!”
“Miss Gordon will be worried about us too!” Connie added. “Oh, dear!”
When the girls reached the bridge, it seemed to them they could not walk another foot.
“Let’s stop under the bridge and rest,” proposed Veve.
“All right,” agreed Connie. “But we won’t dare stand still very long.” She had heard that in severe blizzards persons sometimes froze to death.
Under the bridge, the girls were protected from the wind and snow, but not the intense cold. Connie’s fingers and toes ached, while Veve was certain her nose already was frozen. Huddling together for warmth, they tried to decide what to do.
Now, although the girls were unaware of it, help already was close at hand. Clem Stone, who had been out looking at his traps, came tramping along the frozen creek. He saw the two half-frozen children even before they heard his approach.