“Or the water has cut them off,” Richards finished.
“Then——” said Mr. Wade, faintly.
“Reach ’em from the level above,” Richards answered. But he thought of certain contingencies—thought of a good many important things.
There was a crowd of miners now, watching for the cage to appear. The jargon of Finnish comment sounded to Mr. Wade like the buzzing of bees. Then the cage came in sight. Empty and dripping wet.
The next second everything was action, and Richards its mainspring. His orders pelted down like hailstones. Men, tools, paraphernalia, filled the cage. Other men went racing off on surface errands.
Mr. Wade, paralyzed by his complete ignorance of conditions or remedies, seemed crushed under the consciousness of casualty. Richards caught him by the arm and shook him into attention.
“We’ll bring them up, if they are alive,” he shouted to him, as though he were deaf.
Then he stepped into the cage, and down it went again. Mr. Wade leaned back against the wall, motionless, his eyes fixed on the hole where it had disappeared.
But over all the little town the news was spreading like wildfire.
* * * * *