"There"s Ripley, but where"s Prescott?" shouted several.

"A-a-ah!"

That last cry went up as a sound of relief, when Prescott"s brown-haired pate, hatless, bobbed up close to where he had gone down.

"Good boy, Prescott!"

"Go in and get Ripley."

"Save yourself, anyway! Don"t be over-foolish!"

A dozen more cries went up from cove and sh.o.r.e.

Yet it is doubtful if Prescott heard any of them.

In the first instant that his eyes came above the level of the water, d.i.c.k took in the details of Ripley"s whereabouts.

d.i.c.k had to calculate at lightning speed.

"O Prescott," gasped Fred, when he saw his would-be rescuer, "can"t you break the ice between us? I can"t keep up much longer."

"Get hold of the edge of the ice, Ripley," called d.i.c.k. "Just rest lightly on it. Don"t try to make it bear your weight---it won"t! It"ll help hold you up, though, if you keep cool."

"Cool?" groaned Fred. "I"m freezing. In pity"s name get to me quickly."

Fred was so wholly self-centered that it didn"t occur to him that the freshman must be just as chilled as he himself was.

d.i.c.k"s legs ached with the cold chill of the icy water. He was free of the weight of skates, however, and he trod water during the few seconds that he needed for making up his mind what it was best to do.

Much depended upon the help that those on sh.o.r.e gave, but d.i.c.k had left his orders with Dave Darrin, and he trusted the sh.o.r.e end to his capable lieutenant.

Fred, though hardly more than able to keep himself afloat, managed to reach the nearest edge of ice.

He clutched at it eagerly, then, disregarding excellent advice, he tried to climb out upon it.

There was another crash. With another yell, Ripley sank again, to the horror of those on sh.o.r.e.

But Prescott did not see this. The freshman, after trying to calculate the exact distance across the intervening ice, dived below the gla.s.sy surface. He was swimming, now, under the ice.

As he swam the freshman kept his eyes open, swimming close to the ice, yet not touching it.

So he came up, in the open. But where was Fred?

"Ripley just sank!" came the hoa.r.s.e chorus from sh.o.r.e and cove.

This was serious enough. He who sinks for the second time in icy waters, especially when hampered by skates, may very likely not come up again.

"It must have been about here that he went down," calculated Prescott, deliberately, as he swam through the open water. "Now, then!"

Down went d.i.c.k. To those looking on, it was heroic---sublime?

Yet it looked as though the rescuer must be dooming himself.

"One Prescott is worth a dozen Ripleys" murmured one man who, unable to swim, was obliged to stand looking uselessly on.

There were still many who were shouting confusing advice as to what others ought to do. A few were even running about trying to do something.

Dave Darrin was actually "on the job."

He had pressed d.i.c.k"s other partners into service and as many of the High School boys as possible. They got off their skates in a rush.

"Tom," shouted Dave, "you and Greg get some of the fellows and rush down as many ties as you can from that pile by the railroad tracks. Dalzell, you and Harry get down at the edge of send him your way. Make a raft by laying four ties side by side, and lash the ends. Do it as quick as a flash. I"ll be there by that time."

Tom and Greg quickly had a dozen men running for railroad ties, a pile of which stood less than an eighth of a mile away.

By the time that the man with ropes arrived, and two more behind him, bringing more, there were a dozen railroad ties on the ice by the outer edge of the cove. Harry Hazelton and Dan s.n.a.t.c.hed short lengths of rope and knotted them around either end of the raft.

"Some of you men make another raft, just like that one!" shouted Dave, who, at the time, was busily engaged in making a noose at one end of a long coil of half-inch rope.

"Here, you two men get hold of the other end of this," ordered Dave, running up with the coil of rope.

Then, hardly waiting to make sure that they had the rope, Dave turned to Harry and Dan, calling to them to help him push the raft out beyond the cove. A dozen men and boys tried to help, all at once, but Dave and Harry saw to it that no speed was lost by blundering.

The raft was not difficult to push out over the ice.

"Now, let me have it alone," shouted Dave. "The ice may break at any point beyond."

So Dave tugged and pushed, guiding the small raft before him.

Cra-ack! Dave and the raft went through the ice, but Darrin quickly climbed up astride of the ties.

Out beyond, d.i.c.k was holding up Fred Ripley, whom he had found and brought to the surface. Fred"s eyes were nearly closed.

After his second drop below, the Ripley lad was nearly spent.

Glancing back, Dave saw that another raft was being pushed out by the two men who held the rope that was noosed under his shoulders.

"Now, halt where you are!" Dave Darrin shouted back. "Toss me a long rope that I can throw out to Prescott!"

The rope came swirling. Dave caught it easily enough. Then, still sitting on the raft, his legs, of course, in the water, Darrin recoiled the rope.

"Can you spare a hand to catch, d.i.c.k?" shouted Dave.

"Surely!" came back the steady answer.

The coil flew out across the thin ice. One end splashed in the water. Guiding the all but helpless Fred, d.i.c.k swam to the rope"s end.

Further back the two men who held to the rope connecting with Dave had seated themselves across the second raft. If the ice broke at _that_ point they would have little difficulty in making themselves safe.

"Ripley, stir yourself!" ordered d.i.c.k. "Can you take hold of this rope, and keep hold of it" Can you climb across the thin ice, holding onto the rope and being towed if the ice breaks?"

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