Ed and Jack exchanged glances. Would she really be found? Oh, how terrible it all seemed!
"I must speak with Mr. Rand," said Jack. "Ed, you tell the girls."
All that had been gayety and gladness was instantly turned into consternation and confusion. A young lady lured away from the Tip-Top!
And the hotel crowded with guests!
Belle was obliged to call for a doctor. Nor was it any case of imagined nerves. The excitement of the big ball had been enough, the disappearance of Cora was more than her weak heart could stand. Bess tried to be brave, but to lose Cora! Then she recalled the face at the window.
Hazel and Betty waited for nothing, but took up a lantern and started out to search. If she had fallen down some place! Oh, if they could only make her hear them!
"Here, porter," called Mr. Rand, when he had heard all the details that could be given, "get me a donkey--a good, lively donkey. I can manage one of the little beasts better than I can a horse. I used to ride one in Egypt. I"ll go over the hills if it is midnight."
"Oh, don"t, Mr. Rand," begged Jack. "You are not strong enough to go over the mountains that way."
"I am not, eh! Well, young man, I"ll show you!" and he was already waiting for the donkey to be brought up from the hotel stables.
"Nothing like a good donkey for a thing that has to be done."
But it was such a wild wilderness--the sort chosen just on that account for hotel purposes. And after the brilliancy of the ballroom it did seem so very dark out of doors.
"This way, Hazel," said Betty courageously. "I know the loneliest spot. Maybe she has been stolen, and might be hidden away in that hollow."
"But if we go there alone----"
"I"m not afraid," and Betty clutched her light stick. "If I found her, they would hear me scream all the way to--Portland!"
Men were searching all over the grounds. Every possible sort of outdoor lantern had been pressed into service, and the glare of searchlights flickered from place to place like big fireflies.
It was terrible--everything dreadful was being imagined. Only Ed, Walter and Jack tried to see a possibility of some mistake--of some reasonable explanation.
It was exciting at first, that strange, dark hunt, but it soon became dreary, dull and desolate.
Hazel and Betty gave up to have a good cry. Jack and Ed insisted upon following Mr. Rand on horses, making their way over the mountain roads and continually calling Cora.
Walter followed the advice of the hotel proprietor, and went to notify the drivers of a stage line, which took pa.s.sengers on at the Point.
But how suddenly all had been thrown into a panic of fear at the loss of Cora! Not a girl to play pranks, in spite of some whispers about the hotel, those most concerned knew that Cora Kimball was at least being held a prisoner against her will somewhere; by whom, or with whom, no one could conjecture.
What really had become of daring, dashing Cora Kimball?
CHAPTER XVIII
KIDNAPPED
"Oh! Where am I?"
"Hush! You are safe! But keep very quiet."
Then Cora forgot--something smelled so strong, and she felt so sleepy.
"We are almost there!"
"But see the lights!"
"They will never turn into the gully!"
"If they do----"
"I"ll----"
"Hush!"
"She is a strong girl!"
"So much the better. Give her a drink."
"I don"t like it."
"You don"t have to."
"Do you know what they do now with kidnappers?"
"She"s no kid."
"But it"s just the same."
"Hold your tongue. You have given me more bother than she has."
"Salvo deserved what he got."
"You deserve something, too," and the older woman, speaking to a young girl, gave the latter a blow with a whip. The girl winced, and showed her white teeth. She would some day break away from Mother Hull.
They were riding in a gypsy wagon through the mountains, and it was one hour after Cora Kimball had been taken away from the porch of the Tip-Top. The drivers of the wagon were the most desperate members of the North Woods gypsy clan, and they had not the slightest fear that the searchers, who were actually almost flashing their lights in to the very wagon that bore Cora away, could ever discover her whereabouts.
It was close and ill-smelling in that van. Cora was not altogether unconscious, and she turned uneasily on the bundle of straw deep in the bottom of the big wagon.
"She is waking," said the girl presently.
"She can now, if she"s a mind to. We are in Dusky Hollow."
"I won"t be around when she does awake. I don"t like it."
"If you say any more, I"ll give you a dose. Maybe you--want--to go--to sleep."
"When I want to I shall," and the black eyes flashed in the darkness.
"We did not promise to----"