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<h2> CHAPTER XXIX. A MYSTERY </h2>
<p>O'Rooney stood with rifle grasped, while young Munson ran toward him from
the centre of the cave, exclaiming in his excited tones:</p>
<p>“There's another man back yonder! I saw him and spoke to him!”</p>
<p>“Did ye ax him anything, and did he make a sensible reply?” demanded the
Irishman, whose concern was by no means equal to that of the lad.</p>
<p>“He made no answer at all, nor did he seem to take any notice of me.”</p>
<p>“Maybe it's a ghost walking round the cave, on the same errand as meself.
But whist now; where is he, that I may go and ax him the state of his
health?”</p>
<p>The lad turned to lead the way, while Mickey followed close at his heels,
his gun ready to be used at an instant's warning, while Fred kept glancing
over his shoulder, to make sure that his friend was not falling too far in
the rear.</p>
<p>It seemed that, while the man was engaged in his exploration, the lad had
ventured upon a little prowling expedition of his own. During this he made
the startling discovery that some one else was in the cave, and he dashed
off at once: to notify his friend and guide.</p>
<p>Fred walked some distance further, still holding the torch above his head
and peering into the gloom ahead and on either hand, as though in doubt as
to whether he was on the right track or not. All at once he stopped with a
start of surprise, and, pointing some distance ahead and upon the ground,
said:</p>
<p>“There he is!”</p>
<p>Following the direction indicated, Mickey saw the figure of a man
stretched out upon the ground, face downward, as though asleep.</p>
<p>“You ain't afeard of a dead spalpeen?” demanded Mickey, with a laugh. “You
might have knowed from his shtyle that he's as dead as poor Thompson was
when Lone Wolf made a call on him.”</p>
<p>“How do you know he's dead?” asked Fred, whose terror was not lessened by
the word of his friend.</p>
<p>“'Cause he couldn't have stretched out that way, and kept it up all the
time we've been fooling round here. If ye entertain any doubt, I'll prove
it. Let me have your torch.”</p>
<p>Taking it from the lad's trembling hand, he walked to the figure, stooped
down, and, taking it by the shoulder, turned it over upon its back. The
result was rather startling even to such a brave man as Mickey. It was not
a dead man which the two looked down upon, but practically a skeleton—the
remains of an individual, who, perhaps, had been dead for years. Some
strange property of the air had dessicated the flesh, leaving the face
bare and staring, while the garments seemed scarcely the worse for their
long exposure.</p>
<p>Another noticeable feature was the fact that the clothing of the remains
showed that not only was he a white man, but also that he was not a hunter
or frontier character, such as were about the only ones found in that
section of the country. The coat, vest, and trousers were of fine dark
cloth, and the boots were of thin, superior leather. The cap was gone. It
was just such a dress as is encountered every day in our public streets.</p>
<p>Mickey O'Rooney contemplated the figure for a time in silence. He was
surprised and puzzled. Where could this person have come from? There was
nothing about his dress to show that he belonged to the military service,
else it might have been supposed that he was some officer who had wandered
away from his post, and had been caught in the same fashion as had the man
and boy.</p>
<p>“Are there any more around here?” asked Mickey, in a subdued tone, peering
off into the gloom.</p>
<p>Fred passed slowly round in a circle, gradually widening out, until he had
passed over quite an area, but without discovering anything further.</p>
<p>“There isn't any one else near us. If there is, he is in some other part
of the cave.”</p>
<p>“How came ye to find this fellow?”</p>
<p>“I was walking along, never thinking of anything of the kind, when I came
near stepping upon the body. I was never more scared in my life.”</p>
<p>“That's the way wid some of yees—ye're more affrighted at a dead man
than a live one. Let's see whether he has left anything that ye can
identify him by.”</p>
<p>Upon examining further, a silver-mounted revolver was found beneath the
body. It was untarnished, and seemingly as good as the day it was
completed. When Mickey came to look at it more closely, he found that only
one barrel had been discharged, all the others being loaded.</p>
<p>This fact aroused a suspicion, and, looking again at the head, a round
hole, such as would have been made only by a bullet, was found in the very
centre of the forehead. There could be but little doubt, then, that this
man, whoever he was, had wandered about the cavern until famished, and,
despairing of any escape, had deliberately sent himself out of the world
by means of the weapon at his command. But who was he?</p>
<p>Laying the handsome pistol aside, Mickey continued the search, anxious to
find something that would throw light upon the history of the man. It was
probable that he had a rifle—but it was not to be found, and,
perhaps, had vanished, as had that of Fred Munson. It was more likely that
something would be found in his pockets that would throw some light upon
the question; and the Irishman, having undertaken the job, went through it
to the end.</p>
<p>It was not the pleasantest occupation in the world to ransack the clothing
of a skeleton, and he who was doing it could not help reflecting as he did
so that it looked very much like a desecration and a robbing of the dead.
To his great disappointment, however, he failed to discover anything which
would give the slightest clue. It looked as if the man had purposely
destroyed all such articles before destroying himself, and, after a
thorough search, Mickey was compelled to give up the hunt.</p>
<p>Five chambers of the revolver, as has been said, were still loaded, and,
after replacing the caps, the new owner was confident they were good for
that number of shots.</p>
<p>“Here,” said he, handing the weapon to the boy; “your rifle is gone, and
you may as well take charge of this. It may come as handy as a shillelah
in a scrimmage, so ye does hold on to the same.”</p>
<p>Fred took it rather gingerly, for he did not fancy the idea of going off
with property taken from a dead man, but he suffered his friend to
pursuade him, and the arrangement was made.</p>
<p>In the belief that there might be others somewhere around, Mickey spent an
hour or two longer in an exploration of the cave, with the single purpose
of looking for bodies. They approached the ravine in which Fred had
dropped his gun. The Irishman leaped across, torch in hand, and prosecuted
his search along that side; but they were compelled to give over after a
time and conclude that only a single individual had preceded them in the
cave.</p>
<p>“Where he came from must iver remain a mystery,” said Mickey. “He hasn't
been the kind of chaps you find in this part of the world; but whoever he
was, it must have been his luck to drop through the skylight, just as we
did. He must have found the wood here and kindled a fire. Then he wint
tramping round, looking for some place to find his way out, and kept it up
till he made up his mind it was no use Then he acted like a gintleman who
prefarred to be shot to starving, and, finding nobody around to 'tend to
the business, done it himself.”</p>
<p>“Can't we bury him, Mickey?”</p>
<p>“He's buried already.”</p>
<p>The Irishman meant nothing especial in his reply, but there was a deep
significance about it which sent a shudder through his hearer from head to
foot. Yes, the stranger was buried, and in the same grave with him were
Mickey O'Rooney and Fred Munson.</p>
<p>The speaker saw the effect his words had produced, and attempted to remove
their sting.</p>
<p>“It looks very much to me as if the man had n't done anything but thramp,
thramp, without thrying any way of getting out, and then had keeled over
and give up.”</p>
<p>“What could he do, Mickey?”</p>
<p>“Could n't he have jumped into the stream, and made a dive? He stood a
chance of coming up outside, and if he had n't, he would have been as well
off as he is now.”</p>
<p>“Is that what <i>you</i> mean to do?”</p>
<p>“I will, before I'd give up as he did; but it's meself that thinks there's
some other way of finding our way. Bring me gun along, and come with me!”</p>
<p>Mickey carried the torch, because he wished to use it himself. He led the
way back to where the stream disappeared from view, and there he made
another careful examination, his purpose being different from what it had
been in the first place. He stooped over and peered at the dark walls,
noting the width of the stream and the contour of the bank, as well as the
level of the land on the right. Evidently he had some scheme which he was
considering.</p>
<p>He said nothing, but spent fully a half hour in his self-imposed task,
during which Fred stood in the background, trying to make out what he was
driving at. He saw that Mickey was so intently occupied that he was
scarcely conscious of the presence of any one else, and he did not attempt
to disturb him. Suddenly the Celt roused himself from his abstraction,
and, turning to the expectant lad, abruptly asked:</p>
<p>“Do you know, me laddy, that it is dinner-time?”</p>
<p>“I feel as though it was, but we have no means of judging the time, being
as neither of us carries a watch.”</p>
<p>“Come on,” added the Irishman, leading in the direction of the camp-fire.
“I'm sorry I didn't bring my watch wid me, but the trouble was, I was
afeard that it might tire out my horse, for it was of goodly size. The
last time it got out of order, it took a blacksmith in the owld country
nearly a week to mend it. It was rather large, but it would have been
handy. Whenever we wanted to cook anything, we could have used the case
for a stew-pan, or we could have b'iled eggs in the same, and when we
started our hotel at New Boston, it would have done for a gong. It was
rather tiresome to wind up nights, as the key didn't give you much
leverage, and if your hold happened to slip, you was likely to fall down
and hurt yersilf. But here we are, as Jimmy O'Donovan said when he j'ined
his father and mother in jail.”</p>
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