A Diamond Clue “A clue, did you say? Now we’re looking for clues,” Lois said with a laugh as she followed Judy toward what they now felt almost sure was the broken and deserted fountain. “It’s a shame, isn’t it?” asked Judy. “It used to be so beautiful.” “You remember it in the summer,” Lois reminded her again. “Now it’s winter. Things naturally change with the changing seasons.” “Not this much,” Judy objected. “It isn’t the same at all. There should be steps—” “There are!” Lois interrupted. Lorraine found them and almost bumped into one of the stone lions beside them. He seemed to have a startled expression on his face. “This is the fountain all right,” declared Judy. “Those stone lions used to have water spurting out of their mouths. Now there’s nothing but a rusty old water pipe.” “So that’s what gives Mr. Lion such a startled expression?” Lois cocked her head to one side and made a face at the statue. “Is that Mrs. Lion on the other side?” asked Judy. “They look exactly alike. There should be eight of them guarding the four flights of steps leading up to the pool. I remember running up and down those steps and meeting all the lions. Shall we do it again?” “Let’s!” cried Lois, seizing Judy’s hand. “Wait!” urged Lorraine. “Stop acting like children. I think there’s still a little water in the main fountain, and if there is, I intend to make my wish.” “So we’re acting like children?” Lois looked at Judy and giggled, but Lorraine was serious. She walked sedately up the steps to the circular pool and peered over the edge. “You can’t wish,” Judy called, “unless you shed a tear. The spirit said so.” “The spirit is gone, and so is most of the water,” declared Lois. “You can try,” Lois told her. “We’ll follow you if you don’t get your feet wet.” “I won’t. I wore my rubbers. Anyway, there’s a thin coating of ice over what little water there is left in the pool. I’ll just skate over to the center fountain and have a look.” It was not quite as easy as it sounded. Judy had some difficulty climbing over the edge of the pool and sliding down into its nearly dry bottom. The ice turned out to be nothing but melting slush from an earlier snowfall. She waded through it to the smaller circle of cement immediately surrounding the pedestal which was ornamented with cupids. At their feet she found a pool that had not been drained. A cap that looked like the nozzle of a watering pot covered another rusty waterpipe that seemed to be clogged with dead leaves. Judy peered into a cave behind the cupids, trying to see what was there. “What have you found?” called Lois, seeing something in Judy’s hand. “A sprinkler, I guess. There’s a cave that seems to go down underneath the fountain. I can’t see anything in it but rusty pipes. Could the spirit voice have come from there?” “It seems logical, doesn’t it?” “Let’s go then,” Lorraine suggested. “I can’t wish if there isn’t any water—” “There is a little. I don’t know why it wouldn’t work just as well, especially if you shed a tear.” “I can’t turn my tears on and off like a faucet,” Lorraine objected. “Couldn’t we throw in a coin or something?” “People toss coins in wishing wells. Shall we try it?” asked Lois. “Come on over and try it if you think it will do any good,” Judy invited them. “It does seem a shame to throw perfectly good money away. Would a penny do?” Lois asked after she had helped Lorraine across. “I suppose you have to feel enchanted.” “I did.” Judy stopped and listened. “Do you hear anything? Maybe the voice will still speak to us if we’re perfectly quiet.” “Out of a dry fountain? Oh, Judy!” Lorraine cried. “I did so want to wish. It’s the only thing left to do.” “Why?” asked Lois. “Then don’t hold it back. Tell us, dear!” Judy urged her. “Oh, if only I could! If only I could cry my heart out and tell you everything!” sobbed Lorraine. And suddenly, as she leaned over the little pool that was left around the fountain she did shed a tear that splashed in the water and made ripples all around the spot where it fell. “Wish! Wish!” Judy and Lois cried both together. They were so excited that they heard only part of what Lorraine whispered into the fountain. “... it wasn’t Arthur,” the wish ended and then, as the ripples vanished, Lorraine sobbed, “Oh, but it was! It was! How can I keep on loving him if I can’t trust him? Judy, could you love Peter if—if you thought he was a—a cheat? Could you?” “I wouldn’t think it—even with proof. I mean it,” declared Judy. “I’ve learned my lesson. Once I did doubt him, and then when I found out what was really happening I was so ashamed. No matter what happened now, I’d keep on trusting him because I love him, and loving him because I trust him. The two go together—” “It looks—like a diamond!” gasped Judy “Have you found another clue?” asked Lois. “What is it this time?” “It looks—like a diamond!” gasped Judy. “But it can’t be. What would a diamond be doing in an old deserted fountain?” “It could be a piece of ice,” Lorraine ventured. “A frozen tear, perhaps,” Lois put in whimsically. “Maybe the tear you shed, Lorraine, turned into a diamond. Maybe there are more diamonds in the pool. Maybe we’ll walk home with our hands full—” “We’ll walk home dripping wet if we aren’t careful! The fountain is beginning to bubble!” cried Lorraine as she seized her friend’s hand and pulled her away from the water. Judy stood spellbound watching the transformation as if a miracle had taken place. Finally Lois expressed the obvious. “Someone has turned it on!” “Someone in the tower,” guessed Judy. “Or down underneath,” Lorraine whispered. “Judy, I’m scared. This was planned, somehow. I think we’re being watched!” |