Curiosity dispelled the last vestiges
of Percy’s seasickness. For a little while
he gazed without speaking.
A cove four hundred feet wide opened
toward the south between two rocky points. At
its head a pebbly beach sloped up to a sea-wall, behind
which a growth of cattails bespoke a stagnant lagoon.
Still farther back a steep bank of dirt rose to the
overhanging sod of the pasture.
From the western point a spur extended
into the cove, forming a little haven amply large
enough for a modest fleet of fishing-boats. Near
by on the sea-wall stood two structures, one low,
oblong, flat-roofed, with a rusty iron stovepipe projecting
from its farther end; the other a small, paintless
shed with a large door. Percy gave them only a
casual glance.
“You said we were going to live in a camp.
Where is it?”
Jim pointed to the first structure.
“There! It’s the
cabin of an old vessel that came ashore here in a
southerly gale years ago. Uncle Tom jacked it
up a foot, put in a good floor, and made it into a
first-rate camp. It’s got bunks for half
a dozen, and at a pinch could hold more. The
roof’s a bit leaky, but we’ll soon fix
that. There’s a good stove, and always plenty
of driftwood on the beach. It’s a mighty
snug place on a stormy day.”
Percy turned up his nose at this list of good points.
“What’s that pile of chicken-coops near
it?”
“Lobster-traps.”
“And that big box with its top just above water?”
“A lobster-car. All that
we catch in the traps we put in there until the smack
comes.”
The mooring-buoy was now alongside.
Making the Barracouta fast, the boys went ashore
in the dory and pea-pod. Percy became conscious
that he was thirsty.
“Where can I get a drink?”
“There’s the spring at the foot of that
bank.”
Opening a trap-door in a rude wooden
cover, Percy looked down into a shallow well.
The only cup at hand was an empty tin can. Rather
disdainfully he dipped it full and tasted, then spat
with a wry face.
“It’s brackish!” he called out,
indignantly. “I can’t drink that.”
Spurling and the others were hard
at work unloading the boats. Percy repeated his
complaint:
“I can’t drink that stuff.”
Jim was staggering up the beach, a heavy box of groceries
in his arms.
“Sorry!” he replied, indifferently.
“That’s what all the rest of us’ll
have to drink. It isn’t Poland water, but
I’ve tasted worse.”
Percy slammed down the cover and tossed
away the can in a huff. Lane was passing boxes
and bundles ashore from the dory to Stevens and Filippo.
“Catch hold here, Whittington,
and help tote some of this stuff up to the cabin,”
exhorted Budge.
Percy complied ungraciously; but he
was careful not to tackle anything very heavy.
“I didn’t come out here
to make a pack-mule of myself,” was his mental
remark.
Jim unfastened the rusty padlock on
the cabin door and stepped inside. Percy followed
him, eager to get a glimpse of his new home.
The camp had not been opened for some
weeks; it smelled close and stuffy. As Percy
crossed its threshold his nostrils were greeted by
a mingled odor of salt, tarred rope, and decaying
wood, flavored with a faint suggestion of fish.
Mastering his repugnance, he looked about.
He saw a single, low room, nine by
fifteen, dimly lighted by three small windows, one
in the farther end directly opposite the door, the
remaining two facing each other in the middle of the
long sides. Along the right wall on each side
of the central window was built a tier of two bunks.
On Percy’s left, over a wooden sink in the corner
near the door, was a rough cupboard. Next came
a small, rusty stove with an oven for baking; then,
under the window, an unpainted table; and on the wall
beyond, a series of hooks from which were suspended
various articles of clothing and coils of rope.
Empty soap-boxes supplied the place of chairs.
With nose uplifted and a growing disgust
on his features, Percy surveyed the cramped, dingy
room.
“How do you like it?” asked Spurling.
“You don’t mean to say that five of us
have got to live in this hole?”
“Nowhere else, unless you want
to stay out on the beach or in the fish-house.”
“But where do we sleep?”
“There!” Jim gestured toward the wooden
framework on the right wall.
Percy thrust his hand into one of the bunks.
“Why, there’s no mattress or spring here!
It’s only a bare box!”
“That’s just what it is,
Whittington! You’ve hit the nail on the
head this time. You’ll have to spread your
blanket on the soft side of a pine board. If
you want something real luxurious you can go into the
woods and cut an armful of spruce boughs to strew
under you.”
Percy disregarded this badinage.
From his view-point the situation was too serious
for jesting. It was outrageous that he, the son
of John P. Whittington, should be expected to shift
for himself like an ordinary fisherman.
“I’m not used to living
in a pigpen!” he snapped. “This cabin’s
too dark to be healthy; besides, it isn’t clean.”
A spark of temper flashed in Spurling’s eyes.
“Stop right there, Whittington!
This is my uncle Tom’s cabin. Any place
that’s been shut up for weeks seems stuffy when
it’s first opened. You’ll find that
there are things a good deal worse than salt and tar
and fish and a few cobwebs. I want to tell you
a story I read some time ago. Once in the winter
a party of Highlanders were out on a foray. Night
overtook them beside a river in the mountains, and
they prepared to camp in the open. Each drenched
his plaid in the stream, rolled it round his body,
and lay down to rest in the snow, knowing that the
outside layers of cloth would soon freeze hard and
form a sleeping-bag. In the party were an old
chieftain and his grandson of eighteen. The boy
wet his plaid like the others, but before he lay down
he rolled up a snowball for a pillow. The old
chief kicked it out from under the lad’s head.
He didn’t propose to have his grandson be so
effeminate as to indulge himself in the luxury of
a pillow when everybody else was lying flat on the
ground.”
Whittington grunted. “I
don’t see how that applies to me.”
“In this way. You’ve
lived too soft. You need something to wake you
up to the real hardships that men have to go through.
Then you won’t be so fussy over little things.
Perhaps I’ve talked plainer to you than I should;
but I believe in going after a fellow with a club before
his face rather than a knife behind his back.
Now let’s open those windows so the fresh air
can blow through, build a fire in the stove to dry
out the damp, and get everything shipshape. After
supper we’ll go up on top of the island and
take a look about.”
It was nearly seven when the sloop
was finally unloaded and everything stowed under cover.
Filippo had collected plenty of driftwood, and a fire
crackling merrily in the rusty stove soon made the
cabin dry and warm.
Jim, in his shirt-sleeves, superintended
the preparation of supper. The wall cupboard
yielded a supply of ordinary dishes, cups, and saucers.
There were old-fashioned iron knives and forks, iron
spoons of different sizes, and thick, yellow, earthenware
mugs. Despite Percy’s slur, everything
was clean.
“Make us a pan of biscuit, Budge;
and I’ll fry some potatoes and broil the steak,”
volunteered Jim. “After to-night we’ll
have to break in somebody else to do the cooking.
You and I’ll be too busy outside.”
Percy heard and registered a silent
vow that the cook should not be himself. Pricked
by Spurling’s earlier remarks, he had taken an
active part in unloading the boats, and he had been
glad to throw himself into one of the despised bunks
to rest.
At last supper was ready. The
steak, potatoes, and hot biscuit diffused a pleasant
aroma through the cabin.
“Pull up your soap-boxes, all
hands!” invited Spurling. “Don’t
be afraid of that steak! There’s plenty
of it for everybody. It’s liable to be the
last meat we’ll have for some time. The
butcher doesn’t go by here very often.”
The boys made a hearty meal.
Even Percy’s fastidiousness did not prevent
him from eating his full share. But he took no
part in the jokes flying round the table. Jim’s
sermon had left him rather glum. Lane noticed
it.
“Why so distant, Whittington?” he inquired.
Before Percy could open his mouth
to reply a black body shot with a squawk through the
open door and alighted on the corner of the table
close to Percy’s elbow.
“Hullo! This must be Oso!” exclaimed
Jim.
The crow croaked hoarsely. On
Percy’s plate lay a single morsel of steak,
the choicest of his helping, reserved till the last.
Seeing the bird’s beady black eyes fasten upon
it he made a quick movement to impale it with his
fork. But Oso was quicker still. Down darted
his sharp beak and snatched the titbit from under
the very points of the tines. A single gulp and
the meat was gone.
A roar of laughter went round the
table. Starting up furiously, Percy aimed a blow
at the crow. But the bird eluded him and scaled
out of the door with a triumphant screech. Budge
proffered mock consolation.
“Percy,” said he, “that
was the best piece in the whole steak. I saw you
saving it until the last. Too bad, old man!
Now you’ll have to eat crow to get it.”
“I’ll wring that thief’s
neck if I can catch him,” vowed the angry Whittington.
“Guess we can trust Oso not
to leave his neck lying round where you can get hold
of it,” observed Lane. “Come on!
Let’s you and I wash the dishes!”
“Dishes nothing!” snarled Percy.
Stalking out, he gathered a handful
of convenient pebbles and lay in wait for the culprit.
But the crow had disappeared.
“I’ll get even with him later,”
muttered Whittington.
He remained sulkily outside, taking
no part in clearing away the supper-table. At
half past seven the others joined him.
“Feeling better, old man?” queried Lane,
solicitously.
“Fall in, Whittington,” said Jim.
“We’re going on a tour of inspection.”
“Wait a minute,” remarked
Lane. “We’ve had our house-warming.
The next thing is to christen the place.”
Dragging out a soap-box, he mounted
it, produced from his pocket a piece of red chalk,
and traced in large letters over the door, “CAMP
SPURLING.”
“Now we’re off!”
said he. “Welcome to our city! Watch
us grow!”
“Come on!” urged Jim.
“We want to look the island over before dark.”
The party walked west along the sea-wall
and proceeded in single file up a steep path to the
highest part of the promontory.
“Brimstone Point,” said
Jim. “Best view on the island from here.”
He began pointing out its different features.
“That little nubble almost west,
sticking up so black against the sunset’s Seal
Island. Matinicus is right behind it. Up
there on the horizon, just a trifle west of north,
are the Camden Hills; you look exactly over Vinalhaven
to see them. North across the pasture is Isle
au Haut that we came by this afternoon.
Beyond is Stonington. About time the lights were
lit Yes, there’s Saddleback!
See it twinkling west of Isle au Haut.
Now look sharp a little south of west and you’ll
see Matinicus Rock glimmering; two lights, but they
seem like one from here. Wouldn’t think
they were almost a hundred feet above water, would
you? They look pretty good to a man when he’s
running in from outside on a dark night.”
It was a magnificent evening, the
air clear as crystal, the sky without a cloud.
Gulls were wheeling and screaming about the promontory,
their cries mingling with the rote of surf at its
base. Sheep bleated from the pasture. A
hawk sailed slowly in from the ocean and disappeared
in the woods behind the eastern point. From under
the boys’ feet rose the fragrance of sweet grass
and pennyroyal. Tall mullein stalks reared their
spires on the hillside; and here and there were little
plats white with thick strawberry blossoms.
The boys gazed their fill. Gradually
the red sky darkened and the stars began to come out.
Saddleback and Matinicus Rock gleamed more brightly.
A cool breeze from the south sprang up. Jim roused
himself.
“Guess we won’t have time
to look about any more to-night. Never mind!
There are evenings enough ahead of us before September.
One thing out here no matter how hot the
day may be, it’s always cool after dark.
Let’s be getting back to camp!”
Two small kerosene-lamps from the
cupboard made the cabin seem actually cheerful.
Percy dug into one of his suit-cases and produced a
pack of cards.
“Let’s have a game, fellows! What
shall it be?”
“Might as well put those up,
Whittington,” said Spurling. “We’re
going to turn in as soon as we get things arranged.
We’ve a busy to-morrow before us.”
Somewhat disappointed, Percy put the
cards back. Taking four wooden toothpicks, Jim
broke them into uneven lengths. He grasped them
in his right hand so that the tops formed a straight
line.
“Now we’ll draw lots for
bunks! Filippo’s going to sleep in the hammock
across that corner beyond the table, so he won’t
be in this. Longest stick is lower bunk next
the door; second longest, lower bunk back; third,
upper bunk near door; shortest, other upper. Draw,
Throppy!”
Stevens drew; then Budge and Percy
followed him. They matched sticks. Percy
got the lower near the door, with Budge over him; while
Spurling drew the back lower, and Stevens the one
above that.
“Percy and I are the lucky ones,”
said Jim. “We can try this a month, then
have a shake-up to give you top men a chance nearer
the floor.”
Percy pulled out his wrappers and
tobacco. Spurling nipped his preparations in
the bud.
“No cigarettes in here!”
“Can’t I smoke just one?”
“Not inside this cabin.
It’s too close. We might as well make that
a permanent rule.”
“All right! You’re
the doctor! But I thought it might help kill this
smell of tarred rope.”
“I like the tarred rope better than I do the
cigarettes.”
Percy went outside and burned his
coffin-nail unsociably. When he came back the
cabin was shipshape for the night. Jim was setting
the alarm-clock. Percy, watching him, thought
he detected a mistake.
“You’ve got the V on the
wrong side of the I,” he said. “IV
doesn’t stand for six.”
“But I didn’t mean six,”
retorted Spurling. “I meant four. Now
you see why we haven’t any time for card-playing.
And as soon as we’re really at work we’ll
be getting up a good deal earlier than that. Turn
in, fellows!”
He extinguished one of the small lamps.
“You can put out the other one,
when you’re ready,” said he as he crept
into his bunk.
Following the example of his associates,
Percy draped his clothing over his soap-box and the
lower end of his bunk, then blew out the lamp and
turned in, barking his shins as he did so. He
found his couch anything but comfortable. A single
blanket between one’s body and a board does
not make the board much softer. Neither is a tightly
rolled sweater an exact equivalent for a feather pillow.
Further, the comforter over him was none too warm,
as two windows, opened for ventilation, allowed the
cool ocean breeze to circulate freely through the cabin.
They also admitted numerous mosquitoes, which sung
and stung industriously.
The hours of darkness dragged on miserably.
Percy dozed and woke, only to doze and wake again.
An occasional creaking board or muttered exclamation
told that, like himself, his mates were not finding
their first night one of unalloyed comfort.
Bare feet struck the floor. A
match scraped, and Percy saw Jim gazing at the alarm-clock.
“What time is it?” groaned Budge from
above.
“Only ten minutes to twelve.”
“Gee! I wish it was morning.”
“Me too!” complained Stevens from the
darkness aloft.
Percy echoed the wish, silently but
fervently. And then in an instant all their discomfort
was forgotten. Bursting through the open window,
a sudden sound shattered the midnight stillness.
Spang!