“Whoop! All hands on deck to pump ship!”
“My camera! Oh! where did I put it?”
“Grab up the bedding and hustle in under the
other tent, boys!”
This last from steady, clear-headed
Frank, who seemed to know just what should be done
in an emergency.
It started Bluff and Uncle Toby working
strenuously to keep blankets from getting very wet.
But Will could not think of lending a hand until he
had first of all lugged his beloved camera under shelter.
It was indeed fortunate that both
tents had not gone by the board at the same time,
or the camp must have been plunged into the deepest
distress. Led by Frank, they managed to hustle
their belongings under the second cover, where the
driving rain could not reach them.
By the time all had been done the
boys were dripping, and it took them some twenty minutes
to get warm again, snuggled in their blankets.
“Oh! what a night!” wailed Will a dozen
times.
“Please let up on that, or give
us a change in tune. It’s bad enough to
have to stand the storm without listening to a phonograph,”
grunted Bluff.
The hours crept along. Now and
then they dozed, but sound slumber did not come to
a single one of the group. Uncle Toby was quite
content to cower as close to Frank as possible, satisfied
that the other was able to protect him. He seemed
to exhibit the blind confidence of a dog in an emergency
calling for energy; to him Frank was a type of manliness
hard to match.
“Will the morning ever come?”
groaned Will, as he shifted his cramped position for
the tenth time at least.
“Well, I think we’ve got
a lot to be thankful for,” declared Frank, stoutly;
“in the first place, no great damage is done,
for I saw that our tent was caught in the branches
of a tree close by, and we can rescue it in the morning.
Then nothing was spoiled that I know of. And the
storm is really over, though morning is some two hours
off,” striking a match and looking at his nickel
watch.
“Can’t we have a fire?”
asked Will, who was shivering under his blanket.
“Just thinking so myself.
It’s getting sharp, now that the wind has shifted
into the northwest. Suppose we make a try,”
answered Frank, readily.
It was just in anticipation of such
an emergency that he had hidden some of the dry wood
away where the rain could not reach it. Frank’s
previous experience in woodcraft had taught him many
valuable things.
Securing some of this, he quickly
had a little blaze. The others fed this in a
cautious manner, so as not to smother it by too much
fuel. As a result the fire was in a short time
burning freely, and diffusing a genial warmth around
that proved very acceptable to the chilled campers.
Even Will thawed out under its influence
and ceased to grumble.
“It’s all right, too,
fellows; not a drop got in tinder these waterproofs,”
he declared, as he eagerly examined his precious possession.
So the morning found them.
The first thing they did was to rescue
the runaway canvas. It was found to be intact,
the pins only having given under the strain. So
shortly afterwards the second tent again arose, and
things began to look shipshape around the camp.
“Seems like an Irish wash-day,”
remarked Will, as he surveyed the various blankets
and other things spread out on bushes to dry in the
sunshine and air.
“Only for Jerry’s strange
absence, I’d feel bully,” remarked Frank.
“Don’t you think we’d
better start out and look for him?” asked Will.
“Yes, after we’ve had
some breakfast. I never like to attempt anything
on an empty stomach. And, besides, you see, we
may have to go all the way over to Jesse’s shack
before we learn about him,” observed Frank.
“Do you really think he’s
stayed there?” questioned Bluff, anxiously; for
even though he and Jerry seemed to be constantly bickering,
deep down in their hearts they had a genuine affection
for each other, as had been proven more than once.
“I hope so,” was all the other would say.
“And I’ve got a dreadful
fear,” remarked Will, sighing, “that the
poor fellow’s been caught under a falling tree.
So many went down last night. I’ll hear
that terrible crashing every time I wake up for a long
time to come. It haunts me, just because I imagined
Jerry out in it all.”
Toby here banged the big spoon on
the empty frying pan. That was a welcome sound
to a set of ravenous boys, and they quickly assembled
around the rude table upon which the black chef
was placing heaps of flapjacks, flanked by steaming
cups of fragrant coffee.
Uncle Toby did not seem to relish
being left alone in the camp again; but there was
nothing else to be done. Frank gave him some advice
as to what he should do if any wild beast invaded
the place; and also how he could threaten any of Andy’s
crowd should they show up with hostile intent.
Then the three boys started off, meaning
to head in a direct line for the distant camp of the
old trapper.
“What if we don’t find
him there?” asked the skeptical Will.
“Wait till we get to the river
before trying to cross. I reckon we’ll be
apt to find some traces of him there. And even
if he was caught out in the woods in that storm, that’s
no sign he was hurt or killed. Jerry knows enough
to get in out of the wet; and depend on it he found
shelter somehow, somewhere.”
So Frank buoyed their spirits up in
his accustomed cheery way. One could easily see
that he belonged to the optimist family, and never
looked on the gloomy side of things.
They had not gone half a mile away
from the camp before they discovered some one moving
through the bushes ahead.
“There he is!” exclaimed
Bluff, eagerly, as he raised his hand to his mouth,
as if about to give a “cooie.”
“Hold on! I don’t
believe it is. There, you see, it’s a man,
and a hunter, too, I expect, for he’s carrying
a gun,” interrupted Frank.
“Perhaps he may have seen Jerry.
Shall we ask him?” demanded Will.
“If we keep on straight we’re
going to meet him, and, of course, we’ll ask.
I only hope he has, though I doubt it. Do either
of you know him?”
Frank asked this because he was comparatively
a newcomer in Centerville, while the other boys had
been raised there.
“Seems to me I’ve seen
him before,” exclaimed Bluff. “Why,
yes, it’s Mr. Smithson. He lives in Centerville-that
is, his family does, because he isn’t home much.
You see he’s one of the wardens over at the State
insane asylum at Merrick.”
“What?” cried Frank, startled;
“then perhaps he may not be hunting wild animals
after all. Suppose one of the mad inmates of that
institution escaped, and is up here roaming through
the woods?”
“Jewhittaker!” exclaimed
Will, turning a trifle pale, and hugging his camera
closer to his breast, as though his first fear concerned
its safety.
“If that’s so, I hope
Jerry didn’t run across him, that’s all,”
remarked Bluff.
“Come on, hurry. You’ve
given me a little shock now, and we must learn the
truth immediately. Call out to him, Bluff-there,
he sees us, and is coming this way.”
As Frank said, the keeper was hurrying
toward them now, an anxious look on his face.
He nodded to Bluff as he came up.
“Camping up here, are you, boys?
That’s fine. Used to like to do it myself
when I was younger. Say, you didn’t happen
to see anything of a wild-looking chap anywhere around,
did you?” he asked, glancing at each in turn.
“Sorry to say we haven’t,
Mr. Smithson. Has one of your charges got away?”
“That’s just what has
happened, and I’ve been chasing him all over
the country. Got track of him yesterday just
before the beastly old storm hit me. He’s
somewhere around this section right now. Where’s
your camp, boys? He’ll be pretty sharp
set with hunger by now, and can scent grub a long
ways off?” continued the keeper.
The three lads looked at each other.
“What shall we do, fellows?
Doesn’t seem just right to be chasing off this
way in a bunch, and leaving that poor old innocent
alone in camp. What if this crazy man drops in
on Toby while we’re gone? Had we better
turn back, and later on, if Jerry doesn’t show
up, organize another expedition, dividing our forces?”
Frank always put things so clearly
that he seldom met with any opposition.
“That strikes me as sensible,” observed
Will, quickly.
“Turn back it is, then.
Will you go with us, Mr. Smithson? We can give
you a good cup of hot coffee, and some breakfast, if
you’re hungry?” said Bluff.
“I accept your offer, boys,
and glad to meet you. Now, lead the way, please,
because somehow, I seem to feel it in my bones that
Bismarck will gravitate toward some place where there
is an odor of cookery in the air. He always was
a good feeder.”
“Bismarck?” ejaculated Frank.
“Why, you see, that’s
what he thinks, and he carries out the part to a dot.
Wait till you run up against him, if luck turns that
way,” replied the other.
“He may have been injured in the storm?”
suggested Will.
“Not he. Such a cunning fellow would know
how to escape a wet back.”
“Is he considered dangerous?” Bluff inquired,
a little anxiously.
“Well, not particularly, although
he can look mighty fierce, and would terrify a timid
person, possibly.”
“And I guess Uncle Toby fills
that bill, all right,” said Bluff; “but
there’s our camp through the trees, Mr. Smithson;
and, as sure as you live, there’s a stranger
standing poking at the fire where our cook is bending
down.”
“Bismarck is making himself
at home, all right,” laughed the warden.