Mark dashed through the bushes for
a hundred yards, heedless of the clinging thorns of
the rattan vine that tore his clothes, and scratched
his face and hands until they bled, before reaching
the scene of what sounded like a terrible struggle.
The screams for help told him that at least one of
the contestants was a human being in sore distress,
and in thus rushing to his assistance Mark did not
give a moment’s thought to his own safety.
As he burst from the bushes he found himself in a
little open glade on the opposite side of the point
from that on which he had landed. Here he came
upon a struggle for life such as rarely takes place
even in the wilder regions of the South, and such as
but few persons have ever witnessed.
On the farther side of the glade,
clinging with the strength of despair to the trunk
of a young magnolia-tree, lay a boy of about Mark’s
own age. His arms were nearly torn from their
sockets by some terrible strain, and his eyes seemed
starting from his head with horror. As he saw
Mark he screamed, “Fire! Fire quick!
His eyes! I’m letting go.”
Looking along the boy’s body
Mark saw a pair of great jaws closed firmly upon his
right foot, though the rest of the animal, whatever
it was, was hidden in a thicket of bushes which were
violently agitated. He could see the protruding
eyes; and, springing across the opening, he placed
the muzzle of the rifle close against one of them,
and fired.
The horrid head was lifted high in
the air with a bellow of rage and pain. As it
fell it disappeared in the bushes, which were beaten
down by the animal’s death struggle, and then
all was still.
Upon firing, Mark had quickly thrown
another cartridge from the magazine into the chamber
of his rifle, and held it in readiness for another
shot. He waited a moment after the struggles ceased,
and finding that no further attack was made, turned
his attention to the boy, who lay motionless and as
though dead at his feet. His eyes were closed,
and Mark knew that he had fainted, though he had never
seen a person in that condition before.
His first impulse was to try and restore
the boy to consciousness; but his second, and the
one upon which he acted, was to assure himself that
the animal he had shot was really dead, and incapable
of making another attack. Holding his rifle in
one hand, and cautiously parting the bushes with the
other, he peered, with a loudly beating heart, into
the thicket. There, stretched out stiff and motionless,
he saw the body of a huge alligator. It was dead dead
as a mummy; there was no doubt of that; and without
waiting to examine it further, Mark laid down his
rifle and went to the river for water.
He brought three hatfuls, and dashed
them, one after another, in the boy’s face before
the latter showed any signs of consciousness.
Then the closed eyes were slowly opened, and fixed
for an instant upon Mark, with the same look of horror
that he had first seen in them, and the boy tried
to rise to his feet, but fell back with a moan of pain.
Mark had already seen that the boy’s
right foot was terribly mangled and covered with blood,
and he went quickly for more water with which to bathe
it. After he had washed off the blood, and bound
the wounded foot as well as he could with his handkerchief
and one of his shirt sleeves torn into strips, he
found that the boy had again opened his eyes, and
seemed to have fully recovered his consciousness.
“Do you feel better?” asked Mark.
“Yes,” answered the boy. “I
can sit up now if you will help me.”
Mark helped him into a sitting position,
with his back against the tree to which he had clung
when the alligator tried to drag him into the water.
Then he said,
“Now wait here a minute while
I bring round the canoe. I’ll get you into
it, and take you home, for your foot must be properly
attended to as soon as possible.”
Hurrying back to where he had left
the canoe, Mark brought it around the point, very
close to where the boy was sitting, and pulled one
end of it up on the bank. Then going to the boy,
he said,
“If you can stand up, and will
put both arms around my neck, I’ll carry you
to the canoe; it’s only a few steps.”
Although he almost cried out with
the pain caused by the effort, the boy succeeded in
doing as Mark directed, and in a few minutes more was
seated in the bottom of the canoe, with his wounded
foot resting on Mark’s folded jacket.
Carefully shoving off, and stepping
gently into the other end of the canoe, Mark began
to paddle swiftly up the river. The boy sat with
closed eyes, and though Mark wanted to ask him how
it had all happened, he waited patiently, fearing
that his companion was too weak to talk. He noticed
that the boy was barefooted and bareheaded, that his
clothes were very old and ragged, and that he had
a bag and a powder-horn slung over his shoulders.
He also noticed that his hair was long and matted,
and that his face, in spite of its present paleness,
was tanned, as though by long exposure to the weather.
It had a strangely familiar look to him, and it seemed
as though he must have seen that boy somewhere before,
but where he could not think.
Just before they reached the “Go
Bang” landing-place the boy opened his eyes,
and Mark, no longer able to restrain his curiosity,
asked,
“How did the alligator happen to catch you?”
“I was asleep,” answered
the boy, “and woke up just in time to catch
hold of that tree as he grabbed my foot and began pulling
me to the water. He would have had me in another
minute, for I was letting go when you came;”
and the boy shuddered at the remembrance.
“Well,” said Mark, a little
boastfully, “he won’t catch anybody else.
He’s as dead as a door-nail now. Here we
are.”
Jan and Captain Johnson were at the
landing, and they listened with astonishment to Mark’s
hurried explanation of what had happened. The
captain said they would carry the boy to the house,
while Mark ran on and told his mother who was coming,
so that she could prepare to receive him.
Mrs. Elmer was much shocked at Mark’s
story, and said she was very thankful that he had
not only been the means of saving a human life, but
had escaped unharmed himself. At the same time
she made ready to receive the boy, and when the men
brought him in she had a bed prepared for him, warm
water and castile soap ready to bathe the wounds, and
soft linen to bandage them.
Captain Johnson, who called himself
“a rough and ready surgeon,” carefully
felt of the wounded foot to ascertain whether or not
any bones were broken. The boy bore this patiently
and without a murmur, though one or two gasps of pain
escaped him. When the captain said that, though
he could not feel any fractured bones, the ankle-joint
was dislocated, and must be pulled back into place
at once, he clinched his teeth, drew in a long breath,
and nodded his head. Taking a firm hold above
and below the dislocated joint, the captain gave a
quick twist with his powerful hands that drew from
the boy a sharp cry of pain.
“There,” said the captain,
soothingly, “it’s all over; now we will
bathe it and bandage it, and in a few days you will
be as good as you were before you met Mr. ’Gator.
If not better,” he added, as he took note of
the boy’s wretched clothes and general appearance.
After seeing the patient made as comfortable
as possible, Mark and the two men went out, leaving
him to the gentle care of Mrs. Elmer and Ruth.
“Mark,” said Captain Johnson,
“let’s take the skiff and go and get that
alligator. I guess Miss Ruth would like to see
him. One of my men can go along to help us, or
Jan, if he will.”
“All right,” said Mark,
and Jan said he would go if it wouldn’t take
too long.
“We’ll be back in less
than an hour,” said the captain, “if it’s
only a mile away, as Mark says.”
So they went, and it took the united
strength of the three to get the alligator into the
skiff when they found him. He measured ten feet
and four inches in length, and Captain Johnson, who
claimed to be an authority concerning alligators,
said that was very large for fresh-water, though in
tide-water they were sometimes found fifteen feet
in length, and he had heard of several that were even
longer.
While Mark was showing them just where
the boy lay when he first saw him, Jan picked up an
old muzzle-loading shot-gun and a pair of much-worn
boots, that had heretofore escaped their notice.
Both barrels of the gun were loaded, but one only
contained a charge of powder, which surprised them.
“What do you suppose he was
going to do with only a charge of powder?” asked
Mark, when this discovery was made.
“I’ve no idea,”
answered the captain; “perhaps he forgot the
shot, or hadn’t any left.”
When they reached home with the big
alligator, the whole household came out to look at
it, and Mrs. Elmer and Ruth shuddered when they saw
the monster that had so nearly dragged the boy into
the river.
“Oh, Mark!” exclaimed
Ruth, “just think if you hadn’t come along
just then.”
“How merciful that your father
thought of taking the rifle!” said Mrs. Elmer.
“I don’t suppose we could keep it for Mr.
Elmer to see, could we?” she asked of Captain
Johnson.
“Oh no, ma’am, not in
this warm weather,” answered the captain; “but
we can cut off the head and bury it, and in two or
three weeks you will have a nice skull to keep as
a memento.”
“And what will you do with the body?”
“Why, throw it into the river, I suppose,”
answered the captain.
“Wouldn’t it be better to bury it too?”
“Hi! Miss Elmer; yo’
sho’ly wouldn’t tink of doin’ dat
ar?” exclaimed Aunt Chloe, who had by this time
become a fixture in the Elmer household, and had come
out with the rest to see the alligator.
“Why not, Chloe?” asked Mrs. Elmer, in
surprise.
“‘Kase ef you’s
putten um in de groun’, how’s Marse
Tukky Buzzard gwine git um? Can’t
nebber hab no luck ef you cheat Marse Tukky
Buzzard dat ar way.”
“That’s another of the
colored folks’ superstitions,” said Captain
Johnson. “They believe that if you bury
any dead animal so that the turkey buzzards can’t
get at it, they’ll bring you bad luck.”
“’Taint no ‘stition,
nuther. Hit’s a pop sho’ fac’,
dat’s what!” muttered Aunt Chloe, angrily,
as she walked off towards the house.
So the head of the alligator was cut
off and buried, and the body disappeared, though whether
it was buried or served to make a meal for the buzzards
no one seemed exactly to know.
That afternoon Captain Johnson went
off down the river with his lighter, saying that he
could always be found at St. Mark’s when wanted,
and Mark and Jan went into the woods to look for cedar
fence-posts.
After the day’s work was finished,
and the family were gathered in the sitting-room for
the evening, Mark had a long and earnest conversation
with his mother and Ruth. At its close Mrs. Elmer
said, “Well, my son, wait until we hear what
your father thinks of it;” and Ruth said, “I
think it’s a perfectly splendid plan.”
Mark slept in the room with the wounded
boy, whose name they had learned to be Frank March,
that night, and was roused several times before morning
to give him water, for he was very feverish. He
talked in his sleep too, as though he were having
troubled dreams, and once Mark heard him say,
“Fire quick! No, it’s
only powder; it won’t hurt him. I didn’t
kill the dog.”