“All righto, so long,” I heard him say.
After a few seconds I called, “Are you all right?”
And I heard him say, as if his voice
was muffled and far away, “All right, so far.”
I said to myself, “Poor little
kid, he isn’t very heavy, that’s one thing.”
Then I started off.
It wasn’t hard to swim across
the old creek bed, because the water was flowing easier
now, and pretty soon I was hiking it up through the
mountains. Now, the way I went was through those
mountains west of Nick’s Valley. And I
went south toward the lake. You look at the map
and you’ll see just the way I went.
The woods are pretty thick up in those
mountains and a couple of times I got rattled about
which way to go. But most of the time I could
look down and see the valley and the water in the
bottom of it, just like a river. It wasn’t
rushing any more and I guessed that whatever happened,
the worst of it was over.
Pretty soon I came out where I could
look down and see the lake all spread out before me.
It was there all right But first I didn’t get
the hang of things, because Nick’s Cove wasn’t
there at all. There was just a kind of a river
flowing from where Nick’s Cove used to be, right
through the valley. There were lots of trees,
all uprooted, down there, too, and the place was so
different that I couldn’t even tell where the
Gold Dust Twins’ tent had been. Anyhow,
it wasn’t there any more, that was sure.
All around the lake was a kind of gray border and I
guess it showed how much the water had gone down.
But, gee, there was enough lake left to satisfy anybody.
A scout that wouldn’t be satisfied with what
was left must be a hog. But, oh, boy, when that
flood started, it must have piled up in Nick’s
Valley. Anyway, I could see Temple Camp all safe
across the water, but the spring-board was way up in
the air gee, it looked awful funny.
There were half a dozen or so of the
Temple Camp boats with fellows in them, flopping around
near the old cove. It was almost dark, but I
could see them plain. I guess they had rowed across
just to look around and see how things looked there.
A couple of hours before they would have been carried
right through on the flood, but when I looked down
it was pretty calm there.
I shouted to them and started down
the mountainside for the shore. I could see Westy
and Pee-wee and a couple of Portland scouts in one
of the boats. All the while I was coming down
I kept shouting and when I got to the shore, there
were half a dozen boats to meet me. Mr. Elting
and Uncle Jeb were in one of them. Besides, I
could see half a dozen fellows plodding around on
shore. I knew they were looking for Gold Dust
Camp.
“Don’t bother hunting
for those fellows,” I shouted, all out of breath;
“they’re all right; they’re down
at Catskill or somewhere. Bert Winton started
through the passageway from an old pit he’s
got Skinny take me in and row down to Rebels’
Cave. Anybody got a lantern?”
I guess they thought I was crazy,
appearing from up in the mountains like that and shouting
about pits and passageways and Rebels’ Cave.
But as soon as Mr. Elting and Uncle Jeb took me into
their boat, I told them about all that happened.
Uncle Jeb just looked at Mr. Elting
and Mr, Elting looked awful serious. Then Uncle
Jeb shook his head and said, “It daon’t
come out through Rebels’ Cave, I reckon.
I ain’t never explored Rebel’s Cave,
but it daon’t come out thar, nohow.”
I was just trembling all over when I heard him say
that.
“It was the only way he could
do, anyway,” I said. “It must come
out somewhere.”
Mr. Elting said, “We’re
not blaming you, my boy, nor Winton, either.”
Then he said, kind of serious, “Let me go ashore,
Uncle Jeb. Some of you row over to the cave.
Here, some of you boys, come along with me. Who
wants to volunteer to go back through the mountains?
George,” he said (he’s in a Boston troop,
that fellow George), “you row across and get
some lanterns quick. You go with him,
Harry; get your fists on those oars hurry
up. Bring some rope and an aid kit. You stay
with Uncle Jeb, Roy.”
Gee, I can hardly tell you how things
happened. The next second fellows were hurrying
back and forth, getting in and out of boats, while
the one boat skimmed across to the camp landing.
In a half a minute Mr. Elting and
about a dozen scouts were standing on the cove shore,
waiting for the boat to come back, and meanwhile we
rowed down along the south shore to where the cave
is. It’s about half way down to the outlet.
You can see about where it is. Several other
boats went down there with us. Westy was in one
of them and I made him come in our boat, because now
that Bert was gone, maybe dead, and Skinny, too, I
just felt as if I’d like to have one of my patrol
near me I just felt that way. Besides,
Westy was my special chum and after all I liked him
best of any. When you’re feeling kind of
shaky, that’s the time you like to have one
of your own patrol with you you bet.
Soon we heard the boat coming back
and could see the lanterns bobbing. “Pull
hard,” I heard Mr. Elting call from the shore.
It sounded awful clear in the night. The fellows
in the boat rowed straight for us and gave us an aid
kit and a couple of lanterns.
“That you, Blakeley?”
I heard a fellow say. It was young Mr. Winter;
he’s Mr. Temple’s secretary, and he always
spends his vacations at Temple Camp. “Who’s
there?” he asked.
“Uncle Jeb and Westy and I,”
I said; “I don’t know who’s in the
other boats; everybody, I guess.”
They didn’t stop but a second
and they pulled for where Mr. Elting and the fellows
were waiting. I could hear their voices and see
the lanterns rocking, as they hiked up the side of
the mountains.
“Maybe I ought to have gone with them,”
I said.
“They’ll find the place,
I reckon,” Uncle Jeb said. “Naow let’s
pull ashore and root around.”
The fellows in the other boats waited,
just rowing around close to shore, while Uncle Jeb
and Westy and I climbed up to the cave. It was
higher above the lake than it was before, on account
of the water escaping and we had to scramble up through
a lot of mud.
I was so excited I couldn’t
keep still and I just stumbled into the cave and stood
there for a couple of seconds, holding the lantern.
It was as dark as pitch and smelled like earth.
I kind of had a feeling that it was a grave.
I was sorry I had ever shouted down to Bert Winton
that maybe the passageway came out there. Anyway,
I held the lantern into the passage way. It was
a sort of an opening between two big rocks inside.
Then I squeezed myself in and went ahead about thirty
or forty feet, I guess. And that was every bit
as far as I could go. The passageway just fizzled
out against a great big rock. It didn’t
lead anywhere at all.
Then, all of a sudden, a cold feeling
came over me and my fingers just loosened and I dropped
the lantern. It sort of scared me when I heard
the glass crash on the ground. For about half
a minute I couldn’t budge; I just couldn’t
go out and tell Westy and Uncle Jeb that it was all
up with Bert Winton I just couldn’t
do it. Because I knew I was to blame for shouting
that down to him like a fool.
If I had been a good scout I would
have known that passage didn’t lead anywhere.
Look how Bert was always finding things out and how
he knew all about the country around there. I
could just kind of see him poking around with his
stick. And I just couldn’t call and I felt
sick, as if I was going to fall right down.
“It was me that killed him,”
I cried, and I heard a voice say, “killed
him.”
It was just an echo, I guess.