The result of A swim
To the boys, who had never visited
a military quarters before, the fort proved of great
interest, and they were glad, after the meal was over,
to have Lieutenant Carrol take them around. This
occupied some time, and when they had finished it
was time for the evening parade.
This was quite an affair, and the
two lads joined the ladies of the place to witness
it. Everybody turned out, in uniform as clean
as possible, on inspection. The drums rolled,
the fifers struck up a lively air, and the three companies,
headed by a major, marched around the stockade several
times and then to the parade-ground in front of the
gates. Here the command went through the manual
of arms and through a number of fancy evolutions.
“It’s splendid!”
murmured Joe. “Everything moves like clockwork.”
“It makes me almost wish to
be a soldier,” answered Darry. “But
if a fellow had this day in and day out I am afraid
he would grow tired of it.”
“You are right, Darry,”
said Mrs. Fairfield. “The colonel has to
think up a great number of things whereby to interest
his men. They get up all sorts of contests, and
concerts and theatricals, and go hunting when they
can get the chance anything to keep them
from growing too dull.”
“Have they had any real military
duty to do lately?” asked Joe.
“Not for over a year. Then
the Modoc Indians got up a sun-dance, and they had
to march over to Kedahmina and stop it. Two Indians
were killed and one soldier was badly wounded.
Since that time the Indians have been quiet.”
“But the Indians may rise again.”
“Probably they will one
is never sure of them. As one old general has
said, ‘The only safe Indian is the dead Indian.’”
The boys were assigned to a small
room next to that occupied by Captain Moore and Lieutenant
Carrol. The apartment was neatly furnished with
iron cots, an iron washstand, and a small wardrobe
for extra clothing. Fortunately the extra clothing
they had carried had not been stolen, so they were
not as bad off as they would otherwise have been.
Joe was anxious to hear from his brother
Will, but had to be patient. Yet he was not greatly
worried, for he was almost certain that the soldiers
would fail to fall in with the desperadoes, each having
taken a different trail.
The day following their arrival the
boys fell in with several soldiers who were going
fishing up a mountain stream not far away, having
obtained special leave of absence for that purpose.
The soldiers, who were named Biggs, Ferry, and Lambert,
were glad enough to have the boys for company.
“We’ll show you some good
sport,” said Lambert, who proved to be something
of a leader. “No better fish in these parts
than those you can catch in Rocky Pass River.”
The boys had no fishing-tackle, but
Lieutenant Carrol fitted them out, and soon the party
was on the way. The soldiers were to be gone but
four hours, and so struck out at a gait that taxed
Joe and Darry to the utmost to keep up with them.
“It’s the air does it,”
explained Biggs, when Darry spoke about the speed.
“After you’ve been out here a while you’ll
eat like a horse and feel like walking ten miles every
morning before breakfast. I tell you, the air
is wonderful.”
“It certainly is bracing,”
answered Darry. “I noticed that as soon
as we began to climb the foothills.”
A walk of half an hour brought them
to Rocky Pass River, and they journeyed along the
bank until they came to a favorite fishing-hole.
“Here we are,” said Lambert. “Now
for the first fish!”
“Ten cents to whoever catches
it!” cried Joe, and placed a shining dime on
a nearby tree stump. At this the three soldiers
laughed.
“That dime is mine,” declared
Ferry, who was the first to throw in.
“Perhaps,” answered Biggs.
“But I reckon I’ve got just as good a chance
now.”
“Here I come,” put in
Lambert, and threw over his friends’ heads.
Hardly had his bait gone down than he felt a tug and
whipped in a little fish not over six inches long.
“Mine!” he cried.
“It isn’t worth ten cents!”
cried Biggs and Ferry; nevertheless Lambert pocketed
the coin, amid a general laughing.
The boys now went to a spot a little
above where the soldiers were fishing, and set to
work on their own lines. Just as Ferry announced
a fine haul, they threw in, and soon everybody in
the party was busy, bringing in several kinds of fish,
big and little, including some fine trout of a variety
the boys had not before seen.
Inside of an hour everybody had all
the fish he wanted, and then the soldiers said they
were going to take a swim. The boys were willing,
and soon the whole crowd were in the water, calling
out and laughing and having a good time generally.
“Don’t go too far down
the stream,” cautioned Lambert. “The
falls are below, and you might get caught in the rapids.”
“All right, we’ll surely remember,”
answered Joe.
“I’ll race you across the river and back,”
said Darry, a little later.
“Done!” cried Joe. “To what
point?”
“To that willow hanging down near the big rock.”
So it was agreed, and in a minute
both boys were off. They were good swimmers,
and the race interested the soldiers, so that they
gave up sporting around to watch the result.
At this point the stream widened out
to nearly two hundred feet, so the race was not a
particularly short one. The water ran quite swiftly,
and they soon found they had to swim partly up stream
to prevent being carried below the willow.
Darry made the mark first, and, touching
the willow, started on the return. Joe was close
behind, and now it became a neck-and-neck race between
them.
“Go it, boys!” shouted Lambert. “Do
your best!”
“I bet on Joe,” said Ferry.
“I bet on Darry,” added Biggs.
Hardly had the wager been made when
Joe shot ahead. Slowly but surely he drew away
from his cousin.
While the sport was going on nobody
had noticed a large tree that was drifting rapidly
down the middle of the river. Now, however, Lambert
saw the danger.
“Look out!” he cried wildly.
“Look out! A tree is coming down upon you!”
Joe heard the cry, and looking up
the stream managed to get out of the way of the big
piece of driftwood. But Darry was not so fortunate,
and in a twinkling the youth was struck and carried
out of sight.
This accident came so quickly that
for the moment nobody knew what to do.
“Darry! Darry!” cried Joe. “Where
are you?”
“He went under!” shouted
Lambert. “The tree branches struck him on
the head.”
“He’ll be drowned!” gasped Biggs.
“What shall we do?”
By this time the tree had drifted
past the point where the soldiers were stationed.
Joe had now struck bottom with his feet, and at once
went ashore.
“We must do something!”
he panted. “We can’t let Darry be
drowned!”
“He must be caught under the
branches,” said Lambert. “As the tree
hit him it turned partly over. Perhaps There
is his foot!”
He pointed to the tree and
there, sure enough, was Darry’s left foot, kicking
wildly above the surface of the river. Then the
boy’s head came up, but only for a moment.
“Save me!” he spluttered, and immediately
disappeared.
“This is awful!” groaned
Joe. “Can’t we throw a fishing-line
over the tree and haul it ashore?”
“A good idea!” answered Lambert.
“We’ll take two lines.”
He caught up the fishing-tackle, and
lines in hand ran along the river bank until he was
below the tree. The others followed, and helped
him to get the lines into shape. Then a quick
cast was made, but the lines fell short.
“Too bad!” came from Joe. “Quick,
try once more!”
“The tree is turning over again!”
shouted Biggs, and he was right. As some other
branches came into view, they beheld Darry, caught
in a crotch and held there as if in a vise.
Another cast was made, and then a
third, but all in vain. Then the tree, with its
helpless victim, moved forward more rapidly than ever,
in the direction of the roaring falls, which were
but a short distance off.