Phil reached for his gun. Luckily
he had it close by, even though hardly expecting to
make use of it during the night.
He fancied he heard a low snarking
sound; possibly it may have been pure imagination;
though so wary an animal as a wildcat might have detected
a movement down below, where its human enemies held
forth, and signified by this means its displeasure
at being disturbed in a feast.
Now the gun was being carefully pushed
forth, advantage being taken of the opening under
the canvas cover, where Phil had released a couple
of the grummets. He wondered just how he was
to get the butt against his shoulder, under such peculiar
conditions; but where there’s a will there nearly
always can be found a way; and in the end this difficulty
was bridged over.
Then he thought of Larry. What
a fright the sudden roar of the gun in the confined
space under the canopy would give his chum. But
Phil had warned him against being alarmed in case
of a shot during the night.
Was the cat still there?
Looking closely he could see a movement
as though the animal might have finally reached the
meat through the covering, and was busily engaged
chewing at it.
“Think of the nerve of the thing!”
Phil was saying under his breath, as he got ready
to fire.
The report quickly followed.
Phil, once he was ready, began to have a fear lest
the animal take sudden alarm, and make a leap that
would carry it beyond his range of vision. And
the more he thought over the thing the greater became
his desire to punish the beast for its audacity.
“Thunder!” shouted Larry,
as he came floundering off his made-up bed, landing
in a struggling heap in the bottom of the motor boat.
“Oh! no, not quite so bad as
that,” laughed Phil, himself gaining an upright
position; and trying the best he could to throw out
the old shell, so that he might have the pump-gun
in serviceable shape again.
Tony seemed to be the least disturbed
of the lot. Familiarity with alarms had considerable
to do with it, no doubt. He had started to open
the flap of the canvas cover nearest him, so that he
could thrust his head out.
“What happened, Phil?”
asked Larry, as he sat up on the floor of the boat.
“Why, I just saved our bacon;
or to be plainer, our venison,” laughed the
other.
“Oh! was something running away
with it, then?” demanded Larry, beginning to
get upon his knees as the first step toward rising.
“Something was making way with
it, which is about the same thing,” replied
Phil.
“W-was it a bobcat?” continued Larry.
“Listen!”
As Phil said this one word they could
hear a fierce growling, accompanied by a strange scurrying
sound. It came from the shore close to the boat.
“Will it come in here after
us, Phil?” asked the more timid member of the
firm, as he tried to find the hatchet which he remembered
seeing somewhere close by at the time he lay down
on his cot.
“How about that, Tony; do you
think there’s any danger of such a thing happening?”
queried Phil, turning to the swamp boy.
“Getting weaker all the time,”
came the ready reply. “I think yuh give
him all in the gun. Kick the bucket purty soon
now.”
Tony thrust the curtains more fully
aside. Then he crept out and reached the shore;
nor was Phil far behind him. The latter, however,
not being quite so confident as Tony, insisted on carrying
his Marlin repeater along. If the dying cat
gave evidence of a desire to attack them, he wanted
to be in shape to finish matters on the spot.
There was really no need. Even
as he arrived on the scene the stricken animal gave
one last convulsive shudder, and stiffened out.
“Good shot that!” remarked
Tony, admiringly, as he bent over to see where Phil
had struck the midnight marauder.
“Wow! what a savage looking
pussy!” exclaimed Larry, joining the others.
“I’d everlastingly hate to run up against
such a customer in the pine woods. Say, if a
fellow like that pounced down on my back some time,
what ought I to do?”
“Lie down, and roll,”
laughed Phil; who knew that down here in this warm
country, where food is plenty, no wildcat would be
bold enough to openly attack a human being without
provocation.
Tony immediately started to shin up
the tree, desirous of ascertaining the extent of damage
done. When he came down he announced that the
beast had just succeeded in tearing a way in to the
venison; but had eaten very little of it, thanks to
Phil chancing to awaken when he did.
So, as the night air felt rather chilly,
they soon bundled back into the boat again, and sought
to secure more sleep.
There was no further alarm that night,
and Larry was glad when his chum aroused him by saying
that morning had arrived.
The sun was beginning to gild the
eastern heavens when they started to get breakfast.
Larry took a look all around, after what he fancied
would be the manner of an old sea dog; and then gravely
announced his opinion as to the weather.
“Guess we’re going to
have another fine day of it. No sign of red in
that sunrise; and the few fleecy white clouds don’t
whisper rain. You know, Phil, I’m taking
considerable interest in weather predictions these
days. Got an old almanac along, to compare notes.
I hazard a guess first, and then look up what old
Jerold says we’re going to have.”
“Well, how do his predictions pan out?”
asked Phil.
“Oh! nine times out of ten it
happens just the opposite to what he says. That’s
the fun of the thing. He knows how to tell what
the weather ain’t going to be; and to my mind
that’s going some. Now, what shall we
eat this morning?”
“Any of those fresh eggs left
we bought from that old cracker just outside the town
limits?” asked the head of the expedition.
“Half a dozen, you say? Good! Suppose
you give us an omelet for a change. They might
get broken, anyway; and we’d better have the
use of ’em.”
“What will you do with that
awful beast out there, Phil?”
“Tony is going to look after
him for me,” replied the one who had shot the
bobcat thief. “He says it is a very fine
skin, and that sometime I’ll be glad to have
it made into a little door mat. He knows how
to take it off, and stretch it on a contrivance he
expects to make. You see, he’s handy at
all such things. Necessity is a great teacher.
If you just had to go hungry for two whole days,
Larry, I really believe you could do it.”
“Perhaps I could,” sighed
the other; “but thank goodness, just at present
there’s no need of fasting, while we’ve
got all these bully stores aboard, and that haunch
of prime venison hanging up there. Suppose you
drop it down, Tony, if you don’t mind climbing
the tree again. Two eggs apiece ain’t
going to fill the bill; and the taste I had of that
venison last night haunts me still.”
At that Phil chuckled.
“Seems to me, just before we
went to bed I saw you getting away with the surplus
we put in that pan,” he remarked.
“Oh! that was only a little
snack,” replied the unabashed Larry. “This
air seems to tone up a fellow’s appetite some.
Given a week or two of the open life, and I have
hopes that my usual appetite will come back to me
again.”
Of course the breakfast was a success.
Larry could cook, even if he did lack many of the
qualities that should be found in a woodsman; and
was woefully ignorant as to the thousand and one things
connected with the great outdoors.
Still, Phil had hopes of him.
From time to time he kept dinning certain facts into
the ears of his chum. These concerned the secrets
of the open, and which at times are so important to
any one who dares venture into the woods.
He explained for instance, to his
boat mate, just how to learn the direction of the
compass from the sun, the marks on the trees, and even
his watch, if put to it. He showed him how to
make a fire without a match, by the use of friction,
after the manner of savage tribes who never knew flint
and steel, or a brimstone stick. He explained
to Larry how easy it was to cook game, by making a
fire in a hole until it had become very hot, and then
placing the meat therein; sealing the oven until hours
had elapsed; which backwoods method of cooking was
really the first fireless cooker known.
In these and dozens of other ways
Phil daily taught his chum. Larry evinced considerable
interest in the matter so long as his comrade was
speaking; but that was about as far as it went.
He did not have the spirit in him; and the seed fell
on barren ground. Larry would never in all his
life make a genuine woodsman. But if he kept
on, he might in time get a job in a restaurant over
the grill, so Phil assured him, as he complimented
Larry on the fine omelet.
An hour later they left the place
which Larry called “Wildcat Camp” in his
log of the motor boat cruise.
Larry was full of high spirits.
Indeed, it was hard for him to keep from showing
his bubbling good nature at any and all times.
Phil too seemed quite contented with the way things
were moving along. Only the swamp boy gave evidence
of increasing uneasiness.
Tony would sit there as if lost in
thought, his eyes fastened on the frank face of the
young fellow for whom he had come to entertain such
a lively sense of friendship in the short time he
had known him. Then he would sigh, and shake
his head dolefully, as though he foresaw troubles
arising which he would fain ward off, if only Phil
would accept his earnest advice, and turn around before
it was too late.
But Phil believed he had that on his
person which would change the terrible McGee from
a bitter enemy into a good friend; and confident in
his own honorable intentions he never dreamed of turning
back.