Afloat

Chapter 7

"What do you say about that, Johnny?" Elmer inquired.

"Well, it daon"t stand tuh reason he did," replied the other, gravely; "even if he had holt o" one at the time, he never"d a held on tuh hit arter that rope had slung him head down"ards. Guess I ort tuh know.

If any o" yuh wants tuh feel what it"s like, I"ll rig the trap up agin in the mawnin" for yuh. Hold a turkey nawthin". He couldn"t even hold his breath, but had tuh give a yell like he was killed."

Indeed, they were all of pretty much the same opinion. No matter how brave a fellow the trespa.s.ser might be, when he met with such a sudden and unexpected upheaval as that running noose brought about, his wits were bound to desert him for the time being at least.

It may have been noticed also that no one, even bold Lil Artha, the most venturesome of them all, volunteered to make the additional test when morning came. They seemed perfectly satisfied to accept the will for the deed. They had witnessed the speedy working of Johnny"s trap, and evidently had no itching to try what it felt like to hang head downward from the limb of a tree, with a leg almost dislocated by a sudden jerking, powerful lever.



"Well, "tain"t no use acryin" over spilt milk, they sez," remarked Johnny, who, after all, seemed to be of a philosophical turn of mind; "the thing"s done, an" that"s all they is tuh hit. Might as well git Mose and fix him here tuh the tree. Them turks has jes" gut tuh be saved, no matter how much trouble it takes."

"Elmer, what are you thinking about?" asked Mark just then; for being used to the ways of his best chum he could see that the patrol leader was pondering something in his mind.

"If you want to know it was about that yell," Elmer admitted.

"A pretty husky whoop in the bargain, let me say," observed Lil Artha; "I used to think I could beat all creation letting out a yell, but that went one better, you hear me talking."

"Yes," added Toby, "it sounded as if the top of the world had blown off, the fellow made such a howl. Anyway, that"s how it seemed to me when I was waked up so suddenly."

"Have we ever heard a whoop like that before?" asked Elmer.

"Now you"re thinking of Hen Condit, of course, Elmer," came from Toby.

"Well, Hen"s got a good strong pair of lungs, let me tell you,"

admitted Landy. "I remember the time that cow tossed him when he was a small boy, and say, he made everybody inside of half a mile run outdoors to see what was the matter. They found Hen straddlin" a limb of a tree, and whooping it up for all he was worth. It might have been him, Elmer, no telling."

"And just as well any other person badly scared," Mark observed. "I think I"d be able to do some fine work along those lines under the same conditions."

"Then it seems that we"ll never be able to identify Hen by that shout,"

laughed Elmer; "but there"s a way we can find something out, as all scouts ought to know."

That remark immediately put them all on their mettle.

"Sure thing, Elmer," agreed Lil Artha, "for, of course, you mean if we could find a trail around here we might pick out the different footprints; and one of us ought to know something about the kind of shoes Hen wears."

"That"s me," admitted Landy, "because I happened to be going with Hen more or less lately. Show me the footprints and I"ll tell you soon enough if it"s him."

Of course, nothing could be done without the lantern, so they kept close to Johnny, who carried the same. From time to time he was given instruction how to hold the light so they might examine certain spots.

"h.e.l.lo! Elmer"s found something!" suddenly exclaimed keen-eyed Lil Artha, when he saw the scout leader stoop over almost under the tree, and alongside the large drygoods box.

"That so, Elmer; what was it?" several asked him in a breath.

"Gather around me," the other commanded, "and let"s see if you can recognize what I picked up."

"Huh! bet you it fell from his pocket when he was dragged upside-down,"

was the way Lil Artha put it; quick to guess the truth, though he had not himself thought of this possibility before.

"Correct for you, Lil Artha, for that"s what happened," Elmer acknowledged.

"Is it a knife, Elmer?" continued the tall scout.

"Once more you hit it," said the other; "and Landy, since you say you"ve been going more or less with Hen lately, perhaps you"d be apt to know his knife if you happened to set eyes on it?"

"To be sure I would, Elmer."

"You"ve handled it then, have you?"

"Lots of times, because you see I lost my own frog-sticker some weeks back, and I ain"t had a birthday since to get a new one," Landy confessed.

"That sounds good to me," Elmer told him; "so now take a look at this, and tell us what you think."

With that he brought his hand around, having been keeping it behind his back all this time. When he opened it there was disclosed a common, every-day jack-knife with a buckhorn handle, such as might be expected to be found in the pocket of almost any lad, and capable, when given a keen edge, of performing miracles in the way of shaving sticks and cutting up apples.

So Landy gravely, though eagerly, took up the knife. He opened the big blade and seemed interested in a certain nick he found there.

"Elmer, that settles it," he said, finally; "it"s Hen"s knife, I"m positive; and it must have been him that was hanging from this tree a bit ago!"

CHAPTER VI

BOUND FOR Sa.s.sAFRAS SWAMP

When Landy Smith settled the matter in this convincing fashion, the rest of the scouts showed more or less interest in the outcome.

"That proves one thing," a.s.serted Toby; "Hen Condit is up here, all right."

"It proves a whole lot of things, according to my opinion," added Lil Artha as he nodded his head in a way he had of emphasizing his remarks; "it tells us Hen is in bad company, for the second fellow must be the man he was seen with the other day in Hickory Ridge town."

"According to my notion, fellows," said Mark, seriously, "the hand of that same unknown man stands back of all poor Hen"s troubles. Until that party was seen in this part of the country, Hen didn"t seem to have a single worry. He was always as light-hearted a chap as you could find in a week of Sundays."

"What under the sun can it mean?" queried Landy, looking distressed; because, truth to tell, he and the missing scout had been getting quite fond of one another lately, and the shock had told upon Landy much more than any other boy belonging to the Wolf Patrol.

"I tell you what I think," ventured Ted Burgoyne just then; "that man mutht have hypnotized Hen. I don"t thee how elth he could make him do whatever he wants. Yeth, I even believe he forced Hen to wite that letter. Needn"t laugh, Lil Artha, I"ve been reading it all up lately, and there are thome queer happeningth along the line of hypnothism."

"Elmer, how about that; do you believe in it?" asked Lil Artha, who was known to be pretty much of a scoffer in his way.

"I decline to commit myself--just yet at any rate," laughed the patrol leader. "I confess that queer things do happen, and a fellow who always refuses to believe because he doesn"t understand is silly. But we do know this unknown man has some kind of influence over our chum; what it is we"re going to find out before we"re many days older."

"I like to hear you say that, Elmer," cried Landy, "because I just seem to believe the thing"s more"n half done when you put _your_ hand to the plough. I can"t help but think how poor Hen must be feeling right now, after getting himself in such a fix."

"How about those tracks we started out to find?" asked Toby just then.

"We"ll give another look before closing shop," replied the patrol leader. "Just fetch the lantern over, Johnny; they"d be apt to head away from the barn."

It was really in the direction of the near-by swamp that they now commenced to look. The wisdom of Elmer"s figuring was soon made manifest, for they quickly ran across what they were looking for.

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