"What"s this I hear? Lonesome for Partner and me?" asked Skipper Ed, who had finished with the boat and, coming up behind the boys, overheard Bobby"s remark.
"Yes," said Bobby, "at the fishing."
"Well, well, now, isn"t that strange!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed Skipper Ed. "I was thinking the same way, and Abel was thinking that way, too, and we"ve been talking it over!"
"Jimmy and I think "twould be fine if we could all fish together,"
continued Bobby.
"So were we! So were we! A strange coincidence!" declared Skipper Ed.
"And Abel thinks it might be arranged."
"Oh, can it? Can it?" and the boys jumped to their feet.
"I don"t know," and Skipper Ed"s face a.s.sumed a long and gloomy expression as he seated himself upon the rock. "There"s one thing in the way and I couldn"t consent."
"Why can"t we?" asked Jimmy, in deep disappointment.
"Because," said Skipper Ed seriously, "I"m not free to consent."
"Why not? Yes, you are!" coaxed Bobby. "Please do."
"I"d like to," said Skipper Ed. "Yes, I"d _like_ to; but you see I"ve got a partner, and one partner can"t go ahead and do things unless the other partner agrees. At any rate he shouldn"t. Do you agree, Partner?"
The boys gave a whoop of joy.
"Then you consent, Partner?" and Skipper Ed"s eyes twinkled humorously.
"Of course I do, Partner!" exclaimed Jimmy. "It"s what I"ve wanted to do right along."
"Then everything is arranged," said Skipper Ed. "Abel says there are plenty of fish for all of us around Itigailit Island. Perhaps, then, we"d better go home, Partner, and put things in shipshape for an early start in the morning."
And so they parted in high glee, Bobby to the cabin to break the good news to Mrs. Abel, and Skipper Ed down the trail toward his own cabin, with Jimmy at his heels.
CHAPTER X
A FOOLHARDY SHOT
Though the days were long now, for this was July, when dawn comes in this land before two o"clock in the morning, it was scarce daylight when Skipper Ed and Jimmy in their big trap boat, and with a skiff in tow in which were stowed his seven sledge dogs, hoisted sail and bore down the bay before a westerly breeze.
And as they pa.s.sed beyond the point which separated the cove in which Abel"s cabin stood from the cove where their own cabin stood, they discovered Abel"s boat almost abreast of them, and within hailing distance. Bobby and Jimmy exchanged vociferous greetings, and Skipper Ed and Abel converged their courses until the boats were so close as to permit of conversation.
It was a glorious morning. The air was crisp and fragrant with whiffs of forest perfumes borne down to them from the near-by sh.o.r.e. Banks of brilliant red and orange in the eastern sky foretold the coming of the sun. The sea sparkled. Gulls and other wild fowl soared overhead or rode lightly upon the swell. A school of shining caplin shimmered on the surface of the water. Here and there a seal lifted its curious head for a moment, and then disappeared. At intervals a grampus, with a startling, roaring blow, raised its great black back above the surface, and then sank again from view.
On barren hillsides patches of snow, remnants of mighty drifts, lay against the dark moist rocks like great white sheets, and here and there miniature ice pans rose and fell upon the swell, reminders of the long cold winter, for winter in this far northern clime is ever reluctant to relinquish its grasp upon the earth.
The glow in the east disappeared at length, and then the sun rose to caress them with his warmth. Presently mirages appeared. Islands seemed to sit upon the tops of other islands, or to hang suspended in the air, and every distant sh.o.r.e became distorted in the brilliant July sunlight.
"That"s the way a good many of us look at things in this life," said Skipper Ed. "We see the mirage, and not the thing itself. Hopes loom up and look real, when they"re just false. It"s a great thing to be able to tell the differences between what is real and what is just a mirage."
The wind fell away to a dead calm before noon, and though Abel and Skipper Ed worked at their heavy sculling oars, and Bobby and Jimmy and Mrs. Abel at the other oars, the boats, laden as they were, and r.e.t.a.r.ded by the skiffs in tow, made such slow progress that at length they stopped at a convenient island to boil the kettle and cook their dinner and wait for a returning breeze.
Dinner was a jolly feast, simple as it was, for in this land folk live upon simple food and are satisfied with little variety, for their appet.i.tes and desires are not glutted, as ours so often are. And many things that you and I deem necessary they do not miss, because they have never had them, and more often than not have never so much as heard of them. And perhaps it is just as well, and their happiness is just as complete.
A cod which Bobby caught with his jigger, was boiled in sea water, because sea water salted it to just the right flavor. This was the first cod of the season, and the first cod is always a delicacy, and so they deemed it, together with some of Mrs. Abel"s bread, and a pot of tea sweetened with a drop of mola.s.ses.
Then Skipper Ed and Abel shaved tobacco from black plugs, and Skipper Ed and Abel and Mrs. Abel talked while they waited for the wind to rise that was to carry them on their journey.
It was a rocky, irregular island upon which they had halted, with rocks sloping up from the water"s edge, and on the top some struggling bunches of brush. It was not a large island, but nevertheless Bobby and Jimmy deemed it worthy of exploration, and so, bent upon discovery, they left their elders to talk, while they wandered about.
"There"s a dotar on the sh.o.r.e," exclaimed Bobby, stopping suddenly and indicating the dark body of a harbor seal sunning itself comfortably upon the surface of the smooth, flat rocks near water. "Wait here, Jimmy, till I get my gun and try a shot at him."
And away he ran, presently to return with his gun--the same that Abel had found in the boat at the time he discovered Bobby. It was double-barreled, and a shotgun, but now both barrels were loaded with round ball. And loaded with ball it was effective enough at fifty yards or so, but far from certain in accuracy at a greater distance.
"Let"s work down through the brush as far as we can," suggested Bobby, "and then I"ll crawl down on him, if he"ll let me, for a good close shot."
Slowly they crawled, and cautiously, looking at nothing and paying attention to nothing but the seal, which, presently becoming conscious of danger perhaps, grew restless; and though Bobby was not as near his game as he should have wished, he threw up his gun and fired. The bullet, after the manner of bullets fired from shotguns at long range, went wide of its mark, and the seal, after the manner of seals, slipped gently into the water and was gone.
"There he goes!" exclaimed Bobby in disgust, springing to his feet. "If I had only had a rifle!"
"Yes," said Jimmy, "you"d have--"
Jimmy"s sentence was cut short by the sound of a heavy tread behind them, and wheeling about our young hunters discovered a big polar bear, in the edge of the brush and not twenty yards away. It had apparently been aroused from an afternoon sleep, and not being partial to human society was now bent upon an expeditious departure from the vicinity.
Quick as a flash Bobby raised his gun to his shoulder.
"Don"t shoot! Don"t shoot!" warned Jimmy.
But Bobby did not heed the warning. The bullet from the undischarged barrel went crashing into the animal"s shoulder. The bear stumbled, bit furiously at the wound, and then in a rage charged upon his now defenseless enemies.
Polar bears, unless very hungry, or unless placed in a position where they must defend themselves, will rarely attack man. But when wounded they are more likely than not to become furious, and their fury knows no bounds. Bent upon revenge they will attack viciously and are dangerous enemies. The hunter who wounds a polar bear without first taking the precaution to prepare for defense or retreat, tries an exceedingly dangerous experiment.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Quick as a flash Bobby raised his gun to his shoulder]
This was exactly what Bobby had done. The instant he fired the shot he realized that he had not reached a vital spot. In his eagerness to secure the bear he took the chance of his single bullet disabling it. A reckless game it was, but he played it and lost.
Jimmy was unarmed and Bobby had no time to reload, for he knew the bear would charge immediately.
"Run, Jimmy! Run for your life!" he shouted.
But Jimmy needed no warning. He was already putting into action all the speed he could muster, and away went Bobby, also.
Jimmy chose the open s.p.a.ce nearer the sh.o.r.e, Bobby a more direct, though more obstructed, course across the island, but both took the general direction of camp. As the two diverged the bear, probably because he was more plainly in view, chose to follow Jimmy, and followed him so strenuously and with such singleness of purpose that he was presently at Jimmy"s very heels--so close at his heels, indeed, that had Jimmy stopped or hesitated or lessened his speed for an instant, the infuriated beast would have been upon him.
Bobby was quick to discover that the bear had left his own trail, and he was also quick to discover Jimmy"s imminent danger. There was no other help at hand. If Jimmy was to be saved, he must save him. The thought crossed his mind like a flash of lightning. He did not lose his head--Bobby never lost his head in an emergency. He thought of everything. He feared there was not time to reload, but it was the only thing to do. As he ran he drew two sh.e.l.ls, loaded with ball, from his pocket. For the fraction of a minute he halted, "broke" his gun, dropped the sh.e.l.ls into place, snapped the gun back and threw it to his shoulder, but in the brief interval that had elapsed the bear and Jimmy had so far gained upon him that the distance between him and the bear loomed up before him now as almost hopelessly long. If he only had a rifle, instead of his shotgun! But it was the last hope, and whispering a prayer to G.o.d to send the bullet straight, with nerves as tense as steel, he pulled the trigger.