"Why, you agreed to be one of us boys, and to "share and share alike"
with us in work and in everything else. Now, this morning you gave that mountaineer some money out of your own pocket, basely trying to conceal the fact from us. Even yet we don"t know the amount of your gift. Now, we have unanimously decided not to submit to any such proceeding."
"But my dear Jack," interrupted the Doctor--
"But my dear Doctor," broke in Jack, "hear me out. What we have decided is to require you to tell us the amount of your benefaction to that man, so that we may owe you our share of it until we go down the mountain in the spring and collect our money. We are sharing and sharing alike in every thing or nothing, so out with it! How much money did you give the man?"
"But Jack, permit me to explain," said the Doctor. "You see, if I gave that fellow any money, it was of my own impulse and without any consultation with you. It was a bit of personal almsgiving in which I have no right to let you share. I did it solely to relieve my own mind, not yours. It wasn"t a company transaction at all, and besides I could well afford it inasmuch as by coming up here with you boys and sharing your camp life this winter I have cut off nearly the whole of my personal expenses and am actually saving money."
"Now listen!" said Jack. "We all wanted to give that poor fellow some money with which to feed his wife and little girl "till blackberries get ripe" next summer, and we should have done so if any of us had had any money. So in relieving your own mind you have relieved ours just as much. We all shared alike in the cost of fitting out this expedition. We have all shared alike in the building of our house and in all the other camp work. We have all shared alike in guard duty, in danger and in everything else, and we"re going to do so to the end of the chapter. So we"re going to share alike in this gratuity of yours, our shares to be paid to you as soon as we collect our money down below. So you must tell us how much you gave the man, or else our whole partnership and comradeship will be at an end. Come, Doctor, tell us all about it!"
"Well," said the Doctor, "I don"t think it fair to let you boys share in what was a purely personal bit of almsgiving, done without any sort of consultation with any of you, but as you insist I will say that I gave the man a twenty dollar bill."
"All right," said Tom. "That gives us a chance to impose upon you. It is three dollars and thirty-three and a third cents apiece for us. We"ll never pay that third of a cent, doctor, and so you"ll be out a cent and two-thirds besides your own share in the gift. That will help to buy another doll for "the little gal," and I suppose you won"t mind the expense."
"No," said the Doctor, "but what can be done to relieve these people"s wretchedness and lift them up?"
Not one of the boys could answer the question. Perhaps there was no answer. There often is none to questions of that kind.
CHAPTER XIX
_A Stress of Circ.u.mstances_
The next few weeks brought nothing of adventure to the boys. Their work went on wonderfully well. They sent down the mountain innumerable ties and all the cordwood that the trees yielded after the ties were cut.
They sent down also a large number of great timbers for use in bridge building and the like, but nothing occurred to justify the name of their camp--Camp Venture.
Their firelight conversations were briefer and less spirited than before, because they were working so strenuously now that they were over-weary when supper was done, and they went to bed at least an hour earlier than they had done before. The earlier novelty of camping had at last worn out and with it the excitement that tends to keep people awake.
Nevertheless they const.i.tuted a happy company, all the more so because their work was producing larger results even than they had antic.i.p.ated.
They were sending down the mountain more ties, more cordwood and many more of the high-priced bridge timbers than they had expected to send.
Looking over the accounts one evening in February, when the snow was beginning to melt, Jack said:
"Boys, we"ve already accomplished more than we expected to do during the whole winter and spring. If we keep it up at the same rate we shall earn quite twice the money we expected to make. So Camp Venture is clearly a success. It is getting so well along in the year now that we need not fear deep snows or avalanches, or anything of that sort to bother us or interfere with our work."
"Nevertheless," said the Doctor, returning from an examination of his scientific instruments, "we"re in for a snow storm to-night. It is already beginning and so far as my instruments are to be trusted, it is likely to be very heavy, with high winds."
The boys all went out and took a look at the sky. There was as yet no wind of any consequence, but the snow, in fine, dry, meal-like flakes, was coming down in a way that promised a heavy fall.
About nine o"clock the boys went to bed--all but Harry Ridsdale, who stayed outside as the sentry. About ten o"clock the wind rose to a gale and the roaring of it awakened the Doctor, who instantly arose and with a brand from the fireplace to serve as a torch, went out to consult his instruments. When he returned his stamping and brushing off of snow aroused the others, and the howling of the tempest brought them all into a very wide-awake condition.
"I say, boys," said the Doctor, throwing the brand he had carried into the fire again, "this is an awful night. The snow is coming down in blankets, the wind is blowing at a rate which is between a whole gale and a hurricane, and of course the snow is drifting terribly."
"All right," said Jack. Then he went to the door and called,--"Come in here, Harry! We shall have no use for pickets to-night."
In answer to some questions he said:
"No mountaineer is going to prowl about the hills in such a storm as this. If he did he would be smothered in a snowdrift before he got a hundred yards from his cabin door. We"re perfectly safe for this night without a sentry, so we"ll all crawl into our bunks and go to sleep."
The soundness of Jack"s opinion was obvious enough, and so no more sentries were posted that night. The fire was reinforced with some big logs and all Camp Venture ventured for once to go to sleep.
The hours pa.s.sed on. The wind howled more and more fiercely, and but for the solidity of its thick log walls the house would have shaken in a way to wake the heaviest sleeper. As it was the boys slept on undisturbed.
Finally the fire burned low, so that it gave very little light in the cabin. Little Tom waked and feeling no need for further sleep he got up and piled on some additional logs. Then he went back to bed, but somehow his eyes would not close again. The other boys also waked up, and, turn over as they might, could not go to sleep again. Finally Harry, seeing that all were awake, called out:
"I say, fellows, let"s get up and have some breakfast. I for one am hungry."
"So am I," answered Jack, springing out of bed.
"So say we all of us," responded Tom. "By the way, what time is it?"
Harry fumbled among the Doctor"s belongings and looked at that gentleman"s watch.
"Doctor, you forgot to wind your watch last night. It has run down at a quarter past nine."
"No, I didn"t," answered the Doctor, leaping out of bed, where he had lazily lingered for a time. "I certainly wound it before I went to bed."
With that he went across the cabin, took the watch, looked at it, and then put it to his ear.
"It"s running all right," he presently said, whereupon the other two members of the company who had watches brought them out.
All pointed to a quarter past nine.
Just then Jack opened the door and something like half a ton of snow fell into the house, but no light came with it.
"Boys!" he cried, "we"re utterly snowed in. It is a quarter past nine in the morning, but the house is completely buried in snow! You see there is no light coming in even through the loosely laid roof, while the Doctor"s windows are as black as midnight. Yet by looking up the chimney you can see daylight plainly. The fire has kept that open."
"Can there have been twenty odd feet of snowfall in a single night?"
asked Harry in astonishment.
"No, certainly not," answered the Doctor. "We"re caught in a snowdrift, that"s all. You see with the fearful gale that has been blowing all night the snow has drifted greatly and now that I think of it, our house is peculiarly well situated to be caught in a drift."
"How so, Doctor?"
"Why, the wind has been from the north, northwest, or very nearly north.
Our house stands on a plateau on the northerly side of the mountain.
Less than a hundred feet south of it, rises a high cliff. That, of course, catches all the snow that comes on a north, northwest wind. Then again the house itself is an obstruction, catching and holding all the snow that strikes it. The snow storm has been a tremendous one, probably a three-foot fall, and we are caught under all of it that ought to have been scattered over several miles of mountainside."
"Let"s postpone the explanations, fellows," broke in Tom, who always devoted himself to the practical, "and give our attention for the present to the problem of What to Do Now. That is after all the thing to think about in every case of emergency, and this is a case of emergency if ever there was one."
"How do you mean, Tom?" asked Jim Chenowith.
"Why, in the first place, we have less than a quarter of a cord of wood in the cabin, and, after such a storm, it is likely to turn very cold.
So we must first of all dig a pa.s.sageway to one of our wood piles, or else we must freeze to death. We can"t get to the spring, of course, and if we did, it would be frozen up. But we can get all the water we need by melting snow. The worst of our problems is that of a food supply."
"That"s so," said Jack, in something like consternation. "We haven"t a pound of fresh meat on hand and I remember that you, Tom, intended to go out with your gun to-day to get some. We have eaten up all our hams and bacon, and we haven"t anything left except the coffee, two small pieces of salt pork, some corn meal and the beans."