"Well, now that we"re here," George suggested, "perhaps Will can be coaxed into telling us exactly what we"re here for."
"I should say so!" exclaimed Tommy. "We don"t, know at the present moment whether we"re here to trap brown bears, or to box and ship Northern Lights to the eastern markets."
"Don"t get sarcastic, boys!" replied Will. "I was instructed by Mr.
Horton to communicate to you all the information in my possession on our first night in camp, and I"m ready right now to obey orders. Shall we go inside? The bugs are pretty thick out here!"
"I should say so!" shouted Tommy. "I"m pretty well hedged in from the blooming insects," he went on, "but it makes me nervous to hear them blowing their dinner horns every minute."
"Gee!" exclaimed Sandy. "Whenever I get into this anti-mosquito rig, I feel like an armored train!"
Twilight lay heavy over the landscape now, and so the boys were confronted by a dark interior as they stepped into the cabin.
"Who"s got a searchlight handy?" asked Will.
Tommy replied that he would have a light on in a second, but before the finger of light from the electric shot into the room, Will half fell over a yielding figure which lay on the floor not for away from the table.
Then the circle of light, thrown hastily down, rested upon the white, drawn face of a boy not far from sixteen years of age. There was a little showing of blood on the floor, and his eyes were tightly closed, indicating that he had been rendered unconscious by a wound.
The lad was dressed in the khaki uniform of the Boy Scouts of America, and the badge on his hat showed that he was Leader of the Fox Patrol.
A long envelope torn open at one end and bearing the name of Will Smith, lay empty by the lad"s side.
"Where did he come from?" cried Tommy, "and who is he?"
"Must have dropped out of the sky!" declared Sandy.
CHAPTER II
THE PRINT OF A THUMB
"The Fox Patrol!" exclaimed George. "I wonder if that means the Fox Patrol of Chicago? It doesn"t seem to me that this kid could have followed on our heels across the continent!"
Will lifted the torn envelope from the floor and examined it critically.
"That"s your name isn"t it?" asked Sandy looking over his shoulder.
"It certainly is!" replied Will.
"Well, you"ve got the address left, anyhow!" said George.
"Say," Tommy suggested, opening his eyes very wide, "some gink followed the boy here, b.u.mped him on the coco, and stole the communication! I reckon we"re getting into the center of population again. Here we are, several hundred miles from nowhere, and we"ve unearthed an innocent messenger and a bold highwayman already!"
"Have you any idea what the stolen paper contained?" asked George.
"Not the slightest!" replied Will.
"Wasn"t it arranged that Mr. Horton should communicate with you after we reached this point?" asked Sandy.
"Certainly not!" was the reply. "He gave me full instructions before we left Chicago. If I found a deserted cabin at this point, I was to make camp here. If I did not, I was to keep along the coast toward Bering Glacier until I discovered one answering this description."
"But where did this kid come from?" insisted Tommy. "How did he ever get here all by his lonely? We had two guides to help us in, and it seems that he came alone, that is, as far as we can see."
"I don"t think he came alone!" replied Sandy pointing to the wound on the boy"s head. "He never got a b.u.mp like that in a fall!"
"Oh, we"ll have to wait until the kid wakes up!" Tommy cut in. "We"d better be doing something to help him out of his trance, instead of standing here guessing. He may be badly hurt!"
The limp figure was lifted from the floor and placed on one of the bunks fastened to the wall of the cabin. The lad groaned slightly as the change was made, but did not open his eyes.
"I guess he got a bad b.u.mp," Will suggested. "And I"m sorry to say that his wound requires a piece of surgery far beyond my ability to perform.
I"m afraid we"ll have to send out for a doctor!"
The boys used every means within their knowledge to bring the lad back to consciousness, but all their efforts proved unavailing. The lad lay in a comatose condition long after all their resources had failed.
So busily engaged were the boys in their efforts at resuscitation that they did not for a moment remember that they, themselves, might be in danger from the same hand which had struck down the boy.
As they worked over the lad, bathing the wound with hot water and endeavoring to force stimulating drinks between the set teeth, they did not observe a bearded face was pressed for a moment against a window pane. It was an evil face, and was gone on the instant.
After three hours of steady exertion, the boys relaxed their efforts and sat down to consider the situation. They had searched the boy"s clothing, but had found nothing giving a clue to his name or residence.
"Right out of the air!" exclaimed Sandy. "If we should blunder into a camp devoid of a mystery, we"d have to move out or die of suffocation!"
"I"d like to know who the boy is, and where he came from," Will said, after a short pause, "but the princ.i.p.al question now is this: What was in the paper that was stolen from the envelope?"
"Probably some information directed to you," suggested Tommy.
"Undoubtedly," Will answered.
"And now, instead of coming into your hands," George remarked, "the warning, or the command, or whatever you may call it, pa.s.ses over to the man who attempted murder in order to secure it!"
"That"s just the size of it!" Tommy agreed.
"It strikes me," George suggested, "that we"d better set a guard through the rest of the night. The fellow who struck this blow may be waiting to strike another!"
"How long were we gone from the cabin?" asked Will.
"Less than an hour," replied Sandy.
"Then, if we had at once set up a search for the a.s.sa.s.sin," Will went on, "we might have discovered him."
"Not in a thousand years, in this wild country!" exclaimed Tommy.
Will went to the door and looked out toward the east.
"It will be daylight directly," he said, "and then we will see what can be accomplished in the way of finding clues."