<h2 id="c3">CHAPTER III. <br/><span class="small">CAMP-FARE.</span></h2>
<p>“Hold up!” called out Thad.</p>
<p>Of course, as the scout-master, his word had to
be recognized as law by the members of Cranford
Troop. Several of the boys manifested signs of
disappointment, and impulsive Giraffe seemed to be
the chief offender.</p>
<p>As a rule they were not averse to giving vent to
their feelings; for besides being Boy Scouts, they
had long been school chums.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_24">24</div>
<p>“Oh! that’s too bad, now, Thad,” Giraffe remarked,
dejectedly; “you didn’t want us to chase
after that fellow. Four of us ought to’ve been
able to beat him in a furious dash; and how d’we
know but what it isn’t the very man we’ve come all
the way from Cranford to see?”</p>
<p>“It’s too late now, anyway!” observed Bumpus.</p>
<p>“Yes, he’s disappearing among the shadows yonder,”
said Davy, who had sharp eyesight; “and I saw
him turn to look back at us just when he was passing
through that bar of sunlight that crosses the
water.”</p>
<p>“Did you think he was a negro, or a white man,
Davy?” asked Thad, quietly.</p>
<p>“Well, to tell you the truth, Thad, I guess now
he <i>was</i> a coon, all right. He didn’t have any hat on,
and his hair seemed woolly enough,” Davy admitted,
frankly.</p>
<p>“I thought as much all along,” Thad told them,
“and that was one of the reasons I wouldn’t give
the word to pursue him. There were plenty of
others, though.”</p>
<p>“Name a few, Mr. Scout-master,” requested
Giraffe, still unconvinced.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_25">25</div>
<p>“Oh! well, for instance, we’re all pretty tired as
it is, and to make that dash would wear us out.
Then we’d lose the chance for camping on this spot
here that I picked out, and we might go a long way
without running across as good a one. And if it
was a black outlaw, one of those desperate escaped
convicts from the turpentine camps, if they have
them in Louisiana, even should we manage to overtake
him he might happen to have a gun of some
kind. You could hardly blame him for showing
fight, Giraffe.”</p>
<p>“Not when you remember that we’re wearing
uniforms pretty much like the National Guard, and
chances are he believed we were real soldiers, not tin
ones,” was the contribution of Step Hen, easily convinced,
after he had given the subject a little reflection.</p>
<p>“Besides,” added Bumpus, as a clincher that he
knew would catch the lanky scout; “it’s nearly
time we’re thinking of having supper; and sure, it
would be too bad if we had to postpone trying that
delicious home-cured ham we fetched along.”</p>
<p>The frown left the forehead of Giraffe like magic,
and in its place came a most heavenly smile.</p>
<p>“I surrender, boys!” he announced. “I throw
up my hands, and give in. Seems like everybody’s
against me, and seven to one is big odds. Must
be I’m mistaken. If it was a genuine coon after all,
why, sure we’d a been silly to waste our precious
muscle achasing after him. Besides, looks like the
shadows are acreeping out along there, and we’d as
like as not get lost somehow. Oh! you’re right, as
usual, Mr. Scout-master. I’m always letting my
ambition run away with my horse sense. Seems
like I never open my mouth but I put my foot in
it, somehow.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_26">26</div>
<p>“Then why don’t you get a button, and keep it
shut?” asked Bumpus, promptly.</p>
<p>“I would, if it was the size of some I’ve known,”
responded Giraffe.</p>
<p>“I hope now, you ain’t making wicked comparisons?”
the fat scout demanded.</p>
<p>“Why, you don’t think I’d be guilty of such unbrotherly
kindness, do you?” was Giraffe’s perplexing
rejoinder; and knowing that he could not
get the better of the tall scout Bumpus gave a
grunt, and stopped short.</p>
<p>They were soon busily engaged in making preparations
for camping. Having come all the way
from home with the idea of spending some time in
the Southern swamp, looking for those whom Thad
so earnestly wished to meet face to face, the lads
had of course made ample preparations for having
at least a fair degree of comfort.</p>
<p>None of them had ever been in the Far South,
so all they knew about the country, its animals, and
the habits of its people, must come through reading,
and observation as they went along.</p>
<p>But they did know the comfort of a tight waterproof
canvas tent in case of a heavy rain storm; and
consequently a good part of the luggage they carried
in the three trunks had been a couple of such
coverings, besides the usual camp outfit about which
many happy associations of the past were clinging.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_27">27</div>
<p>These trunks had of course been left in the small
town where they had obtained the roughly made
canoes, to be picked up on their return later.</p>
<p>Long experience had made every one of them
clever hands at tent-raising; and from the way
Smithy and Davy undertook to get one up in advance
of Step Hen and Bob White, it was plain to
see that the old-time spirit of rivalry still held
good.</p>
<p>Giraffe as usual took it upon himself to start the
cooking fire. He was what the other boys called
a “crank” at fire-building, and had long ago demonstrated
his ability to start a blaze without a single
match, by any one of several ancient methods, such
as using a little bow that twirled a sharp-pointed
stick so rapidly in a wooden socket that a spark
was generated, which in turn quickly communicated
to a minute amount of inflammable material,
and was then coaxed along until a fire resulted.</p>
<p>Bumpus always stood ready to assist in the cooking
operations; because there were so many other
things coming along that required dexterity and
agility, and from which his size and clumsiness debarred
him, that he just felt as though he must be
doing something in order to shoulder his share of
the work.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_28">28</div>
<p>As the twilight quickly deepened into night—for
in the South there is not a very long interval between
the going down of the sun, and the pinning of
the curtains of darkness—the scene became quite an
animated one, with eight lively lads moving around,
each fulfilling some self-imposed duty that would
add to the comfort and happiness of the patrol in
camp.</p>
<p>And when that “delicious home-cured ham”
that Bumpus had spoken of, and which had really
come from his own house, so that he knew what he
was saying when thus describing it, began to turn
a rich brown in the pair of generous frying-pans,
giving out a most appetizing odor; together with
the coffee that Bumpus himself had kept charge of,
well, the healthy boy who could keep from counting
the minutes until summoned to that glorious feast
would have been a strange combination.</p>
<p>Bumpus was trying a new way with his coffee.
Heretofore he had simply placed it in the cold
water, and brought this to a boil, keeping it going
for five minutes or more. Now he had the water
boiling, and just poured in the coffee, previously
wetted, and with an egg broken into the same; after
which he gave it about a minute to boil, then let it
steep alongside the fire for the rest of the time.</p>
<p>“Better than anything we ever had, isn’t it, fellows?”
he demanded, after he had tested the contents
of his big tin cup, and nearly scalded his mouth
in his eagerness. “Ketch me going back to the old
way again. Coffee boiled is coffee spoiled, I read
in our cook book at home.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_29">29</div>
<p>It was good, but all the same Giraffe, as well as
several others, declared they preferred the old way,
because it was such fun to see if the cook was caught
napping, and allowed the pot to boil over; besides,
the aroma as it sent out clouds of steam was worth
a whole lot to hungry lads.</p>
<p>“Bumpus, I’ve got a favor to ask you,” said
Davy, as they started to settle down around the fire,
each in a picked position.</p>
<p>“Go ahead, Davy, you know I’m the most accommodating
fellow in the bunch. Tell me what
I can do for you,” replied the fat scout, immediately;
and every word he spoke was actual truth,
too, as his comrades would have willingly testified
if put on the witness stand.</p>
<p>“I wish you’d let me sit over there, and you take
my seat, which, I reckon is much more comfortable
than yours; and besides, you complained of a pain
in your back, and I’m afraid of the chilly night wind
taking you there. You’ll face it here instead.”</p>
<p>“Don’t you budge, Bumpus!” exclaimed Giraffe;
“he’s only giving you a little taffy, don’t you see?
Thinks he’ll have a better chance to enjoy his grub
if the wind don’t blow <i>from</i> you, to him. I
wouldn’t stand for it, Bumpus; you just stay where
you are. Reckon you look comfortable enough, and
what’s the use dodging all around?”</p>
<p>“Huh! guess you’re thinking of your own comfort
now, Giraffe,” grunted Davy in disgust.</p>
<p>Bumpus eyed them both in distrust.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_30">30</div>
<p>“I remember we learned in school that it was
best policy to keep an eye on the Greeks that come
bearing gifts,” he wheezed; “and so I’ll just stay
where I am. If you don’t like it, Davy, why,
there’s plenty of space all around. As if I’m to
blame because this old swamp isn’t the sweetest
place agoing.”</p>
<p>The conversation soon became animated and general,
so that the three disputants forgot the cause of
their trouble. Bumpus was the bugler of the troop,
and always insisted on carrying the silver-tongued
emblem of his office along with him; he had it by his
side now; but Thad had given peremptory orders
that he should not make any use of the instrument
except by special order; or under conditions that
might arise, whereby they would need to be called
together, like a scattered covey of “pa’tridges,” as
quail are universally designated in the South.</p>
<p>“We must remember,” Thad went on to say,
“that this isn’t just an ordinary jaunt, or an outing
for fun. It means a whole lot to me that I
manage to find the man and the little girl. Either
it will turn out to be Felix Jasper and my lost sister;
or else we’ll prove that the gentleman was terribly
mistaken. And you can understand, fellows,
what a load I’m laboring under all the time that
puzzle remains unsolved. But I want you to remember
that we ought to keep as quiet as we can.
Bumpus, you understand the situation, and why we
don’t ask you to amuse us with some of your fine
songs?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_31">31</div>
<p>Bumpus had a very good voice, and often did entertain
his chums while in camp by singing certain
songs they were particularly fond of. He was a
sensible fellow, and did not take offense easily.
Moreover, even though he might feel huffed over
some action on the part of his mates, he never “let
the sun go down on his wrath,” but was quick to
extend the olive branch of peace.</p>
<p>“Sure I understand, Thad!” he declared; “and
I’m going to bottle up my voice on this occasion,
so’s to have it in fine trim, to let loose in a hallelujah
when we find that it <i>is</i> your little sister Pauline—”</p>
<p>Bumpus said no more, and for a very good reason;
because, just at that particular moment there
arose the strangest sort of sound from some point
close by, such as none of the scouts could ever remember
hearing before.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_32">32</div>
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