<h2 id="c13">CHAPTER XIII. <br/><span class="small">MORE TROUBLE ALL AROUND.</span></h2>
<p>“I tell you, Thad, it was all a mistake; we went
and buried the wrong thing after all, and I don’t
care who knows it.”</p>
<p>Davy looked fixedly at the back of Bumpus’ head
while he was saying this, for they were once more
in the boats, moving along, and Bumpus had the
bow, then Step Hen, Davy and Thad the steersman,
in the stern.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
<p>“Now what’s ailing you, Davy?” demanded
Step Hen; “seems like you’re never happy any
more.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you’d only shake off that cold Bumpus
gave you, so you could get that onion scent, like
I do this minute, chances are you wouldn’t be feelin’
any too happy either,” lamented Davy.</p>
<p>“Well, I declare I thought that was all buried
with the onions,” said Bumpus, trying to twist his
fat neck so he could look around, but failing.</p>
<p>“All right, but it wasn’t, all the same,” avowed
the complaining one, “’cause it’s just as rank as
ever. Wait till I tell Giraffe when we go ashore
at noon, and say, you’ll see a mad fellow then, with
all them onions sacrificed for nothing, and him that
fond of them, too.”</p>
<p>“You have got the greatest imagination of anybody
I ever saw,” declared Bumpus, indignantly.
“To me the air is as sweet as anything.”</p>
<p>“That’s because you ain’t got a big chump wearing
a greasy old suit asitting right to windward of
you,” burst out Davy.</p>
<p>“Step Hen, ain’t the air all right?” demanded
the accused one.</p>
<p>“You’ll have to pass me, boys; I’m out of the
smelling class right now. I don’t believe I could
even smell a rat, as they say. Fight it out between
you, but don’t drag me in. Some other time I’ll
act as judge and jury, but not to-day.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_115">115</div>
<p>“Well, I know what I know,” Davy went on to
say stubbornly, “and if me’n Giraffe can manage
it there’ll be a scout alookin’ a hundred per cent
cleaner than he is now, by to-morrow morning.”</p>
<p>“Better look out,” warned Bumpus, belligerently.</p>
<p>“Lookout yourself, where you’re running us,”
cried Davy.</p>
<p>Somehow or other the boat left its course and
scraped into the overhanging branches. Perhaps
this was only a clever little trick on the part of
Thad, calculated to break up the dispute between
the two scouts, which was rapidly becoming rather
acrimonious.</p>
<p>It had the expected result, if this was Thad’s
design, for all of them found it necessary to scramble
around, using both hands to protect their eyes
from the intruding branches, so that when the boat
finally came out into the open again, Davy forgot
to resume his discussion, and just suffered in silence.</p>
<p>The alligator hunter, in his own boat, led the
van of the procession. With so clever and reliable a
guide to depend on Thad wasted no time in marking
the way, for so long as Tom Smith stayed by
them they did not anticipate having any further
trouble in getting out of the swamp.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, it had become second nature for
Thad and Allan to take mental notes of all things
as they went along, a good habit that may often
prove valuable in the extreme.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
<p>No scout can afford to fail to keep all his senses
on the alert when in the woods or on the waters.
Besides seeing many interesting things that less observant
lads would pass blindly by, he notices the
lay of the land, the direction of his course, and a
multitude of queer formations that may easily be
recognized again in case of necessity.</p>
<p>Thad knew that they were going in a new direction,
and had been ever since starting out immediately
after breakfast.</p>
<p>Undoubtedly Tom Smith had been considering
the whole matter, after learning all those important
points connected with the case. He had settled
upon the region where they would be most apt to
come upon the man and girl whom Thad yearned
to meet.</p>
<p>First of all the swamp hunter felt positive that
those they sought could not be anywhere along his
haunts, because he must have come upon traces of
them while running his lines of traps.</p>
<p>In like manner he judged that they were not over
at the other side of the swamp, where the voodoo
doctor had his cabin, and the strange shed where
the ignorant blacks gathered in the dark of the
moon to carry on their strange and uncouth religious
ceremonies.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_117">117</div>
<p>Having eliminated at least half of the flooded
tract in this way Alligator Smith knew just what
territory he had to cover. And as Thad more than
suspected, he had undoubtedly laid a plan of campaign
in his mind, the first move in which he was
even now carrying out.</p>
<p>Not knowing how soon they might find themselves
in the neighborhood of the parties they hoped
to meet, the scout-master had given strict orders
that for the time being all manner of levity must
be laid aside.</p>
<p>That meant Davy must not attempt to climb,
monkey fashion, any trees when they came to land;
that Giraffe must tone down his loud voice; Bumpus
give up all thought of using his bugle, or even
warbling a strain of some favorite song—in fact
a subdued air must take the place of the boyish
hilarity that as a rule reigned in their midst.</p>
<p>And had not his other little plan held good, no
doubt Thad would have speedily given Davy to
know that he was making entirely too much noise.</p>
<p>After the little episode of the encounter with the
branches, the forward movement was continued for
a while in almost absolute silence.</p>
<p>The dip of paddles, the drip of water as they
were raised monotonously, the gurgle of the boats’
passage—these were nearly the only faint sounds
heard in the swamp, which in places seems almost
devoid of life.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
<p>Some noisy fish crows cawed at them while flying
over, their sharp eyes discovering the creeping
canoes. A couple of buzzards sitting on a
branch of a dead tree, jumped into the air and
went flapping away at their near approach. There
were always water moccasins, either gliding down
from the exposed roots of trees where they had
been sunning themselves, or coiling up in the water
aggressively, until struck by the sharp edge of a
paddle blade, when they would writhe in agony,
and sink.</p>
<p>It was getting more and more gruesome all the
time, and Thad took notice of numerous things
that he had not seen before, in the other section
of the swamp.</p>
<p>Evidently the alligator hunter believed Thad was
following the wrong track for he had turned in
another direction entirely. Perhaps the boat that
had made the numerous signs Thad was searching
for and using as a trail, had been that of Alligator
Smith himself on his way in and out, and not the
one containing the mysterious man and girl.</p>
<p>But Thad was quite satisfied with what they had
done. He believed that in the end the hide hunter
would take them where they wanted to go; and
more than that they could hardly ask.</p>
<p>The three boats were very close together as the
midday hour drew near when, without the least
warning there sounded the report of a rifle from
some point not far away.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
<p>And the scouts not accustomed to being under
fire, experienced a thrill in the region of their hearts
when every one heard the strange zip-zip of a bullet
cutting through the air just above their heads.</p>
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