<h2 id="c21">CHAPTER XXI. <br/><span class="small">ON THE TRAIL.</span></h2>
<p>Tom Smith looked as though he were himself
rather pleased over his find. Thad had an idea that
the swamp guide had been basing a part of his
plans on some theory he had formed; and was
tickled to discover how well it had turned out.</p>
<p>Under his directions a guard was also set over
the boat, with orders to remain in hiding, but constantly
ready to spring upon the hunted party, in
case he should manage to elude the main body,
and make his way to the secret hiding-place of his
boat, with the intention of fleeing from the swamp.</p>
<p>And when all these little arrangements had been
completed, Tom Smith passed to the other side
of the sedge grass, and showed them what seemed
to be a sure-enough trail, leading directly into the
scrub, and undoubtedly only recently made.</p>
<p>“Wait up for just a minute or so, will you,
Tom?” said Thad; and while the boy did not go
further in order to explain what he wished to do,
when the other scouts saw him move hastily along,
and drop down on his hands and knees beside the
trail, somehow they just seemed to instinctively
guess what was in his mind and heart.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_183">183</div>
<p>Thad was looking for the track of <i>little feet</i>
there; such as would betray the fact that a child had
accompanied the man when he passed to and fro
from the boat to the secret hiding-place!</p>
<p>All of them fairly held their breath while waiting
to hear the result of the scout-master’s investigation.
They knew what his ability was in the
line of reading “signs,” and felt no hesitation about
believing that if any one present could discover
the impression of the girl’s shoes in the soil, Thad
would.</p>
<p>He got up presently, and those who had seen him
almost tenderly touch the ground in certain places
with his hand, knew before he said a word that his
search had certainly met with abundant success.</p>
<p>“Yes, he has the girl along with him,” Thad
went on to say, softly, noticing the anxious faces
of his chums; “and so far as that goes, the story
that was sent up North was true. But then, we
will have to wait a little before we know whether
she is really his daughter or—little Polly!” and
his voice was very tender as he just softly breathed
that name which had been almost constantly in his
mind of late.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_184">184</div>
<p>The sheriff had drawn near the guide, and seemed
desirous of learning something more about the
expected hiding-place of the fugitive from justice;
and thus having his hands doubly strengthened for
the anticipated fray.</p>
<p>“Tell us a leetle more about it, Tom,” he urged;
“how did ye ever come to think Jasper he’d be a
keepin’ undeh cover heah; and what does it look
like? We-all ain’t agoin’ to get a chanct to talk
agin, I reckons, an’ let it all be said an’ done now.”</p>
<p>The guide did not seem to be unwilling to rest
a bit before starting out on the last leg of the
“closing-in” process. And no doubt he quite
agreed with the sheriff in what the other said about
the man who was forewarned being doubly armed.</p>
<p>“Why, yuh see, Shurff,” he began, softly, “I
done took consid’able int’rest in everything ’bout
this heah ole swamp; an’ when I fust cotch theh
story ’bout theh Jasper fambly, I investigates, an’
larns how a cupple o’ theh boys used tuh hide out
in the swamp days at a time, when theh ole man
he was riled at ’em, an’ nobody ever cud find out
whar they stayed.”</p>
<p>“I see that same just got your spunk up,” remarked
the officer with a grin, “and ye was detarmined
ye’d find it out fo’ y’self, eh, Tom?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_185">185</div>
<p>“W’ich I did afore I was satisfied,” continued
the other, “an’ we’en I larned as how a Jasper hed
kim back, tuh disappear like to Alligator Swamp,
w’y, don’t yuh see, I jest nat’rally concludes as
how he must be one o’ them as used to play hide an’
seek thar. So I reckons I’d know whar tuh find
theh same; an’ arter runnin’ acrost that ole boat
whar we did, I hain’t any doubts ’bout hit. He’s
thar, as sure’s my name’s Thomas Beauregarde
Smith.”</p>
<p>“But tell us somethin’ about the nest, now,”
urged the sheriff.</p>
<p>“This heah trail’ll lead us plumb thar, see if she
don’t,” remarked the guide, wagging his head with
conviction. “Yuh see, tuh git tuh the place it’s
fust necessary tuh cross a big bed o’ muck whar a
sunken ridge lies. I had tuh <i>feel</i> my way acrost
mighty keerful; ’cause if yuh takes a wrong step
chances are yuh’ll be up tuh yuh waist in mud; an’
if so be thar hain’t nobody ’round thet section tuh
lend yuh a helpin’ hand yuh kin make up yuh mind
it’s the end. I seen quicksand sum in my time,
but they ain’t a sarkimstance alongside that muck
fo’ suckin’ yuh in.”</p>
<p>Bumpus tightened his fists as he heard this stated.
He seemed to have a sudden inspiration, or fear,
and it was to the effect that if any single person
in all that host were unlucky enough to slip from
that concealed ledge, and test the depth of that
muck bed, he would be the wretched victim—was
it not always the case that he had to play the part
of the “goat” in any performance?</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_186">186</div>
<p>“But once over thet bad part an’ the rest is
easy sailin’, Shurff,” the guide went on to say, confidently,
“fo’ yuh see, they’s a sorter wooded island
thar; an’ outside o’ them Jasper boys an’ me, I
done reckon as how nobody ever did find theh way
tuh git oveh thar. All I asks yuh is tuh keep right
still till we kin kinder s’round theh shack an’ s’prise
him!”</p>
<p>“Then there is some sort of house, is there?”
asked Thad, thinking again of the little girl, and
what a cover over her head might mean in wet
weather.</p>
<p>“I allow as thar be, suh; leastwise ’twar thar
w’en I larst been oveh. You see, it happens as
how the ’gators they don’t use thet island, frum
sum cause er other, an’ so I neveh keered tuh stay
thar any time; so it’s ben sum yeahs sense larst I
crossed. But I hain’t forgot theh way, I reckons,
an’ I’ll guide yuh thar, safe an’ sound.”</p>
<p>“Glad to heah ye say that, Tom,” remarked the
sheriff: “and fo’ the sake of this heah fine boy I
sure hopes that we’ll find his sister, too.”</p>
<p>“Well,” remarked Thad, turning his eyes toward
the officer, with a feeling of gratitude in
that Fortune had raised up such a sympathetic
friend just when they were in need of help; “you
can be certain that I’m hoping all the while the
same way. When we get back to town I’ll find
letters there from my uncle, and begging me to
wire him how it has come out; and I trust that the
news I send will be just the one word: ‘Found!’”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
<p>“And as for me,” Bumpus was heard to say,
softly, “I’m also hoping to get a letter in answer
to the one I wrote my ma on the way down, asking
her if I’d delivered that medicine she sent me for.
Hope to goodness the answer is ‘yes,’ because it’ll
be a turrible load off my mind.”</p>
<p>“Five cents’ worth of worry, and you’d think it
spelt ten thousand dollars!” jeered Giraffe; but
he was careful to say this in the ear of the stout
scout, for he did not want Thad to know he was
still keeping up this badgering process.</p>
<p>“I don’t care for the amount, and you know
that,” said Bumpus, in an irritable fashion that was
strange for him, but might be laid to the cold in
the head from which he had now been suffering
for several days; “it’s just the <i>principle</i> of the
thing that hurts me. My honor as a scout is in
question. I hate to think of having failed the only
mother I’ve got, when she trusted and depended
on me. Get that, do you, Giraffe?”</p>
<p>“Oh! sure, only how many mothers would you
expect to have?” the other went on; but Bumpus,
having had his say, relapsed into a dignified silence.</p>
<p>Thad had taken his position alongside the guide
when they started out again. As they now had a
trail to follow there was no longer any necessity
for depending on the knowledge of Tom Smith,
and his broad acquaintance with the intricacies of
the swamp. Left to themselves the scouts could
have easily carried the expedition safely along from
this point; for they were well versed in the secrets
of woodcraft.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_188">188</div>
<p>And as he walked along by the side of Alligator
Smith the scout-master kept his fond gaze fastened,
a part of the time, upon every fresh indentation of
those heels belonging to the shoes of the girl who
was in the company of the fugitive, Jasper.</p>
<p>What hopes and fears must be passing constantly
through the mind of Thad as he contemplated those
dainty footprints. Many and many a time had he
yearned to be as well off as some of his chums, in
the way of having some one near and dear to him,
whom he could love and protect; and now that there
seemed a possible chance of a little sister being
miraculously given to him through the working of
Fate, the boy could hardly believe that he was not
dreaming.</p>
<p>At the same time he did not forget his scout
schooling, and that he must always be on the alert.
So from time to time he would take his eyes away
from the faint trail ahead, to scan the bushes, and
seek for any sign that might spell danger.</p>
<p>When a lesson has been well learned it soon becomes
what might be called “second nature;” and
so Thad, even in the present excited condition of
his mind, could not help acting as he believed a
sagacious scout should when on duty, and following
in the wake of a dangerous man.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_189">189</div>
<p>Perhaps it was a good thing he kept himself
on the alert, for while Tom Smith was a woodsman,
and might have seen what attracted the attention
of the scout-master, there could be no telling.
And had it not been discovered, they might
have found what Giraffe would call “rougher sledding”
later on.</p>
<p>They happened to be in a particularly thick patch
of scrub and woodland where Thad felt more than
half convinced that if the fugitive had thought to
lay any sort of trap the springing of which would
give him warning of the coming of enemies he must
have chosen this place; when he made a little discovery
that caused him to instantly clutch the arm
of Tom Smith, and say softly:</p>
<p>“Hold on!”</p>
<p>Others of the party gripped their guns, and
looked eagerly around, under the impression that
Thad must have sighted a hovering figure back of
some tree; and no doubt half expecting to hear
the crash of a gun break the silence that hung over
the spot. But nothing of the kind came to pass.
Instead, Thad drew the guide several steps along,
and then pointed to the brush close at their feet.</p>
<p>“Well, what d’ye think of that?” Bumpus remarked,
as he pushed forward the better to see;
“if he hasn’t put an old rope across the path just to
trip us up, and make all the trouble he can.”</p>
<p>Giraffe looked scornfully at the fat scout.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_190">190</div>
<p>“Think so, do you, Bumpus?” he remarked, with
a lofty sense of his own sagacity. “Well, if you
happened to trip over that same rope, chances are
now you’d hear a gun go off. P’raps the load
<i>might</i> miss you, though I don’t see how anything
could do that; but all the same, the bang of the
gun’d tell Mr. Jasper it was time he took to the
woods, and ran like a scared rabbit. So you see
what Thad’s shut off by his find.”</p>
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