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diff --git a/37803.txt b/37803.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..9bf4aac --- /dev/null +++ b/37803.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6058 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Rocky Mountain Boys, by St. George Rathborne + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Rocky Mountain Boys + Camping in the Big Game Country + +Author: St. George Rathborne + +Release Date: October 19, 2011 [EBook #37803] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROCKY MOUNTAIN BOYS *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +ROCKY MOUNTAIN BOYS + +or + +Camping in the Big Game Country + +By + +St. George Rathborne + +Chicago + +M. A. Donohue & Co. + +Made in U. S. A. + + + + +CONTENTS + + CHAPTER I--COMRADES OF THE TRAIL + CHAPTER II--IN POSSESSION OF THE DUGOUT + CHAPTER III--THE FIRST GOOD LUCK + CHAPTER IV--THE WOLF PACK + CHAPTER V--A FIRST TASTE OF VENISON + CHAPTER VI--FELIX TAKES HIS TURN + CHAPTER VII--UNAVOIDABLE DELAY + CHAPTER VIII--PLENTY OF TROUBLE + CHAPTER IX--ADRIFT IN THE SNOW FOREST + CHAPTER X--TURNING THE TABLES + CHAPTER XI--THE BUCK'S HEAD + CHAPTER XII--BURNING OUT A HONEY THIEF + CHAPTER XIII--HUNTING THE BIGHORN + CHAPTER XIV--A WAKEFUL NIGHT + CHAPTER XV--OUT FOR A GRIZZLY + CHAPTER XVI--THE TERROR OF THE ROCKIES + CHAPTER XVII--WHEN MUSIC WAS PLAYED OUT + CHAPTER XVIII--A HARD CUSTOMER + CHAPTER XIX--BREAKING CAMP--CONCLUSION + + + + +ROCKY MOUNTAIN BOYS + +CHAPTER I + +COMRADES OF THE TRAIL + + +"We must be pretty nearly there now, Tom, I take it!" + +"I reckon we'll sight the dugout inside of half an hour or so, Felix; if +the description, and the little chart old Sol Ten Eyck gave me, are +correct." + +"Well, I'll sure be glad when we arrive, because this pack is getting +heavier, it seems to me, every hour now. One thing certain, Chum Tom, +we'll go out of this part of the country a heap lighter than we're +coming in; with all this good grub swallowed up after two months +roughing it. Been three days on the trail now, since Frazer turned us +loose out of his big bull-boat." + +They were two pretty well-grown boys, the one tall and slender; while +the other, whom he called Tom, seemed stockily built, with the ruddy hue +of perfect health on his sun and wind tanned cheeks. + +Tom was really Tom Tucker, and the taller young hunter, Felix Edmondson. +Besides repeating rifles of a modern make, and such ordinary +accompaniments as ditty bags and hunting knives, the lads were carrying +heavy packs on their backs, to each of which were also strapped a pair +of snow-shoes, proving that they anticipated staying around the +foothills of the great Rocky Mountains, for some time at least, and were +prepared for getting around when several feet of snow covered the +ground. + +They were in a region not a great distance from the border of that +Wonderland which Uncle Sam has transferred into a grand playground, +known far and wide as the Yellowstone Park. In fact, a range of the +Rocky Mountains towered almost above them as they looked up, standing +out against the blue afternoon sky like a rock-ribbed barrier. + +Around them lay the great forest that in many places grows at the base +of the giant uplifts that are well called the back-bone of the +continent. It was a wild region, seldom pressed by the foot of man; save +when some Indian or trapper chose to pursue his calling--the "primeval +wilderness," Felix was fond of calling it, in his humorous way. + +Felix was a city-bred boy who had ambitions to take up his father's +profession later in life, and shine as a surgeon. But not being very +strong, it was under this parent's wise advice that he was now knocking +off for a year from his studies, and getting in the great Outdoors all +he possibly could, in order to build himself up, so as to have a good +foundation for the hard work that lay before him. + +And he was succeeding wonderfully, since there is nothing better under +the sun to change a weakly boy into a sturdy man than this free life of +the Wild West. If proof of this statement were needed, it could be +demonstrated in the life of Theodore Roosevelt himself, who took the +same course of treatment. + +As for Tom Tucker, he had always lived pretty much in the open ever +since his father bought that Wyoming cattle range with its herds. +Between times Tom had attended school, so that he was far from being +ignorant; the fact of his great love of reading also put him in touch +with what was going on in the world, whether in the line of scientific +discoveries, exploration, or the constant change in the map of nations. + +The two lads were really cousins, and it was while Felix was paying a +long promised lengthy visit to the home of the other that this trip to +the foothills of the Rockies was discussed and decided on. + +Just at present the one great ambition in the life of the city lad was +to bag a genuine grizzly bear. He had done considerable hunting of +smaller game, having spent two seasons in the woods, one up in Maine, +and the other in Canada. While he had more than one deer to his credit, +besides wildcats, and even a wolf, Felix had conceived a desire to come +face to face with the most dreaded wild animal of the American wilds, +the grizzly. + +So they had organized this expedition, being taken in a bull-boat as far +on the way as was possible; and after that manfully shouldering their +heavy packs. Under such conditions they did not cover many miles a day, +which accounted for their being so long on the road. + +But as Tom Tucker had said, they were now pretty near the end of their +trail, and he fervently hoped that ere darkness descended they would +have reached the goal of all their ambitious progress. + +An old trapper with whom Tom had spent part of a season in another part +of the big game country, had a dugout up here, in which he used to +hibernate winter after winter, sometimes with a tried and true +companion, often absolutely alone; content to live his simple life under +the shadow of the mighty Rockies, and take his toll of the fur-bearing +animals that frequented this favored region. + +Tom had a rude map of the country, as well as directions, how to find +the dugout when he got there. And here the two boys anticipated putting +in about two months of the late fall and early winter, doing a little +trapping, just for fun, and considerable hunting besides. + +Naturally they expected having a glorious time, as what boy, with a love +for the woods and the chase, would not? + +The leaves had long since turned a russet brown, and any day now they +might expect the first snow of the season to fall. It was a time when +the bracing air was filled with a tonic which Felix needed more than +anything else in the wide world; and as his lungs filled with its +life-giving qualities, the boy from the Far East was never tired of +telling how different he was feeling from the conditions of a few months +back. + +As they struggled onward, hoping at almost any minute now to sight their +goal, the two boys exchanged remarks concerning the matters that were +naturally uppermost in their minds. + +"You said that Old Sol hadn't been up here for several seasons now, +didn't you, Tom?" the taller lad was asking. + +"Why, yes," the other replied, "you see, the old fellow isn't as strong +as he used to be, and does his hunting nearer his sister's home. Fact +is, she won't let him come up here any more; and there are a lot of +youngsters in her family, too, that Sol has become interested in. So +he's satisfied to keep around there, if only they let him take a week +now and then in the woods, with a comrade. That's how I came to know +him, and often we spent some mighty fine days together. He taught me +about all I know of trapping, and lots besides about the habits of big +game animals. I'm itching to make use of some of the things that Old Sol +handed down to me." + +"And the traps he said he had catched up here, do you reckon, now, +they'll be in decent condition, or rusted all to pieces?" Felix +continued. + +"Well," Tom observed, "he said he had rubbed them all over with bear's +grease, and rolled them up in a leather cover, before he hid them away; +so he expected they'd keep in fair shape many years. We'll have to take +our chances on that. It wasn't the hope of making anything at trapping +that fetched us away up here, you know. That's only a little side issue, +you might say, just to see if we've learned anything about the game." + +"One thing sure, Tom, this region doesn't seem to be overrun with +settlers, seeing that we haven't met a solitary soul these three days; +while game seems fairly plentiful, because we sighted seven black-tailed +deer on the way, and had a peep at some bighorn sheep yesterday away up +on the mountain." + +"I've seen no sign of any one around but they told us below that once in +a while some Indian was known to be in this part of the country, doing +his winter's trapping. And you remember, they said that if we happened +to run across an old Shoshone chief, who now goes by the name of Charley +Crow, and who sometimes acts as guide for Eastern sportsmen, we ought to +cultivate his acquaintance, because he has the reputation of being the +straightest redskin in the whole State of Wyoming." + +"I remember that they said he was really a halfbreed," remarked Felix; +"but his wife is a full blood. Perhaps we may happen to run across the +old fellow while we're up here. I'd like to meet him, wouldn't you, +Tom?" + +"Well, I don't know," replied the other, with a shrug of his broad +shoulders, on which the big pack seemed to rest so easily in comparison +with the way that of Felix gave him trouble; "I must say, that so far +I've never run across an Injun I'd care much to cultivate. They're not +what they used to be. The white man's whisky has changed them terribly. +In the old days they never worked, only hunted; and went to war; while +the squaws did all the drudgery in camp. And now, as a rule, they are +just satisfied to loaf their lives away, fed by the bounty of the White +Father at Washington--gambling and drinking, and doing a little stealing, +when everything else fails them." + +"But on the reservations many of them farm, and I understand with +success, too," remonstrated Felix. + +"Oh, sure, that must be a fact," admitted Tom, readily enough, "though +I've never seen it; but others have told me that many of the braves have +taken to farming, and are doing well. I was only speaking of the Injuns +who wouldn't change their way of living. But Felix, take a look at that +monster tree over there. Seems to me that answers the description Old +Sol gives of the big one overhanging his hidden dugout." + +Felix heaved a sigh of relief, as with one hand he mopped his forehead, +using a red bandana handkerchief which he wore knotted around his neck +in true cowboy fashion; for despite the coolness of the day, the labor +had heated him up considerably. + +"I hope so, Tom," he remarked, trying to act as though after all it was +not such a vital matter whether or not they came upon the shack that day +or the next; but all the same his eyes eagerly sought the vicinity of +the big tree, and he was trying to make out something vaguely resembling +the shape of a rough dugout near its base. + +They kept on advancing, and Tom suddenly gave utterance to an +exclamation of intense satisfaction. + +"We've arrived, all right, Felix!" he declared, positively. "It must lie +in that tangle under the shadow of the tree. And say, this just suits me +all to the good. Look around, and think of spending a whole two months +in such a grand stretch of country. Here are the woods around us, where +we must surely find lots of deer and other game; and there stands the +range of mountains, where you're going to bag that grizzly you want so +bad, not to speak of big-horns, such as can be found in no other section +of the known world, I'm told. For one I'll feel like dancing a jig if it +turns out that we've come on Old Sol's shack at last." + +"Well, it'd take a whole lot to tempt me to do that same," chuckled +Felix; "and anyhow, I'm not going to begin till we make sure. When I +throw this pack down for the last time I'll be pretty happy, though, +Tom, believe me." + +"It has been pretty hard on you, Felix, for a fact," observed the other, +"for the reason that you've not been used to carrying heavy packs on +your back, like I am. Look at my shoulders and see what I could stand. I +wanted you to let me take more of it in my load, you remember." + +"Oh! just as if you hadn't picked out all the heaviest things already," +declared Felix, indignantly, "why, I'm dead sure your bundle weighs a +third again as much as mine does, right now. I'd be ashamed to let you +tote it all, Tom, however willing you were. But do you see anything that +looks like that blessed old dugout?" + +Hardly had he asked this question than the other started on a run. + +"That's what I do, Felix, right through that screen of bushes that +serves to hide it from any one who didn't have a tip it was there. Make +up your mind we're at the end of our long tramp, and in another hour +you'll smell smoke, perhaps the tempting odor of coffee cooking. Hurrah! +what did I tell you, old boy?" + +There could no longer be any doubt, for as they broke their way through +the vines and brush that had not been disturbed for several years, they +looked upon a sort of half cabin, and the rest dugout. The rise of the +ground had allowed Old Sol to construct an ideal winter hiding-place, +with the great mountains to protect him from the worst of the chilling +northwest winds and storms. + +Down went both packs instantly. Tom began to caper around, to show his +delight, and Felix actually followed suit; but more to get some of the +"kinks" out of his weary leg muscles, for that last day's tramp had +sorely tried the city boy. + +"Here it is, just as he described it to me!" exclaimed Tom, staring hard +at the singular little shelter where the trapper had spent many a happy +season, content to gather his share of the pelts of the wild animals +that wore valuable fur; and secure enough meat for his own consumption +from the elk, black-tailed deer, or it might be, some antelope that +lingered late in the Fall in the grassy valleys of the foothills. + +"I suppose we might as well take a look in," remarked Felix, presently. + +"That's right," replied the other, readily enough. "You see, such a +thing as locks are unknown in this country. Notice that the door has a +bar on the outside that simply holds it shut when the owner is away, so +that wild animals will not have a chance to sneak in, and steal his +grub. Well, all we have to do is just to give this bar a turn--whew! she +moves hard, as if stuck there--then push open the door, and enter!" + +Tom Tucker was carrying out his words to the letter, but just as he +started to push the door back the two boys heard an ominous savage growl +that came from within the cabin. + +Immediately Tom, being a boy of quick action, drew the door shut again, +and at the same time swung the stout bar into place; after which he +turned around to look at his amazed companion. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +IN POSSESSION OF THE DUGOUT + + +"Wow! would you hear that, now?" exclaimed Tom. "Pleasant sort of +welcome to a pair of tired, footsore pilgrims, I should say." + +"By George! there's some sort of animal that thinks it owns the shebang, +and has made its den in the dugout!" remarked Felix, in a tone of +astonishment. + +"Just what's happened," continued his chum, stepping back, rifle in +hand, in order to look around; "but what's bothering me, is to know how +the beast got in, when both door and window blind were closed tight. +Why, to be sure, it was the easiest thing going, to drop down that +chimney! Old Sol forgot to fix that against a smart bobcat!" + +"A bobcat!" echoed Felix, "do you think that's all it was? Sounded to me +heavier than any cat's growl I ever heard. You must have whoppers up +here in Wyoming, when you find them at all, Tom." + +"Why, what did you think it could be?" asked the other, quickly. + +"My first idea was that it might turn out to be a panther," said Felix, +"or one of those bad fighters that they call Indian devils; but then, +you ought to be the best judge. No matter what it is, we want that +shack, don't we, Tom?" + +"And we're going to have it, right away, Felix, as soon as we can +dislodge that critter. I was in hopes he'd crawl up out of the chimney, +and give us a crack at him; but it looks like he was too smart to try +such a dodge, with two handy guns waiting to bowl him over." + +"Suppose I pound on the door, and give him notice that he'd better be +making his way out as fast as he can," proposed the taller lad. + +"Let me do that, while you stand here, ready to give him a bullet the +instant his head shows above the top of the chimney; that's made of +slabs, you notice, and mud baked so hard that it's more like cement now. +The light ain't all it might be; but by stepping over here, you ought to +get him against that brighter background. All ready, are you, Felix?" + +"Go ahead; and it's just like you, Tom, waiting to give me the first +chance at everything. Knock him up, and tell him to vamose the ranch," +with which Felix raised his Marlin repeater to his shoulder, and stood +at attention. + +With the butt of his rifle Tom gave several sharp pounds on the door of +the dugout cabin. In response, the hairy occupant simply growled some +more. Again did Tom tap his summons, and the growling continued. + +"That's what I call real sassy," chuckled Tom. "He says he won't budge +an inch, if we have got a quit claim deed from Old Sol to this shack! +And he wants to know what we're going to do about it, either." + +"I don't suppose it would be the right thing to do to open the door, and +rush the beast," remarked Felix. "They're a bad lot, and scratches from +their claws are apt to give a fellow blood poisoning, unless he's got +the stuff to counteract it. How are we going to dislodge that cat, Tom?" + +"You watch my smoke," went on Tom, "and in this case that ain't just a +figure of speech, either, let me remark." + +"Smoke! Oh! I'm on to your game, old fellow; and let me say it's the +best thing we could do. Want any help?" Felix remarked, deeply +interested. + +"Not me," sang out the other, who had laid his gun aside, and seemed to +be looking around for certain dead twigs, and such things as would be +apt to take fire readily; "I'll get a little blaze started, and then +give this green weed a chance to smoulder. It'll put up the rankest +smell you ever did whiff, and when I toss the same in through the door, +take my word for it that cat will soon make a run up the chimney." + +He busied himself for another minute, and then struck a match. As a +little fire started Tom stepped back and gathered an armful of a certain +weed that had not yet been killed by the frost. This he threw upon the +flame, when immediately a dark smoke began to rise. As Felix got a scent +of it he gave a snort. + +"You're sure right, when you said that beat anything I ever ran up +against," he declared, vigorously; "whew! it must be the stink-weed of +the Indians. Nothing else could throw off that awful smell." + +"Just what it is; and now take care, for I'm going to open the door a +little to toss the stuff inside," replied Tom. + +"I see our finish, if that weed ever gets to smoking inside the dugout," +sighed Felix, rather disconsolately, as he held his fingers to his nose, +and tried to deep his rifle in position at the same time. + +"Oh! we'll soon chase that out with coffee and such things," returned +the cheerful Tom; "besides, you've got to stand lots of things when you +can't help it. Here goes, Felix. Now, Old Claws, will you be good?" + +He gathered up the smouldering weeds, and opening the door with one +hand, suddenly tossed his burden within, slamming the barrier shut +again, and turning the bar. They plainly heard some heavy object come +with a crash against the door, as if the cat had sprung savagely, hoping +to land on its enemy, as it undoubtedly considered the one who was +bothering with its peaceful occupation of the apparently abandoned +shack. + +Snatching up his gun, Tom sprang back to where he too could get a dim +view of the top of the short chimney, not more than ten feet away. + +"You first, remember, Felix; I'm only going to break in if you fail to +get him," he said, hastily. + +They plainly heard the cat jumping around within the place, as though it +resented the odor of smoke, and such smoke too! Felix certainly could +sympathize with the animal. + +"He's coming!" warned Tom, suddenly. + +A distinct scratching sound came to the ears of Felix. He understood +what must be the cause of this; the inmate of the dugout was about to +vacate. Defying all other arguments, the cat had to succumb to that of +smoke from the stink-weed. + +Felix kept his eyes fixed on the top of that stumpy chimney, and his +gunstock was already fast against his shoulder. + +"There," exclaimed Tom, as something pushed up into view, and the form +of a big bobcat was seen emerging. + +It had just about all appeared in view, when the report of the Marlin +sounded sharply through the neighboring woods, where perhaps a gun had +not been fired for several years, so far as they knew. + +"Back!" cried Tom, dragging at the arm of his comrade, as the monster +cat came whirling down toward them, in such a mixed-up mess that it was +impossible to say whether the animal were in its death throes, or making +a savage leap at its tormentors, though in either case it was the safe +policy to sheer off. + +When the cat landed on the ground they both saw that it had received its +death wound, and hence there was no need of a second shot from either of +their guns. + +"That settles him for good," remarked Tom, when, with a last spasmodic +movement, the savage looking beast stiffened out. "Nice to have such a +warm welcome, eh, when you get to your future snug home? Now to kick +that weed out of doors in a big hurry, Felix." + +"Go slow," warned the other. + +"What for? Do you think there might be another inside? Not much. If one +had to vacate, the other would have been on his heels. This was an old +hermit cat, without any family, I guess; and a buster, too. Here goes, +then." + +With that he flung open the door. No growling greeted them, which was a +pretty good indication that the shack had yielded up its entire quota of +cats. + +Tom jumped in and in a trice had tossed out the smouldering weeds; which +Felix trampled under foot, until they ceased to give out any smoke or +smell. + +"Pretty rank in here, what with the cat and the weed; hard to tell which +is the worse," declared Tom; "but we'll remedy that right quick." + +Both boys bustled about, getting wood for a fire; and Tom selected as +much fragrant burning fragments as his knowledge of the forest trees +allowed. They carried this into the dugout, the shutter of which had +been opened to admit of fresh air. + +The big fireplace seemed to fairly yawn, and ask for a supply of fuel, +and in a very short time they had the fire going briskly. + +First of all, they did everything possible to get rid of the awful +odors. The two big packs were brought inside and opened, so that the +coffee could be reached, and once Tom had sprinkled a few pinches of the +powdered grain on the hearth, and set a burning brand alongside, to +cause it to catch fire, a different scent filled the place. + +"Is that any better?" he asked, laughingly. + +"A thousand per cent," replied Felix. "But say, I'm as hungry as a bear; +and we can't get supper any too soon to suit me." + +"Same here," chirped Tom; with which remark he started in to make +immediate preparations for the meal. + +Expecting to depend for the most part on the game they would find, for +their subsistence while in the wilderness, they had carried only certain +things along, in the shape of bacon, salt pork, coffee, tea, some sugar, +flour, rice, hominy, and about a quart of onions for an occasional +relish. That, with their blankets, some extra clothes, and ammunition, +made up the heavy packs which the boys had been carrying on their backs +for three full days now--the snow-shoes counted for little, as they were +light weight. + +While Tom made the coffee, Felix busied himself in cooking some of the +bacon. Until they had managed to knock over a deer, or supplied +themselves with meat in some other fashion, they must make a raid daily +on their scanty stock of food. + +"But tomorrow we'll both get busy, and see what we can bag," remarked +Tom, when the other mentioned this depressing fact. + +There were a few crackers left, as well as some cheese, upon which they +had subsisted at "noonings" on the way, not wishing to bother lighting a +fire, and spending time in cooking anything, when in such haste to get +located in their quarters. + +Altogether they had a good satisfying meal, and Felix declared after it +was over that he felt many times better. + +"I'm going to smoke one pipe, just to give a flavor to the old shack +where Sol burned many a pound of the weed in his day," remarked Tom, +settling back comfortably, with a block of wood to support him. + +"And what's in the wind then?" asked his cousin. + +"I might try my hand at taking our first pelt," chuckled the other. + +"Oh! yes, to be sure, I'd about forgotten that he's got a fur worth +keeping. And Tom, every time we look at it, won't we just remember what +a welcome he gave us on our arrival. To be sure it was only in growls; +but then, that's the only language a poor old cat's got. But when you +say you mean to try your hand, you're only joking, because I wager you +took off many a pelt when out with Old Sol Ten Eyck." + +"Of course, and I hope I haven't forgotten the lessons he taught me; for +there never was a better trapper known than Sol in his prime. He's +brought in the skins of every kind of animal in the country, from a +black fox, down to muskrat hides, when you couldn't hardly give these +last away. But nowadays, with the big demand for all kinds of furs, and +a shortening supply, the muskies are fetching a price that makes it pay +a fellow to gather them." + +"That's what I understood from a big fur dealer," Felix went on to +remark. "What's going to happen when all the seals and foxes and mink +and otter are gone, nobody knows. He said that people would either have +to quit wearing any kind of furs; or else be satisfied with muskrat, or +something that never will be extinct." + +"Look at the wolf, for instance," said Tom. "Time was, when it hardly +paid to skin one on the ranch, when we shot them. How is it now? Why, +they've found that those skins make the finest kinds of warm coats for +men driving in automobiles; and the consequence is the price keeps going +up right along. Mr. Wolf has a rough road ahead of him in the next ten +years. But nobody will cry if he's wiped out, because he's a bad lot, +and sure death to young calves in the herd." + +Felix was not addicted to the smoking habit, which probably was a good +thing, as he lacked the robust figure of his western cousin. But Tom did +certainly seem to suck a great deal of consolation from that little pipe +of his, and the other boy had no objection to the fumes, indeed, the +fragrant odor of the tonca bean, which was mixed with Tom's tobacco +rather pleased his senses. + +After he had finished that one pipe, Tom arose, and picking up his +knife, said he would step out to attend to the dead cat. + +"If I can't get the right light, why, I might hang the old boy up from +the limb of a tree until morning," he said; "only that's likely to fetch +others of the breed yowling around tonight. But I'll see." + +A full moon had arisen after sunset, and while the trees kept much of +her light from reaching the ground, still it was far from dark. Tom, +however, was particular with respect to how he took off any pelt, and +decided that it had better wait until morning. He stood outside there +quite a little while, until Felix came to the door to ascertain what he +was doing. + +"Not taking time to bother with the hide tonight, then?" he asked, as he +discovered the dead cat swinging about six feet from the ground, having +been fastened there with a stout cord. + +"Changed my mind, and concluded it would make a better job in daylight," +answered the other. "But I was standing here, listening to something +that ought to make you feel happy." + +"What was that?" asked Felix, his curiosity of course aroused. + +"I heard a 'woof woof' over there that told me a bear was passing by, +and had got a whiff of human presence here," Tom went on to say, +chuckling in his usual way. + +"And do you think it could be a grizzly?" demanded Felix, thrilled with +the very thought of such a thing. + +"Oh! well, I never shot a grizzly, myself, and in fact only hunted for +the breed once; so my ear isn't educated enough to tell the difference +between the sounds made by a cinnamon, and his black cousin; but then, a +bear means game, one way or the other; and that suits us both. Besides, +bear steak ain't so _very_ bad, even if it is tough generally. We'll +look up that gentleman tomorrow, Felix, just as sure as anything." + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE FIRST GOOD LUCK + + +One side of the cabin had a couple of rude but serviceable bunks built +in the wall. Here the boys arranged their blankets; and thus prepared to +put in their first night in camp with a roof over their heads. + +They already saw where they would have numerous things to do in order to +feel comfortable when the snows of early winter struck them; but there +would be plenty of time for all that, as the days glided on. + +After all, the night proved to be a quiet one, in spite of Tom's +expressed fear that the swinging body of the cat might attract others of +its species, who, gathering around, might think to hold a regular "wake" +over the remains. + +In fact, neither of them heard anything from the time they lay down +until dawn came, and with it a desire for breakfast. + +Feeling considerably refreshed, the two comrades set about accomplishing +some of the numerous duties that had been laid out for the day. + +Breakfast disposed of, they started to fix up the interior of the dugout +shack, so as to make it seem more comfortable. Dozens of little things +needed to be done. The roof showed signs of wear in several places, and +had to be patched against the time when the cold winds would whistle and +moan around the corners the livelong night, trying to get a nip at their +toes and fingers. + +During the morning, then, they were constantly busy, and before noon +came around the camp looked a thousand per cent more cheerful. + +"Begins to seem like somebody lived here, eh?" remarked Tom, as he +looked about him with a satisfied air; he was rather "fussy" about how +he did things, never being content to have them just "passable;" the +best was none too good for him, Tom always declared; meaning that if +anything was worth doing at all, it was worth doing well. + +Tom had taken off the skin of the wildcat which was making a den of the +dugout at the time of their arrival. This he had stretched in the proper +fashion, over a thin piece of board, many of which they found in a +corner of the place, having evidently served Old Sol for years in the +same way. + +Strange to say, Tom, knowing the secrets of trappers had not cut the +skin underneath at all but turned it inside-out; this is called +"casing," and the skin is dried with the flesh side out. Besides +wildcat, a few other animals are also treated this way, notably 'possum, +muskrat, mink and otter. As for beaver, raccoon, marten, fox, lynx, +wolf, coyote and skunk, these may be slit underneath, and when stretched +on the board, the hair is allowed to be on the outer side. + +They are never cured near a fire or in the sun; the shade, where the +wind can get at them being much more preferable, if "prime" or +first-class pelts are desired; and of course that is the aim of every +trapper. + +Of course, one of the first things both boys had done on this morning +was to take a look for signs of the bear Tom had heard passing in the +night. The experienced Western lad had no difficulty in finding the +tracks, and he showed his chum how the animal, after standing at a +certain point, evidently sniffing in the direction of the smoke that +came from their chimney, had made an abrupt turn, and headed once more +for the neighboring defiles of the mountains, evidently not caring to +remain in the vicinity of man, whom his instinct told him must always be +the mortal enemy of his species. + +"He was a bully big grizzly, too, all right, Felix!" announced Tom, +pointing to the tremendous size of the footprints, with the marks of +terrible claws showing; for a bear, like a dog, lacks the peculiar +ability of the cat tribe to draw back its claws entirely except when +needed. + +Felix looked rather longingly toward the great rocky uplifts that seemed +so very close by, although he well knew it was quite likely to prove a +little undertaking, reaching any of the gulches and canyons that pierced +the massive barrier. + +"Not today, but soon, I hope," he remarked, turning with a smile toward +Tom. + +"That's right," remarked the other, "all in good time. We must first of +all manage the eating end; or before we know it we won't have any meat +in the cabin. Then we want to look up Old Sol's cache, where he's got +some of his traps hid away. I'd just like to set a few of the same, to +see if the luck holds good. And when, after a while, the spirit moves +us, why, we'll start out to get that grizzly you've been dreaming about +so long." + +So Felix put the thought out of his head, and determined to abide his +time. As he so often said, when some companion tried to make undue +speed, "Rome wasn't built in a day," and the more haste the less speed +to the end. + +"How about that cache?" asked Felix, along about the noon hour, as they +sat and rested up a bit after working faithfully all morning at many +tasks. + +"That's a fact!" exclaimed Tom, jumping up again in a hurry; "I'd let +that slip my mind. And I'm a whole lot curious to know how the steel +contraptions have stood the three years that have gone by since Old Sol +was up here." + +"Didn't you say he wanted you to try and lug the traps back, when we +started for home again?" inquired the other boy. + +"He said he had an enduring affection for the traps, and that if we +could manage to carry a few, he'd think it just prime. I suppose an old +fellow does kind of get attached to anything he's handled so long. +P'raps some of the traps have histories, too. And since we expect to +make a sledge, and pull all our stuff over the snow to where we agreed +to meet Frazer on Christmas day, why, chances are, we can take the whole +caboodle out of the mountains. I know it would tickle the old man a lot, +and he's been mighty kind to me, let me tell you, Felix." + +"Oh! we can do that easy enough," returned Felix, always ready to +oblige; "when we leave here there'll be plenty of snow; and with our +shoes we can make good time, picking out a day that's suited to the +work." + +Tom went over to the lower bunk. Getting down on his hands and knees he +reached underneath, and presently drew forth what seemed to be a rudely +made box. This he had some difficulty in opening, and when the top was +finally pried off they found that the traps had been wrapped, each one, +in an old, poor quality skin, that seemed to be in a pretty good state +of preservation. + +Of course Old Sol had expected to be up there again on the following +Fall, when he put his traps away like this; and never dreamed that three +years would slip by before the cache was opened. But he had carefully +greased them with bear's fat, and as a whole they were looking very +decent. + +Altogether they made quite an assortment when Tom laid them out. The boy +handled them almost with reverence. He knew that, as he had said before, +each one must have a history. Many a story could they tell, if those +grim-looking jaws could only speak--stories of captured wild animals +galore, and of more than one fierce fight before the prisoner finally +gave up the ghost. + +"Tomorrow, perhaps, we can get several of these placed," Tom remarked, +as, having hung the traps up from pegs in the wall, he started +preparations looking to having some warm lunch, for the day was quite +cold. "If I go out for a little turn this afternoon, as you said, why, +I'll keep my eyes about me for likely places. Sol, in his many stories +about his life up here, gave me more than a few hints about the favorite +places he had for certain animals. I rather guess this place must have +been his pet camp, and he used several in his day." + +Felix was not quite recovered from his fatigue, and hence it had been +agreed between them that perhaps he would be wise to stay in camp, and +let Tom take the first look for meat. + +Tom was as tough as a pine-knot. He had been used to roughing it all his +life, and hardly knew such a thing as getting real tired. Besides, as he +had known Old Sol personally, the chances were he would be able to find +a deer more quickly than his cousin might. With that rough chart to +guide him, and the stories of the old trapper still fresh in his mind, +Tom believed he had a pretty comprehensive idea concerning the lay of +the land, even before he had taken one step towards exploring the +vicinity. + +"The woods ought to be good enough for me," he had said; "and I hope to +bring back a load of juicy venison; but if I don't strike up with my +deer, why, we'll just have to fall back on that piece of ham that's left +over." + +"I hope not," remarked Felix, with a shrug; "I'm just tired of ham and +bacon for a steady diet, and ache to have a piece of venison between my +teeth. So here's wishing you the best luck ever, Tom, which is saying a +good word for myself, too." + +When Tom shouldered his gun, and took one last look at the now cozy +interior of the cabin, he smiled back at his chum. + +"Let me tell you, Felix," he remarked, "it looks good to me already; and +I just know we're going to have the best sort of time up here, if only +we manage to keep the wolf from the door." + +"I'll do all I can to assist," laughingly responded Felix, little +dreaming how shortly circumstances, just then utterly unseen, would +bring these words of his companion forcibly before his mind. + +"If you feel like it, Felix, you might be cutting up that big limb that +was torn off the tree in some storm; we can't have too big a pile of +fire wood, against the coming of winter, you know; and once we get a +string of traps to look after, the less time we have to spend in +chopping wood, the better." + +And with these words, followed by a cheery wave of his chum's hand, Tom +strode off for his first side hunt. They really were in need of fresh +meat. Some five days had passed since leaving home, and with three to +feed part of the time, this had made a little hole in the stock of +provisions brought along with them. + +Tom had done a great deal of hunting, and was familiar with most of the +tricks resorted to by those who are most successful in getting game. Of +course he took occasion to notice the direction of the wind before +leaving the cabin. It would be the height of folly to try and stalk a +deer with the breeze blowing his scent directly to the delicate nostrils +of his intended quarry, for the wary animal must detect his presence +long before he could hope to get within gunshot, and as a consequence +would be off "like a streak of greased lightning," as Tom himself put +it. + +As he went along, the boy kept his eyes about him, observing numerous +things of a nature to interest a hunter and trapper. The sigh of the +wind through the tree-tops was sweetest music in the ears of Tom Tucker; +many a night had it lulled him to sleep when in the woods; or stealing +softly over the grassy prairie, where the cattle grazed, it had carried +with it the chirp of crickets and katydids and all the other familiar +sounds of a summer night on the range. + +Never a leaf came floating to the ground near him but that his quick eye +sought it out instinctively. If some little squirrel rustled the leaves, +his ear was on the alert, even as his eager finger touched the trigger +of his gun, ready for a shot at a bounding black-tail deer. + +So Tom went on for perhaps an hour. + +He was not more than half a mile away from the camp at most, since he +had considered it good policy to make a half circle, covering as much +ground as possible in this, his first tramp. + +So far he had seen nothing worth shooting at, though signs of deer had +caught his watchful eye numerous times; and he felt sure they used these +grounds for feeding purposes, as there were patches of green grass every +little while. + +And then, all of a sudden, there was a loud rustle of the leaves that +sent a thrill through the young hunter. He saw a deer leap over a fallen +tree with all the ease in the world, and start to bound away, taking +great springs. Instinct rather than anything else caused Tom to throw +his rifle to his shoulder; and then he fired, just as the buck turned +slightly in order to avoid some obstruction, which Tom had already known +would make him veer. + +With a crash the deer went down. Throwing another cartridge into the +firing chamber of his gun, Tom started full speed toward the spot, ready +to finish his quarry, if such a thing proved necessary; for he had known +deer to get up again, full of fight, after being thrown to the ground by +a shot. + +But that first well-placed ball had accomplished its work. The buck was +dead by the time Tom reached the spot, pleased with his success, which +he looked upon as a splendid sign of future luck. + +As the afternoon was well along, and he would have half a mile to "tote" +his burden, the boy lost no time in setting to work removing the skin of +the animal, and then cutting the deer up, so as to secure the choice +portions, including of course the two haunches. + +Outside of the hams and perhaps the shoulders there is not a great deal +about a deer worth taking; so in due time Tom had packed all he wanted +in the hide, which he made up into a compact bundle, and threw over his +shoulder. + +Thus loaded, and in a happy frame of mind, he started in the direction +of camp. Never once during his hour's tramp had Tom been compelled to +guess where the dugout lay. The woods were as an open book to him, so +accustomed was he to unconsciously noting many little things around +him--the moss on the trees; the way the forest monarchs inclined away +from the prevailing storms that came from the west in this region, +sweeping down the sides of the mountains; with these and many other +signs to tell him, a hunter can read locations as easily as you or I +might a printed page in a book. + +Tom had been moving along a short time in this way when suddenly he +stopped to listen. The report of a gun had been borne to his ears, and +from the direction of the camp, though the breeze was not favorable for +carrying sounds. + +"Hello!" he started to remark; when to his surprise a second shot +followed the first, and quickly came a third. + +By this time Tom was excited. He fancied that this might be a signal +calling for help, as is well known among woodsmen, and cattle rustlers. +Thoughts of the rough characters said to be somewhere in this vicinity, +after being run out of Yellowstone Park by the soldiers guarding the +preserves, flashed into his mind. + +And so Tom, hastily throwing his pack up over a limb, where it would be +safe for a while at least, and carefully noting the spot, so he could +find the meat again, started on a wild run for the location of Old Sol's +hideout. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +THE WOLF PACK + + +When Felix found himself alone he set about doing a number of things +which he had in mind, meaning to tackle the wood problem when it got +later in the afternoon. + +Time passes quickly when any one is busily employed, and so the hour +slipped by almost before he knew it. From some distance away there +suddenly came the report of a rifle. Felix listened eagerly, but no +second shot sounded. This seemed to tell him that none was needed. + +"I reckon Tom got what he wanted that time," he said to himself, as he +went on doing what had engaged his attention; "when he lets go, +something generally drops. Makes my mouth water, just to think of having +a saddle of venison hanging up here for a starter. And then it'll be my +turn next to make a try. Yes, Tom was right; and it sure does look like +we were going to have the time of our lives up here in this Rocky +Mountain foothills country." + +He remembered after a bit that there was only a scant amount of wood +handy, and that Tom had hinted about laying in a further supply. + +"Guess I'll just get a bucket of water, and then take to the axe for a +spell," he remarked to himself, for, like a good many other people, +Felix was quite food of talking to himself when alone. + +Among other things they had found an old but serviceable galvanized +bucket, which Old Sol had carefully greased, and put away for future +use. It had taken Felix not a little time to get it in fairly decent +shape again; but it would hold water, and that was a fortunate thing. +Under such conditions campers have no right to be overly particular +about the looks of things; and a little rust never hurt any one yet, +Felix stoutly declared. + +So, taking the bucket, he set out for the spring, which happened to be +about two hundred feet away from the dugout. + +No doubt Sol Ten Eyck was fully aware of the existence of that same fine +spring when he started to locate his trapping cabin here in the +wilderness; in fact it had everything to do with his selecting that +particular locality for putting up his dugout-shack. + +He had told Tom that that spring must be connected with some of those in +the National Park; because, no matter how cold the winter was, it never +froze up. What water came from it might get as hard as anything in the +zero temperature; but as for the spring itself, it continued to cheerily +bubble forth all through the wintry weather, defying Jack Frost to seal +its mouth. + +Felix was thinking of his chum as he made his way toward the spring. +Doubtless he pictured Tom as busily engaged preparing the carcass of the +deer for transportation to the camp; and he could in imagination almost +see the pleasure his cousin was taking in his work. + +"There never was a better chum than Tom," Felix was saying to himself, +as he dipped his bucket carefully into the water; and then, noticing +that in approaching too closely he had caused the water to become +slightly "roiled," he poured this away, and stooping there, waited a few +minutes until it should settle again. + +A sound caught his hearing that caused him to quickly look up, and then +turn his head. What he saw gave the boy a thrill such as he had seldom +experienced before. + +One, two, three savage looking animals were standing there, staring at +him in a hungry way, just as though they considered themselves in good +luck to come upon a dinner so easily. + +They had all the appearance of dogs, but although Felix could not own up +to any considerable experience with wolves, he knew in a flash that that +was what these visitors must be. + +And they looked dangerous, too. A single wolf is a cowardly beast, and +will almost always slink away from a human being; but when in company, +or running with a pack, he becomes an entirely different sort of animal. +At such times, especially when sharp pressed by hunger, in the middle of +the winter, he will break into the sheep-fold of a farmer, and even pull +down a running horse that has been exhausted by a long flight. + +Felix had read many a wild story of wolf hunts in Russia; and knew with +what fierceness the animals on the Siberian steppes often chase +travelers in native vehicles, frequently devouring men and horses. + +So he did not underestimate the wolves that so suddenly appeared before +him as he stooped over the spring, bucket in hand. + +It flashed upon him that save for his hunting knife he was wholly +unarmed just then; for his trusty Marlin had of course been left in the +cabin; and what use would a five inch blade be against a trio of active, +vigorous and reckless wolves, bent upon securing a dinner? + +He stood up, and took a step toward the cabin. Ominous growls greeted +the act, as though they would warn Felix that they did not mean to allow +him to gain the shelter of his fort. + +Felix had another thrill about that time. The first had meant only +excitement; but this went further, and whispered of alarm as well. + +How they bared their white fangs, and raised the long hair on their bony +shoulders, to show that they were primed for fight. + +The boy realized that unless he proved himself quick-witted the chances +of his ever getting to where he could snatch up his good rifle, and give +them what they deserved, would be pretty slim. + +At such a time as this the brain works as if on fire. It seemed to Felix +as though a score of things flashed through his mind at the same +instant. He wondered if he could frighten the animals by dashing at +them, waving his arms, and letting out a few wild whoops, for sometimes +wolves are sent into a panic by the sound of the human voice. + +But if the expedient failed, why, it would bring him all the sooner to +grips with the three hairy scamps that seemed to invite a trail of +strength, and resourcefulness. + +How about the bucket--could he knock upon the bottom with his knuckles at +the same time, and add to the din, so as to produce a temporary fear in +their hearts? + +The cabin was only two hundred feet away, and Felix just knew he could +fairly fly over this distance, given half a chance; but if they +recovered soon enough to leap after him, was he not likely to have them +on his back before he could get inside and slam the door shut? + +But something _must_ be done! + +He could see them edging a little closer all the while, as though unable +to hold themselves wholly in check. And they were spreading out more in +the shape of a fan, too, as if they knew the best way to trap him. + +Whatever was to be done, he must lose no more time about it, or the +attack would follow, and then it would be too late to devise any scheme +looking to creating a diversion. + +It seemed as though just at that instant Felix remembered something that +promised to open up a possible avenue of escape. + +When he was sitting there, resting for a few minutes, he had picked up +the newspaper that had been wrapped around some of their smoked meat. +Despite its greasy condition Felix had become interested in an article +on some subject of surgery that happened to catch his eye. This he had +partly read through; and then, wishing to complete a certain task with +which he was engaged, he had doubled the paper up, and unconcernedly +thrust it into a rear pocket; little dreaming how in doing this he might +have been actually saving his own life. So do trifles sometimes turn out +to be of the greatest moment. + +This paper, with its greasy surface, would make a fierce flame, if only +for a brief time; and he always carried a bountiful supply of matches +along with him; for Tom had advised this, as a precaution, in case he +ever became lost, when each one would be worth a priceless sum. + +No sooner had the idea flashed into the mind of Felix than he put his +hand around, in hopes of feeling the doubled paper. His heart was in his +throat when at first he failed to touch anything, then he remembered +that it was in the other hip pocket he had thrust the paper. + +So he drew it out, rustling in a manner that elicited a fresh chorus of +snarls and growls from the three guards, who stood between him and the +shack where safety for him lay. + +Crunching the paper up, Felix next sought for a match. He had a little +safe in one pocket of his trousers; but so clear was his mind at this +critical stage of the game that he instantly remembered placing several +matches loosely in the side pocket of his coat, where he could get at +them more easily when starting a fire for supper. + +So ugly did the wolves act about this time that he was almost afraid +they were determined not to wait any longer, but proceed to open +hostilities. And so he continued to talk, and call out at them the +while, in hopes of averting the crisis until he had started things +moving himself. + +Straight ahead of him lay the dugout. Once he began running he must make +record time, and keep in a direct line for the door. How fortunate that +he had left this wide open when starting after that bucket of water! All +he would have to do would be to fly through that friendly aperture, +snatch hold of the door, and fling it back of him. Then his next move +would be to make one leap for the corner where the Marlin stood; once he +felt its convincing metal in his hands, and after that he would not care +a snap of his fingers for all the timber wolves that existed within a +radius of ten miles. + +All these preliminaries Felix seemed to settle, just like a great +general would his plan of campaign; only he had to do it out of hand. +The impatient and hungry wolves would not wait his pleasure; they wanted +things to be moving along. + +Felix had let the empty bucket drop to the ground when his brilliant +scheme came flashing into his mind, so that both his hands were free to +conduct the work he had arranged. + +First of all was the striking of the match, and this he would have to +accomplish along one leg of his trousers, as Tom always did. The act was +greeted by more nasty and irritating snarls, as the three wolves moved +still closer, hardly able to hold back longer. + +When the flame of the match was communicated to the greasy newspaper, of +course it flashed up splendidly. + +This was his chance, and delay now would be apt to injure his prospects +of being able to reach the shelter of the cabin. + +So Felix began to wave his flaming torch, made up of the twisted +newspaper, and at the same time sprang straight at the three wolves. He +knew that such a move would add to their temporary panicky state of +feeling and give him a chance to cover some ground. + +And as he started to jump at them, he also called out at the top of his +voice, and waved both arms, as though he might be an animated human +windmill in action, bearing down upon them. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +A FIRST TASTE OF VENISON + + +"Get out! Get out, you rascals!" + +That was about the burden of what Felix yelled, as he dashed at the +three timber wolves; although, when put to it afterwards he could never +be sure of what he said, only that he endeavored to make his whole +appearance as fierce looking as possible. + +It seemed to be a success, too, for the animals turned tail, and bolted. +Wolves, as indeed about every other wild animal in the woods or in the +mountains, inherit a peculiar dread of fire, though of course the only +acquaintance most of them have with its terrifying qualities is when a +forest or a prairie fire threatens their lives. + +Even before the white man came to these shores of America, the Indians +knew how to use flint and steel in order to kindle their fires; and +besides, now and then, doubtless conflagrations may have occurred +through fire coming down from the clouds, and the lightning striking +some dead tree in the woods. + +Thus the fear of flames is born in these predatory animals; and as even +in the broad daylight the wolves saw the greasy newspaper flash up into +a little pyramid of fire, they just "scooted for all they were worth," +as Felix afterwards declared, when telling the story of his little +adventure. + +He did not even waste a second in glancing over his shoulder as he ran, +in order to ascertain how far this fear carried them. Chances were, they +would quickly get over the condition of panic, especially when seeing +their expected dinner making off in that vigorous fashion. And Felix +knew that once this occurred, they would be racing after him as fast as +they could run. + +As the boy had always been fond of baseball, and kindred games, while at +school, doubtless he could look back to many an occasion when he put in +what he considered his "best licks" in endeavoring to stretch out a +two-base hit into a three-bagger; or possibly trying to steal home, when +the ball was being sent back to the pitcher, and his club needed a run +the worst kind, to win. + +But Felix always claimed that had he been able to cover ground on those +occasions as rapidly as he did when those three wolves were after him, +he might have easily counted a home-run on that two-base hit; or be +sitting on the home plate by the time the pitcher was ready to throw to +catch him. + +He fairly flew, every muscle and nerve being "on the job," as he called +it. The yawning open door was just in front of him; but by now he could +positively hear a terrible scratching sound in his rear, which must be +produced by the scrambling of his lupine foes over the intervening +ground. + +They had recovered from their temporary scare, and were after him at +full speed, bent on pulling him down as they would a wounded deer. + +But he reached the dugout, and shot through that opening like a flash. +At the instant of doing so he reached out, and catching hold of the +door, gave it a desperate fling. + +He heard it strike something, which could only be the head of the +foremost wolf. And turning as quickly as possible, Felix threw his +weight against the door, which was even then commencing to move inward, +under the rush of enemies without. + +But there was enough of vigor and alarm in the boy to crush the door +fast; after which he secured it with the bar. + +He was safe, then, and had cheated the hungry beasts out of their +expected dinner. Felix seemed to experience a sudden change in the state +of his feelings. He had been alarmed before; now he was angry at those +three bold beasts. And turning around, he picked up the Marlin with +which he expected to get his ferocious grizzly; and which had been +chosen particularly on account of its hard shooting qualities, as well +as its faithfulness in a pinch, the mechanism never failing to work, as +some guns have a weakness for doing. + +Once he had the hammer drawn back, and Felix walked deliberately over to +the door, which he meant to swing open. He might have taken to the +window just as well, but somehow he felt so fortified by this accession +of the repeating gun that he scorned such "baby" action. + +Taking down the bar, he allowed the door to open just a few inches. That +gave him the chance he wanted to see the gleaming eyes and the red mouth +of a wolf not two feet away. + +With the shot he saw the animal roll over in convulsions; while the +other two lost no time in making hasty tracks away from that dangerous +locality. + +And here was where Felix showed that he knew what he was doing when he +selected the door instead of the smaller opening that served as a +window, since it actually had a pane of glass, and a movable sash--he was +enabled to immediately step outside, gun in hand, and take a couple of +shots at the fleeing wolves. + +With each report one of the scampering beasts rolled over. It was as +fine shooting as Felix had ever done in all his life, and he had always +been accounted a rather clever hand with either rifle or bird gun. + +"All down in that alley; set 'em up again!" he exclaimed, thrilled with +the remarkable success that had followed his work. + +Not one of the ferocious beasts got up again, to try and limp away; so +that the young Nimrod was not compelled to use more than a single +cartridge apiece. + +But when, presently, he went to the spring for that bucket of water, +Felix, you may be sure, carried the rifle along with him; and the three +cartridges that had been ejected were replaced by fresh ones. + +There were no more wolves hovering around in that immediate +neighborhood, apparently, and he was not disturbed any further. So Felix +set about chopping his wood in the most unconcerned way possible, after +examining the bodies of his prizes, and dragging them into a row under +the big tree. + +A short time later he heard Tom's "cooie," and answered it. Of course +the other had ceased his wild run as soon as he caught the regular sound +of the descending axe; but when he came up presently, fairly panting for +breath, his face displayed more than ordinary curiosity. + +"What was it, Felix?" he asked. + +"Do you mean, why did I fire those three shots?" asked the other, +meaning to tantalize his chum a little; for he could see how Tom was +burning up with eagerness to know the cause of the firing. + +"Yes, yes, of course. It's generally the signal that a fellow needs +help," said Tom, eagerly. + +"Well, my time for needing help had about passed when I let drive with +the Marlin gun," Felix went on, in a mysterious way that the other could +make nothing out of. "But if you could have dropped in here about a +minute before that time, I tell you now, you'd have been the most +welcome sight my eyes could have looked on." + +"But why? Open up, Felix, and tell me what happened. You shot something, +didn't you?" Tom went on to demand. + +"I shot three times, and there were just that number of the scamps, Tom." + +Whereupon Tom glanced around, and in consequence quickly discovered the +several forms of the defunct beasts lying in a grim row under the big +tree. + +"Well, I'll be hanged if it wasn't a whole pack of wolves; and what +fierce looking fellows, too!" he exclaimed, as he hurried over to +examine them. + +"Huh!" grunted Felix; "I reckon each one looked about as tall as a house +to me, when they stood there, and showed me by their bared fangs, and +savage growls, that they didn't mean to let me make a dash from the +spring to the shack without tackling me." + +"The spring! D'ye mean to say they waylaid you there? But how lucky it +was that you didn't forget to have your gun along!" ejaculated Tom. + +"That's where the joke comes in," remarked the other, drily; "because it +never once occurred to me that a fellow ought to go to get a bucket of +water, with his gun under one arm. It was in the cabin at the time, +more's the pity." + +Tom plumped down on the ground, and mopped his face with his bandana; +his run had apparently heated him up considerably. + +"Spin the yarn, Felix; don't keep me guessing so hard. However in the +wide world did you keep them off till you grabbed up the gun?" he urged. + +"Couldn't have done it at all, I give you my word, because they were +just bent on tackling me off-hand; but it chanced that I had an old +newspaper in my pocket." + +"A newspaper!" echoed Tom; "what under the sun did that have to do with +it! How could a paper interest wolves? Come on, tell me what you did, +Felix?" + +"Struck a match, and made a bully old torch. Then I just jumped for 'em, +and hollered to beat the band!" replied the other, with a grin. + +Tom's face was a study as he listened, and he too smiled broadly. + +"A great stunt, my boy, it sure was," he went on to say. "And so that +scared 'em off enough for you to get inside, where your gun was, did +it?" + +"But only by a close shave," replied Felix. "One of the critters came +slap up against the door even when I was banging it shut; and they all +tried to outpush me." + +"Then I suppose you just opened the little window, and gave the sassy +beasts one, two, three, eh, Felix?" + +"Just what I did, only it was the door I opened a little, Tom. After I'd +bowled one over, the others put for shelter, just as I expected; and so +I was able to just step outside, and plunk the runners as neat as you +please. I'm some proud of those two shots; they were as good as anything +I ever did at my best." + +"Well, you have done yourself proud, let me tell you that; but in my +mind the best part of the whole business was where you thought up that +clever dodge of using that newspaper for a torch. It was a stroke of +genius," said Tom, earnestly, and there could be no doubt that he meant +it. + +"But I heard you shoot; did you get any fresh meat? Excuse me for +asking; but I'm that hungry for a bite of venison I'll have to forget my +manners, Tom?" + +"Oh! I downed a young black-tail buck, and was toting the meat to camp +when I heard you shoot three times. Of course I just thought you'd +visitors here in the shape of that Abe Cozzins and Perley Kline we've +been hearing so much about, as guides who've been doing all sorts of +tough things, been fired from the Park, and are suspected of shooting +game on the Government reservation. You just bet I did some tall +sprinting for a while; then when I heard you start chopping, I knew you +must be all right; but by that time I was too much worked up to turn +around and go back for the venison I hung on a limb. I'll do that as +soon as I get my breath once more." + +Felix swung his axe merrily, while the other watched him. + +"You couldn't have better exercise than that for broadening your chest +and hardening your muscles don't you know it, Felix," Tom asked, +presently. + +"Sure I do, and that's a sly hint I'm to be the steady wood chopper +while we're up in camp at the foot of the Rockies," replied the other, +laughingly; "but I really like the handling of an axe first-rate; and +with more practice I think I'll be able to bring it down exactly where I +want, every time, just like those loggers up in Maine do." + +"Well, I must say you're in an awful big hurry to load up with pelts," +Tom continued, with a whimsical grimace in the direction of the three +wolves. "Here you hardly get in camp before you begin by knocking over a +big cat that crawls out of our chimney; and before a single day goes by +you've lain out a heap of fine wolf hides for me to stretch and dry. At +that rate I see myself keeping busy right along and we'll have a load to +take back on our sledge that'll make Frazer's eyes stick out of his +head. I kind of think he laughed in his sleeve at the idea of two boys +catching any of these fur bearing animals. He'll have another guess +coming. But I ought to be hiking out after that venison. I'd hate to +have any critter make way with it, after going to all the trouble I did, +eh, Felix?" + +"And then, we need it in our business so bad, too," remarked the other, +drily; "so I think you'd better be getting it, Tom." + +Accordingly, Tom started off again to retrace his steps, promising to be +back in half an hour or less. With the pleasing prospect of fresh meat +for supper, Felix worked with additional vim, as he swung the light axe +they had carried with them through the three days they had been on the +trail up here. + +Now and then he would steal a glance toward the row of grim trophies +that had fallen to his skill as a marksman; yet from certain words that +dropped from his lips it was evident that Felix gave much of the credit +to his faithful gun. + +"Just point it straight, and it'll do the rest every time," he chuckled, +with a fond look at the rifle snuggled down close to where he was +working, so that he could snatch it up at a second's warning, if +necessary. + +After a time the cheery whistle of his chum was heard near by, and then +Tom appeared, staggering under his load, but making light of it when +Felix protested that he should not have tried to carry so much. + +"Plenty of meat for a week or two, because it'll keep sweet and nice in +this mountain air, and particularly at this time of year," Felix had +said, as he helped unload the pack-horse and sized up the cuts. + +"Don't examine 'em too close," remonstrated the Nimrod; "I never was a +good hand at butchering; though I had ought to be, because I've been +raised among cattle, and have cut up many a steer. But it answers our +purpose." + +"Well, if you call that poor work, you'll take a fit when you see what I +do," remarked the other, shaking his head in despair. + +As the afternoon was now getting along, they determined that they might +as well start things moving, looking toward supper. Both of them were +fairly wild to get the first taste of meat on the trip. + +At home, and cooked in the civilized fashion, with possibly only a poor +appetite spurring one on, venison is apt to seem dry eating; but take it +out in the woods with the proper surroundings, and hunger that is +clamorous in its demands; with the game cooked after the hunter's +fashion, and there is nothing more delightful. Just so the coffee tastes +like nectar out of a rusty old tin cup, while at home much of the +pleasure is lost if there happens to be a crack in the delicate china +cup in which the fragrant juice of the Java bean is served. The +conditions and surroundings have a great deal to do with the enjoyment +of a thing; and venison was never intended to be eaten over a snow-white +table cloth, and flanked by cut glass and china and silverware. + +While Felix commenced to get supper Tom gave his attention to taking off +the gray "jackets," as he called them, of the wolves. + +"Some day, not a great ways off," he remarked, "they'll be keeping a +chauffeur or a gentleman in a car snug and warm, and that's a better use +for them, than just covering three pesky calf-killers. I'm always +tickled all to death to see a wolf knocked over, I despise the breed so; +they're so sneaky and so cruel." + +"Well, they looked that way to me, let me tell you," remarked Felix from +within the shack, where he was busily employed; "especially when they +drew back their lips and showed me what long fangs they had, all of 'em. +But all's well that ends well; and we've got a nice bunch of wolf pelts +to start on." + +After awhile the tantalizing odor of coffee began to steal out to Tom; +and then this was supplemented by the delightful smell of frying meat; +for they had fetched along a good-sized frying pan, without which Tom +never would go camping. + +He had just washed up, after completing his job, so far as the first +part of it went, when Felix announced that supper was ready. + +"I reckon you'd better take a look around tomorrow," Tom remarked, as +they sat there by the fire, enjoying a bountiful meal that made both +boys as contented as kings. "I had my inning today; and besides, I've +got lots of work to do, what with getting these wolf pelts fastened on +stretchers; and setting a few traps in places not a great ways from the +shack. And after the time you had, I give you fair warning that I'll +never be caught out, with my gun at home. If you'd had time, of course, +you could have climbed a tree; but those hungry chaps didn't mean to let +you try such a dodge. Chances were they'd have nabbed you in three +shakes of a lamb's tail." + +"But we've got enough meat for awhile, haven't we?" asked Felix. + +"Better lay in a stock while the chance offers," replied the other, +wisely. "If we want to keep it I know how the Indians jerk their +venison, and it ain't half way bad, cooked in a stew, or eaten as it's +dried. Pemmican they call it, and some of the lot they carry is about as +black as your hat, from the smoke it was dried in. An Indian brave can +run for days with only a handful of that stuff along to nibble at when +he feels faint. It's a life saver, all right." + +"Perhaps, then, I will take a look around," Felix admitted; for he was +eager to try his luck with the deer, as well as have a chance to observe +what the surrounding country looked like. + +They passed a pleasant evening, both busy doing some little thing; for +there could always be found plenty that needed attention; and Tom was a +great hand to want to have everything about him shipshape. + +And when finally, becoming tired, the two chums turned in, they did not +need any rocking to put them to sleep. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +FELIX TAKES HIS TURN + + +So another day found the campers under the shadow of the great Rockies. +They were up early, for it had been about nine o'clock when they turned +in on the preceding night; and there was plenty waiting to be done. + +"Suppose you let the pelts go until later in the day, Tom," remarked +Felix as they ate breakfast at the rough table, which Old Sol had built +for his use when he used to spend so many months every winter up here, +in this favorite nook. + +"What for?" asked the other, well knowing that Felix would never make +this odd proposition without having some good reason for it. + +"Well," said his chum, slowly, "I'd like to go with you for a little +while, and see how you set the traps you think of putting out. Then, +later on in the day, perhaps after we've had a bite of lunch, I might +try a tramp in another quarter from where you went, just to see what the +country looks like." + +"Just as you say," replied Tom, readily enough. "I didn't stop to think +that perhaps you'd like to see the operation. And I guess it's just as +well that you pick up some information about how to do the job; because +some days perhaps you'll want to run the line of traps yourself; and +then you'll have to know how to set them, as well as keep your scent +from staying around, and warning timid animals away." + +In about half an hour they started forth, each carrying a few traps. Tom +had been cudgeling his brains to remember all that Old Sol had told him +about his favorite places for setting his mink traps. There was a little +ravine close by, through which a stream of water ran; and along the +banks of this the wary animals abound. + +Perhaps Tom may not have gone about his task in exactly the same way an +experienced trapper would; for it takes years of work to learn all there +is to know in connection with the cunning little fur-bearing animals +that look on man as their most implacable foe, as indeed he has been +ever since the world began. + +Some people have a knack for doing this sort of thing, while others +never seem able to learn anything about the game. Tom was one of the +former. He had spent enough time with Old Sol to learn a great many +points that were worth knowing. The rest could only come through +personal experience in the field. + +These mink traps were set in front of certain openings in the banks +which, from the signs, were "used" by the mink in traveling about, a +peculiar habit they have of doing at certain times of the year. + +Then a couple of fox traps were left at spots which Tom understood were +likely to bring about results. Great care had to be exercised in setting +these traps, so as to conceal the human scent, which would come to the +acute sense of smell of the sly fox, and completely baffle the designs +of the would-be trappers. + +After that some muskrats traps were placed in a little marsh where the +rodents lived in great numbers. They are possibly the easiest animal to +trap there is; and as the price of their skins has been going steadily +up from next to nothing, until now they bring as high as sixty-five +cents apiece, it pays a trapper to devote his entire time to taking the +rats; which, truth to tell, are really no relation to the ordinary house +rats, but are called musquash by the Indians, and are really very tasty +as food. + +It was when the boys were starting back to the dugout, after locating +the last of their muskrat traps in the marsh, that Tom made a discovery. + +"Looky here!" he exclaimed, pointing to one side; "what's been going on, +d'ye suppose? Part of a deer, and it hasn't been killed more'n a week. +Why, the foxes haven't made way with it all. Queer those hungry wolves +didn't scent it; but then they don't eat carrion as a rule, like the +coyotes. They're daintier in their choice of food." + +"Whatever do you suppose killed this deer?" asked Felix, as they turned +that way. + +"We'll soon find out," replied his chum; "but the chances are ten to one +it was a bullet from a rifle." + +He bent over to examine the few remains, and presently looked up with a +smile. + +"What did I tell you, Felix?" he demanded, holding some small object +before his chum's eyes. + +It was a bullet, somewhat flattened from having struck the heavier +bones, when it pierced the body of the deer. + +"And only a week back, you say, Tom?" remarked Felix, a frown appearing +on his face. "Then some party has been around here a short time ago? I +had begun to believe we were going to have it all to ourselves; but I +suppose that would be too good luck. Any idea what sort of a man the +hunter was?" + +"Injun," replied Tom, laconically, as he pointed to the mark of a +moccasin in the soft soil near by; and which Felix noticed "toed-in;" +for an Indian always walks that way; as Nature intended man should, +before he began to wear stiff boots, and started to use his feet the +wrong way, by "toeing-out." + +"Whew! then all I hope is, that it turns out to be that good old +halfbreed we heard so much about, Charley Crow they call him, because +his other name is too much for a fellow's tongue. I wouldn't mind him so +much; and if he's starting to put in a season trapping in this +neighborhood, why, we might make friends with him, you know." + +"As for me," declared Tom, with a disconsolate look on his sun-burned +face; "you know, I don't take much stock in any Injun or half-breed. I +only hope we have the good fortune not to run across this fellow, or any +of his kind, all the time we stick it out up here. But then I'm +prejudiced, I own up. Charley may be all they say about him. We'll let +it go at that. If he doesn't bother us, be sure I'll not go ten steps +out of my way to look him up." + +All the same, it made them a little serious as they walked back to the +camp. If there were others hunting and trapping in that section, such a +thing always opened the door for all sorts of new troubles. + +Supposing there should turn out to be a whole hunting party of Shoshones +or Flatfoot Indians off their reservation, and engaged in a grand hunt; +they would make things look pretty "sick," as Tom expressed it, around +there, in short order. + +But then, fortunately perhaps, boys are not much given to forebodings; +and presently both Tom and his chum were feeling themselves again. +Doubtless the recollection of that deer would return to them more than a +few times to arouse these same doubts and speculations. And every time +Tom felt that smashed bit of lead in his pocket, he would allow himself +to indulge in guesses that could hardly lead to anywhere in particular. + +It was now getting on toward noon, and Felix announced that he would not +bother making a start until some time afterwards. There was no need of +hurry, and inside of a couple of hours, he thought he ought to cover as +much ground as he wanted to get over for that time. + +"I'd better be making a start with those wolf pelts," said Tom; "because +there's no telling what we may have on our hands by tomorrow, if only a +third of those nine traps bring us returns. Makes me think I'm out again +with Old Sol. How much I'd like to have him along, right now, he's such +a bully old chap; and with a lot of queer things to tell about his +experiences." + +Although Felix did not bother to say so, truth to tell, he was entirely +satisfied with the way things ran just then; there could not be a better +comrade than Tom Tucker, and according to his mind, two was always a +better number than three. + +He watched Tom get busy with one of the pelts, and affix it to the large +stretching board; after he had done considerable scraping, so as to get +the skin as free from flesh as possible. + +"They're prime skins, and that's what," the worker declared. "And if +you'd shot this fellow on purpose so as not to injure his hide, you +couldn't have done better." + +"That must be the one that was trying to butt in at the door when I +opened it just a mite," declared Felix. "I gave him his right down his +throat; for he had his mouth open, and I could see the rows of shining +white teeth; besides his red tongue hanging out." + +"Of course that's it," remarked Tom. "I remember now that the others are +shot in the side, and both of them just back of the foreleg. Great work, +that, my boy; and when it comes to shooting I'll have to take a back +seat, I reckon." + +"Lay it to the gun," chuckled Felix; "all you have to do is to stick +that shooting-iron out, and shut your eyes as you pull trigger. It does +all the rest." + +"Yes, and goes out to retrieve your game besides," added Tom, with a +laugh. "The gun's all right, and I've used it enough to know what it can +do; but there's a whole lot in the fellow behind the gun, as they say in +the navy." + +"By the way, Tom, you'd better tell me if you think there's any chance +of my getting lost in these same old woods. I don't know half as much as +you do about finding my way about; and I used to have the greatest +weakness for losing my bearings you ever saw, some time back. Yes, I +studied up all the known ways for telling the direction, if I lost my +compass and could point out north as well as the next fellow; but the +trouble with me was, I couldn't say whether camp meant north, south, +east or west, most of the time. Of course, here I'd have the mountains +to guide me; and besides, I've got a bully little compass somewhere +around; so I don't think I'll worry about it. And even if I did stray +off, it could only be for a night. After several stabs at it, I'd be +sure to arrive at the proper direction." + +"I don't believe you would lose yourself around here if you tried, +Felix," asserted Tom, positively. "You're only saying that to josh me. +But I'm not going to let it bother me any. If you don't turn up, why, +I'll be on your trail in the morning." Tom said this jokingly, never +dreaming that he might have a chance to put his words into practice so +soon. + +He, himself, had never been lost in all his life. Like the homing +pigeon, Tom seemed to have some sort of instinct that, under all +circumstances, allowed him to face toward home when he wanted to turn +that way. And he could not understand how anyone could make such +mountains out of mole-hills. Why, all they had to do was to use their +eyes, and what sense lay in their head, in order to figure out just how +to head to get back to their starting point. + +And yet you could drop Felix down into the heart of a strange city, even +great London, and he would presently be able to find his way around, so +that in a week's time the streets would be as familiar to him as those +of his native town; while probably Tom Tucker would have to be escorted +to his hotel by the police every time he sauntered forth. He was used to +one thing, and Felix another. + +When two hours had passed Tom, seeing that his companion had not made +any sign of going forth began to ask questions. + +"Give up the idea of that little hunt for today, Felix?" + +"Oh! no," was the reply, as the other got up and stretched himself, for +he had been busying himself with some small job that allowed of sitting. + +"Better be moving, then, or you'll be caught by darkness away from camp; +and then you'll have to try bunking alone for once," suggested the +other. + +"That's so," Felix went on, beginning to buckle on his ammunition belt, +and put a few things in the pockets of his coat, the sight of which made +Tom elevate his eyebrows. + +"Don't mean to take any chances, eh?" he remarked. + +"Oh! well, there's no telling, and you yourself always say its best to +be prepared. I expect to be back inside of two hours at the most, +however," and Felix picked up his gun, showing that he was now ready to +start. + +"And I expect to have a lot of things done by the time you do come +back," remarked Tom. "If you're lucky enough to get your deer, perhaps +you'd better only bring home the saddle, and leave the rest for +tomorrow." + +"You're saying that because you know I'm not built along the same husky +lines you are," declared Felix; "but lots of times these thin fellows +can show plenty of grit and carrying power. So-long, Tom." + +"And Felix," called out the other, as an after thought, "if you happen +to run up against any of those fellows like Abe Cozzins and Perley +Kline,--you remember Frazer telling us about their stamp, don't +you?--better give 'em a wide berth. We know they're being looked for by +the Government men, and p'raps they know it too, so they may feel ugly +toward every one. If we were together I wouldn't think much of it; but +you haven't rubbed up against that sort of border scoundrel as much as I +have. Be careful, won't you?" + +"I guess I will, Tom; and don't worry about me." + +With that Felix was gone, his gun over his shoulder, and not a sign of +his recent weariness to be seen about his quick, springy step, Tom +noticed, with satisfaction. + +The time passed rapidly to the boy who was so busy in camp. In fact, he +hardly noticed its passage, and when he heard a distant shot, soon +followed by a second, he was astonished to find that two hours had +really gone. + +"That sounded as though he'd struck something worth while," Tom was +saying to himself, with a smile, once more turning his attention to +whatever it was at which he chanced to be working at the time. "But +unless he hurries in his work, it'll come on dark before he gets back. +At this time of year night just seems to be in the tallest kind of a +hurry to get a move on the daylight." + +And indeed, as the dusk deepened, and he saw nothing of his chum, Tom +went to the open door many times, wondering whether after all Felix +might not have wandered so far afield that his own laughing prediction +was being fulfilled, and that in truth he was temporarily lost. + +But Tom, having prepared supper for two, waited a long time before he +would sit down alone to eat his portion. As Felix was still absent the +Western boy began to feel more or less worried. He had thought there +could be little or no danger in those woods at the base of the Rockies; +but now, with the absence of his chum, he began to see all sorts of evil +things that might have come upon Felix, rather unused to these vast +ranges of wilderness, so different from those he was accustomed to +roaming in the Far East. + +Later grew the hour, and Tom realized that the matter was getting a bit +serious. He even went out, and fired his gun three times in rapid +succession; and then listened eagerly; but there was no air stirring to +carry sounds, and only the melancholy hooting of an owl up among the +cliffs far away answered him. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +UNAVOIDABLE DELAY + + +There was a reason, and a good one, too, for Felix failing to show up +that afternoon or evening, which will become apparent to the reader +after a short time. + +When he strode away from the camp under the big tree, it was as +cheerfully as ever he had felt in all his life; nor was he dreaming of +the possibilities of anything odd, or out of the usual rut, overtaking +him. But many times it is the unexpected that swoops down upon us; just +as storms once in a while surprise the oldest weather prophets, coming +from a point they have never considered. + +Felix wanted very much to duplicate the performance of his chum. He had +made up his mind to three things, which he hoped his trip to the Rockies +would bring forth. One of these, as has been said before, was to be able +to shoot a ferocious grizzly bear, alone and unaided. Then he yearned to +bring down one of those sturdy jumpers of the steeps, a Rocky Mountain +sheep, or bighorn, stories concerning which he had read so many times; +and last of all, he hoped to get the head of a seven-pronged buck, +something that in all his hunting before he had never been able to +secure for his collection. + +He strode away, and in less than half an hour had begun to work things +to suit the conditions of the hunt. The wind had changed materially from +the preceding day, and was now coming out of the northwest. This allowed +Felix a chance to head in a northerly direction, which was just what he +wanted; because it gave him the option of covering ground which Tom had +not touched in his little hunt. + +Now he was moving cautiously along, eyes and ears on the alert; for his +chum had warned him that in all probability the first thing he would +know concerning the presence of a deer would be when he heard it jump +hurriedly to its feet in some thicket, and then catch a glimpse of its +brown side as it leaped wildly away. And Felix, being a clever snap-shot +with his favorite gun, was on the watch ready to do himself credit. + +Of course, even the best of hunters may make a poor shot at times, since +when a deer plunges madly through woods and brush there is no certainty +for aim; but he believed that if the chances gave him half a show he +would make a success of his little excursion. + +A more cautious or experienced lad than Felix would of course have taken +more pains to note the lay of the land, and its other features, +calculated to prove of more or less value to him later on in case he got +his bearings mixed. + +But he was buoyant and indifferent; besides, it happened that he had +lately discovered certain tracks that held his interest, to the +exclusion of all such minor things as the possibility of his getting +lost. + +These hoof prints had certainly been made by a deer of unusual size, a +fact he viewed with exultation, since it told him that undoubtedly here +was the very buck for which he had long been looking, and whose antlered +head he began to hope was to grace the wall of his den at home. + +And as he moved along he registered a silent vow that he would let +nothing come in the way to interfere with the success of his +undertaking, should he only have the good fortune to come up with his +quarry. + +Felix could not tell exactly how old the tracks were. He saw by several +signs, however, that they had been made since early morning, since in +places they had broken down the partly frozen earth. He was trusting +partly to luck that the deer might not be miles away from him just then. +If he had followed the usual custom of his kind he had lain down during +the middle of the day, when the sun was warm, and might be feeding by +this time. + +An hour passed away, and Felix was just as eagerly tramping along with +his eyes fixed upon those tracks as when he first started. If there was +one trait young Edmondson possessed that cropped out frequently, it was +his stubbornness, once his mind was made up; no matter what difficulties +loomed up ahead, that were calculated to dismay the ordinary fellow, he +would not be deterred. + +By now he had covered fully twice the distance from the camp that he had +intended to do; for instead of sweeping around, and making a half +circle, he was keeping almost straight on, even though the trail +zigzagged at times. + +Even Felix, without the extended experience in tracking which his +companion possessed, could tell that he was gaining on the deer, which +had stopped to browse from time to time, when some tempting bit of green +grass was come upon in small glades under the heavy timber growth. + +This kept his excitement at fever height. What mattered it if he did not +get back to camp that night; he had made ample preparations for spending +a short period alone under the trees; and in fact was not wholly averse +to trying how it felt to be making a bivouac in that Wyoming wilderness, +quite by himself; for Felix was always seeking new and novel sensations, +and he could not remember ever camping in solitary state in all his +life. + +At any rate Felix gave promise of some day making a splendid trailer; +since the prime requisite to success along this line is +stick-at-it-iveness, such as marks the wolf following the deer through +day and night, until finally he wearies his intended quarry, and brings +it to bay. + +The tracks now looked much fresher than when he started to follow them. +He began to hope that he might come suddenly upon his game in some quiet +nook; and hence his eager finger toyed nervously with the trigger, as he +kept pushing ahead. + +And just as he had anticipated many a time, the first thing he heard was +a loud snort. Then up jumped a buck of such splendid proportions that +Felix was thrilled doubly by the apparition. Nevertheless, he did not +lose his head, as many boys would have done under similar circumstances; +but as the big beast leaped away, the Marlin repeater was flung up to +the young hunter's shoulder, and its sharp report instantly followed. + +With a crash the deer went down in a heap; but after a wild scramble, +seemed able to get upon its feet again, proving that the first shot had +failed to effect a fatal wound. + +Felix naturally expected to see the animal go off with frantic bounds, +and was prepared to send several shots after him, in the hope of +bringing him down with a lucky bullet; but he did not calculate what a +painful wound might accomplish in arousing the combative spirit and fury +in an old buck. + +To his intense amazement and consternation, the animal, while "bounding" +all right, headed directly toward him, instead of away. + +This surprising fact must have disconcerted the young Nimrod a trifle, +at least, as it has many a veteran marksman under similar conditions; at +least it caused him to aim badly; so that although he pulled trigger and +the gun spoke, the advancing animal did not seem to swerve from the +direct course he had taken in starting, and which if pursued, would +bring him swooping down upon the boy. + +Now Felix had heard Tom tell about the far from amiable qualities shown +by these same hermit bucks, when aroused, and enraged by wounds; and how +dangerous a charge on the part of one might prove. + +He even noted that the antlers were much larger than the coveted +seven-prongs upon which he had set his mind and hopes; and indeed just +at that moment they must have appeared to his excited imagination about +five feet long, and each prong threatening to do him a tremendous amount +of harm if it came in contact with his person. + +Felix rejoiced in the fact that he was in the neighborhood of a +good-sized tree, behind which he could take immediate shelter, for the +charging animal was so close upon him that he had no chance to shoot for +a third time. + +And it was with considerable activity and eagerness that the young +Nimrod gave a leap to one side, and placed the tree-trunk between; but +he clung with a desperate clutch to his rifle, knowing instinctively +that sooner or later this was the only thing that could rid him of the +implacable foe that his shots had aroused to such fury. + +And then began a merry chase around that tree, with the wounded buck +trying all he knew how to reach the fleeing hunter with those terrible +antlers, which Felix had coveted so much; it began to look just then as +though he might make their acquaintance in a fashion he had never +dreamed possible. + +Of course the boy had only part of the distance to cover that the deer +required, in order to pass around the large trunk; but he was compelled +to do this so many times, and kept going at such constant whirlwind +speed that presently it began to cause Felix to puff a little; while to +his alarm the raging beast seemed capable of keeping the chase up +indefinitely, despite the wound in his shoulder, which Felix noted was +bleeding considerably. + +This fact warned Felix that he had better get busy, and think up some +new line of tactics, if he hoped to come out of the scrape with flying +colors, for he certainly could not gallop, or even slide, around that +tree as he had been doing now for ten minutes, much longer. + +The buck was desperately in earnest, and several times, came near +impaling the boy with his antlers; so that Felix found himself kept busy +between rushes in avoiding these dangerous attacks. + +His attention being taken up just then with trying to work the mechanism +of his rifle, in the hope of being able to put another bit of lead into +the anatomy of his pursuer, possibly he failed to note just where he was +stepping, for suddenly Felix tripped over some object, and fell just in +the path of the swooping buck! + +The rifle was twisted from his hands as he tried to save himself, and +dropped far beyond his reach. As he tried to squirm out of the way of +the charging buck, he felt a thrill of horror when the antlers of the +beast were thrust under him, just missing his flesh, as it were, by an +inch. + +Before he could think twice, he was raised in the air by a sudden upward +movement of the deer's head; and then went sailing swiftly through +space, with his arms and legs flying in four separate directions. + +Just how high he really did go Felix never knew, though he often +pondered over the matter with considerable amusement, and wished some +ambitious photographer might have been present with his little snap-shot +camera to take the picture, for his edification in future days. + +At any rate, he felt his progress checked by the branches of the tree +under which he happened to be at the time; and with an involuntary +movement, for thinking was positively out of the question at that +moment, he instantly threw out both hands, his one idea being to clutch +something that would prevent his falling back upon those cruel looking +antlers of the wounded buck. + +Fortune was kind enough to allow Felix to fasten to a friendly limb, and +hold on tenaciously so that after a little struggle he found himself +astride the same, and looking down in mingled astonishment and +satisfaction on the chagrined buck below. + +The furious animal seemed surprised that the object of his sudden hatred +should decline to drop back again, to be gored and trampled upon, in +order to satisfy the rampant spirit of revenge that was now wholly +dominating the buck's actions. He gave positive evidence of his humor by +leaping upward again and again as if in hopes of reaching the panting +lad, who sat there just out of range; though once the sweeping antlers +managed to touch the dangling foot of the hunter, causing Felix to +experience an involuntary thrill of apprehension, as he snatched his leg +hastily away. + +Then by slow degrees the ludicrous nature of his predicament dawned upon +Felix, and leaning back he laughed long and heartily; this only after he +had anxiously felt of his ribs and limbs, to make positive that nothing +beyond a few minor contusions and bruises had resulted from this heaving +act of the animal in causing him to take an unexpected aerial flight. + +After that he amused himself in addressing the animal, snorting and +prancing below, calling him many sarcastic names that might have wounded +the buck's self respect, could he but have understood. But the stubborn +deer seemed bent upon only one thing, which was to visit his wrath upon +the object of his hatred, or at least keep him treed, if it took him all +night. + +When another hour had passed without the beast showing the slightest +inclination of quitting his post, Felix gave over his playful mood, and +began to survey the situation in a more serious light. + +Why, the stubborn old chap was apt to keep up his vigil all night; and +even then some. + +While the boy might be able to maintain his position among the branches +of the tree that length of time without great difficulty, Felix +considered the possibility of having to remain there inactive during a +chilly night, with anything but pleasure. Thoughts of a cozy campfire +taunted him, and urged him on to devise some method of outwitting the +old buck. + +What could he do to frighten the beast away? Apparently Mr. Buck was not +one to be easily scared; and unless heroic measures were adopted, the +chances of his occupying that elevated position until at least dawn, +seemed excellent. + +Felix cudgeled his brains, endeavoring to recall anything he had ever +heard or read covering this strange ground. + +Of course his first thought and expectation lay in the direction of his +rifle; for if so be he could only get this valuable asset in his grasp, +it would soon be goodbye to his tormentor. + +Then he remembered that there was also another method of frightening the +buck away, if only he could apply it. This consisted of taking some +powder from several of the cartridges belonging to his gun, which still +reposed in his belt, moistening it until it had the consistency of +paste; then allowing it to partly dry; but while still in a soft +condition thrusting a number of pins into the ball, with the points +sticking out like the quills on the back of the "fretful porcupine." + +Watching his opportunity, he would have to make a skillful cast, after +first applying a lighted match to this boyish idea of a "spit-devil," +and fasten it to the back of the jumping deer. Rendered frantic by the +pain, and fright, the animal would of course dash madly away, and leave +the prisoner of the tree a chance to descend at his leisure. + +This latter scheme was very alluring in the eyes of Felix, in that it +would relieve him of his persistent enemy; but at the same time he +remembered that he wanted that same buck's antlers, and more than ever +now, since they had given him the strangest free ride of all his +experience; and letting him get away was not at all to his taste. + +Then again, not being an experienced bull fighter, expert in tossing the +ribbon-bedecked burrs that fasten to the sides of a bull in the ring, +and make him ready for the sacrifice of the matador's sword, Felix +doubted his ability to land his projectile upon the back of the buck at +just the right second, and make it stick there long enough to frighten +the valiant old fellow. + +On the whole, he concluded to attempt the other plan, which had to do +with the recovery of his precious rifle. + +To accomplish this it was first necessary to produce some cord, and a +hook; and then do some fishing for the weapon; all the while the buck +must be watching his labors, with a possibility of defeating his efforts +just when success seemed assured. + +Fortunately Felix had the cord, all right; and in that wonderful little +ditty bag, which Tom had taught him to always carry, there turned out to +be a solitary fish-hook; though what use Felix had intended putting it +to, was a problem which he could hardly have answered, had the question +been asked. + +He also hung a little weight upon the cord, to properly balance it, and +allow of better angling. + +Everything being ready, Felix crawled out on a limb where he would be +just above the coveted rifle. The watchful buck noted his movements with +no doubt considerable curiosity; and even followed below, shaking his +antlered head from time to time, as if to warn the treed hunter what he +must expect if he should slip from his hold, and fall to the ground, an +accident Felix did not mean to have happen if he knew it. + +The boy saw that if he commenced work now, the deer might frustrate all +his efforts by entangling the line in his horns, and jerking it from his +hands; so he settled down, as if to locate there permanently on that new +limb. + +Presently, as if reassured by his actions that there was nothing to be +feared from the hunter, the deer began to move restlessly around, +stopping now and then to look up questioningly; it seemed as though the +beast had an idea he might thus coax his enemy to descend; for his +manner was as plain an invitation as anything Felix had ever seen; but +the boy failed to take advantage of it, continuing his labor of allowing +the line to drop nearer and nearer the gun. + +It was quite an exciting moment for the boy when the hook finally +landed. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +PLENTY OF TROUBLE + + +Felix found it a more difficult task, getting that hook fastened in the +trigger guard of the rifle, than ever he had dreamed could be possible. +A dozen times he thought he had accomplished the feat, only to have the +cord twirl, and the tricky hook double upon itself; so that his "bite" +turned out to be a mere "nibble," altogether unsatisfactory in results. + +But Felix would never give over, and kept at his task with a grim +determination that was, in fact, born of desperation; since he could +think of no other way whereby a cold night in that tree might be +avoided. + +Finally success came to crown his efforts, and he actually felt the +"pull" of the rifle's weight, when he tightened the cord. + +The suspicious buck, attracted by the movement of the ascending rifle, +started to advance in that direction, as if bent upon investigating this +new feature of the game; so that Felix, in sudden fear lest his little +trick might be spoiled just when it promised a golden success, had to +make a quick ascension. + +When his angry four-footed foe made a vicious leap forward and upward, +as if bent upon sending the swinging gun a dozen yards away, the boy's +heart seemed to be almost in his mouth with the suspense; but as the old +saying has it, "a miss is as good as a mile," and the buck failed to +strike the object of his sudden new animosity, though coming perilously +near it. + +When his eager fingers clutched the precious Marlin, Felix felt like +giving vent to a shout of joy. He knew now that the game lay safely in +his hands; and had the old buck been as wise as he was savage, he would +have lost not a second in trotting away from that dangerous vicinity; +but unaware of his new peril he only started a new series of furious +jumps in the air, in the futile endeavor to strike the dangling legs of +his tantalizing human foe. + +At another time Felix might have allowed himself to feel a little +compunction about taking the life of such a valiant old fellow; but his +sides still ached from the rough experience he had passed through, and +it was absolutely necessary that he clear the way to his descent from +that tree. + +So he quietly waited until he had a chance to get in a death shot, and +glancing along the matted top of his rifle barrel, he pulled the +trigger. + +Then the report sounded, the gallant buck went over in a heap; there was +no wild leap into the air as so frequently happens when a deer receives +its fatal hurt; but the buck just seemed to crumple up, and drop +dejectedly in his tracks, as if to prove that he had kept up the fight +to the bitter end. + +Then Felix came down from the tree that he had never climbed; which +queer feat few people could duplicate, in even a varied experience. + +He already knew that, as night was now at hand, he would have to make +camp there in the wilderness; so that at least it was some consolation +to know that he need not starve, with all that fresh meat ready at his +hand; since he had in the buck, tough eating though he might prove, +sufficient food for any length of time. + +Felix immediately set about making ready for the night, after bleeding +the dead deer--fuel was hastily gathered, and a rude temporary shelter +erected, after the way he had seen it done by Adirondack guides, and +called a "lean-to." This was fashioned out of boughs that he found +handy, and which would at least keep off most of the cold, penetrating +north wind, as well as snow, should this last fall during the night. + +In front of this shelter he built his fire; and once its cheery presence +came to bolster up his courage, Felix felt no anxiety concerning his +experience. + +In the words of the immortal wandering Indian, he could say when +rescued: "Injun no lost--wigwam lost--Injun _here_!" for he felt that it +would prove an easy task on the morrow to take the back trail, loaded +with the spoils of the chase, and by noon no doubt, bring up close to +the camp under the big tree. + +Proudly he severed the head of the buck, with those grand antlers which +would some fine day hang in his den at home. This he managed to hang +from the limb of the tree, hoping thus to preserve it from any animal +that might be attracted to the spot by the scent of fresh blood. +Afterwards he meant to come with Tom, and manage in some fashion to +"tote" that head back to camp, where with the aid of the Western boy he +would no doubt be able to preserve it for mounting. + +After that he began to cut away some of the choice portions of the meat, +and when the job was completed, he hung the balance that he cared to +keep from the limb of the tree, encased in the hide of the old buck. + +Felix was feeling pretty hungry by now. Soon several generous slices of +meat had been secured upon the points of splinters of wood the other +ends of which he thrust into the ground, and inclined at such an angle +that presently the venison began to sizzle under the influence of the +red coals, and at last send out a very appetizing odor, calculated to +make the hungry boy even more ravenous. + +The meat proved pretty tough, partly on account of the age of the +animal; and also because of its not having been allowed to hang a +certain length of time, as is always preferable in climates where the +game will not easily spoil. When, however, a fellow has the real woods +appetite, these minor things are ignored; and Felix munched away for +half an hour in perfect content, until in the end he realized that he +had had enough. + +After that there was nothing to be done but get ready to spend the night +as comfortably as the circumstances allowed; indeed, after thinking it +over, and what a lucky escape he had had from staying in that tree all +night, hungry and cold, the boy felt that he had nothing to complain +about. + +He had taken pains to gather an ample supply of firewood, and also made +sure that the magazine of his gun was fully charged; so that when he got +good and ready, he felt quite safe to lie down and sleep; knowing that +in all probability he was sure to be up and down many times during that +night, since camping entirely alone was in the line of a new experience +for Felix. + +Nothing of any note occurred during the hours he spent there under his +temporary shelter of an arbor; although he fancied that several times +when he awoke, and got up to put more fuel on the fire, a sly bobcat +must be prowling around, eager to steal some of the meat but deterred by +the blaze; the presence of a human being possibly had also something to +do with its lack of courage; for when day came nothing was missing. + +Breakfast, which was an exact repetition of supper, being disposed of, +Felix began to figure on what course he should take in order to make a +bee-line for the camp. He consulted his little compass, and sent several +glances around him at the big mountains, that strangely enough seemed to +encompass him about much more than he had dreamed possible, and gave him +a puzzle to solve. + +So he decided upon his course, although with a lingering doubt that he +might once more be about to enjoy an old experience in his career--that +of losing himself. + +Half an hour later, with a pack upon his back containing all he could +carry of the choice portions of the gallant buck, Felix started forth. +He cast one backward look, filled with regret, at the antlered head of +his prize, still secured to the limb of the tree; at least he hoped to +return at some time in the near future and secure those horns for a +trophy, even though it were not possible to preserve the head entire. + +Felix walked for half an hour, trying to keep as near to the course he +had laid out as seemed possible. Really it was not such an easy +proposition as he had at first calculated. Why was it he had so poor a +sense of direction, he could not say? But he felt sure, that unless he +improved very much in this respect, he could never hope to make a good +woodsman like Tom was, for instance. + +Somehow, by this time, the boy began to lose a little of his former +confidence. Things did not seem at all familiar, and he began to feel +sure that he could not have come this way. + +Once more he consulted his compass, and tried to figure out which +direction stood for home. He laughed at himself for feeling so +uncertain. What a silly sensation this must be to a proud boy, to +realize that he is actually all at sea in the woods, and cannot say for +a certainty which way he ought to go. + +Felix laid out a new course, and made a fresh start. He was not at all +discouraged as yet, and only looked on the thing in the light of a joke; +just as he had his sailing through the air, to hang to the limb of the +tree, after the buck had given him a rise in the world. + +Once he heard a shot ahead. This caused him to wonder whether it could +be Tom, or some one else; and he soon decided that if his chum were +anywhere near by he would be more apt to give the well known signal of +three shots in order to let the wanderer know of his presence; when +Felix would be expected to answer in kind. + +Tom had warned him several times to keep an eye out for certain vicious +characters, said to be in hiding away up in this part of Wyoming--men who +had once been honest guides, but drifted into bad ways; and having been +known to kill game in the Yellowstone Park reservation, were being +sought after by the authorities, who meant to make an example of them to +deter others from doing likewise. + +He had understood that such men might not be averse to robbing and +abusing a young chap who happened to cross their path; and so Felix, +with this troublesome thought struggling in his brain, walked on in +silence, looking cautiously to the right and to the left, as if he +feared that he might suddenly run upon some kind of danger. + +Was that a groan he heard; or did some wild animal give vent to a sound? + +It seemed to come from the bushes over to his left; and as he stood +stock-still, and listened, he once more heard the strange and doleful +sound, which seemed to be half way between a groan and a grunt. + +Immediately Felix lowered his burden softly to the ground, and clutching +his rifle in readiness for instant use, he walked slowly in that +direction, scanning every foot as he thus advanced. + +Then he discovered a slight movement, as the sound again came to his +ears; and realized that some one was sitting upon the ground, holding +fast to his arm, as if in great distress and pain. The sight of red +blood trickling between the bronzed fingers of the party told Felix that +he had come upon the scene just in time to be very useful along his +chosen line. Undoubtedly the dark-faced stranger had been badly injured +by the accidental discharge of his own gun; which would account for the +single shot Felix had heard. + +Without question the man was an Indian, perhaps a halfbreed; though he +dressed pretty much as did any white man who spent much of his time in +the wilderness; wearing corduroy trousers; and a blue flannel shirt, +covered by a faded heavy jacket; while a greasy slouch hat lay upon the +ground, where it had evidently fallen at the time he hurriedly dropped +his gun. + +Felix hastened forward to reach the side of the suffering man, whose +raven black locks he now saw were being touched with the frost of years. +The prospect of a job along his favorite line caused the lad to quicken +his steps; for all the professional instincts of his nature were +aroused. + +The Indian seemed to maintain the usual stoicism of his race; though the +pain and the weakness at times caused him to shut his teeth hard, in the +effort to stifle the groan that tried to well forth. + +Any one could easily see that in this quarter at least the boy was quite +at home, even though there might be a few things connected with +woodcraft wherein he could blunder. + +He immediately took hold, examined the ugly gunshot wound that was +bleeding so freely, in the fleshy part of the left arm, made a rude but +effective tourniquet by twisting a stout stick in his handkerchief, +which he had carefully knotted, so that the protuberance rested exactly +on the artery; and in this fashion stopped the cut from bleeding. + +Then he bound it up as best he could, showing considerable skill in so +doing. + +The old Indian did not utter a single word while all this was going on. +He had shown considerable disappointment upon first seeing that the +newcomer was only a mere lad; but presently his black eyes began to +glitter with satisfaction, when he saw the business-like way in which +Felix took hold of his job, and the astonishingly clever way in which he +accomplished that which the other had in vain tried to do by working the +wrong way. + +"There, my friend," said Felix, as he finished his job, "I guess you'll +hold out now, until you get home. Listen, and I'll tell you just what +must be done after that," and then he proceeded to explain in simple +language what should follow his "first aid to the injured work;" to all +of which the other listened gravely, with an occasional nod of his head, +to indicate that he understood. + +"How far away do you live?" asked the young hunter, finally, wondering +whether he had not better volunteer to accompany the wounded man home; +though he understood that an Indian's pride would be terribly hurt by +such a happening. + +For the first time the other spoke, and he proved to have an excellent +command of English, quite surprising the boy. It told that he was +accustomed to associating with the whites, and that in all probability +he had served as guide to many a party of bighorn hunters from the East, +as Felix suspected. + +"Not far away--can get to cabin all right now. Charley Crow never forget +this. Never before pull gun through bushes by muzzle--much fool this +time, serve right if head 'stead of arm get bullet. Worst of all is +shame of telling my people, who will say Charley Crow getting too old go +on hunt any more; better stay home and dry venison. But I go now on back +trail; no need any that you come 'long. Tell me name of Little Doctor, +so I may let my people know what friend they have. Some day mabbe my +turn--you wait. Now shake hands, and say goodbye. Charley Crow him get to +cabin all right, you never be 'fraid." + +So Felix gladly told him who he was, and how, with a chum, he had come +to spend some weeks hunting, and doing a little trapping, in the +foot-hills of the Rockies. In speaking of Tom Tucker he happened to +mention the name of Old Sol; and immediately the brown face of the old +halfbreed lighted up. + +"Known Old Sol right well. Here one year, we come this way, and always +good friend Charley Crow. Much glad meet him Tom. Some day mabbe drop in +see same. If need help, come to cabin under shadow of yonder peak, and +my boys they glad do you good turn, because me, Charley Crow, still head +of house! Goodbye!" + +He drew himself up proudly, regardless of the pain his wound must be +causing him; and the lad could see that despite his evident age, the +well-known halfbreed was as straight as any pine that ever grew in the +Northland. + +Then he stalked away, leaving Felix to look after himself, and wonder if +Fate had any further adventures in store for him during his little +outing. + +He did not doubt in the least but that so vigorous a man could easily +reach the home cabin which, in company with his family, he must be +occupying for a winter's campaign among the fur-bearing animals that +frequented the district. At the same time it did begin to look as though +there might be a storm in prospect, as the heavens had clouded over, and +an occasional snow-flake drifted down lazily, as though they might be +reckoned ambassadors sent to herald the coming of the first real snow +fall of the season. + +So Felix once more lifted his pack to his back, and again started in the +direction he believed the camp to be. When it was too late he bitterly +regretted that he had not also swallowed his pride, and asked Charley +Crow the right trail that would take him to the cabin of Old Sol. He had +no positive sense of certainty as to whether his course were the right +one; and for all he knew, with the mountains apparently turned around in +his mind, he might even now be heading in the wrong direction. + +The lad presently began to realize that his load was beginning to tell, +for he had really attempted to carry off too much of the venison in the +desire to stock the camp for some time to come. Twice he found it +convenient to halt, and rest up a bit; when he once more took up the +tramp with a shade of reluctance, and half a notion to divide the +spoils. + +It was while he was resting the second time that he caught a strange +sound that gave him quite a thrill. The baying could only proceed from a +pack of hounds chasing a fleeing deer! + +Felix was troubled a little, and for a very good reason. In talking +about those lawless guides who had been expelled from Yellowstone Park +by the Government authorities, Tom Tucker had incidentally informed him +that one of their favorite tricks was to keep several deer dogs, with +which they were accustomed to having regular old fashioned chases, such +as used to be frequent in the Adirondacks in his native State before the +anti-hounding law was passed and enforced, making it a crime to use dogs +for such a purpose. + +He hoped that the chase would lead away from him, as he certainly did +not want to make the acquaintance of these rough men, against whom Tom +Tucker had warned him more than a few times. + +Listening carefully as the snapping and baying sounded constantly +louder, Felix presently concluded that the animals were certainly +heading his way, and approaching rapidly. He gritted his teeth with a +grim determination to defend himself if beset by the hound pack; and +picked up his rifle from the ground, where he had laid it when resting. + +At least he was not kept long in suspense. Inside of three minutes he +discovered something moving rapidly through the bushes, and almost +immediately saw that it was a noble buck, with its tongue lolling from +its mouth, and giving other evidences of having been chased hither and +thither for hours by the hounds, that doubtless had been educated, just +like a rabbit dog Felix owned, to bring the tired animal back to where +the hunters waited. + +Somehow the sight of that tortured buck gave Felix a wave of disgust. He +seemed to feel an immediate hope that it would escape from the game +butchers who used so unfair a mode for securing their quarry. Yes, +Felix, in the heat of his anger, even went so far as to mentally express +a hope that one of the owners of the pack--who must be near by, because +he had plainly heard a shout, as of exultation over the possible ending +of the chase--would fall into the clutches of the keepers of the great +Government game reservation, said to be on the lookout for them as +transgressors of the law. + +To his astonishment the pursued buck suddenly changed its course a +little, and headed almost directly toward the spot where Felix was +standing, watching the affair with considerable interest. It actually +seemed to the excited boy as though the despairing deer had turned +toward him, in a last frantic hope that he might be merciful, and +stretch out a hand to give the help that was elsewhere denied; though in +all probability the deer never noticed his motionless figure standing +there, as it sprang past, and vanished in the thick scrub beyond. + +The pack of hounds was now in full sight, racing eagerly along, yapping, +and giving tongue after the manner of their kind when they are close on +the fleeing quarry. They looked about as fierce and ugly as so many +wolves might have been, since the old instinct had been aroused in them +by the chase. For the time being they had gone back once more to the +state of the primal beast in pursuit of the prey so necessary to +continued existence, as a survival of the fittest. Felix shuddered as he +saw their foam-flecked mouths, from which the red tongues lolled. + +There were just three of the dogs, all told, and Felix drew back the +hammer of his Marlin, not liking the looks of the aroused beasts, and +suspecting that in their present condition they might not hesitate to +attack a boy, under the impression that as the trail led almost directly +toward him, he must have spirited away their intended prey, which they +had chased so long. + +In that event there was just one thing Felix could do, which was to +defend himself against the pack, no matter at what cost. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +ADRIFT IN THE SNOW FOREST + + +Felix did not have much time to settle this question, for immediately +the hounds swerved upon the trail, they must have caught sight of him, +for there came an even more savage and vengeful tone to their baying; +and leaving the scent, they plunged helter-skelter straight toward the +standing figure of the young hunter. Perhaps the pack of meat at his +feet aroused their instincts for food; Felix never knew. + +One look would be sufficient to tell what they meant to do. To Felix it +became patent that, since running would not avail him in the least, he +must either climb up a tree in a big hurry, or else defend himself; +unless he meant to allow those savage beasts to drag him down, and +mangle him shockingly, before their owners could reach the scene. + +The prospect was not to his liking, but he had made up his mind as to +what his course should be; so he threw up his gun, with the full +intention of settling one, or all of the dogs, unless something +intervened. + +He heard a loud shout as he did so, from some little distance away; but +it was impossible to tell whether the call was intended as a warning to +him not to fire on the ferocious pack; or an endeavor to recall the +hounds; but no matter, it was a wasted effort, since Felix could not +hold back his fire, his very life being in peril. + +Remembering the serious consequences that had followed his hasty shot at +the big buck, Felix was a little more careful when pressing the trigger +of his repeating rifle. In return he had the satisfaction of seeing the +leading hound roll over immediately after he fired. + +Calmly the boy threw out the empty cartridge, and sent another into the +firing chamber. Had he been a volunteer upon parade, and firing at an +inanimate target, he could not have gone through the manoeuvre with more +precision and exactness. Consequently, the gun, being made by the most +skillful workmen, did its duty faithfully, as it always will when +properly handled; and in about two winks of an eye Felix stood there, +ready to repeat his performance, in case the necessity awaited. + +Neither of the other two dogs had taken the least warning from the fate +that had overtaken their companion. If anything, they tried to increase +their speed in chasing toward the boy who stood there as though defying +them to come on, though of course this was hardly the thought animating +the actions of Felix. + +"All right; you will have it, then!" he muttered, as his eye glanced +along the matted barrel; and then his forefinger ever so slightly +touched the willing trigger, at which there was a second sharp report. + +Dog Number Two proceeded to whirl around, leaping up in the air, and in +many ways showing he had received a dose that was likely to put him +forever out of the running. + +Felix put him immediately away from his mind. There was one more, and +all the danger now centered in that remaining beast. By this time the +leaping dog was fearfully close to him, and coming with unabated speed +that proved him a stayer, after such a long chase. + +He presented a really terrifying aspect, with the foam dribbling from +his open jaws; the hair on his short neck standing on end like bristles; +and his eyes seeming to be bloodshot through the heat and excitement of +the long pursuit. + +Still, Felix did not seem to be rattled even a little bit, a fact that +caused him to feel considerable wonder, as well as satisfaction, later +on, when reviewing all the circumstances connected with the momentous +occasion. + +He had his gun up to his shoulder with pretty much the confidence of a +veteran Nimrod, meeting the charge of an old rogue elephant, or a +wounded tiger, in the East Indian jungles. When the dog was not more +than twenty feet away, he pressed the trigger. + +His confidence was well placed, it seemed, for his ball must have +entered the brain of the third and last hound; which whirled half way +around, to fall in a heap; staggered to his feet, took several tottering +steps forward, still strong in his overmastering impulse, even in death, +and then once more dropped, never to rise again. + +The lad had hardly dared hope to meet with such remarkable success in +such an adventure, yet there were the three hounds lying on the +ground--Felix had doubtless saved the poor hunted buck from destruction; +but at what cost to himself? + +Loud curses could be heard, drawing rapidly closer; and it was evident +that the owners of the pack would presently burst upon the scene, filled +with fury at the fate of their hounds. + +Most young fellows might have deemed discretion the better part of +valor, and abandoning the meat, made themselves scarce as soon as +possible; taking to their heels, with but one thought in view, and that +to leave the immediate neighborhood as speedily as possible. + +That might have been the wisest plan, too, considering all things; but +somehow Felix Edmondson was too proud to give in to this impulse. He was +still flushed with the success of his battle; and also with indignation +toward those who would resort to such unsportsmanlike methods for +securing game. + +Besides, would he not have been torn to pieces by the fierce animals, +only for his ability to handle that faithful rifle? + +So Felix simply took a look at his gun, to make sure that it was ready +for use, slipping in several more cartridges where they would give a +good account of themselves, and awaited the coming of the fuming owners +of the defunct pack. + +They proved to be two in number, and at sight of them Felix realized +that his worst fears were about to be realized, in that he was face to +face with a pair of the most notorious characters in the whole +region--the descriptions tallied exactly, even to the single eye of Abe +Cozzins; and the flaming red beard of Perley Kline. + +In times past these men had served as guides, and possibly skillful ones +too, because they were born woodsmen; but the love of liquor had dulled +their sense of honesty, and after a time they began to gain a reputation +for being light fingered, valuables disappearing mysteriously from camps +where they had charge. By degrees, then, they lost all chance for +securing regular employment, since gentlemen coming from the East for +big game shooting, liked to feel that they could depend fully on the +guide, in whose hands they entrusted their fortunes, even their lives, +at times. + +Consequently Cozzins and Kline, being unemployed most of the time, began +to hunt game illegally within the confines of Yellowstone Park; which, +coming to the attention of the authorities, always keen to punish +anything of this sort, the men were really being looked for, far and +wide, and in a measure found themselves in the place of the hunted. + +It was this unwholesome looking couple who now strode angrily up to +young Edmondson, with fury blazing in their eyes. + +Felix held his rifle in such a manner that, had they shown a disposition +to attack him, he could have defended himself, and treated them to a +dose of the same medicine he had handed out to their dogs. + +"Hold hard, there!" he remarked, sharply; "you've come close enough. Now +say what you want from there!" + +The two rough men, while evidently astonished to find themselves spoken +to in this strain, understanding that the young fellow who could stand +there and deliberately knock over three savage hounds in succession was +not one to be easily daunted, pulled up, and divided their scowling +glances between the hunter and the dead dogs, for the last animal had +ceased to make a movement by now. + +"Say, what d'ye mean ashootin' our dawgs thataways?" spluttered the +fellow who had only one eye, though that was now glaring with a +fierceness equal to half a dozen ordinary optics; he also punctuated his +words with a variety of forcible exclamations, which there is no +necessity for repeating, though doubtless Abe Cozzins imagined they +added vim and picturesqueness to his query, and might help awe the boy. + +"I was minding my own business when they started to attack me, with +murder in their eyes. If I hadn't shot I'd have been torn to pieces. +Everybody has a right to defend himself. If I hadn't happened to have a +repeating rifle of the best make to fall back on, and knew how to use +it, there'd have been murder done; and you'd have to stand the blame. +I'm sorry, now, I had to kill the poor brutes, for they hardly knew what +they were doing. I reckon the whole blame lies with their owners." + +Bold words these, from a young fellow not yet fully grown, and addressed +to two of the wildest, most reckless spirits in all Wyoming; perhaps +those men could not remember having been taken so to task for many a +day; and in surprise they exchanged dubious glances, and then looked +hastily and uneasily around, as though half expecting that Felix must be +backed up by half a dozen comrades. + +Seeing no signs of such an enemy, however, they became themselves again, +though far too tricky to throw off the mask wholly, while that lad stood +by his gun, and seemed ready to try conclusions with them. + +Felix should have known that they were just as furious as ever under the +surface; but then he was not experienced in such matters, and judged +other people more or less by his own feelings. + +He saw them talking together in low tones; after which they allowed +their dark faces to take on a more affable look, as they once more +turned toward him. + +"Say, younker," commenced Abe Cozzins, in a whining voice, "we ain't got +no grudge aginst yuh for what yuh done. Them dawgs was some valuable tuh +us, sure, but if so be they pestered yuh, thar was on'y one thing yuh +could do; an' we reckons yuh done thet good an' hard. The pesky critters +broke away from us, an' we was atryin' tuh git holt o' 'em agin, when +this hyar thing happened. They's no reason we should hold hard feelin's +aginst yuh fur defendin' yerself aginst 'em; anybody'd a done the same. +But it comes mighty hard on two pore guides outen a job; fur yuh see, we +was atakin' of them dawgs tuh Colonel Walpole over at ther reservation, +who'd promised tuh buy 'em off us, tuh run down fellows as gits too gay +ashootin' up the game in ther Park." + +Abe put on a piteous face while telling this hastily constructed yarn; +and altogether he did succeed in disarming the suspicions of Felix, even +though the boy might still consider that the two men were hard +characters. Felix felt sorry at once. + +"If that's so I don't mind chipping in, and giving you something to help +out. Perhaps it wasn't your fault, then, that the dogs were loose; and +I've heard of Colonel Walpole, too. Here's ten dollars on account; and +if you choose to leave me an address, I might send you another bill when +I get back home." + +Felix spoke from the depths of a frank and honest heart. He felt that he +had unwittingly been the cause of depriving these men of something they +doubtless valued highly; and so far as he could within reason make +amends, Felix was willing to settle the claim, unjust though it might +be. + +The two men exchanged looks, and actually grinned, as though with +pleasure; after which Cozzins advanced with extended hand, at the same +time talking volubly, evidently with the intention of taking the boy off +his guard, though Felix did not suspect such a thing. + +"Say, that's purty white in yuh, stranger. 'Taint many fellers as'd do +sech a nice job as thet, arter the dawgs'd broke loose on 'em. Me an' my +pal is much obliged, and yuh bet we'll never furgit sech kindness. +'Taint often we sees a tenner these hard times. Now, if so be we kin do +anything in return, why--take thet, ye young cub!" and of a sudden, +catching Felix off his guard, he struck him a vicious blow in the face, +and at the same instant snatched the rifle out of his hands. + +The boy staggered back, and would have fallen, only for the support of a +tree. For half a dozen seconds he stood there, staring at the brutal +ruffian, now laughing, and examining the captured repeating rifle; while +the blood trickled down his cheek, where the heavy and hard knuckles of +the man had bruised and broken the skin. + +Then, as if realizing the dastardly and cowardly nature of the attack +upon him, even while he was in the act of generously compensating them +for having killed their dogs, Felix became wild with anger. Uttering a +scream he started to leap at Cozzins, reckless as to the consequences, +and only desirous of returning that foul blow. + +The man swung the rifle up so as to cover the advancing lad; though it +may be deemed doubtful whether he would have fired under any +provocation, since they were already two against one; and then there was +always a possibility that the boy might be connected with those grim +guardians of the Park, whose advent on the scene Abe and his comrade +dreaded more than they would be willing to confess. + +Perley Kline, however, sprang in between, throwing aside the barrel of +the gun, and giving Felix a push that sent him headlong to the grim +ground, his head striking with such force that for a brief time he +actually lost all consciousness of what was going on. + +He felt hands searching his person, and knew that the rascals were +actually turning to downright robbery in their extremity; though truth +to tell, possibly this was not the first time they had had their hands +in the pockets of others who happened to be asleep. + +Then they seemed to consult in low tones, after which each of them gave +the lad a contemptuous kick, as if to vent their spleen further, in +order to cancel the debt they thought he owed them on account of the +slaughter of their trained dogs. + +As Felix lay there in a half conscious condition, smarting from his +wounds, he realized that they had gone off, after stripping him of +everything of value he possessed, and even taking the pack of venison he +had "toted" over such a weary distance, up to that time. + +Felix, still full of grit, attempted to follow them, after staggering to +his feet; but really he found himself so weak from his injuries that his +head began to fairly swim, and he had to drop down on a friendly log +before going twenty paces. + +He heard a derisive laugh that made him groan with disgust over his +inability to do anything; then the sound of footsteps grew fainter, and +he knew that he had been left alone in the heart of the wilderness, with +no weapon for self defense, or to be used in an effort to procure the +means of continued existence, in case he could not find the camp. + +This, however, sank into insignificance beside the ignominy of those +kicks; and his proud young soul writhed under the memory of the insult; +while he mentally registered a vow to make those two ruffians pay dearly +for the experience, sooner or later, as the chance arose. + +By slow degrees he began to get back his strength, and could think +seriously concerning his next step. At first he burned with the desire +to try and follow after those scoundrels, and in some way manage to +recover all they had taken from him; but second thought convinced him +that such a task was far beyond his capacity in his present helpless +condition; even supposing he could follow successfully, which was +extremely doubtful, how could he hold two armed men up, and make them +disgorge? + +No, it would surely be better for him to conserve his powers in every +way possible, and try to effect a junction with his chum; when they +could talk it over, and decide what ought to be done in order to turn +the tables on Cozzins and Kline. + +The fact that he was now without food seemed to give Felix more cause +for concern than anything else. The thieves had confiscated the contents +of the little knapsack he had carried with him, or rather ditty bag; all +he found of any value was a lone match that seemed to have escaped the +hasty search of the men; and in his eyes this assumed an importance all +out of proportion to its size. + +Felix believed that if only he could follow his back trail, and reach +the tree where his desperate encounter with the wounded buck had taken +place, he would find plenty of meat to last him many days; and with that +last precious match he could start a fire that he would not allow to go +out; so that here he might camp until such time as Tom came hunting for +him. + +This, then, was the sensible programme that finally took possession of +the boy; although it was with considerable disappointment he gave up all +idea of following after the two men, seeking revenge because of their +cowardly conduct. + +Every time Felix put a hand up to his bruised cheek he gritted his +teeth, and in imagination saw the rogues brought to account through his +instrumentality; and it was surprising how much satisfaction such a +pleasing prospect gave him. + +Quitting the vicinity of the three dead dogs that had been left where +they lay by their late masters, he started to follow his back trail, +with all the skill he was capable of calling to his assistance. + +This was, of course, something he had never dreamed of doing half an +hour previously; but all the same, he was glad to see he had somehow +managed to leave such a plain series of tracks, burdened with the meat +pack as he had been, that there promised to be little trouble in +following the trail, if only the snow held off. + +That began to worry him now; what if a bitterly cold storm should break +while he was wandering about in the wilderness, with only a single match +between himself and freezing to death? + +The idea proved so very unpleasant that it urged him to make better time +in following his back trail; and yet when he remembered how long he had +been walking since starting forth after breakfast; and that it must take +him at least the same length of time to again cover the ground, Felix +began to fear he was in for the worst experience of all. + +However, the lad was full of grit, and could not be made to easily lie +down when trouble threatened; he would meet it face to face. + +When almost an hour had passed, and he reckoned that he was possibly +half way back to the tree that had been a haven of refuge to him in that +fight with the wounded buck, he took heart of grace, and hope began to +rise stronger in his breast; but only for a brief space of time. + +Then he took notice of the fact that the lazy flakes were beginning to +descend more thickly and it began to look as though the air would soon +be filled with the feathered harbingers of coming winter, until he could +not see ten feet away. + +The remembrance of that single match gave him a strange sense of +comfort, small item that it might be reckoned. What did cause him to +fret, though, was the possibility of the ground soon being so covered +with the snow that he could no longer find his own late trail, and must +give over the hope of reaching supplies under the big tree. + +Five minutes later and he realized that this condition really faced him, +since he was now utterly unable to discern the faintest trace of his +footprints; while around him stretched the vast woods, each quarter +looking the same in the rapidly descending snow. + +He had taken his bearings after a fashion, and continued to stumble +along for a little while, in the hope that he might by good luck run +across the tree in which he had fastened the antlered head of the buck. + +Finally Felix realized the hopelessness of his hunt, and determined to +make a camp, where he could hold out the best way possible against cold +and hunger. Imagine his utter dismay when he discovered that in some +strange manner his little ditty bag, containing that one precious match, +must have been detached by some officious branch, when he was making his +way along. At least, it had utterly disappeared, and he was now facing a +condition rendered doubly bad on account of the increasing cold which +deemed to come with the snow. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +TURNING THE TABLES + + +The discovery that he had now no possible means for fighting the cold, +that was sure to increase as the day wore on and night approached, gave +Felix a rude shock. + +He faced a situation that might prove very serious indeed; and it was +little wonder that he instituted an eager search of all his pockets, in +the faint hope that he might in some way manage to find just one +fugitive match that had escaped the spoilers, and in the end prove, his +salvation. + +Only keen disappointment rewarded his efforts; and after going three +times over every pocket, he was forced to give it up with a grunt of +disgust. + +All thought of trying to find the tree in which the venison hung now +passed from his mind; and he devoted his efforts to searching for some +friendly hollow, where he could make a shelter in some rude fashion +against the night that would come after a while, for it must by now be +about the middle of the short day. + +What would he not have been willing to pay for a little box of safety +matches, that sell for a penny in town? But he might as well wish for +the moon; as one was as easy to secure as the other, just then. + +So he pushed on, staggering through the increasing snow fall. When he +was indifferent to such a thing, he had noted several splendid places +where he might have found decent shelter, and built up a refuge against +the storm; but now that the need had arisen, Fate seemed to take an +especial delight in baffling him, for, look as he would, he did not come +across anything that appealed to his fancy. + +Rendered desperate at length, when he found his strength giving out on +account of his unusual exertions during the two days, and the rough +treatment he had received both from the wounded buck and the angry +desperadoes, Felix finally made up his mind that he could wait no longer +for what he wanted, but must make a virtue of necessity, and take what +offered. + +So, coming across a tree that had fallen during some violent wind storm, +he saw that when the roots had been torn up quite a large patch of earth +had come along with them. The hollow back of this barrier would prove a +very good refuge against the storm, for it happened to face in the best +possible way. + +Here in this hole, then, he must burrow, doing the best he knew how to +hide from the wind that blew the snow with such violence. Felix set +about carrying out this idea without further loss of time. + +Of course it was but an apology of a den after all; though much better +than remaining out where the cold wind had a sweep at him. Here he +settled down to pass the balance of that dreary afternoon, which he +remembered must be followed by a night he was not soon apt to forget. + +Bitter regrets swept over him from time to time, as he lay there huddled +in a heap. Never again would he be caught so easily by soft words, when +he ought to know these were only a mask to hide treacherous work. + +And then, after taking himself to task in this manner, most severely, +Felix would recollect that even an experienced woodsman may make a +mistake occasionally. Look at old Charley Crow, for instance, a man born +and brought up in the wilderness, and accustomed to handling a gun from +childhood; yet had he not been incautious enough to draw his rifle +toward him, _muzzle first_, through some bushes, with the result that +the weapon had been discharged, sending the bullet through the arm of +the old halfbreed? + +Yes, some others besides greenhorns in the woods, make mistakes +occasionally. + +Slowly that afternoon dragged on, and then came night, which Felix knew +was apt to be the longest and most disagreeable of all his life, thus +far. + +Little sleep came to the lost lad. + +In fact, he hardly dared lose himself, for fear lest he actually freeze +to death; for although the temperature did not actually fall very low at +any time, to his excited imagination this humble little storm was in the +nature of such a blizzard as those which Tom had told him visited the +Far Northwest every Winter, carrying death to many cattle that were +caught without shelter. + +Every hour at least, Felix would crawl out of his shelter, to ascertain +what the signs of promise might be with regard to the weather; and on +such occasions he thought it the part of wisdom to exercise his limbs +energetically; so as to keep his blood in circulation; and hence, upon +creeping into his hole again, very like a fox, as he would grimly remark +to himself, he was hardly in a condition to settle down. + +He could not tell what time it was for several reasons; in the first +place he had no watch, for the ruffians had carried off his little +dollar nickel contraption in conjunction with all his other effects; and +even had this not been the case, without a match, how could he have seen +the face in order to note the position of the hands? + +A woodsman would have known of several ways by means of which to tell +about the time of night; but Felix was hardly up to such tricks, +especially on a stormy night like this, when neither moon nor stars were +visible. + +But one thing cheered him after a while; and this was the fact that the +snow had ceased to fall when about three inches lay on the ground. Then, +after all, things might not be quite so bad as he had begun to picture +them, and he would not be snowed-in, destitute of food, and all means +for securing warmth; why, there might even be a chance for finding the +camp on the following day, if only he could keep his wits about him, and +figure correctly as to his present position, so as to locate the +direction where the cabin lay. + +When Felix had crawled out of his poor shelter for the seventh time, as +he figured it, he began to look hopefully toward the quarter where +according to his calculations the east must surely lie. Nor was he +deceived, for he discovered to his great joy a very faint but positive +sign that the sky was brightening, and this told that dawn must be near. + +As soon as it was fairly light, he left his shelter, which after his +boyish fashion he had named Camp Shiver, and struck out in what he +believed to be the proper direction. + +It was not very encouraging, however, starting on a long tramp hungry +and cold; but Felix still had plenty of grit, and shutting his teeth +hard, resolved to let nothing dismay him. + +Two hours later, and he found himself obliged to confess that his +knowledge of woodcraft seemed at fault, when brought face to face with +the difficulties to be encountered in a snow forest. He was really +hopelessly bewildered, and could not give the slightest guess as to +whether he should head north, south, east or west, in order to reach +camp. The mountains loomed upon two sides, now, as though he had +wandered somehow into a sort of pocket. + +He tried shouting now and then, though it seemed next to foolish to hope +that any one could hear him, unless indeed it might prove to be the +rough men with whom he had had his recent unhappy experience; so +presently he stopped that. + +The cold no longer brought anxiety, for his exertions kept him from +feeling this; but he was mighty hungry, and had visions of all the +glorious dishes he and Tom had ever eaten in company in the past; +somehow they seemed to arise before him, and make him groan with the +empty feeling within. + +About this time Felix chanced to notice that he was almost under the +shadow of a peculiar peak, which he remembered noticing before; and all +at once it dawned on him that this was the very mountain Charley Crow +had pointed to, when he declared that his cabin nestled at its base; and +that if the Little Doctor chose to drop in there at any time, he would +receive a royal Indian welcome. + +The very idea filled Felix with unutterable joy. Oh! if only he could +run across that Indian cabin now, how readily would he throw aside all +his pride, and accept whatever food they could give him; perhaps even +securing a guide in addition who would take him back to the camp. + +And so, filled with a new ambition, he pushed ahead, his hopes revived +once more. Through the branches of the trees, to which none of the snow +had clung on account of the wind accompanying the storm, he could catch +glimpses of the spur that extended out from the main mountain chain; and +such progress did he make that in about an hour he fancied he smelled +smoke in the air. + +After that it was not a difficult thing to follow the direction in which +this came to him on the wind; until in the end he gave a shout, upon +discovering a rude log cabin nestling under an over-hanging shelf of +rock. + +It must certainly be the temporary home of Charley Crow and his family; +and with renewed hopes Felix started forward on a half run, so eager was +he to make sure that his eyes had not deceived him. + +Now he could see human beings moving about, and a couple of yellow +mongrel curs started out with loud barks to meet him; but somehow he did +not feel that they were dangerous, like those savage hounds that had +been running the deer; and while only grasping a stout cudgel in his +hand, Felix continued to advance. + +A couple of young Indians hurried after the dogs, calling roughly to +them to behave; and Felix knew that he had found friends. He lost no +time in explaining that he was nearly famished; whereat the two +exchanged glances, and ranging alongside, took him by the arms, and +assisted him to the cabin; for somehow, such was the effect of the +change from despair to great joy, that a singular weakness seemed to +grip the lad. + +He spoke the name of Charley Crow, and as if understanding what he +wished to convey, they led him into the comfortable cabin, where the boy +found himself face to face with the old halfbreed whom he had so gladly +assisted in the woods. + +Charley Crow had his wounded arm done up in bandages, and was sitting in +a rudely made but comfortable chair. At sight of Felix a broad smile of +welcome came upon the bronzed face of the old guide. + +He held out his well hand, and greeted Felix warmly; indeed, there need +be not the least fear but that every wish of the lost hunter would +hardly be expressed before it was sure to be granted, if it lay in the +power of these people. + +Upon learning that food was the first thing he wanted, Charley Crow +spoke to his sons, and to his wife, who seemed to be a full blooded +Shoshone squaw. Eager to do something to show their gratitude toward the +Little Doctor, of whom they had heard so much since the home coming of +the wounded man, the two well-grown sons darted from the cabin, +doubtless to get food from a _cache_ in the open, where meat would keep +fresh all winter, once it was frozen. + +Felix soon related what dire misfortune had befallen him some time after +parting from the old guide; and the anger of Charley Crow was aroused +toward the pair of precious scoundrels who had dared to do this thing. + +"They pass night not half mile away from here," he declared, "for my son +Jo, he see same when he come in from his line of traps. He speak with +these men, not wishing to make foes out of same; but when they ask him +to stay at their fire, Jo, he no stop, for he know how they bad case. I +promise you, my friend, all be return to you before this day it pass. +But listen, that not all. Revenge you shall have for such kicks they +give you. Not two mile away I know where is a camp of men from Park, who +hunt for these Abe and Kline, I understand. When I learn about them I +say to my sons, this is not business for us; let Mr. Harbison and his +men find them. Now it is my affair. Make mind easy, for all will be +well." + +Felix was delighted with this assurance, for he disliked the idea of +having to pass the remainder of his vacation in the region of the +Rockies without that fine repeating rifle, which he looked to obtain him +other trophies of the chase, in the shape of a grizzly bear; and +possibly a bighorn, strange acrobat of the mountain ledges. + +He was speedily placed before a bountiful breakfast, though since he had +eaten nothing since that last meal under the big tree where the buck had +fallen, he was at a loss to know what name to give his repast. + +Mrs. Crow, it seemed, had learned how to cook after the white woman's +way, for everything tasted just splendid to the boy, and after he had +finished he declared he felt like a new fellow. + +When about this time he saw the two sons of Charley Crow enter the cabin +for a last conference before starting out, he begged to be allowed to +accompany them. + +Old Charley looked dubious at first, and then noting the eager flush on +his face, and apparently sympathizing with the feeling that prompted +Felix to wish to see with his own eyes the discomfiture of the two +rascals who had robbed and mistreated him, he finally nodded his head in +the affirmative. + +So, armed with the rather antiquated rifle of the old man, and fortified +by his late good meal, Felix felt like a different person from the +forlorn lad who had hovered in the hollow beneath the upturned roots of +the fallen tree, and counted the long minutes of the preceding night, as +they crept past. + +They speedily passed over the two miles separating the Indian cabin from +the place where Charley Crow had known the Government officers, who were +out looking for offenders against the laws, to have their temporary +camp. Luckily they found Mr. Harbison, who was in charge of the +expedition, and both his deputies there. + +Felix soon told his story, and was pleased to see the decided interest +the others showed in his recital. They had long been trying to get on +the trail of the two men, against whom they had warrants for several +lawless acts. + +A dozen or two questions followed, and the answers of Felix managed to +put the officers in complete possession of the facts; especially after +they heard what one of the sons of Charley Crow had to tell. + +Speedily the party set out to find the spot where the two thieves had +spent the night, according to the story of the young Indian. + +Of course it could hardly be expected that Abe and his partner would be +found still there, since they may have been heading for some distant +point at the time, possibly intending to sell the fine repeating rifle +that had come into their hands, and which they could claim they found in +the woods; but with three inches of new snow covering the ground, there +should be little trouble in following their trail. + +It turned out just so; and upon making a close examination it was +decided by the wardens, as well as the Indians, that the men had been +gone just an hour; it appearing that they were in no hurry, since they +had plenty of venison, thanks to Felix. + +This was but a small start, and could be easily overcome, especially +since those in the advance had not the slightest warning to the effect +that they were being pursued, and hence would not be apt to make any +especial effort looking to speed. + +If Felix began to feel his limbs grow weary he would not have admitted +the fact for worlds; but shut his teeth hard, and conjured up the scene +he soon expected to feast his eyes upon, with those two ruffians who had +kicked an almost senseless boy, in custody, perhaps their hands in +irons; since he had noticed Mr. Harbison drop a couple of pair of wrist +irons in the pocket of his coat ere starting out. + +It was a pleasing picture, and with every twinge he felt from his wounds +Felix kept saying to himself that it was a long lane that had no +turning; and that he was perfectly justified in wanting to have the +brutes caught. + +They pushed on steadily, six in all, and every one armed. From time to +time Mr. Harbison informed Felix they were steadily overtaking the +fugitives, and that in all probability they would be apt to come upon +them while they were taking a bite around noon. + +Often, in time to come, would the boy recall the picture, and once again +see each eager face of Indian and white man, as they pushed along +through the aisles of that snow forest, bent upon the mission of +justice. + +He felt a constant sense of exhilaration, knowing that with every +passing minute they must really be shortening the distance separating +them from those whom they sought. And as he pushed on, filled with much +of his old time determination, Felix kept a bright lookout ahead, +endeavoring to discover the first sign of smoke in the air, or moving +figures, that could only be those of the two bad men they sought. + +So the time went by until, from the position of the sun, Felix knew that +it could not be far from the noon hour. And at any moment now he hoped +and expected to hear the welcome announcement that they had overtaken +the men they followed. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +THE BUCK'S HEAD + + +An exclamation from one of the sons of Charley Crow announced that their +quarry had been sighted ahead; and shortly afterward, even Felix could +discover the smoke of a fire through the vista of tree trunks beyond; +proving that, just as Mr. Harbison had said, the two men had halted to +cook some more of their easily acquired venison, and take things easy. + +In single file the party advanced; and so earnestly were the pair of +scoundrels at the fire employed getting their lunch ready, that they +failed to note the presence of the others until the six lined up close +by, and Mr. Harbison called upon them to throw up their hands and +surrender. + +Both of them looked very ugly; and given half a chance they might have +made it very interesting for the posse; but with six rifles covering +them, they saw it would be the height of foolishness to resist. Besides, +they had reason to know and fear the man in charge of the force; so, +with a forced laugh, they held up their hands, and announced that they +would not try to run away, or resist. + +Mr. Harbison took no chances with such men. He speedily snapped the +irons upon their wrists, which act brought out a chorus of hard words; +for they had not expected being treated so severely, not having +recognized Felix as yet, as his hat was drawn down well over his face, +and he was wearing an extra old coat belonging to Charley Crow. So that +the men fancied at first they were being arrested on account of some +misdemeanor connected with their work in the reservation known as +Yellowstone Park. + +When, upon the request of the head of the posse, Felix stepped up, and +identified the pair of rascals as the men who had set upon, beaten, and +robbed him of his rifle, as well as everything else of value he had with +him, they began to show signs of positive uneasiness, realizing that +they were in a pretty bad fix. + +It was indeed a great pleasure for the lad to once again fondle his own +gun; and his first act was to carefully wipe it all over, as though he +thought it may have suffered more or less contamination through contact +with such a dirty specimen of humanity as the one-eyed Abe Cozzins. + +The officers announced their intention of starting immediately south +with the prisoners, as it would take them several days to reach the town +they expected to use as a place for locking the men up in. Felix made +arrangements to give his deposition when he came out with his chum, +about Christmas; although Mr. Harbison admitted that he hardly needed +anything more in order to send them to the penitentiary for a term of +years. + +Somehow Felix, now that he had recovered his possessions, did not feel +so vindictive as he had expected he would; and had the fellows shown a +proper spirit of humility the boy would have only too gladly allowed the +matter to drop, so far as he was concerned. + +But they chose to take just the opposite course, cursing him roundly, +and making savage threats of all kinds as to what they would do if they +got free; which was just the way to arouse all his resentment, and cause +him to give his promise to appear against them later on. + +Felix was very glad when they finally went away, leaving him with the +two sons of old Charley Crow. Learning that they were not more than five +miles away from the little shack where Old Sol had often held forth +during the trapping season, the boy was seized with an overwhelming +desire to get back home, and rest up; and when the others heard this, +one of them, the strapping big fellow called Jo by his father, said he +would see him safely there. + +It was really quite a tug for Felix, and only his grim determination +carried him through, for his lower limbs began to feel as though each of +them weighed a ton; so that he found considerable difficulty in dragging +them along; but as familiar scenes began to crop up, the nearer he came +to the cabin, as a consequence he finally found himself in sight of +home. + +Never did a ship-wrecked mariner greet port with more enthusiasm than +Felix did the little old dugout under the big tree. + +Of course Tom was away, undoubtedly wildly scouring the woods in search +of his missing chum; but then he would come back after a certain time to +see whether the lost one had returned; so all that Felix had to do was +to make himself comfortable and wait. + +Jo said he would like to stay with him, and meet Tom. Any one who had +known Old Sol was worth cultivating, in the eyes of the Indian boy, who +had looked upon the veteran trapper as a veritable wonder. + +They had a fine fire that warmed the interior of the cabin, and Felix +was drowsing before this, while Jo examined the wonderful repeating +rifle; when the door was flung violently open, and there stood Tom, his +eyes staring as though he could hardly believe what they showed him. + +Returning almost in despair because he could get no trace of his missing +chum, he had discovered from the smoke that some one was occupying the +dugout; after that it took him just five seconds to reach the door, and +open the same. + +In another instant Tom had thrown his arms around his cousin, and was +hugging him just as though he might be a long-lost brother, instead of +just his every-day chum; meanwhile muttering all sorts of things, and +laughing hysterically, in the effort to master his pent-up emotion. + +Felix was almost as deeply affected, and it was then and there that he +learned just how dear Tom had become to him during the comparatively +short time they had been comrades. + +From beginning to end Tom made him tell the whole story, not omitting a +single detail; and for an hour Felix held his audience spell-bound by a +recital of the many queer things that had come his way, since that hour +when he said goodbye with such a light heart, and started off after +venison. + +It was all like a story from a book to Tom. And of course it pleased him +to hear how the conventional end had been reached, with the two rascals +captured, the stolen goods restored to their real owner, and the +criminals bundled off to jail in irons. Why, Tom could not hear enough +of the details, but kept asking questions, and even turning to the +Indian boy to find out what his chum could not tell. + +"We'll get that buck's head the first thing tomorrow--that is, if you +feel decent enough for the tramp," he declared, after he had had Felix +minutely describe the place of the strange encounter, and where he had +passed his first night. + +Of course the other declared that he would be all right, and eager for +business at the old stand; but the actual truth was, that for several +days he felt the effects of his series of adventures; and the mark upon +his cheek was still faintly visible two months later. + +All the same, with Jo accompanying them they did go to the tree and +secure the prized head, as well as what venison was left--some animal had +been feasting on the latter; but there was still enough left to carry a +lot away with them, and every mouthful of that meat which Felix +masticated gave him more or less satisfaction, since he felt that he had +well earned all that was coming to him in this respect. + +Of course the traps had been neglected during all this confusion; and so +Tom said he would take a run along the entire line that afternoon, in +order that if any prizes had been captured, the skins might not be +spoiled by too long an emersion in the water. + +Jo started back home after they had had lunch. Both boys noticed with +some amusement that the boy's last fond look was in the direction of the +wonderful coffeepot, from whence had come that rich, smooth, fragrant +nectar that had so tickled his palate; doubtless they would see more of +Jo while they lingered among the foothills of the Rockies; but they +would always have their latchstring out for any one who was connected +with old Charley Crow. + +As we already know, Tom had not felt any undue anxiety concerning his +chum until the hour grew late on that first night. Then he had thought +to step out, and fire his gun several times; but as Felix had not heard +the reports, it seemed that he must have been further away than anyone +suspected; or that the wind was wrong. + +In the morning Tom had started out in the direction he supposed Felix +might be; hoping to come across signs of his friend. But the woods were +wide, and apparently he could not at any time have come near the place +where the other had had his adventures. + +Returning at nightfall, Tom had hoped he would find the other at the +dugout, and a keen disappointment awaited him. That night was a restless +one for him. The second day had been a repetition of the first; and late +in the afternoon, dispirited and weary, Tom had drawn near the vicinity +of the shack, when he was electrified to see smoke oozing from the +chimney. + +One thing the incident had surely accomplished, and this was to acquaint +the boys with the fact, if they had not realized it before, that they +were unusually fond of each other. In many ways they were unlike; but it +seemed that what one lacked the other could supply; and in this respect +they made an ideal team for campmates. The right kind of a cheerful, +willing and genial comrade, who will wear well in camp, is hard indeed +to find. It appears that, no matter what a fellow may seem like at home, +when he lands in the wilderness, the veneer is bound to drop off, and +the true elements that go to make up his real nature are quickly +apparent. + +After securing the buck's head Felix was content to remain in camp for a +short time; ostensibly with the idea of "curing" it, so that it might +ornament his room at home; but to tell the plain, unvarnished truth, the +boy was still very sore, and until this in a measure wore off, the +prospects of a long jaunt through the woods and into the mountains +failed to appeal to him very much. + +This feeling began to gradually grow less positive as a couple of days +passed, and finally there was no longer any excuse to hug the fire-side, +because the buck's head had been prepared after a fashion that Tom said +he had never seen beaten. + +So Felix fell back into the rut, just as though there had been no break, +sometimes accompanying his chum in the round of the traps, or doing that +duty alone; and again going out to look for fresh game, with generally +the best of success. + +Doubtless, as the boy tramped through the snowy woods he sometimes found +himself starting when he fancied he heard the coarse voices of the two +unfaithful guides; or it might be a smile, as of amusement, would creep +over his face when it happened that some particular tree awakened +memories of the one into which he had been so neatly tossed by the +wounded buck. + +These experiences all go to make up life; and one learns more quickly +from having passed through such actual performances than by mere +reading; or even listening to what others may have accomplished, +pleasant though this may seem. Felix believed he was a much better +woodsman for having met and boldly faced the difficulties that had been +spread like a net for his unwary feet on that occasion. + +His eye seemed more positive; his nerves firmer; and when he handled his +rifle, it was with an assurance born of experience, so that his aim was +apt to be more accurate than before; while a confidence had been aroused +in his soul that he would not have exchanged for anything he knew of. + +So the youngster, upon being tossed into the water by an apparently +cruel elder brother, and told to swim, upon striking out in desperation +finds that by moving arms and legs he is able to keep afloat, and even +make a little clumsy progress; and into his soul springs a pride that is +never surpassed in later life, even when he wins battles in the business +arena. + +Perhaps the birdling experiences something of the same sensation upon +being actually pushed from the nest by the wise mother, and discovering +that by using its wings it can fly a short distance; it is an +exhilaration never surpassed. + +The buck's antlered head certainly did look mighty fine when fastened up +on the wall of the shack; and Tom vowed that if Old Sol could only be +there in spirit, he must feel pretty proud to see the walls of his well +beloved dugout decorated in such a manner. + +Of course, with his Marlin, Felix had also recovered all his other +little traps from the ugly pair, while they were in the hands of the +game wardens from the Park; so that he again had his little watch, his +compass and his knife, together with what money they had taken from him, +and which had tempted the cupidity of the thieving guides. + +Realizing what he lacked in using a compass, he now set about studying +things, under the guidance of his chum, in connection with the woods, +that would prove useful to him in all time to come. + +It was for some time a source of wonder to Tom Tucker why Old Charley +Crow and his family, although within so short a distance of the dugout, +had never set a line of traps in that neighborhood. One day, when young +Jo was visiting them, drawn by memories of that seductive coffeepot, +they plied him with questions, and thus learned that old Sol had the +last year he was up here, through the use of certain medicines, of which +he knew the value, been able to save the life of Mrs. Crow; and in +gratitude none of the family would ever encroach on his preserves. + +They knew that the old trapper had been absent for several years, and +that game was very abundant over in that direction; but a sort of "dead +line" had been established, across which none would wander with the +intention of doing business. Lacking information to the contrary, they +expected that Sol might show up at any time; and all of them were very +jealous of having him suspect that they had "poached" on his territory. + +When they heard this the boys felt drawn more than ever toward the +honorable Crow family; and Felix privately declared that when he got +back home, the first thing he meant to do was to dispatch a case of +rifles just like his, though of a less expensive pattern, to make those +good fellows supremely happy. + +And so out of evil good many times springs; and as long as they stayed +there at the foot of the great Rockies, Felix and his chum were likely +to enjoy friendly intercourse with the dusky family in the cabin not +many miles away. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +BURNING OUT A HONEY THIEF + + +But it seemed that Felix was not destined to absorb all the adventures +that happened to be adrift up there in that neck of the woods adjoining +the mountain chain. + +And the next one had to fall to the lot of Tom. It was such an admixture +of peril and humor, that whenever either of the chums happened to glance +up at the wall of the cabin, where the wretched looking pelt of a black +bear was stretched, almost invariably a grin would have to follow. + +This is the way it came about: + +Just a few days after Felix had been in that queer mix-up with the +wounded buck, and the two guides, Tom was on his way back from a little +line of traps, when the notion came to him to step aside from his beaten +path, and explore a dense patch of timber into which neither of them had +happened thus far to stroll. + +There was no telling what he might not discover, for it certainly looked +dark and forbidding enough to shelter almost anything. As his catch of +furs that day chanced to be limited to a couple of muskrats, and a +single mink, Tom was just in the humor for striking at something out of +the common. + +He hung the pelts from the limb of a tree, and in plain sight, so that +he might not have any particular difficulty about recovering the same; +and with his rifle in readiness, plunged into the tangled growth, which +was thicker than anything Tom had noticed around them. + +Progress was rather slow, for he had to pass around many obstacles, so +dense was the vegetation in this low lying spot adjoining the marshy +tract where he found the muskrat colony. There was a sense of pleasure, +however, in peering around, not knowing at what minute a fleet doe might +jump up before him. + +To his surprise, and also a little to his chagrin, the tempting place +did not appear to harbor any sort of game whatever. But then Tom was +enough of a sportsman to know that such often proves the case; the +likely spots turn out good for nothing; while, when least expected, luck +often springs upon the unwary. + +Only one thing caught his attention in making his way along, that seemed +worth a second thought. Stooping down in the heart of the dense growth, +Tom picked something up, which he proceeded to examine with increasing +interest. + +It seemed to be a piece of comb from the honey store of a wild colony of +bees, such as are found in nearly every section of the country south of +a certain belt, beyond which the winters are too severe for the busy +little insects. + +Now, Tom had at some time in the past been in the company of a man who +had once made a living, far away in New England, gathering wild honey, +spruce gum, and many other products of the Maine pine woods. The subject +had interested the boy exceedingly, and he had asked many questions +relating to it, that brought him quite a store of information. + +Just the sight and smell of this old piece of comb aroused within him an +eager desire to discover just where it came from. If only he could bring +home a pail of delicious honey, what would Felix say? Why, his mouth +began to water at the very thought of such a delightful accession to +their larder. Think of dripping sweetness flowing over the fine +flapjacks Felix liked to make, and in which he really excelled! + +That was too much for Tom. He just couldn't stand it any longer, but +resolved that since game refused to spring up before his rifle, he would +forget all about hunting; save that somewhere in this thicket growth +there evidently lay a bee tree, fairly groaning with richness; and which +he was resolved to find, if it lay in his power to do so. + +He looked up, but could see no sign near him indicating that bees had a +hive in any tree; in fact there was none of a suitable size right there. + +Tom shrewdly guessed the truth. He knew that black bears have a sweet +tooth; and will go miles to rob a bee tree. The stings of thousands of +the little insects do not appear to bother Bruin a particle; perhaps he +is immune to the poison they inject; or else most of them fail to reach +his skin, on account of the thick hair. + +Apparently, then, some thief of a bear was periodically robbing this +secret storehouse of its sweets, and had dragged this comb away with him +on a recent visit. + +The comb, while somewhat discolored, had not been drained of its nectar +more than a few days, Tom thought. That would seem to indicate that the +hive could not be very far away. If he could only find it, with an axe +he might soon fell the tree in which it was secreted, and then take toll +of the preserves. + +Every tree around came under his observation, and was only allowed to +pass after he had surveyed its entire trunk, and become convinced that +it had no hollow part in which a colony of busy workers might find a +home for the winter's sleep. + +And now that he was upon the subject of bear, he remembered that only a +couple of days back he had himself seen signs of such an animal in the +woods, and wondered how it came that a black, usually hibernating at +this time of year, chanced to be moving around. + +This explained it. Bruin had made a late discovery, and his appetite for +sweet things would not allow him to shut himself up until "the last horn +blew." + +And perhaps, if he could find the bee tree, he might also get track of +the bear, since it would be difficult to divorce the animal from so +dainty a morsel, once he had found how to get at the hive. + +So Tom kept up his search, all the time hoping to make a pleasing +discovery that would make his chum's eye dance, and add a pleasing +variety to their meals. + +He had spent half an hour in this vain hunt when he came upon a tree +that seemed to offer possibilities; for it had a big cavity, and there +was more or less of a chance that some of its larger limbs were also +hollow. It is this kind that appears to be the favorite lodgment of the +bees after swarming from some other hive that is overcrowded; a place +where they can grow indefinitely, and lay up an increasing store with +each successive summer. + +A ton of honey has sometimes been gathered from a single bee tree; much +of it too old and discolored to be of much good but showing that the +little workers never know when they have enough for their winter use. + +Tom became so impressed with the possibilities of this particular tree +that he determined to climb up its trunk and investigate at close range. + +Of course, in order to ascend, he was compelled to lay his rifle on the +ground, as he would surely need both hands to draw himself upward. +Perhaps at the time Tom may have remembered the strange experience of +his chum, Felix, while held unarmed in a tree, by the wounded buck; but +if so, Tom did not dream of allowing such an idea to deter him in the +least. Who could imagine any trouble springing from such an apparently +innocent amusement as climbing a tree to see if any of its limbs being +hollow might shelter a swarm of bees, with their golden brown store of +honey? And besides, a rifle is not often used to shoot such small game, +Tom remembered with a chuckle. + +Once among the branches, he had little difficulty in climbing aloft; and +was soon going about his business of examining the various limbs that +seemed to promise a hope of containing the treasure house he sought. + +He must have passed the hole in the trunk while climbing up the other +side, for otherwise such keen eyes as Tom Tucker possessed would surely +have noticed certain scratches calculated to arouse his suspicions. + +One by one the limbs were looked over, and dismissed from the list of +possibilities, until there remained only a small opening in the main +trunk, about twenty feet above his head. + +Without much hope of finding what he sought there, Tom climbed +laboriously upward to this point, just about to give over the quest; he +could not discover any signs that would indicate the presence of a +swarm; and yet, as he placed his ear to this last opening, it seemed to +him that he could catch a faint buzzing sound from within that excited +new hopes. + +He examined the trunk up and down, but there was certainly no chance of +finding the anticipated hive further aloft; and if in the tree at all, +it apparently must be down further. + +The cavity beside him seemed to extend some distance downward; indeed, +Tom was now of the opinion that it must connect with the larger opening +he remembered having seen when on the ground, and which had slipped his +attention when climbing. On his way back he must certainly take a look +in there; meanwhile he would like to know positively that the bees were +not snugly ensconced in the upper trunk near this minor gash; and as an +idea flashed into his mind, without a second thought he set about +carrying it into practice. + +Taking a piece of oiled rag from the pocket of his khaki canvas hunting +coat, which he was wearing at the time over his sweater and vest, he +ignited it with a match, and immediately dropped this into the opening; +holding back to see whether even a solitary bee made its appearance, +since that would tell the story. + +And Tom immediately became aware of the fact that there was certainly +_something_ going on inside that tree trunk. At first the boy found +himself thinking that he stirred up the biggest bees' nest ever heard +of; for from what at first seemed to be a simple buzzing, there grew a +rumbling that kept on increasing, until it was simply astounding; and +Tom hardly knew what to make of it all, as he hung there to the side of +the tree trunk, looking downward. + +The next thing he saw was smoke puffing out of where he knew the big +opening lay. + +"Hello!" he exclaimed, with mingled astonishment and amusement; "I did +more than I expected, I reckon, and set the old buster afire inside. +Say, she must have been as dry as tinder, to catch like that. Perhaps +it's the fire making all that racket--no it ain't, either, for I never +heard a burning tree make a noise like that. Sounds like growls, too--by +George, it _is_ growls, and I just bet you I've struck the snuggery of +Mr. Bear first pop!" + +The idea was so surprising that Tom just clung there, and stared with +wide-open eyes at the opening below, from whence welled those strange +sounds; together with various little wisps of smoke that seemed to be +getting stronger as they ascended. + +By and by the boy sniffed at this smoke, and as he did so he gave vent +to another exclamation as if to voice his wonder, while something like a +broad grin decorated his face. + +"Burning hair, as sure as you live!" he exclaimed. "Bless me, if I don't +think the old critter must be on fire; that oiled rag lit on his back, +and took hold!" + +Even as Tom gave vent to this startling opinion something appeared at +the opening below; something that speedily resolved itself into a +smouldering black bear, that looked both scared and angry as he backed +out of his den, snapping at various parts of his fat body, where the +fire had touched most severely. + +If Tom had been able to restrain his loud and scornful laughter, in all +probability Bruin would have scrambled down from the tree, and ambled +off; or else rolled in the snow to cool his scorched body; but the sight +seemed so very comical that the boy burst into a shout. + +He was immediately sorry for doing so. + +The singed bear twisted his head when in the act of lowering himself +stern first, and caught sight of his human enemy above. + +Somehow the sight of the boy seemed to completely alter the animal's +plans; and instead of showing fear, he now gave evidence of extreme +anger, just as though he might be able to figure out some connection +between the presence of that biped in his tree, and the suffering he was +even then undergoing. + +He showed his teeth in a vicious growl. + +"Go on down, old man!" called out Tom, waving his hand; "the walking's +fine. Besides, there's nothing for you up here. I'm not hankering for +company, I tell you. So just skip out, please--do you hear, you beggar?" +and Tom ended with a shout; for, to his consternation, the singed bear +had commenced to ascend the tree again, evidently with the intention of +trying conclusions with this enemy who had hurt him so grievously. + +Tom did not exactly like the looks of things just about then. + +There, he was, above the ground some forty feet, with an enraged bear +climbing in his direction, and evidently bent on mischief. It was too +great a distance to be covered in a jump, since the ground was frozen +and hard, so that a broken ankle might be the result. To ascend further +would mean that he must soon be chased to the very pinnacle of the tree, +with Bruin close after, bent on clutching him with his sharp claws, and +teaching him a lesson in politeness. + +Whatever he expected to do must be started quickly, for the animal was +getting closer all the time. If he only had a good long pole; or even a +stout club, Tom believed he might poke the brute so furiously that he +would conclude to give over his attempt to close with the boy who had +laughed so heartlessly over his misfortunes, though Tom was doing so no +longer, it might be noticed. + +But he might just as well wish for his rifle, lying there so temptingly +on the ground; it would be impossible to twist off a branch large +enough, and reduce it to the proper consistency in time to meet the +bear's attack. + +Tom, as the bear came close, began to move out on a limb, wondering +whether the animal would really follow after him. That doubt was +speedily removed, for Bruin never so much as hesitated, though he came +with extreme caution, feeling his way, step by step, suspicious lest he +were being led into a trap. + +It seemed to Tom, however, that if any one appeared to be in a trap, +that individual must be himself. With each foot that he crept out on +that bending limb, he felt that his chances for escaping those cruel +claws in an encounter with their angry owner grew less and less. + +Suppose the limb should break under their combined weight, it would be a +serious thing to go tumbling down fully forty feet, in company with the +fat, hairy monster; possibly to be clasped in his embrace after landing. +Of course, if he could only be sure of alighting on Bruin when the +collision came, it would not seem so bad; but that was only one chance +in ten; and on the other hand the miserable beast might drop squarely +upon him, which would be completing the tragedy. + +One thing Tom noticed was, that the further out on the limb he crawled +the more it sagged, so that he was even now close to the outcropping +branches below; and the daring thought flashed through his brain that +possibly he might suddenly let go his hold above, and by a show of +dexterity, succeed in securing a new grip as he fell! + +That would be leaving Bruin in the lurch nicely; for not daring to trust +his cumbersome body to do likewise he would have to hedge back to the +trunk, an operation taking time; and then descend in the ordinary way. + +Meanwhile Tom could be slipping down the balance of the tree with the +speed, that, in his boyish vernacular, he called "greased lightning," +and when the bear arrived later on, he would find himself up against a +snag in that always dependable rifle. + +There was really no other course left open to him, and hence Tom felt +bound to take the chances, such as they were. + +He was naturally agile, and his muscles accustomed to hardy exercise; so +that after all, it was not such a tremendously difficult task, slipping +dextrously down the outside of that limb, and clutching hold of the next +one as he reached it. + +Tom half expected to see the bear go plunging downward, as the limb, +relieved of the boy weight, must have been violently agitated; but +apparently the animal knew just how to crouch there, and hold on. + +A single look upward showed Tom this, and also that the bear was already +commencing to edge cautiously backward, moving one foot gingerly at a +time, just as Tom had seen a domestic cat do when after a sparrow in a +tree. + +Undoubtedly that must have been the strangest way in which Tom Tucker +ever came down a tree; just as the ascension of Felix had shattered all +records. While his movements were certainly pretty rapid, he managed to +carry himself so dextrously that, save for a number of small scratches, +mostly along his wrists that did not count for anything, he presently +reached the ground, none the worse for his remarkable experience. + +By this time Bruin had succeeded in backing along the limb, and reaching +the body of the tree, down which he commenced to pass, with an eye to +business. Hence, Tom knew that he had no time to waste, if he meant to +hold the advantage that his slide had given him. + +Three bounds took him over to where his rifle lay, and snatching this +weapon up, he was quickly back again at the base of the tree. After that +it was just a picnic--that is, for Tom; what the bear thought no one ever +bothered trying to find out. + +The boy even felt a little compassion for the poor beast that was so +rudely disturbed in the very beginning of his long winter nap, by having +his house take fire; and upon crawling hastily forth, had the double +aggravation of finding himself laughed at by a cruel two-legged foe; and +when he sought to punish such liberties it would be to have a queer +stick poked at his head, and hear a terrible bang that ended his earthly +career. + +But to tell the truth it was bear steaks that animated Tom now; for he +realized that as a piece of marketable fur that sadly singed hide of +Bruin would not pay for the trouble of taking it off. + +He believed that the bear was both fat and rather young, and these +considerations outweighed any compunction he might feel, as the animal +kept coming closer to him. + +Several times the bear stopped to look down at the human enemy waiting +so confidently for him below; and it would seem as though some intuition +must have warned Bruin that he could expect nothing less than trouble +from that source; but to descend seemed to be the only thing left him, +since his late den was now burning in a way that promised the complete +destruction of the tree in due time. + +And so the beast again started downward, growling ferociously; but now +more in the expectation that such fierceness might frighten the hunter +away from his post, than because of a genuine desire to come into +contact with him. + +However, Tom did not mean to take any unnecessary chances; he had never +fought a "singed" bear, and hence could not say just how vindictive such +an animal might turn out to be. So when Bruin was just about down Tom +thrust out his gun until the muzzle almost touched the beast's small +head, close to his ear; when he pulled trigger, and there was one less +live bear in that neck of the woods. + +Later on, Tom, following the trail of the marauding bear, did manage to +discover the bee tree, and upon felling it, secured a bucket full of +good honey; though he afterwards declared that he had never before heard +of such a thing being done in the winter season. + +Bruin had gotten at all he could easily reach, and had then taken up his +quarters in the near vicinity; possibly in the hope and expectation that +when spring came around, and the dormant bees awoke to new activity, he +would be on hand to start a fresh campaign, in the hope of another rich +feast. + +He had not calculated upon the coming of Tom Tucker; and the discovery +of that empty comb which he must have tossed contemptuously aside after +draining its sweet store; so that its finding started the hunter on the +track that ended in Bruin's downfall. + +It was with considerable pleasure that Tom set about the task of +denuding the honey thief of his singed pelt. He meant to simply keep +this as a reminder of the strange adventure that had waylaid him on his +return from the little marsh where the Northern muskrats abounded. But +the meat was the main thing after all; and none of it must go to feed +some prowling bobcat or panther. + +With the assistance of his chum Tom managed to get every pound worth +saving to the cabin, and that which could not be immediately used was +frozen in a secure spot, from which it could not be stolen. Whenever +their stock became low, all that was necessary, was to go out with the +axe, and chop a few pounds off, as though it were fuel for the fire. + +That account also went down in the log of Felix; for it gave him even +more amusement than his own story of the buck that had tossed him into +the tree; he often wished he had a picture of Tom in that tree, with the +bear reaching out for him; and the boy finally sliding down the outside +branches with desperate haste. + +When Tom brought in that pail of wild honey, and declared they could +really get all they wanted during their stay in the mountains, Felix +fairly danced with glee. It just seemed to fill a long-felt want; and +how delicious it did taste upon the next lot of flapjacks, which, of +course, had to follow at the succeeding meal. + +They ate so heartily, Tom declared that if this kept on, the larder +would be cleaned out before half the time they had set for their stay in +the camp were exhausted. But to all this kind of talk Felix turned a +deaf ear; for when such a magnificent appetite had come to him, building +up his energies splendidly, it just _had_ to be catered to, regardless, +even though the two big Crow boys were hired to make the long trip to +civilization on snow-shoes, perhaps, and "tote" back a fresh supply of +stuff on a sledge. + +One can accomplish almost anything when the pocketbook is well lined, +especially with where substantials in the woods are concerned; and those +hardy Indian lads would think little of such a trip through the snow of +the valleys; indeed, it must seem something along the order of a picnic +for them, since doubtless they had more than once done the same thing, +without the inducement of a fat reward, such as Felix would be sure to +promise them. + +It seemed as though adventures were flocking their way thick and fast; +and the boys could not help wondering what the nature of the next one +would be like, as they sat in their cozy dugout at night time, and took +their ease before a roaring fire that made things look so cheery. + +All this while Felix had not forgotten the two principal things he had +in mind when laying out this trip to the Rocky Mountain region. + +A grizzly was the height of his ambition, and unless he could manage to +get such a prize to his credit, all alone and unaided, he would feel +very much disappointed indeed. And then there was that bighorn +business--he had heard so much about these strange sheep of the rocky +heights that he often expressed a wish to try and secure such a splendid +trophy. Could he see a pair of those curved horns decorating his den at +home, the boy felt that it would please him more than words could tell. + +And Tom, understanding what all this eagerness meant to his comrade, was +making preparations looking to a start along those lines; he had his eye +out for signs of the monster that had passed near the cabin on the first +night of their occupancy, and whose den he believed must be among the +rocky canyons of the mountains, not half a mile away from the edge of +the valley where the dugout lay. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +HUNTING THE BIGHORN + + +"I've fixed things so that today the traps can take care of themselves," +remarked Tom, one morning, as they sat there at the rude table eating +their breakfast of oatmeal, and coffee, and some biscuits Felix had +managed to make, using a pan for his oven, and with pretty fair success, +too, Tom had declared, after making away with his tenth one, covered +with honey. + +Felix looked quickly up at his chum. He could read between the lines, +and understood that Tom would not have said this unless he had something +to propose. + +"And what were you thinking of doing, then?" he asked, seeing that the +other was waiting to be questioned. + +"Well, I happened to notice yesterday that a little flock of bighorn +sheep seemed to be feeding in a certain patch away up the face of the +mountain, where there must be some grass that has been protected so far +from the freeze; and I was wondering whether you would feel like taking +a shy at the same, always providing we can climb up to a place within +gunshot?" + +Felix jumped up, as he was really through eating; his eyes danced with +eagerness, just as Tom anticipated they would. + +"Let's start right now," he remarked; whereat the other laughed at him. + +"Not a bit of need for hurry," he said; "and I want to make certain +preparations for the jaunt. It isn't any easy thing, climbing the +mountains, and especially at this time of year. We may be away all +night, for all we know, and must dress warm enough for anything like +that. Besides, we want to make up something to eat; these left-over +biscuits and some dried venison will just fill the bill. And then +there's that rope we brought along, because you said we might need it; +I'll wrap it around my middle, because in mountain climbing a rope is +sometimes worth its weight ten times over in gold. Fact is, no mountain +guide over in the Alps would think of starting out for a climb, without +at least one rope along." + +"I guess you're right," replied Felix; "and I'll begin to get things +moving now. Looks like we might have a decent day, too; which I'm right +glad to see. I'd hate to be caught up there in a snow storm, with a +howling wind blowing." And stepping to the door he looked up to where +the frowning rocky heights could be seen through the partly bare +branches of the trees of the valley. + +Tom would not allow his impatient companion to hurry him in the least. +He declared that there was plenty of time; and he did not want to forget +something which they ought to carry, the absence of which might work a +hardship later on. + +But about the time the sun was an hour high showing through the gap to +the east, the two lads left the old dugout, and headed toward the west, +where the main ridge arose like a monstrous barrier, shutting them out +from everything lying beyond, since to cross its snowy peaks was a task +utterly beyond their ability, even had they ever dreamed of such an +undertaking. + +Later on, when they were really in one of the canyons, Felix began to +comprehend something of the magnitude and grandeur of the massive +Rockies. At a distance they had excited his curiosity and interest; but +once he found himself in their midst, it was a feeling of awe that +gradually took possession of his soul. + +Still, the ambition of a hunter was strong within the Eastern lad; and +when his companion pointed out to him a certain green spot nearly half +way to the top of the nearest ridge and told him to notice the moving +white specks upon it, he realized that these must be the famous +big-horns feeding. + +"However do you expect we're going to get up there?" asked Felix, aghast +at the prospect of climbing at such a height, which looked something +formidable to him just then. + +"Perhaps we can't do it," replied the other; "but we're going to make a +jab at the job all the same; and I reckon I know about the best way. I +haven't been studying the make-up of these mountains, day after day, for +nothing." + +"I'd just depend on it, you've got your plan all laid out," laughed +Felix. "I never knew you to start into anything without doing that." + +"Oh! yes you have," answered the other, chuckling. "When I invaded the +den of my friend, the black bear, and started to smoke him out without +even knowing that it was his house, why, I guess I didn't have any plan +made up beforehand. Any old thing just had to answer; but after all, I +came out of that scrape better than I deserved, after being so breezy as +to invite the gentleman to come out and get acquainted." + +They started in to climb. Tom, as he said, had figured it pretty well +all out, and in this way better progress was made than Felix would have +thought possible. + +Sometimes it turned out to be easy enough; and then again, they would +either have to go around some obstruction, or else make a difficult +ascent of a small cliff. + +When noon came they had ascended a pretty good distance, and Felix saw +that the green patch was much closer. Indeed, he could easily make out +the bighorns now, and even counted them several times. + +"Seven all told, in sight, Tom?" he remarked. "And I wonder if they'll +still be there when we get within range, if we ever manage it?" + +"If not, we must lie over until tomorrow, and take chances that way," +replied the other. "For after going to all this trouble, we must try and +get a sheep, just for the horns; because the mutton of a big fellow will +dent your teeth." + +"Have you got our route all mapped out above here?" asked Felix. + +"Yes; and from now on we must be careful not to let them glimpse us even +once," returned the Western boy. "I haven't hunted sheep before, but I +know something of them, and they're mighty suspicious animals." + +"I notice that we've got the wind in our faces," continued the other. + +"Oh! sure, we couldn't have done the first thing any other way," Tom +declared, as they once more started off. + +An hour later, and Felix was allowed to creep to the edge of a little +ridge of rock in order to take an observation. He found they had made +such splendid progress that it almost seemed as though he might try to +bring down that fellow sporting the massive horns, but then Tom had +warned him that distances were deceiving up in that clear mountain air, +and if so, after all he would be apt to make a mess of it should he try. + +So once more, then, they had to go creeping along, always keeping out of +sight of the wary game, yet forever ascending. And still, when Felix +looked up at the top of the mountain they were climbing, it seemed about +as far off heavenward as ever, in his eyes. + +Later on Tom began to work around more. He believed that they were now +about as close to the bighorn sheep as they could possibly get; and +besides, as the afternoon was waning, the animals might at any time take +a notion to quit their feeding ground, for some other locality, where +they were in the habit of passing the night; and unless the boys got +busy shortly, they would have to wait until another day before securing +the coveted chance for a shot. + +Leaving Felix lying in a little hollow, getting his breath after the +last fierce climb, Tom crept forward. The other saw him gradually raise +his head, and appear to take a peep over the rocks. Then drawing back, +he turned and made a motion that meant he wanted his chum to come +alongside. + +Trembling with eagerness, Felix did so. And no sooner had he raised his +eyes to a level with the line of rock, so that he could look over, than +he saw a sight calculated to pay him for all the trouble he had been to, +in order to gain this position. + +There were the sheep within the easiest possible gun range, so that it +would seem as though even a greenhorn could not miss his aim, if he but +took ordinary precautions. + +"Oh!" + +It was but the faintest sound, and seemed forced from Felix by the +closeness of the game; but Tom nudged him in the ribs, as though to +indicate that even such a whisper must not be indulged in. + +There was really no need of saying a word, because, as they climbed, the +boys had made all the necessary arrangements. + +Felix, therefore, knew absolutely that he was to try and take care of +the buck carrying those massive horns which he envied; while Tom, on his +part, having his mind bent more on securing some mutton that could be +eaten without first being chopped into atoms, meant to pick out a +yearling, or one still younger, provided the flock contained any such. + +Nor was that all, for they had arranged a silent code between them, +looking to the critical moment when they would want to shoot. Tom was to +give the signal for this, after he had learned that his comrade was all +ready for business. + +And on his part Felix must keep a bead on that big buck. + +Perhaps the leader of the flock had some reason to feel suspicious. He +had ceased browsing on the grass that grew in the little plateau +sheltered thus far from the cold, and getting all the warmth of the +sunshine; they could see him standing there as though he might be cut +out of solid rock, apparently sniffing the air as if in some incredible +manner he had caught a whiff of danger, even though the wind blew almost +directly from him toward the spot where the boys lay. + +Tom kicked the ankle of his chum twice. That meant he was ready to give +the word to fire and Felix must be ready to press the trigger of his +Marlin when he heard the one word that was to be whispered, so the +Eastern boy nudged an answer with his elbow. + +"Now!" + +There was a double discharge, Tom firing just after his companion; for +in his generosity he did not want to precede him, even by the fraction +of a second, lest this serve to make the patriarch of the flock move, +and disturb Felix in aiming. + +The big buck with the wonderful horns made a leap into the air, and then +rolled down the slope, falling from the end of the shelf. They could see +his desperate efforts to cling to the rock at the brink with his +forefeet; but powerful as he may have been, that deadly ball had sapped +his strength with its shock; and ten seconds later he vanished from the +sight of the hunters. + +Of course the balance of the flock had bounded off in wild alarm, not +waiting to see what the fate of their leader might be; all but one, +which lay there on the green spot, perfectly still. Tom evidently had +not suffered in his aim because of allowing his chum the first chance to +pull trigger. As usual he had made a centre shot; and if only they could +find a way to get across to where the young bighorn lay, there was a +prospect of some pretty fine eating ahead. + +"I got him, didn't I, Tom?" cried Felix, greatly pleased over the result +of his shot. + +"But where d'ye suppose the beggar dropped to, and will we ever be able +to get to him? I'd just hate awfully to lose those horns, now that I've +knocked him galley-west. What had we better do, Tom?" + +"I'll tell you," replied the other, calmly; for it took considerable to +excite Tom--an angry bear climbing up a tree after him had been known to +do the trick all right, though. "First of all, before we try and go down +after those horns you want, let's see if we can get over to where the +sheep were grazing. For my part, I've got my mouth set for some mutton, +when we get home again; and I'd hate to lose what I've shot. It would be +a wicked waste, that's what." + +They began to look around, there being no longer any necessity for +concealment; and in a short time Tom announced that he believed he saw +how he might cross over to the little green plateau where the bighorns +had been feeding. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +A WAKEFUL NIGHT + + +It required considerable climbing, as well as taking chances, for the +boys to cross over to where the dead bighorn lay on the green plateau +which had long been the dining table of the flock, and where they +undoubtedly felt they were safe from all the ordinary enemies of their +kind. But in reckoning thus, they knew not of the long range of the +modern rifle, nor the terrible expanding power of the up-to-date +softnosed bullet, that mushrooms to three times its original size upon +striking even the flesh of an animal. + +When both of the lads had successfully landed on the plateau it was +beginning to grow a little dusk. The sun had long since vanished behind +the great rocky ridge that stood out above them against the sky. + +"We'll have to put in a night up here, all right," commented Felix, as +they arrived at the side of the dead sheep, over which Tom bent eagerly. + +"Well, since we prepared for that same thing, it won't be so hard on +us," replied the Western boy; "and I'm not any disappointed in my game +either. I don't believe it's a year old even, and I'm only sorry we +haven't some way to make a fire up here; for a slice or two off this +chap would go great. Come over this way, and let's see; I've got a dim +idea I saw a few stunted trees hanging to the face of the rock, where +there were gaps, and some earth had blown in from time to time. If it +turns out that way, count on a supper worth while; and that'll go better +than just cold biscuits and jerked venison." + +They had hardly rounded the shoulder of rock mentioned by Tom, than he +gave vent to a shout of delight. + +"There they are, just as I thought;" he remarked; "and now to see what +we can do about picking up enough fine wood to make a fire. Every scrap +will count. Look in the crevices, and every which way, for broken +branches, twigs, and anything that will burn. We've just got to have +supper, and that's all there is to it, with such bully game on hand!" + +Presently Tom found a way to reach the stunted trees himself, and here +he came upon a regular bonanza in the way of partly dead branches, which +he kicked off in any way possible, until the boy below declared they had +more than enough fuel to cook two suppers. + +By the time they had selected the nook where a fire would be best +sheltered from the night wind at that elevated spot, the darkness had +begun to creep around them. + +Below lay a black gulf, for they could no longer see the trees, or +anything else that in the daytime marked the peaceful valley where they +had their dugout home. + +"We're lucky to have all this wood," remarked Felix, "because, unless I +miss my guess, it's going to be pretty snappy cold up here tonight, and +we've got no blankets along." + +"Yes, I thought it would come in handy," returned Tom, who was already +busily engaged cutting up the sheep, so as to have something to eat as +soon as possible, because the climb, and the cold air of the mountain, +had made both of the boys fairly ravenous. "And that's why I kept on +sending down more, after you said three times we had enough. A fire eats +up a heap of stuff, when you have to keep it going all night in the open +air." + +It was not long before Felix had the blaze going, and he declared that +it certainly made things look a thousand per cent better. It was a +dreary place, so far up the side of the mountains; and without that +cheery blaze the night must have proven one they would never remember +with any degree of pleasure. + +After all, the mutton did taste pretty fine. Even Tom, who being the son +of a cattle raiser, knew what prime beef meant, said it was very good, +and well worth all the trouble they had taken to get it. + +"But how about those horns?" asked Felix, who could not wholly get his +mind off the subject that seemed to concern him, even more than the +supper did; though for that matter he ate his share, and seemed to enjoy +it. "Do you think we can get down to where my fine old granddaddy buck +fell?" + +"We must, sooner or later, and that's all there is to it," replied Tom. +"What d'ye suppose we carried that rope along for if not to use it? Make +your mind easy, you'll have those horns, chances are ten to one." + +"Unless some wild animal carries the body away in the night," remarked +Felix. + +"No danger of that, my boy," laughed the other. "Fact is, the only beast +that is able to do such a thing around here, would be a grizzly; and if +he does, why, we'll just follow him to his lair, and tackle him. Then +you'll have a chance to get back the bighorn head-piece, and knock over +your grizzly, at the same time." + +Felix had to smile at this. + +"You know how to comfort a fellow all right, Tom," he remarked. "That +would be sort of climbing up on our reverses, and making them pay a +profit, wouldn't it? But I'll just try to forget all about the horns +now, and enjoy the good things we have right here--heat and grub in +plenty." + +They did pass a pleasant evening; and later on, when both of them felt +like lying down on the rocks to try and get some sleep, the fire was +arranged so that it might keep going for some hours. Tom expected to be +up a number of times before dawn could be expected, and promised to take +care that the blaze did not go entirely out at any hour. + +Although Tom did not mention anything about it to his chum, he was a bit +anxious concerning the state of the weather. That was the one thing that +had made him hesitate when thinking about pleasing Felix by a climb up +to the place where the coveted bighorns might be found. + +What if a howling storm should swoop down upon them, while they were +away from the cabin and up here in this elevated eyrie? He knew about +how fierce a blizzard could rage, once it took a notion to come out of +the faraway Alaska country. And should such a thing come to pass, the +boys would be in for an experience before which all others must pale +into insignificance. + +With the bitter cold, there would be snow filling the air, perhaps with +a fierce wind; so that for several days they would not dare attempt to +descend into their blessed valley. Could they manage to keep from +freezing there, in that exposed position, where a change of the wind +would find them out, and prevent any possibility of keeping a fire +going, even though they secured fuel to last out, an almost impossible +feat. + +And that was the main reason why Tom hardly slept at all during that +night. He allowed his chum to get all the rest he could; nor did he envy +Felix when, up and down almost every hour, he counted the minutes until +they might see the first peep of dawn away off there in the eastern sky. + +It had clouded up, which was one reason why Tom worried, for he thought +he detected symptoms of a storm in the air. + +But as even the longest night must come to an end, so finally Tom was +heartened when he believed he could detect a little change off toward +the east, which gradually grew better, until he was sure dawn meant to +greet them. + +So he caused the fire to pick up, and by the time daylight aroused +Felix, breakfast was all ready for their attention. The fact of the +matter was, Tom was bent on getting out of that as quickly as possible, +even though they had to leave the task of recovering those massive horns +until another day. He had a pretty fair idea with regard to where they +might have fallen; and it would not be necessary to climb near so high +up the side of the mountain. And, too, it could be done on a clear, +promising day. + +Felix was disappointed when he heard about the change of plans; but +being a sensible fellow he quickly agreed with his chum that their first +consideration must concern their safety. He, too, had been secretly +fearing lest they find themselves trapped up in that high altitude by +the coming of foul weather; and so he agreed to let the matter of +securing his trophy go until later on. + +"Tell you what," remarked Tom, as they prepared to depart the same way +they had come, for that seemed the only means by which a human being +could leave the elevated plateau, not being able to jump, like the +bighorn sheep; "tell you what, we can swing around a little, after we +get down from here, and if it happens that we get sight of your sheep, +we'll make a try for it." + +"That's good of you, Tom," replied the other, warmly; "but remember, +we're not going to take any extra hazard, just to save those horns. I'd +like to have them, all right, but a fellow's life is worth much more +than a trophy." + +A few flakes of snow drifted down as they started to leave, and Tom eyed +the heavens critically. + +"You never can tell about this snow business," he declared. "Seems like +I know when it's going to give us rain, nearly every time; but this +other fools me. But if we can get down to that next level I'll like it. +Plenty more protection there; and some chance of getting wood too. Come +along, and be mighty careful, Felix." + +There were one or two places where it looked so risky that Tom insisted +in fastening the rope to Felix. Then one of them would go at a time, +while the other braced himself for a shock, which luckily never came; +afterwards the leading one would take his turn at standing still, while +the other came on. + +All the while those tantalizing flakes drifted slowly down, just as +though intent on keeping the young bighorn hunters' nerves on edge. + +An hour later, and Tom expressed himself as delighted, because they had +managed to reach the lower level. Now, even though the storm did descend +upon them, he believed they would have a chance to keep on down into the +valley; for the most dangerous rocky heights had been left behind. + +Felix had not noticed how his chum was heading, and hence was surprised +to hear Tom suddenly call out: + +"Here it is, all right; been no grizzly around, you see, Felix!" + +"My old buck, and with not a notch taken out of his grand curved horns!" +cried the other, as he saw what his chum was pointing at, just ahead. + +Tom set to work to get the trophies. He could not make the fine job of +it such as he always liked to carry out; because the flakes seemed to be +getting more numerous now, and evidently the storm was becoming tired of +holding back, just to accommodate them. + +"I can fix 'em up in apple-pie shape after we get home," he remarked; +and Felix had no difficulty in forgiving him; because just then he +believed that it would be a good thing to be quartered once again under +the roof of the dugout, where he could find a peaceful bed, after a +night on the hard, unyielding rocks. + +It was, of course, no child's play, clambering down all sorts of +slippery places, burdened, as the boys were, with the meat of the young +big-horn, and the heavy head piece of the patriarch of the flock; but +save for a few minor accidents that did not amount to anything beyond +some scratches, they managed to finally reach the valley. + +By that time, however, it was snowing heavily, and the wind seemed to be +rising; for while the mountains were entirely concealed from their view, +they could hear it beginning to whistle around the ledges and cliffs +that had marked their line of descent. + +And when, later, the boys staggered up to the dugout, it was with a +sense of deepest satisfaction; now let the storm howl, since they were +assured of shelter, food and warmth. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +OUT FOR A GRIZZLY + + +After all, the storm did not last more than a few hours. As Tom had +declared, no one could ever predict what a snow storm was going to +amount to. The boys, however, were just as well pleased that they +managed to get safely housed before the coming of another night. And as +they sat by their fire, when supper had been disposed of, Felix +mentioned the fact that he could imagine how it must feel to be snow +bound in a dreary place like that elevated plateau, with the prospect +ahead of perhaps a week of fighting the cold wind to keep from freezing. + +He was busily engaged in working upon the bighorn trophy. And it gave +him more satisfaction than he could tell, just to know that he had +secured such a magnificent trophy unaided. Every time he glanced up at +it, when upon the wall at home, he would doubtless remember that +mountain climb, and the camp under the ledge of rock. + +"I've got something to tell you," remarked Tom, with a smile; "only +before I open up I want you to promise not to try and hurry me; because, +you see, I've got a lot of traps out, and they have to be attended to +properly, or else I quit the business." + +"Oh!" replied Felix, "I give you my promise, all right. Now, what are +you going to tell me? Haven't found a wolf's den, have you, with some +cubs in it? Perhaps, now, you've sighted one of those rare black foxes, +that they say are worth all the way from seven hundred up to several +thousand dollars a pelt! That would be fine news, wouldn't it, now?" + +"Yes, if we needed the money, which I take it we neither of us do," +replied Tom. "But this doesn't concern either a wolf's den, or the +trading place of a silver fox. Can't you think of something else that +has been on your mind more or less for a long time back?" + +"Looky here, Tom, do you mean a grizzly?" demanded Felix, his face +lighting up with eagerness and expectation. + +The other just nodded his head. + +"Then you've found out where he lives, when he's at home?" Felix went +on. + +"I think I have, anyhow, Felix." + +"But you haven't said a word to me about it; how long have you known?" +demanded the other, reproachfully. + +"Let's see; we've been home here just ten hours, haven't we; well, call +it about eleven, then; that would cover it," said Tom, with a chuckle. + +"Oh! then you made the discovery while we were coming down the mountain; +is that it, Tom?" Felix asked. + +"Just what it is," replied his chum. + +"Go on, and tell me about it; what did you see, the marks of his claws; +or had he thrown a lot of bones out of his old den, to make room? Which +was it, Tom?" + +"Neither one, it happens," was the reply Tom made to this. "I just +chanced to look up, when we were crawling along on our hands and knees +in a particularly dangerous place, and saw something sticking out from a +ledge above us, that I quickly recognized as the head of a grizzly! +Perhaps the old fellow heard us passing, and came to his front door to +see what the strangers looked like." + +"And why didn't you tell me about it, so I could look up too?" asked +Felix. + +"Well, I had several reasons," answered the other, readily enough. "In +the first place, I didn't dare sing out because, if you slipped just +then, you stood a pretty good chance of being killed. And by the time we +both got to where the climbing was safer, he had pulled his nose in out +of sight. So I just marked that place, and thought I'd keep the news +until tonight." + +"All right; and when you're good and ready, not before, Tom, why, we'll +pay our respects to Mr. Grizzly Bear." + +"H'm! how about the day after tomorrow?" asked Tom. + +"Suits me fine; do you really mean it?" asked his chum, eagerly. + +"Wind and weather permitting, I think we might chance it, Felix. And +I'll try and not let him know we're coming. Sort of a surprise party, +you understand. I only hope the old chap's at home when we knock." + +Felix came over, and clapped a hand affectionately on the shoulder of +his cousin. + +"You're the finest chum a fellow ever could have, and that goes," he +said; "always thinking of doing something to make things move along for +me. Once I get my grizzly, and after that I'm going to turn around, so +as to try and fix things for your liking, see if I don't." + +"Just as if you ain't always picking out the best flapjack in the lot +for me; the juiciest piece of meat; the clearest cup of coffee. I guess +when they started to making chums, they lost the pattern after they had +you built up, Felix. And it makes me sick to think what a gap there'll +be in my life after you go back East again." + +"But you promised to make me a good long visit soon; and I'm going to +hold you to your word. After this we've just got to see more or less of +each other right along. I'm coming out here again, make your mind easy +to that. Perhaps I'll take a notion to invest in a ranch near you, +because, you know, my mother left me some money, more than I'll ever +know what to do with." + +"That would be the greatest thing I know of!" cried Tom; "and I'll see +that you have chances enough, mark me." + +And so they chatted on, as each carried his chosen work along; for Tom +was busy with some of his best pelts, which did not quite look well +enough to suit his eye, and he thought needed a little further +manipulation before being tied up. + +On the following day Tom cleaned up all work possible with the traps, +visiting every one that was set, and bringing home quite a bundle of +fresh skins, which he of course immediately stretched after their kind, +some cased, and others split open, with the fur side out. + +They were accumulating quite a collection of pelts by this time, and +somehow both boys enjoyed the work very much. If they had had to do it +for a living, possibly some of the pleasure would soon evaporate; but as +long as it was just carried on as fun, it did not seem to pall upon +them. + +And sitting there by the fire evenings, they had easily settled what +they meant to do with the main part of the skins. After picking out what +they wanted to keep as a reminder of their great time in the foothills +of the Rockies, they agreed that the balance should be turned over to +Mrs. Crow, for the benefit of herself and family. As old friends of Sol +Ten Eyck, they seemed to have first claim on any surplus; and then there +was something so fine about the way the old halfbreed had kept strictly +away from that part of the region which he looked on as Sol's preserves, +that both lads believed he deserved to be rewarded. + +"And," Tom Tucker had said, in conclusion, after one of these talks; "as +Sol will never come up here again, I'm going to make over all he has, +except the traps he values, and which we're to take home for him, to +Charley Crow. He can call this shack one of his homes, and trap along +the little stream where we've found the mink so plentiful." + +Felix, on his part, had already thought about those Marlin guns he meant +to send west as soon as he got home again; and his companion applauded +the idea when he learned of it. + +Tom worked hard that night trying to get everything in shipshape around +the shack, so that they could take a day off with clear consciences; and +Felix gave him a helping hand in stretching the many pelts; for with two +days catch to be taken care of, and all in the faultless manner that +marked Tom's work, it took considerable time to clean the slate. + +But in due time Tom admitted that he could not think of anything else +that needed attention; so during the balance of the evening they just +rested. + +In the morning they made a few simple preparations looking to the great +event of the day. What one needs most of all, when about to start out +after a grizzly, consists of a cool head, steady nerves, and a gun on +which he can always depend. The harder this latter shoots the better; +and if he can carry sixteen cartridges in the magazine, it will not be +too many, for they are about the toughest beasts to kill on the face of +the earth, barring none. And there have been hunters willing to declare +that some grizzlies can carry off as much lead, and still live right +along, as would wind up the earthly career of a dozen lions or tigers. + +So about the only thing the boys did was to look their guns over +carefully, and make sure they had an abundance of ammunition along, +together with such other things, like matches, hunting knives, and the +like, as they were accustomed to carrying with them. + +The day was everything they could wish; indeed, the weather seemed to be +doing its best to behave. Felix used to say that it was trying to coax +him into making another lone trip, so that it could suddenly veer +around, and show him the other side of the picture. But he was not at +all anxious to go wandering off again; and while Tom did not joke him +about the matter, he was of the opinion that the events of that previous +experience had sunk deeply into the mind of his chum. + +Having made all preparations, therefore looking to pushing a vigorous +campaign against the grizzly, if they were lucky enough to find him +home, the boys shut the door of the dugout, and departed. + +Felix looked back toward the old shack with something like affection. + +"We haven't been here very long, Tom," he remarked, "but do you know, +I've begun to just love that old place. And when I'm far away, perhaps +at home in the East, let me tell you, many a time I'll just shut my +eyes, and see it as we do now. Yes, and I'll never hear the crackle of a +fire but what I'll be sure to picture the two of us sitting there, busy +at our work." + +Tom looked pleased. + +"I'm right glad to hear you talk that way, partner," he remarked, +earnestly, as he too glanced fondly back over his shoulder. "She's a +homely little old shack, and sure not much to look at; but somehow or +other she seems to suit me O. K. And when you say you'll always remember +our days and nights up here in the Rocky Mountain country, you're just +echoing what's in my mind. I never had a chum like you; and I never +expect to again. It was a bully good idea that brought you out to visit +our ranch, the luckiest day in my whole life." + +Tom was usually not given very much to sentiment, as his cousin knew; +and hence, when he did speak his mind after this fashion, it might be +set down that he meant every word of it. + +The subject turned to other points of the compass as they walked +sturdily on in the direction of the mountain pass. With such glorious +surroundings there need never be any want of things to talk about. Even +the grand air that greeted them with the rising of the sun was +invigorating enough to deserve frequent mention; while the impressive +scenery by which they were surrounded was surely of a character to evoke +admiration. + +In this manner, then, they presently reached the rougher country that +lay along the foot of the uplifts. Having come this way before, when +going upon their bighorn hunt, and also returning from the same, it was +in a measure familiar to both boys; still, they saw it now under new +conditions, and discovered many features in the landscape that had +eluded them on the previous occasion. + +"Here we are at the canyon where we came out," said Felix, as they found +high rocky walls beginning to shut them in on both sides. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +THE TERROR OF THE ROCKIES + + +"You must know," said Tom, as they climbed over some of the many rocky +obstacles in the canyon, left there by the last flood, when some +cloud-burst had perhaps filled it dozens of feet high with a raging +flood, "that this grizzly bear hunting is different sport from bagging +an ordinary black." + +"I'd always understood that," Felix answered. "You see, I've read a lot +about the thing, and I'm pretty well posted on that subject. I know that +the grizzly is the toughest animal in existence, barring none, and that +many hunters who have shot big game in other parts of the world give him +the palm, when it comes to being difficult to down." + +"And that's why," continued the Western boy, "men who would hardly +hesitate to openly face a panther, or a pack of wolves, and meet them on +the level; will even climb a tree when expecting an attack from a full +grown grizzly; because it is well known that the old fellow can't climb +worth a cent." + +"Yes, I've read even that about him," remarked Felix. "He's sure the +terror of the Rockies; and the Indians used to always reckon a brave the +greatest ever, when he could show the claws of a grizzly, and prove that +he killed the beast in a square stand-up fight." + +"Whew! I should say so, Felix. Why, nothing could tempt me to try such a +fool game as that. When you see what awful claws the old fellow has, and +the frightful muscle back of them, you'll understand why it's never +looked on as a piece of cowardice to get up in a tree, and then dare him +to come on. Chances are even then, that if the tree is only a sapling, +the bear'll drag it down, and get his man." + +"Are you trying to throw a scare into me, Tom?" laughed the other. + +"Oh! not at all," replied his cousin; "only I wanted you to know that as +we're only a couple of boys after all, we had ought to take as much +precaution as most old hunters would, when out to stalk a grizzly bear." + +"That means climb a tree, I take it, eh, Tom?" + +"Well, it would be wise; and my father would say it was the right thing +to do," went on the ranch owner's son, firmly. + +Felix frowned, as though there was something in the proposition that +somehow went against his proud soul. And seeing this, his cousin was +only the more urgent in his appeal. + +"Remember, you promised me that you'd do anything I said in this game, +Felix!" + +"That's right, I did, and I will, Tom; but you don't know how mean it +makes me feel to think of getting up in a tree, and then daring the bear +to come on; only to fill him full of lead as he accepts the challenge." + +"Oh! I can understand all that, my boy, and it does you credit; but +after you see that monster at the foot of the tree, stretching himself, +and shaking it in his mad effort to get at you, after being wounded a +dozen times, you'll agree with me that anybody would be a fool to try +and meet such an enemy on equal terms, when, if his rifle missed fire it +would all be over with him." + +"But this rifle never misses fire!" declared Felix. "All the same, I +suppose I'll have to do it, though under protest. But see here, Tom, +weren't you telling me just the other night about seeing some of your +dad's cow punchers having a bully old time throwing ropes over a grizzly +that was caught on the open, and badgering the old fellow every which +way, before they pumped him full of lead? How does that agree with what +you're saying now? Are cowboys braver than old hunters, that they take +such chances?" + +"Well, you must know that every one of us was mounted on a fleet pony; +and that though the bear chased after us in every direction, he couldn't +catch up. Then they got their ropes to flying, and he was rattled, so +that before you could count fifty he had as many as four lariats holding +him. When he tried to go one way he was dragged over by the other three +ropes. And when they had had all the fun they wanted, they shot the old +Mountain Charlie. Oh! no, a cowboy on his bronco is a different sort of +a fellow from the time he's afoot. You just bet he couldn't climb up in +a tree any too fast, if ever he met with a grizzly, and wounded him, +when in the mountains." + +"Oh! well, that makes it easier for me, I suppose," said the reluctant +Felix; "but all the same it galls some." + +"I don't see why it should," remarked Tom. "Just look back a little, and +you'll see me taking a mean and cowardly advantage of that black I got, +stepping up when he was sliding down that tree, and shooting him while +his back was turned, so to speak." + +Then Felix laughed a little, as though he might be convinced. + +"I guess you're right, Tom," he observed. "It just occurred to me that +when the wounded buck had me held up in the tree a prisoner, I was only +too glad to fish up my Marlin, and give him his dose. Of course I didn't +climb that tree in the beginning; he tossed me up there." + +"Well, I don't suppose you could induce the grizzly to try that same +thing; but if he did, you'd think it all right then to plug him, would +you? I rather guess it don't amount to much difference after all, Felix, +whether you climb first, or get pushed up a tree. The whole fact of the +matter is, that a man isn't in the same class as a big buck or a wounded +grizzly, when it comes to muscle; and he's just got to fall back on +guns, and trees, and such, to even things up." + +"Consider it settled then, Tom; I'll climb," concluded the Eastern boy; +and with this his chum seemed content. + +They were getting deeper into the mountains all the while, and Felix +could even see where they had started to climb when heading upwards on +that other occasion at the time they went after bighorns. + +And Tom led the way over some of the same ground. It was more familiar +to them now, and they did not have the same difficulty as before. +Indeed, Felix remembered in many instances just where to place his foot; +or to reach up and seize on a projecting knob in order to pull himself +upward. + +He began to look curiously ahead, wondering just where it could be that +Tom had sighted the head of the grizzly thrust out, as the animal +surveyed the descending hunters, who were bearing fresh meat. Indeed, he +really wondered why Bruin had not seen fit to follow after the scent, +and make them drop their packs, or else fight for the spoils on the +spot. Tom, upon being asked declared that ordinarily such might have +been the programme of a grizzly, that fears nothing under the sun, in +either the human or the animal kingdom; but that possibly His Majesty, +as he called the beast, may have recently dined; and when one has no +appetite, it seems the part of folly to go to any extraordinary exertion +to secure food. + +"But he may be on edge today, just the same," he added, after giving +this information in answer to the question of his cousin. + +"I hope so," replied Felix. "If I just do have to climb a tree, and ask +a bear to step up and be shot, I want to see him at his worst. That's +the only thing to give me an easy conscience." + +Tom only smiled. + +He had a pretty good idea some of these gallant notions would undergo a +decided change in his chum before they were done with this business. + +Five minutes later he remarked quietly: + +"We're nearly there, Felix. Hold up a bit, and get your breath. Look up, +and see if you can notice where that seam in the rocks has a black +look." + +"Oh! I get that, all right, Tom; is there where you saw his head +sticking out?" + +"That's the place; and chances are we'll find a regular trail leading up +to the mouth of the den. What I'm going to look for the first thing is +the tree. In hunting a grizzly that's an important part of the game; +unless you happen to have a gully in front, that no bear could cross +over. I've known of a good many hunters coming out here to get the hide +of a grizzly; and they told my father that while the idea of doing such +a thing struck them at first as cowardly, after they'd had a look at the +monster they meant to tackle, the only thing that bothered them then was +about the size of the tree. It seemed to them that they wanted one as +tall as the redwoods in California." + +Felix chuckled at this, but made no further remark. He had noticed that +Tom no longer talked in his natural voice, but whispered. Even this +circumstance seemed to add more or less to the gravity of the occasion. +It told of hovering danger, and the need of ordinary caution, if they +did not want to arouse the sleeping dragon, and have him rushing wildly +out to assail them, before they were good and ready to give him a warm +reception. + +Tom kept on looking carefully around him every chance he got, as they +pushed on slowly. Felix knew the wisdom of this, and that he would be +doing the right thing to also get his surroundings firmly fixed in his +mind, before the grand circus began. There could be no telling how much +need of this there might be before the little mountain drama closed in +the death of the bear. + +He discovered in the first place that there was an occasional tree in +sight, not of any great size, but with a trunk that would baffle any +ordinary animal to bend down, Felix thought. + +As the grizzly could not climb, a perch in one of these would place the +hunters out of danger, and they could proceed to accomplish their work +as they felt inclined. + +How the bear was to be coaxed out, and to the tree, Felix of course did +not as yet know; but he was quite willing to leave this to his chum. Tom +understood all about the ways of grizzlies; he had heard them discussed +since childhood, and seen many of the species brought in by hunters; for +since they are a serious menace to the raising of cattle, there is a +price on the head of every grizzly known to have his haunt within miles +of a ranch. + +Tom was moving about now, and appeared to be scanning the rock at his +feet eagerly. Undoubtedly he was looking for the well worn trail which, +he had told his chum, he expected to discover, leading upward toward +that dark spot in the rocky wall, where, according to his figuring, the +animal's den had its yawning mouth, although as yet they had not +actually looked into it. + +So Felix stood there, waiting, and holding his gun in his hands, +wondering what he might be expected to do should the grizzly appear +unexpectedly from some other quarter, heading toward his den. + +And possibly because Tom had impressed the necessity of a tree so +strongly on his mind Felix even made sure that there was one of these +growing close at hand which he believed might be scaled in a hurry if +there arose any need. + +He saw that his companion was now examining the ground more closely than +ever; and there was that about his manner to tell that he must have made +a discovery of some sort. + +A few seconds later the Western lad arose to his feet, and his face +shone with satisfaction as he turned toward his friend. + +"It's here, just as I said, Felix," he whispered; "and from the signs +I'm pretty sure the old fellow is right now squatted in his den. Things +look all right to me, and the next thing is to coax him out. Like you, I +only hope he's hungry; but no matter whether he is or not, he's just got +to come, and that's all there is to it." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +WHEN MUSIC WAS PLAYED OUT + + +Like a general arranging his plan of campaign, so Tom looked around him, +up at the place where the den of the monster was believed to be, and +then in search of the available tree. + +"That's where we ought to perch," he remarked, pointing to a spot close +by. "We can each have a tree, which is really better than both getting +up in the same one; for while he's trying to get at me, you can pump him +full of lead. I'm only going to dip in here in a case of necessity, +because I want you to say you got him all by yourself." + +"Up a tree," muttered Felix, disconsolately; but his chum paid no +attention to the half protest, being satisfied that time would vindicate +his course. + +"Now, there are some trees up yonder, closer to the den, and they would +answer in a pinch, if we had to run for it," Tom went on to remark. + +"I don't just get on to what you mean," remarked the other; "I thought +you expected to climb up, fix a comfortable seat, and then ask him to +step out, and get acquainted." + +"But perhaps he won't come," retorted Tom. "You never can tell about +these grizzlies. Some days they're ready to just rush out, and tackle a +whole army. Then again they have to be nearly dragged out, they're so +full, and so lazy. But once you get 'em stirred up, they're always the +fiercest ever." + +"Do you expect to go up there, then, and have a look in?" asked Felix. + +"We might have to, if he won't come when we start to shouting," answered +the other. "Let us only get a peek at his nose, so you can touch him up, +and I give you my word there won't be any trouble about coaxing him. +You'll hear a roar that'll just about make your blood run cold, and then +we've got a fight on our hands you'll never forget." + +"But see here, Tom," urged Felix, "suppose, now, we go up there poking +around and just when we're in a fix where we can't back down, the old +rascal heaves in sight down the trail. He'd have us in a lovely hole +now, wouldn't he? Then I guess we'd have to make it a stand-up fight. +Trees wouldn't figure in it that time, eh?" + +"But I'm dead sure he's in his den," declared the other. + +"How d'ye make that out, Tom?" + +"Why, see here, there's some dirt where he goes up and down. You can see +that he's just worn a path with the many times he's gone in and out. +Now, look close, and I can show you several prints of his big feet, with +the claw marks sticking out ahead. And they all point _toward_ the den, +showing that the most recent tracks are the ones he made going in! Get +that, Felix?" + +"Sure I do; and I must say it looks just as you figure it all out, Tom; +and if that's the case, our old chap is at home, all right." + +"Then let's move up closer," said the other. "On the whole, I reckon +we'll use the trees that lie up yonder. We can see into his hole from +there, which we couldn't do down here." + +They started to advance, slowly and cautiously, keeping a wary eye up in +the quarter where danger lay. But nothing occurred to give them a start, +and presently the boys had reached a point where they could see that Tom +had hit the truth when he said the dark spot on the face of the cliff's +base must be the entrance to the grizzly's den. + +"That's where he enters, is it?" said Felix, looking closely at the +aperture that simply yawned darkly before them, with the rock hanging +overhead. + +"Yes," Tom replied; "when he heard us talking, that other time, he must +have walked over to this spot, where he could poke out his head, and +look down." + +"You don't see anything of him around, do you, Tom." + +"Never a sign," came the answer. "Chances are, he's fast asleep inside." + +"And now, do we pick out our trees, and squat in them waiting, for him +to show up?" + +"We'll see if a little music will coax the old gentleman to show his +nose. Which tree do you want, Felix?" + +"Don't see much choice between them; but I suppose I might as well take +this, because it seems to be a trifle closer to the den than the other," +replied the boy from the East, indicating his selection. + +"But it's smaller in the bargain," complained Tom; "don't you think +you'd better let me have that one?" + +For answer the other commenced to climb; and as there was nothing else +to be done Tom followed suit. He knew that Felix had a stubborn streak +in his make-up; and in fact he liked him all the better for it, because, +without such spice, in Tom's mind, a fellow would be like cake without +the ginger in it, flat and commonplace. + +"Well, here we are," commented Felix, after he had fixed himself +comfortably, and raised his rifle to his shoulder several times, as +though wishing to make certain that he could cover any advancing enemy +without difficulty. + +"How does it suit you?" asked Tom, grinning. + +"Oh! I've sat on worse seats, one of 'em a wasps' nest," replied Felix. + +"All right. Now, what'll we sing?" continued the other. + +"Sing?" echoed Felix. + +"Yes, to coax our grizzly to look out. Strike up any old song you like, +and if I happen to know it, I'll join in; I can do that anyhow, because +our audience ain't going to be particular. Fact is, the worst noise we +make, the more chance of his coming out in a bad temper." + +"All right, just as you say, Tom," laughed Felix, falling in with the +humor of the idea. + +Accordingly, Felix began to sing some school song, at the top of his +voice, and his chum joined in with a pretty good bass. They went clean +through with a verse, and roared out the chorus in good style, although +Felix was laughing so hard at the end that the effect was terrific. + +"If he can stand that howl, he's equal to anything," the latter +remarked, as they finished; "see any signs of our friend yet, Tom?" + +"Sorry to say I don't," replied the other; "though that ought to have +fetched him hurrying out, to see what lunatic asylum had broken loose. +Hit up another verse, my boy, and give him all the variations you can." + +So they went through with it, yet there was not the first sign of the +grizzly. + +"That's queer," remarked Tom, when after they had completed their duet, +not a single thing occurred; only the gaping mouth of the den mocked +them, with vacancy behind it. + +"Don't fancy the tune, perhaps?" suggested Felix, humorously. + +"That might be so. The old fellow might have his favorites. Can you give +him a change, Felix, something more solemn like. He must have a weak +spot, if only we could hit on it. Strike up 'Plunged in a Gulf of Deep +Despair,' or something that thrills you the same way." + +Accordingly, as he liked to be obliging, and the situation appealed to +his fine sense of humor, Felix did start a song that sounded very much +like the "Dead March of Saul." Tom added all the touches possible; and +had anybody chanced to be in the vicinity he must have thought he had +struck a camp meeting. + +"How's that?" asked Felix, when they had finished. + +"Simply elegant, take it from me. Queer that we haven't thought to sing +a little while we sat around the blazing fire nights," declared Tom. + +"Well, if we did much of that sort of thing, we'd soon go hungry, Tom." + +"Think so?" chuckled the other. + +"Every animal would take to its heels, and never come within miles of +our shack again," asserted Felix. + +"Strikes me it don't seem to have any effect on _one_ animal I know of, +and that's our big friend in the hole yonder," Tom declared. + +"Perhaps after all he isn't at home," his chum remarked. + +"I'm dead sure he is, in spite of the fact that he doesn't show up," +said Tom. + +"Then grizzlies must be lacking in a musical education, that's all I can +say," Felix observed. + +"Sorry our efforts to amuse don't seem to be appreciated," Tom went on +to observe with a grin. "Shall we try one more? Do you know, I think +something inspiring, like 'Dixie' for example, might stir him up. +Suppose we give him that, and follow with the 'Star Spangled Banner.' If +one of those don't bring results, why something else has got to be done, +that's flat." + +Felix, entering into the spirit of the occasion, held his gun as though +it were a guitar which he was picking; and presently, after a few +extravagant motions, broke out in the invigorating strains of the well +known Southern song, that in times of old, when the armies of the blue +and the gray faced each other in battle array, did so much to inspire +the latter to plunge into the fray. + +But then, this was not a Southern bear; and at any rate, the music +produced no result save to amuse the singers. + +"Well, I must say he's a hard customer to please," laughed Tom. + +"Or to make mad either," remarked Felix. "Why, after hearing how we +murdered that noble tune, I should think any self respecting bear would +rush out, foaming at the mouth, and proceed to rub the assassins in the +dust. He just goes on snoozing, and paying not the least attention. +Shall we give it up, Tom?" + +"Well, let's try if he's got any patriotism about him. Give him one +stanza of the other song. If that doesn't make him look out, then we'd +better put our horns away, and quit singing. We're dead failures as a +drawing card, seems to me." + +"You were right," observed Felix, a few minutes later, when, after they +had done their level best rolling out the chorus, "And the Star Spangled +Banner in triumph shall wave, o'er the land of the free and the home of +the brave," not a single sign of an encore did they receive. + +"He don't seem to mind it in the least," remarked Tom, grimly. "Perhaps +now the old fellow may be stone deaf. I should think he must be, to +stand for all that stuff, and never whimper once." + +"But that couldn't be," declared Felix, "because he must have heard us +talking that other time, when you saw him peeking over at us. I'm not so +sure as you are that he's in just now." + +"Well, here goes to prove it," said Tom, as he made a move as though +intending to leave his tree; but when Felix also started to vacate, the +other called out: "No, I want you to stay just where you are, and keep +tabs on the opening. If you see the first sign of anything moving, you +want to give me the tip right away, so I can run back to my tree." + +"But what are you going to do?" asked Felix anxiously, for if there was +anything dangerous to be accomplished, he did not see why Tom should not +let him share in the enterprise. + +"Just wait and see," was all the satisfaction he received. "And don't +forget you gave me your solemn word to obey. I'm the captain of the ship +just now, and the crew has got to do what the skipper says." + +"But if you're going to take chances, I'd like to be along, Tom." + +"Only one of us can do the little job; the other's business is to stay +there, on guard, and give the alarm if anything shows up. And I've +detailed you for that part of the programme, Felix." + +So, unwilling though he was, the other had to sit there, rifle in hand, +and try to figure out just what Tom meant to do, in order to bring the +inmate of the den to his front door, in case he was at home. + +The ranch boy had been keeping his eyes well about him, and knew just +where he could find what he wanted. First of all, he crept up to the +frowning aperture, and looked in. Felix felt his heart in his throat, so +to speak, with a sudden fear lest his chum take a reckless notion to +enter that gaping hole; he was even on the point of calling out, and +begging Tom not to incur such unnecessary chances, when he saw the other +moving away again. + +Evidently, whatever reason Tom had for going there to the mouth of the +cave, he was perfectly satisfied; for, as he caught the eye of his chum, +he nodded, and made suggestive motions, as if to say that he was more +than ever convinced that the animal was somewhere inside, though +possibly at some distance back from the opening. + +Felix now watched him with deepest interest. If he had figured on how +Tom meant to draw the grizzly forth, he could not have struck on the +right answer to the question, for suddenly he gave an exclamation, and +said as if to himself: + +"Now, what's he gathering wood for? It sure doesn't seem like time for +our noon lunch? And what would Tom want to camp here for in front of the +place? Now he's got an armful, and--why, of course, he's going to stack +it up in front of that hole. That's the ticket, Tom; smoke the old +rascal out?" and he ended in calling aloud to his chum. + +The other only turned, and nodded his head as he made his way cautiously +up to where the black hole gaped silently. Here he tossed his bundle of +small wood, and then went back for more. + +Felix had gripped his gun a little nervously while all this was going +on, ready to take up his part of the game should occasion arise; but +even when the brush from under the trees was thrown down, the inmate of +the den did not deign to show himself, and offer any objection. Felix +concluded that there must be a mistake, and that the grizzly was away +from home; or else the old fellow was so gorged with a recent dinner +that he just could not bother moving, because some foolish boys chose to +play pranks outside of his house. + +Now Tom had returned with a second armful of wood, which he piled up on +the other lot. Then Felix saw him stuffing a crumpled piece of newspaper +under the pyramid, and he understood why Tom had put that in his pocket +so carefully before leaving the shack. + +Everything seemed ready, and he wished Tom would hurry, and come away +from his dangerous quarters, for the bear might rush out at any second. +So Felix breathed a little easier when he saw the other moving off, and +noticed little spirals of blue smoke beginning to weave themselves in +and out of the piled up brush and wood. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +A HARD CUSTOMER + + +"That's bound to settle it, one way or the other!" declared Tom, after +he had climbed up into his tree again, and resumed his former position +of squatting in a crotch, gun in hand. + +"You mean about his being home, or away I reckon?" remarked Felix, who +was feeling fifty per cent easier in his mind, now that his chum had +carried out his little programme without being rushed by the bear. + +"That's the idea," replied the other, keeping his eyes on the spot where +the fire he had kindled was burning fairly well. + +"Plenty of smoke, if there is only a little flame," observed Felix. + +"I wanted it that way; and so I picked out some green stuff that would +make a whole lot of smell, but not burn too lively, you see, Felix." + +"Whee! I got a whiff of it right then; and say, if our friend is at +home, and can stand that smell, why, he's welcome to stay where he is +the rest of the winter, for all of me. It beats anything I ever +whiffed," and the Eastern boy held his fingers to his nose while +speaking, to emphasize his words. + +Tom grinned, as if he really felt proud of that fire. A hot blaze would +have caused very little smoke; and after all might not have accomplished +the end they had in view. + +"Wait!" he said, with a chuckle; "you'll see." + +A few more minutes passed. Felix noticed several things, for he had come +to pay considerable more attention to small matters than before meeting +this cousin who had been brought up in the open, and imbibed many of the +instincts that govern the actions of Indians and veteran woodsmen, among +which observation stands at the head. + +He saw, for instance, that the breeze was blowing straight toward the +face of the cliff where that hole lay; and as it came in rather strong +gusts now and then, it undoubtedly served to carry pretty much all of +the pungent, highly scented smoke into the yawning aperture. + +And Felix also knew that it would drive this odor a long way ahead into +the recesses of the cave. If Bruin were at home, he could not help +getting a whiff of it presently, and smoke always serves to make a bear +both suspicious and angry. Where shouts of derision, and the singing of +songs had failed, a more silent and powerful agency would succeed. + +And it did. + +One, two, three more minutes passed away. Then Felix heard something +that gave him a thrill, and caused him to turn quickly in the direction +of his comrade, perched in the adjoining tree. + +Tom nodded his head, and simply remarked: + +"What did I tell you? That fetched him; and he's waking up!" + +It had undoubtedly been a rumbling roar that came to the ears of the two +boys. Bruin had at last become aware of the fact that there was smoke +rolling into his snug retreat; and instinct warned him that smoke never +came without there being some sort of fire in connection with it. + +Again they heard the heavy thrilling sound, and it was now more distinct +than before, which told them that the grizzly must be advancing +hurriedly toward the opening. Doubtless this was the only exit he had; +and alarmed lest he be caught in a trap by the fire, he was now +shambling along, bent upon seeking the open air before it was too late. + +"Ready!" called Tom. + +Hardly had he spoken than Felix saw the smouldering stuff at the mouth +of the cliff den thrown violently aside, as a huge bulk almost filled +the hole. Then there came into view the very largest grizzly Tom had +ever seen, as he hastened to declare, with boyish vigor. + +"Wow! but ain't he just a jim dandy, though? Big as a house nearly; and +say, did you ever see a madder thing in all your life. He hears me +talking right now, because he's looking this way. Bet you his eyes are +that full of smoke he can't see as well as he might, and he's rubbin' +'em with his paws, would you believe it? Hey! you, we made that fire! +What d'ye mean upsetting it that way? Think you own the earth, don't +you? Well, come on, and have it out with us. Dare you to knock the chip +off my shoulder! Bah! you're nothing but a big bag of wind! Who cares +for you?" + +Just as though the grizzly could really understand what Tom howled at +him, he immediately started toward the trees where they were ensconced. + +"Oh! my, ain't he mad as hops, though?" jeered Tom. "Look at him shake +his head, would you, Felix? He knows we did it, and he means to let us +understand he won't put up with such a racket as smoking him out. Now, +don't be in too big a hurry to start firing. Take my word for it, you'll +have plenty of chances to fill him up with lead before he caves under. +Shake the limb, and holler at him, if you want him to pay attention to +you." + +That was just what Felix did want. He was afraid that the bear would +know Tom had started the fire, and ignore the other boy. So he too +commenced to taunt the old fellow, as boys know how to do so well. + +The result was just as Tom had predicted; for having his attention thus +diverted, the bear now changed his course a little, and came directly +toward the tree that bore such strange fruit in the shape of the second +human enemy. + +What the grizzly thought, at being so rudely disturbed in his +after-dinner nap by all this shouting, and the smell of smoke in his +den, Felix could only guess, for by his actions alone could the animal +tell. + +There certainly could hardly have been a madder bear than that one was. +He acted as though bent upon teaching these impudent boys a much needed +lesson. When they felt like playing any of their annoying tricks, they +had better keep away from his particular sleeping place, if they did not +want to get hurt. + +"Get one in before he reaches your tree!" called out Tom; who seemed to +know what the tactics of the grizzly would be after this had occurred, +and that possibly Felix might not be able to fire with such sure aim, +once his haven of refuge were being violently shaken, as it would be. + +So the Eastern boy, who had all along kept his Marlin leveled at the +advancing grizzly, sought to aim in a vulnerable spot; or at least what +would be reckoned as such with any other wild animal than a grizzly or +an African rhinoceros. + +When he fired he heard the most dreadful roar that ever assailed his +ears. But to his surprise, the bear did not stop his advance in the +slightest degree, no matter how the small bullet "mushroomed" when it +came in contact with his body. + +Felix hastily got his gun in shape to shoot again, and this he was able +to do before the animal succeeded in reaching the tree. + +Another roar, more wicked than the preceding one, told that this bullet +had also lodged in the body of the fierce brute; but as before, it +failed to have any appreciable effect on the grizzly, save to arouse his +slumbering passions the more. + +"Hold on tight, now, Felix!" shrilled Tom, no doubt itching to use his +gun, and ready to do so if he thought the situation began to look +desperate for his chum. "He's going to try and shake you out of that +tree like a wild plum! Get a firm grip and don't try to shoot yet +awhile, till he quits!" + +The big animal reared up on his hind quarters, and as he did so Felix +could see signs of blood about him, which told that his bullets had not +missed connections, even if they did not bring him down. + +The beast endeavored to reach the form of the boy, whom instinct told +him was responsible for his wounds; because he connected that puff of +smoke, and sharp report, with the acute pain that racked him. + +Of course Felix was perched too far up in the tree for that, and the +most the eager grizzly could do was to come within six feet of him. + +Then the monster hugged the tree as though about to try and ascend. +Indeed, the boy above felt a spasm of fear lest this was just what he +meant to attempt; and as he had seen black bears climb, he found it hard +work to believe that the grizzly was deficient in this accomplishment. + +All at once the tree began to sway violently to and fro, with increasing +speed. Having been warned in time, Felix had secured himself against +being thrown out, although at one time he began to actually fear lest +the savage monster below might succeed in breaking the tree off at its +base; he was so big and powerful that few things of an ordinary nature +would be beyond his capacity. And now that he was enraged to the very +limit, doubtless he might accomplish wonders. + +But fortunately that did not happen, and Felix breathed a sigh of relief +when, after testing his strength for a minute or two, the grizzly backed +off, to look up at him out of his wicked little eyes, and growl as he +dropped back upon all fours again. + +"Bully boy!" shouted Tom. "He wanted too, all right, but he couldn't +quite spell able. Now, try him again, Felix; and watch out for one of +his rushes. Quit shooting when he tries that racket, and just hold on. +You can wear the old critter out; and say, that gun does send 'em in +like fun. I could see him quiver all over each time you pulled trigger. +But you'll get him yet, don't fear!" + +Just as Tom said that last word Felix fired a third time, trying to pick +out a better place to send his bullet. Truth to tell he was more than +anxious to finish the game old bear, which he knew must be suffering +horribly already. + +Although he was confident that he planted his lead in the identical spot +he wanted, still the only appreciable effect was to send the monster +furiously at the tree again. + +Never did Felix expect to see such baffled fury. After finding that all +his terrible strength was not sufficient to shake the clinging boy from +his perch, or bear down the tree under his weight, as he had doubtless +done many a stout sapling, when wishing to feast off berries growing +beyond his reach, (if grizzlies do partake of such things, as their +black cousins have always done,) the baffled animal actually started to +gnaw at the bark of the tree, as though in this manner he believed he +might weaken it sufficiently to attain his ends. + +"Now, watch your chance, and give him another!" cried the deeply +interested Tom, who was closely observing every little phase of this +strange fight, so one-sided Felix thought. + +As he had by this time put his hand to the plow, Felix did not mean to +back out. He must have that grizzly pelt, if it took every ounce of +ammunition he carried on his person. And since the beast was so badly +wounded that he might eventually die anyway, he ought to be finished. + +But somehow Felix did not feel as though he would ever want to go +through the experience again; not that he was afraid; but it seemed too +much like butchery to him, with the chances always against the animal. +And those feelings did him credit, too, even if they marked his decline +as a big-game hunter, for as such he could not consider that his quarry +had any right to live at all. + +This time when he fired he believed that the bear was weakening. Tom +must have thought along the same lines for he immediately called out in +an exultant tone; for Tom being a stockman's son, only considered the +grizzly as a possible enemy of his father's herds; and on account of +previous losses from a similar source he bore the grizzly tribe only the +hardest of feelings. + +Again did the wounded beast try to vent his fury upon the inoffensive +tree, biting and clawing at it in the utmost fury, as though possessed +of the one insane idea that in some fashion it had conspired to keep the +object of his anger beyond reach of his teeth and claws. + +Between spells Felix sent in a fifth, and then a sixth shot. After that +he would have to reload, since he had exhausted the contents of his +gun's magazine, with the grizzly still on deck, though weakening. + +"He's got his, I reckon!" said Tom, as the other was working with +feverish haste to insert another set of six cartridges through the +opening meant for this purpose, as well as to eject the empty cases +after firing. "Better give him another to wind him up, though, Felix!" + +The seventh shot did bring the unequal combat to an end, for the gallant +old grizzly rolled over, and became still. + +Tom immediately dropped down from his perch, and went over to where the +bear lay. + +"Now, if we only had the old kodak along, we could take your picture, +standing with one foot on the fallen game!" he remarked, as Felix joined +him. + +"I'm glad we haven't," said the other, simply and Tom looked a bit +puzzled, although by the way he nodded his head presently it was evident +that he had something like an inkling of the truth. + +"Well, he _was_ a game old sport, all right," he declared; "and that +pelt will be something worth while. Reckon I'll have to get you to help +me take it off, because it's too big a job for one fellow." + +Of course, after a little while, Felix got over the sensation of regret +in connection with the shooting of the monster. He realized that a +grizzly is really of no known use in the world and must be a source of +great annoyance to any stockman; so that he need not regret having slain +this fellow. + +But one would be quite enough for him. Somehow, the sport was not all it +had been cracked up to be. Possibly it was because they had been +compelled to locate in those trees; but then, Felix learned afterwards +that those who hunt grizzlies frequently, have so great a respect for +their savage fury, as well as their ability to carry off lead, that they +think it no disgrace to place themselves out of the animal's reach +before opening the battle. + +It was late that evening before the two tired Nimrods reached home; but +at any rate the last great ambition on the part of Felix had been +attained; he had killed a grizzly, and all unaided. + +From that time on he felt that he would be satisfied to pursue the even +tenor of his way, and not allow vaulting ambition to draw him into fresh +fields of adventure after big game. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +BREAKING CAMP--CONCLUSION + + +After that the days just glided along, each one seeming to bring +something in its train that would occupy considerable of their +attention. + +Tom kept up his trapping, and Felix became himself deeply interested in +learning more and more about the habits of the sly little bearers of the +prized fur; for which there was such a growing demand in the world of +civilization, that men were visiting hitherto unexplored sections of the +world in search of new supplies, since the old fields showed signs of +giving out. + +He spent some time in the partly frozen marsh, examining the homes of +the muskrats; and after that had Tom tell him all he knew about the ways +in which the mink lived, both at home, and when abroad searching for +food. + +They had no trouble in getting all the venison they wanted; and once, +when their larder began to decline, on account of a spell of bad +weather, who should come to the dugout but Jo Crow, bearing the choice +portions of a young buck, which his father had sent over to the Little +Doctor, as a slight token of his gratitude for services rendered. + +Just as though that small debt had not been wiped out, Felix remarked, +when he was so hospitably received in the Crow cabin, fed, and then +assisted in recovering his stolen property. + +But then Tom knew that young Jo must have fond recollections of that +smooth tasting Java, and he made sure to treat the boy to many cups of +coffee at each meal, while he stopped over night with them. + +And when, after a heavy storm, they found a chance to make the first use +of the snow shoes they had brought along, the boys proved that they knew +how to utilize the advantages this means of locomotion gave them over +the animals of the forest. + +Once Tom, when on his way back from his traps, was pursued by a pack of +hungry wolves; but he had what he was pleased to term a "picnic" with +them. He would stop and let them come within a certain distance, when +several shots from his repeating rifle lessened their number +considerably. After that he would start on again, all the while slipping +fresh cartridges into his gun so as to have a full equipment, in case of +an emergency. + +As the animals still kept after him, Tom repeated his former tactics, +and knocked a couple more wolves over. He would have liked to keep +dotting the snow with their forms, because he hated the breed violently; +but by this time they scented trouble, and hauled off. + +So Tom even went back, and secured the pelts of the last two, adding +them to the lot he was taking home. + +"You see," he remarked to Felix that night, as they sat around the fire, +speaking of what had happened during the day, "that's a great advantage +one gets by knowing how to use snow shoes. The varmints floundered +through the drifts, while I just skipped over them as if I had wings. +Why, I could have circled the pack at times, if I'd wanted. And they +were savage with hunger, all right, too, because only for that they +wouldn't have kept so hard after me." + +"But I'd have thought they'd stop to make a meal off those you shot at +first," remarked Felix. + +"I see you're on to wolf habits, all right and good," chuckled Tom. +"Well, a bunch of 'em did hold over, to have a sort of wake with the +remains; but I guess the rest of the lot felt that it wouldn't go +around. They kept after me, that's all I know. P'raps they had their +minds set on a nice tender juicy Tucker for supper; but if they'd known +how tough he was, they might have hauled off sooner, and two of the +bunch would be alive yet," and he glanced at the skins he had stretched +on the big frames meant for such purpose. + +"And next winter perhaps those same hides will be keeping some chauffeur +warm, as he guides his car along Fifth Avenue in New York," said Felix, +humorously. + +"That's putting 'em to good uses, anyway," remarked the wolf-killer, +calmly. + +Only the next day Felix had a chance to see for himself what a great +advantage those same snow shoes gave a hunter over his quarry. The snow +was deep enough to come to his knees on the level, and besides, in many +places it had drifted considerably. Then there had come a slight thaw, +that caused the surface to become coated with ice. Through this the +small hoofs of a deer would break with every jump; while the boys could +glide along on the broad netting of their snow shoes without disturbing +the crust. + +Thinking he would take a little turn around, Felix started out while Tom +was off looking after his traps again. He did not intend going any great +distance from the shack, and hardly expected finding game; but then +there was never any telling when one might run across a deer, for they +were fairly plentiful. + +And hearing a floundering noise some distance ahead, he suddenly +discovered a full grown young buck making off at full speed. + +Under ordinary conditions it would have been the utmost folly for Felix +to even dream of overtaking that alarmed deer; but he wished to test the +speeding qualities of his snow shoes. + +The tables were turned by the presence of the deep snow, since the deer +could not run as fast as ordinary, while the powers of locomotion on the +part of the boy had been trebled, at least. + +And so he had by degrees gradually come up on the fleeing buck. The +animal was snorting, and plunging desperately in the endeavor to get +away; just as though he realized that the mortal enemy of his race was +close behind. Breathing so rapidly that it looked like clouds of steam +arising from his nostrils, he kept on in his wild run. + +When Felix had gained a position where he could see the exposed flank of +the deer he came to a sudden halt. And no sooner had his rifle spoken +than there was an end to the chase, for the buck was floundering on the +snow. + +Those were days neither of the boys would ever forget. But the weeks +were slipping past, and they began to figure on the time, now close at +hand, when they must break camp, and set their faces once more towards +civilization. + +It would be with more than a little regret too, even though both of them +must rejoice to again see the dear ones who were at home; for they had +certainly enjoyed this vacation period in the Rockies more than words +could tell. + +Tom had looked over his trophies, and decided on what few they wanted to +take away with them. These were, for the most part, pelts calculated to +remind them of certain adventures which had befallen them in their camp +life. + +For instance, there was that bobcat skin, which had once been sported by +the animal whose vicious growl had greeted them on that first evening of +their arrival at the dugout; then Felix had the pelts of the wolves he +had shot, after they had given him such a lovely little scrimmage, +before letting him get to the shelter of the shack with his burning +torch; and the big grizzly hide, that occupied a place of honor in the +collection also. + +Besides, there were a few choice mink skins; a fox that Tom particularly +wanted, because he had tried for three weeks to trap the wary Reynard +before he managed it; and some muskrat skins that Felix wanted to show +his folks at home. + +The bighorn head adornment had been beautifully prepared; and together +with the head of the big buck, must be carried on the sledge they meant +to drag behind them, when they went out of the mountain country, headed +south. + +All the remainder of the catch, together with quite a supply of store +provisions they handed over to Charley Crow and his boy Jo, when at the +invitation of the inmates of Old Sol's shack the two came over to see +them for the last time. + +And how that dusky boy's eyes did dance when he saw that among the lot +there chanced to be some of that glorious coffee, that had quite taken +his heart by storm. + +Felix was not one to easily forget; and later on he did send out a bulky +package to his cousin Tom, which, upon investigation was found to +contain three good reliable Marlins for Charley Crow and his boys, just +as hard hitting guns as the one Felix himself carried, only of much less +value, because the material was along different lines. And besides, +there were a dozen cans of pulverized coffee for Jo, that would be sure +to make him the happiest Shoshone Indian boy on or off the reservation. + +They looked their last on the old shack one morning when the weather +seemed to promise well for a day or two; said goodbye to every familiar +object, and with one farewell glance around, as though to secure a +mental photograph of the picture to do them for all time, turned their +backs on the spot that had given them the very finest time of their +lives. + +Felix knew that he had benefited greatly from his outing, and indeed he +felt fully able to return home with the New Year, to resume his studies. +Those happy weeks spent in camp had brought the ruddy hue of health back +to his cheeks, just as his wise father had expected would be the case; +his step was elastic; and his eye bright; while as for appetite, he +declared he would eat them out of house and home, unless a curb were put +upon it presently. + +As the snow was in pretty fair shape, they made good progress that day, +and hoped by another to be where they could take advantage of the frozen +river to finish their journey on the ice, bringing up at the ranch of +Tom's father. + +This programme was faithfully carried out, even though it did turn +bitter cold that night, so that they had to keep a fire blazing every +hour, in order to ward off the fate of being frozen stiff; for their +camp happened to be exposed to the breeze more than Tom would have +liked, had he been given any choice. + +Arriving at the river, they met the man who had come from the ranch +under the former agreement. He had been waiting two days, and made +himself as comfortable as the conditions allowed; and it was the smoke +of his fire that directed the two boys to his hideout. As he had a pair +of snow shoes with him, they were able to continue their journey along +the snow-covered surface of the frozen river; and in due time reach the +ranch. + +Here the sight of their trophies, and the story of all that had befallen +them during their two months' stay in the country of the Rockies +interested the cowmen greatly, and for several nights they plied the +boys with innumerable questions concerning the various happenings that +went to make up the experience. + +When Felix arrived home early in January, his father was delighted with +his improved appearance; and doubly proud of the spoils which the young +fellow displayed, to supplement his stories of the events clustering +around the camp in the big game country. + +And it was easily arranged that later on he should again go out to be +with his cousin; indeed, as the good doctor had no need to continue his +practice, since he was well supplied with this world's goods, he +declared it to be his intention to give up his business, and accompany +Felix, for he had always wanted to see what ranch life was like. + +Toward Spring a letter came from Tom in the faraway Wyoming country, +saying that he had had a chance to get up to the reservation, where +Charley Crow and family were finishing the winter, taking the splendid +present Felix had sent with the party; and that there was great +rejoicing in the Crow family. Those wonderful guns, as well as the +enticing coffee from Java's distant shores, quite overwhelmed the +astonished Shoshones, and they never knew when to stop sending their +thanks to Felix. + +But as the boy remembered that occasion, when, after wandering through +the snow forest, hungry, cold, and weary, he sighted the smoke of that +humble cabin of Charley Crow, and what a warm welcome had awaited him +there, he felt that after all he had only begun to pay back the great +debt he owed these dusky people of the fur country. + +The End + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Rocky Mountain Boys, by St. George Rathborne + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROCKY MOUNTAIN BOYS *** + +***** This file should be named 37803.txt or 37803.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/7/8/0/37803/ + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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