<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>TOM SLADE <br/><span class="small">ON THE RIVER</span></h1>
<p class="center">BY
<br/><span class="large">PERCY K. FITZHUGH</span></p>
<h2 id="c1">CHAPTER I <br/><span class="small">THE FIRST ARRIVAL</span></h2>
<p>“But suppose they shouldn’t come.”</p>
<p>“Son, when I wuz out in Colorady, in a
place we called Devil’s Pass, I gut a grizzly
backed up agin’ a ledge one day ’n’ heving ony
one bullet ’twas a case uv me or him, as yer
might say. My pardner, Simon Gurthy,
who likewise didn’t hev no bullets, ’count uv
bein’ stripped b’ the Injins, he says, ‘S’posin’
ye don’t fetch him.’ ’N’ I says, ‘S’posin’ I
do.’”</p>
<p>Jeb Rushmore, with methodical accuracy,
spat at a sapling near by.</p>
<p>“And did you?” asked his listener.</p>
<p>Jeb spat again with leisurely deliberation.
“’N’ I did,” said he.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_2">[2]</div>
<p>“You always hit, don’t you, Jeb?”</p>
<p>“Purty near.”</p>
<p>The boy edged along the log on which they
were sitting and looked up admiringly into
the wrinkled, weatherbeaten face. A smile
which did not altogether penetrate through
the drooping gray mustache was visible
enough in the twinkling eyes and drew the
wrinkles about them like sun rays.</p>
<p>“They’ll come,” said he.</p>
<p>The boy was satisfied for he had absolute
confidence that his companion could not make
a mistake.</p>
<p>“But suppose you <i>hadn’t</i> hit him—I mean
fetched him?”</p>
<p>“Son, wot yer <i>got</i> to do, yer do. When I
told General Custer onct that we’d get picked
off like cherries offen a tree if we tried rushin’
a pack uv Sioux that was in ambush, he says,
‘Jeb, mebbe it cain’t be done, I ain’t sayin’,
but jest the same, we <i>got</i> ter do it.’ Some on
us got dropped, but we done it.”</p>
<p>“Did General Custer call you by your first
name?”</p>
<p>“Same’s you do.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_3">[3]</div>
<p>This was too much for the little fellow.
“Gee, it must have been great to have General
Custer call you by your first name.”</p>
<p>“Wal, now, I ben thinkin’ ’twas purty fine
this winter hevin’ <i>yew</i> call me by my fust
name, ’n’ keep me comp’ny here. We’ve got
ter be close pards, me an’ you, hain’t we,
son?”</p>
<p>“Gee, I’m almost sorry they’re coming—kind
of.”</p>
<p>They were certainly coming—“in chunks,”
as Roy Blakeley would have said, and before
night the camp would be a veritable beehive.
All summer troops would be coming and going,
but just now the opening rush was at
hand, and the exodus from eastern towns and
cities, following the closing of schools, would
go far to fill the camp even to its generous capacity
before this Saturday’s sun had set.</p>
<p>The Bridgeboro Troop, from the home town
of the camp’s generous founder, Mr. John
Temple, would arrive sometime in the afternoon
“with bells on” according to the post
card which little Raymond Hollister had
brought up from the post office the day before.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_4">[4]</div>
<p>They were cruising up the Hudson to Catskill
Landing in their cabin launch, the <i>Good
Turn</i>, and would hike it up through Leeds to
camp. The card was postmarked Poughkeepsie,
and read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="jr">Desert Island of Poughkeepsie,</span>
<span class="jr">Longitude 23, Latitude 40-11.</span></p>
<p>“Put in here for gasoline and ice-cream
soda. Natives friendly. Heavy gales.
Raining in sheets and pillow-cases. Mutiny
on board. Pee-wee Harris, N. G.
Mariner, put in irons for stealing peanuts
from galley. Boarded by pirates below
Peekskill. Coming north with bells on.
Reach camp Saturday late. All’s well
with a yo-heave-ho, my lads.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“That sounds like Roy Blakeley,” Raymond
had said to his companion.</p>
<p>“Does sound kinder like his nonsense,” the
camp manager had answered.</p>
<p>All through the long winter months Raymond
had lived at the big camp with no other
companion than Jeb Rushmore. They had
made their headquarters in Jeb’s cabin, the
other cabins and the big pavilion being shut
tight. Raymond had often thought how like
the pictures of Valley Forge this vacant clearing
in the woods looked in its covering of snow,
and sometimes when Jeb was busy writing letters
(it was a terrible job for Jeb to write
letters) the little fellow had been lonesome,
but he had gained in weight, he had slept like a
bear, he had ceased entirely to cough, and he
ate—there is no way to describe how he ate!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_5">[5]</div>
<p>In short, a great fight had been fought out
in the lonely camp that winter, and little Raymond
Hollister had won it. He could trudge
into the village and back without minding it
now and he could raise the big flag with one
hand. Just the coming summer to top off
with and he would be well.</p>
<p>Raymond lived down the Hudson a ways
and he had come to Temple Camp with his
troop the previous summer. His patrol
leader, Garry Everson, had won the Silver
Cross, which, according to the rule of the
Camp, entitled him and his companions to remain
three extra weeks, and when Mr. John
Temple had heard of Raymond’s ill health
from the Bridgeboro boys on their return
from camp, he had called his stenographer
and sent a couple of home-runs over the plate
in the form of two letters, one to Raymond’s
grandmother telling her that she had guessed
wrong when she had “guessed that Ray would
have to go to an orphan asylum when he came
back,” and the other enclosing a check to Jeb
Rushmore and telling him that Raymond
would stay with him for the winter and to
please see to it that he had everything he
needed.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_6">[6]</div>
<p>That was in the previous autumn. Jeb had
gotten out his bespattered, pyramid-shaped
ink bottle and his atrocious pen and laboriously
scrawled his signature on the back of the
check and had it cashed in Leeds. He had
kept the little roll of bills carefully in his
pocket all winter, buying such things for Raymond
as were needed, and as the roll grew
thinner Raymond had grown stouter, until
now, in the spring, he weighed ninety-one
pounds and the roll was all gone except the
elastic band.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_7">[7]</div>
<p>It seemed a pity that just at the opening of
the new season he should have to think of
going home and perhaps to an orphan asylum,
but if he had entertained any wild hope that
some fortunate circumstance might prolong
his stay into the open season it had been dissipated
when word had come that the Temples
had gone to South America. Either John
Temple had forgotten about the boy up in
the lonely camp or else he felt that he had
done as much for him as could be expected.
Raymond might still remain for two weeks of
the new season as any scout might do, but
then he would be at the end of his rope. For
the rule of Temple Camp was that any scout
or troop of scouts might spend two weeks at
the camp free of all cost. If a scout won an
honor medal it entitled his whole troop to additional
time, the time dependent on the nature
of the award. No scout might remain
at camp longer than two weeks except in accordance
with this provision, but permission
might be granted on the recommendation of
one of the trustees for a scout to <i>board</i> at camp
for a longer time if there were good reason.</p>
<p>One day, however, a registered letter had
come for Jeb. It contained fifty dollars and
a slip of paper bearing only the words: <i>For
Raymond Hollister to stay until September
first</i>.</p>
<p>“So he remembered ’baout yer arter all,”
Jeb had said, as pleased as Raymond himself.
“I kinder knowed he would. If <i>he</i> ain’t a
trusty (Jeb always said <i>trusty</i> when he meant
<i>trustee</i>) ’n’ got rights, gol, I dunno who has.
They wuz jest goin’ on th’boat, I reckon, when
it popped inter his head like a dose uv buckshot
’n’ he sent it right from th’wharf.——’ N’
I dun’t hev ter get out my ink bottle ’n’ my old
double-barrelled pen ter <i>in</i>dorse, neither.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_8">[8]</div>
<p>There they were—two twenties and a ten;
to Raymond they seemed like a fortune as he
watched Jeb fold them up and slip them into
his home-made buckskin wallet.</p>
<p>All this had happened before this auspicious
Saturday, but the dispelling of Raymond’s
fears had given rise to new apprehensions.</p>
<p>“Even if they come,” said he, “maybe Garry
won’t be with them—maybe they won’t stop
for him.” Garry Everson was all that was
left of the little troop he had striven to keep
together the previous summer and the Bridgeboro
troop had promised to stop for him and
bring him along.</p>
<p>“An’ then agin, mebbe they will,” laughed
Jeb.</p>
<p>“Who do you think will be the first to get
here, Jeb?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_9">[9]</div>
<p>“Mebbe them lads from South New Jersey,
mebbe the Pennsylvany youngsters,” said Jeb,
consulting his list from the home-made buckskin
wallet. The trustees kept these lists in
the neatest and most approved manner, but
Jeb had a system of record keeping all his
own. “Let’s see, naouw, thar’s thet troop
with the red-headed boy from Merryland—’member
’em, don’t ye? They’ll be comin’
all week, more’n like. Seems ony like yist’day,
thet that ole hill over thar wuz covered
with snow—’member how me an’ you watched
it? We had a rough winter of it, didn’t
we. Here, lemme feel yer muscle agin now.
Gee-williger! Gittin’ ter be a reg’lar Samson,
ain’t ye?”</p>
<p>“Now that it’s time for them to come,” said
Raymond, slowly, “I’m almost sorry—kind of.
It was dandy being alone here with you.”</p>
<p>Jeb slapped him on the shoulder and
smiled again that smile that drew the wrinkles
like sun rays around his twinkling eyes, and
went about his work of preparation. Perhaps
he, too, rough old scout that he was, felt
that it had been “dandy” having little Raymond
alone with him through those long, cold
winter months.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_10">[10]</div>
<p>All day long Raymond kept his gaze
across Black Lake, for he knew that the
Bridgeboro boys, hiking it from the Hudson,
would come that way; but the hours of the
afternoon passed and there were no arrivals.
The hills surrounding the camp began to
darken in the twilight, save for the crimson
tinge upon their summits from the dying
sun; the dark waters of the lake grew more
sombre in the twilight and the still solemnity
of evening, which was nowhere more gloomy
and impressive than at this lakeside camp in
the hills, fell upon the scene and cast its spell
upon the lonely boy as it always did. But no
one came.</p>
<p>Jeb Rushmore strolled down to where Raymond
sat on the rough bench outside the provision
cabin, facing the lake.</p>
<p>“Still watchin’? If yew say so, I’ll light
a lantern and we’ll tow a couple uv skiffs
across and wait on ’tother side.”</p>
<p>“I wasn’t thinking about them just now,
Jeb; I was looking at those birds.”</p>
<p>High up, through the fading twilight, a
bird sped above the lake, toward the south.
Its course was straight as an arrow. Above
it a larger bird hovered and circled but the
smaller bird went straight upon its way, as if
bent upon some important mission.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly, the larger bird swooped
and there was only the one object left in the
dim vast sky where, a moment before, there
had been two.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_11">[11]</div>
<p>“Get me my rifle,” said Jeb.</p>
<p>As Raymond hurried back with it, he could
see the wings of the big bird flapping in the
fury of its murderous work. What was going
on up there he could only picture in his mind’s
eye, but the thought of that smaller bird hurrying
on its harmless errand—homeward to its
nest, perhaps—and waylaid and murdered up
there in the lonely half darkness, troubled him
and his hand trembled perceptibly as he handed
the weapon to Jeb.</p>
<p>“You always hit ’em—fetch ’em—don’t
you?” he asked, anxiously.</p>
<p>“Purty near.”</p>
<p>The sharp report rang out and echoed from
the surrounding hills. Even before it died
away there lay at Raymond’s feet a hawk,
quite dead, while through the dim light in a
pitiably futile effort to fly, the smaller bird, a
vivid speck of white in the fading twilight,
fluttered to the ground.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_12">[12]</div>
<p>It proved to be a white pigeon, its feathers
ruffled and stained with blood and several
of the stiffer feathers of the tail were gone entirely.
One wing drooped as the bird
stumbled weakly about and an area of its neck
was bare where the feathers had been torn
away. It seemed odd to Raymond that the
poor stricken thing should resume its clumsy
strut, poking its head this way and that, even
in its weakness, and after such a cruel experience.</p>
<p>But what he noticed particularly was a
metal ring around the bird’s leg from which
hung a little transparent tube, like a large
medical capsule, with something inside it.</p>
<p>“Look, Jeb,” said he. “What’s that?”</p>
<p>Jeb lifted the bird carefully, folding the
drooping wing into place, and removed the
little tube.</p>
<p>“You fetched him anyway, didn’t you,
Jeb?”</p>
<p>“’Cause I <i>had</i> ter—see?”</p>
<p>“We won’t have to kill it, will we, Jeb?”</p>
<p>“Reckon not. He don’t seem to be sufferin’
much uv any. Jes’ shook up, as the feller
says. Lucky he fell amongst friends. Let’s
see wot he’s brought us—he’s one of them
carriers, son.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_13">[13]</div>
<p>Raymond said nothing, but watched eagerly
as Jeb, leisurely and without any excitement,
opened the tiny receptacle and unrolled
a piece of paper. The boy knew well enough
what carrier pigeons were and he was eager
to know the purport of that little roll of script.
But even in his excitement there lingered in
his mind the picture of that faithful little
messenger, intent upon its errand, struck down
by the ruthless bandit of the air. He was
glad the hawk was dead.</p>
<p>“Let’s hear wot he’s got ter say fer himself,
son. You jes’ read it.”</p>
<p>The paper was thin and about the size of
a dollar bill; it had been folded lengthwise
and then rolled up. It read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>“Come right away. Governor hurt.
Serious. Can’t leave. Will try to get
to nearest village but am afraid to leave
now. He fell and is bleeding bad.
Think there’s something else the matter,
too. Spotty died or would send.</p>
<p><span class="jr"><span class="sc">Jeff.</span>”</span></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Raymond gazed for a moment at Jeb, then
down at the dead hawk, then at the pigeon
which Jeb still held, stroking it gently.</p>
<p>“It’ll never be delivered now, son, ’cause
nobuddy ’cept this here little feller knows
whar he come frum nor whar he wuz goin’—do
they, Pidge?”</p>
<p>“But somebody’s dying,” said Raymond.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_14">[14]</div>
<p>“Sure enough, but we don’t know who ’tis
nor <i>whar</i> he is—nor whar his friends is
neither. An’ this here messenger here won’t
tell us—he’s got his own troubles. That thar
hawk done more mischief than he thought
for.”</p>
<p>For a few moments there was silence and
Raymond gazed up into the trackless, darkening
sky through which this urgent call for
help had been borne. Where had it come
from? For whom was it intended? Then
he looked down at the limp body of the bird
whose cruel, bloody work had snatched the
last faint hope of succor from someone who
lay dying.</p>
<p>“I—I’m glad you kil—fetched him, anyway——”
said he.</p>
<p>The thought of those two unknown persons,
the stricken one and his frightened companion,
waiting all in vain for the help which that
faithful messenger of the air should summon,
and of that steadfast little emissary, on whom
so much depended, fallen here into strange
hands, sobered and yet agitated the boy, and he
was silent in the utter helplessness of doing
anything.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_15">[15]</div>
<p>“Naow, if yer could ony tell whar yer wuz
goin’ or whar yer wuz comin’ frum, Pidge,
we’d be much obleeged,” said Jeb; “but you
wouldn’t, would yer,” he added, stroking the
bird, “’n’ I ain’t much uv a hand at pickin’
trails in th’air, bein’ as I growed up on th’hard
ground.”</p>
<p>“Nobody can follow trails in the air,” said
Raymond by way of comforting Jeb. “Gee,
nobody could do that. But it’s terrible, isn’t
it?”</p>
<p>He looked up into the sky again as if he
hoped it might still show some sign of path or
trail, and as he did so a loud bark, a sort of
harsh <i>Haa-Haa</i>, came through the growing
darkness from across the lake, and reverberated
in swelling chorus from the frowning
heights roundabout. Then there was a long,
plaintive bellow which died away as softly
and as gradually as the day itself dies, and
this again was followed, as it seemed, by the
happy music of applauding hands, as if in acknowledgment
of the long echoed refrain.</p>
<p>“Oh, they’re here! They’re here!” cried
Raymond. “That was the Silver Fox call—and
the Elks—and Garry’s with them—he
made that Beaver call to let me know——”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_16">[16]</div>
<p>Just at that moment the dense brush across
the lake parted and a boy, bareheaded and
wearing a grey flannel shirt, emerged on the
shore.</p>
<p>“Oh, Tom! It’s Tom Slade!” cried Raymond,
forgetting all else in his ecstasy. “Hello,
Tom, you big—you big——” But he
couldn’t think of any epithet to fit the occasion.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_17">[17]</div>
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