<h2 id="c2">CHAPTER II <br/><span class="small">TOM SURPRISES THE CAMP</span></h2>
<p>“Believe <i>me</i>, it was good to get our feet
on terra-cotta—I mean terra firma. I don’t
want any more life on the ocean wave for at
least two weeks. I’m sorry we didn’t christen
that boat the <i>Sardine Box</i>. <i>Good Turn</i>—you
can’t even turn around in it!”</p>
<p>“You shouldn’t look a gift horse in the
mouth,” someone laughed.</p>
<p>“You can look a gift boat in the cabin, can’t
you,” continued Roy. “We were crowded in
the cabin, not a soul would dare to move.
That boat is all right for three scouts like last
year, but for three patrols—go-o-d night!
There wasn’t even room to flop a rice cake
over—we had to eat them browned on one
side—there was a wrong and a right to them.
Never again! What we want is a sump-tu-ous
yacht like that one moored at Catskill
Landing!”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_18">[18]</div>
<p>“Wal, ye did hev quite a crowd aboard,
sure enough,” laughed Jeb, who always enjoyed
Roy’s nonsense.</p>
<p>“Sure, pick out the one you want and I’ll
drown the rest,” said Roy; “except Pee-wee,
we’re going to keep him till he gets his eyes
open.”</p>
<p>Pee-wee Harris, Silver Fox and troop mascot,
splashed the oar from his seat in an adjoining
boat, giving Roy a gratuitous bath.</p>
<p>“Did you have any adventures?” Raymond
managed to ask.</p>
<p>“Oceans of them—I mean rivers. We got
three points out of our course and went twenty
miles up a tributary.”</p>
<p>“That’s some word,” someone called.</p>
<p>“That’s a peach of a word, comes from the
Greek word <i>Bute</i>, meaning beautiful, and the
Irish word <i>Terry</i>. It was all on account of
Pee-wee’s ignorance of geography. He
thought the Hudson rose in Roseville, Pennsylvania.”</p>
<p>“What!” shouted Pee-wee.</p>
<p>“I’ll leave it to our beloved scoutmaster.”</p>
<p>“Our beloved scoutmaster,” who was rowing
one of the skiffs, only smiled.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_19">[19]</div>
<p>“I know more about geography than you
do,” shouted the irrepressible Pee-wee; “<i>he</i>
thought Newburgh was below Peekskill,” he
added, contemptuously.</p>
<p>“<i>He</i> thought Sandy Hook was a Scotchman,”
retorted Roy. “Well, what’s the news,
Jeb, anyway?”</p>
<p>“Yer didn’t give us no chance ter tell yer,”
drawled Jeb, as they drew the boats up on
shore. “Mebbe yer think yer wuz the fust
arrivals, but yer wuzn’t.”</p>
<p>It was good to hear Roy’s familiar nonsense;
Raymond, who was quiet and easily
amused, saw with joy that the ancient hostilities
between Roy and Pee-wee were still in
full swing; and for all Roy’s dubious picture
of an overcrowded boat (and so it must have
been) they had found it possible to stop down
the river for Garry Everson and bring him
along.</p>
<p>“Last of the Mohicans,” said Roy, as he
dragged Garry forward; “all that’s left of the
famous Edgevale troop—left over from last
summer. The only original has-been. Them
wuz the happy days.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_20">[20]</div>
<p>There was Tom Slade, too, quiet and stolid
as he always was and with no more sign of
the scout regalia than he had shown when he
was a hoodlum down in Barrel Alley. His
gray flannel shirt and last year’s khaki trousers
were in odd contrast to the new outfits which
the other members of the Bridgeboro Troop
wore. But then Tom was in odd contrast
with everything and everybody anyway.</p>
<p>Two troops which had come up by the train
had joined them at Catskill Landing so the
new arrivals descended like an all-conquering
host upon the quiet monotony of the big camp.</p>
<p>“And I’m going to stay till September,”
said Raymond, clinging to Garry and talking
to both Garry and Roy. “Mr. Temple sent
the money. Do you remember how I couldn’t
raise the flag last summer?”</p>
<p>“You were about as tough as a Welsbach
gas mantel last summer,” laughed Roy.</p>
<p>“Well, now I can raise it with one hand
and I can hike to Leeds and back. But listen—<i>listen</i>;
we’ve got a mystery—it just happened——”</p>
<p>“Give it to Tom,” laughed Roy. “He’s
the fellow for mysteries.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_21">[21]</div>
<p>But in another minute he had abandoned
his gay tone as the little company stood gazing
down upon the dead hawk, while Jeb held a
lantern, and listened to Raymond’s breathless
account of what had happened.</p>
<p>It had a sobering effect upon them all, and
as Mr. Ellsworth, the Bridgeboro Troop’s
scoutmaster, held that pathetic note and read
it in the lantern light, with the scouts clustering
about him, he shook his head ruefully.</p>
<p>The note was passed about among the boys,
who fingered it curiously.</p>
<p>“It’s a stalking blank, isn’t it,” said Tom,
as he handed it to Westy Martin, of the Silver
Foxes, who wore the stalking badge. “The
printed part has been torn off so’s to get it
into that little holder. See?” he added, rubbing
his finger along the edge, “it came off a
pad—a stalking pad—one of——” and he
named the sporting goods concern which made
them. “It’s the same kind you and I used
at Salmon River.”</p>
<p>The announcement, made in Tom’s usual
stolid, half-interested way, fell like a bombshell
among them.</p>
<p>“Oh, can we find them? Can we find
them?” cried Raymond.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_22">[22]</div>
<p>“I’m afraid that doesn’t do us much good,”
said Mr. Ellsworth. “We already knew
that the message was sent from some isolated
place or help would have been procurable.
That being the case, I don’t see how the sender
happened to have a pigeon handy.”</p>
<p>“He had more than one, don’t you see?”
said Tom, quietly, “but the other died—Spotty.
It must have been sent by some one
who’s stalking and a fellow who’s that much
interested in birds would be just the kind of a
fellow that might have carrier pigeons—it’s
good sport.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but where is he—or they? There’s
two of them, anyway,” said Doc Carson.</p>
<p>“That’s for us to find out,” said Tom.
“I’m not going to sit down here and eat my
supper with someone dying.” He kicked the
body of the hawk slightly as if to express his
disgust that this insignificant creature could
cause such trouble and baffle even scouts. “We
don’t know much about it but we’ll have to
use what little we do know. I know that
when people try out carrier pigeons they
always get a high ground, and I know that up
on that hill over there—in the woods—there
were chalk marks on the trees last summer.
Maybe someone was stalking there then. Anyway,
I’m going to get to the top of that hill
and see if I can find anyone up there. I want
Doc to go with me. Anybody else can go
that wants to. If there’s anybody there we’ll
wigwag or <SPAN class="fn" id="fr_1" href="#fn_1">[1]</SPAN>smudge
it to you in the morning.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_23">[23]</div>
<p>For a moment there was silence. It was
exactly like Tom to blurt out his plans with
a kind of stolid bluntness, and if he had contemplated
a trip to the moon he would have
announced it in the same dull way. He seldom
asked advice and as seldom asked authority.
He was a kind of law unto himself. If
anyone knew how to take Tom it was Roy
Blakeley, but Roy often threw up his hands
in despair and said he gave it up—Tom was a
puzzle. He stood there among them now,
his face about as expressionless as an Indian’s—coarse
gray flannel shirt open halfway down
to his waist, a strap by way of a belt, and his
shock of thick hair down on his forehead.
Why he had eschewed the scout regalia while
the others came resplendent in their new outfits
was a mystery. What advantage over a
belt the thin strap had, no one knew.</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ll go with you! I’ll go with you!”
shouted the irrepressible Pee-wee. “I’ll——”</p>
<p>“You’ll just sit down and have some supper,”
laughed Mr. Ellsworth.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_24">[24]</div>
<p>It is to be feared that the scoutmaster had
small hope of anything coming from Tom’s
proposed expedition, but he was not the one to
discourage his scouts nor obtrude his authority.
So the little party was made up (for
whatever slight prospect of success it might
afford) of Tom, Doc Carson, Raven and
First Aid Scout, Connie Bennet of Tom’s
patrol, and Garry Everson who, though not
a member of the troop, was asked because of
his proficiency in signalling. Roy, who
would naturally have gone, was asked by Mr.
Ellsworth to remain at camp to help him get
the troop’s baggage distributed in the several
cabins that had been reserved for them.</p>
<p>So the four scouts, having taken a hasty bite
of supper, set out in the darkness on their all
but hopeless errand. Tom carried a lantern;
across Doc Carson’s back was slung the folding
stretcher; Connie Bennet carried the bandages
and first-aid case, and all wore belt axes,
for the hill which they meant to climb was
covered with a dense thicket and even in the
lower land between it and the camp there was
no sign of path or trail after the first mile or
so.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_25">[25]</div>
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