<h2 id="c6">CHAPTER VI <br/><span class="small">THE MOUNTAIN SHELTER</span></h2>
<p>For a few moments they stared at the
wreck and said nothing.</p>
<p>“Maybe it was Kinney,” suggested Doc, at
last. “Do you remember about Kinney?”</p>
<p>“Come on,” urged Tom.</p>
<p>Half reluctantly the others followed him,
glancing back now and again till the tattered
mass became a shadowy speck and faded away
in the darkness.</p>
<p>“He started from somewhere above Albany,”
said Doc, “and he was never heard of
again. I often heard my father speak about
it and I read about it in that aviation book
that Roy loaned me.”</p>
<p>“He’s going to loan it to me when he gets
it back from you,” said Connie; “he says
you’re a good bookkeeper.”</p>
<p>“Put away your little hammer,” laughed
Garry.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_64">[64]</div>
<p>“Some people in Poughkeepsie thought
they heard the humming of the engine at
night,” said Doc, “and that’s what made people
think he had got past that point—but that’s
all they ever knew. Some thought he must
have gone down in the river.”</p>
<p>“How long ago was it?” Garry asked.</p>
<p>Tom plodded on silently. It was well
known of Tom that he could not think of two
things at once.</p>
<p>“Five or six years, I think,” said Doc.</p>
<p>“That would be too long a time for the
wreck, seeing the condition it’s in,” said Garry,
“but anything less than that would be
too short a time for the skeleton.”</p>
<p>“Do you mean they were lost here at different
times?” Connie asked.</p>
<p>“Looks that way to me.”</p>
<p>“If there are buzzards up here a skeleton
might look like that in a month or so,” Connie
suggested.</p>
<p>“There aren’t any buzzards around here.”</p>
<p>“Sure there are,” said Doc. “Look at
Buzzard’s Bay—it’s named for ’em.”</p>
<p>“It’s named for a man who had it wished on
him,” said Garry. “You might as well say
that Pike’s Peak was named after the pikers
that go there.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_65">[65]</div>
<p>“How long do you suppose that aeroplane’s
been there?”</p>
<p>“Five or six years, maybe,” Doc said. “The
frame’ll be as good as that for ten years more.
There’s nothing more to rot.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Garry, “it looks to my keen
scout eye as if that wreck had been there for
about six months and the skeleton for about
six years.”</p>
<p>“Maybe if you had tried shutting your
keen scout eye and opening it in a hurry—— Hey,
Tomasso?” teased Doc.</p>
<p>“Maybe they got here at the same time but
the man lived for a while,” Tom condescended
to reply.</p>
<p>“You’ve got it just the wrong way round,
my fraptious boy,” said Doc. “The skeleton’s
been here longer, if anything.”</p>
<p>“Did you see that hickory stick there—all
worm-eaten?” Tom asked. “It had some
carving on it. None of these trees are hickory
trees.”</p>
<p>“I saw it but I didn’t notice the carving,”
said Doc, surprised.</p>
<p>“Didn’t you notice there weren’t any hickory
trees anywhere around there?” Tom asked.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_66">[66]</div>
<p>“No, I didn’t—I’m a punk scout—I must
be blind,” said Doc.</p>
<p>“You’re good on first-aid,” said Tom, indifferently.</p>
<p>“How’d you know it was hickory?” Connie
asked.</p>
<p>“Because I can tell hickory,” said Tom,
bluntly, “and it’s being all worm-eaten proved
it—kind of. That’s the trouble with hickory.”</p>
<p>They always had to make the best of Tom’s
answers.</p>
<p>“I don’t know where he got the hickory
stick,” he said, as he pushed along through the
underbrush, “but he didn’t get it anywhere
around here, that’s sure.”</p>
<p>“And he probably didn’t sit down that
same day and carve things on it, either,” suggested
Garry; “Tom, you’re a wonder.”</p>
<p>“He might have lived up here for two or
three years after he fell,” said Doc reflectively.
“Gee, it starts you thinking, don’t it?”</p>
<p>Connie shook his head. “It’s a mystery, all
right,” said he.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_67">[67]</div>
<p>The thought of the solitary man, disabled
crippled, perhaps, living there on that lonely
mountain after the terrible accident which
had brought him there lent a new gruesomeness
to their discoveries. And who but Tom
Slade would have been able to keep an open
mind and to see so clearly by the aid of trifling
signs as to separate the two apparent
catastrophes and see them as independent
occurrences?</p>
<p>“Tomasso, you’re the real scout,” said Doc.
“The rest of us are only imitations.”</p>
<p>Tom said nothing. He was used to this
kind of talk and was about as proof against
such praise as a battleship is against a popgun.
And just now he was thinking of other things.
Yet if he could have looked into the future
and seen there the extraordinary explanation
of his discovery and known the strange adventures
it would lead to, he might have paused,
even on that all but hopeless errand of rescue,
and looked again at those pathetic remains.
But those things were to be reserved for another
summer.</p>
<p>“Is there anything we can do? What do
you suggest, Tom?” Garry asked, dropping his
half flippant manner.</p>
<p>“I say, let’s shout again,” said Tom. “We
must be nearly a mile farther on by now, and
the brook’s getting around to the east, too.”</p>
<p>“Good and loud,” said Connie.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_68">[68]</div>
<p>“All together—now!”</p>
<p>Again their voices woke the mountain
echoes. A sudden rustling of the underbrush
told of some frightened wood creature. The
brook rippled softly as before. There was
no other sound, and they waited. Then, from
somewhere far off came the faint answering
of a human voice. It would never have been
distinguishable save in that deathlike stillness
and even there it sounded as if it might have
come from another world. It seemed to be
uttering the letter L in a kind of doleful
monotony.</p>
<p>They paused a moment in a kind of awe,
even after it had ceased.</p>
<p>“It’s calling <i>help</i>,” said Garry.</p>
<p>“I can go there now,” said Tom. “The brook
probably winds around that way, but we can
cut across and get there quicker. We’ll chop
our way through here. Let him rest his
lungs now—I can go right for a ways. I got
to admit I was wrong.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_69">[69]</div>
<p>In the dim light of the lantern Garry
looked at Tom as he stood there, his heavy,
stolid face scratched by the brambly thicket,
his coarse shirt torn, his thick shock of hair
down over his forehead—no more elated by
triumph than he would have been discouraged
by defeat, and as the brighter, more vivacious
and attractive boy looked at him he was seized
with a little twinge of remorse that he had
made game of Tom’s clumsy speech and sober
ways.</p>
<p>“Got to admit you were wrong <i>how</i>—for
goodness’ sake?” he said, almost angrily.
“Didn’t you bring us here? Didn’t you bring
us all the way from Temple Camp to where
we could hear that voice calling for help?
Didn’t you?”</p>
<p>“I said I could find the trees that had the
stalking marks last summer,” said Tom, “and
I got to admit I was wrong, ’cause I couldn’t.”</p>
<p>“Who was it that wouldn’t sit down and
eat supper while somebody was dying?” demanded
Doc. “There’s a whole lot of good
scouts, believe <i>me</i>, but there’s only one Tom
Slade!”</p>
<p>It was always the way—they made fun of
him and lauded him by turns.</p>
<p>“There’s a kind of trail here,” said Tom,
unmoved, “but it hasn’t been used for a long
time—see those spider webs across it? Lend
me your axe, will you, mine is all dulled.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_70">[70]</div>
<p>A hand-to-hand combat with more tangled
underbrush, which they tore and chopped
away, brought them to comparatively open
land which must have been very high for
they were surprised to see, far below, several
twinkling specks of light which they thought
to be at Temple Camp. It was the first open
view they had had.</p>
<p>They called again, and again the voice answered,
clearly audible now, crying, “Help
help!” and something more which the boys
could not understand. They called, telling
the speaker not to come in search of them, that
they would come to him, and to answer them
for guidance when they called.</p>
<p>They plunged into more thicket, tearing it
aside with a will, sometimes going astray, then
pausing to listen for the guiding voice, and
pushing on again through the labyrinth.</p>
<p>After a little they fell into a path and then
could hear the brook rushing over stones not
far distant, and knew that it must verge to the
east as Tom had said and that the path did
lead to it. It would have been a long journey
following the stream.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_71">[71]</div>
<p>Soon a greater intercourse of speech was
possible and they called cheerily that they
were scouts and for the waiter to cheer up for
they would soon be with him.</p>
<p>Presently, along the path they could hear
the sound of footsteps. Tom, who was leading
the way, raised his lantern and just beyond
the radius of its flickering light they
could see a dark figure hurrying toward them;
then a face, greatly distraught in the moonlight,
and Tom stopped, bewildered. As the
stranger grasped his arm he held the light
close to the haggard, wild-eyed face.</p>
<p>“Hello,” he said, “I—I guess I know you.
Let go—what’s the matter? Weren’t you at
Temple Camp last summer?”</p>
<p>The stranger, a young fellow of perhaps
eighteen, shook his head.</p>
<p>“With one of the troops from——?”</p>
<p>“No,” said the young man.</p>
<p>“Hmn,” said Tom, still holding the lantern
up; “I thought——Don’t you fellows remember
him?”</p>
<p>Connie shook his head; Garry also.</p>
<p>“Never saw him in my life,” said Doc.</p>
<p>“Hmn,” said Tom. “Maybe I——just for
a minute I thought——I guess you fellows
are right.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_72">[72]</div>
<p>The stranger was dressed in the regulation
camping outfit—the kind of costume usually
seen on dummies in the windows of sporting
goods stores in the spring, with a spick and
span tent in the background, a model lunch
basket near by and a canoe crowded in. His
nobby outfit was very much the worse for
wear, however, and he looked about as fresh
as the immaculate Phoebe Snow would look
after a <i>real</i> railroad journey.</p>
<p>“Maybe I can be rescued now,” he said
imploringly, clinging to Tom. “I saw the
lights way down there. There was only one
till tonight and tonight I counted seven—little
bits of ones. I tried to get to them, but I got
lost. You can’t go to them. It looks as if
you can, but you can’t. They’re just as far
away, no matter how far you go—they get
farther and farther. Nobody can ever get
away from here. Are you afraid of dead
people?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Doc. “We’re scouts. Is——”</p>
<p>“If a person looks very different, then he’s
dead, isn’t he?”</p>
<p>“Come on,” said Doc. “We’ll see.”</p>
<p>“We’ll never get off this hill; I’ve tried
every way——”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_73">[73]</div>
<p>“Oh, yes, we will,” spoke up Garry, putting
his arm over the boy’s shoulder and urging
him along.</p>
<p>They could see that he was hardly rational,
and Garry, better than any of the others, knew
how to handle him.</p>
<p>“It’s terrible without a light,” he said; “I
spilled all the oil—I’m glad you’ve got a
light.”</p>
<p>“What’s your name?” Garry asked.</p>
<p>“Jeffrey Waring—come on, I’ll show you
the place.” He shuddered as he spoke.</p>
<p>Once more Tom held his lantern up to the
white, distracted face.</p>
<p>“<i>He</i> was never at camp,” laughed Doc.</p>
<p>“Hmn,” said Tom, apparently but half convinced.</p>
<p>A few steps brought them to a little clearing
where stood a rough shack. Outside it,
fastened against a tree, was a vegetable crate
with bars nailed across it—the silent evidence
of departed pets. Several fishing rods lay
against a tree. Close by was a makeshift fireplace.
On a rough bunk inside the shack lay
a man, no longer young, with iron gray hair.
His eyes were open and staring and one seemed
larger than the other. Doc felt his pulse and
found that he was living.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_74">[74]</div>
<p>“He fell on the rocks and hurt his arm—I
think it’s broken,” said Jeffrey. “It bled and
I bandaged it.”</p>
<p>Doc raised the bandaged arm and it fell
heavily. Removing the bandage carefully he
saw that the cut itself was not dangerous, but
from first-aid studies he thought the man was
suffering from an apoplectic stroke or something
of that nature. He wondered if the injury
to the arm had not been incidental to
the man’s seizure and sudden fall. People
sometimes lingered in an unconscious condition
for days, he knew. It was hardly a case
for first-aid, but it was certainly a case for
skill and resource, for whatever happened the
patient, dead or living, would have to be taken
away from this mountain camp.</p>
<p>With Garry’s help, he raised the victim into
a recumbent posture, piling everything
available under the head while Connie hurried
back and forth to the brook, bringing wet applications
for the head and neck.</p>
<p>There was no sign of returning consciousness
and the question was how to get the patient
away down to Temple Camp where medical
aid might be had, and where any contingency
might be best handled.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_75">[75]</div>
<p>The four boys, greatly hampered in their
discussion by Jeffrey, whose long vigil had
brought him to the verge of collapse, decided
that it would be quite useless to signal for help,
since it would mean another expedition with
most of the difficulties of their own, even if
attempted after daybreak.</p>
<p>So they decided to wait for dawn, which
happily would come soon, and with the first
sign of it to send a smudge signal that they
were coming and to have a doctor at camp.
They believed that in the daylight they could
carry the patient back over the same path
which they had so laboriously opened and
though delay was irksome this plan seemed
the only feasible one to follow.</p>
<p>Despite their weariness none could sleep,
so they kindled a little fire and sat about it
chatting while they counted time, impatiently
waiting for the first streak of daylight.</p>
<p>It was then that they learned from the overwrought
boy something of his history, but
they got it piecemeal and had to patch together
as best they could his rather disjointed
talk.</p>
<p>“Is he your father?” Doc asked.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_76">[76]</div>
<p>“No, he’s my uncle,” said Jeffrey. “He
isn’t a real governor; I only call him that.
He’s eccentric—know what that is? If we
hadn’t come trout fishing it would have been
all right. I could have sent my pigeons from
the boat—I’ve got a regular coop there—it
cost thirty dollars.”</p>
<p>“But you like the stalking, don’t you?” Connie
asked.</p>
<p>“Yes, but I can’t be quiet enough—I can’t
sneak up to them. You have to be quiet and
stealthy when you stalk.”</p>
<p>They made out that Mr. Waring was something
of a sportsman and was wealthy and
eccentric.</p>
<p>“We live in a big house in Vale Centre,”
Jeffrey told them, “and we have fountains
and I have twenty-seven pigeons and two dogs—and
I can have anything I want except an
automobile. I can’t have an automobile because
I’m nervous.”</p>
<p>“You don’t mean you live near Edgevale
Village, down the Hudson?” Garry asked in
surprise. “I live about two miles from the
Centre myself.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_77">[77]</div>
<p>“We live in a house that cost thousands and
thousands of dollars, but I like our boat best.
If there’s a war we’re going to give it to the
government, but if there isn’t any war it’s going
to be mine some day.”</p>
<p>It appeared that Jeffrey and his uncle
lived alone, save for the servants, and had
cruised up the Hudson to Catskill Landing in
their boat for the trout fishing of which the
old gentleman was fond. How the pair had
happened to penetrate to this isolated spot
was not quite clear, but the boys gathered that
it had been a favorite haunt of Mr. Waring’s
youthful days.</p>
<p>“He told me he’d bring me and show me,”
said Jeffrey, “and that we’d stay here and
catch fish and I could send my pigeons back
to James—he’s our chauffeur—and I’d get
better so’s I could remember things better.
Do you think you get better living in the
woods?”</p>
<p>“Surest thing you know,” said Garry.</p>
<p>The picture of the kindly old gentleman,
bringing his none too robust nephew to this
lonely spot, which lingered in his memory
perhaps as the scene of woodland sports of his
own boyhood, touched the four boys and
seemed to bring them in closer sympathy with
the figure that lay prone and motionless within
the little shack.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_78">[78]</div>
<p>“I can have anything I want,” Jeffrey told
them again. “Spotty cost fifty dollars, but he
died. That’s because I was sick and my brain
didn’t work good. My other carrier cost
thirty dollars and I sent him to James to tell
him the governor was hurt.”</p>
<p>The scouts told him the fate of the pigeon
and of how they had received the message.</p>
<p>“But we’ll never get away from here,” Jeffrey
said hopelessly. “We’ll never find our
way back.”</p>
<p>With the first light of dawn Garry increased
the dying blaze and sent the smudge signal.
Piling damp leaves on the fire he caused a
straight thin column of thick smoke to rise
high into the air and by inverting the deserted
pigeon coop over this, and removing and replacing
it as the Morse code required, he imprinted
against the vast gray dawn the words</p>
<p class="center">COMING HAVE DOCTOR</p>
<p>They knew well enough that some one in
the camp would keep sleepless vigil, watching
for just such a message. Three times the
words were spelled out in smoke to make sure
that they would be caught and understood.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_79">[79]</div>
<p>To Jeffrey, whose only resource had been
his pet pigeon and who had been unnerved by
his inability to find his way from the hill, the
sending of this message and the quiet orderly
preparations for departure which followed
were the cause of gaping amazement. He
clung to Garry, as the others got his uncle
onto the stretcher, and walked along at his
side, plying him with excited questions. Sometimes
it was necessary for him to take a corner
while one of the scouts went ahead to open
a way and then his panic was pitiable.</p>
<p>It did not seem at all peculiar to the others
that he should single out Garry and cling to
him, for everybody fell for Garry almost at
first sight. What they did notice was that he
appeared to shun Tom, who, indeed, was entitled
to all his gratitude and was the hero
of the occasion if anyone was.</p>
<p>But then he was a queer boy anyway, and
thoroughly shaken up by his experience.</p>
<p>As for Garry, the sudden hit which he had
apparently made quite amused him.</p>
<p>“You should worry,” he said, laughingly
to Tom.</p>
<p>And Tom shrugged his shoulders and
smiled.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_80">[80]</div>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />