<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h3>TIDINGS OF THE LOST MINE.</h3>
<p>"Help! help! Smithy's tumbled over the <SPAN name="edge" id="edge"></SPAN>edge
of the precipice!"</p>
<p>That was Step Hen shouting. He had happened
to be the nearest one to the unfortunate scout, when
Mike gave the other an impatient shove with his
nose, that made Smithy lose his balance, and topple
over the brink.</p>
<p>Thad never lost a second, but went on the jump
toward the spot where the stubborn jack stood,
with his sturdy little legs braced like steel, as
though determined not to be pulled over just because
Smithy had stepped off the trail.</p>
<p>Reaching the spot, Thad threw himself down on
his face. He could peer over the edge, and see the
dangling scout. Smithy was squirming at a tremendous
rate, doubtless terrified at the sudden
mishap that had overtaken him, and which came
when he was dreaming of other things.</p>
<p>"Stop wriggling that way, Smithy!" called the
patrol leader; "it won't do any good, and may
shake the rope loose from your wrist! Here, try
and get hold with your other hand; and grip it
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Page 14]</SPAN></span>
good and fast. We'll have you up in a jiffy, never
fear!"</p>
<p>"Oh! Thad!" gasped the poor fellow, whose
face was as white as chalk when he turned it appealingly
upward; nevertheless Smithy had learned
the quality of obedience, and particularly when he
heard the acting scoutmaster speak; so that almost
mechanically he groped around with his free hand
until his fingers came in contact with the taut rope,
when they closed upon it tenaciously; just as a
drowning man will cling to the first thing he
clutches that seems to hold out a single ray of hope.</p>
<p>"Let me help," said a quiet voice close to Thad's
ear; and he knew that it was Allan who spoke—Allan,
always self-possessed and cool, even in the
most trying conditions.</p>
<p>Thad was only too glad to have an assistant, for
he could never have lifted the imperiled lad alone,
since Smithy was no light weight; and did not
know enough to help himself by digging the toes
of his boots into crevices of the rocks, so as to ease
the terrific strain on his arms.</p>
<p>"Hold on tight, Smithy; it's all right, and you're
not going to fall, understand that now. So, up you
come, my boy! Another pull like that, and we'll
sure have you on deck again. Easy now with that
rope back there; Step Hen, hold to the mule, and
keep him quiet, will you?"</p>
<p>Thad said all this in a reassuring, matter-of-fact
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Page 15]</SPAN></span>
tone, that was better calculated to put confidence
into the faint heart of Smithy than anything else
could. Step Hen and Davy Jones caught hold of
the obstreperous Mike, almost frantic because of
these strange carryings-on, and held him tight, so
that he might not interfere with the critical work
of rescue.</p>
<p>And so Smithy was finally pulled over the edge.
Once Thad managed to secure a grip of the collar
of his scout coat, he knew everything was serene,
for that khaki cloth was firm and sound, and capable
of bearing almost any strain.</p>
<p>The rescued scout sprawled on the shelf, panting
hard. His face was still ghastly white, for
Smithy lacked greatly in fortitude, and needed
building up as much as the other tenderfoot, Bumpus,
had, before his adventures in the big timber,
that had gone so far to raise him in the estimation
of his chums.</p>
<p>"Whew! that was a close shave!" exclaimed
Giraffe, from the rear, where he had been holding
on the other mule with more or less difficulty; because,
when Molly discovered that her mate was
in some sort of panic, she also wanted to frisk
around, and cut up, after the way of mules in general.</p>
<p>Step Hen and Davy Jones were poking their
heads over the edge, curious to know just what
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Page 16]</SPAN></span>
Smithy had been saved from. The former turned,
and grinned.</p>
<p>"Guess you might have been bruised some,
Smithy, if you'd gone on down;" he remarked;
"but there's a big shelf that was waiting to grab
you, just five feet under your toes. But as you
didn't know that, and thought the drop was half a
mile, more or less, I don't blame you for feeling
shaky about it."</p>
<p>Smithy recovered sufficiently to insist on crawling
to the edge, and also peering over. When he
really found that what Step Hen said was the truth,
it seemed to annoy him, strange to say.</p>
<p>"Now, isn't that provoking," he declared, in his
precise way of talking that he had learned from
his maiden aunts; "why, if I had only been aware
of that circumstance, what an amount of mental
suffering it would have saved me. When a fellow
gets such a fright as that, he likes to know that it
was worth while."</p>
<p>The journey was soon resumed; but Thad saw
to it that some one else besides Smithy held the
leading rope of the tricky Mike. Perhaps the mule
might never afterwards try the same game; and
then again he was liable to break out in a new direction;
for there was a little demon in that wicked
eye of his, Thad thought.</p>
<p>Already they were on the downward grade. By
the time night arrived, the guide hoped they would
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Page 17]</SPAN></span>
have reached the lower canyons, where a camp
might be made. All of the boys were really tired
of climbing about among so many <SPAN name="dangerous" id="dangerous"></SPAN>dangerous narrow
paths, and would welcome the coming of the
time when they could move around without constant
danger of being dashed to death over some
precipice.</p>
<p>None of them claimed to be born mountain
climbers. They preferred to take their fun in
some other way.</p>
<p>When the route changed somewhat in its character,
so that the little party could gather more
together, an animated conversation broke out. The
guide was fairly flooded with questions concerning
the country, and what he knew about its past.</p>
<p>"I've been all through here many's the time,"
Toby declared, waving a hand to cover the surroundings
generally. "And some other fellers,
they've jest been fairly hauntin' these regions in
years past; but 'twa'n't any use; for they never
could find that old mine again."</p>
<p>"What's that?" demanded Step Hen, scenting
an interesting item, for he was always on the look-out
for such things as seemed to promise a touch
of mystery.</p>
<p>"A mine; what kind was it, Toby; who lost it;
and why haven't they been able to find it any
more?" asked Giraffe, eagerly; while Bumpus
crowded closer, for he had a little mercenary streak
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Page 18]</SPAN></span>
in his make-up, and was keen to discover a chance
to lay by another store of hard cash, that might
insure a succession of glorious outings for the Silver
Foxes.</p>
<p>The guide seemed nothing loth to tell what little
he knew.</p>
<p>"Why, you see, thar was a man named Rawson—met
him lots of times myself; and one time
after he'd been pokin' about in this section, prospectin',
he came to Greeley with his pockets just
bulgin' out with the richest silver ore ever seen.
All he'd say was he'd struck a lode that was mighty
nigh the pure stuff. Then he went away, to try
an' get up a company to work his mine, they sez,
an' he never kim back. Nobody never knowed
whatever became of Rawson; but heaps of folks
has hunted high an' low to find his rich mine. Why,
thar was that old miner, Kunnel John Kracker, I
jest reckon he spent as much as four months several
times up around here, pokin' into the most unlikely
places you ever heard tell of. They sez as
how he was so dead sot on findin' that same lost
silver mine, that he near went dippy over it."</p>
<p>"And nobody has ever managed to locate it
again, since that day so many years ago; is that
what you mean, Toby?" asked Thad.</p>
<p>"So she seems, Mr. Scout Master," replied the
other, who always gave Thad this full appellation
when addressing him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Page 19]</SPAN></span>
"Bumpus, what in the wide world are you chuckling
at, back there?" demanded Davy Jones.</p>
<p>"Don't you know Bumpus enough," laughed
Allan, "to guess that already he sees the wonderful
Silver Foxes discovering that lost silver mine,
and just grabbing handfuls of cash right out of it,
to pay the expenses of the next trip—where's it
going to be another time, Bumpus; down to the
gulf, cruising; or along the Mexican border; for you
know scouts should never go outside the borders
of their own country?"</p>
<p>"Well, why not?" demanded the fat boy, defiantly;
"look back at the stunts we've carried
through so far, and tell me if it would be so very
strange if we just happened to drop in on this old
hidden mine of the Rockies? Luck camps on the
trail of the Silver Fox Patrol every time; and I'm
ready to shake hands with anything that needs
clearing up. You just wait, and see if I'm so far
off, that's all."</p>
<p>"And just to think of his name being John
Kracker; now, what boy could ever keep from
twisting that around, and calling him a cracker-jack?"
chuckled Giraffe.</p>
<p>"That's a good one, all right," declared the
guide, laughing heartily; "and I'm some surprised,
I am, that nobody ever thought to put that same
on the kunnel afore this. I wish you could aseen
him, boys. Why, he's as fat as—er——"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Page 20]</SPAN></span>
"You needn't look at me that way, Toby," burst
out Bumpus, instantly, for he was more or less
touchy with respect to his size. "I'm taperin' down
right along these days. Why, I don't reckon I
weigh within three pounds as much as I did when
we said good-bye to Cranford."</p>
<p>"And you lost all of that the time you walked
and walked for days, huntin' for your bear!" put
in Davy Jones.</p>
<p>"Well, I got him, all right, didn't I, tell me
that?" asked Bumpus, proudly, as he patted the
double-barreled ten gauge Marlin shotgun, which
he insisted on carrying across his shoulder, while
most of the others were satisfied to secure their
guns to the pack saddles.</p>
<p>"You sure did," replied Davy, willing to give
honor where honor was due.</p>
<p>"I was jest agoin' to say, the kunnel, he's as
fat as all get-out," Toby went on, a twinkle in his
eye telling how much he really enjoyed these little
skirmishes between some of his charges. "But all
the same, he's the most energetic critter you ever
seen. And temper, say, he's gettin' as red in the
face as a turkey buzzard, struttin' around with a
chip on its wing, ready for a fight. I 'spect some
day the kunnel, he'll jest blow up, and disappear
in a cloud of steam. And p'raps after all you might
git a chanct to set eyes on him yet; because I heard
down at Greeley, last time I was thar, that he'd
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Page 21]</SPAN></span>
passed through with a couple of fellers, and packs;
so it looked like he meant to give that pesky lost
mine another whirl, makin' p'raps the fourth time
he's been up thisaways."</p>
<p>"Glad to hear it," spoke up Bumpus. "Makes
it more interesting to know that he's still got some
faith in the story of the lost Rawson mine. But
I'm real sorry for Colonel Kracker, because he's a
back number since the Foxes have come to town.
If he knows what's good for him he'll go away
back and sit down."</p>
<p>"It's refreshing just to hear you say that, Bumpus,"
declared Allan.</p>
<p>"He's just talking for the fun of hearin' himself,
that's what?" grumbled Step Hen. "What
sort of chance would we have, a lot of greenhorns
who never yet saw a silver mine; against an old-timer
like him? For one I'm not going to take any
sort of stock in the yarn. Like as not it's just one
of the thousands of lies that are circulated all
through the mining regions. Why, I've heard that
there are just any amount of wonderful lost mines
that never existed, my dad says, except in the
mind of some crank. And my dad ought to know,
because he owns stock in heaps of mines that was
salted dreadful, just to sell to innocent people in
the East."</p>
<p>"About this Rawson who was said to have found
the silver lode that was nearly pure," Thad remarked,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Page 22]</SPAN></span>
wishing to pick up more information;
"what sort of a man was he, Toby—you said you
used to know him once, I believe?"</p>
<p>"A pretty fair an' square sort of a prospector;
and they sez as how he was that tickled over his
rich find, sayin' that now his fambly could enjy
some of the comforts o' life. Seems like his fust
thought was 'bout them. But I never knowed whar
he lived, except that it was somewhar down in
Utah among the Mormons; though to be sure he
wasn't belongin' to the plural wife colony, not
much. Seemed to think all the world 'bout the
one wife, and the children he'd got."</p>
<p>"Then it's too bad poor Rawson never lived to
profit by his discovery," went on the scoutmaster.
"If he'd only been able to hand the key to his find
over to his family, they might long ago have come
in for a fair share of the profits of the lode. Well,
Bumpus, if, as you seem to believe, in that stubborn
way of yours, that the Foxes are just <i>bound</i>
to tumble into this lost mine, we'll remember, boys,
to hunt up the family of Rawson, and let them
share in our luck. And now, as the afternoon is
getting along, we'd better be thinking of hurrying,
if we hope to camp in the valley this coming night."</p>
<p>They made a little spurt, though it was always
next to impossible to hurry those two independent
pack animals, as contrary by nature as anything
could be. Step Hen indeed declared they would
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Page 23]</SPAN></span>
do well to turn the animals around, and <i>pretend</i>
to want to go in the other direction; when Mike
and Molly would keep on backing until they had
reached the valley below in good style.</p>
<p>The sun was of course out of sight behind the
mountainous wall standing like a great barrier in
the west, when the little company of scouts finally
reached the base of the eastern ridge.</p>
<p>"Thar's a hunky camp site jest over beyond that
bunch of trees, boys;" the guide announced;
"plenty of good drinkin' water for man, an' beast
too. So let's head that way. Reckon you-all must
be some tired with that long trip in acrost the
range."</p>
<p>Five minutes later, and they drew up at the spot,
which Thad immediately saw was just the place
for pilgrims to pass a night.</p>
<p>"Hello! there's been a fire here!" exclaimed
Giraffe, always on the lookout for anything that
pertained to a blaze; for he was the greatest fire
worshipper ever known.</p>
<p>The guide flung himself down beside the ashes,
and felt of them; while the scouts waited to hear
what his report would be.</p>
<p>"Somebody camped here jest last night," declared
the forest ranger, quickly; "and like as not
'twar that ole Kunnel Kracker an' his party, bound
to comb these mountains onct more, lookin' for the
lost silver mine!"</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Page 24]</SPAN></span></p>
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