<h2><SPAN name="chap08" id="chap08"></SPAN>CHAPTER VIII<br/> <span class="chapsub">LONESOME POND</span></h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Lonesome Pond</span> was well named. A mile
long by perhaps half a mile wide at its widest
point, it lay like a turquoise in an emerald
setting between two mountains whose upper
slopes were dark with a splendid stand of
spruce and pine. A magnificent growth of
birch, maple and ash with an occasional pine
or hemlock scattered among them grew to the
water’s edge, save along the southern end
where they had entered. Here for some distance
a sphagnum swamp, dotted with graceful
tamaracks, extended on either side of the
narrow outlet, in places forming a natural
open meadow.</p>
<p>The pond was shallow at this end, with
great masses of lily-pads, both of the white
and the yellow or cow-lily. In contrast to
this the shore of the upper end was bold and
rocky, heavily wooded to the water’s edge.
Here on a tiny patch of shingle, the only
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>117]</SPAN></span>
break in the rocky shore line, the canoe was
beached. A trail led up for a hundred yards
into a grove of hemlocks where, completely
hidden from the lake, was the camp which was
Big Jim’s objective point. Two comfortable
lean-tos had been built perhaps ten feet apart
and facing each other, with a stout windbreak
closing one side between the two. The lean-tos
were of hemlock bark, peeled from forest
giants and flattened to huge sheets. These
sheets formed the sides, back and steeply sloping
roofs, the entire front of each, after the
manner of all lean-tos, being left open. In the
middle, between the two, were the charred
embers of old fires, while the matted brown
needles of small hemlock and balsam twigs in
both lean-tos bore mute witness to the spicy,
comfortable beds of other campers. A rough
board table stood at one side of the fireplace.</p>
<p>“Here we be, pard,” said Big Jim as he
swung his basket to the ground. “You take
this pail an’ follow thet trail yonder till you
find a spring, while I dig out th’ grub. Reckon
you must be hungry. We’ll hev a bit o’ bacon
now and a good square meal to-night.”</p>
<p>It was long past noon, and now that the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>118]</SPAN></span>
excitement of the journey was over Walter realized
how empty his stomach was. He found
the spring easily, and when he returned Big
Jim already had his basket unpacked and was
just starting the fire. He had cut two bed logs
about six feet long and eight or ten inches in
diameter. These he had flattened on top and
one side and had placed side by side, flat sides
opposite and some three inches apart at one
end, spreading to ten inches at the other. Between
these he had built a fire of hemlock bark
started with birch bark, which, by the way, is
as good as kerosene for starting a fire. In a
few minutes he had a bed of glowing coals
over which the frying-pan was soon sizzling,
and that most delicious of all odors, frying
bacon, mingled with pungent wood smoke, assailed
the boy’s eager nostrils.</p>
<p>By making the fireplace and fire in this
way, Big Jim explained, the frying-pan rested
on an even surface, with a steady even heat
beneath it, and one could squat beside it in
comfort without becoming unduly heated.
At the same time the bacon was cooked
thoroughly without scorching.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <SPAN name="illo04" id="illo04"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/bswc04.jpg" width-obs="492" height-obs="700" alt="Walt returns with water to find Big Jim cooking bacon" /> <p class="caption">HE HAD BUILT A FIRE</p> </div>
<p>A kettle of water was set over the coals to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>119]</SPAN></span>
wash the tin plates, knives and forks when the
meal was over. How good that bacon, bread
and butter did taste, washed down by clear cold
water! It seemed to the hungry boy that he
never had eaten such a meal, its one fault
being that there wasn’t enough of it. But Big
Jim laughed at him, telling him that that was
only a lunch, but that he should have a real
dinner at sundown.</p>
<p>When the dishes were cleared away Big Jim
took his axe and went back into the woods returning
presently with half a dozen forked
sticks of green wood. Two of these about
four feet long were driven into the ground,
one at each end of the fireplace. Across them,
supported in the forks, was laid a straight
young sapling which the guide called a lug-pole.
Then he took one of the other sticks
and cut it off about three inches above the
fork or crotch, leaving a good hand grasp.
One branch was cut off some four inches from
the fork, the other branch being left long
enough so that when a small nail was driven
in the end on the opposite side from the short
part of the fork and the fork inverted over
the lug-stick a pail hung from the nail would
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>120]</SPAN></span>
swing just over the coals. Other sticks were
made in the same way, but of varying lengths.
The camp range was then complete.</p>
<p>The long sticks (they are called pot-hooks)
were for bringing a kettle close to the fire,
while the shorter ones would allow of keeping
things simmering without boiling or danger
of burning. Moreover, by simply taking up a
pot-hook by the hand grasp a kettle could be
moved anywhere along the lug-stick away
from the hottest part of the fire without burning
the hands. It was simple, quickly made,
yet for all top cooking as effective as the gas
range at home, and Walter felt that he had
learned an important lesson in woodcraft.</p>
<p>After the dishes were cleared away Big Jim
led the way to a balsam thicket, taking with
him two straight sticks about four feet long,
hooked at the lower end. With his axe he
rapidly lopped over a mass of balsam twigs,
showing Walter how to slip them on to the
long sticks so that when he had finished they
had two big green spicy cylindrical piles of
balsam with a hand grasp at the top to carry
them by. Returning to camp Jim rapidly
made up two beds. Small boughs were laid
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>121]</SPAN></span>
first, overlapping so that the butts were hidden.
A deep layer of the small twigs were then laid
on in the same way and behold! a bed a king
might covet!</p>
<p>About four o’clock the guide told Walter to
rig his rod and they would go in quest of their
dinner. Paddling over to a cove where
several springs fed the lake they drifted idly
while the guide studied the various insects on
and above the water. Finally he told Walter
to rig two flies, a brown hackle for the tail
and a professor for the dropper. The boy had
already become fairly proficient in getting his
line out cleanly and dropping his flies with
that lightness which so closely simulates the
falling of the living insects on the water. As
yet he had seen no indications of fish, but he
was impatient to try his luck. Big Jim, however,
was lazily smoking, and Walter was
forced to be content with admiring the wonderful
panorama of lake and mountain spread
before him as they idly drifted. Presently
there was a splash on the edge of the shadows
inshore, and then Walter caught a gleam of
silver as another fish broke the mirror-like
surface. The fish had begun to rise.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>122]</SPAN></span>
With the same noiseless stroke that Walter
had so much admired in the morning Big Jim
worked the canoe shoreward toward the widening
circle where the last fish had broken.
At his signal Walter cast, ten feet—twenty
feet—thirty feet. The flies dropped lightly
almost directly above the spot where they had
seen the fish. Hardly had the tackle touched
the water when there was a swift flash of silver
and with a deft twist of the wrist Walter
struck.</p>
<p>With a rush the fish started for deep water,
while the reel sang merrily. Gently but
steadily Walter applied the pressure of the
rod, when the first rush was checked, reeling
in every inch of slack, until five minutes
later he led the tired captive within reach of
Big Jim’s eager fingers, which closed in his
gills and the prize was theirs, a shining half-pound
spotted beauty, which the guide
promptly and mercifully killed by slipping
a thumb into the mouth and bending the
head back till the spine broke at the neck.</p>
<p>So they drifted alongshore, Walter taking
two more of about the size of the first one,
and several smaller ones. As they approached
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>123]</SPAN></span>
a lone rock some fifty feet offshore he made
a long careful cast just to the edge of the
deepest shadow of the rock. The strike
which followed was so fierce and the strain on
the rod so great that but for the screaming of
the reel Walter would have been sure that he
had caught a snag. But there was no mistaking
the active form at the other end of the
line. Big Jim had waked to the battle royal
now in progress and was bringing to bear all
his skill in the handling of the canoe.</p>
<p>Straight out into the lake shot the fish.
“Give him th’ butt, boy, give him th’ butt,
but be careful!” shouted the guide. This
Walter did, elevating the tip of the rod until
the springing little bamboo was bent almost
double, the fish pulling against the full spring
of the rod, clear from the butt. This served
to check the rush. A period of sulking in
deep water followed. Then the line slackened
until it hung limply from the end of the
straightened rod.</p>
<p>“He’s off,” thought Walter, his heart sinking.
But the guide was not so easily fooled.</p>
<p>“Reel, boy, reel!” he shouted, deftly turning
the canoe as on a pivot.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>124]</SPAN></span>
Then Walter waked to the fact that the
fish had started a rush straight toward the
canoe, hence the slack line. Madly he reeled
until a sharp tug that pulled the tip of his rod
under water told him that he was still fast.
With a sigh of relief he gently increased the
pressure.</p>
<p>“Must be a four pounder, sartin,” said the
guide, skilfully keeping the canoe bow on.
“Funny he don’t break water. He ought t’
hev been in th’ air half a dozen times ’fore
this.”</p>
<p>Thus far they had not had so much as a
glimpse of the finny warrior. Thrice he had
come almost to the surface, but instead of
the silver flash arching through the air, which
is the joy of the fisherman, there had been no
more than a sudden swirl of the placid surface,
and the fish had again sought the
depths.</p>
<p>Walter’s wrist was feeling the strain. Despite
the excitement he was becoming tired.
His heart was pounding with conflicting emotions,
alternate hope of landing a record prize
and fear of losing it. Another fit of sulking
gave him a few minutes’ respite. When the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>125]</SPAN></span>
next rush started he felt that it was weaker,
nor was it as long. Inch by inch he was recovering
his line, not for one instant relaxing
the steady strain on the fish.</p>
<p>The rushes were short now and quickly
checked. Inch by inch, foot by foot the reel
took up the line. At last in the clear depths
he got a glimpse of a shadowy form as it
started another rush. Big Jim had seen too.
Indeed, he had seen more than Walter had.</p>
<p>“Two o’ em, by gum!” he shouted.
“Steady now, pard! ’Twon’t be safe t’ try t’
land ’em in th’ canoe without a landin’ net.
I’m goin’ t’ work in t’ thet bit o’ shingle over
yonder. Jes’ yer keep ’em comin’ an’ don’t
let up on ’em fer a minute.”</p>
<p>The guide was right. Both flies had been
seized at once. By this time Walter could
occasionally see the two fish, and the sight
brought his heart into his throat. Could he
save both? What a chance to score for the
Delawares! And what a record to send home
to father! He understood now why there
had been no leaping; the fish had checkmated
each other.</p>
<p>As the canoe grated on the pebbles the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>126]</SPAN></span>
guide leaped over, knee-deep in the water.
Walter stood up and gently led the fish
toward the waiting guide. So tired were they
that they were almost passive, their broad
tails feebly winnowing as, getting the line in
his left hand, Big Jim drew them slowly to
him. Gently he sank his right arm in the
water that no sudden move should startle the
fish into a last frantic struggle. Would he
save them? Walter sat down weakly, trembling
with the strain and anxiety.</p>
<p>Slowly the guide’s big hand slipped up the
length of the fish on the dropper. The stout
fingers locked in the gills, there was a deft
throw—Walter could never tell just how it
was done—and both fish were flapping on
the shore. Jim threw himself upon them a
second after, for his quick eye had seen that
the tail fly had torn out. When he stood up
he held out a fish in each hand, such fish!
The young angler could hardly believe the
evidence of his own eyes.</p>
<p>“Smallest’ll weigh ’bout two an’ a half
pounds, an’ t’other ’bout a pound heftier,”
said Jim, eyeing them critically. “Pard,
thet’s goin’ some fer a beginner. Reckon yer
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>127]</SPAN></span>
must carry a rabbit’s foot in yer pocket fer
luck.”</p>
<p>Walter disclaimed any witch charms whatsoever
as he produced the neat little spring
scales which had been a parting gift from his
father. These proved the accuracy of Jim’s
guess, one being an ounce less and the other
an ounce and a half more than the weights
he had named. They were the true broad
tails or speckled trout, commonly called brook
trout (Salvilinus fontinalis) than which no
more beautiful fish swims.</p>
<p>As he admired their exquisitely painted
sides something very like regret for a moment
subdued the boy’s elation and pride, for he
was one of the true nature lovers, to whom
the destruction of life must ever bring a feeling
of sadness.</p>
<p>As the guide shoved off Walter started to
bend on a change of flies, but to this Big Jim
quickly put a stop.</p>
<p>“Pard,” said he, “no true sportsman will
ever kill more’n he needs. We’ve got enough—all
we can use. The man who kills jes’ fer
th’ fun o’ killin’ ain’t nothin’ more’n a
butcher. He’d better get a job in one o’
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>128]</SPAN></span>
them big slaughter-houses. When I find I’m
guidin’ fer one o’ thet breed he most gen’rally
don’t hev no luck.”</p>
<p>Walter felt the rebuke, but he was fair
minded enough to appreciate and not resent
it. Nor did he ever forget it.</p>
<p>Back at camp Big Jim at once started preparations
for dinner. Going into the woods
he cut a small log of hard wood about two
feet long, out of which he split a slab about
three inches thick. One side of this he
rapidly smoothed. Under his direction
Walter had, in the meantime, built a fire of
small pieces of hard wood. This was soon a
bed of glowing coals which would retain their
heat for a long time, a property which soft
woods do not possess, as the guide took pains
to impress upon him. For this reason hardwood
coals are always preferable for cooking.</p>
<p>When the slab was smoothed to Jim’s satisfaction
he propped it up in front of the coals.
Splitting the largest fish down the back its
entire length, taking care not to cut through
the belly, he cleaned it and wiped it dry.
When the slab was hot he tacked the fish to
it, skin side down, and spread full width.
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>129]</SPAN></span>
Then the slab was once more propped in front
of the fire and three strips of bacon were hung
across the top so that the fat would try out
and drip on the fish. When it became necessary
to reverse the ends of the slab so that the
fish would cook evenly the bacon was taken
off and impaled on the pointed end of a small
stick, it becoming Walter’s duty to hold this
so that the drip would continue to baste the
fish.</p>
<p>While Walter tended the fish the guide
made a reflector according to an idea Walter
had given him. Lashing together two sticks
in the form of a T, one two and a half feet
long and the other a foot long, he tacked a
piece of birch about two feet wide to the ends
of the T, thus forming a segment of a circle.
The white side of the bark was turned in. A
flat piece of hemlock bark was fitted across
the sticks and a rough handle was lashed to
the whole. The result was a crude but effective
reflector to concentrate the light from a
flash in a given direction.</p>
<p>By the time this was finished the fish
was done to a turn. A dash of salt and
pepper was added, and it was ready to serve
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>130]</SPAN></span>
on the slab on which it was cooked. Have
you ever sat under the sweet smelling hemlocks,
careless of all else in the world save
securing your full share of the flaky pink
flesh of a trout cooked in this way? If you
have then your mouth is watering this very
minute. If you have not—ah, why try to
describe it? My advice to you is simply this:
Follow Walter’s example at the earliest opportunity.</p>
<p>Bread with butter and hot cocoa (Dr. Merriam
tabooed coffee or tea for growing boys)
completed the menu. When the dinner was
finished, to the last shred of pink flesh clinging
to crisp brown skin, Walter felt that never before
in all his life had he eaten half so delicious
a meal.</p>
<p>With dinner out of the way and camp made
ready for the night they prepared to put into
execution the plan which was the real object
of the trip. There was no moon, for the sky
was overcast, and the night promised to be
very dark. This was much to Jim’s liking,
for the blacker the night the less likelihood
that the deer would see ought but the baleful,
fascinating glare of the jack-light.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>131]</SPAN></span>
It was nine o’clock when they left camp,
Walter in the bow as usual, but this time with
nothing to occupy his attention but his camera
and the jack-light strapped on his hat. The
reflector was within easy reach of the guide,
to whom Walter had given careful instructions
in its use. A flash, consisting of two
No. 2 cartridges, had been prepared and
wires connected from a couple of electric batteries.
Jim had merely to press a button to
fire the flash.</p>
<p>It was agreed that Walter should set his
focus for one hundred feet and that, should
they be lucky enough to find the deer, the
judging of the distance and setting off of the
flash should be left to the guide.</p>
<p>It was weird, uncanny, that paddle down
the lake, the black water beneath them and a
black formless void around and above them.
A dozen strokes from shore Walter felt as
utterly lost so far as sense of direction was
concerned as if blindfolded. But not so Big
Jim. He sent the canoe forward as confidently
as if in broad daylight. The jack was
lighted but not uncovered.</p>
<p>Walter became aware presently that the
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>132]</SPAN></span>
canoe was moving very much more slowly
and he suspected that they were approaching
the lower end of the pond. At a whispered
word he turned on the jack. The narrow
beam of light cutting athwart the darkness
made the night seem blacker by contrast.
Very, very slowly they were moving, and
there was not so much as the sound of a ripple
against their light craft.</p>
<p>The boy sat motionless, but listen as he
would he could detect no smallest sound to
denote the presence of his companion, much
less to indicate that he was paddling. But
paddling he was, and the canoe steadily crept
forward. A mighty chorus of frog voices in
many keys evidenced the close proximity of the
meadows surrounding the outlet. As the canoe’s
course was altered to parallel the shore
the boy cautiously turned in his seat so that
the rays from the jack were directed shoreward.
At that distance, even in the very center
of the beam of light, the shore was but a
ghostly outline, and Walter wondered how it
could be possible that they could see the eyes
of a deer.</p>
<p>Once the heavy plunge of a muskrat made
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>133]</SPAN></span>
him jump inwardly, for his nerves were keyed
to a high pitch. He was beginning to feel
cramped from so long maintaining one position.
One foot and leg had gone to sleep.
But he grimly ground his teeth and resolved
that, come what might, he would not move.</p>
<p>A slight tremor on the port side of the canoe
attracted his attention and he realized
that Big Jim was shaking it, the signal agreed
upon should the guide see the deer first.
Walter forgot his discomfort. Eagerly he
stared at the shore. For a few minutes he
saw nothing unusual. Suddenly he became
conscious of two luminous points—the eyes of
a deer gazing in fixed fascinated stare at the
light. He could discern no faintest outline
of the animal, but the eyes glowed steadily,
unwinking.</p>
<p>Inch by inch the canoe drifted in. Suddenly
the two glowing points disappeared. Walter’s
heart sank. Had the animal taken fright?
No, there they were again! The deer had
merely lowered its head for a moment. A
shake of the canoe warned the boy that there
was something more. Turning his own eyes
from the two burning there in the blackness
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>134]</SPAN></span>
he presently became aware of two more,
smaller and lower down. A second later he
saw a third pair.</p>
<p>What could it mean? Could it be that the
deer had enemies stalking it? What if it
should be a lynx or even a panther! His excited
imagination conjured up a thrilling
scene. What if he could photograph it! He
longed to ask the guide what it all meant, but
that was impossible.</p>
<p>Slowly, slowly they drifted in toward the
three pairs of eyes. Walter kept his camera
pointed directly at them, the shutter open,
not knowing what instant the flash might go
off. Still they drifted in, Walter as fascinated
by the six glowing points as were the deer by
the jack. Inch by inch, inch by inch they
drew nearer. Would the flash never go?
Walter felt that he must turn and see what
Big Jim was doing. Could it be that Jim had
disconnected the wires and was unable to fire
the flash?</p>
<p>Even as this dread possibility entered his
mind the water and shore directly in front of
him were lit by a blinding glare. He had an
instantaneous impression of a doe and two
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>135]</SPAN></span>
fawns staring in curious alarm from near the
shore of a wild meadow flanked by ghostly tamaracks.
Quite automatically he squeezed the
bulb that closed the shutter. Then for a few
minutes he could see nothing. But he could
hear the plunging of the frightened animals
as they fled for the shelter of the forest, and
his heart leaped at thought of what that negative
in his camera must hold.</p>
<p>“Git ’em, pard?” drawled the voice of the
guide.</p>
<p>“I guess so. I don’t see how I could help
it. Anyway, I held the camera pointed right
at them,” replied Walter.</p>
<p>“Guess thet’ll do fer to-night, son,” said
Jim, swinging the canoe about. “Shut off th’
jack an’ git out yer paddle. It’s us fer th’
blankets now!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>136]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />