<h2><SPAN name="chap17" id="chap17"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII<br/> <span class="chapsub">THE HAUNTED CABIN</span></h2>
<p>“<span class="smcap">What’s</span> on this afternoon?”</p>
<p>“Nothin’ much.”</p>
<p>“Come on, push it out! If it’s nothin’
much the sooner it’s out of your system the
better.”</p>
<p>“Well, what’s the matter with a visit to
the haunted cabin? I guess we can get a
permit all right.”</p>
<p>The speakers were Hal Harrison and
Walter. They had just met after noon mess,
and the proposal to visit the haunted cabin
came from Hal.</p>
<p>“Great idea,” exclaimed Walter. “There’s
Chief Avery over there now! You tackle
him while I hunt up Woodhull. I’m pretty
sure he’ll let me go.”</p>
<p>Permission was readily granted, and the two
boys at once launched a canoe, and pointing the
bow up and across the lake soon left the camp
behind. The haunted cabin was the same to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>289]</SPAN></span>
which Walter had heard veiled allusions on
his first day in camp, and to which he supposed
he had been carried for his initiation
ordeal. Ever since then he had intended to
visit it, but until now there had never seemed
a good opportunity. It was located on the
other side of the lake some three miles up,
and was a half mile back from the water some
little distance off to one side of a lumber trail.
As it was out of bounds, it was necessary to
get permission from the chiefs in order to
visit it.</p>
<p>“What do you know about it, Walter?”
asked Hal as they sent their light craft swiftly
over the water.</p>
<p>“Not much except that there was a murder
or a fight or somethin’ of the kind there years
ago. Do you know anything about it?”</p>
<p>“Only the stories that are floatin’ ’round,
and no two agree,” replied Hal. “I’ve
been kind of interested, and have run down
all the stories I could get hold of. I guess
there was a tragedy there all right, but from
all I can gather it was a fair fight, and not
a cold-blooded crime. The story that seems
to be most generally accepted is that there
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>290]</SPAN></span>
was a fight over a girl. The cabin was built
by an old half-breed trapper before there were
any lumber trails through these parts at all,
and he lived there with his daughter, who
was said to be a mighty pretty girl. The old
fellow’s name was Duquesne, but he was more
Indian than French, and was commonly
called Indian Joe. He was a grouchy old
fellow, and people didn’t have any more to do
with him than they had to.</p>
<p>“The girl was a beauty, and old Joe was so
jealous of her that he never would let her out of
his sight when they came down to the village
to trade, and the young fellows of the region
found that the vicinity of old Joe’s cabin was
anything but healthy. Finally a young
Scotchman named Bruce moved down here
from Canada and ran a line of traps up in the
region that Joe had come to consider his own
special preserve. This was bad enough, and
roused all the Indian in him, but when he
discovered that young Bruce had fallen in love
with the girl and that she was in love with
him his rage knew no bounds and he made a
lot of ugly threats, so that the friends of the
young fellow warned him to keep away from
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>291]</SPAN></span>
the cabin, and I guess the girl begged him to
also.</p>
<p>“But Bruce was hot-headed and afraid of
nothing and no one. When he heard of the
threats he rightly guessed that things were
probably mighty uncomfortable for the girl, so
he jumps into a canoe and heads straight for the
cabin. When he got there old Joe was out
on his trap line and the girl begged Bruce
to leave. But he wouldn’t, and waited till
the old man came back. He was in the cabin
when the old man returned and the latter
got inside before he discovered the visitor.
He started to throw his rifle up, but Bruce was
too quick for him and knocked it out of his
hands. But the old man had a knife, and he
didn’t waste any time. He was all Indian
then, and was on Bruce like a wildcat.</p>
<p>“I guess Bruce saw it was kill or be killed,
with the girl for the stakes, so he whips out
his own knife, and they turned that cabin into
a shambles.</p>
<p>“The young Scotchman had the advantage
of weight and youth, but Joe was all Indian,
with every trick known to that kind of fighting,
and with black hate in his heart. I guess
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>292]</SPAN></span>
it was some fight, all right, and the girl seeing
the whole thing. Finally Bruce got in a
lucky thrust that ended things and old Joe
with it. He was cut up something fierce
himself and so weak from loss of blood that I
guess he thought he was going to cash in.
But the girl managed to bind him up and get
him into the canoe, though how she did it no
one knows, for the cabin is half a mile back
from the lake. Anyway, the first the village
knew of it she came paddling in with Bruce
in the bottom of the canoe, more dead than
alive.</p>
<p>“You know lumbermen and backwoods
people are awfully superstitious, and it wasn’t
long before they had the cabin haunted by
Indian Joe’s spirit, moaning for his lost
daughter. Hunters and trappers began to tell
all sorts of stories of queer sounds around the
cabin and soon no one would go near the old
place. Superstition’s a queer thing, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“You bet it is, and it isn’t confined to
lumbermen and backwoods people by a long
shot!” replied Walter. “What became of
the girl?”</p>
<p>“Oh, Bruce recovered, of course, and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>293]</SPAN></span>
married her, and they moved up into Canada.
There’s the landing at the lumber trail.”</p>
<p>A few minutes later they drew the canoe
out on the shore. A lumberman’s batteau
was drawn up at one side, and they could hear
voices ahead of them on the trail.</p>
<p>“A party going up to the Brown camp, I
guess. I understand they’ve begun cutting
about three miles back,” said Walter.</p>
<p>The boys set out at a brisk pace along the
trail. “Avery says that the trail to the cabin
is so overgrown that it’s hard to find, but that
there is a Scout sign where it turns off of this
trail, and then a line of old blazes,” said Hal.
“It’s on the right a short half mile from the
lake.”</p>
<p>The boys slackened their pace, scanning the
right hand side of the trail as they advanced.
Presently Walter stopped and pointed to a little
group of stones half hidden in the brush
to the right. It consisted of a stone of fair
size with a smaller one resting on top of it
and a third on the ground to the right of the
others. Both boys recognized it as the old
Indian sign which means “Trail to the right.”</p>
<p>Turning in they soon found a tree with a
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>294]</SPAN></span>
blaze so old that it was nearly covered with
bark. Getting the direction from this they
were able to sight the next blaze and so pick
out the trail.</p>
<p>“Doesn’t look as if any one had been over
this for an age,” said Hal as they carefully
picked their way along.</p>
<p>In about fifteen minutes they saw an opening
in the tree tops ahead and soon stepped
out into what had once been a small clearing,
but which was now overgrown with brush and
berry thickets, and in places good stands of
second growth birch and maple. In the midst
of this dreary waste stood the “haunted
cabin.”</p>
<p>The boys stood at a little distance and looked
at it in silence for a few minutes, thinking of
the tragedy which was said to have been enacted
there. It was the usual type of log
cabin, a one room affair with the remnants of
a shed or small addition of some kind clinging
to the rear. The cabin had been well
built, for it was in a good state of preservation
save that in places the roof had fallen, leaving
black, yawning holes. It had been turfed at
some time in its existence, and such parts as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>295]</SPAN></span>
were intact were covered with a tangle of grass
and weeds. Altogether it was a desolate and
dreary looking object.</p>
<p>“Gee, I don’t wonder they think it’s
haunted! Well, let’s see what it looks like
inside,” said Walter.</p>
<p>They approached it from the front, and to
their great surprise found the door still intact
and closed. When they attempted to open it
they were further mystified to find that it
would not yield to their combined efforts. It
was locked on the inside.</p>
<p>“What do you know about that!” exclaimed
Hal. “Let’s try the back door.”</p>
<p>Here a further surprise awaited them, for
their entrance was as effectually barred as before.
They stared at each other blankly.</p>
<p>“Wouldn’t that get your goat!” muttered
Walter. “Must be that some hunters have
had nerve enough to use it, and have locked
it up for safe keeping,” he added with a half-hearted
laugh. His eyes idly taking in the
surroundings suddenly became fixed on a
point a few feet distant. “Say, Hal,” said he
abruptly, “there’s a path, and it looks to me
as if it had been used lately. Let’s follow it.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>296]</SPAN></span>
It certainly was a path, and with every evidence
that it had been recently used. The
boys followed it in puzzled silence until it abruptly
terminated at a spring. It required no
very keen observation to see that the spring
had been cleaned out at no very distant day.
As by a common impulse they turned and
stared back at the cabin, which returned the
stare with its gaping windows, as empty of
life and forlorn in appearance as could well be
imagined. And yet there was something
sinister about the old ruin. It lay like
a wet blanket on the buoyant spirit of adventure
with which they had entered the
clearing.</p>
<p>Walter gave a little embarrassed laugh as
he said, “It’s queer, but I’ve had a feeling of
being watched ever since we struck the clearing.
There’s no reason for it, and yet I can’t
get rid of the idea that somebody’s eyes are
on us.”</p>
<p>“Must be the ‘hant,’” said Hal with a
laugh. But his face sobered as he added, “I’ve
had an awfully uncomfortable feeling myself,
Walt. I don’t believe I’m keen to crawl in
one of those windows. Reckon I’ve seen all I
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>297]</SPAN></span>
want to of the old place. What do you say if
we go back?”</p>
<p>“I’ve had enough,” agreed Walter. “I
don’t wonder they call the old thing haunted.
Guess that story got on our nerves all right.
I never thought I was superstitious, but I sure
would hate to spend a night here.”</p>
<p>The boys quickened their pace as they
passed the ruin, throwing a hasty glance in at
the yawning windows, but in the darkness of
the interior they could make out little.</p>
<p>“Ugh!” said Hal as they picked up the
trail out, “I’m glad to leave the blamed old
place. I guess it’s haunted all right!”</p>
<p>Had he looked back and seen the venom in
the pair of black eyes that, through one of the
windows they had so recently passed, watched
them disappear on the trail, he would have
still further rejoiced that they were leaving the
old ruin behind.</p>
<p>They found the canoe where they had left
it, but the batteau was gone. With Hal in the
stern and Walter in the bow they soon had
half a mile of open water between them and
the shore. It was then that Hal noticed for
the first time that there was considerable
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>298]</SPAN></span>
water in the canoe and that it was increasing
rapidly. His exclamation of dismay drew
Walter’s attention to their predicament. The
canoe had not leaked before—what did it
mean?</p>
<p>A hasty examination of the interior showed
that the water was coming in slightly forward
of Walter’s seat, and that at the rate it was
gaining their little craft would soon be awash.
There was nothing wherewith to bail except
their hands or sneaks, and these were wholly
inadequate in face of the fact that one must
paddle. They did not dare go back whence
they had come, for instinctively they felt that
the source of their present difficulty lay there.
Camp was still some two and a half miles distant
and the afternoon was growing late. It
was a situation to test their powers of resource
and scoutcraft to the fullest.</p>
<p>Walter hurriedly stripped off his trousers
and shirt. “What are you going to do?”
cried Hal. “You can’t swim from here to
camp!”</p>
<p>“Don’t intend to,” responded Walter hurriedly.
“I’m goin’ to try to find out what’s
happened to us. When I get out you get as
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>299]</SPAN></span>
far back on the stern as you can. That will
put her bow clear out of water and give me a
chance to see a good half of her bottom.”</p>
<p>With the words he plunged over, and Hal
crawled back as directed. Walter came up at
once under the bow and found that, as he had
anticipated, he could examine easily the whole
forward half of the canoe’s bottom. It took
but a moment to locate the trouble, two long
gashes close to and parallel with the keel.</p>
<p>“Some one’s cut it!” cried Walter. “Must
be one of those lumber-jacks that was over
there with the batteau did it. Never knew of
them doing anything like this before. They’ve
played tricks on the fellows lots of times for
fun, but never anything low down mean like
this, or anything that meant danger. You
stay back there and paddle a while, Hal, and
I’ll swim. With her bow out that way she
can’t leak any more. By and by you can
swim and I’ll paddle. Water’s fine!” he
added with a grin.</p>
<p>The water had rushed to the stern and Hal,
sitting astride the canoe, was able to bail much
of it out with one of Walter’s sneaks. Then
while Walter swam he slowly paddled so as to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>300]</SPAN></span>
remain close to the swimmer. The wind had
begun to freshen a trifle and as they were
heading it came from a point off the port
quarter, and Hal soon had his hands full to
keep on the course at all, for the high bow was
caught by every little gust and frequently he
was spun around as if on a pivot.</p>
<p>Walter was swimming easily, but he realized
that the distance to be covered was beyond his
powers, and he thought rapidly as he swam.
Hal was not a strong swimmer, but would be
able to cover a short distance while he had a
breathing spell in the canoe. Gradually he
came to a realization of the struggle his comrade
was having with the canoe, and that the
latter’s arms would be strained and weary when
it came his turn to take to the water. They
must try some other plan. Studying the lines
of the canoe he concluded that with both of
them far back in the stern the gashes would be
partly out of water, and that with both paddling
they might make some distance before
the water reached the danger point. Then he
could go overboard again and Hal could bail
out as before.</p>
<p>This plan was at once tried and with both
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>301]</SPAN></span>
putting all their strength to the paddles they
gained a full mile before it became necessary
for Walter to go overboard again. This time
they were near a small island, and thither
Hal drove the canoe and had beached and
emptied it by the time Walter arrived. After
a thorough rest they prepared to start again,
when they spied a boat coming down the lake.
One look was sufficient to assure them that
their troubles were at an end. There was but
one pair of shoulders in the woods like those
sending the light craft toward them with
powerful strokes.</p>
<p>“Jim! Jim! Oh, you Jim!” they yelled
shrilly.</p>
<p>The rower stopped and turned toward
them, then altered his course, and in a few
minutes was resting on his oars alongshore
while, both talking at once, they poured out
their story and showed him the gashed canoe.
The big fellow’s face wore a look of perplexity
as, with the boys in his boat and the canoe in
tow, he headed for camp.</p>
<p>“Whar did ye say ye went when ye left th’
canoe?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Up to the haunted cabin,” replied Walter.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>302]</SPAN></span>
“Was the hant t’ hum?” he inquired with
a grin.</p>
<p>“No,” said Hal, “or if he was he was
mighty seclusive. Both doors were locked.”</p>
<p>“What’s thet ye said, son?” demanded the
guide sharply, as he stopped rowing for a
minute.</p>
<p>“I said the doors were locked and we
couldn’t get in,” replied Hal.</p>
<p>“And there was a path down to the spring
that looked as if some one had been using it,”
added Walter.</p>
<p>“Prob’ly some lumberman been in thar
fer a drink,” said the guide with an assumption
of carelessness, and then lapsed into such
a state of abstraction that the boys gave up
trying to interest him further. He came out
of it as they approached the camp.</p>
<p>“Don’t say nothin’ ’bout this; jes’ leave it t’
me,” he advised. “I’ll explain it t’ th’ doctor.
’Tain’t like th’ boys o’ th’ lumber camps t’
do no sech trick as this, and I’d hate t’ hev any
feelin’ stirred up. You boys jes’ keep mum.”</p>
<p>The boys were quite willing to do so, and
bidding them a hasty farewell Jim strode off
toward headquarters.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>303]</SPAN></span>
“Queer thing, the whole business,” mused
Walter as they watched the guide disappear
in the office. “I wonder what Jim’s got on
his mind.”</p>
<p>And he would have wondered still more if
he could have heard the guide exclaim, as he
banged his big fist down on the desk at the
end of a fifteen minutes’ talk with the
doctor:</p>
<p>“It’s him as sure as shootin’! We’ll git
him this time, or my name ain’t Jim
Everly!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[<span class="hidden">Pg </span>304]</SPAN></span></p>
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