<h2 id="c7">CHAPTER VII. <br/><span class="small">THE HEART OF A SCOUT.</span></h2>
<p>“That’s interesting news, Thad!” Step Hen
declared.</p>
<p>“The way you say that makes me think you
mean ‘interesting, if true,’” Thad remarked, with
a little laugh. “In other words, you want me to
prove it.”</p>
<p>“Oh! well, we’re all such a lot of slow-witted
scouts that we have to be shown; just like we’d come
from Missouri,” admitted the other, in a tone that
was meant to serve as an apology.</p>
<p>“And I’m always ready to explain as far as I
can,” the scout-master told him. “At the same
time I have to keep an eye on Allan here, for you
all know that when it comes to reading the signs of
the woods I sit at his feet. What I pick up just
by figuring out, he knows from past experience.
So I want him to pull me in just as quick as he sees
I’m on the wrong track; promise that, Allan.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_58">58</div>
<p>“Go ahead,” remarked the Maine boy, but his
manner told plainly enough that he was very little
afraid he would have to do anything of the kind.</p>
<p>“Of course,” Thad began, “all of you can see by
the marks here that something was moving along
toward our camp; and if you look a little closer
you’ll notice that it was a man on his hands and
knees; for here are the plain impressions of both
his hands; while his shuffling knees made that mark,
and that, and here is where his toes dragged along.
Plain enough, eh, fellows?”</p>
<p>“As easy to read as A B C!” declared Giraffe,
eagerly.</p>
<p>“Another thing is that he had just reached this
spot behind the bushes at the time Giraffe let fly
with his gun, and then we all started to shout; for
you can see the tracks go no further. On the contrary,
the man became suddenly frightened, under
the belief that he had been discovered; for here he
scrambled to his feet, as you can plainly see each
impression of a bare foot, and as he hurried away
he kept back of the low bushes, from which I deduce
the idea that he must have stooped over in
order not to be seen and fired on.”</p>
<p>“Well, it goes right along like a book, don’t it?”
said Bumpus, looking at the young scout-master in
admiration and wonder; for he could not imagine
how any one, and a mere boy at that, could discover
so much just from observation, and using his common
sense at the same time.</p>
<p>Allan nodded his head approvingly.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_59">59</div>
<p>“But chances are that isn’t near all you noticed,
Thad?” he said, questioningly.</p>
<p>“You’re right, it isn’t,” said the other, promptly.
“I can see from the signs that the man is barefooted,
and consequently in great need; so I am
compelled to believe that he must be an escaped
convict who has been trying to keep life in his
wretched body, perhaps for months, in this swamp,
eating roots or berries, trapping birds, or catching
fish, muskrats, turtles, anything that he can find.
And as nearly all those who are held in these camps
are blacks, I find it easy to guess that this is a
negro.”</p>
<p>“Ain’t that a great way of finding out things,
though?” marveled Bumpus. “Why, Thad, you
talk just like you’d been watching that poor old
chap every second of the time. I don’t reckon,
now, that you could tell us anything else about
him—how big he was, and all that?”</p>
<p>“He was a good-sized fellow, for you can see
that the track of his bare foot is really tremendous;
and if you look here you’ll notice where he lay
flat on his face, so that it is possible to roughly
measure his length—all of six feet, too. And his
left hand is lacking one finger!” added the scoutmaster.</p>
<p>“What’s that?” gasped Step Hen. “You’re
only joshing us now, Thad; for how under the
sun could you tell such a thing as that?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_60">60</div>
<p>Allan chuckled, and looked immensely pleased.</p>
<p>“I thought so!” he was heard to mutter to himself.</p>
<p>“Well, it’s the old story of keeping your eyes
about you,” remarked Thad, “and using your head
as you go. Three separate times, now, I saw where
he had placed his left hand spread out on the ground
where it was soft enough to take a pretty good impression;
and in every instance the <i>third</i> finger was
missing; so with all that proof I thought I was
safe in assuming that this man was marked. And
let me say, that later on when we get the chance
I mean to ask a lot of questions just to satisfy myself
about it. If a convict escaped from jail, or
some camp, who has no third finger on his left
hand I’ll consider that I’ve proved my case.”</p>
<p>Some of the boys were still a little skeptical, and
asked to be shown those wonderful imprints of the
hand that told Thad such an interesting story; but
after they too had examined them they admitted
that it was even so.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
<p>“It sure beats the Dutch how these things stick
up with some fellows,” Bumpus frankly admitted,
as he scratched his frowsy head in wonder, and almost
awe. “Now, the rest of us looked right at
them impressions in the mud. We saw they’d been
made by a human hand, of course, cause there ain’t
any monkeys around here besides Davy; but not
one of us went any deeper. Why, after you’ve
been shown, it stands out there like a mountain, and
you see it as plain as you see your nose when you
shut one eye. I wisht I could discover things that
way; there’d be heaps of things I’d find out, let me
tell you.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Giraffe, severely, as he moved away
from the vicinity of Bumpus, his nose elevated at
an angle of forty-five degrees; “but what we’re
all hoping most for now is that you’ll hurry and
get over that cold in your head, so that your natural
sense of smell will come back; for then you’d certain
sure duck out of that grimy old suit that’s just
greased from top to bottom, and give us a chance
to breathe the pure air.”</p>
<p>Bumpus looked at him pityingly.</p>
<p>“You do love to carry on a joke to the limit,
Giraffe,” he said, simply.</p>
<p>“Joke?” burst out the other in a vociferous
voice; “let me tell you, this is a mighty serious
matter; and if it keeps along, some of us in desperation
may be tempted to jump on you while you
sleep, and make the change ourselves. We’re getting
to a point where self-preservation is the first
law of Nature.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_62">62</div>
<p>“Bah! who’s afraid?” retorted Bumpus, with a
shrug of his plump shoulders; “but you want to
keep your hands off me, for I’ll kick and bite like
fun if set on. I know you’re just trying to see if
you can’t convince me against my own good sense.
This atmosphere seems all right to me; though I
admit I don’t just like the looks of this black swamp
water, and the ooze we meet up with sometimes.”</p>
<p>Giraffe gave him a last piercing look; then as if
making up his mind that the case was utterly hopeless,
he shook his head and turned away; while
Bumpus went back to his camp duties as blithely as
though care sat lightly on his head.</p>
<p>After they had finished breakfast the tents were
struck, folded in as small a compass as possible,
and one stowed away in each of the boats. Afterwards
they cleaned up the camp, and made sure
that nothing worth while was left.</p>
<p>There had been certain portions of the razorback
that they did not mean to take along with
them. Seeing Bumpus busily engaged Thad approached,
asking:</p>
<p>“What are you up to here, old fellow? Just as
I thought, trying to do a little favor for that wretch
of a three-fingered coon, by tying up this meat
where the animals will have a hard time getting at
it. Yes, you guessed right that time, for the chances
are he’ll come back here as soon as he knows we’ve
gone, in the hopes of picking up some scraps we’ve
tossed aside. Bumpus, you’re improving, because
that shows you figured it all out, and hit the bull’s-eye
in the bargain.”</p>
<p>The fat scout looked immensely pleased to hear
Thad talk in this strain.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
<p>“Well, after eating such a jolly breakfast myself,
it struck me as pretty sad we should be so near
a miserable human being who was almost starved.
No matter if he is a bad man, and deserves all he’s
getting, he’s made like us, and I just reckon the
lot of us would be quite as tough as he is if we’d
never had the benefit of a nice home and education
and full stomachs. And so I thought, as he’d
be likely to come here, I’d save these pieces from
the cats and skunks for him.”</p>
<p>“It sure does your big heart credit, Bumpus, and
that is the way a true scout ought to feel pretty
much all the time,” Thad went on to say, looking
affectionately at his stout chum. “Now, if he only
gets here soon enough, there’ll be red ashes in the
bed of our fire, and he can start it up again, so as
to do his cooking.”</p>
<p>“Oh!” said Bumpus, with a happy gurgle, “I
thought all that out, too, Thad. See, here in this
paper is half of my matches. I can spare ’em easy
enough; and every one will be worth a heap to him,
I guess.”</p>
<p>At that evidence of thoughtfulness Thad clapped
his hand on the shoulder of Bumpus, and as he
turned away remarked:</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_64">64</div>
<p>“They can talk about you all they please, Bumpus,
and make fun of the onion odor about your
old suit with more or less truth; but you’re certainly
making better progress along the lines of
scout lore than most of the boys who think themselves
your superiors.”</p>
<p>And that sort of earnest praise made Bumpus
beam with happiness all morning long.</p>
<p>The camp spot was deserted shortly after this
little talk between Bumpus and Thad. And for
some hours they continued to press slowly along,
following such channels as Thad believed to be most
promising.</p>
<p>All the time he kept in mind that they were trying
to come across a man and a girl who were supposed
to have a place of hiding somewhere in this
swamp; and so he considered this fact every time
he had to make any sort of choice concerning taking
one channel or another, invariably selecting
that which he fancied had been used more than
the other.</p>
<p>He had to decide from mute evidence. It might
be only a broken branch that told him a boat had
possibly scraped against a bush in making a short
turn; or the fact that he believed he could see a sort
of regular line of marked places, as though some
one besides themselves had resorted to the same
means of blazing their trail in order to be able to
go out whenever they felt inclined, without running
the danger of losing their way among all those
endless channels, and never being able to leave the
confines of that horrible swamp.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_65">65</div>
<p>All this while it had been getting worse and
worse, the heavy growth enclosing them in a narrow
canal at times, so that they had serious doubts
as to whether they were doing the right thing, or
had wandered far from the proper channel.</p>
<p>It was while they were pushing steadily onward
that Bumpus, who was nodding as he lazily paddled,
suddenly heard Thad in the stern cry in thrilling
tones:</p>
<p>“Lookout, Bumpus, there’s a water moccasin
just over your head on that limb, and acting like
he’d drop in the boat. There! throw yourself back,
Bumpus, quick now, I tell you!”</p>
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