<h2 id="c11">CHAPTER XI. <br/><span class="small">ALLIGATOR SMITH, THE GUIDE.</span></h2>
<p>“What’s the matter, Thad?” asked Allan,
some time later, while they were lounging around
the jolly camp-fire, and taking things easy.</p>
<p>“Why, I thought I heard the splash of a paddle
just then, when it was all still!” and the scout-master
continued to cock his head on one side, in the
act of straining his hearing, as though half expecting
to catch a repetition of the sound.</p>
<p>Every scout remained mute, and an anxious look
seemed to creep over not a few boyish faces; for
they had been told such strange stories about the
“hideout” people of Alligator Swamp that all
sorts of fancies had taken possession of their young
minds.</p>
<p>“You’re right, I do believe, Thad,” muttered
Giraffe, who had splendid hearing, as well as wonderful
eyesight.</p>
<p>“Then you caught the splash that time, too?”
questioned the scout-master.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_96">96</div>
<p>“Sure pop, and it wasn’t the flap of a ’gator
dropping in from a bank, or the sportive play of a
muskrat, either. Nothing but a paddle would
make that noise; and as sure as you live I can see
the canoe acoming this way right now!”</p>
<p>This announcement created no end of excitement.
Every fellow thought it was up to him to
get in readiness to resist boarders, and when he
could not have a gun because there were not enough
to go around, at least a club, the camp hatchet, or
in an emergency the long bread-knife seemed to
offer some degree of comfort.</p>
<p>“I see him too!” remarked Step Hen; and others
echoed the words; indeed it would have to be a
very dull fellow who could fail to distinguish the
moving object that was approaching so boldly.</p>
<p>“He ain’t afraid, anyway!” ventured Davy
Jones.</p>
<p>“No more he ain’t,” added Giraffe; “which
would seem to give the idea that he didn’t mean
us any harm; or else felt that one man was equal
to a whole patrol of Boy Scouts, which don’t seem
possible.”</p>
<p>“Well, he’s got another guess coming if that’s
so,” muttered Bumpus, who, with his gun in hand
was not showing much alarm; for since he had
seven chums to back him up, the fat scout could not
see why he should tremble, save with excitement.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_97">97</div>
<p>“There is only one man in the boat,” remarked
Thad, a little anxiously; “and as he’s coming about
over the course we did, I wonder now if it could be
any messenger sent after us by that telegraph agent
at the town?”</p>
<p>“Oh!” gasped Smithy.</p>
<p>Instantly every fellow felt a queer sensation pass
over him. The words uttered by Thad had conjured
up all sorts of grave possibilities as connected with
their various happy homes away up North; and
doubtless they suffered tortures from that moment
on.</p>
<p>Straight for the camp came the solitary paddler.
He was seated in a roomy boat built after the prevailing
type used around the neighborhood of the
swamp, and from the dexterity with which he
handled the paddle it was plain that he must be
quite at home on the water.</p>
<p>“Hello! boys, I’m comin’ ashore tuh jine yuh!”
he called out; perhaps being a little dubious as to
what sort of reception they were calculating on
giving him; for the display of guns and hatchets
and knives must have looked ominous indeed.</p>
<p>“All right, come along then!” Thad sang out
in reply.</p>
<p>Two minutes later and the stranger’s boat was
drawn up on the sloping bank, and he strode toward
the fire. Then the eager boys saw that he
had a genial if wrinkled, sun-burned face, and a
scraggy gray beard.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_98">98</div>
<p>“I’m Alligator Smith,” he announced, just as
though that name might be known in all that section
well enough to explain everything; and it
was, too, for the reader may remember that it was
this very man whom Thad had once wished he
could come upon to try and engage him as a guide.</p>
<p>Here was luck with a capital L. Thad immediately
offered the other his hand.</p>
<p>“Glad to meet up with you, Mr. Smith,” he
said; “here’s a namesake of yours with us, though
we call him plain Smithy; and this next Boy
Scout is Allan Hollister; the stout chap Bumpus
Hawtree,” and so he went on, introducing each
chum, while the angular native proceeded to shake
hands with them in rotation.</p>
<p>“We wanted to run across you, the worst kind,
sir, and so we call this a happy meeting,” Smithy
remarked.</p>
<p>“What’s thet yuh say?” asked the other, apparently
puzzled.</p>
<p>“Why, we had need of a good guide for poking
around in this swamp, and everybody seemed to
fight shy of the job; but they all said that if we
could only come on Alligator Smith, and he’d engage
with us, we’d be all lovely,” Giraffe observed.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
<p>“Oh! that’s it, hey?” the alligator hunter went
on to say, smiling broadly; “why if so be yuh
wants me still, I ain’t no ’jections tuh makin’ arrangements
lookin’ thataways, ’cause the ’gator
hide bizness ain’t what it used tuh be; an’ money’s
tight nowadays. But what under the sun be yuh
awantin’ tuh hunt around in this ole swamp fo’,
boys? They ain’t near so much game in hyah as
yuh cud find in the canebrake, or up on the high
ground. Ducks don’t come in much, an’ yuh seldom
stir up a deer or a bar nowadays.”</p>
<p>Plainly Alligator Smith had already had his curiosity
aroused. And so Thad believed that it would
be as well to tell him everything right in the start,
since he must know the facts so that he could serve
them to the best of his ability.</p>
<p>“We didn’t come down here just to hunt,” he
started in to say, “though we thought it best to
fetch a few guns along for an emergency. To
tell the main thing right in the start, we’re looking
for a man.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I reckons as how I ketch on tuh that same,”
observed the hunter, as he crossed his legs close to
the fire, and made himself quite at home, with the
scouts hovering around him.</p>
<p>“And a small girl!” continued Thad, watching
the face of the other closely, so as to judge whether
any flash of intelligence would pass over it that
would serve as good news to the anxious lad.</p>
<p>“Oh! a gal too, yuh say? An’ d’ye reckons as
how they be somewhar near Alligator Swamp?”
asked the man, quickly.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_100">100</div>
<p>“A gentleman wrote my uncle that he had seen
this man and girl go into this swamp,” Thad continued.
“It may have been ten days ago. They
seemed to have a lot of provisions in the boat, as
though they were laying in a month’s supply. He
had a gun, and looked ready to hold his own against
any runaway black convict he might happen to
meet. Do you know of any man and girl like that,
Mr. Smith?”</p>
<p>It seemed as though every boy ceased to breathe
while waiting for the answer to come to this
important question which Thad had asked. The
swamp hunter nodded his tousled head slowly up
and down. He appeared to be thinking intensely.</p>
<p>“Why, yas, ’twar about thet time I seen ’em,”
he finally remarked. “I ’member as how I’d jest
got outen terbaccy, and nawthin’d do but I must
make fo’ the village store tuh lay in a new s’ply.
Yas, an’ I jest glimpsed thet boat as I kim outen a
side bayou. Reckoned as how’t must be a stranger,
’case I never seen the man afore as I knowed on.
I waved a hand at him, but he never made out tuh
notice. So I jest reckoned as how they must be
some new settlers as’d took up a cabin I knowed
’bout jest beyond the start o’ the swamp. Never
guv it another think, ’case I happened tuh hev
troubles o’ my own aplenty jest then, with my jaws
rusty from not havin’ any terbaccy fo’ nigh on two
days. So them be the pussons yuh want tuh find?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_101">101</div>
<p>“I think there’s no doubt about it, Mr. Smith,”
replied Thad, his eyes shining brightly with renewed
hope; “but do you really think they could
be so near the edge of the swamp? We came on
an old tumbled-down shack, with a mud and board
chimney, and a door hanging by one hinge; but
there wasn’t a sign of life around it.”</p>
<p>“Then I war mistaken when I reckoned thet
way, son,” admitted the hunter; “’case that’s the
on’y cabin around in the swamp wuth mentionin’
anyway. They must agone deeper in. P’raps the
man air like some others as I knows ’bout, an’ don’t
want tuh meet up with a livin’ soul, so he’s buried
hisself in thar sumwhar.”</p>
<p>“If he’s the man we think, his name is Felix
Jasper!” Thad went on to say.</p>
<p>“Hey, Jasper, d’ye say? Well, now, thet’s makin’
me go away back sum. Yuh see, thar used tuh
be a fambly by thet name alivin’ ’round hyah yeahs
an’ yeahs ago; but the ole man he died and the rest
cleared out.”</p>
<p>“Then this might be one of the sons, mightn’t
it?” the boy asked.</p>
<p>“Tuh be sure it mout, and which wud account
fo’ his knowin’ so much ’bout this hyah swamp;
’case yuh see, it’d be all a man’s life was wuth tuh
come in and git lost among all these bewilderin’
waterways. More’n a few never kim out in yeahs
gone by; an’ them as hide hyah now knows every
crook and bayou like yuh do the fingers of yuh
hands.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
<p>“Then you would be willing to stay by us, and
see us through, if we paid you the right sort of
price?” Thad asked, determined to clinch the bargain
at once.</p>
<p>“Glad tuh do thet same, son,” replied Alligator
Smith.</p>
<p>“How would three dollars a day and find suit
you?” the scout-master went on.</p>
<p>“Fine,” answered the other, readily.</p>
<p>“All right then,” Thad continued, “let’s call it
five dollars a day. And I hope there’s nothing in
the way to prevent you sticking with us from now
on?”</p>
<p>“Well, thet’s what I calls handsome, an’ yuh kin
depend on Tom Smith astickin’ tuh yuh like a plaster.
We’ll sure find the man, an’ theh gal, too,
if so be we hev tuh run through theh ole swamp
like a fine tooth comb. An’ I hopes as how they
turn out tuh be the same as yuh want.”</p>
<p>“You can understand how much I’m hoping that
way, when I tell you that we think the girl may be
my little sister, who was stolen when she was a
baby,” Thad went on to say; and upon the other
evincing great interest in the matter, he thought it
best to relate the whole story concerning the dismissal
of the estate manager on account of his evil
practices, and his subsequent hatred for the Brewsters,
which gradually led up to the mysterious disappearance
of little Pauline ten years ago, and the
inability of the best detectives in the country to find
her.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_103">103</div>
<p>Tom Smith was evidently a rough fellow, but
he had a heart, and the way in which he pressed the
hand of the young scout-master, after the whole
story had been told, indicated very plainly that he
sympathized greatly with him in his mission, and
would do everything in his power to bring about a
meeting with the strange man who had entered the
swamp ten days before, with that pretty child.</p>
<p>And Thad looked fully a hundred per cent
brighter, now that the chances for accomplishing
the end he had in view when he came South, seemed
to have gained a new impetus. With such a man
as Alligator Smith to lead them, knowing every
part of the mysterious depths of the swamp as he
did, from long years of hunting in its depths, it
really looked as though they were now on the road
to success; and that before long the truth would
be made known. So that everybody, even Bumpus,
seemed to be in a more jolly mood than had
happened in some time.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_104">104</div>
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