<h2 id="c14">CHAPTER XIV. <br/><span class="small">SWAMP TACTICS.</span></h2>
<p>“Back water, fellows!” called out Step Hen,
who could be cautious at times, as well as bold.</p>
<p>It was ludicrous to see how quickly the scouts
did dip their paddles in again, and not only stay the
forward progress of the two canoes, but cause
them to retrograde so that almost like magic they
had succeeded in putting a tongue of land, on which
trees grew densely, between themselves and the
danger zone.</p>
<p>This did not apply so much to the alligator hunter,
who still sat there in his boat, fingering his
heavy rifle, and with bent head eying the distance,
as though it would please him exceedingly to just
catch a single glimpse of something moving, at
which he might discharge his weapon.</p>
<p>If Tom Smith were anything like the sharpshooter
he made out to be, the result must certainly
have proved disastrous to that unknown party who
had just given the little expedition such a start.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_120">120</div>
<p>“Do you see the coward, Mr. Smith?” called
out Bumpus, who was highly indignant at their receiving
such a warm reception; just as though this
unknown person meant to claim the whole swamp
as his preserves, and intended to serve warning on
the scouts that they had better clear out, if they
knew what was good for their health.</p>
<p>“Sorry tuh say I don’t seem tuh git the least
sign o’ the measly critter!” came the reply, in a
tone that told of mingled disgust and disappointment.</p>
<p>Saying which the alligator hunter picked up his
paddle in one hand, and still holding on to his gun,
as if hope were not quite extinct, he urged his canoe
backward, as though meaning to join the boys.</p>
<p>Thad understood that this was not done from
the same motives of caution that had caused them to
retreat under fire. Tom Smith must have some
other object in view, which would presently be
made apparent.</p>
<p>And as it turned out Thad’s guess was pretty
close to the bull’s-eye; for hardly had the guide
joined them than he was saying hurriedly:</p>
<p>“I’m gwine tuh leave you fo’ a leetle time, boys;
but make shuah tuh stay right hyah till I comes
back agin, which I calc’late ain’t meanin’ mo’n harf
an hour at theh most.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_121">121</div>
<p>“What’s up, Tom?” asked Giraffe, who had
easily become familiar with the lanky hide hunter;
just as though the fact that both were tall and thin
had served to draw them closer together than was
the case with Bumpus, who, being built on an altogether
different plan, could not be expected to
sympathize with one who was all bone and muscle.</p>
<p>And as like draws like, Tom had even come to
calling Giraffe by his nick-name, because he heard
the others doing so; though possibly the man did
not know what such an animal looked like, as most
of his life had been spent in the swamps; and while
Louisiana boasts many queer animals and birds
within her borders, no one ever yet ran across a
giraffe running wild there.</p>
<p>“Why, yuh see, Giraffe, I’m ameanin’ tuh slip
’round back thar, an’ see now if I couldn’t git a
squint at thet sneak. So-long, boys, an’ don’t take
snap judgment on me, if yuh sees the bushes
amovin’ when I kim back.”</p>
<p>He immediately bent to his paddle, and the
rough boat started away at a furious pace, showing
that Tom Smith was deeply in earnest in his
desire to pay back the unseen marksman who had
given warning of his hostile intentions by that shot
over their heads.</p>
<p>They watched him for the space of about a
minute, and then boat and paddler had vanished
amidst the thick green screen of bushes.</p>
<p>“Whew! but didn’t he send her along like fun,
though?” Bumpus wanted to know.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_122">122</div>
<p>“Well, he’s been using the paddle for a good
many years, and knows every little wrinkle of the
business,” returned Thad.</p>
<p>“Yes,” added Allan, “I’m never through watching
the way he manages that clumsy canoe of his.
I’ve seen Penobscot Indians up in Maine who
could do wonders with their boats, but they weren’t
in the same class with him; because in the first
place their canoes were either made of light birch-bark,
or else canvas, painted and varnished until
the sides were as smooth as glass; whereas, look
at the tub he handles like a flash. He’s sure a wonder;
and while I thought I could do a few stunts
along the line of canoe work, I take off my hat to
Tom Smith.”</p>
<p>“But what did he mean by saying like he did,
that he hoped we wouldn’t take snap judgment
on him?” Bumpus asked. “That sounded mighty
funny to me, because of course we ain’t thinking
of doing the least thing to annoy our own guide.
Why, whatever could we do without him now, I
wonder?”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
<p>Giraffe chuckled, as he often did in his aggravating
way whenever Bumpus exposed his ignorance;
but all the same, in spite of his affected
superiority, the lanky scout was seen to pay particular
attention when Thad started in to explain;
just as though he might after all not be quite so
sure himself what Tom Smith did mean by that
expression.</p>
<p>“Why, it’s this way, Bumpus,” said the scoutmaster,
always willing to enlighten the other, “he
knows that we are more or less excited over this
unexpected happening; and as boys are apt to act
first, and think afterwards, Tom Smith wanted to
kindly request us not to shoot at the moving of a
branch, and look up the cause later on. The chances
are that it would be him coming back, and he didn’t
feel like being peppered by our fire.”</p>
<p>“Huh! he ought to have known that all scouts
learn never to shoot until they’re good and sure of
what they’re firing at,” grunted Step Hen.</p>
<p>“Well, lots of people you’d think ought to know
better, allow themselves to get so flustered when
deer hunting, that they’re ready to bang away if
they see anything brown moving among the bushes.
And every year dozens of hunters are killed up in
the Adirondacks, in Maine, and Wisconsin, by just
such fool actions; so that they’re even talking of
making every hunter wear either a white or a red
suit, so he can’t be mistaken for a deer.”</p>
<p>“That’s a fact, this dun-colored khaki cloth is
mighty near like a deer, and the dead leaves too!”
declared Bumpus.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_124">124</div>
<p>“It may have been when it was new and <i>clean</i>,”
interjected Davy, bitterly; “but it’s anything but
brown now. I’d call it a pretty fair shade of dirt
color approaching black.”</p>
<p>“P’raps, now, that’s why the sportsmen in Old
England wear red coats when they go into the
brush?” suggested Smithy.</p>
<p>“Oh! that’s only the fox hunters, and they carry
no firearms, so they’re in no danger,” Thad informed
him; “their grouse shooters wear just the
same kind of togs our hunters do over here; but
they shoot in the open, and so you seldom hear of
an accident over across the ocean.”</p>
<p>All this conversation was carried on in low tones,
and while the boys were constantly peeping out
from their leafy covert, as though expecting to
catch a glimpse of either the mysterious marksman,
or else Tom Smith searching for him beyond.</p>
<p>But there was not a single sign of either. The
trailing Spanish moss continued to wave majestically
to and fro in the light air; a gray squirrel ran down
the trunk of an oak tree close by, to bark saucily,
as though questioning their right in his quiet domain;
a bittern flew past with winnowing wing, and
quickened its flight when discovering the presence
of human beings in that retreat; but there did not
seem to be the first indication that either enemy or
friend could be hidden beyond that other tongue of
land.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_125">125</div>
<p>Thad had figured it all out in his mind, and fancied
that he knew about what the quickly-formed
plan of the alligator hunter might be.</p>
<p>Of course Tom Smith knew every rod of this
place, and he realized that by taking a certain channel
leading back of the point that now screened
the boys, he could manage to come up behind the
place where that rifle had sounded.</p>
<p>If the marksman had remained in his bushy retreat
there was a chance of his being surprised;
but Thad hardly hoped for any such result; because
it stood to reason that the hidden man must
be keen-witted, and he would naturally suspect some
such move on the part of the swamp hunter, whom
he undoubtedly knew.</p>
<p>The minutes dragged along, with the boys exchanging
opinions every little while, and then looking
around again. They felt under something of a
strain, because of this singular happening; and
many were the conjectures as to who the party could
be back of that gun.</p>
<p>Some were inclined to believe that he might
turn out to be a desperate escaped convict who had
managed in some fashion to get possession of firearms;
and seeing those deceptive khaki suits of the
scouts, at once jumped to the conclusion that they
must belong to the State militia, and were even then
looking for a fellow answering his description.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_126">126</div>
<p>Others declared that if this had been the case
he would surely have sent his whistling lead lower,
and not stopped at simply warning them to clear
out. And it was even hinted by Giraffe that the
unseen party might be the counterfeiter of whom
they had heard Tom Smith speak, and who would
naturally believe the Government had sent an expedition
after him at last, tired of his persistent efforts
to inflate the currency of the country at the
expense of his fellows.</p>
<p>“Why, Thad, don’t you know, over half an
hour’s gone already, and not a sign of our guide
coming back?” observed Bumpus, who had remained
quiet for a long stretch of time, for him,
because the fat scout dearly loved to express his
opinions on every subject. “I only hope nothing
can have happened to Mr. Smith, because we would
be up a tree then. I just know even you haven’t
kept track of how we got here; and if there ain’t
no trail, however would we get out again?”</p>
<p>“There you go again, Bumpus,” asserted Step
Hen, “borrowing trouble. Why don’t you wait
till you get to a bridge before you start crossing
over? Now, as for me, I’m ready to just take
things easy-like, till Tom shows up.”</p>
<p>“There he is now, and beckoning to us to come
along!” asserted Old Eagle Eye, who had kept on
the alert all the while, so that he might be the first
to announce a pleasing discovery.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_127">127</div>
<p>When Giraffe had thus announced his discovery,
the two canoes were immediately put in motion,
and the boys hastened to paddle along until they arrived
alongside the boat of the guide, which was
close to the spot where that mysterious shot had
sprung from.</p>
<p>“Reckon you didn’t find our friend, Tom?” remarked
Giraffe, familiarly.</p>
<p>The old alligator-skin collector shook his head
grimly in the negative.</p>
<p>“He slipped out all right,” he observed, “an’
so slick thet I never did git even a look-in at him.
But I found his blank brass shell on the ground,
whar he tossed the same outen his gun, which I
knows real well. It war Ricky, the moonshiner, as
guv yuh thet warnin’ not tuh bother with him; an’
I reckons as how he means hit, too.”</p>
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