<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<h3>AN HONORED GUEST.</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">The</span> boys looked at the moonshiner, who returned
their stares with interest. He seemed utterly
indifferent as to whether they chose to receive
him either as a friend or a foe. From this Thad
was almost certain that there must be other fierce<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
mountaineers close by, ready to back up their chief,
should he provoke a quarrel with the strange boys
in uniform.</p>
<p>That fact meant serious trouble for the scouts, if
it happened to come to pass. Thad knew that these
lawless men of the mountains, who snap their fingers
at the authority of the courts, and feel safe
in the security of their secret fastnesses, deep in the
unknown regions back of the trodden trails, think
very little of human life. They are usually engaged
in some vendetta between rival factions, or families,
and blood is frequently shed.</p>
<p>Understanding how thin was the ice upon which
he and his comrades were skating, the patrol leader
felt that he could not be too careful how he provoked
this man of strong passions to violence.</p>
<p>A little to his surprise Phin Dady wheeled, and
faced him directly. But then the mountaineer was
gifted with a sharp vision, and he could readily
guess which one of the scouts served in the capacity
of leader. Perhaps there was that in the manner of
Thad to tell him this fact. Or he might have been
watching and listening long enough to see how the
others all deferred to Thad's judgment.</p>
<p>"I gut yer letter O. K.," he said, simply.</p>
<p>Thad's anxious face brightened up instantly; he
saw that for the time being the other meant to put
aside his hostility. Curiosity had supplanted enmity.
He wanted to learn more about what that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
term "Boy Scouts," used in the message left in the
cleft of the stick, might mean.</p>
<p>"And I hope you read what we wrote, Phin
Dady?" the boy asked, eagerly.</p>
<p>A whimsical smile flashed athwart the thin face
of the mountaineer.</p>
<p>"As fur me, I ain't much o' a hand ter read, any
more'n I am ter write; but thar chanced ter be a
feller along as hed sum schoolin'; an' him an' me,
we managed ter figger it out. Thort as how I'd like
ter run up agin ye all, an' larn wat all this hyar
bizness consarnin' Boy Scouts be. Heerd tell 'bout
sich, but never cud find anythin' but a cold trail.
So I kim over ter see ye; an' p'raps now ye'd open
up an' 'xplain."</p>
<p>"I'll be only too glad to do that, if you'll take a
seat at our camp-fire here for a little while, Phin
Dady," Thad remarked, making a movement with
his hand to indicate where the other could find a
comfortable spot to rest.</p>
<p>The man looked closely at the speaker; then
turned his head, and deliberately made a motion with
his hand, that must have been intended for some
concealed confederate. After which he stepped
over, and took a seat, but not the one Thad had indicated
as the post of honor.</p>
<p>"Reckon I'll sit hyar, ef so be it's all ther same
ter you-uns," he said, as he dropped down, and
swung his rifle across his knees. "Yuh see, I likes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
ter look at everybody w'en I gets ter talkin'. It's
more sociable like."</p>
<p>But Thad knew better. The gleam in those beady
eyes told him what the true meaning of this action
must be. When a man has been hunted, in and out
of season, for the better part of his long life, he
naturally become most suspicious of every stranger,
young and old. Many had been the shrewd games
engineered by the revenue men to catch this old
weasel asleep. He trusted no one all the way, even
his best friends, who might be tempted to betray him
because of the reward that was offered for his capture.</p>
<p>But although Thad had guessed just why the
other chose the seat he had taken, it would have
been most unwise on his part to have shown any resentment;
or even to let Phin Dady know that he
understood.</p>
<p>"You see," Thad began, simply, "we were warned
to be careful before we left Asheville, because people
said that the fact of our wearing uniforms might
make the mountain folks think we had something to
do with the army. I was explaining all about what
the Boy Scouts represent to Mr. Reuben Sparks
only a short time ago, and he was greatly interested.
If you'll listen, then, I'll go back, and tell what we
aim to do; and why we have left our homes to take
a long hike through a mountainous region, for up
where we live we have no such big hills as these."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So Thad began, and told in as simple language as
he could find just what objects were kept in mind
among all troops of Boy Scouts, whether in America,
England, Australia, South Africa, Germany,
France or any other country on the face of the
globe.</p>
<p>Fortunately Thad was a good talker. He knew
how to make use of a whole lot of little things in
order to arouse the interest of the one who was
listening; and he certainly had a subject worthy of
his best efforts in this explanation of what the Boy
Scout movement stood for.</p>
<p>And the mountain man was deeply interested too.
He proved this by the way he hung upon the words
of the boy. Now and then his suspicious nature
would show itself in a cautious look around, as
though he wanted to make sure that no shrewd
game were being engineered, while the speaker kept
his attention engaged.</p>
<p>Several times he broke in on Thad to ask questions.
He could not get it through his head, for instance,
why boys any more than men, should set
about doing all the work that scouts attempt, without
pay. In this region of the hookworm, where
men never dream of working until driven to it by
actual hunger, they think others must be crazy to
voluntarily take upon themselves huge tasks that
try both brain and muscle.</p>
<p>"But sure the Gov'ment pays yuh!" he said three<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span>
separate times, as though he felt positive there must
be some secret connection between the Boy Scout
movement, and the authorities at Washington; else
why should they be wearing the uniform he and his
fellow-moonshiners had come to look on as the mark
of the oppressor; for several times the army had
been called into the field to hunt down the elusive
law breakers, who simply vanished utterly from
view, and remained in hiding until the raid was
over.</p>
<p>"Not one cent do we get from anybody," Thad
assured him, positively. "Why, even our uniforms
have to be bought with money we've each one
earned. We're not allowed to accept them as a
gift from any man, or any source. So you see,
we're under no obligations to anybody."</p>
<p>Again Phin Dady asked a series of questions
which would indicate that he was at least interested
in all Thad told him, though possibly he believed
only a small part of the whole.</p>
<p>When Thad repeated to him the twelve cardinal
features of a Boy Scout's vow, taken when he
joined a troop, Phin shook his head helplessly, as
though it were beyond his power of understanding.
Indeed, that was where the trouble lay; he possessed
so shallow a nature that he was utterly unable to
grasp the full significance of the scheme. There
must be some sort of recompense, in dollars and
cents, to make it worth while for any person to do<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
things that called for labor. And that was why he
continued to keep his weapon across his knees as he
sat and listened, and asked an occasional question.
Phin Dady was not going to be lulled to sleep by
any interesting yarn that sounded very "fishy" in
his ears.</p>
<p>Of course, the other scouts had discreetly remained
silent while all this was going on. They
were content to let Thad do the talking, for none of
them could equal the patrol leader in explaining
what the benefits were, which boys might expect to
obtain when they joined a scout patrol.</p>
<p>Several of them just sat there, and stared in open-mouthed
wonder at the man, of whom they had
heard more or less lately, and whose defiance of the
authorities had been a matter of many years' standing.</p>
<p>Phin Dady might boast of no education whatever;
and his knowledge of the world, outside the confines
of the Big Smokies, was doubtless extremely
limited; but he did possess what served him far
better in the warfare in which he was continually
engaged with revenue agents—a natural shrewdness
such as the wily fox of the forest shows, and by
means of which he outwits his pursuers.</p>
<p>"An' yuh kim 'way down this away jest tuh climb
the mountings, an' see wot yuh cud do acampin'
out without ary tents er blankets, did yuh?" the
mountaineer went on, surveying the boyish faces<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
that formed a half circle around him. "Wall, I jest
reckons ye'll know a heap more by ther time ye gits
back ter yer homes'n yuh did w'en yuh started out."</p>
<p>He chuckled as he said that. Thad wondered
whether there could be any hidden meaning back of
the words. When dealing with such a slippery customer
as this hunted moonshiner, it was always
necessary to keep on the watch. The man who always
suspected others of double dealing might be
in the same class himself.</p>
<p>"Oh! we're quite sure of that," said the patrol
leader, with a pleasant smile. "Already those
among us who had never climbed a mountain slope
before, have had their leg muscles stiffened, and can
do better work than in the start. We expect to
have a pretty good time all around. And we wrote
you that message, Phin Dady, because we believed
you were ordering us out of these mountains under
a mistake that we meant to do you, or some of your
friends, harm. We want you to feel that we never
dreamed of that when we started in here."</p>
<p>"Then I hopes as how yuh beant changin' o' yer
minds sence yuh kim," remarked the moonshiner,
just as though he knew what the subject of their
recent conversations might have been.</p>
<p>Before Thad could decide just what sort of an
answer he ought to make, if any at all, the manner
of the other changed as if by magic. His face took
on a fierce expression, and he looked along the row<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span>
of boyish faces by which he was confronted, as
though one of them had done something to arouse
his hot anger.</p>
<p>The click of the hammer of his gun could be
heard as his thumb drew it back; and the scouts
shrank away in dismay when they saw the flame in
his small eyes.</p>
<p>"Quick! tell me you'uns, whar be the other one?
Thar was sure eight w'en we counted yuh from the
side o' the mounting. An' it mout pay yuh ter
'member thet Ole Phin, he beant the man ter fool
with. Eight thar was; whar be the other right
now?"</p>
<p>And Thad realized that the ice was indeed getting
desperately thin under their feet at that particular
moment.</p>
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