Part 11 (1/2)
”Hear, hear!” cried Ironbeard; ”good for you, old man!”
”Silence!” thundered Wolf-in-the-Temple, ”I must beg the gentlemen to observe the proprieties.”
This tremendous phrase rarely failed to restore order, and the flippant Ironbeard was duly rebuked by the glances of displeasure which met him on all sides. But in the meanwhile the chief had lost the thread of his speech and could not recover it. ”Vikings,” he resumed, clearing his throat vehemently, ”we have been--that is to say--we have sustained----”
”A thras.h.i.+ng,” supplied the innocent Skull-Splitter.
But the awful stare which was fixed upon him convinced him that he had made a mistake; and he shrunk into an abashed silence. ”We must do something to retrieve our honor,” continued the chief, earnestly; ”we must--take steps--to to get upon our legs again,” he finished, blus.h.i.+ng with embarra.s.sment.
”I would suggest that we get upon our legs first, and take the steps afterward,” remarked the flippant Ironbeard, with a sly wink at Th.o.r.e the Hound.
The chief held it to be beneath his dignity to notice this interruption, and after having gazed for a while in silence at the blood-red mountain peaks, he continued, more at his ease:
”I propose, comrades, that we go on a bear hunt. Then, when we return with a bear-skin or two, our honor will be all right; no one will dare laugh at us. The brave boy-hunters will be the admiration and pride of the whole valley.”
”But Brummle-Knute,” observed the Skull-Splitter; ”do you think he will allow us to go bear-hunting?”
”What do we care whether he allows us or not?” cried Wolf-in-the-Temple, scornfully; ”he sleeps like a log; and I propose that we tie his hands and feet before we start.”
This suggestion met with enthusiastic approval, and all the boys laughed heartily at the idea of Brumle-Knute waking up and finding himself tied with ropes, like a calf that is carried to market.
”Now, comrades,” commanded the chief, with a flourish of his sword, ”get to bed quickly. I'll call you at four o'clock; we'll then start to chase the monarch of the mountains.”
The Sons of the Vikings scrambled into their bunks with great despatch; and though their beds consisted of pine twigs, covered with a coa.r.s.e sheet, and a bat of straw for a pillow, they fell asleep without rocking, and slept more soundly than if they had rested on silken bolsters filled with eiderdown. Wolf-in-the-Temple was as good as his word, and waked them promptly at four o'clock; and their first task, after having filled their knapsacks with provisions, was to tie Brumle-Knute's hands and feet with the most cunning slip-knots, which would tighten more, the more he struggled to unloose them. Ironbeard, who had served a year before the mast, was the contriver of this daring enterprise; and he did it so cleverly that Brumle-Knute never suspected that his liberty was being interfered with. He snorted a little and rubbed imaginary cobwebs from his face; but soon lapsed again into a deep, snoring unconsciousness.
The faces of the Sons of the Vikings grew very serious as they started out on this dangerous expedition. There was more than one of them who would not have objected to remaining at home, but who feared to incur the charge of cowardice if he opposed the wishes of the rest.
Wolf-in-the-Temple walked at the head of the column, as they hastened with stealthy tread out of the saeter inclosure, and steered their course toward the dense pine forest, the tops of which were visible toward the east, where the mountain sloped toward the valley. He carried his fowling-piece, loaded with shot, in his right hand, and a powder-horn and other equipments for the chase were flung across his shoulder. Erling the Lop-Sided was similarly armed, and Ironbeard, glorying in a real sword, unsheathed it every minute and let it flash in the sun. It was a great consolation to the rest of the Vikings to see these formidable weapons; for they were not wise enough to know that grown-up bears are not killed with shot, and that a fowling-piece is a good deal more dangerous than no weapon at all, in the hands of an inexperienced hunter.
The sun, who had exchanged his flaming robe de nuit for the rosy colors of morning, was now shooting his bright shafts of light across the mountain plain, and cheering the hearts of the Sons of the Vikings. The air was fresh and cool; and it seemed a luxury to breathe it. It entered the lungs in a pure, vivifying stream like an elixir of life, and sent the blood dancing through the veins. It was impossible to mope in such air; and Ironbeard interpreted the general mood when he struck up the tune:
”We wander with joy on the far mountain path, We follow the star that will guide us;”
but before he had finished the third verse, it occurred to the chief that they were bear-hunters, and that it was very unsportsmanlike behavior to sing on the chase. For all that they were all very jolly, throbbing with excitement at the thought of the adventures which they were about to encounter; and concealing a latent spark of fear under an excess of bravado. At the end of an hour's march they had reached the pine forest; and as they were all ravenously hungry they sat down upon the stones, where a clear mountain brook ran down the slope, and unpacked their provisions. Wolf-in-the-Temple had just helped himself, in old Norse fas.h.i.+on, to a slice of smoked ham, having slashed a piece off at random with his knife, when Erling the Lop-Sided observed that that ham had a very curious odor. Everyone had to test its smell; and they all agreed that it did have a singular flavor, though its taste was irreproachable.
”It smells like a menagerie,” said the Skull-Splitter, as he handed it to Th.o.r.e the Hound.
”But the bread and the biscuit smell just the same,” said Th.o.r.e the Hound; ”in fact, it is the air that smells like a menagerie.”
”Boys,” cried Wolf-in-the-Temple, ”do you see that track in the mud?”
”Yes; it is the track of a barefooted man,” suggested the innocent Skull-Splitter.
Ironbeard and Erling the Lop-Sided flung themselves down among the stones and investigated the tracks; and they were no longer in doubt as to where the pungent wild odor came from, which they had attributed to the ham.
”Boys,” said Erling, looking up with an excited face, ”a she-bear with one or two cubs has been here within a few minutes.”
”This is her drinking-place,” said Ironbeard: ”the tracks are many and well-worn; if she hasn't been here this morning, she is sure to come before long.”
”We are in luck indeed,” Wolf-in-the-Temple observed, coolly; ”we needn't go far for our bear. He will be coming for us.”