Part 6 (1/2)
”Come here with me; I believe I see him, all right,” remarked the other.
”Follow my finger now; notice that thing moving up yonder in that little old tree? Now it kicks like all get out. You'd think a fellow had gone up there to take lessons in swimming. Well, that's _him_!”
”Who?” demanded the other, imperatively.
”A fellow by the name of Tobias Ellsworth Jones, known among the boys by the more familiar name of just plain Toby,” chuckled Elmer.
”Wow, now I'm beginning to get on, Elmer!” exclaimed the tall boy, excitedly.
”You remember Toby is just crazy to fly like the Wrights and all the other bird men who sail through the air in their aeroplanes?”
”Sure he is,” commented Lil Artha; ”haven't I heard him tell about what wonderful things he was goin' to do some day, to make the name of Jones famous? Say, honest, now, I believe you've hit her right, Elmer. Toby _has_ been trying it out! And that big flapping thing up yonder in the tree top must be his wonderful parachute he's been talking about this long while. Say, I believe the silly must have dropped off Echo Cliff!”
”That's what he did,” remarked Elmer, ”and instead of lighting in that nice little open place, as he meant to, the wind just carried him into the top of a tree!”
”And he's caught up there right now--caught by his trousers seat mebbe, and kicking to beat the band. I don't wonder he grunts and groans and talks to himself. Now what d'ye think of that for a loon? Why, he might have broken his leg if he had fallen on those stones! What're we going to do about it, Elmer?”
As usual Lil Artha was only too willing to have his companion take the lead in suggesting action. Some boys seem to be just fitted to occupy the position of guide, and their mates soon come to rely on them exclusively. Elmer occupied that position, and so Lil Artha looked to him in this emergency.
”Why, we've got to get him down out of there, that's flat,” returned Elmer. ”He's our comrade; and scouts must always help their fellows, or anybody else, for that matter, when in distress. Let's move on a little farther and give him the high sign.”
All this talking had been carried on in such low tones that the sound of their voices could hardly have reached the ears of the ambitious aviator, who was caught in the tree, fully thirty feet from the ground, unable to break away, and confronted by a nasty drop if he did succeed in separating his garments from the branch that had gripped him.
They could now see that what Elmer had suggested was indeed the truth. A boy was flapping at a great rate, his arms and legs going at the same time, as he tried his best to squirm around so as to get at the seat of the trouble, but apparently without success.
After each tiresome struggle he would give vent to a new series of those queer grunts and sighs, and then do some more talking to himself.
Above him, and just barely caught on the tree top, was a strange affair that had somewhat the appearance of a big umbrella, made out of canvas or muslin. A number of holes had been punched through the parachute by its descent through the branches, so that taken altogether, the brave would-be aviator and his apparatus seemed just then to be in a state of collapse.
Elmer waited until the squirming had ceased, with one last groan as of despair. Then he gave the signal of the Wolf Patrol, as only one who had actually heard the long-drawn howl of the timber wolf in the darkness of a Canadian Northwest night could imitate it.
Evidently the sound stirred Toby to new life, for his movements began again. He tried to make an answering signal, but the sound was more like the bleat of a lost calf than anything else. However, it answered its purpose, which was to let the comrade below, who had come to the rescue, understand that his presence was known.
”h.e.l.lo! up there, what are you doing to that tree?” called Lil Artha, who could not keep from trying to extract some fun out of the situation for all its gravity.
”Better ask the tree what it's adoin' to me!” wailed Toby, who had managed to whip himself around so that he could now catch a glimpse of the boys below. ”Hey, Elmer, and you, Lil Artha, get me down out of this first and have your fun afterward! I'm as dizzy as an owl in daytime, and if my pants give way I'm going to squash flat! Come up here and grab me, can't you? Tell you all about it later on. What I want now is sympathy and brotherly kindness, don't you see?”
CHAPTER VI.
A QUESTION OF A SCOUT'S DUTY.
”HE'S right,” said Elmer, energetically, as he prepared to climb the particular tree that bore such strange fruit. ”Toby's hung there so long that all the blood's just going to his head. Come along, Lil Artha; drop that pack and follow me up there. We can rescue him, all right, if we're smart.”
They went up among the branches like a couple of monkeys, both being good climbers. And presently they were close to where poor Toby was dangling, watching their movements feverishly. His face was very red, and he did not look very comfortable as he swung there, without any hold above or below.
Lil Artha was immediately reminded of the stirring piece which he had himself recited in school more than once--about the captain's little boy on board a s.h.i.+p in a harbor, who daringly climbed to the very top of the mainmast and stood up on the main truck--”no hold had he above, below; no aid could reach him there!”
In that case the captain had shouted to the boy to jump far out, so that he might strike the water, and they would pick him up, which in the end the little fellow did, and was saved; but the same advice would not apply with regard to poor Toby, for he could not jump no matter how much he wished to, and it was hard ground below and not soft water.
But Elmer sized the situation up as soon as he arrived. He saw that by good luck the branch that held Toby up was a solid one, and would bear considerable weight, so that it was safe to crawl out on it.