Part 7 (1/2)
”Tell you what, fellows, our outing is starting with lots of excitement.
Wonder how it is going to end?”
”Perhaps it will end very tamely,” said Whopper, who was in the bow, munching an apple. ”We'll strike several weeks of rain, and not get a shot at anything larger than a rabbit. Then we'll all take cold, and have to send for a doctor, and-----”
”Say, please heave him overboard, somebody!” burst out Giant.
”He's just as cheerful as a funeral. We are going to have nothing but suns.h.i.+ne, and I am going to shoot two bears, four deer, seventeen wildcats, eighteen-----”
”Hold on!” shouted Snap. ”You have gotten into Whopper's story-bag, Giant, and it won't do.”
”Oh, I was fooling!” said Whopper. ”We are going to have a peach of a time. We are going to strike an old lodge in the wood---some an old hermit once lived in---and find a big pot of gold under the-----”
”Bay window, near the well, just across the corner from the barber shop, next to the school,” broke in Shep. ”Say, cut out the fairy tales and get to business. Does anybody know that it is exactly ten minutes to twelve?”
”Codfish and crullers! You don't say so!” came from Whopper. ”I knew I was getting hollow somewhere. What shall we do---go ash.o.r.e and cook dinner?”
”Might as well,” came from Snap. ”Our time's our own, remember.
We haven't got to hurry.”
”I know just the spot, about quarter of a mile from here,” said Shep. ”Our family once went there for a picnic. There's a good spring of water there and a hollow for a fire, and everything.”
”Pantry full of dishes and a tablecloth, I suppose,” broke in the irrepressible Whopper. ”I do love a picnic ground where you can pick napkins off the bushes and toothpicks, too.”
The boys pushed the rowboat on its way and soon reached the spot that Shep had mentioned, and there they tied up at a tree-root sticking out of the river bank. Beyond was a cleared s.p.a.ce and a semi-circle of stones with a pole in two notched posts for a fire and kettle. They soon had a blaze started and Whopper filled the kettle at the spring and hung it to boil.
”This is just a taste of what is to come,” said Snap. ”At this meal we'll have our sandwiches, cake and some hot coffee. It will be different when we broil our deer meat, or something like that, and make hot biscuits.”
”And roast our bear steaks,” put in Whopper. ”Just wait till you see the bear I shoot!”
”He means the bear he runs away from,” said Shep, and this caused a laugh.
As soon as the water was boiling they made coffee, and then all sat around to enjoy their first meal in the open. The adventures of the morning had given them all good appet.i.tes, and they did not stop until the entire allowance had disappeared.
”No more just now,” said Snap. ”We must keep something for supper and for breakfast, you know. After that we have got to live on regular camp fare.”
They lolled around for the best part of an hour, then arose, cleaned up the camp, and started on their journey.
”And now for Lake Cameron!” cried Shep. ”May we reach there without further mishaps.”
CHAPTER VI
A FIRST NIGHT IN CAMP
Lake Cameron was a beautiful sheet of water, connected with the river by a narrow but deep creek lined on either side with thick blackberry and elderberry bushes. Around the lake the scenery was rather wild, and had it been closer to the railroad would have been a great spot for sportsmen. Even as it was, many came up there to hunt and to fish, and the boys were by no means certain that they would have even a small portion of the locality to themselves.
”I am going to see if I can't get a shot at something on the way,”
said Snap, as they turned into the creek. ”There used to be wild turkeys up here, so Jed Sanborn told me.”