Part 3 (1/2)

”You can make up your mind I won't give him a chance to grab me,”

a.s.serted b.u.mpus, never dreaming that by accident he would be the very first to feel the force of that curved beak.

”Listen!” exclaimed Step Hen; ”as sure as anything there's another!

Why, this must be what you might call Owl-land.”

From far away in the timber came the plain sound of hooting. All of the scouts knew what it was easily enough, though there had been a time when they were real tenderfeet, and could hardly distinguish between the call of an owl and the braying of a donkey; but camping-out experience had done away with all such ignorance as that.

”There, don't that make you feel foolish, Step Hen?” demanded b.u.mpus.

”Me? Whatever put that silly notion into your head, b.u.mpus?”

”Why,” the other went on to say reproachfully, ”it was you that really wanted to keep the poor old bird; and just listen to its mate mourning for it, would you? I'd think you'd feel so sorry you'd want to unfasten that chain right away, and give the owl its freedom.”

”Not for Joseph, though I'll let you go and undo his chain if you feel inclined that way,” Step Hen observed, knowing full well that b.u.mpus did not want to see the feathered captive set free quite that bad.

”Besides, how d'ye know that's a mate to my bird whooping it up back there?”

”Well, if you want to find out, just you sleep with one eye open,”

b.u.mpus told him; ”and take it from me you'll see that other owl come winnowing around here, wanting to know why our new pet don't come when she calls.”

”Huh! mebbe I will,”' was all Step Hen would say about it; but evidently the idea had appealed to him; and there was a chance that he would indulge in very little rest that night, for trying to ”keep one eye open while he slept.”

After supper was all over, and the boys lay around on their blankets, they fell to talking of other days when they had been in company, and met with a great many, surprising adventures.

Then b.u.mpus, who really had a very fine tenor voice, which he could strain so as to sing soprano like a bird, was coaxed to favor them with a number of selections, the others coming in heavy in each chorus.

Sometimes it was a popular ballad of the day that b.u.mpus gave them; but more often a school chorus, or it might be some tender Scotch song like ”Comin' Through the Rye,” ”Annie Laurie,” or ”Twickenham Ferry;” for boys can appreciate such sentiments more than most folks believe; and especially when in an open air camp, with the breeze sighing through the trees around them, or the waves murmuring as they wash the sandy sh.o.r.e of a lake, and the moonlight throwing a magical spell upon all their surroundings; for there is the seed of romance in the heart of nearly every healthy lad.

So the evening wore on until some of them began to yawn frequently, showing that they were ready to turn in. As one of them had said, this might be the last time they would camp ash.o.r.e during trip, because on the morrow they antic.i.p.ated, unless something unforeseen came up to prevent it, going aboard their boat, and starting on the cruise upon the big waters of Superior.

They had no tent on this occasion, but really that was not going to prove any hards.h.i.+p to these bold lads, accustomed to spending many a night in the woods, with only a blanket for a cover against the dew and frost.

It was arranged to keep the fire going. This would serve in a double capacity, for not only would they be kept warm through the cold part of the night, but if there did happen to be any wild beasts around in that section of the Lake Superior country, which both Allan and Thad rather doubted, why, the glow of the blaze was apt to make them keep their distance.

The last thing Giraffe remembered, as his heavy eyes persisted in closing, was seeing Step Hen bob up his head to stare over toward the low branch upon which the captive owl was fastened; as though he might have arranged a program with himself and meant to do this thing at stated intervals all through the night.

Giraffe chuckled at the idea of sacrificing good sleep in the interest of knowledge; he was willing to simply ask some one who knew, and be satisfied to accept their answer as conclusive.

An hour later and the camp seemed to be all quiet, for every one was apparently sound asleep. Even Thad and Allan had known of no reason why a watch should be maintained, for they felt sure there could hardly be a human being within miles of the camp; and even if this were not so, the chances were strongly in favor of its proving to be an honest farmer, or some miner on his way to the workings further west.

The only sounds that could have been heard from time to time were an occasional peevish fretful croak from the captive owl, as it continued to peck savagely at the chain around its leg; or it might be a snore from b.u.mpus, or some other fellow who had a fas.h.i.+on of lying squarely on his back.

Perhaps pretty soon, when one of the scouts had been kept awake by this noise until patience ceased to be a virtue, he would get quietly up, and pour a tin-cup of lake water over the one who persisted in sleeping with his mouth wide open; for that sort of radical remedy had proven effective on other occasions, and brought relief.

It must have been almost midnight when a sudden change came about that took even the seasoned campers by surprise, for they had not been antic.i.p.ating any such startling event.

The stillness was broken by a piercing scream that caused every head to bob up, and the blankets to be hurriedly thrown aside.