Part 33 (1/2)

_The Doctor Sings_

AS soon as Tom was gone, the Doctor turned to the others and said:

”Come, boys, we must get to work.”

”What have we got to do?” asked Jack.

”Why build the new Camp Venture, to be sure. Don't you understand that we're to stay here perhaps for a month, and must protect ourselves against the spring rains? We must build a shelter before Tom gets back.”

”But, Doctor,” interrupted Harry, ”why should we stay here for a month?”

”Why, don't you understand,” said the Doctor, ”that we have discovered, right here on your mother's land, a coal mine that will certainly make her comfortable all her life and probably make you boys rich. We've got to find out enough about it to enable us to exploit it, and that will take a month at least.”

”But tell us about the coal,” said Jack.

The Doctor replied by singing:

”Old King Coal Was a jolly old soul, And a jolly old soul was he; He called for his pipe and he called for his bowl, And he called for his fiddlers three.

Every fiddler had a fine fiddle And a very fine fiddle had he,

but,” continued the Doctor, ”not a man jack of them would tune up for Old King Coal till little Tom got back, because they had promised Tom not to set the fiddles going in his absence. That's a parable. It gives you fair warning that I'm going to keep my promise to our dearest comrade, Little Tom, and tell you nothing about this or any other coal till he comes back. But I tell you we shall have to stay here for a month at least, and that we need some sort of shelter against the heavy spring rains. So come, Jack, you are our architect. Tell us what sort of house to build.”

Jack thought a few minutes, after which he said:

”We shan't need a house; at this time of year all we need is a shelter, closed in on three sides and open to the fire in front. We can build it of poles and cover it with a thatch of pine branches and other brush thick enough to shed the rain.”

”But if we have only three sides to our house,” said Jim, ”how are we to keep the ends of the poles in place?”

”Oh, that's easy,” said Jack. ”We'll insert short bits of pole between them, with deep notches cut into them; and we needn't c.h.i.n.k or daub at all. We ought to be able to build quite all the shelter we need, to-day and to-morrow, particularly as we are in a thick grove of young trees, just the size that we want for our poles. Get to work, every fellow of you, and cut poles with all your might.”

Just then a thought occurred to Jack, and he took the Doctor aside for consultation.

”Doctor,” he said, ”It occurs to me that this coal mine, if it is a coal mine, is on my mother's land and that therefore it is worth my while and Harry's and Tom's to stay here and work up the possibilities of the case. It is also worth your while, because you are in fact the discoverer of it and my mother will naturally recognize your interest in it, especially as we shall look to you to find capitalists to work the thing.”

”Oh, I'll do that, of course. If I'm right about the mine, I'll have no difficulty in finding plenty of capital. The mine is at exactly the right place, and as to my interest, I'll take care of that when I come to negotiate with the capitalists. I'll see to it that they allow me a proper commission for 'bringing the property to their attention,' as they phrase it. So don't bother about me.”

”No, but I'm bothering about Ed and Jim. If they are to stay here and help us for a month or so, they must be paid in some way.”

”Of course,” answered the Doctor. ”I've been so long thinking of our party as a unit, whose const.i.tuent members 'shared and shared alike,'

that I had not thought of them as persons not interested in this new Camp Venture. Let me think a little!”

He bowed his head upon his hands for a time in meditation. Then he said:

”Of course your mother cannot work this mine herself. It will need at least a hundred thousand dollars of capital to make it productive--perhaps twice that sum. I know enough of the situation to know that I can arrange that without going out of my own family. My father and my brothers will put in the entire sum necessary--for I tell you there is a vastly valuable property here,--and will allow your mother her proper share of the stock for the mine itself. I'll arrange all that to her perfect satisfaction before anything is concluded.

Indeed, I must do that. Otherwise she would naturally make somebody else her agent.”

”Oh, she'll trust you, Doctor,” interrupted Jack.