CHAPTER XI
FACING NEW OBSTACLES
"The first thing to be done," announced the guide, "is to get eithersome pitch pine or some birch bark."
"Ha, ha!" laughed Stacy in a hollow voice. "Easily said."
"I am afraid that is beyond me," declared Tad Butler.
The other boys were of the same mind. Cale directed them to standwhere they were while he made a search for the desired wood. Theycould hear him threshing around in the darkness, the sounds growingfainter and fainter until they were finally lost in the steady patterof the heavy raindrops showering down on them through the foliage.Now and then the raindrops became a deluge as a breeze, stirring thetops of the trees, sent a chilling shower over their shiveringbodies.
"Whoo-ee!" It was the voice of the guide.
"Whoo-ee!" answered Tad.
Cale was seeking for the camp. Tad's voice guided him quickly to it.
"Did you find it?" questioned Butler as the guide strode in.
"I did. I have some choice pine knots here. Wait until I whittlesome fine shavings, then we will have a nice little fire. I've gotsome bark, too. That will answer until we get a light to see what weare about."
"Shall I get out the dog tent?" asked Tad.
"Yes, you might as well, if you can find it."
"I know where to lay my hands on it."
While Tad was occupied with this the other boys stood shiveringagainst the trunks of trees, trying to shelter themselves from thestorm, but without marked success.
A faint light flared up as Vaughn struck a match under his hat, but asudden gust extinguished it.
"Boys, I am not fit to be called a woodsman," grumbled the guide. "Ifailed to fill my match safe before leaving camp this morning."
"I have matches," spoke up Rector.
"In a waterproof case?" asked the guide.
"No, in my pocket."
"No good! They are soaked to a pulp. Master Tad, have you a matchsafe?"
"Yes, sir."
"Good."
"Oh, fudge, I have lost it," groaned Tad. "I am a greenhorn to do athing like that."
"No, it was not your fault that you lost it. It was my fault that Iforgot to fill mine. So you are in the better position of the two,"said Vaughn.
"What are we going to do now?" asked Ned.
"I'm going to stand against this tree until I fall over," declaredStacy. "There will be a dead Pony Rider Boy at the foot of this treein the morning."
"Buck up!" commanded Rector.
"I can't. All the buck is soaked out of me," wailed the fat boy.
"We might as well put up the tent while we are about it," advisedCale. "After that we shall see what can be done."
"Is--is there anything to eat in the packs?" begged Chunky.
"We shall find something," replied Cale cheerfully. "This is nothing,except the provoking part of not having any matches. Got the tent,Master Tad?"
"Yes, sir."
"I will cut a sapling or two for the frame; then we will put the campto rights."
"There are two saplings right here by the ponies that I think willanswer the purpose. Shall I cut them, Mr. Vaughn?" asked Butler.
"No, I will do that."
Tad and the guide worked in the darkness almost to as good purpose asif the hour had been midday. In a short time they had pitched thelittle tent in which the five were to sleep that night. Next theygathered all the spruce and cedar boughs they could lay their handson, shaking the water from the browse as best they could, then pilingthe stuff inside the tent until the little structure was almost fullto the peak.
"Isn't there anything I can do?" asked Ned.
"Not now. Too many at this job would hold the work back," answeredthe guide.
"You have a plan for getting a light?" questioned Butler.
"I am going to try it," answered the guide. "Got anything dry aboutyour person?"
"My throat is the only dry part of me," answered Tad in a hoarse,laughing voice.
"I think I have something dry. That part of my shirt that is underthe tail of my coat I think is fairly dry. I am going to try to showyou a trick worth while," announced the guide.
Cale took a cartridge from his belt. He extracted the bullet withhis teeth, then placed a wad over the powder. Next he ripped a pieceof cloth from the lower part of his shirt, guarding it from the rain,and placing the cartridge in his rifle, he poked the piece of drycloth loosely into the barrel of the gun.
"Don't be scared, boys. I'm going to shoot," warned the guide.
"Wha--what are you going to shoot at?" cried Stacy.
"At you, if you don't keep still," answered the voice of one of theboys, though Chunky did not know which one.
A flash and a report followed. A few seconds later the boys wereamazed to see a glowing ball descending apparently from the tops ofthe tall spruce.
"Good gracious, what is it?" cried Rector.
"That is our light," answered the guide.
"But I don't understand."
"I will explain to you later. I'll warrant Master Tad understands."
"Yes, I know how you did that, Mr. Vaughn. It's a trick worth while,too," answered Butler. "But what are you going to fire with it?"
"You'll see. Will you shield me from the wind with a blanket while Iam starting this fire, Butler?"
Tad kept the blanket in place by standing on two corners, the othertwo corners being gripped in his upraised hands, while the guide,having pared some thin shavings from the pitch pine and made a pileof bark and pine ready for the flame, was blowing on the glowing wadthat he had shot from the gun.
All at once a little flame leaped up from the pine shavings.
"Hooray!" shouted the Pony Rider Boys.
"We don't need matches to build a fire in this outfit," laughed Tad.
"No, we need neither matches nor gunpowder. I can start a fireanywhere, and so can you, Master Tad," returned Cale.
"I shall believe it after this," nodded Tad.
"Now if you will drive a couple of stakes into the ground on thewindward side of the fire, and fasten the blanket up, I think thefire will stay where it is for the rest of the night, unless the windshifts in the meantime. Come, boys, get the packs under the tent.Make yourselves useful unless you are in no hurry for your supper."
This had the desired effect. The boys hustled. Their good humorreturned instantly. Wet as they were--and they could have been nowetter had they jumped into a pond--they forgot all about discomfortin their eagerness to get ready for their late supper. The campfirehad been built close to the front of the tent, whose roof, slopingback away from the fire, caught and deflected the heat down over thebrowse, drying that out very rapidly, filling the little tent withwarmth.
"This is what I call fine," declared Chunky, throwing himself downon the browse.
"Come out of that," commanded Tad. "We are not ready to loaf yet.Bring the saddles in and stow them in the corner. Every man must dohis part now."
Stacy grumbled at this, but obeyed Tad's command, knowing that if hedid not Tad would be after him with a sharp stick. Mr. Vaughn cookedthe supper. There was not a great variety--bacon, biscuit andcoffee, the water for which had been brought from a nearby spring.
"You see," said Cale, while doing the cooking, "how necessary wateris to a camp. Had we not staked down our ponies by the spring herebefore leaving them this forenoon we would be in a fix now andobliged to go to bed supperless. It would have been a thankless taskto look for a spring at this time of the night in the rain. However,I don't need to tell you this. You have been through it before."
"We have," answered Tad. "We have learned the value of water from sadexperience."
"So have I," agreed the fat boy. "I use it for washing every day."
"Come and get it," cried the guide.
They arranged themselves as best they could in the tent, while Calehanded around the supper. There was little conversation for the nextten minutes. The boys were too b
usy.
"After supper we shall have to rustle for firewood," said the guideafter a time.
"I will look after that," offered Tad.
"We will all go out," added Rector.
"No, it isn't necessary for all of us to get wet," answered Tad. "Isuppose the ponies will have to stay out in the wet, but they areused to that. Do we go back to our other camp in the morning, Mr.Vaughn?"
"Yes. One day and night of this, I guess, will be enough for youboys for one time."
"I wouldn't mind a month of it," answered Tad.
"Nor I," agreed Ned.
"Not for me," spoke up Stacy. "I have had enough to last me alifetime already. Next time I remain in camp, bears or no bears.Just think of the Professor snoring away in that nice, comfortabletent. Oh, dear!"
No one gave heed to the fat boy's plaints. They were enjoyingthemselves too thoroughly after their long wet walk. After supperthe boys began to put the camp in shape for the night. Tad cut downa tree, getting a shower of water over him and wetting himself to theskin again. This tree he chopped into proper lengths for a campfirewhile Ned and Walter toted them to camp. The interior of the tentwas thoroughly dried out by this time, so that when they were readyfor bed their bedroom was warm and sweet and dry. They had dried outtheir blankets fairly well, and wrapping up in them the boys settleddown for a night's rest just at midnight. They did not remember everto have had a better night's rest. It seemed as if they had justgone to sleep when they were awakened by Cale.
"Time to get up," he called cheerily. "We will have a quickbreakfast, then you will lead us back to camp, Master Tad."
Packs were quickly lashed after breakfast, and before the sun hadtopped the fronds of the great pines the party was wending its waythrough the trackless forest, Tad leading the way with unerringinstinct, backed by keenest observation.