CHAPTER XI
THE GUN CLUB
For a few moments after Jack's disappearance into the burning school,the spectators, pupils and teachers hardly knew what to do or say. Thethick volumes of smoke that rolled out, even though they knew the firein the boiler-room was under control, seemed to indicate that theconflagration was raging in some other part of the building.
"Ach! Dot brafe Ranger fellow!" exclaimed Professor Garlach. "He villburned be alretty yet! Ach Himmel! Der school will down burn!"
"So! Sacre!" exclaimed the French professor. "It iss too true, zat whichyou speak. Terrible! terrible!"
"Und dose odder boys! Der flames vill gonsume dem also!" wailed theGerman.
"But ze flags--ze flags of our countries--zey are safe!" exclaimedProfessor Socrat, and at this thought the two former enemies threw theirarms about each other.
Meanwhile, Jack was dashing upstairs.
"I don't see any signs of fire," he said. "I believe it's only smoke,after all."
Up he went to the floor where Dock Snaith and his cronies had theirrooms. The smoke was very thick, but there were no evidences of flame.And as Jack reached the trio, who were still leaning out of the windowand calling for help, he saw that a lighted gasjet, reflecting throughthe clouds of vapor, had made it appear as if there were flames.
"Oh! will no one save us!" cried Snaith. "Fellows, I guess we're goingto die!" and he began to whimper.
"No! no!" yelled Pud Armstrong. "Let's jump!"
"I'm--I'm afraid!" blubbered Snaith.
"Come on!" cried Jack, bursting into the room. "There's no danger. It'sonly smoke. The fire's 'most out."
"Are you--are you sure?" faltered Glen Forker.
"Yes. Come on! It's all down in the boiler-room."
Thus assured, the three bullies, who were the worst kind of cowards,followed Jack through the smoke-filled corridors. When the four appearedthere was a cheer, and Professors Socrat and Garlach embraced each otheragain.
"It's all out!" cried Nat Anderson, running from the boiler-room."Fire's all out!"
He was smoke-begrimed, and his thin clothing was wet through.
"Are you sure there is no more danger?" asked Dr. Mead.
"None at all," answered Nat.
Jack hurried up to join his chum. The snow was changing into rain,mingled with sleet, and it was freezing as it fell.
"Say, if I was you I'd go in," exclaimed a voice at Jack's elbow, and heturned to see a lad standing near him, whose lower jaw was slowly movingup and down, for he was chewing gum.
"Hello, Budge," said Jack. "Where have you been all this while?" ForBudge Rankin, the odd character whom Jack had befriended by getting himthe position of assistant janitor at Washington Hall, was clad inovercoat and cap.
"Me? Oh, I've been in town," answered Budge, stretching some gum out ofhis mouth and beginning to pull it in again by the simple process ofwinding it around his tongue.
"In town?" questioned Nat.
"Yep. 'Smynightoff."
"Oh, it was your night off," repeated Jack, for Budge had a habit ofrunning his words together.
"Yep. Wow! My gum's frozen!" he exclaimed, pausing in the act of tryingto chew it again. "But say," he added, "if the fire's out, you'd bettergo inside. It's cold here."
"You're right; it is," admitted Jack, shivering.
"Here, take my coat," spoke Budge, starting to take it off.
"Indeed, I'll do nothing of the sort," replied Jack. "I'll go in and getwarm."
"I guess that's what we'd all better do," added Nat, for the wintry windwas beginning to make itself felt, now that the exercise in putting outthe fire no longer warmed them.
"Come, young gentlemen, get inside," called Dr. Mead, and the studentsfiled back into the school. The smoke was rapidly clearing away, andafter a tour of the building, to make sure the flames were not lurkingin any unsuspected corners, the pupils were ordered to bed.
Jack and his chums managed to get a little sleep before morning, butwhen our hero awoke, after troubled dreams, he called out:
"Say, Nat, there doesn't seem to be any steam heat in this room."
"There isn't," announced Nat, after feeling of the radiator. "It's ascold as a stone."
"Socker must have let the fire in the boiler get low," went on Jack."Probably he thought the blaze last night was enough. B-r-r-r! Let's getdressed in a hurry and go down where it's warm."
They soon descended to the main dining-room, where to their surprisethey found a number of shivering students and teachers. There was nowarmth in the radiators there, either.
"What's the matter?" asked Jack.
"Ach, Ranger," explained Professor Garlach, "der fire from der boilerhas avay gone, alretty, und dere is no more hot vasser mit vich more canbe made yet. So ve haf der coldness."
"I should say we did," commented Jack. "Can't Socker start a new fireand get up steam?"
"I believe not," said a voice at Jack's side, and he turned to see hisnew friend, Will Williams. "I heard the janitor tell Dr. Mead somethingwas wrong with the boiler. They have gone to look at it."
"I'm going to get my overcoat," spoke Nat, and his example was followedby several others, for the room was very chilly. Presently Dr. Mead camein, followed by Socker.
"Young gentlemen of Washington Hall," began the head of the school, "Iregret to inform you that the fire last night has damaged the boiler insuch a way that it is impossible to get up steam. I have just made aninvestigation, and the boiler will have to have extensive repairs. Itwill take some time to make them, and, I regret to say it, but I willhave to close the school until after the holidays----"
"Hurray!" yelled Nat.
The doctor looked shocked. Then he smiled.
"Such feeling is perhaps natural," he said, "and I would resent it, onlyI know that Nat Anderson is a good pupil, who loves his school, as, Ihope, you all do. But we cannot hold sessions in cold rooms. Now Isuggest that you all retire to the general assembly room. There is alarge fireplace there, and I will have the janitor build a blaze in it.You can at least have a warm breakfast, and discuss future plans."
There was a buzz of excitement at once, and the lads made a rush for theassembly room. There, a little later, somewhat warmed by a big log fire,they ate breakfast. The fire of the night previous, it was learned, hadbeen caused by spontaneous combustion among some oiled rags, and thedamage was only in the boiler-room. There had been no need for the firedepartment from the village, and though Sam had summoned it, the orderhad been countermanded before the apparatus started, so there was nodamage by water to the school. Some smoke-begrimed walls were the onlyevidence in the upper stories of the fire.
"Well," remarked Nat Anderson, as Jack and several of his chums gatheredaround in a warm corner, "no more school for a couple of months, anyhow.Solidified snowballs! but I wonder what we'll do all that time?"
"Go home and rest up," suggested Bony Balmore as he cracked a couple offinger knuckles just to keep in practice.
"Rest! Why, we just had one during the summer vacation, Bony," remarkedFred Kaler.
"Oh, I can use more," said Bony. "What are you going to do, Jack?"
"I'm going hunting and camping," announced Jack quietly.
"Hunting?" questioned Nat.
"Camping?" cried Sam Chalmers.
"Sure," went on Jack. "I've been thinking of it for some time, but Ididn't see any opportunity of doing it. I'm going camping and huntingafter big game out West, and I wish some of you fellows would go along."
"We haven't any guns--that is, such as would do for big game," objectedNat.
"We can get 'em," declared Jack. "I was thinking we fellows who wentcamping before might organize a sort of gun club and take a trip. Nowthat the school is to close, it will give us just the chance we want."
"A gun club," mused Nat. "Say, but that's a fine idea! Petrifiedpedestrians! but we'll call it Jack Ranger's Gun Club! That will be adandy name."
"You'll do nothing of the sort," said Jack quickly.
"It won't be my gunclub any more than it will be yours or Bony's or Sam's."
"But you're organizing it."
"That doesn't make any difference. Every fellow will pay his own way.We'll just call it a gun club."
But, in spite of Jack's objection, when the organization was perfected alittle later, every one thought of it as Jack Ranger's club, even ifthey didn't say so.
"Where could we go hunting?" asked Nat. "There's no big game aroundhere."
"I guess you're right," admitted Jack, "but I know where there is some,and I'm going."
"Where?"
"Out in the Shoshone Mountains, in the 'bad lands' district of Wyoming.There's the finest hunting in the United States."
"Hurrah for the gun club!" cried Nat. "I'm going, too."
"Well, don't leave me behind," pleaded Sam. "I guess you can count mein."
Jack looked around at the eager faces of his chums. Then off in a cornerhe saw the somewhat downcast countenance of the new boy--Will Williams.
"I wonder if he wouldn't like to go, too?" Jack said to himself.