§ iNThe t- Lothf^op Pub l 151 B05T01J SECONH °.OPY, I8'a9. ' LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. Chap..„_S* Copyright Xo. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from The Library of Congress http://www.archive.org/details/americanboysinarOOfren AMERICAN BOYS IN THE ARCTICS A TRIP TO THE FAR NORTH BY A NEIV PATH BY / HARRY W. FRENCH AUTHOR OF '< OUR BOYS IN INDIA " " OUR BOYS IN CHINA " " OUR BOYS IN IRELAND " ETC. \ FULLY ILLUSTRATED BOSTON LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY 29804 Copyright, 1899, BY LOTHROP PUBLISHING COMPANY. '"WO COPIi.v, ,^U..lVED. m 1 2 1899 ''(So, -Corfoooti }3rcss : Berwick & Smith, Norwood, Mass., U.S.A. AMERICAN BOYS IN THE ARCTICS CHAPTER I. A STRANGE DISCOVERY. "^^7"ELL, what do you make out?" Captain Downing called V V impatiently, to a man with a glass, clinging to the weather rigging, a little below the masthead, on the brig Louise. " It's a steamer's boat, sir," the man replied. " I can't get the name. There's the likes of an oar run up for'ard, with a bit of a rag on the end of it. It's a signal of distress, sure, sir ; but I can't make out any sign of life aboard." "All right; that'll do," called the captain. To himself he muttered, " I suppose we'll have to overhaul her " — much as if it were a duty he would shirk at that moment if he could. Then aloud, he added, " Port your helm; put about and run her down." The stanch fishing brig Louise, lying off the Newfoundland Banks during a gale of wind, hove to, came about, took the wind, and dashed away toward the flag of distress that was drifting in the heavy sea. As the sailors were prepared to lower a boat the captain called for a volunteer crew to man it, and Scott Campbell and Royal Sargent, two stalwart boys of seventeen, were the first to fall into line. They came from the same town as Captain Israel Downing. He had known them from the cradle. They had sailed with him since they first trod the deck, and he was ready to trust them anywhere 9 J IO A STRANGE DISCOVERY. They were orphan boys whose fathers had died at sea, and were only related by ties of the warmest, life-long friendship, but hand in hand they had gone to school, and now they were fighting their way together, into that same field of hardship and adventure where their fathers and their grandfathers had lived and fought and died. The boat was lowered. Four sailors pulled the oars, another stood in the prow, and the second mate held the tiller rope. They had hardly touched the water when the word was given and they pulled away for the drifting boat tossing to and fro in its mute appeal for sympathy. It was a fair-sized row boat. They could easily make out an oar, thrust into the mast-hole forward, made fast with an end of rope, bearing some poor fellow's shirt, swinging as the boat swung on the heavy sea, waving, still, the flag of distress, for some unfortunate human being. Loose ends of rope hung over the side, lapping the water as the boat tossed about, but even now there was no sign of life. " Stand by with the boat-hook, Mike," the mate said solemnly. " Aye, aye, sir," replied the man in the prow, in the same low voice, for distress at sea touches every sailor's heart. It was a moment of intense excitement for Scott and Roy. They had never before been so near to the reality of suffering, though from their earliest cradle songs to the latest sailor's yarn, their lives had been filled with the romance of distress. Sitting with their backs to the boat they could not see it, and they were too well drilled to look over their shoulders while pulling an oar. They heard Mike's boat-hook as it caught the drifting boat, however, and a moment later it came alongside. They rested on their oars and all eyes were fixed upon the boat, but no one spoke, for there in the bottom lay three dead bodies, and stretched across them the body of a man who evidently was still alive, though entirely unconscious. The mate leaned over him for a moment; then taking the boat in tow they returned as quickly as possible to the brig. The Louise returned to the Banks and the fishing continued. One gang would fish all day with lines or seines and another, on board the brig, was kept busy cleaning the fish ; dumping the livers into great tanks prepared for the purpose on the deck, scraping the bodies and throwing them down into the hold, where they were packed in salt to keep them till they came to port, where they could be dried. &£*& ,« ; ' ,«»$ :'*• m. ki it 1 i \ A STRANGE DISCOVERY. 13 Down in the cabin the rescued man lay between life and death. He had recovered consciousness, but there was little hope that he could live. One afternoon Scott was on duty watching the gauge. It was in a sort of bulkhead, directly under the cabin where the sick man lay, and in fair weather, for light and ventilation a hatch was removed, under the bunk, leaving only a wooden grating in the floor. From his position just under this grating Scott could not avoid hear- ing every word that was spoken in the cabin, and while he watched the CLEANING THE COD. gauge the poor fellow above him told a story to the captain thac at once became so intensely interesting to Scott that he could not have forced himself to lose a single word, even if he had realized that he was over- hearing what was not intended for him. The man said he was an officer sent from Russia to find a family named Lester. Seventeen years before a man, James Lester, officer on an American vessel, while at Sebastopol married the daughter of a 14 A STRANGE DISCOVERY. wealthy Russian, against her father's will. He disowned her, and she sailed for America with her husband. A year later a daughter was born and the husband died. Nothing further was known. In the mean- time the Russian father's remaining child had died, and recently upon CODFISHING. his own deathbed he willed his immense fortune to this sranddauo-hter. Supplied with the necessary papers, the officer had come to find the girl, to take her to Russia to prove her identity and receive her property. The steamer upon which he sailed was burned at sea, and with the other unfortunates in the rescued boat he had made a struggle for life. Captain Downing took the papers, promising to keep them safely, and carry him at once to the person whom he sought. Then all was still in the cabin and Scott sat watching the srauo-e and thinking;. It was one of those strange coincidences where the driftwood on Life's ocean is driven right where it is required. Not far from the house which sheltered Scott when he was on shore, in the bleak little sea-beaten village, there lived a widow, Mrs. James Lester, with an only daughter, Vera, sixteen years old. Scott well remembered being told that she was named for her grandmother, who was a Russian. And A STRANGE DISCOVERY. 15 now, unless he was dreaming — and he was as sure as sure could be that he was not — Vera Lester was to receive an immense fortune. In the timid, modest fashion of the wild coast Scott thought of Vera as the prettiest, the sweetest, the dearest girl in all the world, and Vera as she wandered among the pines and white birches growing on the bluff, accompanied by an old and almost blind Siberian hound, would stand looking away over the water, surging in angry waves, or glistening and flashing in the sun, thinking of that same strong, handsome sailor-boy. Now it suddenly occurred to him that if Vera should go to Russia, to be a great lady, she would never care what might become of him. PACKING THE CODFISH. Scott was glad for Vera, however, and the moment he was relieved he hastened to tell Roy all that he had overheard. Captain Downing's wife was dead and his only child, Louise, for whom the brig was named, lived with her grandmother, in one of 16 4 STRANGE DISCOVERY. the largest houses in the village. Roy thought as much of her as Scott thought of Vera, and the four had always been the best of friends. Captain Downing was a stern officer, and the boys did not venture to tell him what they knew; but Roy as he sat by his bunk mending a torn chaser, and Scott as he clung to his favorite retreat in the rigging, when off duty, sure that he was studying navigation with all his might, kept constantly revolv- ing the matter in their minds, feeling as happy, for Vera, as though the immense fortune were falling to themselves. A few days later the stranger died, and with the limited pos- sibilities of the brig was buried off the coast of Newfoundland. The event cast a sfloom over the superstitious sailors. Bad weather set in and luck seemed entirely to have left them, so that every one was glad when the cap- tain set sail for home, saying that he would sell out the catch as it was and return in time for another haul, if fort- une favored him. Vera and Louise were glad to have the boys at home again, even for a few days, for it is dull enough in such a village when all the men are on the sea. They put on their best clothes, and Scott and Roy dressed as though they never had been sailors, and with games and picnics the days flew swiftly that had dragged so slowly before. But the boys had a burden upon their minds that, from being a pleasure at first, became a tormenting pain with long keeping. Day after day they waited and wondered why Captain Downing did not tell the good news to Mrs. Lester, when they would tell the girls how they had known it all the time. One afternoon Roy borrowed a boat of one of the neighbors, and while the skipper lay smoking in the prow, he and Louise sailed up and down the bay. ROYAL SAR VKRA LOOKING OUT TO SEA. A STRANG E DISCOVERY. 19 Had it not been for the presence of the skipper, Roy thought what a glorious opportunity to have whispered the secret to Louise ; and he lived to regret very bitterly that he let the opportunity slip away. He even opened his mouth to speak, but noticing that the skipper was watching him he said nothing. "To-morrow I will tell her," he thought, forgetting that "to-morrow" is a day that never comes ; and many a thrilling adventure and thousands of miles of space inter- vened between that hour and the next time when he was able to speak to the little girl beside him. Not long after daylight the next morning, while Roy was still dreaming of floating about some- where, with Louise, Scott burst into his room and catching him up by the shoulder, cried: " Roy ! Roy ! wake up ! Cap- tain Downing has sailed with a cargo of salt and provisions and taken Louise with him ! " " Great Scott !" exclaimed Roy, sitting up in bed and rubbing his eyes. " Scott Campbell, if you're yarning" — " I'm not yarning, this weather, Roy. There's too big a sea on for me to set that sail. I tell you the brig has been gone three hours and more. Louise's grandmother came over to see if I was aboard. She's scared to death. She says Captain Downing came home about midnight last night, and said he was going to start for the Banks on the night-tide and take Louise with him, and he did, in spite of the old lady." " Have they really gone? " asked Roy. " What in the world have I been telling you ? " cried Scott. " Gone without telling Mrs. Lester? " " Yes ; and it looks to me like ugly business." SCOTT CAMPBELL. 20 A STRANGE DISCOVERY. " How?" "Why, it's this way. You know he didn't dream that any one knew of it but himself and that dead man. He has been at home ten days without saying a word to a living soul about it. Now he's off again be- tween two days, and nobody knew he was going. It's the first time since we could haul a rope that he hasn't taken us with him. He's taken a crew of only eight men and all strangers from the craft that came in with a leak last night. He took Louise out of bed, without her knowing any- THE DAYS ON SHORE. thing about it, and carried her down to the brig. That's a queer kind of crew and cargo for codfishinp- on the Banks." " If he hasn't gone daft, what in the name of wonder is he up to ? " Roy asked deliberately. " Do you want me to tell you what I think ? " said Scott, stuffing his hands hard into his pockets and leaning back against the wall. A STRANGE DISCOVERY. 21 " 'Course I do, Scott. Fire away. I guess I'm wide enough awake to understand." " Do you suppose he could take Louise over there to Russia and make folks think she was Vera, and get that money ? " " I more think he's gone stark mad," said Roy, deliberately clasping his hands about one bare knee, for he was much calmer by nature than THE SKIPPER WAS WATCHING HIM. Scott. " In the first place, salt would be a mighty poor cargo to take to Russia, unless he did it for a blind. I reckon he's very short for ready money, too, and I don't believe he could go far away from his brig if he had to pay his own expenses ; and when all's said and done he's not in Russia yet, by a very large majority, even if he's headed that way, and it's Louise he's got with him and not Vera. If he does go there, and tries to make that girl pretend she's some one else, and cheat another girl, he'll find he's everlastingly out of his reckoning, every day of the week, or I don't know Louise Downing." Then, very deliberately, Roy began to dress. There was evidently something wrong, however, and the boys at once consulted Mrs. Lester. CHAPTER II. REMARKABLE DEVELOPMENTS. THE result of the interview was perplexing. Mrs. Lester admitted the truth of the story of her life, which no one in America knew, as her husband died shortly after Vera was born, leaving her only the low-roofed cottage which she had never seen, the Siberian hound which she had taken with her, a little puppy from her home, and the baby Vera. In circumstances so changed she had preferred to remain unknown. She could not find a box of jewels which she had always carefully treasured, which she brought from home, nor could she find her marriage certifi- cate, but she refused to believe anything wrong of her neighbor Captain Downing, and requested the boys to let the matter drop. She even made them promise not to speak of it to any one, but they went away more convinced than ever that they were right, and that Captain Down- ing was wrong. " Scott," said Roy, " we haven't much to work with, but we've got our hands and feet and heads, and maybe we can accomplish something by ourselves. If he's gone mad, Louise is in bad weather and ought to have help. If he's cheating, Vera will suffer if we don't lend a hand. But we want to get our bearings before we set our helm. Suppose you cruise round town and find out all you can, and I'll borrow Dick Rhodes' fishing boat, stock her for two or three days, and see if I can overhaul anything coming from toward the Banks that may have sighted the Lottise." REMARKABLE DE VEL OPMENTS. 23 " I'll do it," said Scott, and grasping Roy's hand for a moment, turned to his new work as a sort of detective, with a success that thoroughly alarmed him, while Roy went out to sea. He found that the moment the brig reached the wharf, Captain Downing disposed of his cargo for cash ; that he purchased a cargo of salt and large stock of provisions on credit, saying he had promised to carry supplies to several of the bankers that were running short ; that he had mortgaged his house and farm for all that he could raise, and had even mortgaged the brig. By accident, Scott also learned that he had procured many sworn statements concerning Vera and her mother, and other incidents which left no doubt as to what his intentions were. The barometer had been steadily falling while he worked, and the wind and sea were rising. Scott sleDt but little the second night. He was too anxious about Roy. He wished him safe on shore again. The third morning the barometer was lower than ever, and such a tempest was howling along the coast as had never been known by the oldest dwellers by the sea. Dense fog was hurled in heavy clouds from the ocean, completely engulfing the little town. The wind roared in a furious hurricane and KOY BEGINS HIS SEARCH. the wild waves dashed over the stone pier, hurled themselves fiercely among the ragged ledges on either side and even flung their salt spray defiantly against the doors and windows of the nearest cottages. Scott was out with the earliest daylight, clad in his oil coat and hat, looking for Roy. Laboriously he made his way along the pier where a few of the villagers kept him company ; such as had a father, husband, 24 REMARKABLE DEVELOPMENTS. brother or son on some of the nearer fishing grounds. It was a sad and anxious company, and Scott was sad and anxious, too.' He knew that Roy could handle a boat as well as any one on the coast, but he had gone into deep water with a frail craft. Scott shuddered as he looked out over the foaming sea and muttered between his teeth : " No yacht THE LITTLE HARBOR LEDGE IN FAIR WEATHER. that floats, with the best sailor who ever hauled a rope, could weather this gale an hour. If Rov has not found shelter he is lost." As the day wore on the storm increased, and a larger company of anxious watchers gathered on the pier. Few words were spoken, and the answers were few and short. It was impossible to hear above the roar of the tempest unless one shouted, and there was little to say that was important enough for that. When a wave rose fiercer and higher than the rest and dashed itself over the pier and about their feet, and the wind hurled its burden of blinding spray into their faces and lashed the protruding abutments of the wharf, a groan rose from that solemn com- pany, coming from the depths of every heart that was beating there. Suddenly that silent crowd was roused to the most intense excite- ment, and the cold blood was sent throbbing through their veins. The boom of a cannon sounded. The last cry for help, from some ship in distress. It was close at hand ! It shook the pier! The people, all life and earnestness now, pressed out to the end of the wharf, regardless of the breakers dashing toward them and often gurgling about their feet. The rain was falling in torrents now, cutting away the fog, and a moment later, as another peal thundered its call for help, a huge black outline could be faintly seen, floundering and rolling helplessly among RUSHING TO THE WEATHER RIGGING. REMARKABLE DE VEL OPMENTS. 2 7 the waves, plunging onward before the gale toward a ragged ledge, upon the other side of the wharf, which in fair weather formed a breakwater to protect the little harbor, but to-day meant inevitable death to anything approaching it. In fifteen minutes that vessel would be drifting past the wharf, not five hundred feet away. In half an hour it would be dashed to pieces upon that ledge. Could nothing be done to save it? Brave men looked helplessly at each other. Lives! human lives! Fathers! brothers! sons! Women and chil- A HUGE, BLACK OUTLINE. dren, too, perhaps, were there. Should they stand still and see them drift to destruction before their very eyes ? One boat was on the pier. It could not live a moment in that sea, but in the agony of their desire the men and women seized it, and pushed it into the water. The first wave dashed it against the stonework, the next splintered it from stem to stern, and the third, with a mocking roar, threw the pieces back again upon the pier. 28 REMARKABL E DE VEL OPMENTS. Once more the men looked at each other, and the women clung to their helpless arms as another boom came from the drifting wreck. Only one mortal moved upon the pier. He came running from the storehouse with a huge coil of small rope slung over his shoulder. He threw it down, quick as thought tore off his clothes, thrust his arms through 'a loop in the rope so that the end was held fast behind his head, and stood, for one instant, looking calmly down into a great gully, glisten- ing and black, between two monstrous waves, upon the lee side of the stone pier. Then he turned to an old sailor who stood nearest him and shouted : " Pay her out, steady and free! Have a cable ready for the end if I get there, and tell Roy Sargent where I went if I don't come back." The sailor's hand was stretched out to restrain him from such madness, but he saw it coming-, and with one bound sprang into the angry breakers, as far as possible from the pier. The old sailor caught up the rope and paid it out, inch by inch, but his bronzed face was white and his strong hands trembled. Wave after wave mounted the wharf and curled about his feet, but he did not notice them. The wind shrieked and the rain poured in torrents in his face, but his eyes never left the rope for one instant. Now it drifted back a lit- tle on an incoming wave, and with a shudder he drew it in. Then it would glide out again, and with a sigh he aided it to slip freely through his fingers. " Has some one gone ? " ' Is some one swimming for the wreck ? " "PAY HER OUT, STKADY AND FREE!' REMARKABLE DEVELOPMENTS. 29 " Swimming in that sea ? " " Who is it ? " " Who has dared ? " came in gasps from pale lips, as trembling figures crowded again to the end of the pier, or stood shuddering and shaking their heads about the old sailor, whose only reply was : " Scott Campbell is swimming to the wreck," and one and another, as the word passed from lip to lip, muttered : "God help him!" For an instant some one would catch a glimpse of brown hair or a white arm as the boy rose on a smaller wave, and eagerly point- ing it out the crowd would try to cheer; but the cheer died in a groan as the next great wave swept over it, and their hearts stood still lest the boy should never live to come out on the other side. Thus eleven minutes passed that seemed like a lifetime, and the old sailor still paid out. The black hulk, rolling, floundering, plunging on, was almost abreast the wharf. Those who had brought glasses with them would hastily wipe the salt spray from the lens and for a moment catch a glimpse of sailors clutching the weather rigging, clinging to rope ladders, climbing higher and higher in a desperate struggle to get away from the surging breakers which swept the deck below. They had fired their last signal. They had given themselves up. Twelve minutes ! Where was that atom of white among the breakers? Trembling hands passed glasses from one to another. No one could find it. It seemed an hour since they had seen it last. Had Scott Campbell given up? Was he gone! gone ! gone! Or if he were still struggling, might they not drift past him without seeing the boy who was fighting with those angry waves to save them ? Thirteen minutes ! The old sailor was upon his knees, on the very edge of the pier, bending anxiously forward, regardless of the tempest, of the excitement about him, of the waves that sometimes half-covered him. He held the rope between his thumb and finger as though it were a thread of glass. His breath came short and sharp. His eyes were riveted upon that line as it rose and fell, floating upon each incoming THE ULI) SAILOR- 3o REMARKABLE DEVELOPMENTS. wave. It faltered. His brow contracted. It fell back with the next wave. With a sharp cringe he drew it in a little that it might not be fouled upon the pier. It rested there a moment. The old sailor did not breathe. It fell back again. With a groan he let his hands drop and the rope drift. What was that ? It made a sharp dart forward ! It slipped from his fingers ! He started, caught it in his hand, stared for an instant, then sprang to his feet, and in a voice that sounded clear and shrill above the tempest, he shouted : " Glory to God ! Stand by with the cable ! Scott Campbell has reached the wreck ! " CHAPTER III. A WILL AND A WAY. WHEN the sun rose the next morning, the stormy clouds were drifting away from it and the waves were wearing themselves out. The great hull, black and bare, swept clean above the deck, from stem to stern had been hauled up as far as possible, stranded and made fast by strong cables, with the cargo still intact, and every soul on board safely transported to the shore ; while boisterous sea-gulls, hundreds of them, filled the air, diving and splashing in the water about the wreck, having a grand and noisy feast to welcome the returning sunshine. The family of the owner of the vessel and cargo, a wealthy ship- owner, were on board the wreck. He had been telegraphed for and arrived in the afternoon. He sent at once for Scott, who found him sit- ting upon an iron bench by the door of the house where his family had taken refuge. " Young man," he exclaimed, grasping Scott's hand — then he stopped and for a moment was unable to speak. At last he continued: " I have a very valuable cargo down in that hold, and my wife and children were on board for a summer holiday. I watched them sailing away, little thinking of this end. You saved me a great deal of money, but infinitely more you saved to me the lives of my wife and children. I can never repay you, but I beg you to let me hand you this. It is nothing. I shall try and do something more for you if I can find the opportunity." He put an envelope into Scott's hand and added, with tears in his eyes, " Be 3' 3 2 A WILL AND A WAY. as generous as you were brave, my boy. Do not think it is given you as pay for your noble deed and scorn it as such, but for my sake make use of it, and let me know whenever I can be of service to you." At that moment Roy came running down the road. He cleared the ' I WATCHED THEM SAILING AWAY.' fence at a bound. Scott stuffed the envelope into his pocket and in a moment forgot all about it as he clasped Roy in his arms. The shipowner looked on in kindly admiration as Roy exclaimed: " I've just heard all about it, Scott. What a hero you are ! I always knew you were just the fellow who could do it ; but there's not another man upon the coast who could." " Or who would have dared to try," added the shipowner, eagerly. " Let up on that, now, Roy," Scott exclaimed impatiently, and very much embarrassed. '' You have doubtless heard a great deal too much about me, but I've had no chance to hear a word about you. You'd have done better than I in the same place. You always do ; but go ahead now, and tell me where you've kept yourself " THE STRANDED HULL. A WILL AND A WAY. 35 " There's an account in print that blows my horn for me," said Roy, laughing and handing Scott a newspaper. " Of course it's much better than I deserve, but I never thought of being ashamed. In fact, I was rather proud of it. I was going to show it to you with a tremendous nourish, till I got in on the afternoon stage, and heard how far ahead of me you were, and that kind of took the wind out of my sails, I tell you." " Let up, I say ! " Scott exclaimed sharply, glancing from the news- paper. " Now go ahead and tell me where you have been." Roy threw himself carelessly upon the bench and replied, in his old, deliberate way : " Well, I was aboard Dick's boat till she was stove to smithereens. Then I was on a steamer. Can you believe it, I've walked the bridge as pilot and been paid for it, too, so I have. I was off Eagle Ledge when the storm struck in — by the way, the Louise " WHEN THE STORM STRUCK IN. did go to the Banks, but I'm pretty sure she didn't stop there. It's my opinion sbx 5 i:eok her cargo of salt to St. John's for a blind; but I'll tell you : I ran into the cove and pulled up on the rocks to wait till I could run home. You know there's a steam foe horn on the ledge and a bell buoy off the point. The fog shut down with a steamer in sight and a sail near to. Well, the bell buoy broke 36 A WILL AND A WAY. loose the first thing and drifted on to the rocks, half a mile above me. Then something silenced the fog horn. In the very worst of the storm it stopped working. All of a sudden I heard the steam- er's fog whistle, off to windward ; it was blowing and slashing like mad, and I thought if that steamer was I „ %fc hunting for the buoy and fog horn > ^ J jt f^aTgjS" she was more than likely to run her nose right into the rocks. By good luck I got mv boat into the water, between two waves, flung out sail enough to catch a hatful of the gale, and let her go for the steamer's whistle. In ten minutes I was in sight of her. Jehu ! but she was an ocean steamer, drifting like mad dead on to the ledge. I yelled, but they couldn't hear me. They saw something was wrong, however, and lay to, and stopped her. They threw me_ a line, but it was no use. I saw I'd got to get on board, some way, to make them understand, for the wind alone was carrying them four or five knots an hour, so I worked round to windward, went broadside on, and when a wave slung me up against her I jumped for all I was worth. I went clean over and landed, sprawled out at full length on the deck, in a foot or more of salt water. It didn't take me long to give the captain his points, you bet. " ' Do you know this coast ? ' he shouted. " ' Every inch of it, sir,' I yelled. " ' Where's Sheep Island ? ' he asked, and a half-dozen other points in the same way, and I gave them to him quick as I could breathe. "' Come up on the bridge,' he said, by way of winding up, and there was nothing for me but to obey, for you see Dick's boat was smashed and o-one adrift. All my stores were at the bottom of the sea, and I had no money to pay my fare, so 'twas either work my passage or be put ashore to walk home. I worked it, I tell you. Oh! but it's fun being pilot, if you only had time enough to appreciate it. Coffee, soup, every THE BELL BUOY. n A WILL AND A WAY. 39 thing, all served on the bridge, and everybody, from the captain down, dancing about to make you comfortable. The trouble is, that the thought that you've got a big steamer on your hands in a roaring hurri- cane, is worse than the gale in your face for taking your wind away, and I didn't think of anything but rocks until I was on shore again. It was a little after dark when we sighted the island light, just as I said we should, and as the steamer was leaking badly, the captain ran into port. He wanted me to stay aboard till he heard from the Company, but I told him if he'd give me enough to pay Dick for his boat and buy a ticket home on the cars, I'd like to be le said fee be- side, and insisted on my taking a roll of bills, and before I got away the passengers crowded round and stuffed another roll into my pocket. I was so confused I didn't know what to do, and when I was safely on board the cars, and counted it up, what do you think ? There was over seven hun- dred dollars ! How's that for a starter toward following the brig Louise? It was a great deal more than I deserved, of course, but as we passed "I JUMPED FOR ALL I WAS WORTH.' 40 A WILL AND A WAY. the light, there lay a big ship, with sails still set, high and dry upon the rocks, and I suppose the steamer folks thought they were better off out of such a predicament, even if it did cost them something." The shipowner said good-by as he was leaving with his family, earnestly thanking Scott again, and urging him to call upon him when- ever he could be of service, and the boys wandered down to the coast, still talking over their adventures, when Scott suddenly thought of the " WE SIGHTED THE LIGHT." envelope in his pocket. He broke the seal, and the two boys sat in blank astonishment, staring at the contents. It was a check, payable to Scott Campbell, for ten thousand dollars. Scott's first thought was to return it, but he remembered the tears in the donor's eyes when he asked him to be as generous as he had been brave, and turning to Roy he said earnestly : " It is a gift from God, to use in securing Vera Lester's rights. If you are with me, Roy, we'll fit out the best boat we can get, and the largest A WILL AND A WAY. 41 we can handle, and we'll follow Captain Downing to the end of the world." "Over land and sea!" said Roy, grasping Scott's hand; "through Arctics and Tropics, I'm with you, Scott, till we find that Captain Downino- is innocent, or force him to walk the deck as he should." So they pledged themselves for a longer, more formidable, more exciting chase than either of them dreamed, and set themselves at once to make their preparations. ROY'S STORY IN PRINT. CHAPTER IV. CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. NO time was to be lost. The boys borrowed a yacht, and, putting on their fishing clothes, that they might look precisely what they were, ran down the coast to the city, keeping a sharp lookout among the shipping as they entered the harbor, to see if such a craft as they wanted was there. " Do you see that steamer over there, Scott? " Roy asked. " That's the one I brought in, night before last. They've unloaded her, and are working her over to those docks there, for repairs, I guess. She was leaking pretty bad, they said." Coming up to the wharf, Scott sat in the boat while Roy, as the acknowledged " business man " of the little corporation, went up to make inquiries concerning several sloops and yachts which lay at anchor. Almost the first man he met was the captain of the steamer, who grasped his hand, and at once introduced him to the manager of the line, who had come on to attend to the disabled steamer. " I was going to hunt you up, Mr. Sargent," he said, "just as soon as I got the repairs under way. The Company is greatly indebted to you for the service you rendered. Now you have saved me wandering about in search of you, and I am greatly obliged to you for that, too," he added, with a pleasant smile. Roy was so embarrassed at hearing himself called " Mr. Sarsrent " for the first time in his life, that he hardly knew what he said. He tried 4? CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. 43 to explain how he came there. The two men became interested, and before Roy realized it, by a few well-directed questions they had come at the whole story. " You think he's gone into the Arctic Ocean, do you, and that he is iikely to cross to Norway, and you propose to follow him up ? Well, I sailed in ice-water three seasons when I was young, and I can tell you that a craft which you two could manage could not weather four-and-twenty hours, nor could you run any- thing but square-rigged, with safety, where ice is thick. I happen to know of a tough little duck of less than a hun- dred tons, that took a relief party to Melville Bay, on the northwest coast, last summer. She has two masts, square- rigged, is triple sheathed with wood and iron at the bows for ice. She's a little beauty. Five men can handle her in the worst weather. Two can sail her in a fair sea. She has her old ice-tackle still intact, and three days can see her ready to leave the dock. You would need four good seamen, who understand ice- water, and a cook who understands hot water. You and your friend could divide the honors of captain and mate, if you understand navigation ; do you ? " " Aye, aye, sir, from A to Z ! " Roy exclaimed, glad of an opportunity to put in a word. " Though it is pretty much all we do understand, except codfishing. But such a vessel as you speak of, sir, is " — " I know what you would say, Mr. Sargent — Captain, I suppose I should call you now — but allow me to say: Our company has instructed me to find you, and to do for you anything that, in my judgment, will be KEEPING A SHARP LOOKOUT. 44 CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. most acceptable. If this bark — I think she is registered as a bark, though a queer one — if she meets your approval, I propose to charter and provision her for a year, fit her out, and put on board for that time four seamen and a cook, at the expense of the S. S. Company. If you are through with her before, send her home. If you want her longer, let me know. Our company has never yet lost a passenger, but if it had not been for you, very few of the lives on that steamer could have been saved. DO YOU SEE THAT STEAMER?" Now I beg of you, Captain Sargent, do not say a word. This is a purely business transaction on our part, and we request you so to consider it. Get your friend and come aboard our tender. We will run right down and look at the bark." There was nothing to say, and Roy really did a very sensible thing when he simply touched his hat, sailor fashion, and disappeared for Scott. Three days later they returnd to the city by rail, accompanied by CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. 45 Mrs. Lester and Vera. The bark was hauled into open water by a tender, and as Roy and Scott rowed out in the gig to meet her and take command, Mrs. Lester waved them a God-speed from the wharf, and Vera watched until her blue eyes were so full of tears that she could see noth- ing but one great gleam of light. The boys had an animated controversy as to which shouia command. Scott declared that the vessel was Roy's and that Roy was captain, and finally carried the day, with the agreement that Scott, as the one who was really the prime mover, should be first mate on deck, but admiral in the cabin, and should have the general direction of the voyage. The bark was named Snowbird. Two of the seamen and the jjiGBjafo *■$ MRS. LESTKK AND VLKA. cook had sailed in her before, while the other two were old whalers. Their first point was the Newfoundland Banks, and the run was all that could have been wished. As they came among the codfishers, Scott took his position at the masthead to look out for the brig Louise, but, though they spoke several bankers, no tidings were heard from her till 4 6 CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. they came to port at St. John's, at the southeastern extremity of the island. They had both of them been on shore at St. John's before, so that their eyes and thoughts were bent wholly upon business. First, they made sure that the Louise was not at an- chor in the almost land-locked bay. Then they crossed the bay and dropped anchor, and Scott and Roy, having made the first step in safety, took the gig and rowed ashore, to the quiet, quaint, steep- roofed old town lying opposite the narrow entrance. "St. John's looks very unlike an American city, but its hardy, hospitable people would make any one feel at home," Scott observed, as they were warmly welcomed by one and another who only knew of them that they were sailor boys. They did not have to apply to the American consul, as they ex- pected, for every one was ready to answer questions, and every one at St. John's seemed to know about every one else there, and every one who had ever been there. " Yes ! The brig Louise ran in here some two weeks ago," said one of the wharf officers. " She had a cargo of salt which she sold for cash at a low price, and took in a cargo of grain, flour and mixed stuff for two or three of the southern ports of Greenland. Captain said he had agreed to go up there and fetch back overstock from some whalers." The boys looked at each other, but said nothing. There were a few stores which were lacking in their outfit, which must be purchased at St. John's, and while they were wandering about the quaint old streets, Scott slipped into a jewelry store, closely followed by Roy. " What did you run into this port for ? " Roy asked, and Scott, with a decided blush, replied: " I thought we'd be writinsr to Mrs. Lester, from here, to tell her of our success so far, and maybe 'twouldn't be a bad idea to slip SCOTT AT THE MASTHEAD. CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. 47 m some little trinket for Vera, just to show her that we haven't forgot- ten her." " We ! " said Roy, with a merry laugh. " Bet yer best anchor, Scott, Vera isn't worrying for fear that I've forgotten her. She'd know I hadn't forgotten my old playfellow." Scott laughed too ; but he very carefully selected a little chain, with a cross attached, had it safely packed in a box and addressed. Then they took it to the post-office, registered it, and returned to the Snowbird. IN THE HARBOR AT ST. JOHN S. They wrote a letter to Mrs. Lester and sent it on shore by two of the sailors, who were to bring back the stores they had purchased, including a lot of fresh meat. Then they sat alone in the cabin ready to lay the course to Greenland. " I tell you what it is, Scott," said Roy, " I never dreamed what a terrible strain I was under, running up here, till the anchor dropped and we were in the gig. When I looked back and saw the Snowbird lying 4 8 CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. there, all in regulation ship-shape, and realized that you and I had brought her here, my knees began to shake, and I wondered how in the world we ever dared to do it." " It took me the other way," said Scott. " I knew the ground so far, A LITTLE TRINKET FOK VERA. and had faith in the captain, but when I saw that big lump of ice we passed just outside, and realized that when we went out through those narrows again it would be by a new path, for a new purpose that would lead us 1 no one knows where or for how long, my knees began to shake and, to tell the truth, they are shaking still. Roy, I wonder if I'm a coward." Roy laughed heartily and exclaimed, " Scott Campbell, if your knees were shaking till you could not stand, I'd give more for the courage you had left than for the whole stock of any two fellows on the coast." " Royal Sargent, let up ! " said Scott decidedly, " and when you come down again, let it be to business. So Captain Downing has gone to Greenland." " Well, what in the name of common sense has he done that for ? " CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. 49 " How should I know ? You know how often he remarked that 4 Doubtful things is mighty onsartin.' " " I don't believe he's gone there at all," said Roy. " I believe he's simply gone daft." " Yes, he has," Scott replied, who was studying a large chart spread out upon the table. " It's hardly out of his way at all, if he's doing what I think and going to Russia, for he'd have to go north of Scotland, any way, and by lugging freight he is sort of paying his way, and throwing any one off the track at the same time. He's got a lot of money with him, you know, and he's working fair and foul for more, because he'll need it." " To say nothing of buying everything on credit and selling it for cash. It looks as though there was method in his madness, any way." " Why not go straight to Russia and head him off? " Scott exclaimed. " I don't believe he's going there. I believe he's parted a cable in his upper story, and I want to overtake him and save Louise," Roy replied. And Scott agreed, feeling ashamed that he had forgotten his friend's anxiety in his own. " Two points east of north and a straight course will fetch it," he said. At that moment there was a commo- tion on deck, and the boys rushed up. It was after nine o'clock at night, but the sun was still shining brightly. A hawk, chasing a small bird, had flown against the rigging and dropped dead upon the deck — at the feet of one of the sailors, forward. " Good enough for him ! " Scott exclaimed, but Roy, noticing the solemn faces of the two seamen and the cook, replied in a low voice : " But not for these superstitious sailors. They'll have it, every false wind that blows, that this was a warning;." THE CABIN OK THE SNOWBIRD. 50 CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. And Scott and Roy were quite sailors enough themselves to wish that it had not happened. "We are ten days behind the Louise" Scott said, as the men hauled up the anchor, and they all worked together setting sail. " It may be twenty, or it may be more, by the time we reach Green- A HAWK DROPPED DEAD UPON THE DECK. land," Roy replied ; and Scott, as he caught his eye, turned instinctively to the spot where the hawk fell. A light breeze set in from the sea as they worked their way out of the narrow inlet, and the great cliffs, the wave-washed ledges and the moss-green coves of Newfoundland quickly sank into a dense fog behind them, while the moonlight still lay, white and beautiful, over the sea. Both of the boys were serious and thoughtful that night. They had left behind them the last point of land with which they had ever been familiar. The}' were strangers now, in a world full of uncertainty. The sea breeze continued and increased. Morning dawned at two o'clock, and Scott's first work on coming- on deck for his watch, was to CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. 51 take in sail.. At night a little more sail was taken in, and the third night they were scudding along, careened almost to the water with only a single sail and jib. They had passed several " lumps of ice " of varying size, which, to Scott and Roy, ap- peared to be very fair icebergs, and proved intensely fascinating, but the old sailors paid them very little atten- tion till the third night, when one of them asked to be allowed to keep lookout watch forward. " Why, we are bowling along beauti- fully," Roy remarked ; " and there's not a rock between us and Cape Farewell." The old fellow touched his hat re- spectfully, and said: " We may be at a standstill, sir, before to-morrow night." " Ice ? " said Roy. " Ice, sir," replied the sailor. The possibility served to give the young captain a very wakeful nisbt, but twenty-four hours later found them still close hauled and still plunging forward, making nearly eight knots an hour, with the ice constantly increasing about them, and stormy petrels, with their warning cries, hovering near them. THE SNOWBIRD, THE MOONLIGHT AND THE SEA. 52 CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. Here and there real Arctic monsters now came bearing down upon them, rising far above the tops of their masts, and ten or twelve times longer than the Snowbird. They were often surrounded on the lee by a cluster of smaller bergs, while a cold gray mist settled down on the water, more treacherous than a fog, sometimes freezing as it fell, for an hour or more, making it almost impossible to stand upon the deck or handle the ropes and sails. After an unusually long ice-rain, early on the fifth morning, it began to snow. The wind blew a gale, and the -';/'. " v snow was so thick that it was hard to see the length of the Snowbird. Scott and a sailor held the helm. One sailor stood in the prow, and another sat at the masthead. Rov, one sailor and the cook, having been up all night, were sleeping, when the two lookouts, at the same instant, shouted : " Ship ahoy ! Dead ahead ! " Scott could see nothing, but at a vent- ure put his helm hard down to port. In- stantly the Snowbird took the hint, came into the wind, and lay rolling upon the great waves, as a steamer, sheathed in ice and snow from trucks to water-line, passed so close that the spray from her prow was dashed in Scott's face as he stood at the helm. They found it impossible to hold the course to the north, and fell off to the west, passing several large icebergs, glistening and gray, like frosted silver, and the air seemed as cold as at midwinter. It had become a common incident now, to bump into great lumps of ice, shaking the little Snotubird from stem to stern, but, thanks to the sheathing of the bows, doing no other damage. Before the snowstorm ceased Roy came on deck, and he and Scott held a consultation with the sailor whom they had appointed second mate, that he might act as a sort of Arctic guide. Ice anchors, cables and setting-gear were got in readiness, and none too soon, for above the roar of the tempest the ominous grinding and creakino- of pack-ice could be distinctly heard, and now and then a crash like thunder announced that two great icebergs had come together at no great distance. THE STORMY PETREL. SHE WAS TCF TO THE TRUCKS. CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. 55 An hour before sunset the alternating snow and sleet ceased alto- gether, as suddenly as it began. But what a scene met their eyes ! A solid mass of pack-ice, far as the eye could reach, was bearing down upon them from the open sea, while upon the port huge icebergs, surrounded by their guards of broken ice, were moving with the tide in the very eye of the wind. Behind them there seemed nothing but ice. How they had ever come through it was a mystery. Scott was at the helm. Roy stood braced against the mast. The Snowbird tossed like a cork upon the waves ; bumping, bumping, bump- ing against the floating ice. Here and there a rift appeared with open water, but the position of the ice changed so rapidly that it was impossible to take advantage of it. Upon the port bow a steamer was pushing her way through the ice. A thousand feet away one of the 'THEY HEADED FOR THIS ICEBERG." largest icebergs was lying, motionless, apparently, in all the tumult. Roy talked for a moment with Scott, and they headed for this iceberg. Fortunately the veteran seamen needed only general directions to make fast upon the lee side of the iceberg, for the young commander, 56 CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. who had never seen the operation, would have made poor work directing. He kept his eyes wide open, however, and the next time could command or take a hand himself. The berg was in the shape of an enormous mound on one side, ending in an abrupt ledge of gleaming ice on the " ROY, AXE IN HAND. other, while the gradually sloping side was surrounded at the base by a platform of smooth, flat ice. No sooner had the Snowbird touched the berg than the men were out on the ice with ice-anchors, forward and aft, and in fifteen minutes the little bark was held so fast that she scarcely moved with the waves. " We are surely safer here than dodging about in this gale," said Roy, and, anxious to make the most of every opportunity, the boys were soon out upon the ice. Their first discovery was a ship's anchor, caught in the ice. " It is the relic of some one in trouble," said Roy, " but it is heavier than ours and we may need it." CAPTAIN SARGENT, SIR. 57 He went for an axe to cut it free, when Scott discovered a brig in the distance, dodging and tacking in the gale, trying to find a way out from among large icebergs closing in upon her. " I'm going to take a look at her in the gig," Scott exclaimed, and be- fore Roy could remonstrate he was pulling away over the waves, and Roy, axe in hand, stood watching the brig in its struggle and the little boat midway. It might be the Louise. Scott was half-way across the open water which divided the two masses of ice when she made a desperate dash to cut her way through, failed, fell away with the ice packing behind her, careened almost to cap- sizing, caught the wind again and made a dash for a narrow rift between two icebergs. Even Roy, from the distance, knew better than that. " Fools ! " he muttered in his excitement. " Port your helm ! Lie to and let her come." They did not hear him, however, more than a mile away. They entered the rift between two huge icebergs that were ap- proaching each other, because they saw clear water beyond, and it was a last extremity. The moment they were under the lee of one they lost their wind and headway. It was too late for the boats ;■ too late for any- thing. With a crash which shook the ice where Roy was standing, and echoed like the roar of cannon along the sea, the two crystal mountains plunged against each other and became one pyramid of ice, with the brig and every one on board buried in its silent heart. The yawl was lowered from the Snowbird, and Roy with two seamen followed Scott, but two hours later returned without a trace of the wreck, except a deck water-cask which must have gone overboard when she careened. The cask was marked " Chieftain, New York." " So it was not the Louise, at any rate," said Roy, with a deep sigh. " No, thank God," Scott added fervently. " But it has taught me a good lesson — to respect these monsters. And it makes me much more thankful than proud, to know that the Snowbird is still safe." CHAPTER V. FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. THE sea calmed down very quickly, and the boys slept soundly, leav- ing the Snowbird in charge of the second mate, who was naturally better than either of them to watch the progress of the ice. It seemed only a moment, and, indeed, it was less than three hours when he called them again to see the sun rise. It was a wonderful sight. A silver-gray haze hung over everything. The water was still full of ice, but it was no longer boisterous or dangerous, while the sun, piercing the frosty mist, transformed each iceberg, large and small, to a mass of tangled rainbows. The very air was full of beautiful rainbows. The larger bergs were marvelous in their gorgeous coloring. The boys left the bark, and taking several instruments and a glass with them, made their way to the top of the iceberg. A steamer was slowly moving southward about a mile away. Scott wanted to hail her, but there was a great deal of floating ice between them, and Roy was afraid that if they made her come so far out of her way just to tell two boys if she had seen the Louise, the captain would be so angry he would not answer, and they let her go. There is always a powerful fascination to the stranger in the grand sights of the Arctic Ocean, and the boys turned reluctantly to their in- struments to locate their position, as this was the first time they had seen the sun for nearly four days. 58 £&i^ s, 1 FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. 61 They heard the sailors down below, filling the water tanks from the streams of fresh water trickling down the side of the iceberg, and were busily engaged upon their calculations, when the berg beneath them be- gan to swing very slowly. They started to their feet. There was a shout from below, and catch- ing up their instruments they hurried down. As they ran toward the bark, two of the sailors were pulling on the forward anchor and one working frantically at the rope from the stern, while the poor little Snowbird was pulled way over and almost capsized! " Cut loose that aft anchor, sir ! " yelled the second mate, from the deck. " Get on board, quick, Roy, with this thing," Scott exclaimed, handing *3 "IT WAS A WONDERFUL SIGHT." Roy the instrument he was carrying and pulling his sailor's knife from his belt. Roy sprang on to the deck with his precious burden just as Scott cut the cable. It snapped with a sharp twang like the breaking of some huge violin string. The Snowbird, suddenly set free, slid off & the ice, dove into the water, taking a great gulp of it over her bows, and shot away, out upon the waves. 62 FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. Scott had no time to speculate upon his position, for the iceberg swung back once more, hesitated an instant, then with a resounding crash gave a great lurch, and ice-water of the coldest and sharpest was gurgling in his ears, blinding his eyes and rushing past him like a furious river. He realized that a part of the iceberg at least, must be on top of him bear- ing him down, and had just presence of mind left to put one hand over his mouth and hold his nose with the other. When he became con- scious again he was still un- der water, sliding rapidly in some direction along the smooth ice. He thousrht he was drowning, but just as he was about to give up he saw a gleam of light above him, struck out with mio;ht and main, and an instant later shot out of the water as far as his waist, with the bright sun full in his face. The iceberg was behind him. He was so benumbed by cold that he was hardly more than conscious, but while he struggled to keep his head above and catch his breath, he heard Roy calling: " All right, Scott. Hold there a second. Are you hurt ? " " Guess not," he gasped, " but cold. Colder'n Greenland ! " A moment later Roy was beside him. He was too cold to help him- self, and the gig was too light to pull him in, so Roy could simply hold on to him till another boat with two sailors came up. " Jehu ! " said Roy, when they had Scott at last safe in the cabin. " I wouldn't go through that for a farm Down East. I thought you were never coming up, but when you did come you popped out just like a seal. You missed a wonderful sight, I tell you. That whole iceberg, bigger SCOTT S FIRST VIEW. FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. 63 than a dozen churches, just rolled right over like a lump of ice in a glass pitcher. It went right over on top of you, and I believe every particular hair on my head stood on end. I don't remember anything about start- ing, but the first I knew I was in the gig pulling like mad. It's lucky we left it in the water last night." " Well, we're learning something about ice navigation, at any rate," Scott said, as he pushed his feet closer to the stove and drank a cup of hot coffee. Just then a sailor lifted the skylight and observed: "There's a sail away to the starboard, sir, and land three or four miles to port." " Land ! " Roy gasped, springing to his feet and rushing on deck. " Land ! " Scott exclaimed, jumping into a pair of dry boots and a thick jacket and following him. They were spinning along almost due north, in water that was com- paratively clear of ice when Scott emerged. Roy was at his old position, braced against the mast inspecting a dark horizon on the port-bow, that was land and high land, too, without a doubt. " That's Labrador, and no mistake," he observed ; " and that's why we couldn't make our calculations come out any where this morn- ins;. The fact is, Scott, we've been driven more than a hundred miles off our course." "Let's run in," said Scott, still shivering from his cold bath. "If that's Labrador it means rocks and birds. I wouldn't mind climbing over rocks for an hour after some of them, to warm up a bit." " Nor a game dinner after it, either," Roy replied, and turning to the man at the helm he gave the order to make for the land. " Glory ! " Scott cried, as they neared the wild and savage rocks at the boldest point of Labrador, just south of the confluence of Davis and 'LAND!" ROY GASPED. 6 4 FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. FAT AND LAZY PUFFINS. Hudson Straits. " What if we'd been a little closer in when the storm took us ! " He shuddered. " Don't you almost wish yourself off Cape Race again, catching cod ? " Roy asked, and smiled, though his face was rather pale and solemn as he watched the great waves banging against that grim ledge and toss- ing their spray nearly a hundred feet high. They left it to the second mate to select a safe fjord where they could come to anchor. Then, as they were leaving in the gig, Scott asked, " These rocks will not come loose and drop us, will they ? " at which the sailors laughed heartily. They gathered two large bask- ets full of eggs, and had no need of firearms in securing all that the gig could carry of the fat and lazy puf- fins, the penguins of Labrador. As they were returning they shot two eider ducks and half a dozen of Mother Carey's chickens. " Those eider ducks are the handsomest birds I ever saw," said Scott, holding one in his hands as Roy pulled back to the bark. " Look at the head and back, it is white as snow. Then that crimson neck, and breast as black as coal. And there is gray, green, black and yellow, white and brown all mingled there." Once more they set their course, this time due northeast, wishing to make the southern ports of Greenland, which were very nearly east; but to do it they must allow for the strong course of the arctic current, noted on the chart. As they were moving out of the fjord, one of the sailors spied a huge whale lying dead upon the rocks, where he had drifted at high water, wounded by a harpoon, no doubt, from which he had temporarily escaped. They were close upon some of the fishing grounds, and as they rounded a high promontory, late in the afternoon, with the shore still close upon the port beam, they sighted a stanch, weather-beaten whaler lying at anchor in the straits, while her boats were grappling with an IT MEANS ROCKS AND BIRDS. FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. 6 7 enormous whale. The Snowbird passed within five hundred feet of them The sailors' eyes danced, as they hung in the rigging and watched the excitement of their old trade, and Scott and Roy would willingly have taken a hand. " Tisn't much like landing cod, is it ? " said Roy, as they turned away J * 1*1" Scott was watching an iceberg. There was, however, very little ice •-5? -% ¥ ■ggj^sy^ra STRANDED. in the water now, but a few large icebergs were constantly in sight " They taught us in school that there was seven times more ice under the water than out of it," he said, pointing to a monster slowly moving across their bows. " That's two hundred feet high at least, isn't it ? Do you believe there's fourteen hundred feet of water under us ? " 68 FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. " No, nor half that," Roy replied. " Let's throw the lead and see. We haven't tried taking soundings yet." " I told you so ! " said Roy triumphantly, as they marked just eighty fathoms or four hundred and eighty feet, on a hundred fathom tine. F Hfe "GRAPPLING WITH AN ENORMOUS WHALE." ' There's seven times more ice — only it's spread out more and solid, sir," said a sailor, and the boys looked at each other and resolved not to be quite so quick in coming to conclusions, in the face of science, in the future. They passed a few more whalers and one or two Danish brigs, and a chunky little steamer working through the ice, but did not come in sight of land. Three times a day they took the most careful observa- tions, and each time seemed to be farther and farther north, while by dead reckoning, by log and compass, they should be almost in the middle of Greenland. Again the old sailor was of value in calling to mind what they already knew but had forgotten to apply, that there was always a great variation of the compass in the far north, when the north pole and the magnetic pole FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. 71 were in two distinctly different directions. Again the boys looked at each other in a way to indicate that they realized they had yet much to learn, and, by the sun, set their course due east. Ten hours later the lookout reported land ahead. It was a little island with drifting ice for half a mile clinging to the lee shore. Upon this ice were seals without number, and five or six walrus. The huge fellows looked very tempting, and Scott was so anxious to have a shot at them that the Snowbird hove to, and he and Roy landed on the ice. There 'WORKING THROUGH THE ICE." was a grand adjournment of the meeting as the boys approached, but finally, creeping on his hands and knees, Scott came near enough to have a fine shot at one dignified old walrus, with tusks nearly a foot long. He took a careful aim and fired. He evidently hit, for he was a good shot, and the walrus gave a little jump. Roy said he looked as if an idea had struck him. He quietly lifted his head, looked back over his shoulder at the boys, nodded and gave a little snort, as much as to say, " You'll 7 2 FROM LABRADOR TO GREENLAND. learn better than to waste powder on a tough-skinned fellow like me, if you try it often enough," and then quietly rolled over into the water, leaving a good laugh behind him at Scott's expense. They still bore away to the east. Night came on, at least by the chro- nometer, but with the sun still shining through a brilliant haze, like a beautiful sunset, and against the bright color they distinguished sharp snow-crowned peaks, rising out of the horizon and cutting into the sky. " They're ' Greenland's Icy Mountains ! ' " Scott shouted, as Roy came up from below to take his watch on deck. The two boys stood at the helm together for a few moments, before Scott went below. " Aren't you rather proud, Captain Sargent ? " Scott said, laying his hand affectionately upon Roy's shoulder. " I'm very thankful," Roy replied earnestly. " Scott, what should you and I have done all alone here in a craft we two could have managed at home? " "A DIGNIFIED OLD WALRUS.' §W A SLA-LION. 'they're Greenland's icy mountains!" CHAPTER vi. Greenland's self. AFTER sleeping soundly for several hours, with his jumper hung over the port to keep out the sunlight, Scott was called by a sailor, who notified him that it was a half-hour before his watch on deck began. He pulled the jumper from the port, and peering through the thick green glass obtained his first glimpse of real Greenland. At a little dis- tance was a man in a tight-fitting skin shirt, bareheaded, with a face almost the color of coffee, sitting in a canoe completely covered in with skins, sewed together and stretched over a light wood frame. He had thrust himself through a small hole in the top, up to his waist, and drawn the sides of the opening so tight about him that not a drop of water could get in. The waves dashed over him, but he did not mind them. He might have capsized and righted a dozen times without difficulty. Before him was a small skin-covered barrel, to help him right the canoe, and behind him a reel, upon which a strong cord of seal or walrus skin was coiled, the end of which was made fast to a harpoon which he held in one hand, while with the other he used a double-bladed paddle, darting about over the waves and through them, like a fish. Just as they were passing out of sight a huge sword-fish rose. The canoe leaped forward till its bow almost touched the shining back. The harpoon flew through the air, sank into the side of the fish and disappeared with him as he dove. 73 74 GREENLAND'S SELF. The cord spun from the reel, and the fisherman sat watching it with a placid smile as he passed beyond the range of the port. Before long Scott became better acquainted with the kayak — the skin canoe in which the Esquimau hunts, fishes and travels — and with HP' w FIRST GLIMPSE OF GREENLAND. the oomiak, or woman's boat, completing Greenland's naval architecture. When Scott reached the deck, the Snowbird was beating her way up a strano- e wild bay, or fjord, toward what appeared to be a little cluster of the plainest wood and stone huts imaginable, in a sheltered nook at the head of the fjord. _ " That is Fiskenaes," said Roy, bobbing his head in the direction of the settlement. " It is a Danish trading-post. We are only a few miles GREENLAND'S SELF. 75 farther north than we thought for. I shouldn't have come in here, however ; but look at that ice ! " Scott looked behind them. The wind had evidently changed outside, for a great mass of huge icebergs and pack-ice and floe was following close upon their track. " Just think if we were twenty miles farther back, or if we had not happened to be abreast this fjord when the ice struck in," said Roy. The water about them was covered with kayaks and oomiaks now. There were Esquimaux, Danes and half-breeds, shouting a welcome to the strangers in words they could not understand, and evidently congrat- ulating them upon having escaped the ice ; while others upon the shore were waiting to welcome them when they landed. The air grew foul with the vile odors of drying codfish, for Fiskenaes is the best place on all the coast for catching and drying cod. There was an exaggerated suggestion of home in that odor, and it might have 'THAT IS FISKENAES. been rather agreeable to the boys had it not been saturated, through and through, with the viler smells of last year's whale fat, and seal and shark and walrus blubber, trying itself out into oil by natural processes, in great vats, in the open air. 7 6 GREENLAND'S SELF. They were glad enough, however, to find a temporary haven, and received a hearty welcome from the sturdy little Danish superintendent of the trading-post, who spoke English better than some Englishmen. The Snowbird was warped into a sheltered cove, and in the afternoon the boys sat in the superintendent's office before a smoking oil-fire, watching the trades going on, as Esquimaux came from up and down the coast, and far in the interior, with their wives, all in their Sunday clothes with skins and furs and wal- • WAITING TO WELCOME THEM. rus ivory, frozen deer meat, cod, and all kinds of blubber, to exchange for tobacco and coffee. " How in the world do they catch cod and seal in the interior?" Scott asked. The superintendent smiled as he replied : " Greenland is full of fjords. Many of them you would hardly no- tice from the sea, but the fish find them, and the seal follow the fish for miles among the mountains." " Are there any Esquimau villages in this neighborhood ? " Roy asked. A TRADER S WIFE. GREENLAND'S SELF. 77 " There are several small settlements that don't amount to much, but there's one quite extensive winter city a few miles inland, with summer quarters not far off upon a fjord. It will only require three days to go and come. I'll take you out there to-morrow, and you shall see the Esquimau in all his pristine glory," said the superintendent. " Three days ! " Scott exclaimed. " To-morrow ! " said Roy. " Why, we must try to get out of here this afternoon." Again the superintendent smiled. " It will be more than three days, good friends, be- fore you can escape us. That ice will not break up before a week." They slept in the superinten- dent's house that night, in a room with solid wooden shutters to keep out the light, and when it was early morning by the clock they started for the Esquimaux. Each one was armed, and each one carried a stock of provisions and seal-skin clothes upon his back, while a half-dozen dogs, loaded like so many miniature pack-mules, carried the tent and robes. In the summer the ground was bare about Fiskenaes, and they were obliged to walk a little way to meet the sledges. The superintendent added his little daughter to the pack upon his back. The boys thought she was a boy, for she was dressed in her Esquimau seal-skin clothes, which made her decidedly indignant, till her father explained to her how hard it was to tell men from women, when people first came to Greenland. STARTING ON THE PICNIC. 7 8 GREENLAND'S SELF. When they reached the sledges it was snowing, and they were all of them glad enough to put on the seal-skin clothes. The rest of the burdens were securely packed upon the heaviest 'SCOTT BORROWED THE WHIP." sledge and started off, with six dogs and two Esquimaux harnessed in front and another pushing the sledge, while the fourth drove the dogs. Two persons and a driver occupied each of the smaller sledges, and a moment later were flying like the wind over the white drifts. The boys practiced with an instrument which the trader loaned them, to test their speed, on n - uch the same principle of throwing the log at sea, and watched the driver handle his whip with unbounded admiration. The dogs were attached to the sledge by long cords of rolled hide, of different lengths, and that whip was the only argument-which the driver could use with them. The handle was only two feet long, but the lash was nearly eighteen feet. When one dog lagged, or snapped at another, he called his name, in STARTING THE BAGGAGE. GREENLAND'S SELF. 81 a shrill, sharp voice, shouted something like: " Tti-lee-hee-hee-hee / " and at the same instant lifted that short handle. The lash was always dragging behind, but the driver gave a sudden jerk and it flew through the air. The next instant there was a crack like the report of a pistol, and a yelp and a bound from the offending dog showed how correct the aim had been. Scott borrowed the whip to try his hand. No one at Little Harbor could crack a whip like him, and after a few experiments he could make a report that sent the Esquimau driver into ecstasies. Then he watched for an offending dog, and had not long to wait. He gave an excellent imitation of " Tu-lee-hee-hee-hee ! " and sent the lash flying; but it cracked upon the nose of the dog behind. He yelped, fell back, stumbled and rolled over and over. In the meantime the lash became entangled in the tow-lines. The dos;s discovered the fact in an THE WINTER SETTLEMENT. instant, and as that lash was the only thing they were afraid of, they stopped work forthwith, and began a grand free" fight till everything was tangled. It delayed them nearly half an hour, but fortunately there was no 82 GREENLAND'S SELF. danger of approaching night to hasten them, and in time they reached the winter settlement. It was a cluster of hemispheres, made of cakes of ice, with a hole in one side for the people and dogs to creep in and out, and a hole near the top where the smoke could escape if it was in danger of dying for want of exercise. The city was nearly deserted, as most of the families were at the fjord THEY ENTERED THE LARGEST. for the summer, and the boys crept into the largest hut. They were o-lad enough to get back into the open air again, however. "Jehu! " said Scott, as he gulped a breath. " Fiskenaes is bad enough," Roy gasped, coming out close behind him. " It's only our regulation polar perfume," said the trader; "and that house has been unoccupied for some time. It must be pretty well aired out by this. You should try it in the winter, when three generations with a lot of untanned skins and blubber, live dogs and a whale oil fire THE WALRUS HUNT. GREENLAND'S SELF. 85 get in there all together, and plug up the door and chimney hole in a cold snap. That's the real article." " I should think the dogs would die, any way," Scott muttered. " Die ! why they like it. And so do the people. It is a very good thing for the traveling public, too. In the winter you could not distin- guish one of these settlements at a little distance, and there are no roads or signboards, but you can smell an Esquimau village two or three miles away." " I believe it," said Scott, as they took the sledges again and went on to the summer settlement at the head of the fjord, where the people were hunting and fishing, chattering like sea gulls round a wreck. " The lazy fellows make their dogs do everything," Scott muttered, as they saw an Esquimau fix his harpoon in a large walrus basking on a piece of floating ice, and then leave his dog to land the creature by fastening the coil attached to the . harpoon to the dog's harness. "Just see l those flowers ! " | Roy cried a mo- 5 ment later, as 1 they came upon a cluster of bright native blossoms nestling on the southern side of a ledge of rocks, while ten feet away lay solid ice and snow. " For the next month," said the trader, " wherever a bit of soil shows itself, they will make the most of it. Watercresses grow in a marsh behind my house; and around Julianshaab, at the south, a little grain grows in sheltered places, and coarse grass is a foot high, watered by the A SEAL-CATCHER. 86 GREENLAND'S SELF. melting snow. Fortunately, however, we don't eat what grows in the ground.' The boys looked at each other in astonishment. It was something they had always known, but never stopped to appreciate. " A whole nation," said Roy, " living without fruit or corn, wheat or KOKO AND THE WOLVES. vegetables, except as a few have learned and bought of foreigners ! But there's plenty of game, I suppose ? " "In the winter a musk-ox sometimes finds himself driven down to us. I was out with a party last winter and took a huge fellow. We have made two beds out of his hide. That's his head up in the office. Wolves are plenty, but they are more bother than they are worth. Koko, tell them about the time you had with wolves last winter." _ A sleepy Esquimau, sitting on the ice eating a piece of raw meat, grinned from ear to ear, and in broken English told how he left the settlement for the post with two barrels of fish oil on a sledge, when the wolves came at him. Dogs will fight a white bear wherever they GREENLAND'S SELE. 89 find him, but they will always run from a hungry wolf. The first thing the wolves killed one dog, and the rest all slunk away at the end of their ropes. Then the wolves came at him. He jumped into the largest barrel of oil, and with his harpoon kept the pack at a distance for a time. Then it occurred to him to upset the other barrel of oil, which he did, and while the wolves were going for that he started the dogs and left them. " There are deer, too, but not many," added the trader. - " And how about polar bears ? " asked Roy. " I judged from pictures in my geography that they were floating on every iceberg, but I have not seen any." " Strangers always think that way," said the trader, " but really white bears are very scarce. I never saw but three alive, but if the talk is true you may be fortunate. They tell me tracks have been seen around the camp for several days, and you might go and look them up to-morrow. If you can find the fel- low we'll muster a crowd and go hunt him." "I'll do it!" cried Scott. " Me, too ! " echoed Roy ; " and now let's turn in, so's to start as soon as possible." " It is literally turn in," Scott exclaimed, as the sleeping arrangement was explained to him. " Look at this, will you, Roy? A sleeping bag, they call it. It's seven feet long, at least; that's good. All skin, with the fur inside, and this slit is the only opening. We must crawl into it feet first, and then, if it's a cold night, I suppose we pull the hole in after us. It's a nightgown and a half, I tell you." Their beds were robes thrown on the snow, and they found the sleeping bags none too warm ; while the trader told them of times when the mer- cury was 75 below freezing, when in his warmest clothing, covered with his sealskins, he had got bodily into the sleeping bag and pulled two heavy robes over that, and still found his feet frozen on waking. With the pack-sled, a fresh lot of dogs and the best bear-hunter in the settlement, they started out to track the bear. They soon struck fresh prints in the soft snow. The driver stood up to obtain a better view. Things were very quickly becoming interesting. The dogs were rushing at a furious rate when, with a peculiar yelp, the whole pack made a sharp turn to the right, landing the driver on his head in a snowdrift. A SLEEPING BAG. 9° GREENLAND'S SELF. Instantly the boys discovered a great, dingy-looking creature crouch- ing in the snow ahead of them. He was much larger and not at all like the graceful, snow-white animal that rolls about in the Zoological Garden, but they knew that it must be the bear, and grasped their rifles. Fortunately the sledge, unguided, struck an ice hummock and left both of the boys sitting in the snow ; for a moment later the huge bear was crouching upon the sledge and snapping vigorously at the dogs. Had they come near enough to his head he would have caught them in his teeth, given them one twist, and hurled them so far away that they would not care to come back again ; but they had seen white bears before, and stood in a circle just out of reach, barking furiously, to take THE BEAR CROUCHED UPON THE SLEDGE. up his attention, while two behind him bit and bit and bit, whichever way he turned. The hunter came running up from behind. They could not under- stand a word he said, but it was evident that he was anxious to have them follow him back to the settlement as quickly as possible. GREENLAND'S SELF. 91 •' Well, I guess not! " said Scott. " Not if we know ourselves," Roy added. " Pray, Mr. Esquimau, what do you suppose we are here for ? " Scott asked. The poor fellow looked so earnest and bewildered that Roy took pity II It liT' l ''- ; ' ' "" ON THE SNOWBIRDS DECK. on him, shook his head, pointed to his gun, then at the bear, and motioned him to stand back and see the fun. The stupid fellow shook his head, but obeyed. Presently the bear noticed them, deliberately turned about, and, with the dogs still hectoring him, came slowly toward them, snapping and snarling. " Wonder what he eats ? " Scott muttered, with a suggestive look down at himself. " Not fruit or vegetables, any way," said Roy. " Nor me, either, this morning," Scott added. 9 2 GREENLAND'S SELF. " How are you going to help it if he only bobs his head when you hit him, like your walrus, and comes right on ? " " Do you s'pose he's bullet proof ? " " We'll soon find out." " What if he is?" " We'll have to run." " Can't, in this snow." " Let's try a shot. Are you ready ? " " Aye ! aye ! " " You aim for his eye. That's soft, any way, and you're the best shot. I'll take him in the mouth, if he opens it. If not, I spot his nose ! One ! " UNLOADING STORES. All the time the bear came nearer and nearer, his great claws glistening as he lifted them out of the snow. " Two ! " ' The bear snarled, sat up on his haunches, threw his head back and showed a glistening row of teeth, precisely as though he were saying, " Come on, now. See if you can hurt me." GREENLAND'S SELF. 93 " Three ! " Both rifles banged. The bear did not move except to close his eyes, shut his jaws with a resounding click, and draw his lips still farther back. " Load again ! " whispered Scott. " Did we miss him ? " Roy muttered. " Not to-day ! " Scott cried, as the bear began to sink slowly, and finally rolled over, dead, upon the snow. He was given the place of honor on the sledge, while the boys walked and waded back to the settlement. He measured nearly nine feet, and LANDING THE STORES. weighed six hundred and eighty pounds as his body lay, the next day, stretched in triumph on the deck of the Snowbird. During their absence the supply steamer from Denmark had come in, wedged her way into the outer ice, was made fast there with ice anchors, and such stores as were to be left at the post had been unloaded upon the ice. When the party returned the queer, sturdy, dumpy little Danish sailors were working the stores up to shore, with sledges and boats. The captain had stopped at all of the ports of Greenland to the south, and the trader offered to find out if he knew anything of the Louise. 94 GREENLAND'S SELF. They were all sitting about the moss and oil fire in the office, waiting for the men to finish bringing up the stores, when they would begin the work of cutting the steamer out again. Yes; he had seen the Louise, about three weeks before, and had THE CAPTAIN ALMOST LEFT. taken some freight from her hold for several of the Northern ports, as her captain was in haste to get away. She had loaded with saddle-back seal furs and oil, and had taken on about a dozen passengers for — for — for some port on the northern coast of Norway. He would think in a moment. But before he had thought there was a cry from the shore. The ice was breaking up ! He caught up his hood, pulled on his fur jumper and ran. The great iceberg on the outer edge had suddenly started out to sea, and the whole floe was following it. The steamer, of course, was set free, and must be got out of the dangerous position at once. Two of the steamer's boats were still on the ice, nine of the sailors, and some of the stores. The captain ran till he was met by a broad rift of open water, then yelled frantically for the men with one of the boats to come for him, CHATTERING A FAREWELL. GREENLAND'S SELF. 97 while the people of the post rushed down to save the stores that were drifting away. It was such a scene of confusion as Fiskenaes had never witnessed, and Scott and Roy, with the sailors of the Snowbird who were on shore, gave willing hands to help them out. When the excitement was over, and they were getting the Snowbird into the fjord, it occurred to them that all they knew of the Louise was that three weeks before she had sailed for some northern port of Norway. " Well, we're better off than if we knew nothing," said Roy. " I reckon there are precious few ports in Northern Norway, anyhow. The chart only gives five or six, and I move we run for the upper one as fast as wind will carry us, and then work down." " I wish we had time to see more of Greenland," said Scott; "but I'm going to come again some day." " Greenland is all pretty much alike, only in some places a little more so," said the trader. " A little colder north, a little warmer south. All you'd learn in twenty years would be to talk Esquimau, drink oil, and eat blubber and raw meat." " I've read of wonderful old relics and ruins at the south," said Roy. " I should like to see them, but I'd rather be after the Louise." So they sailed away. They were sorry to leave the hospitable superintendent at Fiskenaes, in spite of all the vile smells that surrounded him, and he was sorry to have them go. They even looked fondly back at the great waves dash- ing upon the base of a huge cliff jutting into the water, with the birds clinging to its ragged sides, chattering a farewell to them, and Puck, a handsome Spitz pup which the trader had given to Scott, barked in return. " We shall be back here some day," said Roy, as he watched Cape Farewell sinking into the sea, and turning to the man at the helm, he set the course of the Snowbird toward Norway, the Land of the Midnight Sun. CHAPTER VII. THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. DAY after day they held their course east by north ; sometimes in sunshine, sometimes under clouds, always in broad daylight or a glowing sunrise and sunset. With a great deal of pride they sighted the headlands of Iceland at the very day and hour they planned when off Cape Farewell, eight hundred miles away. They never dreamed that winds and tides and currents had been counteracting the deviation of their compass, and setting them right all by chance. It gave them too much confidence in their ability. They set the course again for Torghatten, about midway between the Naze and North Cape, some twelve hundred miles away, sure that they should hit it. But now the tides and currents and two sharp storms aided the deviations, and Arctic fogs prevented their taking the sun for seven full days. They knew they had crossed the Arctic circle, for there was no per- ceptible change in the light through all the twenty-four hours. They were sure they had run over thirteen hundred miles, but a lookout had been kept at the masthead for two days before he reported: " Ship ahoy! A small steamer on the starboard bow ! " and a half-hour later, " Land ahead ! on the port bow." They wondered at the absolute lack of vessels or any sign of life. The sun shone out clear and bright as they neared the defiant ledge, and they saw a dozen men pulling upon some sort of a cat-boat. THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. 99 The Snowbird lay to, and Roy and Scott pulled ashore. " Do any of you speak English ? " Roy asked, and a curious shock it gave the boys when pretty much all of them replied with a chorus of, " Yes, sir ! " " Oh ! yes, indeed ! " " Certainly ! " and the like. Roy was so taken by surprise that he forgot what he wanted to ask and Scott put the question for him: " What do you call this place ? " " North Cape, sir." " North Cape ! " Scott exclaimed. " North Cape ! " Roy gasped. " We're seven hundred miles farther north than we thought for," said Scott in a low tone. " We have sailed the Snowbird farther north than Europe or America, my boy," Roy returned triumphantly, striking a tragic attitude. " LAND AHEAD ! " •' But don't you ever let on how we came to do it, Roy," Scott aoded. Among the men was a bright young Norwegian sailor who spoke excellent English, and knew the coast of Norway from cape to cape. He IOO THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. had been spending the season helping visitors to land and climb to the summit of the cape, but was anxious to get back to his home at Chris- tiansand. He offered to pay his passage, but the boys contracted with him to act as their pilot instead. Running to a hut he returned with his limited chest, and soon the Snowbird was under sail again ; for the boys cared nothing about the Midnight Sun, for which so many pilgrims make the journey and climb that precipitous ledge. " I've seen quite enough of this twenty-four hours of daylight business," said Scott; " and it's my humble opinion that when the proper time comes the sun ouarht to blow out his light and go to bed, and not be in any hurry about lighting up again too early in the morning;, either." Hammerfest was their first stopping- place. " It is the nearest city on earth to the North Pole," said the pilot, and the boys expected something worse than little Fiskenaes. When they entered the fjord, however, they found it literally crowded with shipping. Quaint vessels of sturdy model lined the busy wharves. Steep-roofed houses of ample dimensions stretched back as far as the eye could reach. There were smoking fac- tories near the shore, and along the wharves were great store-houses, with open fronts, two stories up, for drying fish and skins, while church spires rose in the distance, and green grass and flowers appeared on the hillsides. "Just think of it!" said Roy. "We're five or six hundred miles farther north than little Fiskenaes." " They fish here every day of the year, and they have a great trade around North Cape with the northern part of Russia," said the pilot. " Well, charity ought to begin at home," Scott replied. " We furnish " NORTH CAPE, SIR. THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. 103 the hot water for the Gulf Stream that makes all the difference between this and Greenland, and then we go freeze to death ourselves, nearly two thousand miles south of here." " It is quite true," said the pilot. " I am told that the winter at New England is often colder than at Hammerfest." There was no Louise to be seen or heard from at Hammerfest, and after filling the water tanks, and stocking up with fresh fish and reindeer meat, they entered another fjord, long and winding, between rocky ledges, making their way toward Tromso. " I suppose you do have ice and snow somewhere in these parts ? " Scott observed. " Most certainly ! " exclaimed the pilot. " Tromso is so far back from the sea that it loses some of the effect, and there will be snow and ice now in the gorges. But Tromso even is still really only an island, though so far inland, and if you will give the time to working a little farther up the fjord and visit a Lapp settlement on the mainland, I'll show you snow and ice as old as any they've got in Greenland, and just as much of it." " Well, I've seen snow and ice enough to keep me cool till next summer," said Scott. " But I'd like a peep at some Lapps, all the same." " Me, too ! " Roy exclaimed. " I have some very queer notions about io4 THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN. Lapps. I don't know where I got them, but I'd like to see if they are true." So the Snowbird kept on and on, through passages so narrow that it seemed almost impossible to pass, and over beautiful broad bays, always K PKISONEJiS OF THE TZAR. 171 As they crossed the bridge, and the carriage rolled under a magnifi- cent arched gateway to enter this inner city, the driver removed his hat, the officer followed his example, and indicated to the boys that they must do the same. They obeyed, without knowing that above their heads, pro- THE GREAT HELL. tected by the overhanging of the arch, was a picture of the Saviour,. and that they were entering the Kremlin by the Redeemer's Gate. The Tzars are crowned within the Kremlin, and from the emperor to the meanest peasant every one removes his hat, and with uncovered head passes through that Redeemer's Gate. Upon their left rose the narrow but substantial tower, marking the Royal Jewel Vault. They were scarcely beyond it when something met their eyes which gave them a peculiar shock — like suddenly coming upon an old friend in the midst of the Sahara Desert. They had tra- versed one quarter of Russia without knowing the name of a single object which met their gaze, when suddenly they came upon something 172 FA'/SO.YEFS OF THE TZAR. in bewildering Moscow, which they knew as well as the boy born and bred within sight of it. It was the Tzar Kolokol, the Great Bell of Mos- cow. They had seen it in their geographies and illustrated readers. They had looked at it a hundred times. They knew all about it; that it was more than twenty feet high ; that it weighed four hundred thousand pounds ; that its metal alone was worth over two million dol- lars. And here it was, just like its pictures, looming up for an instant to greet them as they dashed past it. They only drove through the Kremlin, leaving it again by the St. Nicholas Gate, and out upon a broad road and a great square, with the wall of the Kremlin upon their right. There was a bronze group upon a rose-granite pedestal in the center of the street, with public buildings ST. NICHOLAS GATE. in every direction, and other streets as broad leading away in the most fantastic irregularity imaginable. They crossed the square, toward perhaps the most remarkable church on earth. It was, in reality, the Cathedral of Basil the Blessed, but in utter ignorance the boys watched it till the carriage stopped. CATHEDRAL OF BASIL THE BLESSED. PUIS ONERS OF THE TZAR. 175 It was one grand chaos of angles, towers and domes ; no two alike in shape or size or color; of all kinds of material and ail styles of archi- tecture ; a marvel, however one looked at it. The boys had only to go through a peculiar legal ceremony, and place their signatures upon papers already prepared, when they were APPROACHING THE CATHEDRAL. hurried back to their car asrain, which started at once for the south. Like a meteor, Moscow, the wealthiest of Russian cities, flashed before them, and in the flame expired, but they were too anxious to reach the distant Crimea to care how brief their stay had been. CHAPTER X. ON TO BALAKLAVA ! AS their car waited at a little station south of Tula for a train to the north to pass, they saw the mounted Cossacks forcing back the starving peasants who were making a weak effort to leave the village, in the vague hope of finding something somewhere, while in curious con- trast, on a bench upon the sunny side of the station, a group of children had gathered, and were singing away as though their lives depended on the amount of noise they made. One fellow was beating time, and another was playing on two fifes at once. At another station, while they were taking wood and water, they watched a group of peasants waiting for their share of a car-load of coarse flour and meal that was standing upon a side track, being dispensed by Government officials. They had little opportunity to know of the internal disturbances of which the world at large was constantly supplied with graphically distorted and wondrously exaggerated details. A group of ragged and disconsolate Jews, sitting on the ground to rest while they waited for the train to pass, recalled the unfortunate lot of the children of Israel in the empire, and more than once the destitute condition of some famine-stricken district appeared for an instant and was gone. That was all that they knew either of the persecution of the Jews or the terrors of the famine. Perhaps it was really all there was to know, or perhaps it was simply intended that they should not know. 176 ON TO BALAKLAVA! 177 They were only catching glimpses of a great reality in Russia, much as they had caught glimpses of those other realities, St. Petersburg and Moscow, and in time the car crossed the narrow isthmus, entered the peninsular of Crimea and stood in the station of Sebastopol. Here, to their surprise, they discovered that the officer who had accompanied them could speak very fair English. " The old reprobate ! " Scott muttered. " He didn't mean that we should bother him with questions. That's what's the matter." "And upon my word, I think he was rather bright," Roy replied, thinking how he would have plied the poor official, and kept him talking. " Wonder if we said much that was out of order? " Scott queried. " Presume so," Roy replied. " We generally do under such circum- stances. But he has himself to blame if he didn't like to hear us call him ' Rushy.' ' The officer had explained to them that there was a large house THE RUSSIAN CHILDREN S SONG. belonging to the estates in Sebastopol, and a large farm and country- house some two miles back upon the hills toward Balaklava, and had left them to wait while he made inquiries to learn where the supposed Captain Downing could be found. " Toward Balaklava ! " said Scott. " That's where the Snowbird was to wait for us." 1 7 8 OX TO BALAKLAVA! "Whatever have we heard at home about Balaklava?" Roy asked, scratching his head, in the sailor's inevitable gesture of thought. He was still thinking when Scott suddenly struck a tragic attitude, and throwing out one hand exclaimed : " ' Forward, the light brigade ! Charge for the guns ! ' he said. That's Balaklava, Roy. Hope we shall get a good peep at it." JEWS. A pretty Circassian girl, with a long, slender rod in her hand and a bas- ket on her arm, came up and, smiling, opened the basket, out of which hopped several little birds. Looking up she said, in English: HOLDING BACK THE STARVING PEASANTS. ON TO BALAKLAVA! 181 " Fine gentlemen, fine fortune. Me little birds tells fortunes true." There is always a peculiar fascination about gypsies, and a peculiar fascination to the sailor about having his fortune told. There is always an irresistible charm in one's own language, when one meets it unex- pectedly, and Scott, in his impulsive prodi- gality, put a gold piece in her hand. It was a Swedish coin, but it was all he had, and sold is arold the wide world over. She smiled, held out the rod, and two of the birds lit upon one end of it. She stood silently watching them. One began to hop away, and the other followed. The last one almost caught up and gave the first a peck, but he jumped away, and the last lost his balance, and would have fallen off the rod, but for the help of his wings. They kept it up till they reached the end of the rod ; then the first, grasping it in his feet, hung down, head-first, as though he were dead. A third bird flew up from the basket, lit on the end of the rod, and looked for a mo- ment at the bird which had been following. tie bird's kiss, and all three flew back to the basket. "So it is," said the pretty fortune teller. "One runs away, another follows. Sometimes he come near enough to peck, but almost fall, and only white wings save him. He come to sad end. He can't help. But one sweet kiss and all is bright. God bless young gentlemen," and she walked away. " You remember the hawk that fell dead upon the deck, at the very moment when we were laying our course to Greenland ? " said Roy. " Well ? " said Scott. " Well, that was a fool's errand. Captain Downing hadn't gone that way. " Oh ! fudge, Roy. It was a queer coincidence, but " — " And when the end comes this gypsy's birds may be another," Roy interrupted. Scott was about to laugh at Roy's superstition when the officer drove up in a post-troika, with a burly Russian seated behind the horses, WAITING FOR RATIONS. The two exchanged a lit- 182 ON TO BALAKLAVA! wrapped in a thick coat, though it was very warm, and wearing a hat which Scott declared beat all creation. They drove out two miles toward Balaklava, six miles beyond. The country seat was certainly magnificent, but the great gate upon the street was locked, and no porter was in the lodge. They were obliged to leave the troika and walk nearly a quarter of a mile through the park to the stately mansion. The servant who came to the door assured them that the master and lady had driven to Sebastopol, to return the evening of the next day. It was dark when they reached Sebastopol again, but the same story was repeated at the city mansion: they were not there. " It may be they have gone to Odessa," said the servant. " I do not think the yacht Vera is in the bay." " So the estate possesses a yacht, too," Roy muttered, " and her name is Vera. I wonder what has come over Louise that she is taking part in this?" " In some way she doesn't know what she's doine, I'll bet on that," said Scott, and he felt Roy give his hand a squeeze. They held a council and de- cided to go again to the country seat, early in the morning, and wait the return of the captain. Again they were obliged to leave the troika at the gate, but this time they were invited in and told to entertain themselves in a large drawing-room, where a sam- ova of steaming tea was placed for them. " If he had been in the house and seen us coming, do you think he would make himself scarce ? " Roy asked ; and as Scott was about to answer his ear caught the sound of distant wheels. It was difficult to see through the dense foliage of the park, but straining his eyes, between the branches he was sure that he saw their troika, with a man and woman seated in it, moving away behind an- "A BURLY RUSSIAN. THE rORTUNE TELLER. ON TO BALAKLAVA ! 185 other loaded with something like trunks. " Come quick ! " he exclaimed, and sprang to the door followed by Roy and the fat official. They ran down the read to the gate. Their troika was gone ! " This way ! " cried Scott, starting toward Balaklava. Roy and Scott ran side by side, and soon left the puffing officer lag- ging behind. The boys were strong and determined, but a sailor's life pays little attention to the legs, and theirs were ready to give out when they came upon a three-horse hay cart, into which a peasant, at some dis- tance, was laboriously gathering a little crop of grain, grown in famine year. " It's our only chance ! " Scott exclaimed. " We can make it right afterward. Jump in, Roy, and jump quick." Like a flash the boys were in the hay cart. Scott caught the whip and gave the horses a cut. They started at a furious rate, for they were Russians, while the poor peasant stared in blank astonishment. " Glory hallelujah ! " Scott gasped. " See there ! On the next hill ! There's the troika ! Who knows but we can overhaul it ! " " If they know whose aboard this crib they'll hurry, and if they do they can outrun these lean things two to one," said Roy. " Good idea ! " Scott replied, catching up the peasant's coat and hat lying in the cart, and putting them on. " There ! If I'm not a Russian, what am I ? Gee up, there ! " he shouted. " Now, Captain Sargent, just you lie low. Stow yourself away among that straw. Keep clean out of sight. I've got three sails to their two. any way. Gee up, there ! and if I don't overhaul that brig it's 'cause there ain't wind enough in the sails, or 'cause I don't understand this steering gear. Gee up ! " " I'd give more for two jibs like the cobs that brought us up, than for ten acres of these condemned old war-horses," Roy replied from down among the straw. " Never you mind ! " Scott cried. " We're gaining on her ! Gee up ! This lash seems to speak first-class Russian, and I reckon the handle understands English, for it translates what I'm after. Gee up! " " For mercy's sake," groaned Roy, as they splashed through a lot of water and banged over a wooden bridge, " you'll smash everything to pieces, Scott." " I reckon I may, Captain," Scott replied. " To tell the truth — gee up, there ! — I'm not just sure of the hull of this craft, nor of the tackle either — gee up! — and the rigging is the doubtfullest stuff I ever handled. Gee up! But I — whew! We near went to pieces on that rock." 1 86 ON TO BALAKLAVA! " So we did," groaned Roy. "Guess she's got a stronger bottom than I thought for — gee up! gee up ! " " Are you in the road at all ? " Roy asked. " Don't know, Captain," Scott replied. " I've got my eye on the craft ahead, and can't keep it in two places at once. Gee up! We're gaining — gee up! — or I'm an Esquimau — gee up! And I don't be- lieve I'd know the road if I watched for it. There don't seem to be any ' GEE UT\ THERE !" unless it's all in Russian and I can't make it out. Gee up, there! And I couldn't tell how to keep in it, if I could see it plain as my nose — gee up! — for there's only one line apiece running out to the prow of each of these animals, like the reindeer in Lapland. Gee up, there ! When I pull they slow up so I let 'em lie loose and use the whip. Gee up ! If the lash don't come off I'll keep 'em going till something splits. Gee up ! Cracky ! but that was a bad bump. Is there any water in the hold ? Seem's though we must have sprung aleak that time. Gee up ! gee up! gee up ! Jehu ! They've struck a new tack and bust my best cable, but they're gaining ! Gee up ! " ON TO BALAKLAVA! 187 " How are they now? " Roy asked a moment later. "Can't just say; they're round a curve. Gee up! I believe these things are getting used to the whip, or else the wind's giving out. Gee up! Never mind, we'll be going down hill again in a minute. BALAKLAVA. That's our best tack, for there don't seem to be any hold-backs about the rigging, and they have to run like mad to keep the crib off their heels. There ! Didn't I tell you ? Gee up ! or we'll run over you ! " " I say, Scott, this thing is listing to port like everything. Do you know where you're going ? " " Going to Balaklava, Captain. May be we're listing, but I don't see why. Everything's level on ahead. The horses know the road better than I do. Guess they smell the town. At any rate, they act as though they thought they were going somewhere and one of them — gee up, there! — seems to think he's almost there — gee up! — but we are listing, no mistake. I believe — G. Whittaker ! — There ! I told you so. Any 1 88 ON TO BALAKLAVA! bones broken ? No ? Glad of that. It wasn't my fault," Scott said, as he pulled Roy out of a mass of straw and dirt and fragments of a Russian hay cart. " I had my mouth open to say that I believed a wheel was coming off." " Well, you would have been mighty near right, Scott," said Roy, rubbing several bruises, while Scott brushed off the dirt and straw as they stood beside the dilapidated wreck. " I wish that gypsy and her birds had kept away." " Bother the gypsy ! " Scott exclaimed. " It was the wheel came off, and if the birds did have anything to do with it, why, the white wings of the Snowbird may save us yet. Don't forget that she's at Balaklava if we need her. Come on ! 'Forward, the light brigade !' Bother the gypsy maid! " And setting the example, he began to run again. They reached the summit of the next hill. The troikas were out of sight, but there, in the valley before them, lay the town of Balaklava, the oldest city in Russia — old as the days of Ulysses; governed in turn by Italians, Greeks, Turks and Russians; with its dilapidated fortresses and ruined breastworks; its ragged mountains and deep and silent fjord. And there they saw the white-winged Snowbird. " Come on," cried Scott. Roy tried to, but fell back again. "Scott, I can't !" he muttered. "I'm dizzy. I can't stand up. My heart is beating terribly." " Well, you just stop and rest and come on easy," said Scott. " I'll bet I have strength enough left to reach that wharf, and I want to make sure what Captain Downing's up to. Good-by ! Come on easy." Late that afternoon the Russian officer and Roy rescued Scott from the filth of the Balaklava jail. His story was quickly told. He had met Captain Downing upon the wharf, after one boat loaded with boxes and carrying Louise, had reached the yacht which lay at anchor there. The captain attempted to escape him, but Scott, too much exhausted to speak, caught him by the coat. " Scott Campbell ! " he exclaimed, " you will touch me at your own peril. You know who you are dealing with. I advise you to go back to ON TO BALAKLAVA, 189 America and hold your tongue. I am going to Constantinople for a while, where I shall be out of reach of you, of Russia or America. If you keep still I'll make it for your interest. I'll make you rich. If you don't I'll be the death of you. There ! Let go ! " " I never would have let go," said Scott, " though I couldn't speak a word to save my life, but who should come up but the everlasting fossil OUTSIDE THE FJORD. who belonged to that hay cart. He'd come over the hills by a short cut. He accused me of I don't know what. Then he pointed to his coat and hat. I had forgotten that I had them on. I declare, I don't know what did happen, after that. I don't believe I fainted, but I didn't know much till I found myself in here. Now the quicker we get to Constantinople the better." m igim LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 029 726 023 6