The Outdoor Chums eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about The Outdoor Chums.

The Outdoor Chums eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 170 pages of information about The Outdoor Chums.

This last from steady, clear-headed Frank, who seemed to know just what should be done in an emergency.

It started Bluff and Uncle Toby working strenuously to keep blankets from getting very wet.  But Will could not think of lending a hand until he had first of all lugged his beloved camera under shelter.

It was indeed fortunate that both tents had not gone by the board at the same time, or the camp must have been plunged into the deepest distress.  Led by Frank, they managed to hustle their belongings under the second cover, where the driving rain could not reach them.

By the time all had been done the boys were dripping, and it took them some twenty minutes to get warm again, snuggled in their blankets.

“Oh! what a night!” wailed Will a dozen times.

“Please let up on that, or give us a change in tune.  It’s bad enough to have to stand the storm without listening to a phonograph,” grunted Bluff.

The hours crept along.  Now and then they dozed, but sound slumber did not come to a single one of the group.  Uncle Toby was quite content to cower as close to Frank as possible, satisfied that the other was able to protect him.  He seemed to exhibit the blind confidence of a dog in an emergency calling for energy; to him Frank was a type of manliness hard to match.

“Will the morning ever come?” groaned Will, as he shifted his cramped position for the tenth time at least.

“Well, I think we’ve got a lot to be thankful for,” declared Frank, stoutly; “in the first place, no great damage is done, for I saw that our tent was caught in the branches of a tree close by, and we can rescue it in the morning.  Then nothing was spoiled that I know of.  And the storm is really over, though morning is some two hours off,” striking a match and looking at his nickel watch.

“Can’t we have a fire?” asked Will, who was shivering under his blanket.

“Just thinking so myself.  It’s getting sharp, now that the wind has shifted into the northwest.  Suppose we make a try,” answered Frank, readily.

It was just in anticipation of such an emergency that he had hidden some of the dry wood away where the rain could not reach it.  Frank’s previous experience in woodcraft had taught him many valuable things.

Securing some of this, he quickly had a little blaze.  The others fed this in a cautious manner, so as not to smother it by too much fuel.  As a result the fire was in a short time burning freely, and diffusing a genial warmth around that proved very acceptable to the chilled campers.

Even Will thawed out under its influence and ceased to grumble.

“It’s all right, too, fellows; not a drop got in tinder these waterproofs,” he declared, as he eagerly examined his precious possession.

So the morning found them.

The first thing they did was to rescue the runaway canvas.  It was found to be intact, the pins only having given under the strain.  So shortly afterwards the second tent again arose, and things began to look shipshape around the camp.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Outdoor Chums from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.