The Moving Picture Girls Under the Palms - BestLightNovel.com
You’re reading novel The Moving Picture Girls Under the Palms Part 27 online at BestLightNovel.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit BestLightNovel.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy
"And get one for me; will you, Paul?" begged Alice. "I'll have my valise after all!"
"Surely," he answered.
"Just a few minutes more," requested Russ. "There's a big one over there I want to film. I guess he must be the grandfather of this alligator roost."
"I never saw such a nest of 'em!" exclaimed Jed. "I can make a pot of money out of this. None of the other hunters has stumbled on it. I'm in luck!"
Ruth and Alice had lost much of their first fear, and really the only danger now was lest one of the big saurians upset the boat, which it might easily do, by coming up under it. The alligators showed no disposition to make an attack. Indeed, most of them swam past the boat without noticing it, though a few of the smaller ones scuttled off when they came up and eyed the craft and its occupants.
Out on the sand bar, sunning themselves, were nearly a score of the big creatures. Now and then one would crawl over the others, or plunge into the sluggish stream with a splash.
"Some fine skins here," commented Jed, with a professional air. "When we come back, boys, we'll have a lively time."
"Isn't it dangerous?" asked Ruth, with a shudder.
"Alligators ain't half so dangerous as folks think," said Jed. "I've hunted 'em, boy and man, for years, and I never got much hurt. One I wounded once nipped me on the leg, and I've got the scar yet."
"I thought it was the tail that was the dangerous part of an alligator,"
said Russ, who now had all the pictures he wanted for the present, though he intended coming back with the larger camera and filming the alligator hunt.
"Well, I've read lots of stories to the effect that an alligator or crocodile could swing his tail around and knock a man or dog into his mouth with one sweep, but I don't believe it," the hunter said. "Of course that big tail could do damage if it was properly used, and you didn't get out of the way in time. In India I reckon the crocodiles are dangerous, if what you read is true; but I don't reckon a Florida alligator nor crocodile ever ate a man."
"I thought there were no crocodiles in this country," said Russ, who, with a skillful movement of the oars, avoided hitting a big alligator.
"That's a mistake," said Jed. "There are both alligators and crocodiles in Florida, and some of the crocodiles grow to be nearly fifteen feet long. There ain't so much difference between crocodiles and alligators as folks think. The main point is that a crocodile's head is more pointed than an alligator's."
"They're all horrid enough looking," observed Alice.
"Wa'al, I grant you they ain't none of 'em beauties," returned the hunter, with a chuckle, "though I have heard of some folks takin' home little alligators for pets. I'd as soon have a pet b.u.mblebee!" and he laughed heartily.
The two girls were becoming almost indifferent to the alligators now, though in turning about for the return trip to the steamer they several times b.u.mped into the clumsy creatures, and once the craft careened dangerously, causing Alice and Ruth to scream.
And once, when they were almost out of the haunts of the saurians, an immense specimen reared itself out of the water and thrust its ugly nose over the bow.
"Oh!" cried Alice, shrinking back.
In an instant Jed fired, aiming, however, along the keel of the boat, and not broadside across it, so there was no danger from the recoil.
The alligator sank at once.
"I hit him!" cried the hunter, "but it wasn't a mortal wound. I'll come back and get him."
"Please don't shoot again!" begged Ruth.
"I won't, Miss, and I beg your pardon; but I really couldn't help it," he apologized.
There was considerable excitement aboard the _Magnolia_ when the party returned with word about the alligators, and when Paul and Russ went back with Jed, Russ taking a large camera, another boatload of men with guns was made up for the hunt.
Even Jed was satisfied later with the day's work, and Russ got a film that created quite a sensation when shown, for never before had an alligator hunt been given in moving pictures.
"Well, I can't go on with you folks any longer," said Jed that night, as Mr. Pertell, aboard the _Magnolia_, was talking of further plans. "I've got to stay and take care of my alligator skins," he added. "It means big money to me."
"I wish you could come," said the manager. "For we are going into the wilds, and we may need your help."
"Into the wilds?" echoed Mr. Sneed. "Do you think it safe?"
"I don't know whether it is or not," responded Mr. Pertell, and he spoke half seriously. "But we have to go to get the views I want. I hope none of you refuse to come."
No one did, but there was not a little apprehension.
"Those two girls went into the wilds--and did not come back, you know,"
said Ruth to Alice in a low voice.
"Oh, don't think of it," was the rejoinder. "We are a large party--we can't get lost."
But neither Ruth nor Alice realized what was before them.
CHAPTER XX
LOST
Pus.h.i.+ng her bow up sluggish streams--up rivers that flowed under arching trees, heavy with the gray moss, went the _Magnolia_. The party of moving picture players had been on the move for three days now, without a stop for taking of pictures, save those Russ made of the negroes cutting wood for the boilers. No dramas were to be made until they reached a certain wild and uninhabited part of Florida, of which Mr. Pertell had heard, and which he thought would be just right for his purpose.
They had left the vicinity of the alligator hunt, and were pus.h.i.+ng on into the interior. In reality it was not so many miles from Sycamore, but it seemed a great way, so lonely was it in the palm forests and cypress swamps.
"Seems to me this is lonely enough to suit anyone," observed Miss Pennington as she sat on deck with the others, and looked up stream.
"It surely is--I feel like screaming just to know that there is something alive around here," added Miss Dixon.
"Go ahead!" laughed Russ. "No one will stop you!"
"Really the silence does seem to get on one's nerves," put in Mr. Towne.
"It--er--interferes with--er--thinking, you know."
"Didn't know you ever indulged in that habit!" chaffed Paul.
"Oh, why--er--my deah fellah! Of course I do--at times. I find--I really find I have to give a great deal of consideration--at times--to the suit samples my tailor sends me. And really I shall not be sorry to get back to deah old N'York and renew my wardrobe."
"If he has any more suits he'll have to get a man to look after them,"
remarked Alice.
"Oh, hus.h.!.+" chided Ruth.
Then silence once more settled down over the company on the upper deck of the _Magnolia_. An awning protected them from the hot sun, and really it was very pleasant traveling that way. Of course it was lonesome and the solitude was depressing. For days they would see nothing save perhaps the boat of some solitary fisherman, or alligator hunter.