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"Water!" he yelled. "Water! That's what's the matter. Oh, but I'd just like to know whether it's that pale-faced Burns boy, or some of those other young imps in the house. I'll find out. I'll make somebody smart for this. Wasting my oil, too. I'll make 'em pay for it."
The colonel set down the lamps, rushed out of his room into the hall for the lamp that usually occupied a standard there. He did not find it, because Henry Burns had taken the pains to remove it. The colonel made a sudden dash for Henry Burns's door, rattled the door-k.n.o.b and pounded, and then, finding that in his confusion he had failed to discover that it was unlocked, hurled it open and burst into the room.
What the colonel saw was the pale, calm face of Henry Burns, peering out at him from the bed, as that young gentleman lifted himself up on one elbow. Around his forehead was bound the handkerchief, which he had wetted in the bowl of water. The lamp burning dimly completed the picture of his distress.
"Hi, you there! You young-" The colonel checked himself abruptly, as Henry Burns slowly raised himself up in bed and pressed one hand to his forehead. "What's the matter with you?" roared the colonel, completely taken aback by Henry Burns's appearance.
"Oh, nothing," said Henry Burns, resignedly. "It's nothing."
The colonel little realized how much of truthfulness there was in this answer.
"Did you want me for anything?" asked Henry Burns, in his softest voice.
"No, I didn't," said the colonel, sullenly. "Somebody has been fooling with my lamps, and I-I thought I would use yours, if you didn't mind."
"Certainly," replied Henry Burns. "I may not need mine again for the rest of the night." Again he pressed his hand dismally to his forehead.
"I won't take it!" snapped the colonel. "You may need it again. Why don't you tell Mrs. Carlin you've got a headache? She'll look after you. It's eating too much-eating too much, that does it. I've always said it. Stop stuffing two pieces of pie every day at dinner, and you won't have any headache."
With this parting injunction, the irate colonel abruptly took his departure, slamming the door behind him.
Henry Burns dived beneath the bedclothes and smothered his roars of laughter. The colonel, disappointed in his quest for a lamp, and not caring to search further in his present condition of undress, returned once more to his room and finished undressing in the dark.
"I'll make somebody smart for this to-morrow," he kept repeating. "Like as not that little white-faced scamp in the next room had some hand in it. I can't quite make him out. Well, I'll go to bed and sleep over it."
The colonel rolled into bed.
There was a crash and a howl of rage from the colonel. He floundered about in a tangle of bedclothes for a moment, filling the room with his angry e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.ns, and endeavouring, helplessly, for a moment, to extricate himself from his uncomfortable position on the floor. Then he arose, raging like a tempest, stumbling over a chair in his confusion, and nearly sprawling on the floor again.
He rang the electric b.u.t.ton in his room till the clerk in the office thought the house was on fire, and came running up, breathless, to see what was the matter.
"Fire! Who said there was any fire, you idiot!" shrieked the colonel, as his clerk dashed into the room and ran plump into him. "There isn't any fire," he cried. "Somebody's been breaking the furniture in here; tearing down the beds, ruining the lamps. Get that room on the next floor, down at the end of the hall, ready for me. I can't stay here to-night. Don't stand there, gaping like a frog. Hurry up. Get Mrs. Carlin to fix that bed up for me. She's gone to bed, do you say? Well, then, get somebody else. Don't stand there. Go along!"
The clerk hurried away, as much to prevent the colonel seeing the broad grin on his face as to obey orders. The colonel, stumbling around in the darkness, managed to partly dress himself; and, five minutes later, the boys heard him go storming along the hall to the stairway, which he mounted, and was seen no more that night.
The closet door in Henry Burns's room swung softly open, and there rolled out helplessly on the floor four boys, choking with suppressed laughter, the tears fairly running down their cheeks.
Henry Burns, calm as ever, quietly arose from bed, removed the bandage from his brow, slid into his clothes, and remarked, softly, "I feel better now."
"Oh, don't, Henry," begged George Warren. "If you say any more I shall die. I can't laugh now without its hurting me."
"You need something to eat," said Henry Burns. Pinning a blanket up over the transom to hide the light, and stopping his keyhole, to prevent any ray of light from penetrating into the hallway, and throwing down a blanket at the door-sill for the same purpose, Henry Burns lighted both his lamps, carefully locked his door, and made ready to entertain his guests.
"It's not just according to the rules of etiquette," he said, producing a package from the basket, "but we'll have to start on the ice-cream first before it melts. Then we'll work back along the line, to salad and ginger ale."
He drew forth from the package, which proved to be a box filled with chopped ice, a small brick of ice-cream. It was beginning to melt about the edges, but they made short work of it.
"Now," said Henry Burns, "if you please, we'll start all over again. Here are the sandwiches."
"It's the finest spread I ever had," said young Joe, appreciatively, as he stowed away his fourth sandwich and helped himself to an orange.
"Joe always goes on the principle that he may be cast away on a desert island before he has another square meal," said Arthur, "so he always fills up accordingly."
"It's a good principle to go on," responded Henry Burns. "George, you open the ginger ale."
So they dined most sumptuously, and had gotten down to nuts and raisins, when Henry Burns, whose ears were always on the alert, suddenly sprang up, with a warning "Sh-h-h," and, quickly stepping across the room, turned the lamps down, signalling at the same time for the boys to be silent.
Not one of the others had heard a sound; but now they were aware that soft footsteps were pattering along the hallway.
Presently some one came to Henry Burns's door, turned the k.n.o.b, and rapped very gently.
Not a sound came from the room.
Then a voice said: "Henry, Henry."
There was no reply.
"Strange," said the person outside; "I could have sworn that I heard his voice as I came up. Well, I must have been mistaken. He seems to be sound asleep. I guess his headache is better."
They heard the footsteps die away again along the hallway.
"Whew!" said Henry Burns; "that was a narrow escape. That was Mrs.
Carlin. Somebody must have told her I was sick. She sleeps all night with one eye and one ear open, they say."
"Well," said George Warren, "I reckon we'd better take it as a warning that it's time to be going, anyway. It's eleven o'clock, I should say, and we have got to get up early and overhaul the _Spray_. She's up at Bryant's Cove yet, and we have got to bring her down and have a new bowsprit put in, and reeve some new rigging. We've had a great time, Henry. Count us in on the next feed, and give our regards to Colonel Witham. Come on, boys."
"Sorry to have to show you out the back way," said Henry Burns, "but the front way would be dangerous now, and my lightning-rod staircase seems to be the only way. It's a very nice way when one is used to it; but look out and don't slip."
By the time the last boy was on the roof, Henry Burns was half-undressed; and by the time the last one had reached the ground, his light was out and he was half-asleep. That was Henry Burns's way. When he did a thing, he did it and wasted no time-whether it was working or playing or sleeping.
CHAPTER V.
A HIDDEN CAVE
It was a little after eleven o'clock when Tom left the hotel. His mind was so occupied with the events of the evening that he started at once toward his camp, forgetting an intention he had earlier in the night of visiting the locality of Jack Harvey's camp in search of the missing box.
He stopped every few minutes to laugh long and heartily, as, one by one, the mishaps of Colonel Witham came to his mind.
All at once he remembered the missing box. He had nearly reached his tent by this time, but he stopped short. He called to mind the contents of the box; among other things, a certain big cake, with frosting on it, and, although he and Bob, as young athletes, were bound to hold such food in little regard, there was one thing about it which particularly impressed him just now, and that was the remembrance of how he had watched Bob's sister, with her dainty little fingers, mould the frosting on the top, and how she had slyly wondered-as if there could be any doubt of it-whether they, meaning Tom, would think of her while they were eating it.
The thought of that cake falling into the hands of Jack Harvey and of Tim Reardon and the others of Harvey's crew, and of the jokes they would crack at Tom's expense, made his blood boil. He started in the direction of Harvey's camp, then turned back to get Bob to accompany him,-and then paused and went on again, saying to himself that he would not awaken his chum at that hour of the night. He started off through the woods alone.
The night was warm and pleasant, though it was quite dark, as there was no moon. He pa.s.sed by the cottages, and then turned into a foot-path that followed the windings of the sh.o.r.e. The path led for some distance through a thicket of alders and underbrush, from which at length it emerged into an open field. Crossing this, Tom again entered a growth of wood, the path winding among the roots of some old hemlocks and cedars.
All at once he saw a light s.h.i.+ning indistinctly through the trees, and knew that it must be in the immediate vicinity of Harvey's camp.
"So much the better, if they are up," muttered Tom. "If they're sitting around that fire they are sure to be talking." He hurried on in the direction of the light, still following the path.