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The Shadow Passes

Page 8

by Roy J. Snell


  CHAPTER VIII THE STORMY PETREL'S FIRST PRIZE

  As the winter wore on the cold grew more intense. Ice on the streams wasthick. Wild animals appeared to vanish from the scene. Snow covered muchof the river surfaces. All these things served to make "bringing themhome alive" more difficult.

  At last the boys gave up this strange occupation and turned to the taskof clearing the ten-acre tract.

  "If we can get that tract cleared we'll plant it in barley, oats andpeas. When these are ground together they make excellent chicken feed.We'll go in for poultry. There's a steady market for dressed chickens andeggs at Fairbanks," said Mr. Lawson.

  "Yes, if we get that tract cleared," Lawrence thought, but did not say.No further suggestion that they go into debt for a tractor was made byanyone.

  The long Arctic evenings were divided between games and dreaming. Thefame of Johnny's and Joe's boxing had traveled far. The recreation roomat Palmer was given over to this excellent sport two nights a week.

  A boxing club was formed. Even Jack Mayhorn dropped his feud with Johnnyand joined up. Members of a boxing club at Seward accepted an invitationfor a contest. Johnny and Joe won this by a narrow margin.

  On the evenings when business or pleasure did not take them to townJohnny and Lawrence might often be found dreaming by their ownhearth-fire.

  "When the land is cleared and plowed, when the grain is sowed and we'veearned a breathing spell," Lawrence would say, "then we'll hunt up oldSmokey Joe and go out for one of those glacier bears."

  "If we can find Smokey Joe," Johnny would smilingly agree. "And if theydon't need us for service in Bristol Bay."

  "Bristol Bay," Lawrence would reply doubtfully. "Seems as if I'd rathercatch animals alive than go after those Orientals."

  "We'll take them alive, too," Johnny chuckled.

  Lawrence was not so sure of this. Hour after hour Blackie Dawson, who haddiscarded his crutches, entertained them with stories of his adventureswith the Orientals.

  "They want everything for themselves. They spoiled their own fishing bycatching the salmon before they were half grown and canning them right onthe ships. Now they want to come over here and do the same, right upthere in Bristol Bay.

  "They catch our fish and can 'em, then they pop into Seattle or SanFrancisco and say, 'See all the fine fish we have canned for you. Comeand buy them.'

  "Think we'll do that?" he would storm. "Not on your life! We'll get 'em.You'll see.

  "But the Shadow," his voice would drop, "that shadow that passes in thefog. How's a fellow to catch that? Who can tell? But we'll get it, too,"he would add, striking the table a lusty blow.

  In March he received his appointment as Commander of the _Stormy Petrel_.

  "A swell boat." He was proud of her. "Come on down with me and we'll turnher motors over once or twice just to get the rust out of 'em."

  Johnny and Lawrence accepted his invitation. They did far more than turnthe motors over. With Lawrence as engineer and Johnny as first mate, theycruised for three days along the Alaskan shores.

  On the third day, "Just to get in practice," as Blackie put it, theyhailed a suspicious-looking craft carrying no flag. When the skipperfailed to heed Blackie's command to head around, they sent a ball fromtheir shiny brass cannon over her bow and she promptly hove to.

  She was found to be carrying contraband drugs. "A fair capture in a fairchase," as Blackie expressed it. "A regular feather in our cap."

  "Well," said Johnny, "how did you like it?"

  "Those are glorious motors," Lawrence enthused. "How I'd love to be theirmaster. But I hope--" he hesitated. "I rather hope we go after theglacier bears. That's the surest way to get a tractor. And a tractor'swhat we need most."

  "Time and fate will decide," Johnny said soberly.

  "Time and Blackie," Lawrence added with a laugh.

  "And Smokey Joe," Johnny amended.

 

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