Air Service Boys over the Atlantic eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 168 pages of information about Air Service Boys over the Atlantic.

Air Service Boys over the Atlantic eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 168 pages of information about Air Service Boys over the Atlantic.

After one look at the bear Tom returned to his task.  Shooting game was all very fine, but he had business of a different character to call for his attention just then.

“Wonder if the old chap has got a mate around?” suggested Jack, a sudden thought causing him to survey the ice-floe as seen under the faint light of the stars that were beginning to show in the heavens above.

“Not one chance in a thousand he had company,” Beverly insisted; “but no harm in your keeping a wary eye about, Jack, while Tom gets things in shape again.  I have to stay here with the light.  If you’ve a sharp knife what’s to hinder you from taking one of his claws for a trophy?”

“I’ll do that same.  Thank you for reminding me, Colin!  Some fellows I know are such Doubting Thomases you have to be in a position to prove everything you tell them.  Tom, loan me that knife of yours, please.  It’s got an edge like a razor to it, and those paws look simply immense.”

“Make haste about it, for we’ll soon be ready to skip out of this place,” Tom warned him as he handed over the knife.

Jack began to work industriously.  He found he had undertaken no mean job when he contracted to sever one of the front paws of the dead Polar bear.  Not only did he have to cut through ligaments and tough skin, but the bones themselves gave him no end of trouble.

He solved this by finding the heavy monkey-wrench, and using it as a hammer, with the knife in place, thus actually severing the paw complete after considerable trouble.

“There, isn’t that a regular beauty to show?” he demanded, holding up the result of his labor.  “I feel something like a young Indian warrior who’s just killed his first grizzly, and means to hang the claws about his neck to prove his bravery.”

He stood looking down at the monster bear for a minute, debating something in his mind.

“I wonder now,” Jack finally observed, “if we could eat that bear meat, supposing something happened to keep us marooned on this ice for weeks at a stretch?  What do you think about it, Tom?”

“It might be possible, if we got in a bad pinch and were almost starving,” came the reply.  “But you must remember we’d have to swallow it raw, because we haven’t any means for making a fire; and trying to kindle a blaze on the ice would be a tough job.”

“Then I’m glad to know we don’t have to depend on bear meat to keep us from starving,” Jack announced.  “Pretty nearly through, Tom?”

“Five minutes more ought to see us ready to start.  I’m pretty hungry though and would like something more to eat.  You boys ate a good deal, but you called it ‘a snack,’ and not ‘supper.’”

“On the whole,” Colin suggested, “perhaps we’d better leave the supper until we get to moving smoothly again.  Things ought to taste better if we feel we’ve got the bulge on this engine trouble for fair.”

Jack did not try to urge any undue haste.  Nevertheless he looked several times in the quarter close by where the big berg raised its cone, as if his uneasiness now might be wholly concerned with its possibilities for making fresh trouble.

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Project Gutenberg
Air Service Boys over the Atlantic from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.