<h2 id="c16"><span class="small">CHAPTER</span> <br/><span class="large">16</span> <br/><i>TREED BY A BOAR</i></h2>
<p>Left to themselves, Penny and Louise walked a
few steps on the sagging planks which had been nailed
to tree stumps. The boards beneath them creaked
protestingly and dipped nearly into the water.</p>
<p>“We must have been crazy!” Louise exclaimed.
“We’ll die of boredom waiting here. Two hours
too!”</p>
<p>“It is a long time.”</p>
<p>“And if Joe shouldn’t come back, we’re stranded—absolutely
stranded.”</p>
<p>“We did take a chance, Louise, but I’m sure Joe can
be trusted.”</p>
<p>“He seems all right, but what do we really know
about him?” Louise argued. “If anything queer is
going on here in the swamp, he may be mixed up in it!”</p>
<p>“I thought about that,” Penny admitted. “Anyway,
if we’re to learn anything, we had to take a certain
amount of chance. I’m sure everything will be all
right.”</p>
<p>Slowly they walked on along the rickety planks,
now and then bending down to pluck a water lily.
Louise quickly jerked back her hand as a water snake
slithered past.</p>
<p>“Ugh!” she gasped. “Another one of those horrid
things!”</p>
<p>Interested to learn where the planks led, the girls
followed the bridge-like trail among the trees. Louise,
however, soon grew tired. As they presently came
to a stump which offered a perfect resting place, she
sat down.</p>
<p>“This is as far as I’m going,” she announced.</p>
<p>“But we have lots of time to explore, Louise. Don’t
you want to learn where this boardwalk goes?”</p>
<p>“Not at the risk of falling into the water! At any
rate, I’m tired. If you want to explore, go on alone.
I’ll wait for you here.”</p>
<p>Penny hesitated, reluctant to leave her chum alone.</p>
<p>“Sure you won’t mind, Louise?”</p>
<p>“I’d much rather wait here. Please go on. I know
you’ll never rest until you reach the end of the walk.”</p>
<p>Thus urged. Penny, with the package of lunch still
tucked under her arm, picked her way carefully along.</p>
<p>The board path curved on between the trees for
some distance only to end abruptly where boards had
rotted and floated away. After a break of several yards,
the walk picked up again for a short ways, but Penny
had no intention of wading through water to follow
it further.</p>
<p>Pausing to rest before starting back, she noticed
beyond the water oaks a narrow stretch of higher land
covered with dense, wild growth. Above the trees a
huge buzzard soared lazily.</p>
<p>“Ugly bird!” she thought, watching its flight.</p>
<p>Penny was about to turn and retrace her steps, when
she noticed something else—footsteps in the muck
not far from the end of the boardwalk.</p>
<p>“Someone has been here recently,” she reflected.
“Those prints must have been made since the last
rain.”</p>
<p>Even from some distance away. Penny could see that
the shoemarks were small ones.</p>
<p>“Probably the person who made them is the same
fellow who built the campfire,” she thought. “Wonder
where the footprints lead?”</p>
<p>Penny tried to draw her eyes away, but the footprints
fascinated and challenged her. She longed to
investigate them further. However, she had not forgotten
Trapper Joe’s warning that it was unsafe to
leave the boardwalk.</p>
<p>“If I watch out for snakes and only go a short ways,
what harm can it do?” she reasoned.</p>
<p>A moment more and Penny was off the walk, treading
her way cautiously along the muddy bank. She
paused to listen.</p>
<p>All was very quiet—so still that it gave the girl an
uneasy feeling, as if she were being watched by a
multitude of hostile eyes.</p>
<p>The footprints led to a large tree in a fairly open
area. On one of the low, overhanging bushes, a bit
of dark wool had been snagged.</p>
<p>“Someone climbed up there either to rest or sleep,”
Penny thought.</p>
<p>In the bushes close by, the girl heard a faint, rustling
sound.</p>
<p>“Who’s there?” she called sharply.</p>
<p>No one answered. All was still for a moment.
Then again she heard the whisper of disturbed leaves.</p>
<p>Penny’s flesh began to creep. Suddenly losing all
interest in the footprints, she decided to beat a hasty
retreat to the boardwalk.</p>
<p>The decision came too late. Before she could move,
a dozen big rooters led by an old gray boar, swarmed
out of the bushes, surrounding her.</p>
<p>Too frightened and startled to cry out, Penny huddled
back against the tree trunk. The rooters had
spread out in a circle and slowly were coming closer.</p>
<p>Retreat to the safety of the boardwalk was completely
cut off. The leader of the pack now was so
near that she plainly could see his razor-sharp ivory
tusks. In another moment, the animal would attack.</p>
<p>Throwing off the paralysis of fear which gripped
her, Penny swung herself into the lowermost branch
of the big trees. The package of lunch she had carried,
dropped from her hand, falling at the base of the
trunk.</p>
<p>Instantly, the rooters were upon it, tearing savagely
at the meat and at each other. Sick with horror, Penny
clung desperately to the tree limb.</p>
<p>“If I slip now, I’m a gonner!” she thought. “Those
rooters are half starved. If I fall, they’ll attack me!”</p>
<p>Penny considered shouting for Louise, but dismissed
the thought as quickly as it came. Her chum probably
was too far away to hear her cries. If she did come,
unarmed as she was, she might leave the boardwalk
only to endanger herself.</p>
<p>“Louise can’t help me,” Penny told herself. “I
brought this on myself by not heeding Old Joe’s warning.
Now it’s up to me to get out of the mess the best
way I can.”</p>
<p>The girl lay still on the limb, trying not to draw
the attention of the rooters. Once they finished the
meat, she was hopeful they would go away. Then she
could make a dash for the walk.</p>
<p>Grunting and squealing, the rooters devoured the
meat and looked about for more. To Penny’s relief,
they gradually wandered off—all except the old boar.</p>
<p>The leader of the pack stayed close to the big tree,
eyeing the girl in the tree wickedly. Even in the dim
light she could plainly see his evil little eyes and working
jaws.</p>
<p>“Go away you big brute!” she muttered.</p>
<p>Penny’s perch on the limb was a precarious one and
her arms began to ache from the strain of holding on.
Unsuccessfully, she tried to shift into a more comfortable
position.</p>
<p>“I may be treed here for hours!” she thought. “Can
I hold on that long?”</p>
<p>The old boar showed no disposition to move off,
but kept circling the tree. It seemed to the now desperate
Penny, that the animal sensed she was weakening
and only awaited the moment when she would
tumble down to the ground.</p>
<p>Breaking off a small tree branch she hurled it defiantly
at the boar. The act caused her to lose her
balance. Frantically, she clawed for a foothold but
could not obtain it. Down she slipped to the base of
the tree.</p>
<p>The old boar, quick to see his opportunity, charged.
With a scream of terror, Penny leaped aside and the
animal rushed past, squealing in rage at having missed
his prey.</p>
<p>Even now, the boar stood between the girl and the
plank walk. The tree from which she had fallen, offered
her only refuge, and as she measured her chances,
she realized that the probability of regaining the limb
was a slim one.</p>
<p><SPAN href="#front">The boar had turned and was coming for her again.</SPAN></p>
<p>But at that instant, as Penny froze in terror, a shot
was fired from somewhere in the bushes behind her.
The bullet went straight and true, stopping the boar
in his tracks. He grunted, rolled over, twitched twice,
and lay still.</p>
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