IN CULEBRA CUT
Joe sprang to his feet at the sound
of his chum’s voice. He had come ashore,
after splashing around in the water, and, for the
moment, Blake was alone in the river.
As Joe looked he saw a black, ugly
snout, and back of it a glistening, black and knobby
body, moving along after Blake, who was making frantic
efforts to get out of the way.
“I’m coming, Blake!
I’m coming!” cried Joe, as he ran to the
edge of the stream, with the intention of plunging
in.
“You will be too late,”
declared Mr. Alcando. “The alligator will
have him before you reach him. Oh, that I was
a good swimmer, or that I had a weapon.”
But Joe did not stay to hear what
he said. But one idea was in his mind, that of
rescuing his chum from peril. That he might not
be in time never occurred to him.
Blake gave a gurgling cry, threw up
his hands, and disappeared from sight as Joe plunged
in to go to his rescue.
“It’s got him—the
beast has him!” cried the Spaniard, excitedly.
“No, not yet. I guess maybe
he sank: to fool the alligator,” said the
guide, an educated Indian named Ramo. “I
wonder if I can stop him with one shot?” he
went on, taking up a powerful rifle that had been
brought with the camp equipment.
Joe was swimming out with all his
power, Blake was nowhere to be seen, and the alligator
was in plain sight, heading for the spot where Blake
had last been observed.
“It’s my only chance!”
muttered Ramo. “I hope the boy stays under
water.”
As he spoke the guide raised the rifle,
took quick but careful aim, and fired. There
was no puff of smoke, for the new high-powered, smokeless
powder was used. Following the shot, there was
a commotion in the water. Amid a smother of foam,
bright red showed.
“You hit him, Ramo!” cried
the Spaniard. “You hit him!”
“I guess I did,” the Indian
answered. “But where is Blake?”
That was what Joe was asking himself
as he plunged on through the stream, using the Australian
crawl stroke, which takes one through the water at
such speed. Just what Joe could do when he reached
his chum he did not stop to think. Certainly the
two would have been no match for the big alligator.
But the monster had met his match
in the steel-jacketed mushrooming bullet. It
had struck true and after a death struggle the horrid
creature sank beneath the surface just as Blake shot
up, having stayed under as long as he could.
“All right, Blake! Here
you are! I’m with you!” cried Joe,
changing his course to bring himself to his chum.
“Are you all right?”
“Yes, except for this cramp.
The alligator didn’t get near enough to do any
damage. But where is he?”
“Ramo shot him,” answered
Joe, for he had seen the creature sink to its death.
“You’re all right now. Put your hand
on my shoulder, and I’ll tow you in.”
“Guess you’ll have to.
I can’t seem to swim. I dived down when
I saw how near the beast was getting, thinking I might
fool him. I hated to come up, but I had to,”
Blake panted.
“Well, you’re all right
now,” Joe assured him, “but it was a close
call. How did it happen?”
“I’m sure I don’t
know,” said Blake, still out of breath from
trying to swim under water. “If I’d
known there were alligators in this river I’d
never have gone so far from shore.”
“That’s right,”
agreed Joe, looking around as though to make sure
no more of the creatures were in sight.
He saw none. On the shore stood
Ramo, the guide, with ready rifle.
“Feel better now?” asked Joe.
“Yes, the cramp seems to be
leaving me. I think I went in swimming too soon
after eating those plantains,” for they had been
given some of the yellow bananas by a native when
they stopped at his hut for some water. “They
upset me,” Blake explained. “I was
swimming about, waiting for you to come back and join
me, when I saw what I thought was a log in the water.
When it headed for me I thought it was funny, and
then, when I saw what it was, I realized I’d
better be getting back to shore. I tried, but
was taken with a fierce cramp. You heard me just
in time.”
“Yes,” responded Joe,
as he and Blake reached water shallow enough to wade
in, “but if it hadn’t been for Ramo’s
gun—well, there might be a different story
to tell.”
“And one that wouldn’t
look nice in moving pictures,” Blake went on
with a laugh. “You did me a good turn,”
he said to Ramo a little later, as he shook hands
with the dusky guide. “I shan’t forget
it.”
“Oh, it wasn’t anything
to pop over an alligator that way,” Ramo returned.
“I’ve often done it for sport. Though
I will admit I was a bit nervous this time, for fear
of hitting you.”
“I wish I had been the one to
shoot it,” said the Spaniard.
“Why?” asked Joe, as he
sat down on the warm sandy bank of the stream to rest.
“Why, then I should have repaid,
in a small measure, the debt I am under to you boys
for saving my life. I shall never forget that.”
“It wasn’t anything,”
declared Blake quickly. “I mean, what we
did for you.”
“It meant a great deal—to
me,” returned the Spaniard quietly, but with
considerable meaning in his tone. “Perhaps
I shall soon be able to—but no matter.
Are there many alligators in this stream?” he
asked of Ramo.
“Oh, yes, more or less, just
as there are in most of the Panaman rivers. But
I never knew one to be so bold as to attack any one
in daylight. Mostly they take dogs, pigs, or
something like that. This must have been a big,
hungry one.”
“You’d have thought so
if you were as close to him as I was,” spoke
Blake with a little shudder.
No one else felt like going in swimming
just then, and the two boys dressed. Blake had
fully recovered from the cramp that had so nearly
been his undoing.
For a week longer they lived in the
jungle, moving from place to place, camping in different
locations and enjoying as much as they could the life
in the wild. Blake and Joe made some good moving
picture films, Mr. Alcando helping them, for he was
rapidly learning how to work the cameras.
But the views, of course, were not
as good as those the boys had obtained when in the
African jungle. These of the Panama wilds, however,
were useful as showing the kind of country through
which the Canal ran, and, as such, they were of value
in the series of films.
“Well, we’ll soon be afloat
again,” remarked Blake, one night, when they
had started back for Gamboa. “I’ve
had about enough jungle.”
“And so have I,” agreed
Joe, for the last two days it had rained, and they
were wet and miserable. They could get no pictures.
Their tug was waiting for them as
arranged and, once more on board, they resumed their
trip through the Canal.
Soon after leaving Gamboa the vessel
entered a part of the waterway, on either side of
which towered a high hill through which had been dug
a great gash.
“Culebra Cut!” cried Blake,
as he saw, in the distance Gold Hill, the highest
point. “We must get some pictures of this,
Joe.”
“That’s right, so we must.
Whew! It is a big cut all right!” he went
on. “No wonder they said it was harder work
here than at the Gatun Dam. And it’s here
where those big slides have been?”
“Yes, and there may be again,” said Blake.
“I hope not!” exclaimed
Captain Watson. “They are not only dangerous,
but they do terrible damage to the Canal and the machinery.
We want no more slides.”
“But some are predicted,” Blake remarked.
“Yes, I know they say they come
every so often. But now it would take a pretty
big one to do much damage. We have nearly tamed
Culebra.”
“If there came a big slide here
it would block the Canal,” observed Mr. Alcando,
speculatively.
“Yes, but what would cause a
slide?” asked the captain.
“Dynamite could do it,” was the low-voiced
answer.
“Dynamite? Yes, but that
is guarded against,” the commander said.
“We are taking no chances. Now, boys, you
get a good view of Culebra,” and he pointed
ahead. Blake and Joe were soon busy with their
cameras, making different sets of views.
“Hand me that other roll of
film; will you, please?” asked Blake of the
Spaniard, who was helping them. “Mine is
used up.”
As Mr. Alcando passed over the box
he muttered, though possibly he was unaware of it:
“Yes, dynamite here, or at the
dam, would do the work.”
“What—what’s that?” cried
Blake, in surprise.