The Boy Aviators in Africa by [psued.] Captain Wilbur Lawton
page 89 of 229 (38%)
page 89 of 229 (38%)
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Ben?"
"I feel like a pot of boiling tar with a fire lighted under me," growled the veteran angrily; "consarn these rocks, I'd give a whole lot for a bit of that shade we left behind us." Despite the discomfort and the heat, however, they struggled on up the mountain-side, frequently using the rope-ladder to get over rough places, and at about noon they stood beneath the steep rock cliff that formed the nose of the upturned face. It was easy enough then to reach a spot below the tip and Frank, with a long cord he had brought for the purpose, laid out a straight line from the point down the southern slope of the mountain-side. While they were busy about this they were startled by a repetition of the same strange cry, half-warning, half-savage, that they had been so alarmed by the night before. "A-ho-o-o-o-AH-H-O-O-O-a-h-o-o-hoo-o-o-o-o!" "Great Scott," yelled Harry, "what on earth do you think of that?" Frank--considerably startled himself--had, however, made a determined effort to ascertain the source of the sound as it rose and fell in its strange cadence. "I've got it!" he shouted; now with a cry of triumph. "Got what?" cried Harry, as if he feared his brother had suddenly become infected with some strange complaint--"rabies or the pip?" |
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