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+ <head>
+ <meta content="pg2html (binary v0.17)" name="linkgenerator" />
+ <title>
+ The Jungle Fugitives and Others, by Edward S. Ellis
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
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+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
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+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Jungle Fugitives, by Edward S. Ellis
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Jungle Fugitives
+
+
+Author: Edward S. Ellis
+
+
+Release Date: October 6, 2005 [eBook #16805]
+Last Updated: May 31, 2019
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES AND OTHERS
+ </h1>
+ <h3>
+ A Tale of Life and Adventure in India
+ </h3>
+ <h3>
+ Including also Many Stories of American Adventure, Enterprise and Daring
+ </h3>
+ <h2>
+ by
+ </h2>
+ <h2>
+ Edward S. Ellis
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ 1903
+ </h3>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0001"> <b>THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0001"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ I. &mdash; IN THE SPRING OF 1857. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0002"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ II. &mdash; ON AN AFTERNOON. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0003"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ III. &mdash; YANKEE MARKSMANSHIP. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0004"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ IV. &mdash; FLIGHT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ V. &mdash; COMPANIONS IN FLIGHT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0006"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ VI. &mdash; ON THE GANGES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0007"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ VII. &mdash; AN UNEXPECTED MEETING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ VIII. &mdash; MUSTAD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0009"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ IX. &mdash; SCOUTING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0010"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ X. &mdash; ALONG SHORE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0011"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XI. &mdash; A COLLISION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XII. &mdash; A WHITE MAN'S VICTORY. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0013"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XIII. &mdash; UNDER THE BANK. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0014"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XIV. &mdash; THE SOUND OF FIRING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0015"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XV. &mdash; GONE! </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XVI. &mdash; A SHADOWY PURSUIT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0017"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XVII. &mdash; ALMOS. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0018"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XVIII. &mdash; DOCTOR AND PATIENT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0019"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ XIX. &mdash; ASIATIC HONOR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0021"> <b>LOST IN THE WOODS.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ I. &mdash; THE CABIN IN THE WOOD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0021"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ II. &mdash; A POINTED DISCUSSION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0022"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ III. &mdash; MISSING. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0023"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ IV. &mdash; THE SEARCH BY HUGH AND TOM. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ V. &mdash; A LITTLE CHILD SHALL LEAD THEM. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0027"> IN THE NICK OF TIME. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0028"> LOST IN THE SOUTH SEA. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0029"> AN UNPLEASANT COMPANION. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0030"> A STIRRING INCIDENT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0031"> CYCLONES AND TORNADOES. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0032"> LOST IN A BLIZZARD. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0033"> THROWING THE RIATA. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0034"> A WATERSPOUT. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0035"> AN HEROIC WOMAN. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0036"> THE WRITING FOUND IN A BOTTLE. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0037"> THAT HORNET'S NEST. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0038"> A YOUNG HERO. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0039"> OVERREACHED. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0040"> A BATTLE IN THE AIR. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0041"> WHO SHALL EXPLAIN IT? </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0042"> <b>A FOOL OR A GENIUS.</b> </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0025"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ I. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0026"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ II. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0027"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ III. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2HCH0028"> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;CHAPTER
+ IV. </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. &mdash; IN THE SPRING OF 1857.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ All through India, with its fanatical population five times as great as
+ that of England, the rumblings of the coming uprising had been heard for
+ months. The disaffection had been spreading and taking root. The
+ emissaries of the arch-plotters had passed back and forth almost from end
+ to end of the vast empire, with their messages of hatred and appeal. The
+ people were assured that the "Inglese loge" were perfecting their
+ insidious schemes for overthrowing their religion, and the faithful
+ everywhere were called upon to crush the infidels in the dust. The evil
+ seed fell upon the rankest of soil, and grew with a vigor and exuberance
+ that threatened to strangle every other growth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The plot, as agreed upon, was that a general uprising was to take place
+ throughout India on the last day of May, 1857, but, as is often the case
+ in such far-reaching schemes, the impatience of the mutineers precipitated
+ the tremendous tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first serious outbreak took place at Meerut on Sunday, May 10th, just
+ three weeks previous to the time set for the general uprising. That town,
+ with its population of about 40,000 at that time, lies thirty-two miles
+ northeast from Delhi, which was to be the capital of the resurrected Mogul
+ Empire. It was the precipitancy of this first revolt that prevented its
+ fullest success. The intention was to kill every white man, woman and
+ child in the place. Two regiments were clamorous for beginning the
+ massacre, but the Eleventh Native Infantry held back so persistently that
+ the others became enraged and fired a volley among them, killing a number.
+ Thereupon the Eleventh announced themselves ready to take their part in
+ the slaughter that was to free India from the execrated "Inglese loge."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing now for the first time the real peril, the colonel of the Eleventh
+ made an impassioned appeal to the regiment to stand by its colors and to
+ take no part in the useless revolt. While he was speaking, a volley
+ riddled his body, and he tumbled lifeless from his saddle. The Eleventh,
+ however, covered the flight of the other officers, but helped to release a
+ thousand prisoners, suffering punishment for various offenses, and then
+ the hell fire burst forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bungalows of the officers, the mess houses of the troops, and all the
+ buildings between the native lines and Meerut were fired, and the whole
+ became a roaring conflagration, whose glare at night was visible for
+ miles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When an appeal was made to the Emperor of Delhi by the troopers, he
+ inquired their errand. The lacklustre eyes flashed with a light that had
+ not been seen in them for years, the bowed form acquired new energy, and
+ he gave orders to admit the troopers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their message was enough to fan into life the slumbering fires of ambition
+ in the breast of a dying person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He yielded to the dazzling dream. A throne of silver, laid away for years,
+ was brought into the "hall of special audience," and the tottering form
+ was helped to the seat, into which he sank and looked around upon his
+ frenzied followers. Mohammed Suraj-oo-deen Shah Gezee was now the Great
+ Mogul of India. A royal salute of twenty-one guns was fired by two troops
+ of artillery from Meerut in front of the palace, and the wild multitudes
+ again strained their throats. To the thunder of artillery, the strains of
+ martial music and the shouting of the people, the gates of the palace were
+ flung open, and Prince Mirza Mogul, with his brother, Prince Abu Beker, at
+ the head of the royal bodyguard, rode forth, the king following in an open
+ chariot, surrounded by his bodyguard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With impressive slowness this strange procession made its way through the
+ principal street, the populace becoming as frantic as so many ghost
+ dancers. Finally a halt was made at the Juma Musjeed, the largest mosque
+ in India, where the banner of the Prophet was unfurled and the Mogul
+ Empire proclaimed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. &mdash; ON AN AFTERNOON.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Almost due east from Delhi Dr. Hugh Marlowe, a venerable American
+ physician, had lived for more than twenty years. Since the death of his
+ wife, six years previous to the Mutiny, he had dwelt alone with his only
+ daughter, Mary, and their single servant, Mustad, a devout Mussulman. A
+ portion of the time mentioned had been passed without the society of his
+ beloved child, who spent several years in New England (where the physician
+ himself was born and had received his education) at one of the fashionable
+ schools.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Shortly after her graduation, Miss Marlowe met Jack Everson, fresh from
+ Yale, and the acquaintance ripened into mutual love, though the filial
+ affection of the young woman was too profound to permit her to form an
+ engagement with the young man until the consent of her father was
+ obtained, and he would not give that consent until he had met and
+ conversed with the young gentleman face to face and taken his measure, as
+ may be said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If he doesn't esteem you enough to make a little journey like the one
+ from America to this country he isn't worth thinking about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he <i>will</i> make the journey," said the blushing daughter, patting
+ the bronzed cheek of the parent whom she idolized as much as he idolized
+ her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't be to sure of that, my young lady; romantic young girls like you
+ have altogether too much faith in the other sex."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he <i>has</i> started," she added with a sly smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has, eh? He will change his mind before he reaches here. How far has
+ he got?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He was due in England many weeks ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, well! How soon will he arrive <i>here</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think he is due now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Very probably, but his fancy will give out before he reaches this
+ out-of-the-way place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think not, papa."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course not, of course not; I just told you that that is the way with
+ all foolish girls like you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old gentleman had assumed a stern earnestness, and he added: "I tell
+ you he will never show himself here! I know what I'm talking about."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he <i>is</i> here, papa; let me introduce you to Jack Everson, a
+ physician like yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this time the smiling young man was standing directly behind the old
+ doctor, who was lazily reclining in a hammock on the shaded lawn, smoking
+ a cheroot, while his daughter sat on a camp stool, with one hand resting
+ on the edge of the hammock, so as to permit her gently to sway it back and
+ forth. As she spoke the tall, muscular American walked forward and
+ extended his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Doctor, I am glad to make your acquaintance," he said, in his cheery way.
+ The astonished physician came to an upright position like the clicking of
+ the blade of a jackknife, and meeting the salutation, exclaimed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I'll be hanged! I never knew a girl so full of nonsense and tricks
+ as Mary. You are welcome, doctor, to my house; let me have a look at you!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack Everson laughingly stepped hack a couple of paces and posed for
+ inspection. The elder deliberately drew his spectacle case from his
+ pocket, adjusted the glasses and coolly scrutinized the young man from
+ head to foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You'll do," he quietly remarked, removing his glasses and returning them
+ to the morocco case; "now, if you'll be good enough to seat yourself,
+ we'll talk over matters until dinner time. When did you arrive?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack seated himself on the remaining camp stool, a few paces from the
+ happy young lady, accepted a cheroot from his host, and the conversation
+ became general. Like most Americans, when at home or travelling, Jack
+ Everson kept his eyes and ears open. He heard at Calcutta, his starting
+ point, at Benares, Allahabad, Cawnpore and other places, the whisperings
+ of the uprising that was soon to come, and his alarm increased as he
+ penetrated the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Worse than all," he said gravely, speaking of his trip, "one of my
+ bearers spoke English well, and quite an intimacy sprang up between us.
+ Since his companions could not utter a word in our language, we conversed
+ freely without being understood. He was reticent at first concerning the
+ impending danger and professed to know nothing of it, but this forenoon be
+ gave me to understand, in words that could not be mistaken, that the whole
+ country would soon be aflame with insurrection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did he offer any advice?" asked Dr. Marlowe, less impressed with the news
+ than was his visitor or his daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He did; he said that the escape of myself and of your family could be
+ secured only by leaving this place at the earliest moment possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But whither can we go? We are hundreds of miles from the seacoast and
+ should have to journey for weeks through a country swarming with enemies."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I asked him that question, and his answer was that we should make for
+ Nepaul."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the province to the east of us. It is a mountainous country, a
+ long way off, and hard to reach. Why should he advise us to go thither?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I questioned him, but he seemed to fear that his companions would grow
+ suspicious over our conversation and he said nothing more. I thought he
+ would add something definite when we came to separate, and, to loosen his
+ tongue, I gave him an extra fee, but he added never a word, and, unless I
+ am mistaken, regretted what he had already said."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It seems to me," observed the daughter, "that the man knew it is
+ impossible for us to get to the seacoast, and believed that by going
+ further into the interior we should reach the people who are not affected
+ by the insurrection. Wide as it may be, there must be many points that
+ will not feel it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the true reason," said her parent, "but, confound it! I have
+ lived in this spot for twenty years; the little town of Akwar lies near,
+ and there is hardly a person in it who has not been my patient. I am known
+ even in Meerut and Delhi, and I can hardly believe the mutineers, for such
+ they seem to be, will harm me or my friends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You once told me," replied Mary, "that when an appeal was made to the
+ religion of this people they knew no such thing as fear or mercy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And I told you the truth," said her father gravely. "But since we have
+ weapons and plenty of ammunition, and know how to handle the firearms we
+ shall not be led like lambs to the slaughter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is true enough," said Jack, "but it will be of little avail, when
+ our enemies are numbered by the hundred and perhaps the thousand."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I take it, then, that you favor an abandonment of our home?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do, and with the least possible delay."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And you, my daughter, are you of the same mind?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am," was the emphatic response.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then my decision is that we shall start for the interior and stay there
+ until it is safe to show ourselves again among these people, provided it
+ ever shall be safe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When shall you start?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parent looked at the sky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is two or three hours to nightfall. We will set out early to-morrow
+ morning before the sun is high in the sky."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But will we not be more liable to discovery?" asked Jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not if we use care. I am familiar with the country for miles in every
+ direction. We shall have to travel for the first two or three days through
+ a thick jungle, and it is too dangerous work to undertake in the
+ night-time. This, you know, is the land of the cobra and the tiger, not to
+ mention a few other animals and reptiles equally unpleasant in their
+ nature. Last night," continued the doctor, "I saw a glare in the sky off
+ to the westward on the opposite side of the river in the direction of
+ Meerut. I wonder what it meant?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By Jove!" exclaimed Jack, "that explains something that the palanquin
+ bearer said to me about there being so many Inglese where there are none
+ to-day. I could not catch his meaning, though he mentioned Meerut. But he
+ gave me to understand that it was not quite time yet for the uprising,
+ which would come in a few weeks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Those things are apt to be precipitated. I have no doubt that the
+ mutineers burned the city last night. If so, the main body will hurry to
+ Delhi, which, being the ancient capital of the Mogul Empire, will become
+ the new one. Some of the rebels may take it into their heads to come in
+ this direction. What is the matter, Dr. Everson?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. &mdash; YANKEE MARKSMANSHIP.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ As Jack Everson was seated he faced the broad, sluggish Ganges, with the
+ low, green banks beyond. He was looking over the water, in the rays of the
+ declining sun, when he saw something that caused him to rise hastily from
+ his seat and peer earnestly across the river toward the opposite shore.
+ Observing his action, the doctor asked his question. Both he and his
+ daughter, rising to their feet, gazed in the same direction. It was easy
+ to see what had attracted the attention of their guest. A party of
+ horsemen, fully twenty, if not more, in number, had approached the river
+ and were now halted on the other side, looking across in the direction of
+ Dr. Marlowe's home, as if debating the question of making it a visit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let me get my glass," said Mary, starting toward the house, hardly a
+ hundred feet distant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Allow me to bring it," interrupted Jack. "It is on one of the chairs on
+ the veranda, and I want my rifle."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking the glass from him on his return, the young woman levelled it at
+ the group of horsemen on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot make out who they are," she said, passing the glass to her
+ father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took the parent but a few seconds to answer the question. One sweeping
+ glance told him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are Ghoojurs," he remarked, with as much calmness as he could
+ assume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And who are Ghoojurs?" asked Jack Everson, less excited than his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They belong to the nomadic tribes which originally occupied India, and
+ are among the worst wretches in the world. They are brigands and robbers,
+ who are to be dreaded at all times. Now, if the revolt has broken out,
+ they will be as merciless as tigers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It looks as if they intended to make us a visit, doctor?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Alas! there can be no earthly doubt of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let us hurry into the jungle," said Mary, her face paling with fear. "We
+ have not a minute to waste."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The advice is good, but before acting on it I should like to make an
+ experiment."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this brief interval Jack Everson had carefully examined his rifle
+ to assure himself that it was in good condition.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Heavens, man!" exclaimed Dr. Marlowe, "you are not going to try a shot at
+ them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is my intention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are a mile distant!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "One of my medals was won for hitting a target at exactly that distance,"
+ replied Jack, continuing his preparations.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is impossible that you should succeed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But not impossible that I should try, so please don't bother the man at
+ the wheel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They have ridden into the water," added the young woman, still nervous
+ and excited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which will serve to shorten the distance somewhat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not wait until they are halfway across; or, better still, not wait at
+ all?" inquired the doctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack Everson made no reply, but, lying down on his back, he slightly
+ separated his raised knees, and, by crossing his ankles, made a rest for
+ the barrel of his rifle. The left arm was crooked under his head, so as to
+ serve as a pillow or support, leaving the hand to steady the stock of his
+ gun, while the right inclosed the trigger guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The horsemen, instead of riding side by side, were strung along in a line,
+ with the leader several paces in advance and mounted on a rather large
+ horse of a coal-black color. Directly behind him came one upon a bay,
+ while a little further back rode another on a white steed. There could be
+ no question that they were on their way to kill without mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was intensely trying to father and daughter. The whole party
+ of Ghoojurs had entered the Ganges and were steadily approaching. The
+ water was so shallow that it could be seen as it splashed about the bodies
+ of the riders, who were talking and laughing, as if in anticipation of the
+ enjoyment awaiting them. They preserved their single file, like so many
+ American Indians in crossing a stream, and their last thought must have
+ been of any possible danger that could threaten them from the three on the
+ further bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The situation was becoming unbearable when the rifle cracked with a noise
+ no louder than a Chinese cracker, and a faint puff of smoke curled upward
+ from the muzzle of the weapon. At the same moment the Ghoojur at the
+ front, on his black horse, flung up his arms and tumbled sideways into the
+ water, which splashed over his animal's head. Frightened, the horse
+ reared, pawed the air, and, whirling about, galloped back to the bank,
+ sending the water flying in showers from his hoofs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Score me a bull's-eye!" called Jack Everson, who in his pleasure over his
+ success, could not wait for the result.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But see!" cried Mary, "you have only infuriated them. Oh! father, how can
+ we save ourselves?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. &mdash; FLIGHT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The success of the first shot gave Jack Everson self-confidence and he
+ took less time in aiming the second, which was as unerring as the first.
+ Another Ghoojur plunged off his horse and gave but a single struggle when
+ he sank from sight in the shallow water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Another bull's-eye!" called Jack, proceeding to reload his piece. "I
+ hope, doctor, you are keeping a correct score; I must have credit for all
+ I do."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now for my distinguished friend on the milk-white steed," said Jack,
+ proceeding to adjust his telescopic sight to that individual. "If they
+ will send over the three horses it will give us one apiece."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Ghoojurs had had enough of this fearful business. They saw that
+ some unaccountable fatality was at work and it was madness for them to
+ remain. With never a suspicion of the truth they wheeled their animals
+ about and sent them galloping for the bank which they had left a short
+ time before full of hope and anticipation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm sorry for that," reflected Jack Everson, "for it mixes things and I
+ can't pick out my man, but here goes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In one sense, his opportunity was better than before; for, while he could
+ not select his particular target, he had but to aim at the bunch to make
+ sure of hitting somebody, which is precisely what he did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Ghoojur whom he punctured did not fall, for the reason that two of his
+ friends reached out and prevented him. It was a piece of supererogation on
+ their part, for when the party emerged from the Ganges upon dry land that
+ fellow was of no further account.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack now showed more haste than before in reloading his weapon, fearing
+ that the party would get beyond his reach before he could fire for the
+ fourth time. Much to his regret, they did so, for though he made the shot,
+ it was necessarily so hurried that it inflicted no injury, and the whole
+ party galloped out of sight over the slight swell without showing any
+ further concern for their companions left behind. Jack now rose to his
+ feet with the question:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is my record, doctor?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Three bull's-eyes; your score is perfect."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hardly, for the last was a miss; however, three out of a possible four is
+ pretty fair when the circumstances are considered. I suspect that that
+ particular party is not likely to give us further trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, they will not forget the lesson."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If we can induce our enemies to make their approach by the same ford and
+ when the sun is shining this will become truly amusing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the Ghoojurs will not repeat that mistake. This affair has served
+ another purpose," added the physician, "we must not delay our departure."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you advise our going while it is night?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I advised the contrary a little while ago, but I confess I am afraid to
+ stay in the house, even for a few hours. However, we will take our dinner
+ there, gather a few belongings and then hurry off. We shall find some spot
+ where it will be safe to pass the night, and where we are not likely to be
+ molested, because no one will know where to find us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All glanced in the direction of the other shore, and seeing nothing to
+ cause misgiving moved to the house, a low, roomy structure, though of
+ moderate proportions, with a broad veranda extending along two sides. It
+ was time for the evening meal, and there was some surprise felt that
+ Mustad, the servant, had not summoned them before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This surprise turned to astonishment and alarm when it was discovered that
+ Mustad was not in the house. No preparation had been made for dinner, and
+ though his name was called several times in a loud voice, there was no
+ response.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has left us," said the doctor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What does it mean?" asked Mary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It can have but one meaning: by some legerdemain, such as our own Indians
+ show in telegraphing news from one mountain top to another, word has
+ reached Mustad of what has taken place, and he has been called upon to
+ join the faithful, and has been only too glad to do it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should think he would have attempted to do us harm before going."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is too great a coward."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But his fanaticism will make him reckless."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When he gets among his friends then he will be among the worst."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, father, he was always meek and gentle and respectful."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Those are the kind who become directly the opposite."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you think he would harm us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have no doubt of it," was the reply of the doctor. "I know the breed; I
+ have twice been the means of saving his life through my medicines, and
+ Mary nursed him for three weeks when he was suffering from a fever."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yon may be doing him an injustice," ventured Jack Everson, to whom the
+ judgment of his friend seemed bitter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish I could think so, but, Mary, if you can provide us with something
+ in the way of food, Mr. Everson and I will get the things together that we
+ are to take with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Marlowe wisely decided not to burden themselves with unnecessary
+ luggage. Jack took from his trunk a few needed articles and stowed them
+ into a travelling bag whose supporting strap could be flung over one
+ shoulder. Though a physician himself, admitted to practice, he had brought
+ none of his instruments with him, for the good reason that he saw no sense
+ in doing so. Into the somewhat larger bag of the elder doctor were placed
+ his most delicate instruments and several medical preparations, mostly the
+ results of his experiments. They were too precious to be lost if there was
+ any way of preserving them. Mary packed her articles in a small travelling
+ bag, the strap of which she, too, flung over her shoulder, though Jack
+ asked to be allowed to relieve her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was after the hurried meal had been eaten by lamplight that the three
+ completed their preparations for departure. That to which they paid the
+ most attention was their means of defense. Jack Everson had brought a
+ plentiful supply of cartridges for his superb breechloader; and the belt
+ was already secured around his body. Dr. Marlowe never allowed his supply
+ of ammunition to run low, so that the two were well supplied in that
+ respect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack was pleased to find that the revolver belonging to Mary Marlowe was
+ of the same calibre as his own, so that the cartridges could be used
+ indiscriminately.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I remember," he said to her, when the parent was just beyond hearing,
+ "that you were quite skillful with your weapon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not specially so, but what skill I gained is due to your tuition."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so much to that as to the aptness of the pupil."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your remark is more gallant than true, but I hope I shall not be called
+ upon to use this weapon as you used yours awhile ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Such is my prayer, but if the necessity arises do not hesitate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Be assured I shall not," she replied, with a flash of her fine eyes and a
+ compression of her lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. &mdash; COMPANIONS IN FLIGHT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Everything needed having been gathered, the lamps were extinguished, and
+ with the physician in the lead, the three passed out of the front door to
+ the veranda. The doctor decided to leave the door unfastened, since it was
+ useless to secure it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly, when the doctor was about to give the word to move, he saw a
+ shadowy figure in the direction of the river.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sh!" he whispered; "it looks as if we had waited too long; some one is
+ approaching. Be ready to use your gun or to retreat into the house if
+ necessary to fight it out there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a white man," said the daughter in an undertone; "he may be a
+ patient."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was clear by this time that the stranger was not a native, for he was
+ dressed in civilized costume and his gait was that of a European. He did
+ not perceive the silent figures until within a few paces of the veranda,
+ when he paused abruptly, as if startled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good evening," he said in English. "Is this Dr. Marlowe?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is; who are you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My name is Anderson; I was looking for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "In what way can I serve you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have heard the news, I suppose," said the man, keeping his position,
+ and looking up to the three, who were now all on the edge of the veranda;
+ "the native soldiers at Meerut mutinied yesterday, killed most of their
+ officers, plundered the city, slaying every white person they could find,
+ after which most of them hurried to Delhi."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You bring dreadful tidings; I had heard nothing definite, but suspected
+ all that you have told me. Are you alone and why do you come to me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I fled with my wife and two other families, Turner and Wharton, from the
+ outskirts of Meerut as soon as there seemed a chance for us. We made our
+ way to the river, found a boat and paddled to this place, for we had no
+ sail and there was scarcely any wind."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where are your friends?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I left them by the edge of the river in the boat, promising to rejoin
+ them in a few minutes."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you no companions, but those you named?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "None; my wife and I buried two children last Summer; Mr. Turner has none,
+ and Mr. Wharton and his young wife were but recently married."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have not told me why you come to me?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Chiefly to warn you of your peril and to beseech you to fly before it is
+ too late."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you very much for your solicitude; it was kind on the part of you
+ and your friends, but it strikes me that one place is about as safe as
+ another."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are so far from the large cities and the coast that it is useless to
+ attempt to reach any of them. Our first aim was to get as far from Meerut
+ as possible; then as we found ourselves approaching your home, it seemed
+ to us there was a chance for our lives by pushing to the northward, into
+ the wilder and less settled country, where the flames of the insurrection
+ may not reach."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your sentiments are our own; you have been wonderfully fortunate in
+ getting this far; my friends and I have seen enough to warn us to lose no
+ time, and we were on the point of starting when I saw you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "May I ask what course you intend to take?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have lived here for twenty years, so that I am acquainted with the
+ section. My intention was to follow a slightly travelled road, which, in
+ fact, is little more than a bridle path, until several miles beyond Akwar,
+ when we should come back to the main highway and keep to that for fifty or
+ perhaps a hundred miles. By that time, we should be safe, if such a thing
+ as safety is possible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Your plan is a good one, but is not mine better?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I, too, am familiar with this part of the country; a stream empties into
+ the Ganges just eastward of your house, hardly a half mile distant; it
+ must have its source somewhere among the foothills of the Himalayas. At
+ any rate, it is navigable for all of a hundred miles. It seems to me that
+ when paddling up that stream at night, between the wooded banks, there
+ will be less chance of being discovered by enemies than when travelling
+ overland, as you contemplate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am favorably impressed with your plan; do I understand you to invite us
+ to join your party?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are more than welcome; our boat will accommodate us all without
+ crowding, but I regret to say we have but a single gun among us. That is
+ mine, which I left with my friends against my return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We are well supplied in that respect; we accept your invitation with many
+ thanks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the doctor spoke he stepped down from the veranda, followed by the
+ others, and Mr. Anderson led the way across the lawn to the river, where
+ his friends were awaiting his coming with many misgivings. A general
+ introduction followed. A common danger makes friends of strangers, and in
+ a few minutes all were as well acquainted as if they had known one another
+ for days and weeks. Anderson and Turner were men in middle life, while
+ Wharton was of about the same age as Jack Everson. They had lived for
+ several years on the outskirts of Meerut, but it was young Wharton who
+ discovered the impending peril, and it was due to him that the three
+ families escaped the fate of hundreds of others on that woful night. The
+ young wife and Mary Marlowe became intimate friends at once, while, as has
+ been said, there was a hearty, genuine comradeship immediately established
+ among all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boat was larger than Dr. Marlowe and his companions suspected. It was
+ more than twenty feet in length, with a cabin at the stern, a place for a
+ mast, though there was neither mast nor sail on board. Anderson had spoken
+ of paddling to this point, when, had he spoken correctly, he would have
+ said that no paddles were used, but that the craft was propelled by means
+ of poles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI. &mdash; ON THE GANGES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ While all the members of the party were cheered by hope, none forgot that
+ a dreadful peril impended. Enough time had passed since the revolt at
+ Meerut for the news to spread even beyond the little town of Akwar, which
+ was within a fourth of a mile of the home of Dr. Marlowe. He was aware
+ that some of the most fanatical Mussulmans in all India lived there. The
+ action of the servant Mustad, who owed his life to the father and child,
+ was proof of what might be expected from these miscreants when swept off
+ their feet by the delirium that was spreading with the frightful swiftness
+ of a prairie fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly no time was lost. There was a hurried scrambling on board, the
+ water fortunately being deep enough near shore to allow all to step upon
+ the boat dry shod. The faint moon revealed the smooth surface of the
+ Ganges for nearly a hundred yards from land, but the further shore was
+ veiled in darkness. It was at this juncture that Miss Marlowe made an
+ annoying discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, papa, I have forgotten my pistol!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wait and I'll soon get it," she added, starting to leap the short
+ distance from the gunwale to land, but Jack Everson caught her arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You must not think of it; tell me where you left the weapon and I'll
+ bring it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I laid it on the table in the dining-room and in the hurry forgot it when
+ we left."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack turned to his friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't wait here," he said, aware of the nervousness of the whole party.
+ "Push down stream, and I'll quickly overtake you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without waiting for further explanation, he leaped the slight space and
+ started up the lawn on a loping trot. For convenience he left his rifle
+ behind, but made sure that his revolver was in his hip pocket. He did not
+ apprehend that he would need the weapon in the short time he expected to
+ be absent, but if anything went awry it would be more useful than the
+ rifle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In that moment of profound stillness following the disappearance of the
+ young man among the trees grouped about the lawn, the motionless people on
+ the boat felt a thrill of terror at the unmistakable sound of oars from
+ some point on the river not distant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let us land and take refuge in your house," suggested young Wharton; "we
+ cannot make a decent fight in this boat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall have a better chance than in the house," was the reply of the
+ physician; "the bank of the river is shaded by trees a little further
+ down; we must lose no time in getting there, and avoid the least noise."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were two long poles belonging to the boat, one of which was grasped
+ by Wharton, while Anderson swayed the other, the remainder watching their
+ movements, which could not have been more skillful. Pressing the end
+ against the bank, and afterwards against the clayey bottom, the craft
+ speedily swung several rods from shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the two men were thus employed, the others peered off in the gloom
+ and listened for a repetition of the sounds that had frightened them a few
+ minutes before. They were not heard again, nor could the straining vision
+ detect anything of the dreaded object, which could not be far away. Not a
+ person on board doubted that a number of their enemies were near and
+ searching for them. Dr. Marlowe would have taken comfort from this fact
+ had the circumstances been different; for the men who were hunting for him
+ would go to his house, since it was there they must gain their first
+ knowledge of his flight; but, as he viewed it, it was impossible that they
+ should be wholly ignorant of the boat and its occupants, which must have
+ made most of the distance before night closed in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It followed, therefore, that if they were looking for the doctor and his
+ family they were also looking for the boat and the fugitives it contained.
+ The low-lying shore, with no trees fringing the bank, was the worst place
+ for him and his friends, and he was in a fever of eagerness to reach the
+ protecting shadows along shore. The nerves of all were keyed to the
+ tensest point, when they caught the dim outlines of the overhanging
+ growth, with the leafage as exuberant as it always is in a subtropical
+ region at that season of the year. The men toiled with vigor and care,
+ while the others glanced from the gloom of the river to the deeper gloom
+ of the bank, which seemed to recede as they labored toward it. With a
+ relief that cannot be imagined the bulky craft glided into the bank of
+ deeper gloom, which so wrapped it about that it was invisible from any
+ point more than a dozen yards distant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It is inconceivable how a narrower escape could have come about, for the
+ two men had hardly ceased poling, allowing the boat to move forward with
+ the momentum already gained, when their enemies were discovered. Mary
+ Marlowe's arm was interlocked with that of her father, when she nervously
+ clutched it and whispered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yonder is their boat!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All saw the terrifying sight at the same moment. Almost opposite, and
+ barely fifty yards out on the river, could be traced a moving shadow, the
+ outlines of which showed a craft similarly shaped to their own, except
+ that it was somewhat smaller and sat lower in the water. The men were too
+ dimly seen for their number to be counted or their motions observed, but,
+ as in the former instance, the sounds indicated that they were using
+ paddles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since it was certain that the natives were searching for the fugitives in
+ the boat under the shadows of the bank every one of the latter wondered
+ that the pursuers remained out in the stream, when there was need of
+ unimpeded vision. They half expected their enemies to turn to the left and
+ come directly for them. But nothing of the kind took place. The craft
+ headed down the river, the sound of the paddles so slight that only the
+ closely listening ear could hear them, until it melted in the gloom and
+ vanished from sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a vast relief for the moment, but little comfort could our friends
+ take from the fact. Their enemies were not likely to go far, when they
+ would suspect that something of the nature described had occurred, and
+ they would return and grope along shore for their victims. So certain was
+ Dr. Marlowe of this turn that he believed the wisest course was for the
+ entire party to abandon the boat, and, as may be said, "take to the
+ woods." They had the whole night before them, and, with his intimate
+ knowledge of the roads, paths and trails of the country and jungles, he
+ was confident of guiding them beyond danger and to some place where, when
+ morning dawned, there would be little to fear in the way of discovery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This course would have been taken except for the absence of Jack Everson.
+ There was no way of apprising him of the change of plan, and, with his
+ ignorance of the topography of their surroundings, he would be certain to
+ go astray, and for any one in his situation, to go astray meant death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII. &mdash; AN UNEXPECTED MEETING.
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Meanwhile, Mr. Jack Everson found matters exceedingly interesting.
+ </h3>
+ <p>
+ When he informed his friends that he would rejoin them in the course of a
+ few minutes the possibility of anything interfering with his promise did
+ not occur to him. That danger threatened every member of the little
+ company may be set down as self-evident, but what could happen to disturb
+ him in the brief interval spent in running up the slope, dashing into the
+ house and back again to the river's side?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such were his thoughts as he entered the shadows and hurriedly approached
+ the front veranda. Although he had reached this spot within the preceding
+ twenty-four hours the evening meal and the preparations for flight had
+ given him sufficient knowledge of the interior to remove all difficulty in
+ going straight to the table in the dining-room and taking the forgotten
+ revolver therefrom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first tingle of misgiving came to the young man when he was close to
+ the porch and about to step upon it. He remembered that it was himself who
+ had extinguished the lamp on the table as the three were about to pass
+ into the hall and out of doors, but lo! a light was shining from that very
+ room. What could it mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's deuced queer," he thought, coming to an abrupt halt; "I screwed
+ down that lamp and blew into the chimney in the orthodox fashion, so it
+ couldn't have been that I unconsciously left the wick burning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this juncture he made another significant discovery. The front door
+ which he had seen Dr. Marlowe close was partly open. The inference was
+ inevitable: some one was in the house. In the brief time that had passed
+ one or more persons had entered and were busy at that moment in the
+ interior. Perhaps they had been watching among the shadows on the outside
+ for the occupants to leave the way open for them to pass within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prudence dictated that Jack Everson should not linger another moment.
+ Indeed, he ought to have counted himself fortunate that he had made his
+ discovery in time to save himself from running into a trap. He should
+ return to his friends with the alarming news and help them in getting away
+ with the utmost haste possible. But Jack did nothing of the sort.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The chief cause of his lingering was his desire to obtain the revolver
+ belonging to Miss Marlowe. Recalling the paucity of firearms among the
+ people on the boat he felt that a single weapon could be ill spared. But
+ above and beyond this cold truth was a vague, shuddering suspicion,
+ amounting to a belief, that the young woman would soon need that very
+ weapon; that, without it she would become another of the unspeakable
+ victims of the fiends who made the Sepoy Mutiny one of the most hideous
+ blots that darken the pages of history. He compressed his lips and swore
+ that the revolver should be recovered, if the thing were possible, failing
+ in which he would compel her to take his own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first thing was to learn whether there was more than one person in the
+ house and what business had brought them there. His own return was not
+ expected, so that that advantage was in his favor. He stepped lightly upon
+ the veranda and, like a burglar in his stocking feet, passed across the
+ porch and pushed back the door far enough to admit him. This required but
+ a few inches, and the hinges gave out not the slightest creak. The
+ entrance to the dining-room was closed, so that all was darkness, but he
+ plainly saw the yellow thread along the edges of the door, caused by the
+ lamp in the room beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once within the hall he listened intently, but could not detect the
+ slightest sound within the building. He had already drawn his revolver,
+ and held it ready for instant use. Knowing the value of seconds, he began
+ moving along the hall toward the door, which was only a few paces distant,
+ and had passed half the space when a muttered execration escaped him, for
+ his foot struck some object that was kicked the remaining length of the
+ hall with a clatter that he verily believed must have been heard by his
+ friends on the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No use now for precaution. Determined to have the other weapon, but not
+ unmindful of the peril involved, he strode the few remaining steps and
+ hastily shoved open the door of the dining-room. If a foe was there with
+ the revolver he was quite likely to hold it levelled at the intruder,
+ because of which Jack, when he burst into the room, held his own weapon
+ pointed, so as to prevent any enemy from "getting the drop" on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For one moment the young man believed it was all a mistake and that,
+ despite the precaution taken upon leaving the house, he had not
+ extinguished the lamp, whose wick had recovered its vigor, but the
+ suspicion was hardly formed when he knew there was no foundation for it.
+ In the first place no lamp ever acts that way, and, the front door having
+ been closed, could not open of itself. More convincing than all was the
+ fact that Mary Marlowe's revolver, which had brought him back, was
+ missing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Diagonally across the dining-room from where Jack Everson stood was the
+ door leading to the rear of the house. This was open for three or four
+ inches, and while searching the apartment with all the keenness of his
+ powerful vision, he distinctly saw it move. The distance was no more than
+ an inch, but he was not mistaken, and knew it had been drawn that much
+ nearer shut. Since no air was stirring the conclusion was inevitable that
+ some one was on the other side who was aware of the entrance of the
+ American.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The position of the lamp on the table threw the crevice caused by the
+ slight opening of the door in shadow, and all was blank darkness beyond.
+ But, looking in that direction, Jack caught the gleam of a pair of eyes,
+ peering from the gloom like the orbs of a jungle tiger gathering himself
+ for a spring. Nothing could be seen but the glow of the eyes, that seemed
+ to have something of the phosphorescence of the cat species, but he could
+ not mistake the meaning of what he saw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack had partly lowered his revolver, after the first glance around the
+ room, but it now came to a level again with the suddenness of lightning
+ and was pointed straight at the gleaming eyes, as he spoke in a low,
+ deadly tone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come forth or I'll send a bullet through your infernal brain!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Never was man more fairly caught. In the language of the West, Jack
+ Everson had the drop on him, and none could be more alive to the fact than
+ the fellow who was thus taken at disadvantage. It was merited punishment
+ for his foolhardiness in inviting his own discomfiture. At first the
+ chances of the two were equal, but the white man was more alive to the
+ situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Asiatic showed his appreciation of the situation by stepping forward
+ into the lamplight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Incredible as it may seem, he not only held a pistol in his right hand,
+ but it was half raised and pointed at Jack Everson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII. &mdash; MUSTAD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The East Indian who stood before Jack Everson, thoroughly cowed and
+ submissive, was unusually tall, dark, and thin to emaciation. He wore a
+ turban, a light linen jacket which encompassed his chest to below the
+ waist, with a sash or girdle, loose flapping trousers and sandals. In the
+ girdle at his waist was a long, formidable knife or yataghan, which he
+ would have been glad to bury in the heart of the man who had thus brought
+ him to his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Jack Everson demanded to know his identity the fellow replied in a
+ low voice that was not lacking in a certain musical quality:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mustad!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man half expected the answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What business brings you here?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is my master; I work for him. I have been to see my aged mother, who
+ is very ill. I have just returned to serve my master."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is not true! You went away to bring some of your people to kill the
+ doctor and his family."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sahib does Mustad great wrong," replied that individual in a grieved
+ voice. "I love my master and my mistress. I am not ungrateful. I would
+ give my life sooner than harm a hair of their heads. Where have they
+ gone?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the last question that removed all lingering doubt of the native's
+ treachery. He had returned to bring about their overthrow, but knew not
+ where to look for them. When he could ascertain whither they had fled he
+ and his brother miscreants would be at their heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Suppose I should tell you that they had gone to Meerut or Delhi?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Allah be praised!" exclaimed the other devoutly; "for then they will be
+ safe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is there no trouble in Meerut or Delhi?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What trouble can there be!" asked Mustad, with well-feigned simplicity.
+ "It is in those cities that the missionaries and many of the Inglese live.
+ They have lived there many years. What harm could befall them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time Jack Everson had lost all doubt of the perfidy of the man. He
+ could not fail to know what had taken place within the preceding
+ twenty-four hours in the cities named, and he lacked his usual cunning
+ when he tried to deceive his questioner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man saw that it was a waste of time to question Mustad. No
+ reliance could be placed on anything he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You will wait here, then, until Dr. Marlowe comes back?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mustad vigorously nodded his head and replied:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall wait, and my eyes will be filled with tears until I see the good
+ man and his child again. When will they come to their home?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, the best thing you can do is to wait here until you see them
+ again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Jack made this remark he took a quick step forward and picked up the
+ revolver. He did not pause to examine it, but was sure that none of the
+ chambers had been discharged. Slipping the weapon into his coat pocket,
+ and still grasping his own, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think I shall go out on the veranda and await the return of the
+ doctor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he made this remark he committed a mistake for which there was no
+ excuse. Instead of backing out of the room he turned about and started
+ through the open door into the hall. The walking cane against which he had
+ once struck his foot still lay where he had kicked it, and he tripped over
+ it a second time. The mishap, slight as it was, saved his life. As he
+ stumbled in the gloom something whizzed like the rush of a cobra's head
+ past his temple, nipping his hat and striking the opposite wall with force
+ enough to kill two or three men. It was the yataghan of Mustad, who had
+ drawn and hurled it with inconceivable quickness and with an aim so
+ unerring that it would have brained the unsuspecting American but for his
+ fortunate stumble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The furious Jack whirled around with the purpose of sending a bullet
+ through the brain of the wretch, but something like a shadow flitted
+ through the lamplight while Jack was in the act of turning and, before he
+ could secure any aim, the scoundrel had vanished. Determined not to be
+ balked the young man let fly, and then, bounding across the room, snapped
+ back the door, meaning to repeat the shot at the first glimpse of Mustad.
+ But the latter was familiar with all the turnings of the house, while Jack
+ knew nothing of that portion of the building. He could neither see nor
+ hear anything, and did not deem it prudent to use the lamp to help in the
+ search, though it was hard to retire from the field and leave the
+ miscreant unpunished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To do so, however, was the wiser course, and again he moved into the hall.
+ This time he backed thither, though, since Mustad had no weapon, it was
+ impossible that the attempt upon the young man's life should be repeated.
+ The outer door was opened, and once more he stood on the veranda.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before venturing across the lawn in the direction of the river he spent a
+ minute or two in peering into the surrounding gloom and listening. He may
+ have been mistaken, but he fancied he heard more than one person moving
+ stealthily about in the house. Once he was sure he caught the sound of
+ whispered words, so that the astounding fact was established that during
+ the few minutes occupied in talking with Mustad he had a friend within
+ instant call.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All of which goes to prove that these people are cowards at heart," was
+ the sage conclusion of Jack Everson. "They will throw away their lives for
+ the sake of Islamism, and they will fight like wildcats if a man turns his
+ back upon them; but when he stands face to face they are whipped curs."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since there was no doubt that Mustad and his companions would be on the
+ alert to note the course taken by Everson, so as to learn what had become
+ of his friends, the young man saw the need of misleading them. He took
+ care not to return to the river over his own trail. Instead of doing so he
+ moved to the right, as if on his way to the nearby town of Akwar. When
+ satisfied he was beyond range of the keen vision of those in the house of
+ Dr. Marlowe he made an abrupt change, which led him toward the Ganges,
+ forgetting, when he did so, that there might be natives in the vicinity
+ who were not in the building at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX. &mdash; SCOUTING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Had Mr. Jack Everson spent a few years in Hindoostan he would not have
+ made the blunders that we are obliged to record concerning his movements
+ after parting from his friends on the boat. He had acquitted himself
+ pluckily while in the house of the physician, but his escape from death at
+ the hands of Mustad and his companion was providential and, under similar
+ circumstances, was not likely to be repeated once in a thousand times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Moreover, with his knowledge, already gained, of Asiatic cunning, he ought
+ to have reflected that if two of their dusky enemies were within the house
+ there were likely to be others in the immediate neighborhood. It looked as
+ if Mustad had entered the dwelling expecting to find the physician there.
+ He was prepared with an excuse for his abrupt departure and an explanation
+ that would satisfy his indulgent master and mistress. Keeping his
+ companion in the background the wretch could then complete his plans for
+ turning the party over to the fury of their brother murderers, who
+ probably were calmly waiting on the outside for the signal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing of all this, we repeat, entered the head of Jack until he had made
+ the change in the course he was following and had passed down the slope to
+ the river bank. His effort to mislead his enemies necessarily took him
+ some distance above the point where he had left the boat, and he now set
+ out to find his way to it. It was while he was engaged in doing so that he
+ became aware that he was followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I'll be hanged!" he muttered, coming to an abrupt stop; "it seems
+ to me that these infernal imps are everywhere."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not seen any one, but a rustling, grating noise in the shadow of
+ the nearest tree told him where the immediate danger lay. Believing that
+ an unexpected course was best he wheeled and ran at full speed toward the
+ tree, which contained a large number of dense, wide-spreading branches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result was surprising. Instead of one native, two leaped out from
+ cover and ran away at full speed. They had been stealing after him, on the
+ watch for a chance to bring him down by a blow in the back, when the
+ tables were turned in this unexpected manner. Jack, therefore, had no
+ hesitation in firing at the one on his right, and immediately after at his
+ companion, whose superior speed had placed him considerably in advance. As
+ a consequence, he missed the latter, while the first emitted a screech,
+ leaped high in air and sprawled forward on his face as dead as Julius
+ Caesar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that his pursuers were two in number led the young man to believe
+ they were Mustad and his companion, whom he had heard in the house. A few
+ minutes later he made another halt. He was able, despite the gloom, to
+ identify the spot where he had left the boat, but it was not in sight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I told them not to wait for me, and they acted on my suggestion. They
+ can't be far off, and I hope have run into no trouble."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The occurrences of the last quarter of an hour gave Jack a vivid idea of
+ the increasing peril. The natives from the nearby town were hunting for
+ the physician, his daughter and himself, all of whom had not left the
+ house a minute too soon and now, while he paused on the shore of the river
+ and listened, he too caught the sound that had filled his friends with
+ dread. There were no noises from the jungles to the eastward, though at
+ times the outcries are terrifying, and the shouts and shrieks of the
+ mutineers and their victims at Meerut and Delhi were too far away to reach
+ his ears, but he heard now and then the faint sound of paddles out on the
+ stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anderson spoke of using paddles," reflected Jack, "but it was a misnomer,
+ for they have none, and they would not have pushed so far out from shore
+ when they knew I expected to return so soon. All that proves that a party
+ of devils have also a boat and are hunting for the one in which our new
+ friends are groping for safety."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This threatened to make a new complication, but the plain course for Jack
+ was to keep along the shore of the river and press his search for the
+ craft, which he was certain was not far off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His experience had taught him the need of unceasing vigilance, and as he
+ advanced, he scrutinized the ground in front and on every hand, like a
+ scout stealing into a hostile camp. Within less time than he counted upon
+ he saw the boat lying close to shore, where his friends were awaiting him.
+ As soon as he recognized the craft he announced himself in a guarded
+ undertone, to guard against any mistake, and the next moment clambered
+ aboard, where, it need not be said, he was warmly welcomed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After they had exchanged greetings the doctor asked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did I not hear the report of your pistol a little while ago?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Inasmuch as I discharged it very probably you did."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon Jack told of what he had seen and done since leaving the boat to
+ recover the pistol of Miss Marlowe. It was a story of deep interest to
+ all, and his account of his meeting with the faithless Mustad deeply
+ stirred his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Despite my denunciation of the fellow I confess I had a lingering
+ suspicion that I might have been mistaken; but all doubt now is removed.
+ There is no native in all India to be more dreaded than he."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a faint hope that it was he with whom I made my fourth
+ bull's-eye," remarked Jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hardly likely. Probably there were two others skulking on the outside and
+ waiting for a chance at us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But they had all the chance they could have asked at <i>me</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may have been the doctor and his daughter whom they were the most
+ eager to secure," suggested Mr. Turner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is my belief," added Anderson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And mine, too," joined the doctor himself. "It seems to be a trait of our
+ perverse human nature to hate with the deepest intensity those who have
+ done us the greatest kindness."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This remark meant more to Jack Everson than to any one else, for he
+ believed that it was the daughter who was the special object of the
+ natives. That reminded him of the weapon he had secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here," he said, "take it before I forget to return it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You risked a good deal for my sake," she said gratefully, accepting the
+ weapon, "and I cannot thank you sufficiently&mdash;&mdash; Well, I
+ declare!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was in the act of placing the pistol in the pocket of her dress when
+ she made the discovery that her weapon was already there. Jack Everson had
+ taken Mustad's own property from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X. &mdash; ALONG SHORE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The curious incident served to lift for a brief time the oppression that
+ rested upon all. The remarkable part of it was how Miss Marlowe could
+ believe she had left her revolver in her home when it was in the pocket of
+ her dress, where, it would seem, she ought to have felt it while walking
+ across the lawn to the boat, even if she had forgotten to examine that
+ most natural receptacle for it when she first missed the weapon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is the most stupid thing I ever did," she declared. "I meant to keep
+ it in my hand while coming from the house, and, awaking to the fact that
+ it was not there, did not stop to examine my pocket. It is too bad."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have gained an additional means of defense," observed Mr. Turner, "and
+ that may be decisive before we are through with this business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that all were together again each was impatient to be on the move.
+ Wharton and Turner began using the poles with the skill shown some time
+ before, and once more the unwieldy craft swung slowly down the Ganges,
+ with all on board alert for the first sign of their enemies. The women
+ were advised to remain in the small cabin, where they would be safe
+ against stealthy shots.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As the boat crept under the shadows along shore the spirits of all
+ improved, for it seemed that with every rod placed behind, them the danger
+ was diminished, and by and by would vanish altogether.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That, however, cannot be," said the doctor to Jack Everson, as they sat a
+ little apart from the rest, near the bow of the craft. "In truth, I see
+ but one possible escape for this party."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have already referred to it. It will take us weeks to reach Calcutta on
+ the east or Bombay on the west, and between us and each of these points
+ the hell fire will rage for months to come. To go south is equally
+ suicidal, since it would take us into the heart of the insurrection. I
+ repeat that there is but one thing to be done: that is to push northward,
+ as I said, until we reach a people too far removed to be affected by this
+ deviltry."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To find a simple people where our knowledge of medicine will cause us to
+ be looked upon as superior beings. I have discovered a remedy for the bite
+ of a cobra which will stand one in good stead, should a native be bitten.
+ They believe, you know, as does the rest of the world, that the bite of
+ this serpent is certain death. But I have discovered a remedy, the
+ necessary drugs of which I carry in this case," touching the leather case
+ strapped to his back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Beyond all doubt. You have tested this remedy of yours?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have, twice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon man or brute?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Upon both."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI. &mdash; A COLLISION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Although the two physicians were deeply interested in the question of
+ toxicology they could not forget their situation and its perils. The craft
+ had nearly completed its half mile to the mouth of the tributary which it
+ was intended to ascend, when the polemen, pausing for a moment's rest,
+ whispered that they heard the sound of paddles again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>There they are</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Jack Everson who uttered the exclamation, loud enough for all to
+ hear. He pointed down stream as he spoke, and every one perceived the
+ dreaded boat returning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although nearer at hand than before, it seemed to be following the course
+ of the river, and there was hope that it would again pass without
+ discovering the shrinking ones so near land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When first observed the other boat was fifty yards out and not quite so
+ far down stream. Moving against the current its progress was slower than
+ before, but its advance was plainly perceptible. The craft of the white
+ people had lost the momentum imparted by the poling, and was now
+ controlled only by the current, which was so sluggish close to the land
+ that the motion was hardly noticeable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hopes of our friends steadily rose until the other boat was almost
+ directly abreast. It would seem that if the occupants intended attacking
+ they would have veered inward before this, but there could be no assurance
+ so long as they remained visible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Every one started when the gaunt, sloping figure suddenly became upright
+ at the prow of the boat and stood motionless. He had ceased using the pole
+ that he had been plying with so much vigor. At the same moment the noise
+ of the paddles ceased, proving that the men controlling them had also
+ stopped work. What could it mean?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No one of the white people stirred or whispered. Could they have done so
+ they would have checked the beating of their hearts through fear of being
+ betrayed. Surely something had awakened the suspicion of the natives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly some one spoke on board the craft. The voice was audible, but the
+ doctor, who was a master of Hindoostanee, could not catch what was said.
+ At the same instant a splash was heard, and the lank form bent over, as he
+ pressed the long pole against the bottom of the river and resumed his slow
+ walking toward the stern. The noise of paddles, too, was heard again. The
+ craft had resumed its progress, and for an instant every one believed it
+ was about to pass by. Then Jack Everson said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By heaven! they're coming for us!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All saw that the boat was swinging around so as to head toward them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Into the cabin, quick!" commanded the doctor, and the women quickly
+ scrambled out of sight, while the men lay down, so as to screen their
+ bodies as much as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It won't do to let them come too near," added the physician. "Try to make
+ every shot tell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he took the best aim he could and fired. Jack Everson was but
+ a moment behind him, and Anderson discharged his gun almost
+ simultaneously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII. &mdash; A WHITE MAN'S VICTORY.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was clear that the reception was a stunning surprise to the Asiatics in
+ the other boat. In times of confusion and terror strong men often sit
+ dazed and meekly submit to massacre when sturdy resistance would leave a
+ far different tale to tell. Such was the case at Meerut, at Delhi, at
+ Cawnpore, at Lucknow and scores of places where the human fiends revelled
+ in massacre and crime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here, where evidently the same submissiveness was expected, the
+ miscreants were fired upon before they had discharged a single shot
+ themselves. Not only that, but the Caucasians kept the thing up. This was
+ contrary to all rule and precedent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If, however, the white men did not wait to be slain, neither did the dusky
+ barbarians sit still and allow themselves to be shot down. They ceased
+ paddling and appealed to their guns, whose bullets began whistling about
+ the heads of the defenders in the other boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who of our friends did it will never be known, but one of them perforated
+ the gaunt scoundrel who, with his form bent over, was pushing the pole
+ while he stalked the length of the boat, returning again to the prow to
+ repeat the performance. The fellow emitted a screech like a wounded tiger
+ and leaped several feet in air, coming down on the gunwale, over which he
+ toppled into the water and was seen no more. It was the spirited defiance
+ of the white men that told. Screening themselves as best they could they
+ continued firing, Jack Everson occasionally adding a shot from his
+ revolver by way of variety. The conformation of the other boat and its
+ crowded condition prevented the natives from sheltering themselves as did
+ those who were using them as targets. In short, the wretches were getting
+ the worst of the business, and it did not take them long to learn the
+ fact. Left without control, their boat began drifting with the current,
+ which being stronger than along shore gradually carried it down stream and
+ out of sight. So long, however, as it was visible its occupants continued
+ firing, while the white people did still better, for they sent several
+ shots after their enemies when they could see nothing and fired wholly by
+ guess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could be no question that the promptness of Dr. Marlowe and the
+ vigor of the resistance threw their foes into a sort of panic from which
+ they did not recover until beyond range. They had been taught a lesson
+ that they were sure to remember for a long time; though, when our friends
+ came to think the matter over, after finding no one of them had been hurt,
+ they could not escape the belief that the consequences were certain to be
+ of the most serious nature to themselves, and in this conclusion, sad to
+ say, they were not mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII. &mdash; UNDER THE BANK.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ A few minutes later an open space appeared in front of the boat. It was
+ the month of the tributary flowing into the Ganges from the left or north,
+ and was more than a hundred yards across. Since it was necessary to stem
+ the current in order to take advantage of this refuge, the doctor
+ contemplated it with misgiving, for the work of poling it up stream
+ promised to be laborious. He had not forgotten his original plan of
+ abandoning the boat and striking across the country on foot, taking
+ advantage of the less-frequented roads and paths that were well known to
+ him. He was relieved, however, to find the flow so languid that it was
+ easy to make headway against it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have never followed this stream far," he remarked, "and, therefore,
+ have less knowledge of it than the rest of the country, but my impression
+ is that it cannot serve us long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It will be time enough to leave the boat and take to the woods when we
+ can go no further," said Jack Everson; "but we cannot get away from the
+ main stream too soon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was self-evident. It was not likely that the natives after their
+ decisive repulse would abandon their purpose of massacring the party, but
+ they would be more guarded in what they did and probably secure
+ reinforcements, an easy thing to do when the sanguinary wretches
+ everywhere were thirsting for victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack had seized one of the poles, and he and young Wharton plied them with
+ so much sturdiness that the heavy craft made better progress than at any
+ time since it was used as a vehicle of safety. The course of the tributary
+ was winding, and our friends had not gone far when they were shut out from
+ the sight of any persons passing up and down the main river, even if close
+ to the northern bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Would the natives suspect the course taken by the whites? That was the
+ all-important question that must soon be answered. After searching up and
+ down the Ganges without success, it was likely they would penetrate the
+ stratagem and follow them, in which event the fugitives would be in a
+ critical situation, since the straightness of the stream and the wooded
+ shores would place them at much greater disadvantage than if they remained
+ upon the Ganges.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the boat had ascended the tributary for perhaps an eighth of a mile
+ it was deemed safe to lessen the work of poling. Careful listening failed
+ to detect any sound of pursuit, and there was ground for hoping that their
+ enemies neither knew nor suspected what had been done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several facts had become apparent. The densely wooded shores offered
+ excellent concealment. By running the boat beneath the dense branches and
+ among the heavy vegetation the keenest-eyed Asiatics might pass up or down
+ stream almost within arm's length without suspecting its presence. But the
+ tributary had perceptibly narrowed and its current was swifter than at the
+ mouth. All this pointed to the truth of what Dr. Marlowe suspected&mdash;the
+ stream could not serve them much further.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night was now so far advanced that the women took the advice of their
+ friends and withdrew to the cabin for slumber. Their quarters were
+ cramped, but they made themselves fairly comfortable. The night was cooler
+ than the day, but only sufficiently so to be pleasant. It was not deemed
+ probable that anything would be seen of their enemies before the morrow,
+ and perhaps not even then.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Marlowe insisted upon taking his turn in poling, but since there were
+ four vigorous men without him, they would not consent. When two had toiled
+ for an hour or more, they gave way to the other couple, and the progress
+ thus continued without interruption, while the time slowly dragged along.
+ The resting spells gave each the opportunity for sleep, thus husbanding
+ their vigor for the morrow. Finding that there was nothing to which he
+ could turn his hand, the physician reclined at the bow and soon joined the
+ others in dreamland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was probably one o'clock when Jack Everson, who had been sleeping for
+ nearly an hour, was awakened by a gentle shaking of his shoulder. Opening
+ his eyes and looking up he saw Wharton bending over him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right," remarked the American; "I'm ready for my turn," and he rose,
+ yawning, to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think we had better rest until morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The current has become so rapid that it is hard to make progress; this
+ stream can't be of much further use to us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It needed but a glance around in the gloom to see that it was as his
+ friend had declared. The boat was so close to the left-hand shore that it
+ was held motionless by Anderson at the bow, who gripped an overhanging
+ branch, with one hand. The water rippled around the front of the craft,
+ and when Jack dipped the end of one of the poles into the current it swept
+ downward at a rate that astonished him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I esteem your advice good," he said, "but it will not do to leave the
+ boat in sight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the help of the limbs and the use of the poles it was easy to force
+ the craft under the bank, where it was screened from observation. Then it
+ was secured in place against drifting and all work for the time was over.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wharton and Jack Everson were the only persons awake. The women had been
+ sleeping for several hours, while Anderson and Turner had long since
+ joined the venerable doctor in the realms of unconsciousness. The two
+ young men sat down where they could speak in low tones without being
+ overheard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It won't do for all of us to sleep at the same time," remarked Jack; "the
+ scoundrels may be creeping up stream after us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is hardly possible; I am sure that for the present we are as safe as
+ if in the heart of London."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot believe as you do; since I have just enjoyed an hour's sleep I
+ will act as sentinel until daybreak. I can easily keep awake for the few
+ hours that remain."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As you think best, though I am sure it is an unnecessary precaution."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We must not forget that there are perils from the jungle as well as from
+ the river. There is no saying what wild beast may pay us a visit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inasmuch as Jack could not be dissuaded from his purpose, and Wharton
+ began to suspect his friend was half right, the question was decided.
+ Wharton stretched out on the deck, falling asleep almost immediately, and
+ Jack thus found himself the only one with his senses at command and with
+ the safety of the others dependent upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He took his place near the cabin, where the women were slumbering, with
+ his breechloader in hand. He was never more wide awake and was sure he
+ would remain so for hours to come. Wharton had offered to divide the duty
+ with him in acting as sentinel, but our hero preferred to keep the matter
+ in his own hands. He was sure his friend did not realize the full peril of
+ their situation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stillness was broken only by the peculiar cries in the jungle, which
+ it may be said were never wholly silent. First on the right, then on the
+ left, then from the front, and again from different points on both sides
+ of the stream he heard the sounds, some faint and far away, with others
+ alarmingly close. The hoarse snarl of the tiger, the finer cry of the
+ leopard, the squawking of night birds, with other noises that he could not
+ identify, were continually in the air. Had they been heard for the first
+ time he would have been in a tremor of fear and nervousness; but man soon
+ becomes accustomed to danger, and the nearest must come still nearer to
+ cause his pulse an additional throb.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack Everson was sensible that through this medley of strange noises there
+ was one sound that was continuous and never changing. So faint that at
+ first he and Wharton failed to notice it, it now impressed itself too
+ distinctly upon his consciousness for him to be mistaken. It was a low,
+ steady hum or moaning, such as the traveller hears when miles inland from
+ the ocean. He could not identify it, though he made several guesses, and
+ was still speculating unsatisfactorily, when he received a startling
+ reminder that there was a new peril at his very feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first notice was a faint purring sound, as if made by a gigantic cat,
+ accompanied by a rustling of the vegetation scarcely a dozen feet away. He
+ instantly grasped his rifle with both hands and was alert. It was
+ impossible to distinguish ordinary objects in the gloom, but suddenly two
+ small circles glittered with a greenish light and the purring was
+ succeeded by a low, cavernous growl. Then it all became clear to him: a
+ royal Bengal tiger was stealing upon the boat and was probably gathering
+ himself for a leap at that very moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had all the occupants been asleep the frightful terror would have played
+ sad havoc with them before they could defend themselves. As it was, it
+ looked as if more than one fatality must follow his attack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for that phosphorescent gleam of the brute's eyes Jack Everson would
+ not have been able to locate him, but the glow of the two objects defined
+ the outlines and locality of the horrible thing as unmistakably as if the
+ sun were overhead. The occasion was one in which everything depended upon
+ promptness. The tiger was likely to shift his position and turn his head
+ so that the eyes would fail to show.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack reflected that there probably were a number of spots in the anatomy
+ of the jungle terror that were more vulnerable than others; that a
+ well-aimed bullet might be instantly fatal in one, while able to inflict
+ only a partial wound in another. Be that as it may, he was sure that a
+ conical bullet driven between the eyes and through bone, muscle and brain
+ by a rifle that could kill a man at the distance of a mile must do
+ effective work when that brain was not a dozen feet distant from the
+ muzzle of the weapon. At any rate, there was no time for inquiry and he
+ did not hesitate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aiming for a point midway between the gleaming orbs he pressed the
+ trigger. It takes a well-aimed weapon to kill a royal Bengal tiger, even
+ at a short distance, but Jack's rifle was well aimed. The tiny sphere of
+ lead darted through the brain and along the spinal marrow as if fired with
+ the vicious energy of a charge of dynamite.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It so happened that the tiger was in the act of making his graceful but
+ fearful leap that was to land him upon the breast of the young man, who
+ had risen to his feet just before firing. The check at that instant
+ produced a queer result, the like of which is not often seen. The shock of
+ the bullet crashing into the head of the muscular beast at the instant he
+ was calling into play his prodigious strength intensified that strength to
+ a sudden and astonishing degree. The consequence was that the tiger,
+ instead of making the leap he intended, made one twice as great and
+ overshot the mark. From out the gloom the beautiful sinewy body, of which
+ only a glimpse could be caught, emerged as if fired from the throat of a
+ Columbiad and, curving over the shoulders of the man and the boat, dropped
+ into the stream with a splash that sent the water flying in every
+ direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Beyond the line of shadow, where the faint moonlight fell upon him, the
+ tiger was seen to be a beast of extraordinary size. He emitted one rasping
+ snarl while sailing through the air, but was already dead when he fell
+ into the water, where it could not be seen he had made a struggle. The
+ sinewy body dipped out of sight, bobbed up again and the next minute was
+ swept beyond view by the rapid current.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rather strangely, not one of the women was awakened by the report of the
+ rifle so near them, and of the men Dr. Marlowe and Anderson were the only
+ ones who rose to a sitting posture and anxiously inquired the cause of the
+ firing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I discovered an animal prowling near the boat," replied Jack, who thought
+ it well not to disturb them with the whole truth, "and I winged him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are sure you killed him?" asked the doctor; "most likely it was a
+ tiger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am quite sure of that, and am just as sure that, considered strictly as
+ a tiger, he is of no further account. I made another bull's-eye in his
+ case."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How many is that?" asked the physician, entering into the spirit of the
+ jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My fifth, counting only those that I am sure of."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are doing well; keep it up; let the good work go on," replied the
+ elder, again adjusting himself for slumber, quite content to leave the
+ valiant young American in charge of the boat and its occupants. Jack had
+ it in mind to question him about that distant murmuring sound that puzzled
+ him, but when ready to do so he discovered that the doctor was again
+ asleep and he did not disturb him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fact that one denizen of the jungle had paid the boat a visit was
+ ground for looking for a call from another. Jack remained, therefore, on
+ the alert, and though under ordinary circumstances he would have fallen
+ asleep he kept wide awake until the growing light in the sky told of the
+ coming day. Before the sun was fairly above the horizon all were astir.
+ They bathed faces and hands in the roiled water and greeted one another
+ with thankfulness that the night had passed without harm to any member of
+ the little company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the three men and their wives fled from Meerut they took with them
+ enough food to last for several days. There is little excuse for people
+ dying of starvation in any part of India, though sad to say it is only
+ recently that thousands were swept away by famine. Fruit is abundant and
+ little meat is necessary in hot countries. Before the morning meal was
+ partaken of Jack Everson asked Dr. Marlowe to explain the cause of the low
+ moaning noise that had been in his ears for moat of the night. The elder
+ listened for a minute and replied:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What I expected! We are very near the head of navigation; that sound
+ comes from falls or rapids, above which we cannot go with this boat."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This announcement precipitated a discussion as to what was the best course
+ to follow. The physician left no doubt of his sentiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The devils will be prowling up this stream within a few hours; I should
+ not be surprised if they are near us this moment; the boat is of no
+ further use to us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three, Anderson, Turner and Wharton, did not agree with him. The craft
+ had served them so well that they were unwilling to abandon it. They
+ seemed to believe that it offered a much safer means of defense than they
+ could find anywhere on land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you cannot stay forever on it," protested the doctor impatiently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We do not expect to," replied Anderson; "we may decide to descend to the
+ Ganges again, and continue down the river."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whither?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To Cawnpore or some point nearer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor was aghast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean to leap straight into the hornet's nest; those are the places,
+ of all others, that must be avoided."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may be as you say, but I am hopeful that the English garrisons have
+ been able to hold out against the mutineers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a woeful mistake, my friend; if you persist in it we must part
+ company."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV. &mdash; THE SOUND OF FIRING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Jack Everson was hardly less impatient than the doctor over the obstinacy
+ of their lately made friends. He reminded them that the physician had
+ spent a score of years in that part of the world, with which he was so
+ familiar that his judgment ought to outweigh theirs, but the argument was
+ useless. They had decided to stick to the boat that had served them so
+ well and could not be dissuaded. Their plan, as they had intimated, now
+ that they found they could go little further up stream, was to descend to
+ the Ganges, with a view of working their way down to some of the cities,
+ where they hoped to find the English had succeeded in holding out against
+ the mutineers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Could this be done, and could such a haven be reached, all would be well,
+ but the doctor assured them they were leaning upon a broken reed. When it
+ became evident that all persuasions were useless the parties separated. A
+ common peril had brought them near to one another and it was impossible
+ that that they should part except as friends. All felt the solemnity of
+ the hour. Each wife kissed and embraced Mary Marlowe, and like her shed
+ tears at what they felt was probably the final parting, so far as this
+ world was concerned. The men warmly shook hands and there was more than
+ one tremulous voice when the three passed over the side of the boat and
+ said farewell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter walked some distance through the jungle, which was so dense
+ that they were obliged to follow one of the numerous paths made by the
+ animals in going to and coming from the water. The doctor, by virtue of
+ his superior knowledge, took the lead, with his daughter close behind, and
+ Jack Everson bringing up the rear. They were silent and thoughtful, for
+ their spirits were oppressed by a deep gloom and the feeling that
+ something dreadful impended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not far off the path which they were following expanded into a natural
+ clearing two or three rods in extent. When they reached the spot the
+ doctor halted and faced his companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I now know where we are," he said in an undertone; "we have to follow
+ this path a little way back, when we enter a hilly and rough country,
+ where the jungle is more open. It is cut up by numerous trails like this,
+ most of which have been made by the feet of wild animals, but one of them
+ leads northward and finally enters a highway, which if followed far enough
+ will land us in the Nepaul country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I assume from what you have said that it will not be safe to stick to
+ this road?" said Jack.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; for two or three days while travelling over it we shall be in
+ constant danger; our task will be to make our way over it without
+ attracting the notice of any of our enemies who are scouring the country
+ for us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is the thing possible?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I should not undertake it did I not think so; the danger will threaten
+ for probably a hundred miles, though growing steadily less as we proceed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Will it not be safer to do our travelling by night?" asked the daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is what I mean to do after reaching the more plainly marked path,
+ which connects with the highway. I see no risk in pushing through the
+ jungle by day, since the only foes we are likely to encounter are
+ four-footed ones. If we meet any such we must refrain from firing, since
+ the reports of our guns will be sure to draw attention to us. I mean, of
+ course," explained the doctor, "that our weapons are not to be appealed to
+ unless there is no escape otherwise, as was the case with the tiger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was speaking, Mary gave a faint gasp and caught his arm. She and
+ Jack were facing the point toward which his back was turned. Seeing that
+ it was something behind him that had startled both, the doctor turned his
+ head. As if to emphasize the words just spoken, he saw an immense spotted
+ leopard, motionless in the trail not more than fifty feet away. Evidently
+ he was trotting to the stream, when he caught sight of the three persons,
+ stopped short, raised his head and stared wonderingly at them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The leopard shares the reputation of the tiger for deadly ferocity and
+ daring. When more than 20,000 persons are killed in India every year by
+ wild animals and serpents, it will be found that the leopard is one of the
+ most active among these factors of death, and holds his own well up with
+ the tiger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like the venomous serpent, the leopard had a terrible beauty all his own.
+ As he stood with head raised, eyes glaring, mouth slightly parted and his
+ long tail lashing his sides with a force that made the thumping against
+ his glossy ribs plainly audible, his pose was perfect. What a picture he
+ made!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question that was to be quickly answered was whether the fearful brute
+ would allow himself to be turned aside from the path and withdraw again
+ into the jungle with his thirst unslaked. If he did he would not be
+ molested; if he presumed to advance upon the party, whom he evidently held
+ in slight fear, let him be prepared for the consequences!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack Everson fumbled his rifle and looked with sparkling eyes at the
+ beast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What a chance for another bull's-eye!" he said, in a low voice. "I would
+ take him right between and above his forelegs, where I should be sure of
+ reaching his heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't fire unless he advances to attack us," warned the elder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It would be hard to say what induced the leopard to retreat, for, as has
+ been said, he is one of the most dangerous denizens of the jungle; but,
+ while our friends were expecting a charge from him, he wheeled about and
+ trotted off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It looks as if he had learned something of your skill," remarked the
+ doctor with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again, while the words were in the mouth of the speaker, he was
+ interrupted, this time in a more terrifying manner than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the direction of the stream which they had left but a short time
+ previous, and undoubtedly from the boat itself, came the reports of
+ firearms. There were no shouts or outcries, but the firing was rapid and
+ apparently made by gun and pistol.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They have been attacked!" exclaimed Mary; "we must go to their help!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She impulsively started along the path, but her father seized her arm and
+ said sternly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Remain here! It is no place for you; Jack and I will do what we can."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps in the excitement of the moment the parent did not fully
+ comprehend the danger of leaving his daughter alone in the jungle, even at
+ so slight a distance and for so brief a time as he anticipated, with
+ nothing but a revolver as a means of defence; but he and Jack Everson were
+ eager to rush to the aid of their friends, and they hurried over the trail
+ without even looking back at her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man was slightly behind his companion and both broke into a
+ loping trot. Each held his rifle in hand, on the alert to use it the
+ instant the opportunity presented itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It will be borne in mind that the distance from the slight natural opening
+ to the boat was short, and a few minutes sufficed for the two men to cover
+ it; but a strange thing happened. The reports of firearms which had broken
+ out with such suddenness ceased with the same abruptness, and the silence
+ because of the contrast was tenfold more oppressive than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What can that mean?" asked Jack, as his companion slackened his pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>It means that they are through</i>!" replied the doctor, whose face
+ was of deathly paleness. "My God! what have we escaped!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall soon know," replied Jack, catching the awful significance of the
+ words; and then he added to himself:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We may have escaped it, but for how long?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few rods further and they were at the side of the stream, and the boat
+ loomed to view through the thick undergrowth and vegetation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV. &mdash; GONE!
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Neither Jack Everson nor Dr. Marlowe forgot his own personal danger in
+ hurrying to the help of their imperilled friends. If the two were too late
+ to be of any assistance they were imminently likely to precipitate
+ themselves into the same whirlpool of woe and death. They had slowed their
+ gait to a walk as they neared the spot, and when they caught the dim
+ outlines of the boat the two stood still.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So far as they could see there was no change in its surroundings. It was
+ still moored against the bank, so close that any one could step aboard,
+ but no sign of living person was visible on or about it. There was
+ something so uncanny in it all that but for their mutual knowledge they
+ would have doubted the evidence of their senses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't understand it," whispered Jack. "Suppose you stay here while I
+ steal nigh enough to learn something that will help clear up the horrible
+ mystery."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are running frightful risk," said the doctor; "I cannot advise you to
+ try it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All the same, I shall do it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus, it will be observed that the three persons composing the little
+ party became separated from one another for greater or less distances. The
+ daughter was waiting, two or three hundred yards away, for the return of
+ her father and lover, while they had just parted company, though they
+ expected to remain in sight of each other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Marlowe stood in the path, partly sheltering himself behind a couple
+ of tree trunks, but with his eyes fixed upon his young friend, who walked
+ cautiously but unhesitatingly forward. Jack held his rifle in a trailing
+ position at his side, his shoulders bent slightly forward, while he
+ stepped lightly, his senses alert, like those of a scout entering the camp
+ of an enemy. That he was running into great danger was self-evident, but
+ he was determined not to turn back until he learned something of the
+ strange occurrences.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Watching his young friend, the doctor saw him stop when at the side of the
+ motionless boat. His profile showed first on one side and then, on the
+ other, while he listened for the slightest sound that could give an atom
+ of knowledge. Apparently the effort was useless, for the next moment he
+ placed his left hand on the gunwale and vaulted lightly upon deck. He
+ stood a few moments as if transfixed, then turning abruptly about leaped
+ to the ground, and, breaking into a run, hurried back to his friend, who
+ noticed that his face was more ghastly than before, while his eyes stared
+ as if they still looked upon unutterable things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it?" asked the elder in a ghostly whisper.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My God! don't ask me to tell!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You forget that we are both physicians."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But not that we are human beings; thank Heaven forever that you did not
+ look upon the sight my eyes saw a moment ago. Let it suffice, doctor, to
+ say that of the three men and women to whom we bade good-bye within the
+ past twenty minutes not one is alive! The fiends have been there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not the least singular fact connected with this hideous incident was that
+ the devils who committed the unspeakable crime had vanished, so far as
+ could be seen, as utterly as if the ground had opened beneath their feet
+ and swallowed them. Two men had come back upon the scene within a few
+ minutes after all this was done, and yet the doers were nowhere in sight.
+ What was the meaning of their hasty departure?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was unreasonable to think they had gone far. They must be in the
+ vicinity. They must have noticed the absence of the doctor and his
+ companions; doubtless they were looking for them along shore; possibly
+ they had started over some of the trails and ere long would strike the one
+ along which the three had fled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A wonderful Providence has preserved us thus far," said Jack Everson;
+ "but it is too much to expect we shall emerge unscathed from this hell
+ hole."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hope nothing will happen to Mary before we rejoin her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall be with her in a minute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless, a vague fear disturbed both. The parent was again leading,
+ and he unconsciously hastened his footsteps. Only a slight distance beyond
+ they came to the small opening where they had left her standing but a
+ brief while before. Since the men had passed over the intervening distance
+ to the river it was unlikely that anything had occurred to alarm the young
+ woman, but there was no saying what might happen in those times and in
+ that part of the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The real shock came to the parent when he turned in the trail and saw the
+ open space but failed to observe his daughter. He hurried on without
+ speaking, but Jack, directly behind him, had made the discovery, for a
+ moment he was so breathless and dizzy that he barely saved himself from
+ falling. His heart became lead, and the awful conviction got hold of him
+ that the most woeful affliction of all had come upon them, and that his
+ betrothed was lost irrecoverably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the sight of the anguish of the parent when he turned about and
+ faintly gasped, "Where is my child?" brought the self-command of the young
+ man back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the despairing question wrung from the heart of the parent, with a
+ grief that was no keener than that of Jack Everson himself. Here was
+ another instance of the appalling suddenness with which tragedies began
+ and were completed in this infernal country. A band of half a dozen was
+ cut off within the space of a few minutes, and now, in still less time, a
+ young woman vanished as if she had never been.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack did not dare trust his voice in the effort to speak, but when his
+ eyes met those of the parent he shook his head, saying by the gesture:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God have mercy, I cannot answer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But strong men do not remain dazed and helpless in the presence of a
+ shuddering calamity. If any one thing could be set down as certain it was
+ that Miss Marlowe had left the place by fleeing deeper into the jungle.
+ She could not have approached them without being observed: therefore they
+ must seek her by taking the same direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The energy of the man more than threescore under the spur of his anguish
+ was like that of the athlete of one-third of his years. He still led the
+ way, and, after the brief halt under the fearful blow, he rallied and
+ compelled Jack Everson to keep upon a trot to save himself from falling
+ behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A hundred paces from the opening they reached a point where the trails
+ forked. They stopped, the parent being the first to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jack," said he, using the less formal name, for under the awful shadow
+ they had drawn nearer to each other, "we can't afford to make any
+ mistake."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There shall be none if you tell me how to prevent it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She must have followed one of these paths, but who shall say which?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He stooped over and peered at the ground. Within the dim hush of the
+ jungle he was unable to discern the slightest disturbance of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No use of that," said the doctor, reading his intention; "therefore we
+ will separate; one of us will overtake them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you any idea of the identity of these devils?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think they are Ghoojurs, but it makes no difference; Mussulmans and
+ Hindoos are the same; each of us has a rifle and revolver; if you get
+ sight of them don't wait to notify me; shoot to kill; you know how to do
+ it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall shrink from nothing, but the case may be hopeless."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If it is will you promise me one thing?" asked, the parent of the young
+ man looking him in the eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I do; what is the pledge?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That you point your gun at her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI. &mdash; A SHADOWY PURSUIT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It was a fearful pledge to exact, but Jack Everson gave it without
+ hesitation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You understand me; enough; let us lose no more time; I will turn to the
+ right; good-bye; we are all in the hands of God."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was not a tear in the eye of the parent. His heart might be torn by
+ grief, but he was now the Roman from whose lips no murmuring was heard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It seemed to Jack Everson that the strangeness of the incidents of the
+ past hour had lifted him into a state of exaltation. He never felt calmer
+ nor more self-possessed than when hurrying over the path, rifle in hand,
+ revolver at his hip with the belief that there was not one chance in a
+ thousand that he would ever again look upon the one who had won his heart
+ when the two were on the other side of the world and for whose sake he was
+ ready to go to the uttermost lengths of the earth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His feeling was: "They have stolen her from us, but by the Eternal she
+ shall cost them dear!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was no thought of what all this implied to himself. He did not care
+ what the consequences were, so far as he was concerned. It came to be a
+ legend among the men desperately defending their families and themselves
+ during the horrors of the Sepoy mutiny, that in fighting the unspeakable
+ fiends, the European should save a bullet apiece for his dear ones and one
+ for himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such was the resolve of the young American who was now making all haste to
+ find his beloved and her captors, and settling down into that resolution
+ he acted with the coolness of a veteran.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first truth that impressed itself upon him was that the path which he
+ was following steadily ascended, being quite steep in many places. This
+ showed as a matter of course that he was attaining higher ground. He was
+ not familiar enough with the country to know that he was approaching a
+ steep ridge of hills, for the doctor had told him nothing of the fact, and
+ the elevated section had been passed in the boat at night. He observed,
+ too, that his course trended to the right, proving that he was penetrating
+ deeper into the country.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If the line that the doctor is following holds straight on we must
+ approach each other, but his may turn more than mine&mdash;confound it!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had reached a point where the paths forked again. Supposing he had been
+ fortunate enough to take the right course at the beginning, how could he
+ maintain it?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swallowing his exasperation, he reflected coolly. The trail to the left
+ was less travelled than the one which kept directly forward. He believed
+ the Ghoojurs had kept to it possibly because there was less danger of
+ pursuit. One fact was self-evident: nothing was to be gained by standing
+ still, while there was a chance of accomplishing something by going on.
+ With scarcely a minute's hesitation he advanced at a rapid stride over the
+ more faintly marked course, peering in advance for a glimpse of his
+ enemies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the latter had not gained much start it would seem that he ought to
+ be close upon them, always provided he was traveling in their actual
+ footsteps. The ground continued rough and broken, but it had no effect on
+ his progress. Something like a shadow whisked across the path in front at
+ the moment of his passing round a turn. Some animal had caught sight of
+ him, and, scared by the vision, had leaped into the jungle at the side.
+ Whether it was a tiger, leopard, cheetah, wild boar or another brute he
+ did not know or care. If it dared to dispute his way he would shoot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was pressing forward in this reckless, desperate fashion, when he
+ dropped as if he had collided with a stone wall, and his heart almost
+ ceased its beating. He had caught the faint report of a firearm. It came
+ from a point on his right and sounded as if caused by a revolver, rather
+ than a larger weapon. The thought that came to him was that it was the
+ pistol of Mary Marlowe!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is at bay; she may have fired it at herself, and yet I do not think
+ she would do that until some of the bullets had reached the wretches who
+ have captured her. I am following the wrong path, for this one leads me
+ away from her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without an instant's hesitation he turned and began his return on a loping
+ trot. He was incensed with himself because of his mistake, and yet there
+ was no reasonable cause for such feeling, but grief is as thoughtless as
+ love, and he was stirred to the very depth of his soul by both. Reaching
+ the last forking, he did not pause, but set out over the main trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In front of him towered a mass of rocks higher than any he had yet seen.
+ The path wound about these, but instead of following it, he climbed to the
+ highest part.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I may gain sight of something from up there," was his thought as he
+ pushed on, "that will be of some help."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he did see something from the crest which fairly took away his breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII. &mdash; ALMOS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Mary Marlowe was an obedient daughter, and when her father checked her
+ move to go to the aid of the imperilled ones on the boat, and peremptorily
+ ordered her to wait where she was, she obeyed without protest. She would
+ have been glad to bear them company, but knew she would be more of a
+ hindrance than a help.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was less than five minutes after the disappearance of her father and
+ betrothed when she was frightened by hearing a slight sound directly
+ behind her in the path. Her thought naturally was that some wild animal
+ was stealing upon her, but the first glance told a more dreadful story.
+ Five men, who, from their ragged, scant attire, their dark complexion and
+ wild expression of features, she knew to belong to the terrible bandits
+ called Ghoojurs, had come upon her unnoticed, and pausing within a half
+ dozen paces, were looking fixedly at her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sight was so startling that the young woman gasped and recoiled. She
+ would have fled after her friends had not the leader made a gesture,
+ accompanied by the command:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stay where you are or you shall be killed! I know you as the daughter of
+ the doctor, and we seek you and him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each of the Ghoojurs carried a long, muzzle-loading gun, and every one had
+ a yataghan thrust into a girdle around his waist, the weapon being a foot
+ or more in length, and with a point of needle-like fineness. The leader
+ spoke in Hindustani, which was as familiar to the young woman as her own
+ tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young woman possessed quick wit. She could not doubt that the five,
+ including Almos and Mustad, were now her deadly enemies. Whether they had
+ taken part in the massacre of those left on the boat could not be
+ conjectured, but the probabilities were the other way, since it would have
+ been well-nigh impossible for them to reach their present position from
+ the river without colliding with Dr. Marlowe and Jack Everson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mary showed her shrewdness by acting as if the two men were the friends
+ they had always shown themselves when their former meetings took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Almos," she said, forcing a smile in which there was no pleasure,
+ "we have not met before since you came to my home and my father gave you
+ medicine that cured your illness. How do you do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she had the courage to advance a step and offer her dainty hand, but
+ the brute refused it. With a shake of his head he retreated a step and
+ said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My caste will not allow me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But it allowed you to take drink and food from my hand and medicine from
+ that of my father," she said, stung by the repulse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did evil, for which Allah has pardoned me; the faithful have been
+ summoned to drive the infidels from India; the followers of Islam have
+ heard the call, and they are flocking to the banner of the Prophet from
+ all parts of Hindostan; not one infidel shall be left in all the land."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During these few moments Mustad stood directly behind the leader, with a
+ fixed grin in which there was a certain shamefacedness, for with all his
+ fierce fanaticism he could not forget the gentle, sweet nature of the one
+ who had become a prisoner nor the unvarying kindness he had received at
+ her hands. True, the devil in his nature was roused, and there could be
+ little question that he was acting as guide to these murderers while they
+ hunted for the doctor and his family.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And do you mean to help kill those who have been your friends, Mustad?"
+ she asked, with her penetrating eyes fixed upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the two been alone, it is possible the edge would have been taken off
+ the response, but with four Ghoojurs at his elbow, and one of them the
+ furious Almos, he dared not be behind them in savagery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is a war for our deen; when we fight for that we know none but the
+ followers of the Prophet! The Inglese loge stole our homes and our land
+ from us! They have put lard on the cartridges of the Sepoys that the
+ faithful may become unclean and be shut out of paradise! I hate them all!
+ I have no friends among them! I shall never sheath my knife nor stay my
+ hand while one remains alive in India."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let it be as you say," she calmly replied, seeing that it was useless to
+ hold converse with the wretch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her wish was to keep the party where they were until Jack and her father
+ could have time to return. Here would be an opportunity for the young man
+ to make a few more bull's-eyes, but Almos was too wise to run the risk. He
+ was not afraid to fight two men, even though not so well armed as they,
+ but his wish was first to place the young woman beyond their reach&mdash;for
+ when the fight came it would be to the death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No harm shall come to you," said the leader in a gentler tone. "Walk
+ forward over the path and we will guard you against harm."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Whither do you intend to take me?" she asked, debating whether to obey or
+ to make a fight then and there and force matters to an issue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To Akwar."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why there?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To place you among friends that your enemies may not reach you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not take me to my home?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has been burned and the men are hiding among the trees that they may
+ slay you when you and your father return."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After a moment's hesitation she obeyed, taking the path along which her
+ parent soon after pressed in the desperate effort to recover her from her
+ captors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII. &mdash; DOCTOR AND PATIENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The bright wits of Miss Marlowe were active. Mustad took the lead along
+ the path, she following next, while Almos, the leader of the Ghoojurs, and
+ his three companions, brought up the rear. Like most of the trails through
+ the Asiatic jungles, this was inclosed on each side by a growth of trees,
+ undergrowth and matted vegetation of such density that it was next to
+ impossible for any one to pick his way forward or backward except by
+ keeping within the path itself. To step aside into the jungle would
+ immediately involve one in so inextricable a tangle that he could move
+ only with the greatest difficulty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An attempt to escape, therefore, by darting to one side was not to be
+ thought of, and she knew that her only hope lay with her absent friends.
+ She was confident that they would speedily return, and, finding her gone,
+ start in immediate pursuit. A collision between them and the Ghoojurs was
+ imminent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter acted as if their only interest lay in their prisoner. So far
+ as she could judge no attention was paid to the rear, whence the danger of
+ attack threatened. The place of Mustad, at the head, confirmed her
+ suspicion that he had been playing the part of guide for the rest from the
+ first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She did not doubt that her home and its contents had been burned by the
+ wretches, but under the circumstances the matter gave her little concern.
+ She was inclined to believe that her captors meant to conduct her into the
+ town of Akwar, nearby, and with her knowledge of the fanatical hatred of
+ the population against all Christians she still hoped to find some friends
+ there who would protect her from harm. And thus it was that she was not in
+ the state of collapse or despair that might be supposed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly a pistol was fired from some point at the rear beyond her
+ captors, and out of sight. All the men instantly stopped, grasped their
+ arms and looked back, the young woman doing the same. Her thought was:
+ "That was father or Jack, but he did not hit any one; therefore, it wasn't
+ Jack."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the six were looking expectantly to the rear Dr. Marlowe, his face
+ flushed, and his whole appearance, showing his intense excitement, came
+ into sight. He was panting from his severe exertion, and raised his hand
+ as a signal for the Ghoojurs to wait for him. It is probable that he would
+ have received a shot, but for an interruption that was as unexpected as it
+ was remarkable. Almos, the leader of the Ghoojurs, emitted a yell that
+ could have been heard a half-mile away, and leaped several feet in the
+ air, while his companions with exclamations of terror hastily recoiled
+ from him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Great Allah! He has been bitten!" exclaimed the horrified Mustad, almost
+ knocking the young woman off her feet in his rush towards his master; but
+ one of the others had perceived the monstrous cobra, and, clubbing his
+ gun, he beat the life out of it with one blow, before it could glide away
+ into the jungle. It looked as if this part of the country was specially
+ pestered by the dreadful reptiles.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almos knew he was doomed. All hope had vanished, and, dropping to the
+ ground, he bared his bronzed ankle, looked at the tiny points where the
+ horrible poison had been injected into his system, and then, like the
+ fatalist be was, he calmly folded his arms and waited for the last moment
+ that was rushing upon him. He was a faithful follower of the Prophet and
+ knew how to meet the inevitable that awaits us all. His companions, awed
+ and silent, stood around, unable to say or do anything that could give him
+ comfort. Miss Marlowe, after walking part way to the group, paused and
+ looked at them and at her father, who was hurrying to the spot. She
+ wondered that Almos had permitted the killing of the cobra, since the
+ snake is looked upon as sacred in India, and few natives can be induced to
+ injure one. The Ghoojurs probably slew it in the flurry of the moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Marlowe had heard the cry and noted the excitement, but did not
+ suspect the cause until he drew near the spot. Then Mustad, familiar with
+ the skill of the medical man, beckoned to him and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Make haste, great sahib, Almos has been bitten by a snake; no one can
+ save him but you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stricken chief, from his seat on the ground, looked up in the face of
+ the white man, of whose wonderful skill he had received proof in his own
+ self. The countenance of the Ghoojur was of ashen hue, and the yearning
+ expression of his eyes told of the hope that had been kindled within his
+ breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now that the physician had dropped into what may be called his
+ professional character, he was himself again. He set down the caba
+ containing his instruments, and medicaments, adjusted his glasses, and
+ stooping over, intently studied the wound made by the cobra. Then he drew
+ out his watch, as if he were timing the pulse beats of a patient.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is one minute and a half since you were bitten," he said, still
+ holding the timepiece in his hand, but looking into the face of Almos; "in
+ three more minutes and a half no power but Allah can save you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Catching the full meaning of these words, the Ghoojur leader quivered with
+ suddenly renewed hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Can you save me?" he asked in Hindustani.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have in there," replied the physician, tapping his caba with his long
+ forefinger, "that which will render the bite of the snake as harmless as
+ the peck of a bird that flies in the air, but barely three minutes remain
+ in which to apply it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then I beseech you, do not wait," said the eager Almos, shoving his foot
+ towards the doctor; "great is the English doctor; be quick; why do you
+ tarry?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Before I heal you," replied Dr. Marlowe, with maddening deliberation, "I
+ must be paid my fee; I have attended you before and refused to accept what
+ you offered, but now I demand payment before applying the remedy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall have it; name it, I beg you; all that I have shall be yours if
+ you will save me, but haste, O great physician, haste!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is strong, and will do its work well, if it be given the chance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He next drew out a lancet, with its edge like a razor's. Almos
+ breathlessly watched him, but when he expected the doctor to begin work,
+ he leaned back and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why should I bring you back from death, when you are seeking the lives of
+ my daughter and myself? The best thing I can do is to let you die, as you
+ will do in two minutes and a half more," he added, looking again at his
+ watch; "the venom of the cobra works fast and it will soon strike your
+ heart."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You promised to save me if I would pay you in advance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So I will."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Name your fee; be quick with it!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is that you and the rest of the Ghoojurs shall leave me and mine
+ alone; that you shall depart at once; that you shall not attempt to
+ follow, nor harm us in any way. Without that pledge on your part, I shall
+ let you die like the dog that you are. What is your answer?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I promise; I promise!" exclaimed Almos, almost beside himself with
+ excitement and renewed hope. "I will guide you through the jungle to a
+ safe point, and will watch over you till all danger is gone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have given me your promise, but you may break it; swear by the mantle
+ of the Prophet, or I shall let you die."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I swear by the mantle of the Prophet!" the Ghoojur chieftain fairly
+ shrieked, "that I will do as I have promised! Quick, quick, or it will be
+ too late!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have made the most sacred vow that a Mussulman can make; I will test
+ it by saving your life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX. &mdash; ASIATIC HONOR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One quick movement with the lancet made an incision across the red specks
+ left by the fangs of the cobra, and into the opening he poured a
+ teaspoonful of the yellowish fluid, which was so much like liquid fire and
+ pepper that even the dusky scoundrel gasped with agony. Then he was made
+ to open his mouth and swallow something from a large bottle, which, as
+ regards strength and flavor, was a twin of that which was consuming his
+ flesh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All at once the countenance of the physician expanded with a beaming smile
+ as he looked at his patient and said gently as if speaking to his own
+ child:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All danger is past, Almos."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From the abundance of rags which fluttered about his person, the doctor
+ tore a piece and bandaged the wound. Then he said in a business-like tone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am through; now you and the rest of you may go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almos hesitated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have saved my life: is there nothing I can do for you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have just told you what to do&mdash;<i>leave</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Probably there would have been less promptness in complying with the
+ command had there been less in uttering it. As it was, Almos, without a
+ word, motioned to the rest of his band, and led the way down the path in
+ the direction of the stream, the four tramping after him like so many
+ ragged phantoms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Marlowe was more eager to leave the place than he would permit his
+ child to know. He had no faith in Almos's promise, knowing that the
+ Ghoojur chieftain would break his oath, which he and his brother fanatics
+ did not consider binding when made to infidels, and the only hope,
+ therefore, was for the fugitives to conceal themselves from the miscreants&mdash;a
+ thing which the physician's intimate knowledge of the country would enable
+ him to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Footfalls sounded along the path over which the two had just come, and a
+ minute later Almos, Mustad and their three companions emerged into the
+ opening and approached the couple, one of whom suspected nothing until her
+ father spoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Almos, what do you want?" demanded Dr. Marlowe, calmly looking up
+ at the Ghoojur chieftain, as he paused in front of him and made a salaam.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We have come for the infidel and his daughter; our deen commands us to
+ put them to death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What does the oath you gave me a little while ago command you to do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That was made to an infidel; it is not binding upon a true son of the
+ Prophet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A true son of the devil!" exclaimed the physician, unable to repress his
+ rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Turning to his daughter, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My child, you have a pistol; when they make a move, shoot; leave Almos to
+ me and save your last bullet for yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The infidels shall be destroyed everywhere," said Almos; "none of the
+ Inglese loge shall be left in India. The faithful have risen and they will
+ crush them all, for so commands the Prophet&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dr. Marlowe had placed his hand on the butt of his revolver at his hip,
+ meaning to whip out the weapon and fire before the miscreant had finished
+ his high-sounding tomfoolery. His daughter had also grasped hers,
+ intending to obey to the letter the command of her parent, when the
+ Ghoojur chieftain abruptly paused in his speech, staggered for a moment,
+ and then sank to the ground like a bundle of rags, with the breath of life
+ gone from his body.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The incident would have been as inexplicable to parent and child as to the
+ Ghoojurs, had they not caught the faint, far-away report of a rifle,
+ which, if heard by the bandits, was not associated by them with the
+ startling thing that had taken place before their eyes. But the doctor and
+ Mary knew the connection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And about half-a-mile away, on the top of that huge rock, hot enough under
+ the flaming sun to roast eggs, Jack Everson had assumed the same position
+ that he held the afternoon before on the bank of the Ganges, when he
+ checked the advance of the Ghoojur horsemen across the river. With the aid
+ of the glasses, he had descried the forms of his beloved and her father
+ when the bright eyes failed to detect his own. Then, when about to start
+ to join them, he observed their visitors, and the glass again helped to
+ identify them, after which he "proceeded to business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The instant he made his aim sure he pulled the trigger, came to a sitting
+ position, readjusted a cartridge, and placing the glasses to his eyes that
+ he might see the more plainly, watched the result of his shot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "By Jove; another bull's-eye!" he gleefully exclaimed, as he saw his man
+ stagger and fall almost at the feet of Dr. Marlowe. "I don't know the
+ gentleman's name, but a first-class obituary notice is in order. That
+ makes six, and now for the seventh. I really hope the doctor is keeping
+ score for me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The professional eye of the physician saw where the pellet of lead had
+ passed through the chest of Almos, but it was not observed by Mustad or
+ the other Ghoojurs, who probably attributed it in some way to the bite of
+ the cobra, in spite of the miraculous cure that seemed to have been
+ wrought before their eyes. The three remained in the background, but the
+ fall of the leader appeared to add flames to the hatred of Mustad, who,
+ assuming the mantle of the fallen chieftain, stepped to the front.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You shall not escape us!" he hissed; "all the Inglese loge shall die!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But before any more of them perish, you shall go to the infernal regions
+ to keep company with the imp that has just gone thither."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The doctor had learned from the exhibition of the preceding afternoon the
+ time required by Jack Everson to repeat his marvelous shots. He knew,
+ therefore, about the moment when a second was due, and he decided to make
+ its arrival as dramatic as possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You stand almost on the same spot where stood Almos; he dropped dead
+ before me, and," raising his hand impressively, "I command you to do the
+ same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mustad obeyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Again the faint report swept across the extent of jungle, travelling with
+ almost the same speed as the bullet, which, like its predecessor, bored
+ through the dusky chest of the victim and lost itself in the vegetation
+ beyond. Mustad gasped, convulsively clasped one hand to his breast, flung
+ out both arms, groped blindly for an instant, and then slumped down as
+ dead as one of the mummies of the Pyramids.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the young American, still reclining on that gray, blistering rock,
+ again rose to a sitting posture and clapped the glasses to his eyes to
+ observe more clearly the result of his last trial at markmanship.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That makes seven bull's-eyes!" was his delighted exclamation, "but I have
+ done as well when the distance was twice as great. I must keep the number
+ in mind, for it will be like the doctor to insist that I made but six out
+ of a possible eight. I notice that three gentlemen are left and require
+ attention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the same care as before, he lay back and drew bead on the group, but
+ the next moment uttered an impatient exclamation and straightened up
+ again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They have fled; only Mary and her father are left, and there's no call to
+ send any bullets in their direction."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fall of Mustad at the command of the wrathful physician was more than
+ the other Ghoojurs could stand. Suspecting no connection between the
+ almost inaudible reports and the terrifying incidents, they believed their
+ only hope was in headlong flight. Without a word they dashed down the
+ trail, quickly passing from sight, and were seen no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Jack Everson, finding no demand for long shooting, sprang from
+ the rock and made all haste to the spot where he had recognized his
+ friends, and where they awaited his coming with an anxiety that could not
+ have been more intense. That others of their enemies were in the
+ neighborhood was certain, and their vengeance could not be restrained or
+ turned aside as had been that of the Ghoojurs. A collision between them
+ and the fugitives must be fatal to the latter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Great, therefore, was the delight of father and daughter when the brave
+ fellow bounded into sight, his whole concern, as it seemed, being to learn
+ whether the score kept by the doctor agreed with his own. When assured
+ that it did, he announced that he was at the disposal of the venerable
+ physician and his daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three pushed steadily toward Nepaul, cheered by the knowledge that
+ with every mile passed their danger lessened. They were in great peril
+ more than once. Twice they exchanged shots with marauding bands, and once
+ their destruction seemed inevitable; but good fortune attended them, and
+ at the end of a week they entered the wild, mountainous and
+ sparsely-settled region, where at last all danger was at an end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So it came about that when the young people took their final departure
+ down the Ganges for Calcutta, thence to return to the United States, Dr.
+ Marlowe went with them. He and his son-in-law formed a partnership in the
+ practice of their profession, and it is only a few years since that the
+ aged physician was laid to rest. He was full of years and honors, and
+ willing to go, for he knew that the happiness of his daughter could be in
+ no safer hands than those of Jack Everson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0021" id="link2H_4_0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LOST IN THE WOODS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I. &mdash; THE CABIN IN THE WOOD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Harvey Bradley had been superintendent of the Rollo Mills not quite a year
+ when, to his annoyance, the first strike in their history took place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Young Bradley was a college graduate, a trained athlete, and a bright and
+ ambitious man, whose father was president of the company in New York which
+ owned the extensive mills. It was deemed best to have a direct
+ representative of the corporation on the ground, and Harvey qualified
+ himself for the responsible situation by a six-months' apprenticeship,
+ during all of which he wrought as hard as any laborer in the
+ establishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made his home in the remote village of Bardstown, where the Rollo Mills
+ had been built. He lived with his Aunt Maria, (who went all the way from
+ New York with her favorite nephew that she might look after him), and his
+ sister Dollie, only six years old. The plan was that she should stay until
+ Christmas, when her father was to come and take her home. Aunt Maria, with
+ the help of honest Maggie Murray, kept house for Harvey, who found his
+ hands and brains fully occupied in looking after the interests of the
+ Rollo Mills, which gave employment to two hundred men, women and children.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All went well with the young superintendent for some months after the
+ assumption of his duties. He was alert, and surprised every one by his
+ practical knowledge. He was stern and strict, and, after warning several
+ negligent employes, discharged them. This did not help his popularity,
+ but, so long as the directors were satisfied, Harvey cared for the opinion
+ of no one else.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When dull times came, Superintendent Bradley scaled down the wages of all,
+ including his own. The promise to restore them, as soon as business
+ warranted the step, averted the threatened strike. Within a month the
+ restoration took place, but every employe was required to work a half hour
+ over time without additional pay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strike was averted for the time, but the friendly feeling and mutual
+ confidence that ought to exist between the employer and the employed was
+ destroyed. The latter kept at work, and the former felt that he had not
+ sacrificed his dignity nor his discipline.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the discontent increased. One day Hugh O'Hara, the chief foreman, and
+ Thomas Hansell, one of the most influential of the workmen, called upon
+ Mr. Bradley, and speaking for the employes, protested against the new
+ arrangement. They said every man, woman and child was willing to work the
+ extra half hour, but inasmuch as the need for such extra time indicated an
+ improvement in business, they asked for the additional pay to which they
+ were clearly entitled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey was looking for such protest and he was prepared. He said it was an
+ error to think there was an improvement in business. While in one sense it
+ might be true, yet the price of the manufactured goods had fallen so low
+ that the mills really made less money than before. The wages that had been
+ paid were better than were warranted by the state of trade. Now, when the
+ employes were asked to help in a slight degree their employers who had
+ done so much for them, they would not do so. O'Hara and Hansell, showing a
+ wish to discuss the matter, the superintendent cut them short by saying
+ that it was idle to talk further. He would not make any reduction in their
+ time, nor would he pay any extra compensation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night 200 employes of the Rollo Mills quit work, with the intention
+ of staying out until justice was done them. Harvey asserted that he would
+ never yield; he would spend a few days in overhauling the machinery and in
+ making a few needed repairs; then, if the employes chose, they could come
+ back. All who did not do so would not be taken back afterwards. New hands
+ would be engaged and in a short time the mills would be running the same
+ as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'Hara and Hansell warned the superintendent that serious trouble would
+ follow any such course. While making no threat themselves, they told him
+ that blood was likely to be shed. Harvey pooh-poohed and reminded them
+ that a few men and children would make sorry show in fighting the whole
+ state, for, in the event of interference by the strikers, he meant to
+ appeal to the authorities.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The repairs needed at the mills were soon made. Steam was gotten up and
+ the whistle called the hands to work. Only O'Hara and Hansell came
+ forward. They explained that all would be glad to take their places if the
+ superintendent would allow them a slight increase of pay for overwork.
+ They had held a meeting and talked over the matter, and now abated a part
+ of their first demand; they were willing to accept one-half rate for
+ overtime.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superintendent would not yield a jot. The most that he would consent
+ to do was to wait until noon for them to go to work. The two men went away
+ muttering threats; not one of the hands answered the second call to work.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quite sure that such would be the result, Harvey had telegraphed to
+ Carville, fifty miles away, for sixty men, to take the place of those who
+ had quit work. He asked only for men, since it would have been unwise to
+ bring women and children to become involved in difficulties.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By some means this step became known, and, as is always the case, it added
+ fuel to the flames. Warning notices were sent to the superintendent that
+ if the new hands went to work they would be attacked; Bradley himself was
+ told to keep out of sight unless ready to come to the terms of the
+ strikers. Even in his own home, he could not be guaranteed safety. His
+ house as well as the mills would be burnt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey felt no special alarm because of these threats; he did not believe
+ that those who made them dare carry them out. But that night the mills
+ escaped destruction only by the vigilance of the extra watchmen. The same
+ evening Aunt Maria was stopped on the village street and told that it was
+ best she should lose no time in moving away with her little niece Dollie,
+ since it was more than likely the innocent would suffer with the guilty.
+ For the first time, Harvey understood the earnestness of the men; but he
+ clung to his resolution all the same.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ You can see how easily the trouble could have been ended. The employes had
+ abated their first demand and were willing to compromise. Had Harvey
+ spoken his honest thoughts, he would have said the men were right, or at
+ any rate he ought to have agreed to their proposal to submit the dispute
+ to arbitration; but he was too proud to yield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They will take it for weakness on my part," was his thought; "it will
+ make an end of all system and open the way for demands that in the end
+ will destroy the business."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sixty new hands reached Bardstown and were about as numerous as the
+ men who wrought in the mills before the strike. They looked like a
+ determined band, who would be able to take care of themselves in the
+ troubles that impended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The arrivals were received with scowls by the old employes, who hooted and
+ jeered them as they marched grimly to the mills. No blows were struck,
+ though more than once an outbreak was imminent. It was too late in the day
+ to begin work, but the new hands were shown through the establishment,
+ with a view of familiarizing them to some extent with their new duties.
+ Most of them had had some experience in the same kind of work, but there
+ was enough ignorance to insure much vexation and loss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The night that followed was so quiet that Harvey believed the strikers had
+ been awed by his threat to appeal to the law and by the determined front
+ of the new men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a dear lesson," he said to himself, "but they need it, and it is
+ high time it was taught to them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the whistle sent out its ear-splitting screech, whose
+ echoes swung back and forth, like so many pendulums between the hills, but
+ to the amazement of Harvey Bradley, not a person was seen coming toward
+ the mills. The whistle called them again, and Hugh O'Hara and Tom Hansell
+ strolled leisurely up the street to the office, where Mr. Bradley
+ wonderingly awaited them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You'll have to blow that whistle a little louder," said O'Hara, with a
+ tantalizing grin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you mean, sir?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Those chaps all left town last night; they must be about forty miles
+ away; you see we explained matters to them; I don't think, if I was you, I
+ would feel bad about it; they believe they can get along better at
+ Carville than at Bardstown."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For the first time since the trouble began, Harvey Bradley lost his
+ temper. To be defied and taunted in this manner was more than he could
+ bear. He vowed over again that not one of the strikers should do another
+ day's work for him, even if he begged for it on his knees and he was
+ starving. He at once telegraphed to Vining, fully one hundred miles away,
+ where he knew there were many people idle, for one hundred men who would
+ not only come, but stay. He preferred those who knew something about the
+ business, but the first need was that the men would remain at their posts,
+ and if necessary fight for their positions. He guaranteed larger wages
+ than he had ever paid experienced hands, but he wanted no man who would
+ not help hold the fort against all comers. The superintendent was on his
+ mettle; he meant to win.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having sent off this message, for which it cannot be denied, Harvey had
+ every legal and moral warrant, he set out on a long tramp through the
+ woods at the rear of Bardstown. It was a crisp autumn day, and the long
+ brisk walk did him much good. The glow came to his cheeks, his blood was
+ warmed, and his brain cleared by the invigorating exercise. So much indeed
+ did he enjoy it that he kept it up until, to his surprise, he saw that it
+ was growing dark, and he was several miles from home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was snowing, though not heavily. He walked fast, but, when night had
+ fully come, paused with the uncomfortable discovery that he was hopelessly
+ lost in the woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, this is pleasant!" he exclaimed, looking around in vain for some
+ landmark in the gloom. "I believe I shall have to spend the night out
+ doors, though I seem to be following some sort of path."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He struck a match, shading it with his hand from the chilly wind, and
+ stooped down. Yes; there was an unmistakable trail, and with renewed hope
+ he hurried on, taking care not to stray to either side. Within the next
+ ten minutes, to his delight, he caught the twinkle of a star-like point of
+ light among the trees, a short distance ahead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While making his way hopefully forward, Harvey became aware of a singular
+ fact. The air around him was tainted with a peculiar odor, such as he had
+ never met before. It was of a rank nature, and, while not agreeable, could
+ not be said to be really unpleasant. It might have interested him more,
+ but for his anxiety to reach the shelter which was now so near at hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Arriving at the cabin, he found the latch-string hanging out. A sharp
+ pull, the door was swung inward and Harvey stepped into a small room, lit
+ up by a crackling wood-fire on the hearth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he entered, two men who were smoking their pipes, looked up. The
+ visitor could not hide his expression of surprise, for they were Hugh
+ O'Hara and Thomas Hansell, the last persons in the world he wished to see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II. &mdash; A POINTED DISCUSSION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Hugh O'Hara was in middle life. He was of Scotch descent, and, in his
+ younger days, had received a fair education. Even now he spent much time
+ over his books. He talked well, and was not without a certain grace of
+ manner founded, no doubt, on his knowledge of human nature, which gave him
+ great influence with others. It was this, as much as his skill, that made
+ him the leading foreman at a time when a score of others had the right by
+ seniority of service to the place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Hugh had dipped into the springs of learning just enough to have his
+ ideas of right and wrong turned awry and to form a distaste for his lot
+ that made his leadership dangerous. Besides, he had met with sorrows that
+ deepened the shadows that lay across his pathway. In that little cabin he
+ had seen a young wife close her eyes in death, and his only child, a sweet
+ girl of five years, not long afterward was laid beside her mother. Many
+ said that Hugh buried his heart with Jennie and had not been the same man
+ since. He was reserved, except to one or two intimate friends. Shaggy,
+ beetle-browed and unshaven, his looks were anything but pleasing to those
+ who did not fully know him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom Hansell was much the same kind of man, except that he lacked the book
+ education of his companion and leader. He had strong impulses, and was
+ ready to go to an extreme length in whatever direction he started, but he
+ always needed a guiding spirit, and that he found in Hugh O'Hara.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter, after burying his child, moved into the village, saying that
+ he never wanted to look again upon the cabin that had brought so much
+ sorrow to him. Most people believed he could not be led to go near it, and
+ yet on this blustery night he and Tom Hansell were seated in the structure
+ without any companions except the well known hound Nero, and were smoking
+ their pipes and plotting mischief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh and Tom were in their working clothes&mdash;coarse trousers, shirts,
+ and heavy shoes, without vest or coat. Their flabby caps lay on the floor
+ behind them, and their tousled hair hung over their foreheads almost to
+ their eyes. Tom had no side whiskers, but a heavy mustache and chin
+ whiskers, while the face of Hugh was covered with a spiky black beard that
+ stood out from his face as if each hair was charged with electricity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nero, the hound, raised his nose from between his paws and looked up at
+ the visitor. Then, as if satisfied, he lowered his head and resumed his
+ nap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bradley, as I have said, was angry with himself for walking into such a
+ trap. It was not fear, but a deep dislike of the man who was the head and
+ front of the trouble at the mills. He was the spokesman and leader of the
+ strikers, and he was the real cause of the stoppage of the works. Harvey
+ looked upon him as insolent and brutal, and he was sure that no
+ circumstances could arise that would permit him to do a stroke of work in
+ the Rollo Mills again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good evening," said Harvey stiffly, "I did not expect to find you here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hansell nodded in reply to the salutation, but Hugh simply motioned with
+ the hand that held the pipe toward a low stool standing near the middle of
+ the apartment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Help yourself to a seat, Mr. Bradley; the presence of Tom and myself here
+ is no odder than is your own."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose not," replied Harvey with a half-laugh, as he seated himself;
+ "I started out for a walk to-day and went too far&mdash;that is, so far
+ that I lost my way. I had about made up my mind that I would have to sleep
+ in the woods, when I caught the light from your window and made for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The glance that passed between Hugh and Tom&mdash;sly as it was&mdash;did
+ not elude the eye of Harvey Bradley. He saw that his explanation was not
+ believed, but he did not care; there was no love between him and them,
+ and, had it not looked as if he held them in fear, he would have turned
+ and walked away after stepping across the threshold. As it was, he meant
+ to withdraw as soon as he could do it without seeming to be afraid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is this the first time you have taken a walk up this way?" asked Hugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The fact that I lost my way ought to answer that question; how far is it,
+ please, to Bardstown?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "An even mile by the path you came."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I didn't come by any path, except for a short distance in front of
+ this place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then how did you get here?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is there no way of traveling through the woods except by the road that
+ leads to your door?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The conversation was between Harvey and Hugh alone. Tom was abashed in the
+ presence of two such persons, and nothing could have led him to open his
+ mouth unless appealed to by one or the other. Neither made any allusion to
+ the strike. After the superintendent's rebuff, Hugh scorned to do so,
+ while Harvey would have stultified himself had he invited any discussion.
+ The repugnance between the two men was too strong for them calmly to
+ debate any question. Besides Hugh and Tom were suspicious; they did not
+ believe that the presence of the superintendent was accidental; there was
+ a sinister meaning in it which boded ill for Hugh and his friends, and the
+ former, therefore, was in a vicious mood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With the conditions named, a wrangle may be set down as one of the
+ certainties. But Harvey Bradley had defied the fury of half a hundred men,
+ and he meant to teach this marplot his proper place. There was a
+ threatening gleam in his eye, but he puffed a few seconds at his pipe, and
+ then, glaring through the rank smoke that curled upward from his face
+ said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are a good many ways by which Hugh O'Hara's cabin can be found, but
+ those who come on honest errands stick to the path."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Which explains why the path is so little worn," was the reply of Harvey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aye, and your feet have done mighty little to help the wearing of the
+ same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If those who live in the cabin were honest themselves, they would not
+ tremble every time the latch-string is pulled, nor would they be scared if
+ they saw a visitor stop to snuff the air in this neighborhood."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was an ill-timed remark, and Harvey regretted the words the moment
+ they passed his lips. He saw Hugh and Tom glance at each other; but the
+ words, having been spoken, could not be recalled, nor did the
+ superintendent make any attempt to modify them. Before the others could
+ answer, he added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have heard it said that Hugh O'Hara held this place in such strong
+ disfavor that nothing could lead him to spend a night here, yet he smokes
+ his pipe and plots mischief as if the cabin is the one place in the world
+ with which he is content."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words were not soothing in their effect, nor did the speaker mean
+ that they should be. Hugh was insolent, and the superintendent resented
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The only proof of the rising anger in the breast of O'Hara was the
+ vigorous puffing of his pipe. Tom, as I have said, was too awed to say
+ anything at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am of age and free born," growled Hugh, looking into the glowing embers
+ and speaking as if to himself; "where I go and what I do concerns no one
+ but myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not so long as you go to the proper place and do only what is right,"
+ said Harvey, who, sitting back a few feet from the fire, looked calmly at
+ the fellow whose rough profile was outlined against the fiery background
+ behind him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Men interpret right according to their own ideas, and they seldom agree,
+ but most people will pronounce that person the worst sort of knave who
+ robs poor men of what they earn and looks upon them as he looks upon the
+ beasts of the field&mdash;worth only the amount of money they bring to
+ him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III. &mdash; MISSING.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The conversation was taking a dangerous shape. Harvey saw that it would
+ not do for him to stay. Both these men were fierce enough to fly at his
+ throat. That little cabin in the woods was liable to become the scene of a
+ tragedy unless he bridled his tongue or went away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Disdaining to say so much as "good-night," he rose to his feet, opened the
+ door, shut it behind him, and walked out in the blustery darkness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would rather spend the night fighting tigers than to keep the company
+ of such miscreants. But the new hands will be here in a few days, and the
+ fellows will be taught a lesson which they will remember all their lives.
+ I suppose I ought to pity their dupes, but they should have enough sense
+ to see that these men are their worst enemies. It will be a bright day for
+ the Rollo Mills and for Bardstown when they are well rid of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superintendent did not pause to think where he was going when he
+ stepped into the open air. The cold wind struck his face and a few fine
+ particles touched his cheek. The sky had partly cleared, so that he could
+ see the fine coating of snow around him, but after all, very little had
+ fallen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I can keep the path," he thought, "I will reach the village, but that
+ is no easy matter&mdash;ah! there it is again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The peculiar odor that had mystified him before was in the air. He
+ recalled that Hugh and Tom had made an allusion to it that he did not
+ understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It may come from their chimney and be caused by something burning; but I
+ looked closely at the wood on the hearth and saw nothing else."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A natural impulse led him, after walking a few rods, to look behind him.
+ He had heard nothing, but knowing the surly mood of the couple, he thought
+ it probable they might follow him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door of the cabin, was drawn wide open and the form of a man stood out
+ to view, as if stamped with ink on the flaming background made by the fire
+ beyond. His lengthened shadow was thrown down the path almost to the feet
+ of Harvey. The fellow no doubt was peering into the gloom and listening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder whether they mean to dog me," said Harvey; "it will be an easy
+ matter to do so, for they know every part of the wood, while I am a
+ stranger. They are none too good to put me out of the way; it is such men
+ who have no fear of the law, but they shall not take me unawares."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While still looking toward the cabin, all became dark again. The door was
+ closed, but he could not be sure whether the man stood outside or within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If he means to do me harm he will soon be at my heels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the straining eyes could not catch the outlines of any one, and the
+ only sound was the moaning wind among the bare branches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has gone back into the house, but may come out again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so, while picking his way through the dim forests, you may be sure
+ that Harvey Bradley looked behind him many times. It makes one shiver with
+ dread to suspect that a foe is softly following him. Harvey had buttoned
+ his pea jacket to his chin and he now turned up the collar, so that it
+ touched his ears. His hands were shoved deep into the side pockets and the
+ right one rested upon his revolver that he had withdrawn from its usual
+ place at his hip. He was on the alert for whatever might come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was pleased with one fact: the path to which so many references were
+ made, was so clearly marked that he found it easy to avoid going wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If I had had sense enough to take the right course when I first struck
+ it, I would have been home by this time."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After turning around several times without seeing or hearing anything
+ suspicious, he came to believe that however glad O'Hara and Hansell might
+ be to do him harm, they lacked the courage, unless almost sure against
+ detection.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hugh will stir up others to go forward, but he will take good care to
+ protect himself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dull roar that he once fancied he heard when tramping aimlessly during
+ the day, was now so distinct that he knew he must be near a stream. The
+ path crossed it at no great distance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sure enough, he had only turned a bend and gone down a little slope when
+ he reached the margin of a deep creek, fully twenty feet wide. It flowed
+ smooth and dark at his feet, but the turmoil to the left showed that it
+ tumbled over the rocks, not far away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey was anything but pleased, when he saw the bridge by which the
+ stream had to be passed. It was merely the trunk of a tree, that lay with
+ the base on the side where he stood, while the top rested on the other
+ bank. Whoever had felled the tree had trimmed the trunk of its branches
+ from base to top&mdash;the result being more ornamental than useful, for
+ the protuberances would have served to help the footing of a passenger.
+ The trunk in the middle was no more than six inches in diameter, and being
+ a little worn by the shoes that had trod its length, the footing was
+ anything but secure. With the sprinkling of snow it was more treacherous
+ than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Must I cross <i>that</i>?" Harvey said aloud, with a feeling akin to
+ dismay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can do so or swim, whichever you choose."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These words were spoken by a man standing on the other side, and who was
+ about to step on the support, when he paused on seeing another on the
+ point of doing the same from the opposite bank. In the dim light, Harvey
+ saw him only indistinctly, but judged that he himself was recognized by
+ the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I suppose it's safe enough for those accustomed to it," said Harvey in
+ reply, "but I prefer some other means; do you intend to use it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I do; I want no better; if you are afraid, get out of the way, for I
+ am late."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey moved to the right, and watched the other, who stepped upon the
+ support and walked over with as much certainty as if treading a pavement
+ on the street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey looked closely, and as the fellow came toward him, he recognized
+ him as one of his former employes. He was Jack Hansell&mdash;a brother of
+ Tom, and like him a close associate of Hugh O'Hara, the leader.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are out late, Jack," remarked the superintendent, as the other left
+ the log. To his surprise, Jack did not answer, but quickly disappeared up
+ the path by which the superintendent had reached the spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He is surly and ill-mannered, like all of them; no doubt he is on his way
+ to the cabin to plot mischief with the others."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since nothing was to be gained by waiting, Harvey now stepped on the trunk
+ and began gingerly making his way across. It was a hard task, and just
+ beyond the middle, he lost his balance. He was so far along, however, that
+ a vigorous jump landed him on the other bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A little beyond he caught the twinkling lights of the village, and he
+ hastened his steps, now that, as it may be said, home was in sight. He
+ felt as if he was famishing, and the thought of the luscious supper
+ awaiting his return, gave him such speed that he was soon at his own door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Though it was late, he saw his aunt was astir, for the lights were burning
+ brightly. Before he could utter the greeting on his tongue, he was
+ terrified by the scared face of his relative.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, aunt, what is the matter? Are you ill?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Harvey!" she wailed; "haven't you brought Dollie with you?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dollie!" repeated the other; "I haven't seen her since I left home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then you will never see her again," and, overcome by her terrible grief,
+ the good woman sank into the nearest chair, covered her face with her
+ apron and wept.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey Bradley stood petrified. Bright-eyed Dollie, whom he had left a few
+ hours before, rosy, happy, overflowing with bounding spirits, was gone,
+ and the sobbing Aunt Maria declared she would never be seen again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Stepping into the room, Harvey laid his hand on his aunt's shoulder and in
+ a trembling voice said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, aunt, what does this mean? Are you in earnest? What has become of
+ Dollie? Tell me, I beseech you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She is lost; she is lost! Oh, why did we ever bring her to this dreadful
+ country? I wish none of us had ever seen it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what about Dollie? Where is she? How long has she been gone? Compose
+ yourself and tell."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until he spoke sharply that the hysterical woman was able to
+ make known that the child had been absent for hours, no one knew where.
+ When she learned that noon that her big brother would not be back till
+ night, Dollie had pouted because he had gone off without telling her. She
+ was not sure she could ever forgive him. However, she ate her dinner, and
+ soon after went out to play. Some hours later her aunt went to the door to
+ call her, but she was not within sight or hearing. Maggie was sent to look
+ for her, but soon came back with word that she could not be found.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The child had been seen a couple of hours before, running in the direction
+ of the path that led into the mountains, as if she was fleeing from some
+ one, Maggie had gone as far as she dared in quest of her, but her loudest
+ shouts brought no reply and she returned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The word brought by the servant, as may well be believed, filled the aunt
+ with the wildest grief. Beyond all doubt, Dollie had formed a sudden
+ resolve to hunt up her brother Harvey, who had gone away and left her at
+ home. She had strayed so far into the mountains that she was lost.
+ Fortunately, she was warmly dressed at the time, but exposed as she must
+ be to the wintry winds and cold, she could not hold out until morning
+ unless rescued very soon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey was stricken with an anguish such as he had never known before, but
+ he knew that not a minute was to be lost. Dollie must be found at once or
+ it would be too late. It added a poignancy to his woe to know that in
+ coming down the mountain path, he must have passed close to her, who was
+ in sore need of the help he was eager to give.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you made no search for her?" he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could not believe she would not come back until it began to grow dark.
+ I thought she could not be far away; Maggie and I hunted through the
+ village, inquiring of every one whom we saw; many of the people were kind,
+ and two or three have gone to hunt for her; I started to do so, but did
+ not go far, when I was sure she had come back while I was away, and I
+ hurried home only to find she was not here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you sure any one is looking for her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are several."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said Harvey, impatient with the vacillation shown by his aunt, "I
+ shall not come back until she is found."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His hand was on the knob of the door when his distressed relative sprang
+ to her feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Harvey;" she said in a wild, scared manner, "shall I tell you what I
+ believe?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dollie did not lose herself: some of those awful men did it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you mean the strikers?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; they have taken her away to spite you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Impossible!" exclaimed the young man, passing out the door and striding
+ up the single street that ran through the village.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But though unwilling to confess it to himself, the same shocking suspicion
+ had come to him at the moment he learned that Dollie was lost. Could it be
+ that some of the men, grown desperate in their resentment, had taken this
+ means of mortally injuring him? Was there any person in the wide world who
+ would harm an innocent child for the sake of hurting a strong man? Alas,
+ such things had been done, and why should they not be done again? The
+ words that he overheard between Hugh O'Hara and Tom Hansell proved them
+ capable of dark deeds. Could it be that some of the hints thrown out by
+ them during that brief interview in the cabin bore any relation to the
+ disappearance of Dollie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the moment Harvey turned away from his own house it was his intention
+ to rouse the village and to ask all to join in the hunt for the child, but
+ a feeling of bitter resentment led him to change his purpose. No; they
+ would rejoice over his sorrow; they would give him no aid, and, if they
+ had had a hand in her taking off, they would do what they could to baffle
+ him in his search. Slight as was his hope, he would push on alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O'Hara and Hansell know all about it; I will search the neighborhood of
+ the path all the way to their cabin and then compel them to tell what they
+ know; if they refuse&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He shut his lips tight and walked faster than ever. He strove to fight
+ back the tempestuous emotions that set his blood boiling. He was moved by
+ a resolve that would stop at nothing; he would not believe that there was
+ no hope; he knew he could force the miscreants to give up their secret,
+ and had a hair of his little sister's head been harmed the punishment
+ should be swift and terrible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "When Dollie is found," he muttered, determined to believe she must be
+ restored to him, "I will send her and Aunt Maria away, and then have it
+ out with these fellows; I'll make them rue the day they began the fight."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These were dreadful thoughts, but there was excuse for them, his grief
+ made him half frantic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The path over which he believed Dollie had either strayed or been led or
+ carried, entered the woods about a hundred yards from the village and
+ gradually sloped and wound upward for a mile, when it passed the door of
+ Hugh O'Hara's cabin and lost itself in the solitude beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sky had cleared still more during the interval since he came down the
+ mountain side, and he could not only see the course clearly, but could
+ distinguish objects several rods away, when the shadow of the overhanging
+ trees did not shut out the light. But the season was so far along that few
+ leaves were left on the limbs and it was easy, therefore, for him to keep
+ the right course.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not gone far when he stopped and shouted the name of Dollie. The
+ sound reached a long way, and he repeated the call several times, but only
+ the dismal wind among the limbs gave answer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Striding forward, he stood a few minutes later on the margin of the creek
+ that was spanned by the fallen tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She would not have dared to walk over," was his thought: "she must have
+ been on this side, if she wandered off alone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later he added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; for the very reason that it is dangerous, Dollie would run across; it
+ would be no trouble for her to do so, and there is just enough peril to
+ tempt her. Could she have fallen in?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked at the dark water as it swept forward and shivered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rivers and lakes and seas and streams are always thirsting for human
+ life, and this may have seized her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tramping through the undergrowth that lined the bank he fought his way
+ onward until he stood beside the rocks where the waters made a foaming
+ cascade, as they dashed downward toward the mills far away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If she did fall in, she must be somewhere near this spot&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart seemed to stop beating. Surely that dark object, half submerged
+ and lying against the edge of the bank, where the water made an eddy, must
+ be her body. He ran thither and stooped down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank God," was his exclamation, after touching it with his hands, and
+ finding it a piece of dark wood that had been carried there from the
+ regions above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back he came to where the fallen tree spanned the creek, and hurried
+ across. No snow was falling, but the earth was white with the thin coating
+ that had filtered down hours before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Had it come earlier in the day," he thought, "it would help us to trace
+ her, but now it will hide her footprints."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hardly a score of steps from the creek his foot struck something soft, and
+ he stooped down. Straightening up, he held a small hood in his hand, such
+ as children wear in cold weather. Faint as was the light, he recognized it
+ as Dollie's; he had seen her wear it many times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What can it mean?" he asked himself; "I must have stepped over or on that
+ on my way down, but did not notice it. Yes, Dollie is on this side the
+ stream, but where?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aye, that was the question. Once more he raised his voice and shouted with
+ might and main, but as before no answer came back.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey was now master of himself. He had recovered from the shock that at
+ first almost took away his senses and he was able to think and act with
+ his usual coolness. But with this, the belief that Hugh and Tom had
+ something to do with the disappearance of Dollie grew until at times he
+ was without any doubt at all. Occasionally, however, he wavered in his
+ belief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it was that two theories offered themselves. The first was that
+ Dollie had set out to find him and had wandered up the mountain path to
+ some point above the bridge and then had strayed from it and become lost.
+ Worn out, she had laid down and was at that moment asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The corollary of this theory was that she had perished with cold, or would
+ thus perish before daylight. True, she was well clad when she went out
+ that afternoon to play, but her hood was gone and she could not escape the
+ biting wind that pierced the heavy clothing of Harvey himself. Then, too,
+ there was the danger from the wild beasts, of which he had had too late an
+ experience to forget.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Should it prove that Dollie went off in the manner named, then Harvey made
+ a great error in setting out alone to search for her. He ought to have
+ roused the village, and, with the hundreds scouring the mountains, helped
+ by torches and dogs, discovery could not be delayed long.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other and darker theory was that she had been seen by some of his
+ enemies as she went into the woods and had been coaxed to some
+ out-of-the-way place, where her abductors meant to hold and use her as a
+ means of bringing the superintendent to terms. All must have known that no
+ method could be so effective as that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was hard to believe that the evil-minded men would go any further. Yet
+ it was easy for them to do so; they could make way with a little child
+ like her and have it seem that her death was caused by falling over the
+ rocks or by some other accident that might easily come to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "O'Hara and Hansell must have known all about it when I was in their
+ cabin. They were afraid to assail me in the cabin, for I was prepared, and
+ the fear of the law kept them from following me after I left their place."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey was thinking hard when he caught the well-known light, among the
+ trees in the cabin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He, Tom and Jack, precious scamps all of them, are exulting over the
+ sorrow they have caused, but they shall pay for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latch-string had not yet been withdrawn. Harvey gave it a jerk,
+ followed by a spiteful push that threw the door wide open. Disappointment
+ awaited him. Neither Hugh nor Tom was there, but Jack, looking like a twin
+ brother of Tom, was in the act of lighting the pipe that his relative had
+ probably left for his use. He was alone, not even the hound being present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack had partly risen to his feet to reach the pouch of tobacco on the
+ short mantel above the fireplace. He paused and looked over his shoulder
+ with a startled expression at the visitor who made such an emphatic
+ entrance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why&mdash;why, Mr. Bradley," he stammered, "I didn't know it was you;
+ will you take a seat?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where are Hugh and Tom?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They went out some time ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where did they go?" demanded Harvey in an angry voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Down to&mdash;the&mdash;that is, I don't know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, you do know. I want no trifling; I will not stand it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fellow, though flustered at first, quickly regained his
+ self-possession. He had evidently checked himself just in time to keep
+ back some important knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where have they gone?" repeated the superintendent, bursting with
+ impatience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Jack Hansell was himself again&mdash;sullen and insolent as ever. He
+ had an intense dislike of his employer&mdash;a dislike that had deepened
+ within the past few days. He slowly sat down and smoked a full minute
+ before making reply to Harvey, who felt like throttling him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I told you I didn't know," he finally said, looking into the embers and
+ speaking as if to the glowing coals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you do know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So I do, but I know another thing as well, and that is that there ain't
+ any reason why I should tell you if I don't choose to."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It took a great effort of the will for Harvey to hold himself from doing
+ violence to the man who said he was not bound to tell what he preferred to
+ keep to himself: but the superintendent saw that nothing could be gained
+ by violence. The man who can keep cool during a dispute has ten-fold the
+ advantage over one who does not restrain himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After all, Jack Hansell was of small account. It was O'Hara, his master,
+ and mayhap his companion, whom Harvey Bradley must see. If Tom chose to
+ tell the truth he could do so, but if he would not, no one could force him
+ to say the words.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this was clear to the young man, who, checking his anger, added in a
+ lower tone:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are not bound to answer any question I ask you, even when you have no
+ reason for your refusal, but you cannot decline to say when they are
+ likely to be back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, I can, for I don't know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish to see O'Hara on a matter of the first importance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he may not want to see you, and I ain't the man to make things
+ unpleasant for a friend."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You certainly expect them back to-night, do you not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack smoked his pipe a few seconds before giving heed to this simple
+ question. Then, turning slowly toward Harvey, who was still standing in
+ the middle of the room, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You had better sit down, for you won't find Hugh and Tom any sooner by
+ keeping your feet. What do you want to see 'em for?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That I can explain only to them, though it is Hugh whom I particularly
+ want to meet."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superintendent took the seat to which he was invited. It was the stool
+ on which he sat when in the cabin before. It cost him a greater effort
+ than can be explained to defer to this defiant fellow, who a few weeks or
+ even days before would have cringed at his feet like a dog.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That being the case," added Jack, between the puffs at his pipe, "why
+ you'll have to wait till they come back. That may be inside of five
+ minutes, and not for an hour; maybe," added Jack in the game exasperating
+ manner, "that nothing will be seen of 'em till daylight. You see that
+ since they have been cheated out of their work they have plenty of time to
+ loaf through the country."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Any man who is too lazy to work can find time to turn his hand to
+ dishonest tricks," said the superintendent, meaning that the words should
+ not be misunderstood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sometimes the tricks that you call dishonest pay better than working for
+ a superintendent who wants all the wages himself," was the impudent reply
+ of Jack Hansell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the excuse of the man who is bad at heart and who prefers wrong
+ to right. Our state prisons are full of that sort of people."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes&mdash;and there are a good many people that ought to be in prison
+ that ain't there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure no one is better qualified than you to speak on that matter."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Except yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It struck Harvey just then that he was doing an unworthy thing in holding
+ such a conversation with any man. If he had anything of the kind to say,
+ he ought to speak it openly. He now did so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is not a particle of doubt, Jack Hansell, that you and your brother
+ and Hugh O'Hara are engaged in business that ought to place you all behind
+ the bars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "If you think it safe to talk that way before Tom and Hugh you will now
+ have the chance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will be glad to tell them to their faces what I have told you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right; there they come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Footsteps and voices in such low tones were heard outside that it was
+ clear the men brought important news with them. And such indeed proved to
+ be the case.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV. &mdash; THE SEARCH BY HUGH AND TOM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Never did one person do another a greater injustice than did Harvey
+ Bradley when he believed that either Hugh O'Hara or any one else had aught
+ to do with the absence of his little sister Dollie. No men had a hand in
+ the sad business, nor could any one have been led to harm a hair of her
+ head. Had Harvey asked for help, no one in the village would have held
+ back from doing all that could be done to restore the child to her
+ friends.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first news that came to Hugh O'Hara's cabin of the loss of the child
+ was brought by Jack Hansell, who went thither on a far different errand.
+ After a long talk on business, he gave the tidings, adding:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I met him at the creek, but thought I wouldn't tell him, for it would do
+ no good. I kept my eyes open for the gal, but seen nothing of her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh jerked the pipe from his mouth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's that you are saying? The little girl lost?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's it; she's been missing since noon; they think she come up the path
+ and got lost in the mountains."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good gracious!" gasped Hugh, starting to his feet, "that is bad; do you
+ know," he added, turning to Tom and speaking with a slight tremor, "that
+ that little girl Dollie is about the age my Jennie was when she died?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I hadn't thought of that," replied Tom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And," continued Hugh, swallowing a lump in his throat, "she looks so much
+ like Jennie that I've often felt as if I would give all I have&mdash;which
+ ain't much&mdash;to hold the little one on my knee as I used to hold my
+ baby. She is a sweet child and likes me; we've had many a talk together
+ that no one beside us knows about. She's so gentle, so innocent, so good
+ that it seems to me I see my own darling before me when she looks up in my
+ face. Come, boys," he added, decisively, as he walked to the farther end
+ of the room, picked up a lantern and lit the candle inside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come where?" asked Tom, in amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh turned half angrily toward him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Do you think that I could rest while that child is lost in the mountains?
+ Mr. Bradley hasn't acted right toward us and I bear him no good will, but
+ this isn't <i>he</i>&mdash;it's a little child&mdash;she looks and acts
+ like my Jennie, that's dead and gone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But, Hugh, you forget&mdash;what about the place?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let it go to the dogs for all I care! What does it amount to against the
+ life of the little one? But we'll let Jack stay; if any of the boys come,
+ send them out to help in the hunt; it'll do them more good than to break
+ the law."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Suppose some that are strangers come?" said Jack with a grin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh O'Hara gave a hollow laugh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Send them out, too, to help in the search; we'll be sure to find her when
+ the whole country gets to work. If I was down in the village I would have
+ every man, woman and child in the woods, and wouldn't let them eat or
+ drink or sleep till she's found. Tom, there's no one that knows the woods
+ better than we and Nero. Let's be off!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was drawn inward, and Jack Hansell was left alone. He lit his
+ pipe, smoked it out, refilled it and was in the act of refilling it, when
+ Harvey Bradley came in&mdash;as has been made known in another place.
+ While the man sat smoking and alone in the cabin, he fell to brooding over
+ the troubles at the mills. Thus it came to pass that his feelings were so
+ bitter at the time the superintendent entered that he kept back every hint
+ that the absent men were engaged in the most "honest" business in the
+ world&mdash;that is, they were looking for the missing child.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Hugh and Tom went at the task not only with zeal, but with a
+ sagacity that gave promise of good results. As Hugh had said, they knew
+ every foot of the mountains for miles, they were free from the flurry that
+ at first ran away with the judgment of the superintendent, and they were
+ used to prowling through the woods. Still further Nero had been trained to
+ follow the faintest footprints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Tom," said the leader, when they had walked a short ways, "we can't
+ do anything till we get on the trail of the little one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you think has become of her?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She's somewhere in the woods asleep or dead, with the chances about even
+ for either."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jack says she was seen coming up the mountain path early this afternoon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, she has kept to it till she has either slipped out of the path
+ without knowing it or she has done it on purpose. She has strolled along
+ until it became dark or she was tired. Then she has lain down on the
+ leaves and gone to sleep. Nero, find the trail of the little girl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But," said Tom, "the night is so cold."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So it is, but if the girl went out to play she was well clad, and, if she
+ knew enough, she has crept under the lee of a rock or into the bushes,
+ where the wind can't reach her. If she did the same, she hasn't frozen to
+ death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But there are wild animals in these parts."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know that, and she would make a meal that any of them would be glad to
+ get; we can only hope they didn't find her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then Nero, who had been nosing the path in front, uttered a whine and
+ turned aside. Hugh held up the lantern and saw that he had gone to the
+ right. He was following a trail of some kind; whether it was that of the
+ one whom they were seeking was to be learned. It would take a fine scent
+ to trace the tiny footsteps under the carpet of snow, but such an exploit
+ is not one-tenth as wonderful as that of the trained dogs in Georgia,
+ which will stick to the track of a convict when it has been trampled upon
+ by hundreds of others wearing similar dress and shoes, and will keep to it
+ for miles by running parallel to the trail and at a distance of a hundred
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in the latter case the canines have an advantage at the start; they
+ are put upon the track or directed to hunt for it where it is known to
+ exist; they are given a clew in some form.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The hound Nero was skilful in taking a scent, but his ability was not to
+ be compared to that of the dogs to which I have referred, nor indeed was
+ it necessary that it should be. But he had great intelligence, and acted
+ as if he understood every word said to him by his master. He had saved
+ Hugh and his friends many a time by giving warning from afar of the
+ approach of strange parties. It may seem incredible that he should know
+ what was wanted of him, but there is the best reason for saying he
+ understood it all. Having no part of the little one's clothing to help, he
+ was without the clew which would appear to be indispensable. His master,
+ however, was satisfied the dog had struck the right trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stick to it, Nero," said Hugh, encouragingly, "not too fast, but be sure
+ you're right."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without pause, the two followed the dog, Hugh in front with lantern in
+ hand. The woods were so cluttered with undergrowth that they could not go
+ fast, seeing which Nero suited his pace to theirs. Now and then he ran
+ ahead, as if impatient with the slow progress of the couple, and then he
+ calmly awaited their approach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hark!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The single word "<i>Dollie</i>!" rang through the arches of the woods.
+ They recognized the voice as that of the superintendent, who was hurrying
+ over the path they had left, and who was not far away. In fact, Hugh held
+ the lantern in front of him so as to hide its rays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sorry for him," he said, "but we don't want him with us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It cannot be," remarked Tom, after they had struggled further, "that she
+ has gone as far as this; Nero must be off the track."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this moment the dog emitted a low, baying whine that would have
+ startled any one had he not known its meaning. It was the signal which the
+ remarkable animal always gave when close to the end of a trail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We shall soon know the worst," said Hugh, crashing through the wood with
+ such haste that Tom had to hurry almost into a trot to save himself from
+ dropping behind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The singular call of the dog was heard again. He wanted his friends to
+ move faster. It came from a point slightly to the left.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here he is!" exclaimed Hugh, making a sharp turn and showing more
+ excitement than at any time during the evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see him! There he stands!" added Tom, stumbling forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With his right hand Hugh raised the lantern above his head, so that its
+ glare was taken from their eyes. The hound was close to a rock that rose
+ some six or eight feet above the ground, and his nose was pointed toward
+ the base of the black mass. At the same moment the men saw something dark
+ and light mixed together, like a bundle of clothing. One bound and Hugh
+ was on his knees, the lamp held even with his forehead while he peered
+ downward and softly drew the clothing aside. Tom was also stooping low and
+ leaning forward with bated breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There lay little Dollie Bradley, sleeping as sweetly as if nestling beside
+ her big brother in the warm bed at home. She must have wandered through
+ the woods until, worn out, she reached this spot. Then she had thrown
+ herself on the earth beside the rock and had fallen asleep. Having lost
+ her hood, her head was without any covering, except her own native hair,
+ which was abundant. Besides, rugged people do not need to cover their
+ heads while asleep, even in cold weather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was fortunate for Dollie that she was so warmly wrapped. One arm was
+ doubled under her head, and the cheek that rested on it was pushed just
+ enough out of shape to add to her picturesqueness. Her heavy coat having
+ been buttoned around her body, kept its form and could not have been
+ better arranged. The chubby legs were covered by thick stockings, and the
+ feet were protected by heavy shoes. True, she ran much risk in lying upon
+ the cold earth, with nothing between her and the ground, but there was
+ hope that no serious harm would follow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rock not only kept off the wind, but screened her from the snow. It
+ was almost certain that the little one had been asleep several hours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh gently examined the limbs and body to see whether there was any hurt.
+ Her peaceful sleep ought to have satisfied him, but he was not content.
+ Not a scratch, however, was found, though her clothing had suffered a good
+ deal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Take the lantern," said he in a husky voice to his companion. Then,
+ softly pushing his brawny arms under the dimpled form, he lifted it as
+ tenderly as its mother could have done. Tom smoothed the clothing so as to
+ cover the body as fully as possible. Hugh doffed his coarse cap and
+ covered the mass of silken tresses that streamed over his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Dollie muttered as a child will do when disturbed in its slumber, but,
+ fitting her head to the changed position, she slept on as sweetly as ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now lead the way," added Hugh, "and be careful where you step."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom was only too glad to do his part. Nero, as happy as the others, walked
+ in advance, in his dignified manner, now and then wagging his tail and
+ whining with delight. None knew better than he the noble work he had done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom used great care. When the bushes could not be avoided, Hugh shoved
+ them aside with one hand, that they might not brush against the face
+ resting so close to his own. Perhaps he held the velvety cheek nearer his
+ shaggy beard than was needed, but who can chide him when his heart glowed
+ with the sorrowful pleasure that came from the fancy that his own Jennie,
+ whom he had so often pressed to his breast, was resting there again?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A tear dropped on the cheek of the little one. In that hour new resolves
+ entered the heart of O'Hara. He had been sullen, discontented, and had
+ long led a life that grieved his conscience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by when they came back to the path they found the walking easier
+ than before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hugh," said Tom, stopping short and facing about, "ain't you tired of
+ carryin' the kid? 'cause if you are, I'm ready to give you a lift."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I wish I could carry her forever!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All too soon the glimmer from the cabin window fell upon them, and they
+ paused at the door to make sure the clothing of the child was arranged.
+ They acted as if they were getting ready to go into the presence of
+ company.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't know as I've done right in not carrying her home," said Hugh,
+ "but she has been out too long already in the night air; we'll take her in
+ and keep her while you run down to the village and let the folks know she
+ is safe."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is she still asleep?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, hark! some of the boys seem to be inside," added Hugh, as the sound
+ of voices came to them from within.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door was pushed open and the two men and dog entered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey Bradley had risen to his feet, and for one second he stared angrily
+ at the newcomers. You will recall that hot words had just passed between
+ him and Jack Hansell, and both were in an ugly mood. Then Harvey quickly
+ recognized the form in the arms of Hugh and rushed forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is she alive?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Aye, alive and without a scratch," replied Hugh, deftly taking the hat
+ from the head of the little sleeper and placing her in the outstretched
+ arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How thankful I am," exclaimed Harvey, kissing the cold red cheeks over
+ and over again, and pressing her to his heart; "yes&mdash;she is well&mdash;she
+ was lost and is found&mdash;she was dead and is alive again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are you laughing at?" demanded Hugh, wiping his eyes and glaring
+ savagely at Jack Hansell, who, with open mouth, was looking on in a
+ bewildered way; "haven't you manners enough to know when gentlemen are
+ present?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack seemed to think that the only way to behave was by keeping his mouth
+ closed. He shut his jaws with a click like that of a steel trap and never
+ said a word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey Bradley sat down on the stool from which he had arisen, first
+ drawing it closer to the fire, and unfastened the outer clothing of the
+ little one. He saw that all was well with her. Then he looked up with
+ moistened eyes and said in a tremulous voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hugh, tell me all about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The short story was soon told. The hardy fellow made light of what he had
+ done, but the superintendent, who kept his eyes fixed on his face, saw the
+ sparkle of tears that the speaker could not keep back. It was hard for any
+ one of the three to believe that only a brief while before they were ready
+ to fly at each other's throats. Harvey was melted not only by the rescue
+ of his sister, but by the remembrance of the dreadful injustice done Hugh
+ O'Hara and his friends, when he allowed himself to think they had taken
+ part in the disappearance of Dollie, who, through all the talk, continued
+ sleeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I can never thank you for what you have done," said the superintendent,
+ hardly able to master his emotion, "but I shall show you that the charge
+ of ingratitude can never be laid at my door."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's all right," replied Hugh, in his off-hand fashion; "Tom and I are
+ glad to do a turn like that; nobody could want to see any harm come to
+ such a child, no matter how they might feel toward others related to her.
+ Do you mean to take her home to-night?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; her aunt is frantic with grief."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But Tom can run down there quicker than you can with the little one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No doubt, but we shall feel better to have her with us. She seems to be
+ well, and we can bundle her up warmly. There may, after all, be serious
+ results from this exposure, and it is best that we should have her where
+ we can give her every care."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And drawing the hood from his pocket he fixed it upon Dollie's head. She
+ opened her eyes for a moment and mumbled something, but sank into sleep
+ again. Harvey explained how it was he came to have the headgear with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I have a favor to ask of you, Mr. Bradley," said O'Hara, shifting from
+ one foot to another and as confused as a school-boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Anything that you ask shall be granted, if it be in my power to grant
+ it," replied Harvey with a fervor that could leave no doubt of his
+ sincerity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a long distance to the village, and I will be glad if you will let
+ me carry her."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He made as if he simply wished to assist the superintendent. The latter
+ knew better, but he did not say so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I shall be glad to have your aid; you have had a rest for several days,
+ and a little exercise like this won't hurt you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh brought forth his best coat and gathered it around Dollie, as if he
+ was tucking her up in her trundle bed. Then Harvey placed her with much
+ care in his arms and made sure they were fully prepared to go out doors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Hansell brothers quietly looked on during these proceedings. They felt
+ that there was no special use for them, and therefore they kept in the
+ background. The hound Nero showed much interest. He walked around Hugh and
+ Harvey, whining and wagging his tail as if he thought his views ought to
+ have some weight in the questions the couple were called upon to consider.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Come, Nero," said his master, as he drew the door inward. The dog shot
+ through like a flash and the tramp to the village was begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hardly a word was spoken on the way, but when the house was reached Hugh
+ handed his burden over to Harvey and, refusing to go in, started to move
+ off. The superintendent put out his free hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hugh, I want you to come and see me to-morrow afternoon; will you do so?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I will. Good-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh O'Hara had walked but a short distance up the mountain path when he
+ was caught in a driving snow-storm. He cared little for it, however, and
+ reached the cabin in due time, there to perform a strange duty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V. &mdash; A LITTLE CHILD SHALL LEAD THEM.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When Hugh O'Hara came to the door of Harvey Bradley, he was in his best
+ dress&mdash;the same that he wore to church on Sundays. Aunt Maria met him
+ on the threshold, and, in tremulous tones, thanked him. Then she led the
+ way to the back parlor, where the young superintendent awaited him. The
+ moment he entered, there came a flash of sunshine and a merry exclamation,
+ and with one bound, little Dollie (none the worse, apparently, for her
+ adventure the night before) landed in the iron-like arms and kissed the
+ shaggy-bearded fellow, who laughingly took a chair and held her a willing
+ captive on his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey sat smiling and silent until the earthquake was over. Then, as his
+ chief foreman looked toward him, he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As I said last night, Hugh, the service you have done is beyond payment.
+ You know what a storm set in just after Dollie was brought home, she never
+ could have lived through that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It would have gone hard with her, I'm afraid," replied the embarrassed
+ visitor; "does the little one feel no harm?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We observe nothing except a slight cold, which the doctor says is of no
+ account. I have made up my mind to give to you, Hugh&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter raised his hand in protest. He could accept money for any
+ service except that of befriending the blue-eyed darling on his knee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never refer to that again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I looked for something of the kind; I have a few words to add. I found
+ out this morning that there was a mortgage of $600 against your little
+ home in the village. I don't believe in mortgages, and that particular one
+ has now no existence. If you see any way to help undo what I have done go
+ ahead, but I beg you not to refuse another small present that I have
+ prepared for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Harvey turned as if about to take something from his desk, but stopped
+ when he saw Hugh shake his head almost angrily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I would do a good deal to oblige you, Mr. Bradley, but you must not ask
+ that. I would have been better pleased had you let the mortgage alone; my
+ wife and little one are under the sod, and it matters nought to me whether
+ I have a place to lay my head. But," he added with a faint smile, "what's
+ done can't be undone, and, since you have asked me, I will drop the
+ matter, but nothing more, I pray you, on the other subject."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hugh," said the superintendent, like one who braces himself for a duty
+ that has its disagreeable as well as its pleasant features, "you know that
+ I had sent to Vining for men to take the places of those who are on
+ strike?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I heard something of the kind, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They were to start for Bardstown to-night and are due to-morrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I countermanded the order by telegraph this morning; not a man will
+ come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The whistle will blow to-morrow as usual, ten minutes before 7 o'clock,
+ and I shall expect every one of you to be in place; I have agreed to your
+ terms."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh looked at the superintendent a moment and then asked a singular
+ question:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is it because I found Dollie that you agree to our terms?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why do you ask that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because, if that is the reason, I will not accept the terms, for you
+ would be doing out of gratitude an act which your judgment condemned."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey Bradley felt his respect for this man increase tenfold. Such
+ manliness was worthy of all admiration. He hastened to add:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's where, I am glad to say, you are in error. Now you know as well
+ as I do that in order to keep discipline the employer must insist upon his
+ rights. If he were to give all that is asked his business would be
+ destroyed. But, on the other hand, labor has rights as well as capital,
+ and the two can never get along together until this truth is respected by
+ both. In all disputes, there should be an interchange of views, a full
+ statement of grievances by those who are dissatisfied, and a fair
+ consideration of them by the party against whom they exist."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ O'Hara was not afraid to look his employer in the face and say:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That has been my opinion all along, Mr. Bradley, and had it been yours
+ this lock-out would never have come."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I admit it. You came to me from the employes and asked for a discussion
+ of the differences between us. I thought you insolent, and refused to
+ listen to you. Therein I did you all an injustice, for which I apologize."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It gives me joy to hear you speak thus, Mr. Bradley."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Seeing now my mistake, there is but the one course before me. I am
+ convinced that in all cases of trouble like ours the court of first resort
+ should be arbitration. The wish to be just is natural to every one, or at
+ least to the majority of mankind. If the parties concerned cannot agree,
+ they should appeal to those in whom both have confidence to bring about an
+ agreement between them; that is according to the golden rule. Employer and
+ employed, labor and capital, should be friends, and arbitration is the
+ agent that shall bring about that happy state of things."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But I do not see that there has been any arbitration in this dispute."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But there has been all the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is the arbitrator?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She sits on your knee wondering what all this talk means. I tell you,
+ Hugh, there is a good deal more in those little heads than most people
+ think. Yesterday morning, when Dollie sat in her high chair at the
+ breakfast-table, she heard her aunt and me talking about the strike.
+ Though she could not understand it all, she knew there was trouble between
+ me and my employes. I was out of patience and used some sharp words. She
+ listened for a few minutes while busy with her bread and milk, and then
+ what do you think she said?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am sure I have no idea," replied O'Hara, patting the head of the
+ laughing child, "but whatever it was, it was something nice."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She says, 'Brother Harvey, when I do anything wrong, you take me on your
+ knee and talk to me and that makes me feel so bad that I never do that
+ kind of wrong again. Why don't you take those bad men on your knee and
+ talk to them, so they won't do so again?' I showed her that such an
+ arrangement was hardly practicable, and then she fired her solid shot that
+ pierced my ship between wind and water: 'Brother Harvey, maybe it's <i>you</i>
+ that has done wrong; why don't you sit down on their knees <i>and let them
+ give you a talking to</i>? Then you won't be bad any more."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh and Harvey broke into laughter, during which Dollie, who had become
+ tired of sitting still full two minutes, slid off O'Hara's knee and ran
+ out of the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We smile at the odd conceits of the little ones," continued Harvey, "but
+ you know that the truest wisdom has come from the mouths of babes. I
+ hushed her, but what she said set me thinking&mdash;'<i>Why don't you let
+ them give you a good talking to</i>?' <i>That</i> was the very thing you
+ had asked and I had refused. I set out to take a long walk, and was absent
+ most of the day. Her question kept coming up to me, and I tried to drive
+ it away. The effort made me angry and ended in a decision to be sterner
+ than ever. I would not yield a point; I would import a body of men at
+ large expense and keep them at work, just because I was too proud to undo
+ what I knew was wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Still my conscience troubled me, but for all that I don't think I would
+ have yielded. Pride, the greatest of all stumbling-blocks, was in my way.
+ Reaching home, I learned that Dollie was lost; then, of course, every
+ other thought went from my head. Nothing else could be done until she was
+ found."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey was about to tell his guest his suspicion that he had had a hand in
+ the abduction of the child, but he was ashamed, and really there was no
+ call for such a confession.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, it was you who found her. I repeat that my debt to you can never be
+ paid. And yet I do not believe that that obligation would have led me to
+ yield, where I felt that a principle was at stake. It was the words of
+ Dollie, spoken yesterday, that stuck to me. They kept me awake most of the
+ night and played a part in the dreams that I had about her being lost in
+ the woods and eaten up by panthers and all sorts of creatures. When I
+ awoke this morning, the mists had cleared away. I saw my error, and fully
+ made up my mind to do all I could to correct it. I went to the telegraph
+ office before breakfast and sent a message to Vining countermanding the
+ order for the men. Then I came back and had just finished my meal when a
+ message was brought to my house. Odd, wasn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I see nothing odd in a telegram for you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I mean in the telegram itself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I could not answer that unless I saw it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course," said Harvey with a laugh, wheeling about in his chair and
+ picking up one of the yellow slips of paper which the Western Union
+ furnishes its patrons gratis.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There, read <i>that</i>," he added, passing it to Hugh O'Hara, who looked
+ at it with no little curiosity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was dated in the city of New York and signed by Johnson W. Bradley,
+ father of Harvey, and President of the Rollo Mills Company. This was the
+ body of the telegram:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't lose sight of the interests of your men. Before hiring other hands
+ <i>try arbitration</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That <i>is</i> rather odd," said Hugh; leaning forward, so as to hand the
+ telegram back to his employer, "but it is sound wisdom all the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Undoubtedly; but are you convinced that I agree to your terms not because
+ of gratitude, but because I believe them right?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am satisfied," said Hugh; "have you sent the notice to the hands?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes. I wonder that you did not hear of it on the way here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hugh smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course I heard of it. I knew it long ago, but I did not know <i>why</i>
+ you had decided to restore our time to what it was and to pay the same
+ wages; <i>that</i> I have learned from yourself. And now that you have
+ done your part so well," added Hugh, rising to leave, "I assure you that
+ we shall do ours; we shall give you the best service we can. No one shall
+ misinterpret your action or try to take advantage of it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The superintendent was wise enough to avoid a mistake to which persons,
+ placed as was he, are liable&mdash;that is, he did not overdo his part. He
+ was so happy over the return of his little sister that he was willing not
+ only to give the old wages and time asked for by his employes, but he felt
+ like adding to them. He meant to make the pay of O'Hara greater than
+ before, but changed his purpose at the last moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had he added to the pay of his chief foreman it would have changed the
+ ratio between that and the wages of the others, unless theirs, too, was
+ increased. In that event, a reproof was likely to come from the directors,
+ and he would find it hard to retrace his steps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Justice called for him to do just what he had done; it would be weak to do
+ more. "Hugh," said he, also rising to his feet, "I am not quite through
+ with you; I am now going to ask you to do <i>me</i> a favor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess it's safe to promise in advance that I will do it&mdash;that is,
+ of course, if it be in my power to do it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is in your power. Last night, when I was in the woods near your cabin,
+ I noticed a strange odor in the air; I could not imagine its cause, but I
+ know now what it was."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What was it?" asked O'Hara, turning crimson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You and some of your friends have been illicitly making whiskey. You have
+ a distillery somewhere in the mountains, and, while working in the mills
+ during the day, you have taken turns in running the still at night. I will
+ not ask you to tell me how long you have been doing this, but you know as
+ well as I that it is a crime."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two men were silent a moment and then Hugh, without any appearance of
+ agitation, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You have spoken the truth; the still was not more than a hundred feet
+ from the cabin, and caused the smell you noticed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How could you three attend to it when you were in the cabin?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Some one was generally close by. The pipe that carried off the fumes ran
+ into the chimney of our cabin and mixed with the smoke. We took turns in
+ looking after it. Tom and I had been there earlier in the evening, and
+ Jack was to look in now and then against our coming back. But," added
+ Hugh, "you said you had a favor to ask of me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So I have; I ask you to destroy that still, root and branch, and never
+ take a hand in anything of the kind again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot do that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not? You are engaged in breaking the laws of your country, for which
+ there is a severe penalty. Now that you will have steady work, you cannot
+ make the plea that would have been yours if the strike continued. Why
+ can't you do as I ask you to do?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Because it has already been done. After I got back to the cabin last
+ night, Tom and Jack and I went out and wound up the business. The worm has
+ been thrown down the rocks, where it can never be found, the mash has been
+ scattered to the four winds, and everything smashed to general flinders.
+ It took us nearly to daylight to finish it, but we stuck to it till the
+ job was done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am delighted to hear that, what was the cause of all this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess it must have been the little arbitrator," said O'Hara, with a
+ smile; "they say that when a man does a bad act he feels like doing
+ others. That may or may not be true, but I know that when a man does a
+ good deed, the impulse to do more is awakened, and whatever good there is
+ in him is strengthened. I have been a bad man; I grew desperate after the
+ death of Jennie; but when I held your Dollie in my arms it seemed that
+ some of her goodness found its way into my heart. I resolved with the help
+ of heaven to be a better man. The first step toward becoming so was to
+ stop the unlawful work in which I had been engaged only a short time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought that Tom and Jack would make trouble, but I didn't care, for I
+ could manage them. To my surprise, however, they seemed to feel just as I
+ did. So they fell to work with a will, and the job couldn't have been done
+ more thoroughly. Now, if you will allow me to kiss Dollie, who has come
+ back, I will bid you both good day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Harvey Bradley shook hands with his visitor, during which he handed him a
+ liberal sum of money for Tom Hansell, who had taken part in the search for
+ Dollie. He sent naught to Jack, for he deserved none. Then he went with
+ Hugh to the outer door, giving him a number of encouraging words on the
+ way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The whistle of the Rollo Mills never screeched more cheerily than it did
+ the next morning, and there was never a happier band of employes than the
+ 300, young and old, who took their places again in the works.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A short time afterward Harvey Bradley opened and furnished a room where
+ the best of reading was given free to all who chose to accept the
+ privilege. Still later in the season a night school was started, and the
+ skilled teacher who took charge was liberally paid by the board of
+ directors, who never made a better investment of money.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The interest shown by the superintendent in the welfare of his employes
+ proved to be seed sowed in good ground. All wrought faithfully and well,
+ and when on the 1st of January the balance sheet was made up, lo! the net
+ profits of the Rollo Mills were greater than ever before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ IN THE NICK OF TIME.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ It may sound like slander for me to say that the elephant, which is
+ admittedly one of the most intelligent members of the animal creation, is
+ also one of the most vicious and treacherous. But it is a fact all the
+ same. I have seen one of those beasts, that had been fed and treated with
+ the greatest kindness for years by his keeper, turn upon him like a tiger,
+ and, seizing him with that wonderful trunk of his, dash him to death
+ before he could do more than utter a cry of protest and terror.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen another, after waiting weeks for the opportunity, suddenly
+ grasp an innocent person, and, kneeling upon him with his beam-like legs,
+ knead him out of all semblance of humanity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Columbus, who was the main attraction of Barnum's establishment some forty
+ years ago, killed several keepers, and was likely to start on one of his
+ terrible rampages at any moment. The giving away of a bridge in New
+ England so injured him that he died, long before any of my young readers
+ were born.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An elephant, fully as bad as Columbus, was Vladdok, who was brought to
+ this country when quite young. A glimpse at his enormous ears told his
+ African nativity at once, those from Asia and Ceylon having much smaller
+ ears. He belonged to the old traveling circus of Blarcom &amp; Burton, and
+ made several journeys through our country in the days when those
+ establishments found no use for the railways, but patiently plodded from
+ town to town, delighting the hearts and eyes of our grandfathers and
+ grandmothers when they were children just as we are now.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Vladdok had killed two keepers, besides badly wounding a couple of
+ spectators in Memphis, when he yielded to one of his vicious moods. He had
+ been fired upon and wounded more times than any one could remember, and
+ Mr. Blarcom, who always traveled with his show, had been on the point more
+ than once of ordering his destruction; but he was of such large size and
+ possessed such extraordinary intelligence, that he constituted the main
+ attraction of the exhibition and he hesitated, well aware that sooner or
+ later, the wicked fellow would die "with his boots on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was after an afternoon performance in one of the Western States that
+ Vladdok indulged in his last rampage. His sagacious keeper had come to
+ understand the animal so well, that he knew the outbreak was coming. While
+ Vladdok was unusually tractable and obedient, there was a dangerous
+ glitter in his small eyes, and an occasional nervous movement of his head,
+ which proved that he was only biding his time and waiting for the grand
+ chance to present itself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fortunately, he did not rebel until after the exhibition was over, and the
+ crowds had departed. Then, with a fierce trumpeting and one vast shiver of
+ his enormous bulk, he made a dash which snapped his chains like so much
+ whip-cord and went through the side of the tent as though it were
+ cardboard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On his wild charge, which set all the rest of the animals in a panic, he
+ reached for his keeper, who with prodding spear and shouts, interposed
+ himself in his path and tried to check him. But the man's inimitable
+ dexterity and good fortune enabled him to dodge the beast and escape by a
+ hair's breadth. The next minute, the elephant reached the public highway,
+ down which he swung awkwardly but swiftly, on an excursion that was
+ destined to be the most tragic in his whole career.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first object on which he vented his wrath was a team of horses, driven
+ by a farmer, whose wife was sitting beside him on the front seat. Neither
+ they nor the team knew their danger until the avalanche of fury was upon
+ them. The animals screamed in an agony of fright, and were rearing and
+ plunging, when Vladdok grasped one with his trunk, lifted him in the air
+ and dashed him to death. The other broke loose and plunged off at such
+ headlong speed, that the elephant followed him only a few paces, when he
+ turned to attack the man and woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they were nowhere in sight, and, with a trumpet of disgust, he wheeled
+ about, and turning from the highway, took to the woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The couple were saved by a singular occurrence. The violent rearing and
+ backing of the horses overturned the wagon body, and the farmer and his
+ better half were caught beneath it, before they could escape. They had
+ sense enough to remain quiet, until the brute left, when they crept out,
+ none the worse for their mishap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Consarn his pictur!" exclaimed the husband; "if that don't beat all
+ creation! I allers said that circuses and shows was a burnin' shame, and
+ now I <i>know</i> it; I'll make the owner of that elephant pay ten
+ thousand dollars for the damage he done us, for he scart you and me so bad
+ Betsy, that we'll never grow another inch."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the runaway kept things moving. He knew his keeper and
+ attendants were hot on his trail, and his sudden change of course was
+ undoubtedly with a view of misleading them. It is hardly to be supposed
+ that he expected to find any "game" in the woods, but nevertheless he did.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It so happened that Jack Norton and Billy Wiggins, a couple of boys not
+ more than fourteen years of age, were engaged on a little hunt that same
+ afternoon. The teachers had sent such bad reports home about them that
+ their parents inflicted the most awful kind of punishment; they did not
+ permit them to attend the circus, to which they had been looking forward
+ for weeks. The father of Billy was specially stern, and forbade his
+ hopeful to take his gun, when he joined Jack on a little hunting ramble in
+ the woods. Mr. Norton felt some slight compunctions, when he noted how
+ patiently his boy accepted his fate, and relented to that degree that he
+ permitted him to take his rifle, though he knew there was little chance of
+ his securing any game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys had walked about a mile, and, coming to a fallen tree, sat down
+ to rest awhile, for the day was warm and the gun which they had taken
+ turns in carrying, was heavy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess this hunt ain't agoin' to amount to much," sighed Jack, as he
+ leaned the rifle against the prostrate trunk, on which they were seated.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not?" asked Billy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "'Cause there ain't nothin' to hunt; I heerd Budge Jones say that when he
+ was a boy, these woods used to be full of bears and deers and tigers and
+ lions and giraffes and that sort of thing."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, and the folks were so mean they killed 'em all, but I've the idea,
+ Jack, that maybe some of the lions or tigers has hid somewhere in the
+ woods and we might find 'em."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Golly! I don't know whether I'd want to find 'em or not," replied Jack,
+ looking about him, with a scared expression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why not? Hain't you got a gun?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, but while I was killin' one the others might chaw me all to pieces;
+ but if there was only one, I wouldn't care, if he was an elephant as big
+ as a barn&mdash;&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My gracious! there he comes!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A terrific crashing of the undergrowth caused both lads to glance
+ affrightedly behind them, and there, sure enough, was Vladdok, the fearful
+ elephant, almost upon them. They started to run, their courses so
+ diverging that the beast was forced to select one and let the other alone
+ for the moment. He fixed upon Billy Wiggins, who had taken barely twenty
+ steps, when the trunk of the beast inclosed his waist and he was lifted,
+ as if he was a feather from the ground, and the next instant he felt
+ himself whizzing through space.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A marvelous providence saved him. Instead of dashing him against a tree,
+ or upon the ground, the elephant, in one of his mad freaks, flung him from
+ him as though he was a ball. He spun through the air, the leaves and limbs
+ whizzing against his face and body, and instinctively clutching with both
+ hands, succeeded in grasping enough branches to support the weight of his
+ body and check his descent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, when he collected his senses and stared around, he found that he was
+ a dozen yards above the ground, with the elephant beneath, looking up, and
+ apparently waiting for him to fall within his reach, that he might finish
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Not much," muttered Billy; "I'm going to stay here and I don't believe
+ you know how to climb a tree. Helloa! how do you like <i>that</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack Norton had dashed only a few yards, when the terrified look he cast
+ over his shoulder told him the elephant was giving his whole attention to
+ Billy, and seemed to have forgotten all about him. Instantly he was filled
+ with alarm for his young friend, and started back to the log to get his
+ rifle, that neither had thought of in the panic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he knelt behind the fallen tree, to make his aim sure, he descried a
+ queer object going through the limbs of a large oak, and did not identify
+ it, until it lodged fast, as his friend Billy Wiggins.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Jack had no more idea of the fatal point at which to aim his weapon than
+ you have, but knowing that he must do something, and, with a dread that
+ the elephant after all, might succeed in climbing the oak and getting at
+ his friend, he let fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gordon Cumming himself could not have done better. The tiny bullet bored
+ its way into the vast bulk, just back of the fore leg and went directly
+ through the heart. The huge brute, as if conscious that he was mortally
+ hurt, swung part way round, so as to face the point whence the shot had
+ come. Catching sight of the kneeling youngster, with the muzzle of his
+ rifle still smoking, he plunged toward him. He took a couple of steps,
+ swayed to one side, moved uncertainly forward again, then stopped, tried
+ to steady himself, and finally went over sideways, like a mountain,
+ crashing the saplings and undergrowth near him, and snapping one of his
+ magnificent tusks into splinters. He was dead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the boys fully comprehended what had taken place, they were not a
+ little alarmed and puzzled, and started home, wondering whether their game
+ was a descendant of the creatures that used to inhabit that section, or
+ whether he was a visitor to these parts. They had not gone far, however,
+ when they met the attaches of the menagerie and circus to whom they
+ related what had occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The proprietors were relieved on learning the whole truth, for there could
+ be little doubt that the sudden ending of the career of Vladdok was the
+ means of saving more than one person from death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for Jack Norton and Billy Wiggins, it was generally conceded that they
+ spoke the truth, when they declared:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our fathers wouldn't let us go to the circus that afternoon, but I guess
+ we had a bigger circus than any of you all to ourselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0028" id="link2H_4_0028"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LOST IN THE SOUTH SEA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Captain William Gooding was commander of the <i>Tewksbury Sweet</i>, of
+ Portland, Maine, and was lost in the South Pacific in the spring of 1889.
+ This fine American bark sailed from New Castle, New South Wales, on the
+ 17th of March, bound for Hong Kong. Everything went well until the 9th of
+ the following month, when she encountered a severe gale. Despite all that
+ skillful seamanship could do, and in the face of the most strenuous
+ exertions, she struck the dangerous Susanne Reef, near Poseat Island, one
+ of the Caroline group of the South Sea.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wreck was a total one. The vessel broke up rapidly, and seeing that
+ nothing could be done, the captain and crew, numbering ten men in all,
+ took to one of the boats, carrying with them only a single chronometer
+ belonging to the ship. Even after entering the small boat they were still
+ in great danger, and only succeeded after the utmost difficulty in
+ reaching a small islet some miles to the southward. The storm was still
+ raging so violently that the shelter was a most welcome one, though as
+ there were no animals or vegetation, or even water upon the island, their
+ stay of necessity could be only temporary. They had saved nothing to eat
+ or drink, and to remain where they were meant a lingering death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After several hours waiting, the tempest abated somewhat, and launching
+ their boat once more, they rowed toward the main island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The end is likely to be the same in either case," remarked the captain to
+ the second mate, George W. Harrison, as they approached the land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And why?" inquired the latter: "we shall find food and water there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "True enough; but there are no fiercer savages on the South Sea than those
+ of this island, and I have never heard that they were particularly
+ friendly toward the crews of shipwrecked vessels."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They may not discover us until we can signal some passing ship."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is no possibility of any such good fortune as that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Stranger things have happened, and&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Does that look like it?" interrupted the captain in some excitement,
+ pointing toward the island.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sight that met the gaze of every one was startling. Fully thirty
+ canoes, each filled with eight or ten natives, were putting off from shore
+ and heading toward them. Several of the crew favored turning about, and
+ putting to sea; but that would have been not only hopeless, but would have
+ invited attack. Nothing is so encouraging to an enemy as flight on the
+ part of his opponent. It impels him to greater exertions and gives him a
+ bravery which otherwise he may not feel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The savages, in their light, graceful craft, and with their great skill in
+ manipulating them, would have overhauled the white men "hand over hand."
+ There was a faint hope that by presenting a bold front, and acting as
+ though they believed in the friendship of the savages that they might
+ spare the unfortunates. At any rate, it was clear there was no choice but
+ to go ahead, and the white men did so, rowing leisurely and calmly, though
+ the chances in doing so were hastening their own doom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There could be no mistaking the ardor of the ferocious natives. They
+ paddled with might and main, and fully a dozen, in their eagerness, leaped
+ into the sea and swam ahead of their canoes. They were magnificent
+ swimmers, speeding through the water like so many dolphins. The Americans,
+ even in their frightful peril, could not repress their admiration.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you ever see anything like it?" asked first mate Watchman; "they are
+ like so many sharks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are indeed," was the significant response of Captain Gooding, "and I
+ would like it better if they were real sharks."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Here they are!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sure enough; they surrounded the boat in a twinkling, and shouting and
+ screeching like so many demons, clambered over the gunwales until there
+ was danger of swamping the craft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had our friends possessed firearms, they would have made a desperate
+ resistance, and possibly might have beaten off their assailants; but, as
+ it was, they acted the part of wisdom in offering no opposition to the
+ presence or actions of their unwelcome visitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter proved that they meant business from the first, for hardly were
+ they in the boat when they began stripping the officers and sailors of
+ their property. When they ceased the men had nothing left but their
+ undershirts, their despoilers flinging the garments into the canoes that
+ now crowded around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No more plunder being obtainable, the fleet headed for land, with their
+ captives in anything but a cheerful frame of mind. The shore was lined
+ with women and children, who answered the shouts of their friends in the
+ boats by running back and forth, screeching and yelling and dancing, as if
+ unable to restrain themselves until the arrival of their victims.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sailors believed they would be speedily killed and eaten, the latter
+ horror might have been escaped had they known, what they afterward
+ learned, that the savages of those islands are not cannibals.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The poor fellows stepped from their boat upon the shore, where they were
+ immediately environed by the fierce men, women and children, half naked,
+ wild, boisterous, and seemingly impatient to rend them to pieces. The
+ prisoners could do nothing but meekly await the next step in the tragedy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was during these trying moments that the sailors were astounded to
+ hear, amid the babel of voices, several words spoken in English. Staring
+ about them to learn the meaning of such a strange thing, they saw a man
+ attired as were the others, that is with only a piece of cloth about his
+ hips, whose complexion and features showed that he belonged to the same
+ race with themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He advanced in a cheery, hearty way, and shaking hands with the new
+ arrivals, said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you did not expect to find me here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Indeed we did not," was the reply; "you appear to be an Englishman."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "So I am, and I am anxious to give you all the help I can, for your
+ situation is anything but a desirable one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There can be no doubt of that. But how is it that you are here? Were you
+ shipwrecked like ourselves?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I may say I was deserted. My name is Charles Irons, and I was left at
+ Poseat by a trading vessel four years ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How came that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I was to act as the agent of a company of traders on the Cocoanut
+ Islands. Well, the vessel left me, as I first told you, and that was the
+ last of it. They forgot all about me, or more likely, did not care to keep
+ their promise, for I have never seen anything of the vessel since."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What an outrage!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was, and there couldn't have been a more wretched person than I was
+ for several months. I looked longingly out to sea for the ship that never
+ came, and chafed like a man who is bound hand and foot. But," added the
+ Englishman with a smile, "there is nothing like making the best of things.
+ You can accustom yourself almost to anything if you will only make up your
+ mind to do so. I was among these people and there was no help for it, so I
+ decided to adopt their ways and become one of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You decided when in Rome to do as the Romans do," suggested the captain,
+ who, like his companions, was greatly cheered, not only by the presence
+ and friendship of the Englishman, but by the fact that the savages, who
+ watched the interview with interest, showed no disposition to interfere.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's it. There are a great many worse people in this world than these.
+ They are not cannibals, as are many of their neighbors, and they have
+ never harmed me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what about us?" was the anxious inquiry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Englishman looked grave.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot say what their intentions are, but I am afraid they are bad.
+ They have been used ill by some of the vessels that have stopped here, and
+ are naturally suspicious of all white people. Then, too, they are
+ revengeful, and like all barbarians are satisfied, if aggrieved against
+ our race, to get their satisfaction out of any member of it, whether he is
+ the one who injured them, or is entirely innocent."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You seem to be regarded with high favor here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am. I stand next to the chief in authority, so you see I have reason to
+ believe I may be of some service to you. You may be sure that I shall
+ leave no stone unturned to help you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain and his companions gave expression to their deep gratitude,
+ and Irons continued in his bluff, pleasant manner:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess I am about as much a savage as any of them. If I hadn't been I
+ never would have obtained any control over them. I have seven native
+ wives, and find I am forgetting a great many details of civilization,
+ while my desire to return home is growing less every day. After all, what
+ difference does it make where you are? A man has only a few years to live,
+ and as long as he is contented, he is a fool to rebel."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There may have been good philosophy in all this, and the captain did not
+ attempt to gainsay it, but, all the same, it was hard for him to
+ understand how any one could be so placed as to lose his yearning for his
+ home and his native land.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was several days afterward, when the captives had become somewhat
+ accustomed to their surroundings, that Captain Gooding found he and his
+ men were mixed in their reckoning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is a question among us whether this is Thursday or Friday," said he,
+ addressing Irons; "can you settle it for us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Englishman looked at the captain in an odd way and replied:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I haven't the remotest idea of what day in the week it is, nor what is
+ the month. It seems four years ago that I was left here, but I am not sure
+ of it. Will you please give me the year and month?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is April, 1889."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Englishman bent his head for a few minutes in deep thought. He was
+ recalling the past, with its singular incidents of his career. When he
+ looked up he said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; it is four years and more since I was abandoned, and if you stay
+ that long you will be content to remain all your lives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The captain shook his head, and his eyes were dimmed as he replied:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I never could forget the loved ones at home, Irons; I would prefer death
+ at once to a lingering imprisonment here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I am going to help you all to leave just as soon as it can be done.
+ I understand how you feel, and sympathize with you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Englishman proved himself the most valuable kind of a friend. The
+ authority which he possessed over these savage South Sea Islanders was
+ stretched to the utmost, but he never hesitated to employ it. But for his
+ presence the Americans would have been put to death within a few hours at
+ most of their arrival on the mainland, and without his aid it would have
+ been impossible for them ever to have gotten away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When everything was in shape, Irons hired a canoe of the natives for the
+ use of his friends. The craft was not large enough to contain all the
+ party, and since all real peril had passed, there was no fear in following
+ the course that had been agreed upon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Gooding, second mate Harrison; and one of the sailors left Poseat
+ in the canoe, first mate Watchman and his six companions remaining on the
+ island. This was ten days after the loss of the <i>Tewksbury Sweet</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Captain Gooding and all the sailors were in the best of spirits, for they
+ were confident that their wearisome captivity was substantially over. The
+ three made their way from island to island, stopping at eight different
+ points, sometimes for days, and even weeks. Finally they arrived at Ruk,
+ where they found a missionary station, and received the most hospitable
+ treatment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good men owned a boat abundantly large enough to carry twenty persons,
+ and the captain asked its use with which to bring the rest of his crew
+ from Poseat. This was asking more than would be supposed, for the
+ missionaries told them that they were surrounded by hostile natives, who
+ were liable to an outbreak at any hour, in which event the only means of
+ escape the white men possessed was the boat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionaries, however, gave their consent, and Captain Gooding,
+ hoisting sail in the staunch centre-boarder, set sail for Poseat, where he
+ safely arrived, without unnecessary delay. He found the first mate and his
+ sailors well and in high spirits, though they were beginning to wonder
+ whether their captain, like the friends of Irons, had not forgotten, and
+ concluded to leave them to themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No objection was offered to their departure, and bidding an affectionate
+ good-by to the Englishman, who had proven the best kind of a friend, they
+ returned to the missionary island. Two months later the missionary vessel,
+ the <i>Morning Star</i>, arrived, and carried them all to Honolulu, which
+ was reached in November. Thence Captain Gooding and a part of the crew
+ were brought by the steamer <i>Australia</i> to San Francisco, from which
+ point the captain made his way to his home in Yarmouth, where his family
+ and friends welcomed him back as one risen from the dead, for they had
+ long given up hope of ever seeing him again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AN UNPLEASANT COMPANION.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ "Say, Jack, the shellbarks are droppin' thick down in Big Woods. What a
+ chance for a fellow to lay up a bushel or two before the crowd gets down
+ there in the morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wouldn't it, though, Ned!" I replied wistfully, for if there was anything
+ I had a fondness for, it was shellbarks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We were trudging home to our dinner, for Ned and I lived close to the
+ schoolhouse, much to the envy of some less fortunate pupils who brought
+ their noonday meal with them in tin pails. It was a late September Friday,
+ and a soft golden haze lay on hillside and woodland, and the quail were
+ whistling in the furrows; and, as Ned spoke, I could see in my mind's eye
+ just how Big Woods would look that afternoon with the soft sunlight
+ slanting through the trees, and glimmering on the quiet waters of the
+ creek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Jack, will you go?" said Ned abruptly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You mean will I play truant?" I asked, a little startled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes; there's no danger, Jack; we'll tell the teacher we had to stay home
+ to cut corn."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At first, I resisted Ned's appeal. I had played truant once before, a long
+ time ago, and the memory of the punishment that I received in the woodshed
+ at home was still strongly impressed on my memory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this, I thought, was an exceptional case, I badly wanted a bushel or
+ two of shellbarks, and I knew full well that, unless they were gathered
+ that afternoon, they wouldn't be gathered at all; for bright and early the
+ next morning all the boys in the neighborhood would be down in Big Woods,
+ armed with clubs and baskets and sacks, and even the squirrels would stand
+ a poor show after that invasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In our selfishness, we never thought that other people might have a
+ fondness for shellbarks as well as ourselves. So, after a little more
+ pleading on Ned's part, I gave in, and we agreed to meet down at the foot
+ of our orchard, as soon as dinner was over, for Ned lived right across, on
+ the next farm. In a corner of the barn, I found my old chestnut club, a
+ hickory stave, well coiled with lead at the top. Shoving this under my
+ jacket, so no prying eyes could see it, I joined Ned at the meeting-place,
+ and off we went in high spirits for the Yellow-breeches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a good mile to Big Woods, for we had to circle away down to Hake's
+ Mill to get across the creek, but we felt well repaid for our trouble when
+ we arrived there. The fallen nuts lay thick amid the dead leaves, and up
+ on the half-naked trees the splitting hulls hung in clusters, willing to
+ drop their burden at the least rustle of the breeze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We heaped the shellbarks in great piles, ready to stow away in Ned's big
+ wheat bag; and, when the ground was cleaned up pretty well, and the leaves
+ had been thoroughly raked, we turned our attention to a close cluster of
+ trees that stood close by the creek. These nuts were unusually large, and
+ thin-shelled. The hulls were cracked apart, but very few nuts lay on the
+ ground, so I hauled out my club, and drove it fairly into the heart of the
+ tree. A shower of nuts came down, with a merry clatter that gladdened our
+ hearts; but the club, striking the trunk of the tree, bounded sideways and
+ lodged in the crotch of a limb overhanging the creek, some twenty or
+ thirty feet above the water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was a dilemma. I didn't want to lose that club, for it had done good
+ service in past autumns, and had gone through a great many hairbreadth
+ escapes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If we tried to dislodge it by hurling sticks or stones, it would fall into
+ the water, and just at that point the creek was very deep, and moreover,
+ as popular tradition held, a treacherous undertow existed which would
+ render the recovery of the club impossible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Climb the tree, Jack," said Ned; "that's your only chance."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was always considered a pretty good climber, so, after a little
+ hesitation (for this was an unusually difficult tree), I started up the
+ slippery trunk, and, with Ned's friendly aid, pulled myself among the
+ lower limbs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an easy matter to reach the particular bough that I wanted, but
+ then came the tug. I was half-inclined to give up the whole thing and go
+ down to the ground, but Ned kept egging me on so confidently that I
+ determined to go through with it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Straddling the limb, I took a firm hold with both hands in front of me,
+ for no other boughs were close enough to be grasped, and thus inch by inch
+ I moved cautiously forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The branch creaked and groaned, and at last began to bend in such an
+ alarming fashion that I stopped short.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was the club, not four feet away now, and far below I could see the
+ quiet waters of the creek, wrinkling the reflected foliage as a dropping
+ nut or stray leaf rippled the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You're nearly there, now," cried Ned, with hearty encouragement; "just a
+ little more, Jack, and you'll have it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But the limb will break," I called down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, it won't," he insisted, "don't be afraid."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That settled it. I wasn't afraid, and Ned should know it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I took a firmer grip on the bough, and slid forward half a foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Crack, crack,&mdash;the big branch slowly began to split, and as I made a
+ frantic effort to crawl back, a strange noise from the bushy part of the
+ tree overhead turned my gaze upward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It's a wonder my hair didn't turn white that very instant, for what I saw
+ was a big, tawny wild-cat, with blazing eyes and quivering claws, crouched
+ on a narrow limb. I knew the animal was going to spring, and I tried to
+ shout as loudly as I could, but my tongue stuck to the roof of my mouth,
+ and the only sound I made was an odd cry that caused Ned to laugh, for he
+ couldn't see what was the matter from where he stood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then like a streak the brute plumped down on my back, and with a tremendous
+ splash, limb, wildcat, and myself went into the creek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I heard Ned shout, as the water closed over me, and then everything became
+ dark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I rose to the surface terribly frightened, for, sad to relate, I had never
+ learned to swim, and Ned could do very little in that direction. Instead
+ of clutching at the empty air, as most drowning persons do, I caught hold
+ of something substantial; and when the water was out of my eyes and out of
+ my stomach, for I had swallowed about a pint, I saw that I was hanging to
+ the bushy end of the broken limb. That was all very well, but the next
+ thing I observed was not so pleasant, for six feet distant, on the thick
+ part of the branch, sat the wild-cat, apparently none the worse for his
+ fall. His sharp claws were driven into the bark, and he was calmly licking
+ his dripping fur. Meanwhile the current was sweeping us down stream, and
+ Ned was running along the bank in a sad state of fright and excitement. My
+ back began to hurt pretty badly, and I discovered that my face was torn
+ and bleeding in one or two places, though whether this was caused by the
+ fall or by the wild-cat I did not know.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Swim, Jack, let go and swim," shouted Ned, and then, remembering perhaps
+ that I was unable to follow his instructions, he suddenly turned and ran
+ back through the woods at the top of his speed, instead of making any
+ effort to help me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was badly scared before, and now, when I saw, as I supposed, my last
+ hope vanish, I began to shout for help as loudly as I could.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at the very first cry the wild-cat lifted his head, and emitted a
+ vicious snarl. As I howled louder than ever, he advanced a foot or two
+ along the limb, ripping off the bark, and fixing his big glaring eyes
+ savagely on my face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was terrified into silence, and, as soon as I ceased shouting, the brute
+ stopped and coolly proceeded to lick his fur again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Apparently, he did not object to my presence so long as I remained quiet.
+ The worst of it was that my end of the branch was pretty far down in the
+ water, and threatened every moment to carry me entirely under the surface.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this precarious situation, I drifted down the creek, until the bend
+ drew near that sweeps round to Hake's Mill. Here the country was a little
+ more open, and a farmhouse came into sight over the brow of a hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a chance of rescue, and in spite of my previous experience, I
+ decided to try it, for my limbs were becoming chilled, and I knew I could
+ not hold on much longer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Help! Help!" I cried with might and main. No answer came back, but before
+ I could shout a third time the wild-cat uttered a snarl, and began
+ creeping toward me, inch by inch, and lashing the water fiercely with his
+ tail. Lower and lower sank the branch, until my shoulders were submerged,
+ and still the beast kept advancing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I continued to shout, but no welcome voice responded, only empty echoes
+ floating back from the hills.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then I must have given up all hope, for I remember wondering vaguely what
+ had become of Ned, and what they were doing in school, and whether my
+ absence was noticed or not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cold water was rippling about my neck now, and the wild-cat was so
+ close that I could note the horrible colors of the glaring eyes, and feel
+ the hot breath in my face. I wondered how it would feel when those two
+ rows of needle-like teeth met in my flesh; and then, before I could think
+ any more, a deafening report filled my ears, and, through the cloud of
+ smoke that rolled over the creek, the wild-cat bounded high in air, and
+ fell into the water with a loud splash. That was all I remembered then.
+ The next thing I knew, I was lying in a grassy hollow, alongside the
+ creek, while Ned and an old farmer bent over me, and threw water in my
+ face. Ned's desertion was explained. He had cut off the bend in the creek
+ by running over the hill, and, accompanied by the farmer, who happened to
+ be down in the woods hunting rabbits, they had arrived just in time to
+ shoot the wild-cat and drag me out of the water. That was the last time I
+ played truant. I didn't lose my share of the shellbarks, for Ned went down
+ early the next morning and got them, but I did lose the chestnut club, and
+ what was worse, in spite of my sore back, I spent a very unpleasant
+ quarter of an hour out in the woodshed, just two days later, and Ned, I am
+ happy to say, passed through the same edifying experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A STIRRING INCIDENT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ India is the home of the deadliest serpents and fiercest wild beasts on
+ the globe. When it is stated that more than twenty thousand persons are
+ killed annually by the snakes and animals of that country, some idea may
+ be formed of its attractions in the way of a residence. To this should be
+ added the fact that, during certain seasons, the climate is like that of
+ Sahara itself. For days and nights the thermometer stands above one
+ hundred degrees in the shade and in the city of Madras, unacclimated
+ persons have died at midnight in their beds from apoplexy caused by the
+ appalling temperature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Among the venomous serpents of India, the <i>cobra di capello</i> holds
+ foremost rank, though it is claimed that a still more deadly reptile has
+ been found in the interior, and I believe the British Museum has one of
+ these terrible creatures, whose bite brings death with the suddenness of
+ the lightning stroke. However, the cobra has been known to strike two
+ persons in instant succession, proving fatal to both within ten minutes of
+ each other. It is hard to conceive of any serpent more venomously
+ destructive than this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On one of the flaming Sunday mornings, when there was not a cloud in the
+ brazen skies, a well known missionary came home from early service and
+ seated himself at the breakfast-table with his family. The door of the
+ dining-room was open and the Teluga school-teacher was outside, when he
+ became interested in a novel sight. A frog was hopping along the front
+ veranda, with an immense cobra chasing it. The serpent struck at it
+ repeatedly, but the fugitive, in its desperation, eluded each blow, giving
+ utterance to pitiful cries, as a frog will do when pursued by a snake.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The end of the veranda reached, the frog leaped off, and the cobra dropped
+ to the ground in hot pursuit, but a box, standing near, offered shelter.
+ The creature scrambled beneath, just in time to avoid another swift blow
+ of the reptile, which was unable to follow it. The cobra glided around the
+ box, seeking some avenue by which to reach his victim, but, finding none,
+ moved off in the grass and disappeared.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The teacher hurried into the dining-room, with the announcement of what he
+ had seen. The missionary listened gravely and then inquired:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where is the cobra now?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I cannot tell, sir; he moved off among the flower-pots, but I do not know
+ whither he went."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not my practice to go shooting on Sunday," remarked the minister,
+ "but it won't do to have that serpent where it is liable to bite one of
+ us. He must have a hole somewhere near the flower-pots; please keep watch
+ while I get my pistol."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The missionary always kept a loaded revolver for use when traveling
+ through the jungle at night, and he speedily stepped out on the veranda,
+ with the weapon in hand, and started to find the cobra.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two large native flower-pots stood within a couple of yards of the
+ veranda. Each contained a fragrant rose, of which the good man's wife was
+ very fond. Every day she spent some time sprinkling them with water or
+ removing the dead leaves, never suspecting what proved to be the fact that
+ while thus employed, she continually moved about a spot where an immense
+ cobra lay coiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An opening was discovered directly between the flower pots, partly
+ concealed by the grass. It was about as thick as a man's wrist, and
+ descended perpendicularly, expanding into a small chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minister called for a hand-mirror, and with little trouble threw the
+ bright reflection of the sun into the hole, a little more than a foot
+ deep, fully lighting up the interior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cobra was there! It lay motionless in a glistening coil, as if resting
+ from its fruitless pursuit of the frog and brooding over its
+ disappointment. It was an alarming sight, but the good man kept cool, and
+ meant business from the start.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Taking a piece of broken wagon tire, he thrust it slantingly into the
+ hole, to hold the serpent a prisoner, and shoving the muzzle of his
+ revolver forward, he let fly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not the slightest motion followed. He had missed. He now gently turned the
+ tire edgewise and fired again. A furious writhing followed, proving that
+ the snake had been hit hard. The tire was instantly turned over flat to
+ prevent its coming out. It struck fiercely at the iron, which in a minute
+ was shifted on its edge again, and the missionary emptied the remaining
+ chambers of his revolver down the hole. Then he turned up the tire once
+ more, and allowed the hideous head to dart forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The minister had brought with him a pair of large hedge shears, with which
+ he seized the protruding neck, drew out the snake and gave it a flirt
+ toward the compound. He was so absorbed with his task that he had not
+ noticed the crowd of men, women and children that had gathered to watch
+ the results of his hunt. When they saw a huge cobra flying through the air
+ toward them, there was a scampering and screaming, which might have been
+ less had they known that the grip of the shears had dislocated the
+ serpent's neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The good man did not forget that whenever you find one deadly serpent,
+ another is quite certain to be close at hand. He had passed the wagon tire
+ to the teacher, when he began pulling out the wounded cobra, and asked him
+ to insert it again without an instant's delay. This was done, and
+ returning with the hand-glass, the missionary once more conveyed the rays
+ into the underground chamber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sure enough a second cobra was there, wriggling and squirming in a way to
+ show that he had received some of the bullets intended for his companion.
+ The revolver was reloaded and a fusillade opened, standing off a few
+ paces, the marksman waited for the head to come forth that he might seize
+ and draw it out as he had done with the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The wounded reptile continued its furious squirming and striking, but its
+ head did not appear, until shot after shot had been fired. At last it
+ showed itself, and was immediately gripped with the shears. Dropping the
+ pistol, the missionary employed both hands in the effort, and running
+ backward a few steps, the whole frightful length of the serpent was drawn
+ out upon the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Remembering their former experience, the crowd moved away, but the
+ missionary spared them a second fright.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Both cobras being helpless, an examination was made of them. The second
+ one showed the marks of fourteen pistol balls through his body, any three
+ of which would have proved fatal, but he was still full of fight, and died
+ while trying to strike the persons near him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The serpents were now stretched out on the veranda and measured one of
+ them five feet eleven inches long, and the other six feet two inches. The
+ last is an extraordinary size, rarely seen even in the favorite haunts of
+ the reptile. An investigation of their home left no doubt that they had
+ been living for months right among the flower pots that were attended to
+ daily, and within six feet of the veranda and twelve feet of the door of
+ the missionary's study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As for the frog that crawled under the box just in time to save himself,
+ he was well and flourishing at the last accounts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0031" id="link2H_4_0031"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CYCLONES AND TORNADOES.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Science as yet has not been able to grasp the laws that govern cyclones.
+ They seem to be the result of some intensely electric condition of the
+ elements, which finds an expression in that form. Cyclones, until within a
+ few years, meant those circular tempests encountered in the Pacific and
+ Indian oceans. They are the most destructive of all storms, being far more
+ deadly than monsoons and tornadoes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All navigators, when caught in a cyclone know how to get out of it. They
+ have only to sail at right angles to the wind, when they will either pass
+ beyond the outer rim of the circular sweep, or reach the center, where the
+ ocean is calm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The diameters of the ocean cyclones range from fifty to five hundred or a
+ thousand miles. Professor Douglas, of Ann Arbor University, entertains his
+ friends now and then by manufacturing miniature cyclones. He first
+ suspends a large copper plate by silken cords. The plate is heavily
+ charged with electricity, which hangs below in a bag-like mass. He uses
+ arsenious acid gas, which gives the electricity a greenish tint. That mass
+ of electricity becomes a perfect little cyclone. It is funnel-shaped and
+ spins around like a top. When he moves the plate over a table, his cyclone
+ catches up pennies, pens, pith balls and other small articles, and
+ scatters them in every direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cyclones never touch the equator, though the ocean ones are rare outside
+ the torrid one. They are caused by the meeting of contrary currents of
+ winds, and are known under the names of hurricanes, typhoons, whirlwinds
+ or tornadoes. Those terrifying outbursts which now and then cause so much
+ destruction in our own country seem to be the concentration of the
+ prodigious force of an immense ocean cyclone within a small space, which
+ renders them resistless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A writer in the <i>N. Y. Herald</i> gives some interesting facts regarding
+ these scourges of the air. While the cyclone, as we have shown, may have a
+ diameter of hundreds of miles, the track of a tornado is often limited to
+ a few hundred feet, and rarely has the width of half a mile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cyclone carries with it a velocity of as much as 100 to 140 miles an
+ hour. It sends a certain amount of warning ahead of its track, and the
+ acceleration of the wind's speed at any given point, is gradual.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tornado falls almost without notice, or rather the indications are
+ often so similar to those of an ordinary thunderstorm that only a skilled
+ and careful observer can detect the difference.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The phenomena and effects of cyclones in the West Indies have long been
+ subjects of study and observation. As the center approaches a ship she is
+ assaulted by wind of a terrible force and a sea that is almost
+ indescribable. The water no longer runs in waves of regular onward motion,
+ but leaps up in pyramids and peaks. The wind swirls and strikes until
+ wherever there is a chance for vibration or flutter, even in tightly
+ furled sails, the fabric soon gives way. I once saw a brig go drifting
+ past us in a West Indies cyclone with everything furled and closely lashed
+ with sea gaskets. We were in company nearly at the height of the storm,
+ when the center was only a few miles away. There was a spot in the bunt of
+ the foretopsail where the sail was not tightly stowed, and for several
+ hours it had doubtless been fluttering under tremendous pressure. As I
+ watched her a little white puff went out of the bunt of the topsail, and
+ then the destruction of the sail was rapid. Long ribbons of canvas went
+ slithering off as if a huge file had rasped the yard arm, and in a short
+ time there was nothing left on the yard except the bolt ropes and the reef
+ tackles. We could do nothing to help the crew, for it was doubtful whether
+ we could keep off the reefs ourselves, and the brig passed out of sight to
+ her certain doom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The local tornado that so frequently plays havoc with property and life in
+ the West is, like the cyclone, a revolving force, but it carries with it a
+ variety of phenomena wholly distinct from those that accompany the larger
+ storm. Many of the effects of one tornado are wholly absent in others, and
+ the indications that in one case have been followed by a terrible disaster
+ are not infrequently found at other times to presage merely a heavy
+ thunder shower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The freaks of a tornado are wholly unaccountable. In some cases not an
+ object in its track will fail to feel its power for long distances; in
+ other instances it will seem to act like a cannon-ball that plows up the
+ earth on striking, then rises and strikes again, leaving the space between
+ untouched. Sometimes it will go through a forest leveling the trees as
+ though a gang of axemen had plied their tools on lines laid out by
+ surveyors, nothing outside the track being touched; but again in similar
+ windfalls there will be found occasional pockets scored in the forest
+ growth jutting off the right line, like small lagoons opening into a
+ flowing stream. These seem to have been caused by a sort of attendant
+ whirlwind&mdash;a baby offspring from the main monster, which, having
+ sprung away from the chief disturbance, scoops a hole in the woods and
+ then expires or rejoins the original movement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I have seen one of the most violent and, so to speak, compressed of these
+ storms, cut a road through thick woods so that at a distance the edges
+ stood out clear and sharp against the sky as would those of a railway
+ cutting through earth. Trees standing at the edge of the track had their
+ branches clean swept one side while on the other there was no perceptible
+ disturbance of the foliage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sometimes the tornado acts like an enormous scoop, catching up every
+ movable thing and sweeping it miles away: and again it becomes a
+ depositor, as if, tired of carrying so much dead weight, it dumped it upon
+ the earth preparatory to grabbing up a new cargo. These effects are
+ particularly noticeable in the tornado that goes by jumps. When it strikes
+ and absorbs a mass of debris it seems to spring up again like a projectile
+ that grazes the surface. For a space there will be a very high wind and
+ some damage, but no such disaster as the tornado has previously wrought.
+ Out of the clouds will come occasional heavy missiles and deluges of
+ water. Then down goes the tornado again crashing and scattering by its own
+ force and adding to its destructive power by a battery of timbers and
+ other objects brought along from the previous impact. Relieved of these
+ masses, it again gathers up miscellaneous movables and repeats its
+ previous operation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The force with which these objects strike is best seen when they fall
+ outside of the tornado's path, since the work done by the missile is not
+ then disturbed by the general destructive force of the storm. Thus, near
+ Racine, Wis., I have known an ordinary fence rail, slightly sharpened on
+ one end, to be driven against a young tree like a spear and pierce it
+ several feet. The velocity of the rail must have been something enormous,
+ or otherwise the rail would have glanced from such a round and elastic
+ object.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many of the settlers in the tornado districts of Southern Minnesota, Iowa,
+ Kansas, and Nebraska excavate a deep cellar beneath their houses and cover
+ it with heavy timbers as a place of refuge for their families when a
+ tornado threatens to strike them. While these dugouts are usually
+ effective, they are not always so. There have been instances where
+ families having only time to descend and not time enough to close the trap
+ door have been exposed to the storm's full fury by the tornado getting
+ into the opening and lifting off the whole roof after having first swept
+ away the house above. Another pathetic case resulted in the death of a
+ whole family by an extraordinary freak of the tornado. The storm first
+ struck a large pond and swept up all the water in it. Its next plunge
+ deposited this water on one of these dugouts, and the family were drowned
+ like chipmunks in a hole.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Some of the western tornadoes are accompanied by electrical manifestations
+ to an extent that has originated a belief in electricity as their cause.
+ These disturbances are very marked in some cases, while in others they
+ have not been noticed. In one tornado in Central Illinois electricity
+ played very peculiar antics not only in the tornado's track, but also at
+ some distance from it. In the ruined houses all the iron work was found to
+ have been strongly magnetized, so that pokers, flatirons and other metal
+ objects were found adhering to each other. Just off the tornado's track
+ the same effects were noticed, and several persons experienced sharp
+ electric shocks during the passage of the storm. Afterward it was found
+ that the magnetic influence was so strong that clocks and watches were
+ stopped and rendered wholly useless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scooping action of the tornado sometimes makes considerable changes in
+ the topography of the country, as when it gathers up the water of a large
+ pond or water course and makes a new pond or opens a new channel. At
+ Wallingford the water in a pond of very large size was taken bodily from
+ its bed, carried up a hill and dropped nearly in one mass, so that gullies
+ and ravines were cut in every direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There is a divide in Northeastern Illinois between streams flowing into
+ Lake Michigan and those running to the Mississippi. So level is a portion
+ of the land on the summit, and so slight the elevation above the lake,
+ that in wet seasons the surface-water seems almost as willing to go one
+ way as the other; and on one occasion the upper streams of the Desplaines
+ River were nearly permanently diverted toward the lake by a tornado that
+ gathered up the water and scored the surface in its track toward the east.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Many are the stories told of the way in which objects are carried away by
+ the wind and left in strange places. In one Illinois tornado two children
+ and an infant were caught up. The dead bodies of the children were found
+ only a few hundred feet distant, but the infant was picked up alive more
+ than a mile away from the spot where the tornado swept the children up. An
+ accordion that must have come a long distance&mdash;for it was never
+ claimed&mdash;was found so entangled in the branches of a tree that it was
+ alternately pulled apart and pressed together by the wind, thus creating
+ such weird and uncanny music during a whole night that an already
+ sufficiently scared settlement of negroes were kept in a state of frantic
+ dismay until daylight revealed the cause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In another case a farmer who followed the tornado's track in search of
+ missing cattle was astonished to discover one of his cows lodged about
+ twenty feet above the ground in the branches of a half-stripped maple.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I allers knew that was an active heifer," he remarked, as he came in
+ sight of her hanging over the slanting limb, "but I never allowed she
+ could climb a tree."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0032" id="link2H_4_0032"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ LOST IN A BLIZZARD.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ If I were given my choice between a visit from a cyclone or a blizzard, I
+ would unhesitatingly choose the former. True, there is no resisting its
+ terrific power, and a man caught in its embrace is as helpless as a child
+ when seized by a Bengal tiger; but there is a chance of escape, and the
+ whole thing is over in a few minutes. You may be lifted into the air and
+ dropped with only a few broken bones, or, by plunging into a "cyclone
+ pit," the fury of the sky may glide harmlessly over your head; but in the
+ case of a blizzard, however, let me tell you the one woeful experience of
+ my life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The snow fell steadily for two days and nights, and looking out from my
+ home in western Kansas I saw that it lay fully three feet on a level. By a
+ strange providence my wife, who had been my brave and faithful helper for
+ several years, was away on a visit to her friends in Topeka, and my only
+ companion was my servant Jack, a middle-aged African, who in his youth was
+ a slave in Kentucky.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Things had not gone well with us of late. The grasshoppers and drought
+ played the mischief with out crops, and it was a question with me for
+ months whether the wisest course to take was not to throw up my hands, let
+ everything go to the bow-wows and, in the dry-goods firm, that I knew was
+ returning to St. Louis, resume my situation still open for me. A man hates
+ to confess himself beaten, and I decided to remain where I was one more
+ year. Then, if there was no improvement, I would turn my back on Kansas
+ forever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Master Thomas," said Jack, as the dismal December afternoon drew to a
+ close, "thar isn't a pound ob flour in de house. Shall I go to de village
+ and get some?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I will go myself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the sudden realization of the unutterable loneliness I would feel
+ without any companion that led me to this rash declaration. The town was
+ only a mile distant, but it would require hours to make the journey there
+ and back, and I could not bear the thought of being without the society of
+ any one for that time. I had read everything in the house; the single
+ horse and cow I owned had been looked after, and there was absolutely
+ nothing to do but to sit down before the scant fire, listen to the sifting
+ of the snow against the window panes, and give way to gloomy reverie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Anything was preferable to this, and it was with a feeling akin to relief
+ that I added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I might do so had I not noticed this afternoon that he had gone lame."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Better let de flour go, den, for de snow am too deep and de storm to
+ heavy for you to tramp all de way to town and back again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; while I haven't much fear of our starving, yet, if the snow-fall
+ continues, we shall be in a bad way. I can carry twenty-five pounds
+ without trouble, and will be back in a few hours; then the storm may rage
+ as hard as it pleases, for all we care."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preparations were quickly made, and, to shorten my story, I may say
+ that, after a laborious tramp, I reached the village without mishap,
+ bought my quarter of a hundred of flour, slung it over my shoulder, and
+ started on my return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time I had made several disquieting discoveries. The snow was
+ falling faster than ever, the cold was increasing, a gale was blowing,
+ and, under the circumstances, of course there was not a glimmer of light
+ in the sky. My course was directly across the prairie, and in the event of
+ my tracks being obliterated by the snow&mdash;as was almost certain to be
+ the case&mdash;it was almost impossible for me to prevent myself from
+ going astray.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My hope lay in Jack's promise that he would keep a bright light burning in
+ the upper story to guide me on my course. On a clear night this light was
+ visible from the village, but somehow or other I failed to take into
+ account the state of the weather. The air was full of eddying flakes,
+ which would render the headlight of a locomotive invisible a hundred yards
+ distant. Strange that this important fact never occurred to me until I was
+ fully a fourth of a mile from the village. Then, after looking in vain for
+ the beacon light, the danger of my situation struck me, and I halted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am certain to go wrong," I said to myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is out of my power to follow a direct course without something to
+ serve as a compass. I will go back to the village and wait till morning."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Wheeling about in my tracks, I resumed my wearisome tramp through the
+ heavy snow, and kept it up until I was certain I had travelled fully a
+ fourth of a mile. Then when I paused a moment and gazed ahead and around,
+ I was confronted by blank darkness on every hand. What a proof of a man's
+ tendency to go wrong, that in aiming at a village of fifty dwellings, and
+ only a fourth of a mile away, I had missed it altogether!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This discovery gave me my first thrill of real alarm. I shouted, but my
+ voice fell dead in the snowy air. The gale was blowing more furiously than
+ ever, and the cold was so intense that it penetrated my thick clothing and
+ caused my teeth to rattle together!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You can be of no use to me," I exclaimed, flinging away the small bag of
+ flour. "The village can't be far off, and I will find it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Determined to retain my self-possession, I made a careful calculation of
+ the proper course to follow, and plunged into my work with more vigor than
+ ever. I continually glanced up in quest of the flickering lights, and
+ listened, in the hope of hearing some sound that could guide me, but
+ nothing of the kind was seen or heard, and it was not long before the
+ terrible truth burst upon me that I was lost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Aye, and lost in a blizzard! The wind had risen almost to a hurricane; the
+ cold cut through the thickest clothing, and the snow struck my face like
+ the prick of millions of needles. I shouted again, but, convinced that it
+ was a useless waste of strength, I soon ceased.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was certain death to remain motionless, and almost equally fatal to
+ push on; but there <i>was</i> a possibility that I might strike the right
+ direction, and anything was preferable to remaining idle. And so, with a
+ desperation akin to despair, I threw all the vigor at my command into my
+ benumbed limbs, and bent every possible energy to the life and death task
+ before me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sleet drove against my cheeks with such spiteful and penetrating
+ fierceness that I could make no use of my eyes, I could only bend my head
+ to the blast and labor through the snow, praying that Providence would
+ guide my footsteps in the right direction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was plodding forward in this heavy, aimless fashion when I noticed that
+ the violence of the gale was drifting the snow. Sometimes I would strike a
+ space of several yards where it did not reach to my ankles. Then I would
+ suddenly lurch into a wall that reached to my shoulders. After wallowing
+ through this, I might strike a shallow portion again, where, while walking
+ quite briskly, a windrow of snow would be hurled against my breast and
+ face with such fury as to force me backward and off my feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bracing myself, I waited until there was a sufficient lull in the blizzard
+ for me to make some use of my eyes. I blinked and peered toward the
+ different points of the compass, but without catching the first twinkle of
+ light.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am lost&mdash;lost&mdash;" I moaned; "there is no help for me!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An extraordinary collapse must have come over me, for my senses seemed to
+ forsake me on the instant. I went down in the eddying, blinding snow, and
+ knew no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the moment of giving way I was less than a hundred yards from the
+ easternmost house of the village. My despairing cry was heard, and
+ hospitable hands carried me into the dwelling within a quarter of an hour
+ after losing my consciousness. Intelligent and prompt treatment prevented
+ any serious consequences, but the remembrance of that brief time exposed
+ to the fury of the blizzard will remain with me to my dying day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0033" id="link2H_4_0033"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THROWING THE RIATA.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ The skill shown by cattlemen in throwing the riata or lasso often
+ approaches the marvelous. What is more wonderful than the duel described
+ in the <i>San Francisco Examiner</i>, between Mexican vaqueros, in which
+ the only weapons used were their riatas? The victor overcame the other by
+ throwing his noose, so that his enemy's noose passed right through it, and
+ the conqueror lassoed the other man's arms against his side and jerked him
+ from his steed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The despatch then went on to tell of the skill of the victorious riata
+ man, and mentioned among other wonderful feats, his lassoing an antelope
+ running at high speed 100 feet away. To make the test more extraordinary,
+ the correspondent wrote that he would pick out one of the animal's feet
+ and get the noose around that alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An <i>Examiner</i> reporter called on Louis Ohnimus, Superintendent of
+ Woodward's Gardens, who wielded a riata for many years, and probably knows
+ as much about throwing the lasso as any man on the coast, and asked him if
+ the feats referred to were possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The Mexican may have won the duel by lassoing his adversary, riata and
+ all," was the answer. "It is not an uncommon thing for them to settle
+ their differences by such a fight, and I have heard of the trick of
+ ringing the other man's rope, but if that man can catch an antelope one
+ hundred feet away, by the foot or any other way, he is a better riata man
+ than I ever encountered. In the first place mighty few men are strong
+ enough to throw a rope such a distance. Then an ordinary riata is only
+ fourteen or sixteen yards long&mdash;twenty yards is a very long one. So,
+ you see, a forty-foot throw is a pretty good one."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He was asked to explain how to throw a lasso, and consented to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The first thing about this business," said Mr. Ohnimus, "is to have a
+ perfect riata. If you have one perfectly stretched, oiled, and in a
+ thoroughly good condition, you can throw well; if your rope is kinky or
+ uneven, you will find it impossible to do accurate work."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you consider a good riata?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I can only tell you how a good one is made. First, the rawhide is
+ cut in thin strips, as long as possible, and half tanned with the hair on.
+ Then these strips are soaked and stretched over a block. Then they are
+ braided into a rope, care being taken, of course, to pull the strands as
+ tight as possible. When the riata is made it should be buried for a week,
+ ten days, or even a fortnight, in the sand. It takes up moisture from the
+ ground, without getting hard. Soaking it in water won't do, nor will
+ anything else that I know of except, as I say, burying it. When the riata
+ is resurrected it should again be left for a time stretched over a block,
+ with a weight to hold it taut. Then the hair should be sandpapered off the
+ outside, and when the riata is greased with mutton tallow and properly
+ noosed it is ready for use. Every vaquero that pretends to take care of
+ his apparatus will bury his riata and stretch it every six or eight
+ months.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A hair rope does not make a good riata. It is useful to stretch around
+ camp at night to keep snakes away. For some reason snakes will not cross a
+ hair rope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, as to throwing it:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The riata, say, is hanging from the horn of the saddle&mdash;not tied,
+ but ready for use. No vaquero who understands his trade ties his rope to
+ his saddle. He knows that his life may depend on his ability to let go of
+ his rope in an instant, and he isn't going to chance killing himself or
+ his horse. You see, the vaquero might be on a side hill, and a bull or
+ steer he wishes to catch be on a trail below him, and the ground between
+ them to be too steep to admit of his riding down to it. Now, suppose the
+ noose, instead of catching around the horns of the steer, should circle
+ his neck and draw down to his shoulders? Accidents are, of course, as
+ likely to happen in catching cattle as in anything else, and give a bull
+ such a hold and he could pull a house, let alone a mustang. That would be
+ one case where it would be very handy to let go quickly. Then a man is
+ likely to get his hand caught, and if he can't let his rope go free he is
+ likely to lose a finger or two.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Our vaquero is trotting along with his rope hanging at his saddle bow or
+ fastened behind him. He sees a deer or whatever else he wants to catch,
+ and grabs his rope with the left hand if he is a right-handed man, though
+ a man to really excel in this business should be ambi-dextrous. A
+ right-handed man can, under ordinary circumstances, rope a steer; but he
+ has frequently to turn his horse to gain a good position. Now it sometimes
+ happens that your horse is in a position where you can't turn; then it
+ would be awkward, unless you could throw with either hand. I usually throw
+ with my left hand, though I can use either.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I take up the rope from the saddle bow, so."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He lifted his riata in his right hand. His little finger held the standing
+ end of the rope, the third and middle finders supported the coil, and the
+ noose dangled from his first finger, while his thumb steadied the whole
+ rope and held it from slipping. The coils were not more than a foot or a
+ foot and a half in diameter. The noose was the same size.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's a smaller noose than you would use on the range, is it not?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," answered Mr. Ohnimus, "the vaquero never carries his noose long. If
+ he did, it would be constantly getting tangled up in the horse's legs. He
+ makes it larger when he swings it. But to get back to the process of
+ lassoing. As our cowboy gets close to his quarry, he takes the noose in
+ his lasso hand. I will use my left, as it is a trifle handier for me. He
+ grips the rope, not too firmly, holding the standing part and the side of
+ the noose about half the length of the loop away from the knot. That is to
+ enable him to swing the noose so that it will fall open. If he holds it at
+ the knot he will throw a long, narrow noose that is very likely to cross
+ and kink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Meanwhile I, representing our cowboy, hold the remaining coils in my
+ other hand, only changing the position of my forefinger so as to secure
+ better control of the coils. Then comes the third maneuver&mdash;enlarging
+ the noose. Of course, you have to have a larger noose than one a foot in
+ diameter to drop over a steer's horns forty feet away. The noose is
+ enlarged by swinging the noose in your lasso hand until the centrifugal
+ force pulls it out the size you wish (this is the reason you do not grasp
+ it too firmly), letting go with the other hand, of course, as many coils
+ as are necessary to make the noose the right size. Now you have the noose
+ in the air you do not cease making it circle around your head until you
+ let it go. When the noose has been let out to the right size the next
+ trouble is to keep it open and to avoid entangling it in the brush or
+ other surrounding obstructions. You keep it open, as I said, by holding
+ the noose from quarter to half its length from the knot, and by a peculiar
+ twist of the wrist that is only attainable by practice. To keep it clear
+ of the brush is often a more difficult job, for the cowboy is not always
+ in a clear place when he wants to throw his rope. Then it is that his
+ judgment comes into play and determines whether his cast is a lost one or
+ not. I have seen vaqueros swing a lasso swiftly almost in the midst of a
+ thicket, and keep it clear without losing speed, and then let it drive
+ straight as an arrow between two close trees and rope an object that could
+ not pass where the noose had gone. Such skill, to be sure, comes only
+ after long practice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, now we have got the noose circling about the vaquero's head, and
+ the next thing is to let it fly. There is not much to describe about this
+ part of throwing a riata, important though it may be. It is only incessant
+ practice that will enable a man to make a certain cast. The main thing is
+ to swing the rope just long enough&mdash;neither so long as to give it a
+ side-wise motion when you throw it, nor short enough to prevent its
+ getting all the force you require. Then the riata man must throw at a
+ particular limb or projection. This thing of tossing blindly at an object
+ and trusting to luck that the animal will get into the rope somehow will
+ not do. You must pick out your mark as carefully as if you were shooting
+ at it, and then time it. A steer jumping along changes his position
+ constantly as regards you. If you throw at his head high up the chances
+ are that it will be away down when your rope reaches him, and you will
+ overthrow. Now, if you pick out a foot you must reckon so that that foot
+ will be off the ground when your rope reaches him. The noose does not
+ travel like a bullet, and this element of time is most important.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of even more importance is it that the distances are gauged correctly.
+ You remember I spoke about holding the coils lightly in two or three
+ fingers. Well, that is done in order that as many coils as may be
+ considered necessary may be let go. If you are wielding a riata you know
+ that each of your coils is almost two feet or two and one half feet long.
+ So if you want to lasso something twenty feet away you let go ten coils.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "As to letting go, you simply open your hand at the correct time and the
+ rope slips off.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But even after you have roped your steer your work is not over. Almost
+ any animal can pull you from your horse, and to prevent this you must get
+ your rope around the horn of your saddle. There is where you have to be
+ quick. There are two ways of making this hitch that are used ordinarily.
+ The one I prefer is simply to take two turns around the horn, taking care
+ that the second turn comes lower and overlaps the other. No pull in the
+ world could make that rope slip, while I can, simply by throwing off one
+ turn, let it all slide off. This other fashion, which is really taking a
+ 'half-inch' around the horn, holds just as fast, but you have to push the
+ rope through to loosen it. You see, in making this sudden twist, a finger
+ is very likely to get caught, and I have known many fingers being taken
+ off before such a hitch could be unfastened.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is often advisable to take an extra twist around anything you have
+ lassoed, and this is done by simply throwing a coil. Practice again is the
+ only thing that can teach this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now you have the whole theory of throwing a rope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There are four sorts of throws, but they are all made alike, only the
+ position of the arm being different. They are the overthrow, the
+ underthrow, the sidethrow, and the backthrow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Backthrow?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, backthrow&mdash;catching an object behind you&mdash;something that
+ you need not even see. That sounds difficult, does it? Well, you stand
+ behind me and you can see it done."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reporter took his station twenty feet behind Mr. Ohnimus, quite out of
+ sight, of course. He swung the loop around his head, and, without turning,
+ let it fly backward. It circled the newspaper man exactly, and by pulling
+ it quickly Ohnimus had his arms pinioned to his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are there any more trick throws?" asked the reporter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lots of them. I never put myself up as a crack riata man, and I am out of
+ practice now, but I can lay the noose on the ground at my feet and kick it
+ around your neck, or pick it off the ground from my horse and land it
+ around you while the horse is going at full speed, and do lots of things
+ like that, but none of them is any good. That backthrow has been used by
+ the Mexican highwaymen to considerable advantage. You see, in that country
+ the traveler always looks out for danger from the rear and is prepared for
+ it, but when a pleasant horseman rides past him, playing with his riata,
+ and wishing him 'Good-day' as he passes, he is likely to consider the
+ danger as gone by, as well as the man. That has caused the death of a good
+ many. The bandit gets the right distance ahead and then lassoes him as I
+ did you. A touch of his spur jerks his victim from the saddle and that
+ ends it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How is the lasso as a weapon of defence?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good. A quick riata man can beat a fellow with a pistol at fairly close
+ quarters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, here is a pistol. Put it in your pocket and draw it on me as I come
+ toward you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reporter did as he was directed. He had not raised the weapon when the
+ noose was around his hand and the pistol was jerked a dozen feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Try again, and tighter," said Ohnimus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The reporter did so. The pistol was not jerked from his hand this time,
+ but before he could snap it Ohnimus had thrown a coil around his neck and
+ pulled his pistol hand up over his shoulder. In another instant a second
+ coil was around the reporter's body, and both arms were fastened firmly to
+ his sides. He could not move that pistol an inch. No clearer demonstration
+ of the use of the lasso as a weapon of defence was possible.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is the most difficult animal, in your opinion, to catch with the
+ lasso?" was asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A sea lion," answered the rope thrower. "I have caught them off the
+ southern coast. They go right through a noose. The only way to get them is
+ to throw the rope around his neck and back of one flipper. A hog is hard
+ to catch, too. He pulls his legs out of a noose without half trying, and
+ you can't hold him by the neck or body. The only way is to get him like
+ the sea lion&mdash;back of one foreleg."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0034" id="link2H_4_0034"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A WATERSPOUT.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Doubtless many of my readers have heard of the dreadful encounters of
+ vessels with waterspouts, when the ship escaped destruction by firing a
+ cannon-ball into the waterspout, thus causing it to break apart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now these things are by no means such terrible objects as many believe. No
+ doubt the vessels of the present day are larger and stronger than
+ formerly, and perhaps waterspouts have become smaller. Be as it may, the
+ people who go down to the sea in ships need give themselves no uneasiness
+ about them, for really they amount to little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>Slavonia</i>, of the Hamburg line left Brunshausen, on the Elbe, on
+ February 26 last, under the command of Capt. H. Schmidt. She had only two
+ passengers. The weather was squally and the air full of mist when she
+ reached the outer Banks, 900 miles from New York, shortly after sunrise on
+ Sunday, March 16. The big vessel was heading west by north, when, at 7
+ o'clock, Second Mate Erichsen, who was on the bridge, saw emerge through
+ the mist on the starboard side of the ship, at the distance of about a
+ thousand feet, a towering column which united sea and sky. The column was
+ in front of the ship to starboard, and was moving in a southeasterly
+ direction, apparently at the rate of eight knots an hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although the Slavonia was running 9 1/2 knots, the column seemed likely to
+ pass in front of the steamship when their paths crossed. Accordingly
+ Erichsen did not try to alter the course of the Slavonia; indeed, he would
+ not have altered it had he known ship and spout were sure to meet, for he
+ had encountered waterspouts before and wasn't afraid of them. All he did&mdash;in
+ fact, all he had time to do&mdash;was to call Third Mate Lorentzen, also
+ an expert in waterspouts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On rushed the <i>Slavonia</i>, heading west by north: nearer came the
+ waterspout, heading south by east. It soon became evident that the spout
+ could not get by before the <i>Slavonia</i> reached it, and it was now too
+ late to slow up&mdash;indeed, a collision was manifestly unavoidable from
+ the start. Lorentzen had scarcely reached the bridge when the watery
+ Philistine was upon the Samson. It just hit the steamer's bows on the
+ starboard side, as depicted in the second cut. A rushing noise accompanied
+ the column, and the water foamed in its wake. Immediately above was a
+ great black cloud from which clouds less dark descended to form a funnel,
+ or inverted cone. The middle of the column was white, apparently because
+ it contained snow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The column's narrowest diameter was about twelve feet, while it was three
+ times as broad as its base, which reproduced in water and inverted the
+ cloud-formed funnel above. The whole column rotated with a spiral motion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The waterspout, when it approached, took all the wind out of the
+ fore-staysail of the steamship, which went blind, but the schooner-sail
+ still kept full, and presently the fore-staysail filled again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Slavonia shook under the shock caused by contact with the column of
+ water, but kept on her course none the worse for the collision. A few
+ flakes of snow on her bow were the only evidence of the collision after
+ the pillar of water had passed off to port.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While the vessel was uninjured, the waterspout soon showed signs that it
+ had received its death-blow. As it sailed off to the southeast it parted
+ in the middle, and the cone of water which formed its base and the cone of
+ cloud which formed its top began to grow smaller by degrees. The
+ waterspout was slowly but surely ceasing to be a waterspout when it
+ disappeared from view in the misty distance some fifteen minutes or more
+ from the time it was sighted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The <i>Slavonia's</i> encounter with the waterspout took place in latitude
+ 42 degrees 22 minutes north and longitude 52 degrees 35 minutes west. This
+ is rather far north for waterspouts so early in the year. The waterspout
+ crop is generally more plentiful when thunder and lightning are on top,
+ which is in warmer weather. The temperature of the air at the time of the
+ encounter was 37 degrees; water 54 degrees. It had been cold during the
+ night, but grew warmer in the morning. The clouds which overspread the
+ firmament were of the cumulus pattern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Erichsen and Lorentzen have not only seen other waterspouts, but the
+ first, when on a sailing vessel in the tropics, ran into the very middle
+ of one with no worse result than to deluge the deck of the ship with water
+ as a heavy shower would have done. He thinks an unusually large waterspout
+ might possibly sink a very small vessel, say a pilot boat, but with a ship
+ of ordinary size he considers bombarding a waterspout with cannon a waste
+ of powder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0035" id="link2H_4_0035"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ AN HEROIC WOMAN.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Every boy and girl should learn to swim. When one recalls how easily the
+ art is acquired, and the many occasions that are liable to arise, we
+ cannot but wonder that the accomplishment is so universally neglected by
+ the other sex. It is pleasant to note, however, that swimming is growing
+ to be popular among women, and the day is not far distant, when the
+ majority of young ladies will become the rivals of their brothers in their
+ ability to keep their heads above water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Torres Strait separates Australia from Papua or New Guinea; and connects
+ the Arafura Sea on the west, with the Coral Sea on the east. Its current
+ is swift and the waters from time immemorial have been dangerous to
+ navigation. It has been the scene of many shipwrecks, and it is only a few
+ months since that the steamer <i>Quetta</i> was lost in those waters. One
+ hundred and sixteen persons perished on that terrible night in the South
+ Pacific, but among the survivors was Miss Lacy, whose experience was not
+ only among the most interesting and thrilling ever recorded, but
+ emphasizes the statement we have made at the opening of our sketch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Lacy says she was sitting in the saloon, engaged in writing a letter,
+ the other ladies practicing for a concert which it was intended to give on
+ shipboard. Everything was going along, merrily, and all were in high
+ spirits, when, without the least warning, they were startled by a harsh,
+ grating noise, the steamer rocked violently, and nearly every one was
+ thrown into the wildest panic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The confusion and shouts above showed that some fearful disaster had
+ occurred. Instantly Miss Lacy made a rush for the deck to learn what it
+ meant. Quick as were her movements, she found the ship was already
+ sinking. Going aft was like climbing a steep hill, but she saw that one
+ portion was high above water, and she struggled bravely to reach it. But,
+ so rapidly did the <i>Quetta</i> go down that she had hardly gone forward,
+ when the steamer was swallowed up in the furious waters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That which followed is beyond description. In an instant, two hundred
+ human beings were struggling frantically, shrieking in their terror for
+ the help which was nowhere to be found, clutching each other, praying and
+ drowning by the score.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Miss Lacy was caught in this fearful swirl, and was in imminent danger of
+ being dragged down by those around her, who were crazed by the one wild,
+ despairing hope of saving themselves, no matter at what cost. But she was
+ a powerful swimmer, and retaining her self-command, she shook herself free
+ of several who attempted to cling to her. The whirlpool caused by the
+ sinking of the steamer pulled her beneath the water, but, with the same
+ wonderful presence of mind she had shown from the first, she fought her
+ way to the surface, and swam from the dangerous spot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finding herself her own mistress, and fully aware that her life now
+ depended on her ability to swim, she removed all her superfluous clothing
+ and moved hither and thither in the darkness, in the hope of coming upon
+ some of the survivors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was about midnight, that she heard some one shout. The gloom was too
+ powerful for her to distinguish anything, but she swam toward the point,
+ whence the call issued, and came upon a raft, that had been hastily thrown
+ together by the chief officer of the <i>Quetta</i>. Several persons were
+ clinging to it, and she accepted the invitation to avail herself of the
+ temporary refuge and give her weary limbs a rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The dismal hours wore slowly away, and at last the growing light in the
+ eastern sky told that the longed-for day was breaking. As soon as the rays
+ of the sun illumined the wild waste of waters, every eye scanned the ocean
+ in quest of some sail; but on every side was the vast heavy sea, with no
+ sign of life except on the little raft. It was water, water everywhere,
+ with not a drop to drink nor a morsel of food to eat, and with no prospect
+ of escaping a lingering death of the most distressing nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The discouraging feature of the situation to Miss Lacy was that their rude
+ support was making no progress at all. They had no means of propelling it,
+ and, had they possessed such means, no one knew what course to follow. It
+ looked as if days and nights must be passed on the raft, until one by one
+ the survivors succumbed or ended their sufferings by plunging into the sea
+ which they had striven so hard to escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Far away, however, on the verge of the horizon, an object rose dimly to
+ view, which, after carefully studying for some time, the shipwrecked
+ people agreed was a small island, but, as we have stated, they were
+ powerless to propel their craft thither, and could only gaze and sigh for
+ the refuge that was as much beyond their reach, as though it were a
+ thousand leagues distant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am going to swim to it!" exclaimed Miss Lacy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Are you mad?" demanded the astonished chief-officer; "it is utterly
+ impossible."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I prefer to risk it rather than remain here."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But it is much further off than it seems to be; these waters are full of
+ sharks and you will never live to swim half the distance. Dismiss the idea
+ at once."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-by!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the brave woman took a header into the sea, and with a long graceful
+ stroke, that compelled the admiration of every one of the amazed
+ survivors, began swimming toward the supposed refuge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the chief-officer knew more about the difficulties in her way than she
+ did. She grievously miscalculated the distance, and, though she was a
+ swimmer of amazing skill and endurance, she began to believe she had
+ undertaken a task beyond her power of accomplishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She swam directly toward the island, husbanding her strength like a wise
+ person, but making steady progress, until before the afternoon was half
+ gone, she knew she had placed many a long mile behind her. When she looked
+ back she could see nothing of the raft and her friends, but as she rose on
+ the crest of an immense swell, she plainly discerned the island. It still
+ was in the verge of the horizon, and it was hard for her to see that she
+ was apparently no nearer to it than when she started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Besides this alarming fact, she was threatened by a still greater peril.
+ As the chief-officer had warned her, the waters abounded with sharks, of
+ the man-eating species, who were liable to dart forward and seize her at
+ any moment; but, in recalling her extraordinary experience, Miss Lacy says
+ that at no time did she feel any fear of them. She knew they were liable
+ to discover her at any moment, but they did not, and fortunately indeed
+ she escaped their ferocious jaws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her greatest suffering was from the blazing sun, whose rays shot downward
+ upon her head with pitiless power. When she found her brain growing dizzy,
+ she averted the danger of sunstroke by dropping or swimming for some
+ distance below the surface. This always cooled or refreshed her, though
+ she felt her face and neck blistering under the fierce rays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In striving to recall her experience, Miss Lacy is unable to remember a
+ large portion of the time she spent in the water. She believes she slept
+ for several hours. What an extraordinary situation! Alone in the midst of
+ the vast strait in the southern Pacific, surrounded by sharks, with no
+ friendly sail in sight, and yet slumbering and unconscious.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Of course she was not swimming all this time. When she found herself
+ growing weary, she floated on her back for long periods, then propelled
+ herself first upon one side and then upon the other, and all the time the
+ dim misty object in the distance remained as far away as ever. Finally,
+ when she raised her head and looked for it, she was dismayed at being
+ unable to detect it at all. It had vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she knew that it had been an optical delusion from the first. There
+ was no island or land in sight. She was alone on the vast deep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the heroic woman did not despair. After she had been in the water
+ twenty hours altogether, and was in the last stage of exhaustion, she was
+ picked up by a boat belonging to the search steamer <i>Albatross</i>. For
+ several hours succeeding her rescue she was delirious, but it was not long
+ before she was entirely herself, having given a signal proof of the value
+ of swimming as a lady's accomplishment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THE WRITING FOUND IN A BOTTLE.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Let me assure the readers, at the beginning of this sketch, that it is
+ strictly true in every particular. I have no ambition to shine as a writer
+ of fiction, and, at the request of a number of friends acquainted with the
+ remarkable circumstances, have sat down to relate, in a straightforward
+ manner as is at my command; the part that I took in the history of the
+ famous <i>Buried Treasure</i>.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not the least singular part of this strange business was that, of the
+ three individuals concerned two were boys, one being my son Frank (named
+ for his father) and a playmate, Arthur Newman. The latter was thirteen
+ years old, while Frank was only a few months his senior.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They were inseparable playmates from early childhood; and as we lived near
+ a broad, deep inlet, which put in from the Atlantic, they learned to swim
+ at the age of ten, and soon learned to manage a yacht as well as veterans.
+ I was sometimes anxious because of their venturesome disposition, but
+ although they frequently ventured outside, sometimes in very nasty
+ weather, no accident ever befell them, and the parents of both boys
+ gradually learned to dismiss all fear concerning them, under the belief
+ that, as they grew older, they became better fitted to take care of
+ themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day in March Frank told me that a suspicious brig had been standing
+ off shore for the better part of a week, and he and Arthur had come to the
+ conclusion that it was a pirate. I laughed heartily at their fancy, and
+ assured them that the days of buccaneers and sea rovers were long since
+ past, and they must dismiss all such absurd ideas from their minds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The following week the Atlantic sea-board was devastated by one of the
+ fiercest storms that had been known for years. Reports of wrecks and
+ disasters to shipping reached us for several days after, and Frank
+ remarked one evening at supper that he believed his suspected pirate was
+ one of the unfortunate vessels that had gone down with all on board. I
+ smiled at his words, but when I learned that the beach was strewn with
+ wreckage, and that a great deal of it had washed into the inlet, I thought
+ it probable that he was right, so far as the fate of the strange ship was
+ concerned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was near the close of the month that my boy brought home a tightly
+ corked bottle, which he and Arthur had found while cruising in the inlet.
+ When he said that there was a piece of rolled paper inside, I felt enough
+ curiosity to withdraw the stopper with the aid of a strong corkscrew, and
+ to make an examination.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sure enough there was a small roll of thick, vellum-like paper, on which,
+ in a cramped hand, evidently written years before, was the following:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Three feet under the Beacon Tree</i>."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a minute or two I was puzzled, and then, as if by inspiration, the
+ whole truth burst upon me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Beacon Tree was the name of an immense poplar that stood near the
+ mouth of the inlet. The fish-hawks had builded their nests in the forked
+ tops for a half century. I remember hearing my father say it was struck by
+ lightning long before and although its upper branches were shattered, and
+ it had been as dead as a fence-post ever since, yet its immense size,
+ great height, and peculiar, silver-like appearance caused it to become a
+ prominent landmark to the vessels when approaching the coast, and long
+ before I was born it gained the name of the Beacon Tree, by which title it
+ was known to unnumbered hundreds of sailors and sea-faring men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There is a treasure buried under that tree," I said to Frank, suppressing
+ my excitement so far as I could. "More than likely it was placed there by
+ some freebooter a long time ago, and these people were awaiting a chance
+ to dig it up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maybe Captain Kidd buried it," suggested the boy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Possibly he did, for there is reason to believe that he hid a great deal
+ of treasure along the Atlantic coast. Now, since Arthur was with you when
+ you found this bottle, he has the same claim to the treasure that you
+ have. We will not say anything to his father, and you must take particular
+ care not to give a hint to a living soul. Go over and tell Arthur to come
+ here this evening. I will furnish the shovels and lantern, and when we are
+ sure that no one will see us, we will slip over to the Beacon Tree and
+ dig."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I recall that I was never so absolutely sure of anything in my life as I
+ was that valuable treasure lay buried under the old poplar. My wife, to
+ whom I showed the little roll of paper, expressed a doubt, and smilingly
+ hinted that perhaps I was too much impressed by that brilliant sketch of
+ Edgar A. Poe called "The Gold Bug."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course," I answered, "disappointment may await us, and I know these
+ bottles picked up at sea are frequently frauds; but the age of the writing
+ and the peculiar circumstances convince me that this is genuine. I am sure
+ <i>something</i> will be found under the Beacon Tree."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime Frank had hurried off to acquaint Arthur with the amazing
+ discovery, and to warn him against dropping a hint to any one. My son soon
+ returned with the word that his friend was "b'iling" with excitement, but
+ alas! his parents were going to spend that evening with a neighbor, and
+ since they would not be back until late, there was no possible way of his
+ joining us.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys were not more disappointed than I, and the impulse was strong
+ upon me to make the venture without the help of Arthur, meaning, of course
+ that such a proceeding should not affect his share in the find; but it did
+ not strike me that that would be exactly right, and Arthur was informed
+ that we three would attend to the business the following evening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I could not avoid strolling out to the Beacon Tree the next day. I did so
+ in the most off-hand manner and with the most unconcerned expression I
+ could assume; but had any one scrutinized my countenance, I am sure he
+ would easily have detected the deep agitation under which I was laboring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was considerably disturbed, upon examining the immediate surroundings of
+ the tree, to discover signs which looked as if some one had been digging
+ there quite recently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The secret has become known and the treasure has been carried off," I
+ gasped, with a rapidly throbbing heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Reflection, however, reassured me. No one had seen the writing in the
+ bottle beside myself (though evidently it must have been known to others),
+ and it was certain that if any person had succeeded in unearthing the
+ hidden wealth, he would not have taken the trouble to hide all signs with
+ such extreme care. Closer examination, too, convinced me there had been no
+ digging about the tree at all. And yet I was mistaken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We three reached the old poplar the next evening between ten and eleven
+ o'clock. Arthur had escaped inquiry by slipping out of his bedroom window
+ after bidding his parents good-night; and, inasmuch as the lantern which I
+ carried was not lit until we arrived at the tree, we were confident of
+ escaping attention. Still I watched sharply, and was greatly relieved to
+ discover no persons abroad at that hour beside ourselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Since the treasure was located but three feet below the surface, in sandy
+ soil, I brought only one shovel, while the boys watched me, one holding
+ the lantern, and both casting furtive glances around to guard against
+ eavesdroppers. It would be useless to deny my excitement. My heart at
+ times throbbed painfully, and more than once I was on the point of ceasing
+ until I could regain mastery of myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pop, you must be nearly deep enough," said Frank, in a guarded undertone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm pretty near to the place," I replied stopping a minute to draw my
+ handkerchief across my perspiring forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm afraid there's somebody watching us," added Arthur.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Where?" I asked in affright, staring around in the gloom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thought I saw a man moving out yonder."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, it's too late for him to interfere now," I said, compressing my
+ lips and renewing my digging more determinedly than ever; "I carry a
+ revolver with me, and I don't mean to be robbed."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next moment my heart gave a great throb, for the shovel struck
+ something hard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hold the lantern down here, Frank, quick!" I commanded in a hoarse voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He obeyed, but to my disappointment the object proved to be a large stone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess it's under that," I whispered, stopping work for a moment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Pop, there's another piece of paper," said Frank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I stooped over and picked it up. I saw that there was writing on it, and
+ holding it up beside the lantern read:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dig three feet under the Beacon Tree and you will be an April fool."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again the truth flashed across me. The whole thing was a practical
+ joke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Boys," said I, "what day of the month is this?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They reflected a moment and answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, it's the first of April."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Let's go home," I added, stepping out of the excavation, "and here's a
+ half a dollar apiece if you don't tell anybody about it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As we moved mournfully away I was sure I heard a chuckling laugh somewhere
+ near in the darkness, but the author of it was prudent enough to keep
+ beyond reach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was not until three months afterward that I learned all the facts
+ connected with the writing found in a bottle. My neighbor, the father of
+ Arthur Newman, on whom I had played several jokes, adopted this means of
+ retaliating on me. He took my son and his own into his confidence, and I
+ am grieved to say that the young rascals were just as eager as he. When I
+ proposed to make the search on the last day of March, my friend resorted
+ to the subterfuge I have mentioned, so as to insure that it should not
+ take place until the following evening, which was unquestionably
+ appropriate for my first and last essay in digging for buried treasure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ THAT HORNET'S NEST.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ There was an indignation meeting of the boys at Bushville school, one
+ sultry day in August. From stress of circumstances it was held at the noon
+ recess, in the piece of woods back of the old stone building, and on the
+ banks of the crystal stream in which the youngsters swam and revelled at
+ morning, noon and night, during the long, delicious days of summer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All the lads, not quite a score, belonging to the Bushville school, were
+ present at the impromptu convention, but the proceedings were chiefly in
+ charge of the lads, Tom Britt, Dick Culver and Fred Armstrong. There were
+ but a few months' difference in their ages, none of which was more than
+ fourteen years, but all were so much larger and older than the rest that
+ they were looked up to as leaders in everything except study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It cannot be denied that the three were indolent by nature, inclined to
+ rebel at authority, and their enforced attendance at school was the
+ affliction of their lives. They had given their teachers no end of
+ trouble, and more than once had combined in open rebellion against their
+ instructors. Tom's father was a trustee, and like the parents of many
+ ill-trained youths, including those of Dick and Fred, he could see nothing
+ wrong in the conduct of his son. As a consequence, discipline at times was
+ set at naught in the Bushville institutions, and one of the best teachers
+ ever employed by the district threw up his situation in disgust, and went
+ off without waiting to collect his month's salary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The successor of this gentleman was Mr. Lathrop, a young man barely turned
+ twenty, with a beardless face, a mild blue eye, a gentle voice, and such a
+ soft winning manner that the three leaders gave an involuntary sniff of
+ contempt when they first saw him and agreed that he would not last more
+ than a week at the most.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "We'll let up on him, for a few days," Tom explained to some of his
+ friends, "so as to give him time to get acquainted. I b'lieve in letting
+ every fellow have a show, but he's got to walk mighty straight between now
+ and the end of this week," added the youth impressively; "I ain't in favor
+ of standing any nonsense."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A nodding of heads by Dick and Fred showed that Tom had voiced their
+ sentiments.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, somehow or other, Mr. Lathrop was different from the teachers that
+ had preceded him. He never spoke angrily or shouted, and his first act on
+ entering the schoolroom was to break up the long tough hickory "gad" lying
+ on his desk and to fling it out of the window. The next thing he did,
+ after calling the school to order, was to tell the gaping, open-eyed
+ children the most entertaining story to which they had ever listened. The
+ anecdote had its moral too, for woven in and out and through its charming
+ meshes was the woof of a life of heroic suffering, of trial and reward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At its conclusion, the teacher said to the pupils that if they were
+ studious and transgressed no rules, he would be glad to tell them another
+ story the next day, if they would remain a few minutes after the hour of
+ dismissal. The treat was such a rare one that all the girls and most of
+ the boys resolved to earn the right to enjoy it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm going to hear the yarn, too," muttered Tom Britt, "for he knows how
+ to tell 'em, but as for behaving myself that depends."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the following afternoon, when five o'clock arrived (in those days most
+ of the country schools opened at eight and closed at five, with an hour at
+ noon, and not more than two weeks vacation in summer. I have attended
+ school on more than one Saturday, Fourth of July and Christmas), the
+ school was all expectation. When Mr. Lathrop saw the bright eyes turned
+ eagerly toward him, a thrill of pleasure stirred his heart, for he felt
+ that his was the hand to sow good seed, or this was the soil where it
+ could be made to spring up and bear fruit a hundred fold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am glad," said he, in his winning voice, "to know that you have done
+ well and earned the right to hear the best story that I can tell. You have
+ been studious, obedient and careful to break no rules, and I am sure that
+ as we become better acquainted, we shall like each other and get on well
+ together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish I could say you had <i>all</i> done well, but it grieves me to
+ tell you, what you know, that one boy has neglected his lessons, been
+ tardy or so indifferent to my wishes that it would not be right that he
+ should be allowed to sit with the rest of you and listen to the incident I
+ am about to relate. I refer to Thomas Britt. Thomas, you will please take
+ your books and hat and go home."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The words came like a thunderclap. No one expected it, least of all the
+ youth himself. Every eye was turned toward him and his face flushed
+ scarlet. He quickly rallied from the daze into which he was thrown at
+ first, and with his old swagger, looked at the teacher and replied with an
+ insolence that was defiance itself:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "My father is trustee, and I've as much right here as you or any one else,
+ and I'm going to stay till I'm ready to go home and you can't&mdash;&mdash;"
+ but, before he had completed his defiant sentence, the slightly built
+ teacher was at his side and had grasped the nape of his coat. It seemed to
+ the lad, that an iron vise had caught his garment and a span of horses
+ were pulling at him. He clutched desperately at everything within reach
+ and spread his legs apart and curled up his toes in the effort to hook
+ into something that would stay proceedings, but it was in vain. Out he
+ came from the seat, and to the awed children who were looking on it seemed
+ that his body was elongated to double its length during the process,&mdash;and
+ he was run through the open door, and his hat tossed after him. Then the
+ teacher walked quietly back to his seat behind the desk on the platform,
+ and without the slightest sign of flurry or mental disturbance, he told
+ one of the sweetest and most delightful incidents to which his pupils had
+ ever listened. He closed with the promise to give them another at the end
+ of the week, if they continued in the good course on which they were so
+ fairly started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He catched me foul," explained the indignant Tom Britt the following day
+ in discussing his hurried exit from the schoolroom; "if he had only let me
+ know he was coming, it would be him that dove out the door instead of me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sullen youth did not receive much sympathy at first, for Mr. Lathrop
+ was steadily winning the affections of the pupils; but Dick and Fred
+ rebelled at such quiet submission to authority, and acted so sullenly that
+ they, too, were shut out from the privilege of listening to the next story
+ related by the teacher to the rest of the school. It had been agreed among
+ the three boys that they should refuse to depart when ordered to do so by
+ the instructor, and that when he made a move toward them, they would
+ assail him simultaneously and rout him "horse, foot and dragoons."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the business was conducted with such a cyclone rush that the plan of
+ campaign was entirely overturned. Before the rebels could combine, all
+ three were out doors, so shaken up that they agreed that a new system of
+ resistance would have to be adopted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus it came about that at the noon recess, one day of the following
+ week, the boys of Bushville school gathered in the cool shade of the woods
+ to listen to the plan of the three malcontents for destroying the
+ authority of the school. It was mainly curiosity on the part of the
+ younger portion, who had little sympathy with the motives of the leaders
+ and were quite sure they would meet with failure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I've made up my mind that I won't stand it," announced Tom, after the
+ situation had been freely discussed; "no boy with any spirit will allow a
+ teacher to run him out of school in the style he served me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What then made you let him do it?" asked little freckled-face Will
+ Horton, from where he lay on the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Didn't I tell you he catched me foul?" demanded Tom, glaring at the
+ urchin; "if I'd knowed what was coming things would have been different."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dick and Fred knowed he was coming for <i>them</i>," added Will, "for he
+ walked clear across the schoolroom."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You've got too much to say," retorted Dick Culver, angrily; "when we want
+ your advice we'll ask for it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, boys, you had better make up your minds to behave yourselves and
+ then there won't be any trouble," was the sensible advice of Jimmy
+ Thompson, who had perched himself on a log, and was swinging his bare feet
+ back and forth; "Mr. Lathrop is the best teacher we ever had and he suits
+ the rest of us first rate."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course he suits all boys that ha'n't any spirit," was the crushing
+ response of the leader, "but I've a plan that'll teach him that me and
+ Dick and Fred ain't that kind of chaps."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How are you going to help yourself?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After several mysterious hints and nods of the head, Tom revealed his
+ stupendous scheme for bringing the teacher to terms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know the big hornet's nest over in Bear Hollow?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inasmuch as there wasn't a boy in the crowd who hadn't shied stones at the
+ object named (always without hitting it), no further information was
+ necessary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I'm going to put that nest in the teacher's desk, and when he comes
+ in, takes his seat and raises the lid, won't there be music?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The scheme was so prodigious that for a full half minute all stared open
+ mouthed at their leader without speaking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The teacher never locks his desk at noon, so it will be easy enough to
+ slip it in before he gets back."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But when he opens the desk and the hornets sail out, what will become of
+ <i>us</i>?" was the pertinent inquiry of Will Horton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why the minute the things begin to swarm out I'll yell, and we'll all
+ rush out doors."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Won't the teacher do the same thing?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But he'll be the last and he'll catch it the worst. He'll be right among
+ the critters, and they'll just go for him, so his head will swell up like
+ a bushel basket and we'll have a week's vacation. By that time he'll learn
+ how to treat us fellers."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>I</i> am," was the proud reply; "come on and I'll show you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, Tom sprang to his feet and started on a trot toward Bear
+ Hollow, with the others streaming after him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It cannot be denied that the youth displayed considerable pluck and
+ coolness when he came to the test. There hung the hornet's nest from the
+ lower limb of an oak, so near the ground that it could be easily reached
+ by one of the larger boys. It was gray in color and of enormous size. It
+ resembled in shape an overgrown football or watermelon, pendant by one
+ end. In some portions faint ridges were visible, like the prints left by
+ tiny wavelets on the sand. Near the base was a circular opening about as
+ large as an old-fashioned penny. This was the door of the hornets'
+ residence, through which all the occupants came and went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys halted at a safe distance, and even Tom paused a few minutes to
+ make a reconnoissance before going nearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You fellows stay here, and don't any of you throw stones or yell!" he
+ said, in a guarded undertone; "for if them hornets find out what is up,
+ they'll come swarming out by the million and sting us all to death."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The promise was readily made, and Tom went forward like a hero, the eyes
+ of all of his playmates fixed upon him. It was noticed be carried a large
+ silken handkerchief in his hand&mdash;one that he had secured at home for
+ this special purpose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He advanced stealthily until within some ten feet, when he halted again.
+ With his gaze centered on the gray, oblong object, he saw one of the dark
+ insects suddenly crawl to view through the opening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder if he suspects anything," thought Tom, half disposed to turn
+ about and run; "no&mdash;he's all right," he added, as the hornet spread
+ his wings, and shot off like a bullet through the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still intently watching the orifice, the boy moved softly forward until
+ directly under the nest. Then, with the deliberation of a veteran, he
+ deftly enfolded it with the large silk handkerchief, easily wrenched it
+ loose from its support, tied the covering over the top so securely that
+ not an inhabitant of the nest could possibly escape, and rejoined in
+ triumph his companions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now you'll see fun!" he exclaimed, as he led the whole party trooping in
+ the direction of the schoolhouse; "keep mum, and don't tell any of the
+ girls what's up."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a grand scheme and it looked as if there could be no hitch in it.
+ What compunctions the other boys might have felt against the attempt to
+ cause pain to their teacher were forgotten in the excitement of the coming
+ sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The residents of the oblong home must have been surprised, to put it
+ mildly, when they found the house swinging along, in the grasp of some
+ great giant, themselves enveloped in gloom, and the only avenue of escape
+ sealed up. They hummed, and buzzed and raised a tempest within, but it was
+ in vain: they were prisoners and must remain such until the ogre chose to
+ release them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Everything seemed to join to help the young rebel. The girls were playing
+ so far from the school building, that they gave no heed to the procession
+ which passed into the structure. One glance told Tom that it was without
+ an occupant, and he strode hastily to the desk, the others pausing near
+ the door, ready to dash out in the event of disaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The desk was unlocked and Tom raised the lid. The nest was laid on its
+ side, in the middle, but it was so big that he had to displace several
+ books to make room for it. Then the knots were untied, the handkerchief
+ flirted free, the lid lowered, and the deed was done.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tom joined his companions with a radiant face. "Not a word," he cautioned,
+ "be extra good this afternoon; even I'll try to behave myself for once,
+ but we won't have to wait long."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "S'posin' them hornets lift the lid of the desk and come out before the
+ teacher gets here?" suggested Will Horton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are you talking about?" was the scornful question of Dick Culver;
+ "how can a hornet raise the lid of a desk?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't mean that <i>one</i> will do it, but, if they all join together
+ and put their shoulders to it, they'll lift more than you think."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this contingency was too vague to be feared. A quarter of an hour
+ later, Mr. Lathrop entered the building with his brisk step, bidding such
+ children as he met a pleasant good afternoon, and hanging his hat on the
+ peg in the wall behind his desk, rang the bell for the children to
+ assemble, and took his seat in his chair on the platform.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The observant instructor quickly saw that something unusual was in the
+ wind. There was a score of signs that he detected in the course of a few
+ minutes, but he could have no idea what it all meant. He was on the alert,
+ however, and did not remain long in suspense.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first hint was the sound of loud and angry buzzing within his desk.
+ While wondering what it meant, and in doubt whether to investigate, he
+ observed a hornet emerging through the key-hole. Before it could shake
+ itself free, he shoved him back with his key, which was inserted and
+ turned about, so effectually blocking the opening, that the insects were
+ held secure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The teacher read the whole story, and it needed only a brief study of Tom
+ Britt's actions to make sure that he was the guilty one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much to the disappointment of the boys, Mr. Lathrop seemed to find no
+ occasion for opening his desk. It remained closed through the whole
+ afternoon and, when the moment for dismissal arrived, the only one to
+ remain was Tom Britt, who, while conducting himself fairly well, had made
+ a bad failure with every recitation. His mind seemed to be too
+ pre-occupied with some other matter to absorb book knowledge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boys loitered around the playground, waiting to see the end of it all.
+ Tom sat with his hands supporting his head, and his elbow on the desk,
+ morose, sullen and disappointed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wonder if he suspects anything," he muttered; "I don't see how he can,
+ for nobody told him. It's queer he has never opened his desk all the
+ afternoon. I never knew him to do anything like that before&mdash;Gracious
+ alive!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just then Tom felt as if some one had jabbed a burning needle into his
+ neck. Almost at the same instant came a similar dagger thrust on the top
+ of his head, where he always wore his hair short. Uttering a gasp of
+ affright, he leaped from his seat, with a score of fierce hornets buzzing
+ about his ears. The terrified glance around the room showed that the
+ teacher had slipped noiselessly out of the door, but, before doing so, he
+ had raised the lid of his desk to its fullest extent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next moment Tom bounded through the door, striking at the insects that
+ were doing painful execution about the exposed parts of his body. It was
+ not until after a long run that he was entirely freed of them and was able
+ to take an inventory of his wounds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a lesson the lad never forgot. In the final contest between him and
+ his teacher, he was conquered and he admitted it. Mr. Lathrop made a study
+ of his character, and having proven himself physically his master, set out
+ to acquire the moral conquest that was needed to complete the work. It
+ need hardly be added that he succeeded, for he was a thoughtful,
+ conscientious instructor of youth, who loved his work, and who toiled as
+ one who knows that he must render an account of his stewardship to Him who
+ is not only loving and merciful, but just.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A YOUNG HERO.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Reuben Johnson leaned on his hoe, and, looking up at the sun, wondered
+ whether, as in the Biblical story, it had not been stationary for several
+ hours. He was sure it was never so long in descending to the horizon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wake up, Rube," sharply called his Uncle Peter, smartly hoeing another
+ row a few paces behind him, "doan be idlin' your time; de sun am foah
+ hours high yit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The nephew started and raised his implement, but stopped. He was staring
+ at the corner of the fence just ahead, where sat the jug of cold water,
+ with the Revolutionary musket leaning against the rails. The crows were so
+ annoying that the double-loaded weapon was kept ready to be used against
+ the pests when they ventured too near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "See dar, uncle!" said Rube in a scared voice. The old man also ceased
+ work, adjusted his iron-rimmed spectacles, and looked toward the fence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Within a few feet of where the flint lock musket inclined against the
+ rails, a yellow dog was trying to push his way through. Watching his
+ efforts for a few minutes, the elder said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rube, I wish we had de gun; dat dog ain't peaceable."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He am mad; dis ain't de place fur us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Slip down to de fence and got de gun; dat's a good boy!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Gracious!" gasped the youth; "it am right dar by de dog."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He won't notice you; run behind him and be quick 'bout it, or he'll chaw
+ us bofe to def."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He'll chaw <i>me</i> suah if I goes near him," was the reply of Rube, who
+ felt little ardor for the task his relative urged upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ain't it better dat <i>one</i> ob us should go dead, dan bofe should be
+ obstinguished?" asked the uncle reproachfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dat 'pends which am de one to go dead; if it am <i>me</i>, it am better
+ for <i>you</i>, but I don't see whar <i>I'm</i> to come in; 'spose you see
+ wheder you can got de gun&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Dar he comes!" whispered Uncle Pete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sure enough the cur, having twisted his body between the rails, began
+ trotting toward the couple that were watching him with such interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was good reason for fear, since the canine was afflicted with the
+ rabies in the worst form. He showed no froth at the jaws, for animals thus
+ affected do not, but his eyes were fiery, his mouth dry, the consuming
+ fever burning up all moisture. He moaned as if in pain, his torture
+ causing him to snap at everything in reach. He had bitten shrubbery,
+ branches, wood and other objects, and now made for the persons with the
+ purpose of using his teeth on them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Rube," said his uncle, "stand right whar you am! No use ob runnin', for
+ he'll cotch you; when he gets nigh 'nough bang him wid your hoe; if dat
+ don't fotch him, I'll gib him anoder whack and dat'll finish him suah."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Fate seemed to have ordered that the younger person should hold the van in
+ the peril, though he was tempted to take his place by his relative, so
+ that the attack of the dog should be met by both at the same instant. This
+ promised to be effective, but the time was too brief to permit any plan of
+ campaign.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The brute was already within a hundred yards of Rube, who, with his hoe
+ drawn back, as though it were a club, tried to calm his nerves for the
+ struggle. He would have fled, had he not known that that would draw
+ pursuit to himself. He was inclined to urge his uncle to join him in a
+ break for freedom, the two taking diverging routes. Since the canine could
+ not chase both at the same time, such a course was certain to save one,
+ but, inasmuch as the youth was at the front, he knew he must be the
+ victim, and the prospect of a mad dog nipping at his heels, with fangs
+ surcharged with one of the most fearful venoms known, was too terrifying
+ to be borne. He, therefore, braced himself, and, with a certain dignity
+ and courage, held his ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A dog suffering from the rabies often shows odd impulses. This one was
+ within fifty feet of Rube, when he turned at right angles and trotted
+ toward the other side of the cornfield.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Now's</i> your time, chile!" called Uncle Pete; "got de gun quick, and
+ if he comes back we'll be ready for him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the first suggestion that struck the nephew favorably, and he acted
+ upon it at once. The dog might change his mind again and return to the
+ attack, in which event no weapon could equal a loaded gun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As Rube ran with his broad-brimmed hat flapping in his eyes, he kept
+ glancing over his shoulder, to make sure the brute was not following him,
+ while his uncle held his position, with his hoe grasped and his eye fixed
+ on the animal, trotting between the hills of corn. He managed also to note
+ the action of his nephew, who was making good time, and whose progress
+ caused the hearts of the two to heat high with hope.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the fence ahead of the dog been open, doubtless he would have soon
+ passed out of sight; but, as if recalling his trouble in entering the
+ field, and possibly seeing his error in leaving two victims, he stopped
+ only an instant in front of the rails, when he turned and came at a
+ swifter gait than before, straight for Uncle Pete.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The latter stared a second or two and then shouted:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Quick, Rube! he means <i>me</i> dis time!" And he dashed off, not to join
+ his nephew, but to reach the side of the field opposite the nose of the
+ animal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the youth had his hands on the smoothbore musket and his
+ courage came back. He saw his uncle crashing over the hills, the picture
+ of dismay, while the dog rapidly gained on him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hey dar! hey dar!" shouted Rube, breaking into a run and trying to draw
+ attention to himself. But the brute only sped the faster. He was near the
+ middle of the procession, but gaining on the fugitive, who had thrown
+ aside his hoe, flung his hat to the ground, and was making better progress
+ than when he used to run races with the boys in his younger days.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fence was near and he strained every nerve. It looked as if man and
+ dog would reach it at the same moment, but the former put forth an extra
+ spurt and arrived a pace or two ahead, with the cur at his heels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rube, however, was not far to the rear. Seeing the crisis had come, he
+ stopped short, brought the musket to his shoulder, and, taking the best
+ aim he could, let fly with the whole load that clogged several inches of
+ the barrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He did not observe at the moment of pressing the trigger that his uncle
+ and the dog were in line, but it could have made no difference, since the
+ shot had to be made at that instant or not at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just as the weapon was fired, Uncle Pete with a great bound cleared the
+ fence, landing on his hands and knees; and, rolling over on his back,
+ kicked the air with such vigor that his shoes flew off, one after the
+ other, as if keeping time with his frenzied outcries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The yellow cur was scared, as a shark is sometimes driven off by the loud
+ splashing of a swimmer, and, though he leaped the fence, he wheeled again,
+ and, without harming the man, ran down the highway toward the Woodvale
+ school.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment after firing, Rube Johnson believed he was killed. The flint
+ shot a spark among the powder grains, there was a flash, a hiss, and then,
+ as the fire worked its way to the charge inside, the explosion came and he
+ toppled over, half stunned, with the gun flying a dozen feet away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But his fear for his relative brought him to his feet, and he hurried to
+ the old gentleman, who was climbing uncertainly to an upright posture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What's de matter?" asked Rube; "you ain't bit."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I know dat; I warn't yellin' on <i>dat</i> 'count."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What fur den?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You black rascal, you shot me instid ob de yaller dog."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lemme see," said Rube, turning his uncle round and scanning him from head
+ to foot.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I done pepper you purty well, uncle, but dare ain't any ob de slugs dat
+ hit yer&mdash;only de fine bird shot."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How many ob dem?" was the rueful question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't tink dar's more dan five or six hundred; Aunt Jemimer can gib her
+ spar time de next six weeks pickin' 'em out; she'll enj'y it, but dat shot
+ ob mine scared off de mad dog, and yer oughter be tankful to me, uncle,
+ all yer life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was recess at the Woodvale school, and the forty-odd boys and girls
+ were having a merry time on the playgrounds, which included the broad
+ highway. Within the building, Mr. Hobbs, the young teacher was busy
+ "setting copies," his only companion just then being Tod Clymer, a
+ pale-faced cripple, who, unable to take part in the sports of the other
+ boys, preferred to stay within doors and con his lessons, in which he was
+ always far in advance of the rest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A strange confusion outside caused him to raise his head and look through
+ the window near him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Mr. Hobbs," he said, "there's a mad dog!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The teacher started up, and saw the yellow cur running about the grounds,
+ snapping at the children, while a couple of boys had already raised the
+ fearful cry, and there was a scattering in all directions. Although
+ without any weapon, the instructor was on the point of hurrying out to the
+ help of the children, when he observed the canine coming toward the outer
+ door. He tried to close it in his face, but the brute was too quick and
+ was inside before he could be stopped. He made for the second door,
+ leading into the session-room, but, in this instance, the teacher slammed
+ it shut just in time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of going out the dog slunk into the entry and crawled under a
+ bench, so nearly behind the outer door that he was invisible to any one
+ beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mr. Hobbs," said Tod Clymer a moment later, "will you please help me out
+ of the window?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think you are safer here," replied the teacher, "for he cannot reach
+ you, but you will not be able to get away from him outside."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I want to leave, please, very much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a strange request, and the teacher waited some minutes before
+ complying, but the heart of the lame boy was so set upon it, that he
+ finally assisted him to the window furthest from where the dog was
+ crouching, gently lifted him down to the ground, and then passed his
+ crutches to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now, Tod," said he kindly, "don't tarry a moment, for there's no saying
+ how soon he will be outside again. The other children are away, but you
+ cannot run like them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you," replied Tod, who never forgot to be courteous, as he
+ carefully adjusted the collars of his crutches under his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hobbs motioned from the window for several of the boys to keep off.
+ With a natural curiosity, they were stealing closer to the building, in
+ the hope of finding out what the rabid dog was doing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The teacher, seeing his gestures were understood, turned back, when to his
+ surprise, he noticed the top of Tom Clymer's straw hat, as it slowly rose
+ and sank, moving along the front of the building toward the front door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of hurrying off, as he should have done, the lad was making his
+ way toward the very spot where the dreadful animal was crouching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, Tod, what are you doing?" called Mr. Hobbs through the open window;
+ "you will surely be bitten."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instead of replying or heeding the words, the lad turned his pale face
+ toward his friend and shook his head, as a warning for him to make no
+ noise. Then he resumed his advance to the open outer door, doing so with
+ great care and stealth, as if afraid of being heard by the brute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The entrance to the old Woodvale school building was reached by two steps,
+ consisting of the same number of broad high stones worn smooth by the feet
+ of the hundreds of children that had trod them times without number. To
+ make his way into the entry where the pupils hung their hats and bonnets
+ on the double rows of pegs, Tod had to move slowly and carefully use his
+ crutches. Being tipped with iron he could not set them down on the smooth
+ stones without causing noise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he acted without hesitation. The teacher read his purpose and knew it
+ was useless to try to check him. He leaned his head out of the window and
+ held his breath, while he watched him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tod never faltered, though none could have understood the danger he ran
+ better than he. He had a brother and sister among the children that had
+ scattered in such haste before the snapping cur, and who were gathering
+ again around the building despite the warning gesture of the teacher.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He could not know whether they had all escaped or not, but he was sure
+ that if the dog came forth again, more than one of them must suffer, and
+ in those days there was no Pasteur with his wonderful cure to whom the
+ afflicted ones could be taken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tod did not tremble, though it seemed to him the brute must hear the
+ tumultuous throbbing of his heart and rush forth. Puny as was his
+ strength, he meant that, if he did so, he would steady himself on his one
+ support, and grasping the other with both hands, strike the dog with might
+ and main. It is doubtful whether the blow would have stunned the dog, for
+ the little fellow's confidence in himself was greater than his bodily
+ powers warranted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the moment he rested the end of the crutch on the smooth surface of the
+ second stone, it slipped, and only by a strong wrench did he save himself
+ from falling. The noise was heard by the animal, who was not six feet
+ distant, and he emitted another moan, which can never be forgotten by
+ those that have heard it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Certain that the cur was about to rush forth, Tod steadied himself on the
+ single crutch, and, reversing the other, held it firmly in his weak hands.
+ He knew the shuffling sound was caused by the animal moving: uneasily
+ about the entry, and it was strange he did not burst through the open
+ door. But he did not do so, and, like a flash, the cripple shifted his
+ weapon in place under his shoulder. Then, with the same coolness he had
+ shown from the first, he reached his hand forward and grasped the latch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The smart pull he gave, however, did not stir it. It resisted the effort,
+ as though it was fastened in position. If such were the fact, his scheme
+ was futile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Setting down both crutches, Tod now leaned against the jamb to prevent
+ himself from falling, seized the handle with both hands, and drew back
+ suddenly and with all his might. This time the door yielded and was
+ closed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As it did so, the rabid animal flung himself against it with a violence
+ that threatened to carry it off its hinges, but it remained firm and he
+ was a prisoner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are a hero!" called the teacher in a voice tremulous with suppressed
+ emotion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess we've got him fast, but look out, Mr. Hobbs, that he doesn't
+ reach you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think there is little danger of that," said the other, looking
+ anxiously at the inner door, "but we must get help to dispose of him
+ before he can do further injury."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time, so many of the children had come back to the playgrounds
+ that several of those living near were sent home for assistance. It
+ quickly arrived; for Reuben Johnson and his uncle lost no time in
+ spreading the news, and three young men, each with a loaded gun, appeared
+ on the scene, eager to dispose of the dangerous animal. The latter was at
+ such disadvantage that this was done without trouble or risk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Providentially none of the children had been bitten, though more than one
+ underwent a narrow escape. Such animals as had felt the fangs of the rabid
+ cur were slain, and thus no harm resulted from the brief run of the brute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ OVERREACHED.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Bushrod, or "Bush" Wyckoff was only twelve years old when he went to work
+ for Zeph Ashton, who was not only a crusty farmer, but one of the meanest
+ men in the country, and his wife was well fitted to be the life partner of
+ such a parsimonious person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had no children of their own, and had felt the need for years of a
+ willing, nimble-footed youngster to do the odd chores about the house,
+ such as milking cows, cutting and bringing in wood, running of errands,
+ and the scores of odd little jobs which are easy enough for boys, but
+ sorely try the stiff and rheumatic limbs of a man in the decline of life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bush was a healthy little fellow&mdash;not very strong for his years, but
+ quick of movement, bright-witted, willing, and naturally a general
+ favorite. The misfortunes which suddenly overtook his home roused the
+ keenest sympathy of his neighbors. His father was a merchant in New York,
+ who went to and from the metropolis each week day morning and evening, to
+ his pleasant little home in New Jersey. One day his lifeless body was
+ brought thither, and woe and desolation came to the happy home. He was
+ killed in a railway accident.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The blow was a terrible one, and for weeks it seemed as if his stricken
+ widow would follow him across the dark river; but her Christian fortitude
+ and her great love for their only child sustained her in her awful grief,
+ and she was even able to thank her Heavenly Father that her dear boy was
+ spared to her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But how true it is that misfortunes rarely come singly. Her husband had
+ amassed a competency sufficient to provide comfortably for those left
+ behind; but his confidence in his fellow-men was wofully betrayed. He was
+ one of the bondsmen of a public official who made a hasty departure to
+ Canada, one evening, leaving his business in such a shape that his
+ securities were compelled to pay fifty thousand dollars. Two others were
+ associated with Mr. Wyckoff, and with the aid of their tricky lawyers they
+ managed matters so that four-fifths of the loss fell upon the estate of
+ the deceased merchant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The result swept it away as utterly as were the dwellings in the Johnstown
+ Valley by the great flood. The widow and her boy left their home and moved
+ into a little cottage, with barely enough left to keep the wolf of
+ starvation from the door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was then that Bush showed the stuff of which he was made. He returned
+ one afternoon and told his mother, in his off-hand way, that he had
+ engaged to work through the summer months for Mr. Ashton, who not only
+ agreed to pay him six dollars a month, but would allow him to remain at
+ home over night, provided, of course, that he was there early each morning
+ and stayed late enough each day to attend to all the chores.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tears filled the eyes of the mother as she pressed her little boy to
+ her heart, and comprehended his self-sacrificing nature.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You are too young, my dear child, to do this; we have enough left to keep
+ us awhile, and I would prefer that you wait until you are older and
+ stronger."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, mother, I am old enough and strong enough now to do all that Mr.
+ Ashton wants me to do. He explained everything to me, and it won't be work
+ at all, but just fun."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, I hope you will find it so, but if he does not treat you kindly,
+ you must not stay one day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bush never complained to his mother, but he did find precious little fun
+ and plenty of the hardest kind of work. The miserly farmer bore down
+ heavily on his young shoulders. He and his wife seemed to be continually
+ finding extra labor for the lad. The little fellow was on hand each
+ morning, in stormy as well as in clear weather, at daybreak, ready and
+ willing to perform to the best of his ability whatever he was directed to
+ do. Several times he became so weak and faint from the severe labor, that
+ the frugal breakfast he had eaten at home proved insufficient, and he was
+ compelled to ask for a few mouthfuls of food before the regular dinner
+ hour arrived. Although he always remained late, he was never invited to
+ stay to supper, Mr. Ashton's understanding being that the mid-day meal was
+ the only one to which the lad was entitled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for his love for his mother, Bush would have given up more than once.
+ His tasks were so severe and continuous that many a time he was hardly
+ able to drag himself homeward. Every bone in his body seemed to ache, and
+ neither his employer nor his wife ever uttered a pleasant or encouraging
+ word.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But no word of murmuring fell from his lips. He resolutely held back all
+ complaints, and crept away early to his couch under the plea that it was
+ necessary in order to be up betimes. The mother's heart was distressed
+ beyond expression, but she comforted herself with the fact that his term
+ of service was drawing to a close, and he would soon have all the rest and
+ play he wanted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Bush allowed his wages to stand until the first of September, when his
+ three months expired. He had counted on the pride and happiness that would
+ be his when he walked into the house and tossed the whole eighteen dollars
+ in his mother's lap. How her eyes would sparkle, and how proud he would
+ be!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Lemme see," said the skinflint, when settling day arrived; "I was to give
+ you four dollars a month, warn't I?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was six," replied Bush, respectfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That warn't my understanding, but we'll let it go at that; I've allers
+ been too gin'rous, and my heart's too big for my pocket. Lemme see."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He uttered the last words thoughtfully, as he took his small account-book
+ from his pocket, and began figuring with the stub of a pencil. "Three
+ months at six dollars will be eighteen dollars."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir; that's right."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't interrupt me, young man," sternly remarked the farmer, frowning at
+ him over his spectacles. "The full amount is eighteen dollars&mdash;Kerrect&mdash;L&mdash;em&mdash;m&mdash;e
+ see; you have et seven breakfasts here; at fifty cents apiece that is
+ three dollars and a half. Then, l&mdash;em&mdash;m&mdash;e see; you was
+ late eleven times, and I've docked you twenty-five cents for each time;
+ that makes two dollars and seventy-five cents."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Inasmuch as Bush's wages amounted hardly to twenty-five cents a day, it
+ must be admitted that this was drawing it rather strong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "L&mdash;em&mdash;m&mdash;e see," continued Mr. Ashton, wetting the pencil
+ stub between his lips, and resuming his figuring; "your board amounts to
+ three dollars and a half; your loss of time to two seventy-five; that
+ makes six and a quarter, which bein' took from eighteen dollars, leaves
+ 'leven seventy-five. There you are!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke, he extended his hand, picked up a small canvas bag from the
+ top of his old-fashioned writing-desk, and tossed it to the dumfounded
+ boy. The latter heard the coins inside jingle, as it fell in his lap, and,
+ as soon as he could command his voice, he swallowed the lump in his
+ throat, and faintly asked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Is that&mdash;is that right, Mr. Ashton?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Count it and see for yourself," was the curt response.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not exactly what Bush meant, but he mechanically unfastened the
+ cord around the throat of the little bag, tumbled the coins out in his hat
+ and slowly counted them. They footed up exactly eleven dollars and
+ seventy-five cents, proving that Mr. Ashton's figuring was altogether
+ unnecessary, and that he had arranged the business beforehand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Bush was examining the coins, his heart gave a sudden quick throb.
+ He repressed all signs of the excitement he felt, however.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How do you find it?" asked the man, who had never removed his eyes from
+ him, "Them coins have been in the house more'n fifty year&mdash;that is,
+ some of 'em have, but they're as good as if they's just from the mint, and
+ bein' all coin, you can never lose anything by the bank bustin'."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is correct," said Bush.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Ar' you satisfied?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Then sign this receipt, and we're square."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lad sat down at the desk and attached his name in a neat round hand to
+ the declaration that he had received payment in full for his services from
+ Mr. Zephaniah Ashton, up to the first of September of the current year.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "This is all mine, Mr. Ashton?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course&mdash;what do you mean by axin' that?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nothing; good-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good-day," grunted the miser, turning his back, as a hint for him to
+ leave&mdash;a hint which Bush did not need, for he was in a tumult of
+ excitement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That is the queerest thing that ever happened," he said to himself when
+ he reached the public highway, and began hurrying along the road in the
+ direction of Newark. "If he had paid me my full wages I would have told
+ him, but all these are mine, and I shall sell them; won't Professor
+ Hartranft be delighted, but not half as much as mother and I will be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening Mr. Ashton and his wife had just finished their supper when
+ Professor Hartranft, a pleasant, refined-looking gentleman, knocked at
+ their door.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wish to inquire," said he, after courteously saluting the couple,
+ "whether you have any old coins in the house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," was the surly response of the farmer, "we don't keep 'em."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But you <i>had</i> quite a collection."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had 'leven dollars and seventy-five cents' worth, but I paid 'em out
+ this mornin'."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "To a boy named Bushrod Wyckoff?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yas."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They were given to him unreservedly?&mdash;that is, you renounce all
+ claim upon them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What the blazes ar' you drivin' at?" demanded the angry farmer. "I owed
+ him 'leven dollars and seventy-five cents for wages, and I paid him
+ purcisely that amount, and have his receipt in full. I'd like to know what
+ business it is of yours anyway."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now came the professor's triumph.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Young Wyckoff called at my office this afternoon, and I bought a number
+ of the coins from him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What!" exclaimed the amazed farmer, "you didn't pay him nothin' extra for
+ that rusty old money, did you? You must be crazy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I did, and shall make a handsome thing of it. For instance, among the
+ coins which you gave him was a copper penny, with a liberty cap, of 1793;
+ I paid Bush three dollars for that; I gave him twenty-five dollars for a
+ half dime coined in 1802; twenty dollars for a quarter dollar of 1827; the
+ same sum for a half dollar, fillet head, of 1796; and, what caps all, five
+ hundred dollars for a silver dollar of 1804. There are only five or six of
+ the latter in existence, and I shall sell this specimen for at least eight
+ hundred dollars. Mr. Ashton, sometimes a mean man overreaches himself, and
+ it looks as though you had made a mistake. I bid you good-day, sir."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The numismatist spoke the truth; and when the miserly old farmer realized
+ how completely he had turned the tables on himself, it is enough to say
+ that his feelings may be "better imagined than described."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0040" id="link2H_4_0040"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A BATTLE IN THE AIR.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ One of the most interesting towns I ever visited is New Braunfels, Texas.
+ It was founded by a colony of Germans, and experienced the most
+ distressing trials during its early days; but it is now a picture of
+ thrift and industry. The cowboy who attempts to ride through New
+ Braunfels, with his revolvers displayed, is promptly pulled off his
+ mustang and compelled to pay a round fine for violating a city ordinance.
+ If he undertakes to "kick," it won't help him a bit, and probably will
+ increase the penalty imposed. Our German cousins propose to run that town
+ to suit themselves, and they succeed quite well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rivers of Texas are subjected to violent rises, often as great as
+ twenty feet in an hour or less. Such sudden floods play havoc with the
+ bridges along the bank, but I noticed in riding into New Braunfels an
+ ingenious arrangement of the wooden structure by which, no matter how high
+ the stream may rise, the bridge accommodates itself, and floats on the
+ surface, while securely held from being carried away by the current.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But I set out to tell you a true incident of what happened a few years
+ since, to a bright, lively youngster, sixteen years old, who lives in New
+ Braunfels, and is brimful of pluck. His name is Lee Hemingway; he is an
+ orphan, and if his life is spared, he is certain to be heard from when he
+ reaches man's estate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Prof. McInery, the well-known naturalist, spent several weeks last spring
+ in the neighborhood of New Braunfels, hunting ornithological specimens for
+ his collection, and he offered fifty dollars to any one who would bring
+ him an eagle's nest, with living eaglets or with eggs in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Lee Hemingway learned of the offer, he determined to earn it. It was
+ rather early in the season for our emblematical birds to hatch their
+ young, but, by carefully watching a pair, he succeeded in finding where
+ their nest was made. It was on the summit of an almost insurmountable
+ bowlder, rising nearly a hundred and twenty-five feet in the valley of the
+ Guadaloupe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The bravest man might well shrink from attempting to scale the
+ perpendicular sides of this mass of rock, but as young Hemingway gazed
+ longingly up the side to the nest, he noticed that the stone had become
+ coated, in the course of time, with earth, which was covered with tangled
+ vines and stunted vegetation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe I can climb that," thought the sturdy lad, after scrutinizing
+ the herculean task, and watching one of the eagles soaring far above the
+ summit. "I think there is enough foothold, and I can use the vines to help
+ pull me up; but, if the eagles should catch me at it, they would make
+ music."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the birds that caused him more dread than the forty odd yards of
+ rock. We knew their fierce nature, and, if they discovered his designs
+ against their home, as they were almost certain to do, they would assail
+ him with a fury that must be resistless in his cramped position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The professor advised him not to make the attempt, but the daring youth
+ had to earn his own living, and the prize of fifty dollars was too
+ tempting to be resisted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>I'll do it</i>!" he exclaimed, after considering the question, "if you
+ will keep watch with your gun for the eagles."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course I'll do <i>that</i>," replied the professor, delighted with the
+ prospect of securing that which he had sought so long in vain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The preparations for the work were simple. With a basket, furnished with a
+ lid, slung to his back, in which to secure the eggs or eaglets, young
+ Hemingway began his laborious and dangerous ascent, while the professor,
+ gun in hand, watched him from the ground below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boy quickly proved the possession of unusual skill as a climber. With
+ the help of the vines he went steadily upward, hunting secure places for
+ his feet and testing every support before trusting his weight to it. Once
+ or twice, the professor thought the lad had made a mistake and was on the
+ point of paying the penalty, but he never faltered nor slipped. Higher and
+ higher he ascended until at last the feat was accomplished, and the very
+ summit reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His heart throbbed with pleasure when he discovered two young eagles in
+ the nest. They were no more than a couple of days old, and he had no
+ trouble in placing them and a portion of the nest in the basket, which was
+ again strapped to his back, and, after a brief rest, he started to
+ descend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nothing was seen of the parent eagles, and he was congratulating himself
+ on his good fortune, when bang went the professor's gun. At the same
+ moment a shadow flitted over his head, and looking up he saw that instead
+ of one, both of the eagles had arrived.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lad had not descended half-way and the professor's shot did not harm
+ either of them. They landed on the summit of the rocks, and, if a bird can
+ feel astonishment, they must have felt it when they looked around and
+ discovered nothing of their home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the great American bird is not the one to submit tamely to such an
+ outrage. They began an immediate investigation, and, when they caught
+ sight of a boy scrambling down the side of the rocks with a basket
+ strapped to his back, from which came a number of familiar squeak-like
+ chirpings, they had no trouble in understanding matters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The style in which they went for that same boy was a sight to behold.
+ There was no hesitation or maneuvering; but, with outstretched wings and
+ hoarse screeches, they dashed toward him like a couple of cyclones. The
+ youth saw that he was caught in a desperate fix, for he had no weapons,
+ and had to cling to the vines with one hand to save himself from being
+ dashed to the ground below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He ducked his head to ward off their beaks and talons from his eyes, and
+ tried hard to beat them back with his free hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was impossible. Their beaks struck him repeatedly in the head,
+ bringing blood, which flowed over his face and almost blinded him, while
+ they savagely buffeted him with their great wings, until he was in danger
+ of being knocked from his position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, the alarmed professor could do nothing for his young friend.
+ The eagles kept so close to him, that, if he tried, he was as likely to
+ hit one as the other. He walked back and forth, on the alert for such a
+ chance, and fortunately had not long to wait. One of the furious birds,
+ circled off a few feet, as if to gather impetus for a decisive charge,
+ when, taking a quick aim, the gentleman fired.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shot was unerring and killed the female. She fluttered into a large
+ sapling that sprouted from a large crevice in the rocks, about eight feet
+ above the boy's head, and lay motionless. Although nearly blinded by
+ blood, young Hemingway now attempted a feat which he was convinced offered
+ the only means of saving his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He drew himself up to the foot of the tree, and once there, braced himself
+ firmly with his feet, and tied his handkerchief around his forehead, to
+ keep the blood out of his eyes. Seizing the dead bird by the feet, he
+ swung it around with might and main and struck the male, which had
+ continued beating him incessantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was a strange weapon&mdash;a dead eagle against a live one, and the
+ boy's constrained position prevented his using it with much effect. So
+ lacking, indeed, were the blows in force, that the male flew directly at
+ his face. The sorely beset lad dropped the dead bird and fastened both
+ hands around the throat of his assailant. The latter fought desperately,
+ but the young hero never released his grip, until it ceased its struggles.
+ Then he flung it from him, and it tumbled downward to the professor's
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This gentleman had done his best to help his young friend, but was unable
+ to do so. The lad, after resting awhile, picked his way down to the
+ ground, where his feet had hardly touched when he fainted in the
+ professor's arms. He soon rallied, however, though his wounds were so
+ severe that he was obliged to keep his bed for several weeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two eaglets were found uninjured, and were safely carried to the
+ professor's home, as were the bodies of the dead birds. They were mounted
+ by Professor McInery, who, in consideration of the danger undergone by the
+ boy, and the two extra birds, presented Lee with $100, and no one will
+ deny that the money was well earned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0041" id="link2H_4_0041"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ WHO SHALL EXPLAIN IT?
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Let me begin by saying that I was never a believer in signs, omens, or the
+ general superstitions which, it must be admitted, influence most people to
+ a greater or less degree. I have been the thirteenth guest at more than
+ one table, without my appetite being affected; I have tipped over my
+ salt-cellar without a twinge of fear; I have never turned aside to avoid
+ passing under a leaning ladder, and I do not care a jot whether the first
+ glimpse of the new moon is over my right or left shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I had a little boy Bob, who was fourteen years old on the last anniversary
+ of American independence. Being our only son, his mother and myself held
+ him close to our hearts. In fact, I am sure no little fellow was ever
+ regarded with more affectionate love than our Bob. The painful story
+ which, with much hesitation, I have set out to tell is one, therefore,
+ that no member of our little family can ever forget.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ We always tried to act the part of sensible parents toward our little boy.
+ He never stepped inside of a school-house until he was seven years old,
+ and, when he did so, it was to stay only a brief while. It was six months
+ before he became acquainted with every letter of the alphabet, and no
+ youngster of his years ever ruined more clothing than he. The destruction
+ of shoes, hats, and trousers was enough to bankrupt many a father, and it
+ often provoked a protest from his mother. I have seen him, within a half
+ hour after having his face scrubbed until it shone like an apple, present
+ himself in such ragged attire and with so soiled a countenance, that it
+ took a second glance to identify him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And yet, as I sit here writing by the evening lamp, I am glad to recall
+ that I never scolded Bob. I would have been sadly neglectful of my duty
+ had I failed to reprove and advise him, and I am sure he honestly strove
+ to obey my wishes; but the sum and substance of it all was, he couldn't do
+ it. He was a vigorous little fellow, overrunning with animal spirits, high
+ health, and mischief; and it was a pleasure to me to see him laying the
+ firm foundation of a lusty constitution, which, in later years, could
+ laugh at disease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And then when he did take a start in his studies, he advanced with a speed
+ that astonished his teacher. At the age of twelve there was not a girl or
+ boy in school (and some of them were several years older than he) who
+ could hold his own with him. I took some credit to myself for all this,
+ for I believed it was largely due to the common-sense I used in his early
+ youth. The foundation was strong and secure, and the building erected upon
+ it was upon solid rock.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the last two or three years I suffered from a great fear. Between
+ the school-house and our home was a mill-pond, which in many places was
+ fully a dozen feet deep. I knew what a temptation this was to the boys
+ during the long, sultry summer weather, and there was not a day when a
+ dozen youngsters, more or less, were not frolicking and splashing in it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One afternoon, when I sauntered thither, I found fully a score of them in
+ the height of enjoyment, and the wildest and most reckless fellow was my
+ Bob. When he observed me standing on the shore he was so anxious to
+ astonish me that he ventured into the water up to his chin, I shouted to
+ him to come to shore, for he was in fearful peril, and it needed only a
+ few inches further advance for him to drown before help could reach him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Bob," said I, in a voice and manner that could not be mistaken, "if you
+ ever do that again I'll whip you within an inch of your life."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I won't, pop," he replied, in such meek tones that, parent-like, my heart
+ reproached me at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Now," I added more gently, "every boy ought to learn to swim, and until
+ he is able to do so, he should keep out of deep water. If you will promise
+ me that you will never venture into a depth above your waist until a good
+ swimmer, you may bathe here; otherwise you shall never come near it."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He gave me his promise, and, telling him that he had been in the water
+ long enough for that afternoon, I asked him to dress himself and come home
+ with me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I felt that I had been weak. I ought to have forbidden him ever to enter
+ the mill-pond unless in my company, and thus that which followed never
+ could have occurred. I did not tell his mother what had taken place, for I
+ knew she would insist on a strict prohibition of his aimless swimming
+ efforts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To tell the truth, there were two reasons why I did not forbid Bob to
+ enter the mill-pond. I knew it would be the most cruel kind of punishment,
+ and, I may as well confess it, I didn't believe the boy would obey me if
+ he gave the pledge. The temptation was too strong to be resisted. Alas!
+ how often our affection closes our eyes to the plainest duty!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now I have reached a point which prompts me to ask the question at the
+ head of this sketch, "Who Shall Explain It?" I have my own theory, which I
+ shall submit, with no little diffidence, later on.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was on Saturday afternoon, the ninth of last August, that I became a
+ victim to a greater depression of spirits than I had known for years. I
+ felt nothing of it during the forenoon, but it began shortly after the
+ midday meal and became more oppressive with each passing minute. I sat
+ down at my desk and wrote for a short time. I continually sighed and drew
+ deep inspirations, which gave me no relief. It was as if a great and
+ increasing weight were resting on my chest. Had I been superstitious, I
+ would have declared that I was on the eve of some dreadful calamity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Writing became so difficult and distasteful that I threw down my pen,
+ sprang from my chair, and began rapidly pacing up and down the room. My
+ wife had gone to the city that morning to visit her relatives, and was not
+ to return until the following day; so I was alone, with only two servants
+ in the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I couldn't keep the thoughts of Bob out of my mind. Saturday being a
+ holiday, I had allowed him to go off to spend the afternoon as he chose;
+ and, as it was unusually warm, there was little doubt where and how he was
+ spending it. He would strike a bee-line for that shady mill-pond, and they
+ would spend hours plashing in its cool and delicious depths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I looked at the clock; it was a few minutes past five, and Bob ought to
+ have been home long ago. What made him so late?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My fear was growing more intense every minute. The boy was in my mind
+ continually to the exclusion of everything else. Despite all my philosophy
+ and rigid common-sense, the conviction was fastening on me that something
+ dreadful had befallen him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what was that something? He had been drowned in the mill-pond. I
+ glanced out of the window, half expecting to see a party bearing the
+ lifeless body homeward. Thank Heaven, I was spared that woful sight, but I
+ discerned something else that sent a misgiving pang through me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Mrs. Clarkson, our nearest neighbor, rapidly approaching, as if the
+ bearer of momentous tidings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "She has come to tell me that Bob is drowned," I gasped, as my heart
+ almost ceased its beating.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I met her on the threshold, with a calmness of manner which belied the
+ tumult within. Greeting her courteously, I invited her inside, stating
+ that my wife was absent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I thank you," she said, "but it is not worth while. I thought I ought to
+ come over and tell you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell me what?" I inquired, swallowing the lump in my throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, about the awful dream I had last night."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I was able to smile faintly, and was partly prepared for what was coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am ready to hear it, Mrs. Clarkson."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, you know it was Friday night, and I never had a dream on a Friday
+ night that didn't come true&mdash;never! Where's Bob?" she abruptly asked,
+ peering around me, as if to learn whether he was in the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's off somewhere at play."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, Mr. Havens, you'll never see him alive again!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Although startled in spite of myself, I was indignant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Have you any positive knowledge, Mrs. Clarkson, on the matter?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Certainly I have; didn't I just tell you about my dream?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "A fudge for your dream!" I exclaimed, impatiently; "I don't believe in
+ any such nonsense."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I pity you," she said, though why I should be pitied on that account is
+ hard to understand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "But what was your dream?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I saw your Bob brought home drowned. Oh, I can see him now," she added,
+ speaking rapidly, and making a movement as if to wring her hands; "his
+ white face&mdash;his dripping hair and clothes&mdash;his half-closed eyes&mdash;it
+ was dreadful; it will break his mother's heart&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Clarkson, did you come here to tell me <i>that</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, of course I did; I felt it was my duty to prepare you&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Good day," I answered, sharply, closing the door and hastily entering my
+ study.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had given me a terrible shock. My feelings were in a tumult difficult
+ to describe. My philosophy, my self-command, my hard sense and scepticism
+ were scattered to the winds, I had fought against the awful fear, and was
+ still fighting when my neighbor called; but her visit had knocked every
+ prop from beneath me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She had hardly disappeared when I was hurrying through the woods by the
+ shortest route to the mill-pond. I knew Bob had been there, and all that I
+ expected to find was his white, ghastly body in the cold, cruel depths.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Oh, my boy!" I wailed, "I am to blame for your death! I never should have
+ permitted you to run into such danger. I should have gone with you and
+ taught you to swim&mdash;I can never forgive myself for this&mdash;never,
+ never, never. It will break your mother's heart&mdash;mine is already
+ broken&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "<i>Pop, just watch me</i>!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Surely that was the voice of my boy! I turned my head like a flash, and
+ there he was, with his hands together over his head, and in the act of
+ diving into the mill-pond. Down he went with a splash, his head quickly
+ reappearing, as he flirted the hair and water out of his eyes, and struck
+ out for the middle of the pond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are you doing, Bob?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You just wait and see, pop."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what did that young rascal do but swim straight across that pond and
+ then turn about and swim back again, without pausing for breath? Not only
+ that, but, when in the very deepest portion, he dove, floated on his back,
+ trod water, and kicked up his heels like a frisky colt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How's that, pop? You didn't know I could swim, did you?" he asked, as he
+ came smilingly up the bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I had no idea of such a thing," I replied, my whole being fluttering with
+ gratitude and delight; "I think I'll have to reward you for that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And when he had donned his clothes, and we started homeward, I slipped a
+ twisted bank-bill into his hands. I am really ashamed to tell its
+ denomination, and Bob and I never hinted anything about it to his mother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now as to the question, Who shall explain it? I think I can. I have a
+ weakness for boiled beef and cabbage. The meat is healthful enough, but,
+ as every one knows, or ought to know, cabbage, although one of the most
+ digestible kinds of food when raw, is just the opposite in a boiled state.
+ I knew the consequences of eating it, but in the absence of my good wife
+ that day I disposed of so much that I deserved the oppressive indigestion
+ that followed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That fact, I am convinced, fully explains the dreadful "presentiment"
+ which made me so miserable all the afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On our way home we passed the house of Mrs. Clarkson. I could not forbear
+ stopping and ringing her bell. She answered it in person.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Mrs. Clarkson, Bob is on his way home from swimming, and I thought I
+ would let him hear about that wonderful dream&mdash;"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the door was slammed in my face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I said at the opening of this sketch that I "had" a boy named Bob. God be
+ thanked, I have him yet, and no lustier, brighter, or more manly youth
+ ever lived, and my prayer is that he may be spared to soothe the declining
+ years of his father and mother, whose love for him is beyond the power of
+ words to tell.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0042" id="link2H_4_0042"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ A FOOL OR A GENIUS.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0025" id="link2HCH0025"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Josiah Hunter sat on his porch one summer afternoon, smoking his pipe,
+ feeling dissatisfied, morose and sour on account of his only son Tim, who,
+ he was obliged to confess to himself, gave every indication of proving a
+ disappointment to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hunter was owner of the famous Brereton Quarry &amp; Stone Works,
+ located about a mile above the thriving village of Brereton, on the
+ eastern bank of the Castaran river, and at a somewhat greater distance
+ below the town of Denville. The quarry was a valuable one and the owner
+ was in comfortable circumstances, with the prospect of acquiring
+ considerable more of a fortune out of the yield of excellent building
+ stone. The quarry had been worked for something like ten years, and the
+ discovery that he had such a fine deposit on his small farm was in the
+ minds of his neighbors equivalent to the finding of a gold mine, for as
+ the excavation proceeded, the quality of the material improved and Mr.
+ Hunter refused an offer from a company which, but for the stone, would
+ have been a very liberal price for the whole farm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hunter had been a widower ever since his boy was three years old, and
+ the youth was now fourteen. His sister Maggie was two years his senior,
+ and they were deeply attached to each other. Maggie was a daughter after
+ her father's own heart,&mdash;one of those rare, sensible girls who cannot
+ be spoiled by indulgence, who was equally fond of her parent and who stood
+ unflinchingly by her brother in the little differences between father and
+ son, which, sad to say, were becoming more frequent and serious with the
+ passing weeks and months. It is probable that the affection of the parent
+ for the daughter prevented him from ever thinking of marrying again, for
+ she was a model housekeeper, and he could not bear the thought of seeing
+ anyone come into the family and usurp, even in a small degree, her
+ functions and place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mr. Hunter was getting on in years, and nothing was more natural than that
+ he should wish and plan that Tim should become his successor in the
+ development of the valuable quarry that was not likely to give out for
+ many a year to come. But the boy showed no liking for the business. He was
+ among the best scholars in the village school, fond of play and so well
+ advanced in his studies that his parent determined to begin his practical
+ business training in earnest. He looked upon a college education as a
+ waste of so many years, taken from the most precious part of a young man's
+ life, and it must be said that Tim himself showed no wish to attend any
+ higher educational institution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tim had assisted about the quarry, more or less for several years. Of
+ course he was too young to do much in the way of manual labor, but there
+ were many errands that he ran, beside helping to keep his father's
+ accounts. He wrote an excellent hand, was quick in figures and had such a
+ command of language that all his parent had to do was to tell him the
+ substance of the letter he wished written, to have the boy put it in
+ courteous but pointed and clear form. The elder had never detected an
+ error in the computations of the younger, who had no trouble at all when
+ the operations included difficult fractions.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this was good in its way, but it could not be denied that Tim had no
+ liking for the business itself. His father had told him repeatedly that he
+ must prepare himself for the active management of the stone works, and
+ that to do so required something more than quickness in figures and skill
+ in letter writing. But it was in vain. Tim was never at the works unless
+ by direct command of his parent, and seized the first opportunity to get
+ away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No person can succeed in a business which he dislikes," remarked Mr.
+ Hunter to Maggie who on this summer afternoon sat on the front porch,
+ plying her deft needle, while the waning twilight lasted, with Bridget
+ inside preparing the evening meal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I think that is true, father," was her gentle reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And that boy hates the stone business and I can't understand why he
+ should."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Isn't it also true, father, that one cannot control his likes and
+ dislikes? Tim has told me he can't bear the thought of spending his life
+ in getting out great blocks of stone and trimming them into shape for
+ building. He said he wished he could feel as you do, but there's no use of
+ his trying."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fudge!" was the impatient exclamation; "what business has a boy of his
+ years to talk or think about what sort of business he prefers? It is my
+ place to select his future avocation and his to accept it without a
+ growl."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He will do that, father."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course he will," replied the parent with a compression of his thin
+ lips and a flash of his eyes; "when I yield to a boy fourteen years old,
+ it will be time to shift me off to the lunatic asylum."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why, then, are you displeased, since he will do what you wish and do it
+ without complaint?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I am displeased because he is dissatisfied and has no heart in his work.
+ He shows no interest in anything relating to the quarries and it is
+ becoming worse every day with him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Didn't he help this forenoon?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Yes, because I told him he must be on hand as soon as he was through
+ breakfast and not leave until he went to dinner."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Did you say nothing about his working this afternoon?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I left that out on purpose to test him."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What was the result?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I haven't seen hide or hair of him since; I suppose he is off in the
+ woods or up in his room, reading or figuring on some invention. Do you
+ know where he is?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He has been in his room almost all the afternoon and is there now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Doing what?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess you have answered that question," replied Maggie laying aside her
+ sewing because of the increasing shadows, and looking across at her father
+ with a smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "That's what makes me lose all patience. What earthly good is it for him
+ to sit in his room drawing figures of machines he dreams of making, or
+ scribbling over sheets of paper? If this keeps up much longer, he will
+ take to writing poetry, and the next thing will be smoking cigarettes and
+ then his ruin will be complete."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maggie's clear laughter rang out on the summer air. She was always
+ overflowing with spirits and the picture drawn by her parent and the look
+ of profound disgust on his face as he uttered his scornful words stirred
+ her mirth beyond repression.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What are you laughing at?" he demanded, turning toward her, though
+ without any anger in his tones, for he could never feel any emotion of
+ that nature toward such a daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It was the idea of Tim writing poetry or rhyme and smoking cigarettes.
+ I'll guarantee that he will never do either."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor anything else, you may as well add."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'll guarantee that if he lives he will do a good many things that will
+ be better than getting out and trimming stone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was not the first time that Maggie had intimated the same faith,
+ without going into particulars or giving any idea upon what she based that
+ faith. The parent looked sharply at her and asked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What do you mean? Explain yourself."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the daughter was not yet ready to do so. She had her thoughts or
+ dreams or whatever they might be, but was not prepared as yet to share
+ them with her parent. He was not in the mood, and for her to tell all that
+ was in her mind would be to provoke an outburst that would be painful to
+ the last degree. She chose for the present to parry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "How can I know, father, what ambition Tim has? He is still young enough
+ to change that ambition, whatever it may be."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "And he's <i>got</i> to change it, as sure as he lives! I am tired of his
+ fooling; he is fourteen years old, big, strong, and healthy; if he would
+ take hold of the work and show some interest in it, he would be able in a
+ couple of years to take charge of the whole business and give me a rest,
+ but he is frittering away valuable time until I've made up my mind to
+ permit it no longer."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parent knocked the bowl of his pipe against the column of the porch
+ and shook his head in a way that showed he meant every word he said.
+ Maggie was troubled, for she had feared an outbreak between him and Tim,
+ and it seemed to be impending. She dreaded it more than death, for any
+ violence by her beloved parent toward her equally beloved brother would
+ break her heart. That parent, naturally placid and good-natured, had a
+ frightful temper when it was aroused. She could never forget that day when
+ in a quarrel with one of his employes, he came within a hair of killing
+ the man and for the time was a raging tiger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one appeal that Maggie knew had never failed her, though she
+ feared the day would come when even that would lose its power. She
+ reserved it as the last recourse. When she saw her father rise to his
+ feet, and in the gathering gloom noted the grim resolute expression on his
+ face, she knew the crisis had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tell him to come down-stairs; we may as well have this matter settled
+ here and now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Father," she said in a low voice of the sweetest tenderness, "you will
+ not forget what he did two years ago?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parent stood motionless, silent for a minute, and then gently resumed
+ his seat, adding a moment later,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I can never forget that; never mind calling him just now."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And what it was that Tim Hunter did "two years ago" I must now tell you.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Bear in mind that Tim Hunter was twelve years old at the time, being the
+ junior by two years of his sister Maggie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the day which I have in mind, he had spent the forenoon fishing, and
+ brought home a mess of trout for which he had whipped one of the mountain
+ brooks, and which furnished the family with the choicest sort of a meal.
+ The father complimented him on his skill, for that was before the parent's
+ patience had been so sorely tried by the indifference of the lad toward
+ the vocation to which the elder meant he should devote his life. He left
+ the lad at liberty to spend the rest of the day as he chose, and, early in
+ the afternoon, he proposed to his sister that they should engage in that
+ old game of "jackstones" with which I am sure you are familiar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Years ago the country lads and lassies generally used little bits of
+ stones, instead of scraggly, jagged pieces of iron, with which they amuse
+ themselves in these days. Tim had seen some of the improved jackstones;
+ and, borrowing one from a playmate, he made a clay mould from it, into
+ which he poured melted lead, repeating the operation until he had five as
+ pretty and symmetrically formed specimens as one could wish. It was with
+ these in his hands, that he led the way to the barn for a game between
+ himself and sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The big, spacious structure was a favorite place for spending their
+ leisure hours. The hard, seedy floor, with the arching rafters overhead
+ could not be improved for their purpose. The shingles were so far aloft
+ that the shade within was cool on sultry summer days, and it was the
+ pleasantest kind of music to hear the rain drops patter on the roof and
+ the wind whistle around the eaves and corners. The mow where the hay was
+ stored was to the left, as you entered the door, and under that were the
+ stalls where the horses munched their dinner and looked solemnly through
+ the opening over the mangers at the two children engaged at play. Between
+ where they sat and the rafters, the space was open.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maggie took her seat in the middle of the floor, and her brother placed
+ himself opposite. Before doing so, he stepped to the nearest stall and
+ picked up a block of wood six inches in diameter and two feet in length.
+ This he laid on the floor and seated himself upon it, tossing the
+ jackstones to his sister to begin the game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was his superior, for her pretty taper fingers were more nimble than
+ his sturdy ones, and, unless she handicapped herself by certain
+ conditions, she invariably won in the contest of skill. She tossed them
+ one after the other, then two or three or more at a time, snatching up the
+ others from the floor and going through the varied performance with an
+ easy perfection that was the wonder of Tim. Once or twice, she purposely
+ missed some feat, but the alert lad was sure to detect it, and declared he
+ would not play unless she did her best, and, under his watchful eye, she
+ could not escape doing so. As I have said, the only way to equalize
+ matters was for her to handicap herself, and even then I am compelled to
+ say she was more often winner than loser.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sitting on the block of wood tipped up on one end, Tim kept his eyes on
+ the bits of metal, popping up in the air and softly dropping into the
+ extended palm, and wondered again why it was so hard for him to do that
+ which was so easy for her. Finally she made a slip, which looked honest,
+ and resigned the stones to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, you know that in playing this game, you ought to sit on the floor or
+ ground; for if your perch is higher, you are compelled to stoop further to
+ snatch up the pieces and your position is so awkward that it seriously
+ interferes with your success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very first scramble Tim made at the stones on the floor was not only a
+ failure, but resulted in a splinter catching under the nail of one of his
+ fingers. Maggie laughed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Why do you sit way up there?" she asked; "you can't do half as well as
+ when you are lower down like me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I guess you're right," he replied, as he pushed the block away and
+ imitated her. "I 'spose I'll catch the splinters just the same."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's no need of it; you mustn't claw the stones, but move your hand
+ gently, just as I do. Now, watch me."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's a pity that no one else in the world is half as smart as you,"
+ replied the brother with fine irony, but without ill nature. "Ah, wasn't
+ that splendid?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Which remark was caused by the plainest kind of fluke on the part of
+ Maggie, who in her effort to instruct her brother, forgot one or two nice
+ points, which oversight was fatal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well," said she, "I didn't fill my fingers with splinters."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Nor with jackstones either; if I can't do any better than you I'm sure I
+ can't do any worse."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, Smarty, what are you waiting for?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For you to pay attention."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm doing that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With cool, careful steadiness, Tim set to work, and lo! he finished the
+ game without a break, performing the more difficult exploits with a skill
+ that compelled the admiration of his sister.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm glad to see that you're not such a big dunce as you look; I've been
+ discouraged in trying to teach you, but you seem to be learning at last."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Wouldn't you like me to give you a few lessons?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; for, if you did, I should never win another game," was the pert
+ reply; "I wonder whether you will ever be able to beat me again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Didn't you know that I have been fooling with you all the time, just as I
+ fool a trout till I get him to take the hook?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Maggie stared at him with open mouth for a moment and then asked in an
+ awed whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No; I didn't know that: did <i>you</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Never mind; the best thing you can do is to tend to bus'ness, for I'm not
+ going to show you a bit of mercy."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During this friendly chaffing, both noticed that the wind was rising. It
+ moaned around the barn, and enough of it entered the window far above
+ their heads for them to feel it fan their cheeks. An eddy even lifted one
+ of the curls from the temple of the girl. This, however, was of no special
+ concern to them, and they continued their playing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each went through the next series without a break. Tim was certainly doing
+ himself honor, and his sister was at a loss to understand it. But you know
+ that on some days the player of any game does much better than on others.
+ This was one of Tim's best days and one of Maggie's worst, for he again
+ surpassed her, though there could be no doubt that she did her very best,
+ and she could not repress her chagrin. But she was too fond of her bright
+ brother to feel anything in the nature of resentment for his success.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "There's one thing certain," she said, shaking her curly head with
+ determination; "you can't beat me again."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I wouldn't be so rash, sister; remember that I mean bus'ness to-day."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Just as if you haven't always done your best; it's you that are bragging,
+ not I."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tim had taken the stones in his right hand with the purpose of giving them
+ the necessary toss in the air, when a blast of wind struck the barn with a
+ force that made it tremble. They distinctly felt the tremor of the floor
+ beneath them. He paused and looked into the startled face of his sister
+ with the question:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Hadn't we better run to the house?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No," she replied, her heart so set on beating him that she felt less fear
+ than she would have felt had it been otherwise; "it's as safe here as in
+ the house; one is as strong as the other; if you want to get out of
+ finishing the game, why, I'll let you off."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "You know it isn't that, Maggie; but the barn isn't as strong as the
+ house."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It has stood a good many harder blows than this; don't you see it has
+ stopped? Go on."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right; just as you say," and up went the pronged pieces and were
+ caught with the same skill as before. Then he essayed a more difficult
+ feat and failed. Maggie clapped her hands with delight, and leaned forward
+ to catch up the bits and try her hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At that instant something like a tornado or incipient cyclone struck the
+ barn. They felt the structure swaying, heard the ripping of shingles, and
+ casting his eyes aloft, Tim saw the shingles and framework coming down
+ upon their heads.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was an appalling moment. If they remained where they were, both would
+ be crushed to death. The door was too far away for both to reach it;
+ though it was barely possible that by a quick leap and dash he might get
+ to the open air in the nick of time, but he would die a hundred times over
+ before abandoning his sister. The open window was too high to be reached
+ from the floor without climbing, and there was no time for that.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The action of a cyclone is always peculiar. Resistless as is its power, it
+ is often confined to a very narrow space. The one to which I am now
+ referring whipped off a corner of the roof, so loosening the supports that
+ the whole mass of shingles and rafters covering the larger portion came
+ down as if flung from the air above, while the remainder of the building
+ was left unharmed, the terrified horses not receiving so much as a
+ scratch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was one awful second when brother and sister believed that the next
+ would be their last. Then Tim threw his arm around the neck of Maggie and
+ in a flash drew her forward so that she lay flat on her face and he
+ alongside of her; but the twinkling of an eye before that he had seized
+ the block of wood, rejected some time before as a chair, and stood it on
+ end beside his shoulder, keeping his right arm curved round it so as to
+ hold it upright in position, while the other arm prevented Maggie from
+ rising.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't move?" he shouted amid the crashing of timbers and the roaring of
+ the gale; "lie still and you won't be hurt."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She could not have disobeyed him had she tried, for the words were in his
+ mouth when the fearful mass of timber descended upon them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0027" id="link2HCH0027"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ Do you understand what Tim Hunter did? Had the mass of timber descending
+ upon him and his sister been unchecked, they would not have lived an
+ instant. Had it been shattered into small fragments by the cyclone, the
+ ingenious precaution which a wonderful presence of mind enabled hint to
+ make, would have been of no avail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Take a block of seasoned oak, six inches through, and two feet in height,
+ and interpose it squarely against an approaching body and it is almost as
+ powerful in the way of resistance as so much metal. It would take an
+ ironclad to crush it to pulp, by acting longitudinally or along its line
+ of length. This block stood upright, and received a portion of the
+ rafters, covered by the shingles and held them aloft as easily as you can
+ hold your hat with your outstretched arm. From this point of highest
+ support, the debris sloped away until it rested on the floor, but the open
+ space, in which the brother and sister lay, was as safe as was their
+ situation, before the gale loosened the structure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tim called to his sister and found that not so much as a hair of her head
+ had been harmed, and it was the same with himself. All was darkness in
+ their confined quarters, but the wrenched framework gave them plenty of
+ air to breathe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Who can picture the feelings of the father, when he saw the collapse of
+ the roof of the barn and knew that his two children were beneath? He
+ rushed thither like a madman, only to be cheered to the highest
+ thankfulness the next moment at hearing their muffled assurances that both
+ were all right. A brief vigorous application of his axe and the two were
+ helped out into the open air, neither the worse for their dreadful
+ experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parent could hardly believe what had been done by his boy, when Maggie
+ told him, until an examination for himself showed that it was true. He
+ declared that neither he nor anyone would have thought of the means and
+ applied it with such lightning quickness. It certainly was an
+ extraordinary exhibition of presence of mind and deserved all the praise
+ given to it. The Brereton <i>Intelligencer</i> devoted half a column to a
+ description of the exploit and prophesied that that "young man" would be
+ heard from again. For weeks and months there was nothing at the disposal
+ of Mr. Hunter which was too good for his boy and it is probable that the
+ indulgence of that period had something to do with making Tim dissatisfied
+ with the prospect of spending all his life as a "hewer of stone."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gradually as the effects of the remarkable rescue wore off, the impatience
+ of the parent grew until we have seen him on the point of calling to
+ account the boy who had really been the means of saving two lives, for his
+ own was as much imperilled as the sister's. Once more she appealed to that
+ last recourse, and once more it did not fail her. When he recalled that
+ dreadful scene, he could not help feeling an admiring gratitude for his
+ boy. Although silent and reserved some time later, when the three gathered
+ round the table for their evening meal, nothing unpleasant was said by the
+ parent, though the sharp-witted Tim felt a strong suspicion of the cause
+ of his father's reserve.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Later in the evening, the latter sat down by the table in the sitting room
+ and took up his copy of the Brereton <i>Intelligencer</i>, which had
+ arrived that afternoon. He always spent his Thursday evenings in this
+ manner, unless something unusual interfered, the local news and selected
+ miscellany affording enough intellectual food to last him until retiring
+ time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While he was thus occupied, Tim and Maggie played checkers, there being
+ little difference in their respective skill. They were quiet, and when
+ necessary to speak, did so in low tones, so as not to disturb the parent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ An hour had passed, when he suddenly turned, with his spectacles on his
+ nose, and looked at the children. The slight resentment he still felt
+ toward Tim caused him to address himself directly to his sister:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maggie, do you know who has been writing these articles in the paper for
+ the last few weeks?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She held a king suspended as she was on the point of jumping a couple of
+ Tim's and asked in turn:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What articles?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "They are signed 'Mit' and each paper for the last two or three months has
+ had one of them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No, sir; I do not know who wrote them."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Well, whoever he is he's a mighty smart fellow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maybe it's a 'she,'" suggested Maggie, as she proceeded to sweep off the
+ board the two kings of Tim that had got in the path of her single one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Fudge! no woman can write such good sense as that. Besides, some of them
+ have been on the tariff, the duties of voters, the Monroe Doctrine and
+ politics: what does any woman know about such themes as those?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Don't some women write about them?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I haven't denied that, but that doesn't prove that they know anything of
+ the subjects themselves."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The miss could make no suitable response to this brilliant remark and did
+ not attempt to do so, while Tim said nothing at all, as if the subject had
+ no attraction to him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By and by the parent uttered a contemptuous sniff. He was reading "Mit's"
+ contribution, and for the first time came upon something with which he did
+ not agree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "He's 'way off there," remarked the elder, as if speaking to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "What is it, father?" asked Maggie, ceasing her playing for the moment,
+ for her affection always led her to show an interest in whatever
+ interested him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The article is the best I have read until I get toward the end. Listen:
+ 'No greater mistake can be made than for a parent to force a child into
+ some calling or profession for which he has no liking. The boy will be
+ sure to fail.' Now, what do you think of <i>that</i>?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "The latter part sounds very much like what you said to me this
+ afternoon."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It isn't that, which is true enough, but the idea that a boy knows better
+ than his father what is the right profession for him to follow. That
+ doctrine is too much like Young America who thinks he knows it all."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Read on, father; let me hear the rest."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The father was silent a minute or two, while he skimmed through the
+ article.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It isn't worth reading," he remarked impatiently, thereby proving that he
+ had been hit by the arguments which he found difficult to refute. Maggie
+ made no comment, but smiled significantly at Tim across the board, as they
+ resumed their game.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, Mr. Hunter had come upon some sentiments that set him to
+ thinking, such, for instance, as these: "It may be said with truth in many
+ cases, that the father is the best judge of what the future of his son
+ should be. In fact no one can question this, but the father does not
+ always use that superior knowledge as he should. Perhaps he has yielded to
+ the dearest wish of the mother that their son should become a minister.
+ The mother's love does not allow her to see that her boy has no gifts as a
+ speaker and no love for a clergyman's life. He longs to be a lawyer or
+ doctor. Will any one deny that to drive the young man into the pulpit is
+ the greatest mistake that can be made?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sometimes a father, with an only son, perhaps, intends that he shall be
+ trained to follow in his footsteps. The boy has a dislike for that calling
+ or profession,&mdash;a dislike that was born with him and which nothing
+ can remove. His taste runs in a wholly different channel; whatever talent
+ he has lies there. While it may be convenient for him to step into his
+ parent's shoes, yet he should never be forced to do so, but be allowed to
+ select that for which he has an ability and toward which he is drawn.
+ Parents make such sad mistakes as these, and often do not awake to the
+ fact until it is too late to undo the mischief that has been done. Let
+ them give the subject their most thoughtful attention and good is sure to
+ follow."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was these words, following on the talk he had had with Maggie a short
+ time before that set Mr. Hunter to thinking more deeply than he had ever
+ done over the problem in which his son was so intimately concerned. After
+ his children had retired and he was left alone, he turned over the paper
+ and read the article again. It stuck to him and he could not drive it
+ away. Laying the journal aside, he lit his pipe and leaned back in his
+ chair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It is not pleasant," he mused, "to give up the idea of Tim becoming my
+ successor, for he is the only one I have ever thought of as such. But
+ there is force in what 'Mit' says about driving a boy into a calling or
+ profession that he hates; he will make a failure of it, whereas he might
+ become very successful if left to follow his own preferences. I wonder who
+ 'Mit' is; his articles are the best I have ever read in the <i>Intelligencer</i>;
+ I must ask the editor, so I can have him out here and talk over this
+ question which is the biggest bother I ever had."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Before Maggie and Tim separated to go to their rooms, and while at the top
+ of the stairs they whispered together for a few minutes. The parent had
+ got thus far in his musings, when he heard the voice of Maggie calling
+ from above:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Father, do you think 'Mit' is a smart fellow?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course, even though I may not agree with all his views," replied the
+ parent, wondering why his child was so interested.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Would you like to know who he is?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Of course, but you told me you didn't know."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I didn't at that time, but I have learned since. If you will spell the
+ name backwards and put it before your surname, you will have that of the
+ youth who wrote the articles you admire so much."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The parent did as suggested, and behold! the name thus spelled out was
+ that of his only son, whose writings he had praised before the young man's
+ face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0028" id="link2HCH0028"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV.
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ When the chuckling Tim told his sister the secret as he paused to kiss her
+ good-night at the head of the stairs, he did not dream that she would
+ reveal it to their father; but, before he could exact a promise, she
+ emitted the truth, despite his attempts to place his hand over her mouth.
+ Then she darted off, and, humiliated and chagrined, he went to his own
+ room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the parent was given more to think about. He was pleasant to both the
+ next morning at breakfast and made no reference to the matter that was in
+ the minds of all. Just as the meal was finished, he remarked:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tim, the load of stone is ready and we will take it over to Montvale
+ to-day; wouldn't you like to go with us?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Thank you, father; I shall be glad to go."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "All right; as soon as you and Maggie are through with your nonsense, come
+ out to the wharf and join us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The method of transporting stone from the Brereton quarries to Montvale,
+ on the other side of the river, was simple. The canal ran directly in
+ front of the quarries, and there the boat was loaded with the heavy
+ freight. It was then drawn by horse through the canal Denville, several
+ miles to the north, where the waterway touched the level of the Castaran
+ river. Passing through a lock, the boat was pulled across the stream by
+ means of a rope, and wheel arrangement (a heavy dam furnishing
+ comparatively deep and smooth water), when another lock admitted it to the
+ canal on the opposite side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The boat, which lay against the bank of the canal near the quarries, was
+ loaded so heavily that it was brought as low in the water as was safe.
+ Then a horse was hitched fast, and with Tim driving, and with Warren and
+ his father and two men on board, the craft began slowly moving against the
+ sluggish current.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The start was made in the morning, and before the forenoon was half gone
+ they were at the lower end of Denville, where preparations were quickly
+ made for crossing the river. The horse was taken on board, the boat
+ securely fastened by a strong rope at the bow and stern, so as to hold her
+ broadside against the current, and then the contrivance began dragging her
+ slowly toward the opposite shore.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ During the spring months and the period of high water, a great many rafts
+ of lumber descend the Castaran, though the number is not so great of late
+ years as formerly. They are sold at various points along the river, and
+ occasionally two or three rafts float down stream during the summer
+ months. A long sweeping paddle (sometimes a couple) at either end of the
+ raft enable the men to clear the abutments of the bridges and to shoot the
+ rapids at different points.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canal boat, with its cargo of stone had no more than fairly left the
+ eastern side, when a large raft was observed emerging from between two
+ abutments of the bridge above. The men at the oars began toiling with them
+ with a view of working the structure toward the rapids, through which the
+ only safe passage can be secured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Those on the boat having nothing to do had seated themselves here and
+ there, and were watching their surroundings, as they moved at right angles
+ to the current. The raft was heading toward a point just ahead of the
+ boat, and was so near that Tim, who was sitting beside his father on the
+ cabin, started to his feet and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I believe they are going to strike us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Sit down; there is no danger; these people know their business; we shall
+ be well out of their way before they can reach us."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nevertheless a collision seemed so imminent a moment later, that Mr.
+ Hunter rose to his feet and motioned to those working the rope to give the
+ boat greater speed. At the same time he shouted to the raftsmen:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Keep off; don't you see we are in danger?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Get out of the way, then!" was the reply; "we must go through there."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Such manifestly was their right, and the gentleman again waved his hands
+ to those on both shores. But they saw the danger, and applying all the
+ power at their command, the boat began moving so much faster that Mr.
+ Hunter resumed his seat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It's all right now," he remarked; "but it looked mighty squally a minute
+ ago."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The canal boat was now crossing the rapid current, where a passage-way had
+ been left on purpose for rafts. It had not quite reached the middle,
+ toward which the structure was aiming, but its speed was sufficient to
+ take it well out of the way, provided no accident occurred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And this is just what did occur. The unusual strain on the gearing caused
+ something to give way, and the forward motion of the craft ceased at the
+ very moment it reached the middle of the strong current. Those on the bank
+ who were managing the apparatus saw the trouble at once, and strove
+ desperately to extricate the boat from its perilous situation, but they
+ were powerless.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "For Heaven's sake, keep off!" shouted Mr. Hunter to the raftsmen; "if you
+ don't we shall be ruined!"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he caught up a long pole, and pressing one end against the bed
+ of the river exerted himself with might and main to impel the boat
+ forward. He called to the two men to do the same, and under their united
+ propulsion the boat advanced, but at a snail's pace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lumbermen, seeing the alarming state of affairs, put forth all their
+ strength to swing the raft over so that it would pass between the boat and
+ the eastern shore. There was scant room for this, but they were hardly
+ less anxious than the imperilled boatmen, to whom the consequences were
+ certain to be more serious than to themselves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Had the distance been greater they might have succeeded, but under the
+ circumstances it was impossible. Dipping the broad blades of the long
+ oars, balanced at the ends of the raft, the men almost lay on their faces
+ as they held their breath and pushed with every ounce of strength at their
+ command. Then, when they reached the edge of the raft, they bore down so
+ as to lift the blade from the water, ran back to the other side, dipped
+ the oar again and shoved as before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Mr. Hunter and his assistants were panting and red in the face,
+ as they desperately strove to force the boat from the path of the
+ approaching raft, which came plunging down upon them with increasing
+ speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "No use!" he suddenly exclaimed, flinging the wet pole in the center of
+ the boat on top of the stone; "we shall be shivered to atoms! Be ready to
+ jump on the raft as it crushes through us! Leave the horse to take care of
+ himself! Tim, you know how to swim, but jump on the raft with us&mdash;Heavens!
+ what have you done, my son?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A few seconds before the boy had caught up the sharp hatchet lying near
+ the cabin, and intended for use of splitting fuel for the stove. With two
+ quick blows he severed the rope which held the stern. The latter yielded
+ to the strong current dashing against it, and began swinging around, so
+ that it quickly lay parallel with the river, with the bow pointing up
+ stream, and held securely by the rope fastened at that end.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was no more than fairly done when the enormous raft swept past, so
+ close that the nearest log was heard scraping the entire length of the
+ boat. The impact drove it clear, and before any one beside the boy
+ realized how it was done the entire structure had gone by, no damage was
+ done and all were safe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Jim," said Mr. Hunter, a minute after, when the flurry was over, "what a
+ set of fools we were that we didn't think of that."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I don't agree with you," replied the other, "because no one would have
+ thought of it except <i>that</i> youngster."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Tim," added the father, placing his hand affectionately on his head, "I
+ am proud of you."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And the little fellow blushed and replied:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "I'm glad I happened to think of it in time, but it <i>was</i> rather
+ close, wasn't it?"
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "It couldn't have been more so, and but for you boat and cargo would have
+ been a dead loss, and more than likely some of us would have lost our
+ lives."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night at the supper table, Mr. Hunter remarked with a meaning smile:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Maggie, the Hunter family contains a fool and a genius, I'm not the
+ genius and 'Mit' isn't the fool."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "Father, you are not just to yourself," the boy hastened to say; "I have
+ done wrong in not appreciating your kindness or indulgence, and I have
+ resolved to do my best to please you. I think I have some talent for
+ composition and invention, but I can use it just as well, without
+ neglecting the quarries and stone works, and if you will permit, I shall
+ give you all the help I can in the business with the hope that some day,
+ which I pray may be far distant, I shall become your successor."
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tears filled the eyes of all, as the parent, rising from his chair, placed
+ his hand on the head of Tim and said, in a tremulous voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ "God bless you, my son!"
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Jungle Fugitives, by Edward S. Ellis
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Jungle Fugitives
+ A Tale of Life and Adventure in India Including also Many Stories of American Adventure, Enterprise and Daring: The Jungle Fugitives; Lost in the Woods; In the Nick of Time; Lost in the South Sea; An Unpleasant Companion; A Stirring Incident; Cyclones and Tornadoes; Lost in a Blizzard; Throwing the Riata; A Waterspout; An Heroic Woman; The Writing Found in a Bottle; That Hornet's Nest; A Young Hero; Overreached; A Battle in the Air; Who Shall Explain It?; A Fool of a Genius
+
+
+Author: Edward S. Ellis
+
+
+
+Release Date: October 6, 2005 [eBook #16805]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Al Haines
+
+
+
+THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES
+
+A Tale of Life and Adventure in India
+Including also
+Many Stories of American Adventure, Enterprise and Daring
+
+by
+
+EDWARD S. ELLIS, A.M.
+
+New York
+Hurst and Company
+Publishers
+
+1903
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES
+ LOST IN THE WOODS
+ IN THE NICK OF TIME
+ LOST IN THE SOUTH SEA
+ AN UNPLEASANT COMPANION
+ A STIRRING INCIDENT
+ CYCLONES AND TORNADOES
+ LOST IN A BLIZZARD
+ THROWING THE RIATA
+ A WATERSPOUT
+ AN HEROIC WOMAN
+ THE WRITING FOUND IN A BOTTLE
+ THAT HORNET'S NEST
+ A YOUNG HERO
+ OVERREACHED
+ A BATTLE IN THE AIR
+ WHO SHALL EXPLAIN IT?
+ A FOOL OF A GENIUS
+
+
+
+
+THE JUNGLE FUGITIVES.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+IN THE SPRING OF 1857.
+
+All through India, with its fanatical population five times as great as
+that of England, the rumblings of the coming uprising had been heard
+for months. The disaffection had been spreading and taking root. The
+emissaries of the arch-plotters had passed back and forth almost from
+end to end of the vast empire, with their messages of hatred and
+appeal. The people were assured that the "Inglese loge" were
+perfecting their insidious schemes for overthrowing their religion, and
+the faithful everywhere were called upon to crush the infidels in the
+dust. The evil seed fell upon the rankest of soil, and grew with a
+vigor and exuberance that threatened to strangle every other growth.
+
+The plot, as agreed upon, was that a general uprising was to take place
+throughout India on the last day of May, 1857, but, as is often the
+case in such far-reaching schemes, the impatience of the mutineers
+precipitated the tremendous tragedy.
+
+The first serious outbreak took place at Meerut on Sunday, May 10th,
+just three weeks previous to the time set for the general uprising.
+That town, with its population of about 40,000 at that time, lies
+thirty-two miles northeast from Delhi, which was to be the capital of
+the resurrected Mogul Empire. It was the precipitancy of this first
+revolt that prevented its fullest success. The intention was to kill
+every white man, woman and child in the place. Two regiments were
+clamorous for beginning the massacre, but the Eleventh Native Infantry
+held back so persistently that the others became enraged and fired a
+volley among them, killing a number. Thereupon the Eleventh announced
+themselves ready to take their part in the slaughter that was to free
+India from the execrated "Inglese loge."
+
+Seeing now for the first time the real peril, the colonel of the
+Eleventh made an impassioned appeal to the regiment to stand by its
+colors and to take no part in the useless revolt. While he was
+speaking, a volley riddled his body, and he tumbled lifeless from his
+saddle. The Eleventh, however, covered the flight of the other
+officers, but helped to release a thousand prisoners, suffering
+punishment for various offenses, and then the hell fire burst forth.
+
+The bungalows of the officers, the mess houses of the troops, and all
+the buildings between the native lines and Meerut were fired, and the
+whole became a roaring conflagration, whose glare at night was visible
+for miles.
+
+When an appeal was made to the Emperor of Delhi by the troopers, he
+inquired their errand. The lacklustre eyes flashed with a light that
+had not been seen in them for years, the bowed form acquired new
+energy, and he gave orders to admit the troopers.
+
+Their message was enough to fan into life the slumbering fires of
+ambition in the breast of a dying person.
+
+He yielded to the dazzling dream. A throne of silver, laid away for
+years, was brought into the "hall of special audience," and the
+tottering form was helped to the seat, into which he sank and looked
+around upon his frenzied followers. Mohammed Suraj-oo-deen Shah Gezee
+was now the Great Mogul of India. A royal salute of twenty-one guns
+was fired by two troops of artillery from Meerut in front of the
+palace, and the wild multitudes again strained their throats. To the
+thunder of artillery, the strains of martial music and the shouting of
+the people, the gates of the palace were flung open, and Prince Mirza
+Mogul, with his brother, Prince Abu Beker, at the head of the royal
+bodyguard, rode forth, the king following in an open chariot,
+surrounded by his bodyguard.
+
+With impressive slowness this strange procession made its way through
+the principal street, the populace becoming as frantic as so many ghost
+dancers. Finally a halt was made at the Juma Musjeed, the largest
+mosque in India, where the banner of the Prophet was unfurled and the
+Mogul Empire proclaimed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ON AN AFTERNOON.
+
+Almost due east from Delhi Dr. Hugh Marlowe, a venerable American
+physician, had lived for more than twenty years. Since the death of
+his wife, six years previous to the Mutiny, he had dwelt alone with his
+only daughter, Mary, and their single servant, Mustad, a devout
+Mussulman. A portion of the time mentioned had been passed without the
+society of his beloved child, who spent several years in New England
+(where the physician himself was born and had received his education)
+at one of the fashionable schools.
+
+Shortly after her graduation, Miss Marlowe met Jack Everson, fresh from
+Yale, and the acquaintance ripened into mutual love, though the filial
+affection of the young woman was too profound to permit her to form an
+engagement with the young man until the consent of her father was
+obtained, and he would not give that consent until he had met and
+conversed with the young gentleman face to face and taken his measure,
+as may be said.
+
+"If he doesn't esteem you enough to make a little journey like the one
+from America to this country he isn't worth thinking about."
+
+"But he _will_ make the journey," said the blushing daughter, patting
+the bronzed cheek of the parent whom she idolized as much as he
+idolized her.
+
+"Don't be to sure of that, my young lady; romantic young girls like you
+have altogether too much faith in the other sex."
+
+"But he _has_ started," she added with a sly smile.
+
+"He has, eh? He will change his mind before he reaches here. How far
+has he got?"
+
+"He was due in England many weeks ago."
+
+"Well, well! How soon will he arrive _here_?"
+
+"I think he is due now."
+
+"Very probably, but his fancy will give out before he reaches this
+out-of-the-way place."
+
+"I think not, papa."
+
+"Of course not, of course not; I just told you that that is the way
+with all foolish girls like you."
+
+The old gentleman had assumed a stern earnestness, and he added: "I
+tell you he will never show himself here! I know what I'm talking
+about."
+
+"But he _is_ here, papa; let me introduce you to Jack Everson, a
+physician like yourself."
+
+All this time the smiling young man was standing directly behind the
+old doctor, who was lazily reclining in a hammock on the shaded lawn,
+smoking a cheroot, while his daughter sat on a camp stool, with one
+hand resting on the edge of the hammock, so as to permit her gently to
+sway it back and forth. As she spoke the tall, muscular American
+walked forward and extended his hand.
+
+"Doctor, I am glad to make your acquaintance," he said, in his cheery
+way. The astonished physician came to an upright position like the
+clicking of the blade of a jackknife, and meeting the salutation,
+exclaimed:
+
+"Well, I'll be hanged! I never knew a girl so full of nonsense and
+tricks as Mary. You are welcome, doctor, to my house; let me have a
+look at you!"
+
+Jack Everson laughingly stepped hack a couple of paces and posed for
+inspection. The elder deliberately drew his spectacle case from his
+pocket, adjusted the glasses and coolly scrutinized the young man from
+head to foot.
+
+"You'll do," he quietly remarked, removing his glasses and returning
+them to the morocco case; "now, if you'll be good enough to seat
+yourself, we'll talk over matters until dinner time. When did you
+arrive?"
+
+Jack seated himself on the remaining camp stool, a few paces from the
+happy young lady, accepted a cheroot from his host, and the
+conversation became general. Like most Americans, when at home or
+travelling, Jack Everson kept his eyes and ears open. He heard at
+Calcutta, his starting point, at Benares, Allahabad, Cawnpore and other
+places, the whisperings of the uprising that was soon to come, and his
+alarm increased as he penetrated the country.
+
+"Worse than all," he said gravely, speaking of his trip, "one of my
+bearers spoke English well, and quite an intimacy sprang up between us.
+Since his companions could not utter a word in our language, we
+conversed freely without being understood. He was reticent at first
+concerning the impending danger and professed to know nothing of it,
+but this forenoon be gave me to understand, in words that could not be
+mistaken, that the whole country would soon be aflame with
+insurrection."
+
+"Did he offer any advice?" asked Dr. Marlowe, less impressed with the
+news than was his visitor or his daughter.
+
+"He did; he said that the escape of myself and of your family could be
+secured only by leaving this place at the earliest moment possible."
+
+"But whither can we go? We are hundreds of miles from the seacoast and
+should have to journey for weeks through a country swarming with
+enemies."
+
+"I asked him that question, and his answer was that we should make for
+Nepaul."
+
+"That is the province to the east of us. It is a mountainous country,
+a long way off, and hard to reach. Why should he advise us to go
+thither?"
+
+"I questioned him, but he seemed to fear that his companions would grow
+suspicious over our conversation and he said nothing more. I thought
+he would add something definite when we came to separate, and, to
+loosen his tongue, I gave him an extra fee, but he added never a word,
+and, unless I am mistaken, regretted what he had already said."
+
+"It seems to me," observed the daughter, "that the man knew it is
+impossible for us to get to the seacoast, and believed that by going
+further into the interior we should reach the people who are not
+affected by the insurrection. Wide as it may be, there must be many
+points that will not feel it."
+
+"That is the true reason," said her parent, "but, confound it! I have
+lived in this spot for twenty years; the little town of Akwar lies
+near, and there is hardly a person in it who has not been my patient.
+I am known even in Meerut and Delhi, and I can hardly believe the
+mutineers, for such they seem to be, will harm me or my friends."
+
+"You once told me," replied Mary, "that when an appeal was made to the
+religion of this people they knew no such thing as fear or mercy."
+
+"And I told you the truth," said her father gravely. "But since we
+have weapons and plenty of ammunition, and know how to handle the
+firearms we shall not be led like lambs to the slaughter."
+
+"That is true enough," said Jack, "but it will be of little avail, when
+our enemies are numbered by the hundred and perhaps the thousand."
+
+"I take it, then, that you favor an abandonment of our home?"
+
+"I do, and with the least possible delay."
+
+"And you, my daughter, are you of the same mind?"
+
+"I am," was the emphatic response.
+
+"Then my decision is that we shall start for the interior and stay
+there until it is safe to show ourselves again among these people,
+provided it ever shall be safe."
+
+"When shall you start?"
+
+The parent looked at the sky.
+
+"It is two or three hours to nightfall. We will set out early
+to-morrow morning before the sun is high in the sky."
+
+"But will we not be more liable to discovery?" asked Jack.
+
+"Not if we use care. I am familiar with the country for miles in every
+direction. We shall have to travel for the first two or three days
+through a thick jungle, and it is too dangerous work to undertake in
+the night-time. This, you know, is the land of the cobra and the
+tiger, not to mention a few other animals and reptiles equally
+unpleasant in their nature. Last night," continued the doctor, "I saw
+a glare in the sky off to the westward on the opposite side of the
+river in the direction of Meerut. I wonder what it meant?"
+
+"By Jove!" exclaimed Jack, "that explains something that the palanquin
+bearer said to me about there being so many Inglese where there are
+none to-day. I could not catch his meaning, though he mentioned
+Meerut. But he gave me to understand that it was not quite time yet
+for the uprising, which would come in a few weeks."
+
+"Those things are apt to be precipitated. I have no doubt that the
+mutineers burned the city last night. If so, the main body will hurry
+to Delhi, which, being the ancient capital of the Mogul Empire, will
+become the new one. Some of the rebels may take it into their heads to
+come in this direction. What is the matter, Dr. Everson?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+YANKEE MARKSMANSHIP.
+
+As Jack Everson was seated he faced the broad, sluggish Ganges, with
+the low, green banks beyond. He was looking over the water, in the
+rays of the declining sun, when he saw something that caused him to
+rise hastily from his seat and peer earnestly across the river toward
+the opposite shore. Observing his action, the doctor asked his
+question. Both he and his daughter, rising to their feet, gazed in the
+same direction. It was easy to see what had attracted the attention of
+their guest. A party of horsemen, fully twenty, if not more, in
+number, had approached the river and were now halted on the other side,
+looking across in the direction of Dr. Marlowe's home, as if debating
+the question of making it a visit.
+
+"Let me get my glass," said Mary, starting toward the house, hardly a
+hundred feet distant.
+
+"Allow me to bring it," interrupted Jack. "It is on one of the chairs
+on the veranda, and I want my rifle."
+
+Taking the glass from him on his return, the young woman levelled it at
+the group of horsemen on the other side.
+
+"I cannot make out who they are," she said, passing the glass to her
+father.
+
+It took the parent but a few seconds to answer the question. One
+sweeping glance told him.
+
+"They are Ghoojurs," he remarked, with as much calmness as he could
+assume.
+
+"And who are Ghoojurs?" asked Jack Everson, less excited than his
+friends.
+
+"They belong to the nomadic tribes which originally occupied India, and
+are among the worst wretches in the world. They are brigands and
+robbers, who are to be dreaded at all times. Now, if the revolt has
+broken out, they will be as merciless as tigers."
+
+"It looks as if they intended to make us a visit, doctor?"
+
+"Alas! there can be no earthly doubt of it."
+
+"Let us hurry into the jungle," said Mary, her face paling with fear.
+"We have not a minute to waste."
+
+"The advice is good, but before acting on it I should like to make an
+experiment."
+
+During this brief interval Jack Everson had carefully examined his
+rifle to assure himself that it was in good condition.
+
+"Heavens, man!" exclaimed Dr. Marlowe, "you are not going to try a shot
+at them?"
+
+"That is my intention."
+
+"They are a mile distant!"
+
+"One of my medals was won for hitting a target at exactly that
+distance," replied Jack, continuing his preparations.
+
+"It is impossible that you should succeed."
+
+"But not impossible that I should try, so please don't bother the man
+at the wheel."
+
+"They have ridden into the water," added the young woman, still nervous
+and excited.
+
+"Which will serve to shorten the distance somewhat."
+
+"Why not wait until they are halfway across; or, better still, not wait
+at all?" inquired the doctor.
+
+Jack Everson made no reply, but, lying down on his back, he slightly
+separated his raised knees, and, by crossing his ankles, made a rest
+for the barrel of his rifle. The left arm was crooked under his head,
+so as to serve as a pillow or support, leaving the hand to steady the
+stock of his gun, while the right inclosed the trigger guard.
+
+The horsemen, instead of riding side by side, were strung along in a
+line, with the leader several paces in advance and mounted on a rather
+large horse of a coal-black color. Directly behind him came one upon a
+bay, while a little further back rode another on a white steed. There
+could be no question that they were on their way to kill without mercy.
+
+The situation was intensely trying to father and daughter. The whole
+party of Ghoojurs had entered the Ganges and were steadily approaching.
+The water was so shallow that it could be seen as it splashed about the
+bodies of the riders, who were talking and laughing, as if in
+anticipation of the enjoyment awaiting them. They preserved their
+single file, like so many American Indians in crossing a stream, and
+their last thought must have been of any possible danger that could
+threaten them from the three on the further bank.
+
+The situation was becoming unbearable when the rifle cracked with a
+noise no louder than a Chinese cracker, and a faint puff of smoke
+curled upward from the muzzle of the weapon. At the same moment the
+Ghoojur at the front, on his black horse, flung up his arms and tumbled
+sideways into the water, which splashed over his animal's head.
+Frightened, the horse reared, pawed the air, and, whirling about,
+galloped back to the bank, sending the water flying in showers from his
+hoofs.
+
+"Score me a bull's-eye!" called Jack Everson, who in his pleasure over
+his success, could not wait for the result.
+
+"But see!" cried Mary, "you have only infuriated them. Oh! father, how
+can we save ourselves?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+FLIGHT.
+
+The success of the first shot gave Jack Everson self-confidence and he
+took less time in aiming the second, which was as unerring as the
+first. Another Ghoojur plunged off his horse and gave but a single
+struggle when he sank from sight in the shallow water.
+
+"Another bull's-eye!" called Jack, proceeding to reload his piece. "I
+hope, doctor, you are keeping a correct score; I must have credit for
+all I do."
+
+"Now for my distinguished friend on the milk-white steed," said Jack,
+proceeding to adjust his telescopic sight to that individual. "If they
+will send over the three horses it will give us one apiece."
+
+But the Ghoojurs had had enough of this fearful business. They saw
+that some unaccountable fatality was at work and it was madness for
+them to remain. With never a suspicion of the truth they wheeled their
+animals about and sent them galloping for the bank which they had left
+a short time before full of hope and anticipation.
+
+"I'm sorry for that," reflected Jack Everson, "for it mixes things and
+I can't pick out my man, but here goes."
+
+In one sense, his opportunity was better than before; for, while he
+could not select his particular target, he had but to aim at the bunch
+to make sure of hitting somebody, which is precisely what he did.
+
+The Ghoojur whom he punctured did not fall, for the reason that two of
+his friends reached out and prevented him. It was a piece of
+supererogation on their part, for when the party emerged from the
+Ganges upon dry land that fellow was of no further account.
+
+Jack now showed more haste than before in reloading his weapon, fearing
+that the party would get beyond his reach before he could fire for the
+fourth time. Much to his regret, they did so, for though he made the
+shot, it was necessarily so hurried that it inflicted no injury, and
+the whole party galloped out of sight over the slight swell without
+showing any further concern for their companions left behind. Jack now
+rose to his feet with the question:
+
+"What is my record, doctor?"
+
+"Three bull's-eyes; your score is perfect."
+
+"Hardly, for the last was a miss; however, three out of a possible four
+is pretty fair when the circumstances are considered. I suspect that
+that particular party is not likely to give us further trouble."
+
+"No, they will not forget the lesson."
+
+"If we can induce our enemies to make their approach by the same ford
+and when the sun is shining this will become truly amusing."
+
+"But the Ghoojurs will not repeat that mistake. This affair has served
+another purpose," added the physician, "we must not delay our
+departure."
+
+"Do you advise our going while it is night?"
+
+"I advised the contrary a little while ago, but I confess I am afraid
+to stay in the house, even for a few hours. However, we will take our
+dinner there, gather a few belongings and then hurry off. We shall
+find some spot where it will be safe to pass the night, and where we
+are not likely to be molested, because no one will know where to find
+us."
+
+All glanced in the direction of the other shore, and seeing nothing to
+cause misgiving moved to the house, a low, roomy structure, though of
+moderate proportions, with a broad veranda extending along two sides.
+It was time for the evening meal, and there was some surprise felt that
+Mustad, the servant, had not summoned them before.
+
+This surprise turned to astonishment and alarm when it was discovered
+that Mustad was not in the house. No preparation had been made for
+dinner, and though his name was called several times in a loud voice,
+there was no response.
+
+"He has left us," said the doctor.
+
+"What does it mean?" asked Mary.
+
+"It can have but one meaning: by some legerdemain, such as our own
+Indians show in telegraphing news from one mountain top to another,
+word has reached Mustad of what has taken place, and he has been called
+upon to join the faithful, and has been only too glad to do it."
+
+"I should think he would have attempted to do us harm before going."
+
+"He is too great a coward."
+
+"But his fanaticism will make him reckless."
+
+"When he gets among his friends then he will be among the worst."
+
+"But, father, he was always meek and gentle and respectful."
+
+"Those are the kind who become directly the opposite."
+
+"Do you think he would harm us?"
+
+"I have no doubt of it," was the reply of the doctor. "I know the
+breed; I have twice been the means of saving his life through my
+medicines, and Mary nursed him for three weeks when he was suffering
+from a fever."
+
+"Yon may be doing him an injustice," ventured Jack Everson, to whom the
+judgment of his friend seemed bitter.
+
+"I wish I could think so, but, Mary, if you can provide us with
+something in the way of food, Mr. Everson and I will get the things
+together that we are to take with us."
+
+Dr. Marlowe wisely decided not to burden themselves with unnecessary
+luggage. Jack took from his trunk a few needed articles and stowed
+them into a travelling bag whose supporting strap could be flung over
+one shoulder. Though a physician himself, admitted to practice, he had
+brought none of his instruments with him, for the good reason that he
+saw no sense in doing so. Into the somewhat larger bag of the elder
+doctor were placed his most delicate instruments and several medical
+preparations, mostly the results of his experiments. They were too
+precious to be lost if there was any way of preserving them. Mary
+packed her articles in a small travelling bag, the strap of which she,
+too, flung over her shoulder, though Jack asked to be allowed to
+relieve her.
+
+It was after the hurried meal had been eaten by lamplight that the
+three completed their preparations for departure. That to which they
+paid the most attention was their means of defense. Jack Everson had
+brought a plentiful supply of cartridges for his superb breechloader;
+and the belt was already secured around his body. Dr. Marlowe never
+allowed his supply of ammunition to run low, so that the two were well
+supplied in that respect.
+
+Jack was pleased to find that the revolver belonging to Mary Marlowe
+was of the same calibre as his own, so that the cartridges could be
+used indiscriminately.
+
+"I remember," he said to her, when the parent was just beyond hearing,
+"that you were quite skillful with your weapon."
+
+"Not specially so, but what skill I gained is due to your tuition."
+
+"Not so much to that as to the aptness of the pupil."
+
+"Your remark is more gallant than true, but I hope I shall not be
+called upon to use this weapon as you used yours awhile ago."
+
+"Such is my prayer, but if the necessity arises do not hesitate."
+
+"Be assured I shall not," she replied, with a flash of her fine eyes
+and a compression of her lips.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+COMPANIONS IN FLIGHT.
+
+Everything needed having been gathered, the lamps were extinguished,
+and with the physician in the lead, the three passed out of the front
+door to the veranda. The doctor decided to leave the door unfastened,
+since it was useless to secure it.
+
+Suddenly, when the doctor was about to give the word to move, he saw a
+shadowy figure in the direction of the river.
+
+"Sh!" he whispered; "it looks as if we had waited too long; some one is
+approaching. Be ready to use your gun or to retreat into the house if
+necessary to fight it out there."
+
+"It is a white man," said the daughter in an undertone; "he may be a
+patient."
+
+It was clear by this time that the stranger was not a native, for he
+was dressed in civilized costume and his gait was that of a European.
+He did not perceive the silent figures until within a few paces of the
+veranda, when he paused abruptly, as if startled.
+
+"Good evening," he said in English. "Is this Dr. Marlowe?"
+
+"It is; who are you?"
+
+"My name is Anderson; I was looking for you."
+
+"In what way can I serve you?"
+
+"You have heard the news, I suppose," said the man, keeping his
+position, and looking up to the three, who were now all on the edge of
+the veranda; "the native soldiers at Meerut mutinied yesterday, killed
+most of their officers, plundered the city, slaying every white person
+they could find, after which most of them hurried to Delhi."
+
+"You bring dreadful tidings; I had heard nothing definite, but
+suspected all that you have told me. Are you alone and why do you come
+to me?"
+
+"I fled with my wife and two other families, Turner and Wharton, from
+the outskirts of Meerut as soon as there seemed a chance for us. We
+made our way to the river, found a boat and paddled to this place, for
+we had no sail and there was scarcely any wind."
+
+"Where are your friends?"
+
+"I left them by the edge of the river in the boat, promising to rejoin
+them in a few minutes."
+
+"Have you no companions, but those you named?"
+
+"None; my wife and I buried two children last Summer; Mr. Turner has
+none, and Mr. Wharton and his young wife were but recently married."
+
+"You have not told me why you come to me?"
+
+"Chiefly to warn you of your peril and to beseech you to fly before it
+is too late."
+
+"I thank you very much for your solicitude; it was kind on the part of
+you and your friends, but it strikes me that one place is about as safe
+as another."
+
+"We are so far from the large cities and the coast that it is useless
+to attempt to reach any of them. Our first aim was to get as far from
+Meerut as possible; then as we found ourselves approaching your home,
+it seemed to us there was a chance for our lives by pushing to the
+northward, into the wilder and less settled country, where the flames
+of the insurrection may not reach."
+
+"Your sentiments are our own; you have been wonderfully fortunate in
+getting this far; my friends and I have seen enough to warn us to lose
+no time, and we were on the point of starting when I saw you."
+
+"May I ask what course you intend to take?"
+
+"I have lived here for twenty years, so that I am acquainted with the
+section. My intention was to follow a slightly travelled road, which,
+in fact, is little more than a bridle path, until several miles beyond
+Akwar, when we should come back to the main highway and keep to that
+for fifty or perhaps a hundred miles. By that time, we should be safe,
+if such a thing as safety is possible."
+
+"Your plan is a good one, but is not mine better?"
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"I, too, am familiar with this part of the country; a stream empties
+into the Ganges just eastward of your house, hardly a half mile
+distant; it must have its source somewhere among the foothills of the
+Himalayas. At any rate, it is navigable for all of a hundred miles.
+It seems to me that when paddling up that stream at night, between the
+wooded banks, there will be less chance of being discovered by enemies
+than when travelling overland, as you contemplate."
+
+"I am favorably impressed with your plan; do I understand you to invite
+us to join your party?"
+
+"You are more than welcome; our boat will accommodate us all without
+crowding, but I regret to say we have but a single gun among us. That
+is mine, which I left with my friends against my return."
+
+"We are well supplied in that respect; we accept your invitation with
+many thanks."
+
+As the doctor spoke he stepped down from the veranda, followed by the
+others, and Mr. Anderson led the way across the lawn to the river,
+where his friends were awaiting his coming with many misgivings. A
+general introduction followed. A common danger makes friends of
+strangers, and in a few minutes all were as well acquainted as if they
+had known one another for days and weeks. Anderson and Turner were men
+in middle life, while Wharton was of about the same age as Jack
+Everson. They had lived for several years on the outskirts of Meerut,
+but it was young Wharton who discovered the impending peril, and it was
+due to him that the three families escaped the fate of hundreds of
+others on that woful night. The young wife and Mary Marlowe became
+intimate friends at once, while, as has been said, there was a hearty,
+genuine comradeship immediately established among all.
+
+The boat was larger than Dr. Marlowe and his companions suspected. It
+was more than twenty feet in length, with a cabin at the stern, a place
+for a mast, though there was neither mast nor sail on board. Anderson
+had spoken of paddling to this point, when, had he spoken correctly, he
+would have said that no paddles were used, but that the craft was
+propelled by means of poles.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ON THE GANGES.
+
+While all the members of the party were cheered by hope, none forgot
+that a dreadful peril impended. Enough time had passed since the
+revolt at Meerut for the news to spread even beyond the little town of
+Akwar, which was within a fourth of a mile of the home of Dr. Marlowe.
+He was aware that some of the most fanatical Mussulmans in all India
+lived there. The action of the servant Mustad, who owed his life to
+the father and child, was proof of what might be expected from these
+miscreants when swept off their feet by the delirium that was spreading
+with the frightful swiftness of a prairie fire.
+
+Accordingly no time was lost. There was a hurried scrambling on board,
+the water fortunately being deep enough near shore to allow all to step
+upon the boat dry shod. The faint moon revealed the smooth surface of
+the Ganges for nearly a hundred yards from land, but the further shore
+was veiled in darkness. It was at this juncture that Miss Marlowe made
+an annoying discovery.
+
+"Oh, papa, I have forgotten my pistol!"
+
+"Wait and I'll soon get it," she added, starting to leap the short
+distance from the gunwale to land, but Jack Everson caught her arm.
+
+"You must not think of it; tell me where you left the weapon and I'll
+bring it."
+
+"I laid it on the table in the dining-room and in the hurry forgot it
+when we left."
+
+Jack turned to his friends.
+
+"Don't wait here," he said, aware of the nervousness of the whole
+party. "Push down stream, and I'll quickly overtake you."
+
+Without waiting for further explanation, he leaped the slight space and
+started up the lawn on a loping trot. For convenience he left his
+rifle behind, but made sure that his revolver was in his hip pocket.
+He did not apprehend that he would need the weapon in the short time he
+expected to be absent, but if anything went awry it would be more
+useful than the rifle.
+
+In that moment of profound stillness following the disappearance of the
+young man among the trees grouped about the lawn, the motionless people
+on the boat felt a thrill of terror at the unmistakable sound of oars
+from some point on the river not distant.
+
+"Let us land and take refuge in your house," suggested young Wharton;
+"we cannot make a decent fight in this boat."
+
+"We shall have a better chance than in the house," was the reply of the
+physician; "the bank of the river is shaded by trees a little further
+down; we must lose no time in getting there, and avoid the least noise."
+
+There were two long poles belonging to the boat, one of which was
+grasped by Wharton, while Anderson swayed the other, the remainder
+watching their movements, which could not have been more skillful.
+Pressing the end against the bank, and afterwards against the clayey
+bottom, the craft speedily swung several rods from shore.
+
+While the two men were thus employed, the others peered off in the
+gloom and listened for a repetition of the sounds that had frightened
+them a few minutes before. They were not heard again, nor could the
+straining vision detect anything of the dreaded object, which could not
+be far away. Not a person on board doubted that a number of their
+enemies were near and searching for them. Dr. Marlowe would have taken
+comfort from this fact had the circumstances been different; for the
+men who were hunting for him would go to his house, since it was there
+they must gain their first knowledge of his flight; but, as he viewed
+it, it was impossible that they should be wholly ignorant of the boat
+and its occupants, which must have made most of the distance before
+night closed in.
+
+It followed, therefore, that if they were looking for the doctor and
+his family they were also looking for the boat and the fugitives it
+contained. The low-lying shore, with no trees fringing the bank, was
+the worst place for him and his friends, and he was in a fever of
+eagerness to reach the protecting shadows along shore. The nerves of
+all were keyed to the tensest point, when they caught the dim outlines
+of the overhanging growth, with the leafage as exuberant as it always
+is in a subtropical region at that season of the year. The men toiled
+with vigor and care, while the others glanced from the gloom of the
+river to the deeper gloom of the bank, which seemed to recede as they
+labored toward it. With a relief that cannot be imagined the bulky
+craft glided into the bank of deeper gloom, which so wrapped it about
+that it was invisible from any point more than a dozen yards distant.
+
+It is inconceivable how a narrower escape could have come about, for
+the two men had hardly ceased poling, allowing the boat to move forward
+with the momentum already gained, when their enemies were discovered.
+Mary Marlowe's arm was interlocked with that of her father, when she
+nervously clutched it and whispered:
+
+"Yonder is their boat!"
+
+All saw the terrifying sight at the same moment. Almost opposite, and
+barely fifty yards out on the river, could be traced a moving shadow,
+the outlines of which showed a craft similarly shaped to their own,
+except that it was somewhat smaller and sat lower in the water. The
+men were too dimly seen for their number to be counted or their motions
+observed, but, as in the former instance, the sounds indicated that
+they were using paddles.
+
+Since it was certain that the natives were searching for the fugitives
+in the boat under the shadows of the bank every one of the latter
+wondered that the pursuers remained out in the stream, when there was
+need of unimpeded vision. They half expected their enemies to turn to
+the left and come directly for them. But nothing of the kind took
+place. The craft headed down the river, the sound of the paddles so
+slight that only the closely listening ear could hear them, until it
+melted in the gloom and vanished from sight.
+
+It was a vast relief for the moment, but little comfort could our
+friends take from the fact. Their enemies were not likely to go far,
+when they would suspect that something of the nature described had
+occurred, and they would return and grope along shore for their
+victims. So certain was Dr. Marlowe of this turn that he believed the
+wisest course was for the entire party to abandon the boat, and, as may
+be said, "take to the woods." They had the whole night before them,
+and, with his intimate knowledge of the roads, paths and trails of the
+country and jungles, he was confident of guiding them beyond danger and
+to some place where, when morning dawned, there would be little to fear
+in the way of discovery.
+
+This course would have been taken except for the absence of Jack
+Everson. There was no way of apprising him of the change of plan, and,
+with his ignorance of the topography of their surroundings, he would be
+certain to go astray, and for any one in his situation, to go astray
+meant death.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+AN UNEXPECTED MEETING.
+
+Meanwhile, Mr. Jack Everson found matters exceedingly interesting.
+
+When he informed his friends that he would rejoin them in the course of
+a few minutes the possibility of anything interfering with his promise
+did not occur to him. That danger threatened every member of the
+little company may be set down as self-evident, but what could happen
+to disturb him in the brief interval spent in running up the slope,
+dashing into the house and back again to the river's side?
+
+Such were his thoughts as he entered the shadows and hurriedly
+approached the front veranda. Although he had reached this spot within
+the preceding twenty-four hours the evening meal and the preparations
+for flight had given him sufficient knowledge of the interior to remove
+all difficulty in going straight to the table in the dining-room and
+taking the forgotten revolver therefrom.
+
+The first tingle of misgiving came to the young man when he was close
+to the porch and about to step upon it. He remembered that it was
+himself who had extinguished the lamp on the table as the three were
+about to pass into the hall and out of doors, but lo! a light was
+shining from that very room. What could it mean?
+
+"That's deuced queer," he thought, coming to an abrupt halt; "I screwed
+down that lamp and blew into the chimney in the orthodox fashion, so it
+couldn't have been that I unconsciously left the wick burning."
+
+At this juncture he made another significant discovery. The front door
+which he had seen Dr. Marlowe close was partly open. The inference was
+inevitable: some one was in the house. In the brief time that had
+passed one or more persons had entered and were busy at that moment in
+the interior. Perhaps they had been watching among the shadows on the
+outside for the occupants to leave the way open for them to pass within.
+
+Prudence dictated that Jack Everson should not linger another moment.
+Indeed, he ought to have counted himself fortunate that he had made his
+discovery in time to save himself from running into a trap. He should
+return to his friends with the alarming news and help them in getting
+away with the utmost haste possible. But Jack did nothing of the sort.
+
+The chief cause of his lingering was his desire to obtain the revolver
+belonging to Miss Marlowe. Recalling the paucity of firearms among the
+people on the boat he felt that a single weapon could be ill spared.
+But above and beyond this cold truth was a vague, shuddering suspicion,
+amounting to a belief, that the young woman would soon need that very
+weapon; that, without it she would become another of the unspeakable
+victims of the fiends who made the Sepoy Mutiny one of the most hideous
+blots that darken the pages of history. He compressed his lips and
+swore that the revolver should be recovered, if the thing were
+possible, failing in which he would compel her to take his own.
+
+The first thing was to learn whether there was more than one person in
+the house and what business had brought them there. His own return was
+not expected, so that that advantage was in his favor. He stepped
+lightly upon the veranda and, like a burglar in his stocking feet,
+passed across the porch and pushed back the door far enough to admit
+him. This required but a few inches, and the hinges gave out not the
+slightest creak. The entrance to the dining-room was closed, so that
+all was darkness, but he plainly saw the yellow thread along the edges
+of the door, caused by the lamp in the room beyond.
+
+Once within the hall he listened intently, but could not detect the
+slightest sound within the building. He had already drawn his
+revolver, and held it ready for instant use. Knowing the value of
+seconds, he began moving along the hall toward the door, which was only
+a few paces distant, and had passed half the space when a muttered
+execration escaped him, for his foot struck some object that was kicked
+the remaining length of the hall with a clatter that he verily believed
+must have been heard by his friends on the boat.
+
+No use now for precaution. Determined to have the other weapon, but
+not unmindful of the peril involved, he strode the few remaining steps
+and hastily shoved open the door of the dining-room. If a foe was
+there with the revolver he was quite likely to hold it levelled at the
+intruder, because of which Jack, when he burst into the room, held his
+own weapon pointed, so as to prevent any enemy from "getting the drop"
+on him.
+
+For one moment the young man believed it was all a mistake and that,
+despite the precaution taken upon leaving the house, he had not
+extinguished the lamp, whose wick had recovered its vigor, but the
+suspicion was hardly formed when he knew there was no foundation for
+it. In the first place no lamp ever acts that way, and, the front door
+having been closed, could not open of itself. More convincing than all
+was the fact that Mary Marlowe's revolver, which had brought him back,
+was missing.
+
+Diagonally across the dining-room from where Jack Everson stood was the
+door leading to the rear of the house. This was open for three or four
+inches, and while searching the apartment with all the keenness of his
+powerful vision, he distinctly saw it move. The distance was no more
+than an inch, but he was not mistaken, and knew it had been drawn that
+much nearer shut. Since no air was stirring the conclusion was
+inevitable that some one was on the other side who was aware of the
+entrance of the American.
+
+The position of the lamp on the table threw the crevice caused by the
+slight opening of the door in shadow, and all was blank darkness
+beyond. But, looking in that direction, Jack caught the gleam of a
+pair of eyes, peering from the gloom like the orbs of a jungle tiger
+gathering himself for a spring. Nothing could be seen but the glow of
+the eyes, that seemed to have something of the phosphorescence of the
+cat species, but he could not mistake the meaning of what he saw.
+
+Jack had partly lowered his revolver, after the first glance around the
+room, but it now came to a level again with the suddenness of lightning
+and was pointed straight at the gleaming eyes, as he spoke in a low,
+deadly tone:
+
+"Come forth or I'll send a bullet through your infernal brain!"
+
+Never was man more fairly caught. In the language of the West, Jack
+Everson had the drop on him, and none could be more alive to the fact
+than the fellow who was thus taken at disadvantage. It was merited
+punishment for his foolhardiness in inviting his own discomfiture. At
+first the chances of the two were equal, but the white man was more
+alive to the situation.
+
+The Asiatic showed his appreciation of the situation by stepping
+forward into the lamplight.
+
+Incredible as it may seem, he not only held a pistol in his right hand,
+but it was half raised and pointed at Jack Everson.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+MUSTAD.
+
+The East Indian who stood before Jack Everson, thoroughly cowed and
+submissive, was unusually tall, dark, and thin to emaciation. He wore
+a turban, a light linen jacket which encompassed his chest to below the
+waist, with a sash or girdle, loose flapping trousers and sandals. In
+the girdle at his waist was a long, formidable knife or yataghan, which
+he would have been glad to bury in the heart of the man who had thus
+brought him to his knees.
+
+When Jack Everson demanded to know his identity the fellow replied in a
+low voice that was not lacking in a certain musical quality:
+
+"Mustad!"
+
+The young man half expected the answer.
+
+"What business brings you here?"
+
+"He is my master; I work for him. I have been to see my aged mother,
+who is very ill. I have just returned to serve my master."
+
+"That is not true! You went away to bring some of your people to kill
+the doctor and his family."
+
+"Sahib does Mustad great wrong," replied that individual in a grieved
+voice. "I love my master and my mistress. I am not ungrateful. I
+would give my life sooner than harm a hair of their heads. Where have
+they gone?"
+
+It was the last question that removed all lingering doubt of the
+native's treachery. He had returned to bring about their overthrow,
+but knew not where to look for them. When he could ascertain whither
+they had fled he and his brother miscreants would be at their heels.
+
+"Suppose I should tell you that they had gone to Meerut or Delhi?"
+
+"Allah be praised!" exclaimed the other devoutly; "for then they will
+be safe."
+
+"Is there no trouble in Meerut or Delhi?"
+
+"What trouble can there be!" asked Mustad, with well-feigned
+simplicity. "It is in those cities that the missionaries and many of
+the Inglese live. They have lived there many years. What harm could
+befall them?"
+
+By this time Jack Everson had lost all doubt of the perfidy of the man.
+He could not fail to know what had taken place within the preceding
+twenty-four hours in the cities named, and he lacked his usual cunning
+when he tried to deceive his questioner.
+
+The young man saw that it was a waste of time to question Mustad. No
+reliance could be placed on anything he said.
+
+"You will wait here, then, until Dr. Marlowe comes back?"
+
+Mustad vigorously nodded his head and replied:
+
+"I shall wait, and my eyes will be filled with tears until I see the
+good man and his child again. When will they come to their home?"
+
+"Well, the best thing you can do is to wait here until you see them
+again."
+
+As Jack made this remark he took a quick step forward and picked up the
+revolver. He did not pause to examine it, but was sure that none of
+the chambers had been discharged. Slipping the weapon into his coat
+pocket, and still grasping his own, he said:
+
+"I think I shall go out on the veranda and await the return of the
+doctor."
+
+As he made this remark he committed a mistake for which there was no
+excuse. Instead of backing out of the room he turned about and started
+through the open door into the hall. The walking cane against which he
+had once struck his foot still lay where he had kicked it, and he
+tripped over it a second time. The mishap, slight as it was, saved his
+life. As he stumbled in the gloom something whizzed like the rush of a
+cobra's head past his temple, nipping his hat and striking the opposite
+wall with force enough to kill two or three men. It was the yataghan
+of Mustad, who had drawn and hurled it with inconceivable quickness and
+with an aim so unerring that it would have brained the unsuspecting
+American but for his fortunate stumble.
+
+The furious Jack whirled around with the purpose of sending a bullet
+through the brain of the wretch, but something like a shadow flitted
+through the lamplight while Jack was in the act of turning and, before
+he could secure any aim, the scoundrel had vanished. Determined not to
+be balked the young man let fly, and then, bounding across the room,
+snapped back the door, meaning to repeat the shot at the first glimpse
+of Mustad. But the latter was familiar with all the turnings of the
+house, while Jack knew nothing of that portion of the building. He
+could neither see nor hear anything, and did not deem it prudent to use
+the lamp to help in the search, though it was hard to retire from the
+field and leave the miscreant unpunished.
+
+To do so, however, was the wiser course, and again he moved into the
+hall. This time he backed thither, though, since Mustad had no weapon,
+it was impossible that the attempt upon the young man's life should be
+repeated. The outer door was opened, and once more he stood on the
+veranda.
+
+Before venturing across the lawn in the direction of the river he spent
+a minute or two in peering into the surrounding gloom and listening.
+He may have been mistaken, but he fancied he heard more than one person
+moving stealthily about in the house. Once he was sure he caught the
+sound of whispered words, so that the astounding fact was established
+that during the few minutes occupied in talking with Mustad he had a
+friend within instant call.
+
+"All of which goes to prove that these people are cowards at heart,"
+was the sage conclusion of Jack Everson. "They will throw away their
+lives for the sake of Islamism, and they will fight like wildcats if a
+man turns his back upon them; but when he stands face to face they are
+whipped curs."
+
+Since there was no doubt that Mustad and his companions would be on the
+alert to note the course taken by Everson, so as to learn what had
+become of his friends, the young man saw the need of misleading them.
+He took care not to return to the river over his own trail. Instead of
+doing so he moved to the right, as if on his way to the nearby town of
+Akwar. When satisfied he was beyond range of the keen vision of those
+in the house of Dr. Marlowe he made an abrupt change, which led him
+toward the Ganges, forgetting, when he did so, that there might be
+natives in the vicinity who were not in the building at all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+SCOUTING.
+
+Had Mr. Jack Everson spent a few years in Hindoostan he would not have
+made the blunders that we are obliged to record concerning his
+movements after parting from his friends on the boat. He had acquitted
+himself pluckily while in the house of the physician, but his escape
+from death at the hands of Mustad and his companion was providential
+and, under similar circumstances, was not likely to be repeated once in
+a thousand times.
+
+Moreover, with his knowledge, already gained, of Asiatic cunning, he
+ought to have reflected that if two of their dusky enemies were within
+the house there were likely to be others in the immediate neighborhood.
+It looked as if Mustad had entered the dwelling expecting to find the
+physician there. He was prepared with an excuse for his abrupt
+departure and an explanation that would satisfy his indulgent master
+and mistress. Keeping his companion in the background the wretch could
+then complete his plans for turning the party over to the fury of their
+brother murderers, who probably were calmly waiting on the outside for
+the signal.
+
+Nothing of all this, we repeat, entered the head of Jack until he had
+made the change in the course he was following and had passed down the
+slope to the river bank. His effort to mislead his enemies necessarily
+took him some distance above the point where he had left the boat, and
+he now set out to find his way to it. It was while he was engaged in
+doing so that he became aware that he was followed.
+
+"Well, I'll be hanged!" he muttered, coming to an abrupt stop; "it
+seems to me that these infernal imps are everywhere."
+
+He had not seen any one, but a rustling, grating noise in the shadow of
+the nearest tree told him where the immediate danger lay. Believing
+that an unexpected course was best he wheeled and ran at full speed
+toward the tree, which contained a large number of dense,
+wide-spreading branches.
+
+The result was surprising. Instead of one native, two leaped out from
+cover and ran away at full speed. They had been stealing after him, on
+the watch for a chance to bring him down by a blow in the back, when
+the tables were turned in this unexpected manner. Jack, therefore, had
+no hesitation in firing at the one on his right, and immediately after
+at his companion, whose superior speed had placed him considerably in
+advance. As a consequence, he missed the latter, while the first
+emitted a screech, leaped high in air and sprawled forward on his face
+as dead as Julius Caesar.
+
+The fact that his pursuers were two in number led the young man to
+believe they were Mustad and his companion, whom he had heard in the
+house. A few minutes later he made another halt. He was able, despite
+the gloom, to identify the spot where he had left the boat, but it was
+not in sight.
+
+"I told them not to wait for me, and they acted on my suggestion. They
+can't be far off, and I hope have run into no trouble."
+
+The occurrences of the last quarter of an hour gave Jack a vivid idea
+of the increasing peril. The natives from the nearby town were hunting
+for the physician, his daughter and himself, all of whom had not left
+the house a minute too soon and now, while he paused on the shore of
+the river and listened, he too caught the sound that had filled his
+friends with dread. There were no noises from the jungles to the
+eastward, though at times the outcries are terrifying, and the shouts
+and shrieks of the mutineers and their victims at Meerut and Delhi were
+too far away to reach his ears, but he heard now and then the faint
+sound of paddles out on the stream.
+
+"Anderson spoke of using paddles," reflected Jack, "but it was a
+misnomer, for they have none, and they would not have pushed so far out
+from shore when they knew I expected to return so soon. All that
+proves that a party of devils have also a boat and are hunting for the
+one in which our new friends are groping for safety."
+
+This threatened to make a new complication, but the plain course for
+Jack was to keep along the shore of the river and press his search for
+the craft, which he was certain was not far off.
+
+His experience had taught him the need of unceasing vigilance, and as
+he advanced, he scrutinized the ground in front and on every hand, like
+a scout stealing into a hostile camp. Within less time than he counted
+upon he saw the boat lying close to shore, where his friends were
+awaiting him. As soon as he recognized the craft he announced himself
+in a guarded undertone, to guard against any mistake, and the next
+moment clambered aboard, where, it need not be said, he was warmly
+welcomed.
+
+After they had exchanged greetings the doctor asked:
+
+"Did I not hear the report of your pistol a little while ago?"
+
+"Inasmuch as I discharged it very probably you did."
+
+Thereupon Jack told of what he had seen and done since leaving the boat
+to recover the pistol of Miss Marlowe. It was a story of deep interest
+to all, and his account of his meeting with the faithless Mustad deeply
+stirred his master.
+
+"Despite my denunciation of the fellow I confess I had a lingering
+suspicion that I might have been mistaken; but all doubt now is
+removed. There is no native in all India to be more dreaded than he."
+
+"I have a faint hope that it was he with whom I made my fourth
+bull's-eye," remarked Jack.
+
+"Hardly likely. Probably there were two others skulking on the outside
+and waiting for a chance at us."
+
+"But they had all the chance they could have asked at _me_."
+
+"It may have been the doctor and his daughter whom they were the most
+eager to secure," suggested Mr. Turner.
+
+"That is my belief," added Anderson.
+
+"And mine, too," joined the doctor himself. "It seems to be a trait of
+our perverse human nature to hate with the deepest intensity those who
+have done us the greatest kindness."
+
+This remark meant more to Jack Everson than to any one else, for he
+believed that it was the daughter who was the special object of the
+natives. That reminded him of the weapon he had secured.
+
+"Here," he said, "take it before I forget to return it."
+
+"You risked a good deal for my sake," she said gratefully, accepting
+the weapon, "and I cannot thank you sufficiently---- Well, I declare!"
+
+She was in the act of placing the pistol in the pocket of her dress
+when she made the discovery that her weapon was already there. Jack
+Everson had taken Mustad's own property from him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ALONG SHORE.
+
+The curious incident served to lift for a brief time the oppression
+that rested upon all. The remarkable part of it was how Miss Marlowe
+could believe she had left her revolver in her home when it was in the
+pocket of her dress, where, it would seem, she ought to have felt it
+while walking across the lawn to the boat, even if she had forgotten to
+examine that most natural receptacle for it when she first missed the
+weapon.
+
+"It is the most stupid thing I ever did," she declared. "I meant to
+keep it in my hand while coming from the house, and, awaking to the
+fact that it was not there, did not stop to examine my pocket. It is
+too bad."
+
+"We have gained an additional means of defense," observed Mr. Turner,
+"and that may be decisive before we are through with this business."
+
+Now that all were together again each was impatient to be on the move.
+Wharton and Turner began using the poles with the skill shown some time
+before, and once more the unwieldy craft swung slowly down the Ganges,
+with all on board alert for the first sign of their enemies. The women
+were advised to remain in the small cabin, where they would be safe
+against stealthy shots.
+
+As the boat crept under the shadows along shore the spirits of all
+improved, for it seemed that with every rod placed behind, them the
+danger was diminished, and by and by would vanish altogether.
+
+"That, however, cannot be," said the doctor to Jack Everson, as they
+sat a little apart from the rest, near the bow of the craft. "In
+truth, I see but one possible escape for this party."
+
+"What is that?"
+
+"I have already referred to it. It will take us weeks to reach
+Calcutta on the east or Bombay on the west, and between us and each of
+these points the hell fire will rage for months to come. To go south
+is equally suicidal, since it would take us into the heart of the
+insurrection. I repeat that there is but one thing to be done: that is
+to push northward, as I said, until we reach a people too far removed
+to be affected by this deviltry."
+
+"To find a simple people where our knowledge of medicine will cause us
+to be looked upon as superior beings. I have discovered a remedy for
+the bite of a cobra which will stand one in good stead, should a native
+be bitten. They believe, you know, as does the rest of the world, that
+the bite of this serpent is certain death. But I have discovered a
+remedy, the necessary drugs of which I carry in this case," touching
+the leather case strapped to his back.
+
+"Beyond all doubt. You have tested this remedy of yours?"
+
+"I have, twice."
+
+"Upon man or brute?"
+
+"Upon both."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+A COLLISION.
+
+Although the two physicians were deeply interested in the question of
+toxicology they could not forget their situation and its perils. The
+craft had nearly completed its half mile to the mouth of the tributary
+which it was intended to ascend, when the polemen, pausing for a
+moment's rest, whispered that they heard the sound of paddles again.
+
+"_There they are_!"
+
+It was Jack Everson who uttered the exclamation, loud enough for all to
+hear. He pointed down stream as he spoke, and every one perceived the
+dreaded boat returning.
+
+Although nearer at hand than before, it seemed to be following the
+course of the river, and there was hope that it would again pass
+without discovering the shrinking ones so near land.
+
+When first observed the other boat was fifty yards out and not quite so
+far down stream. Moving against the current its progress was slower
+than before, but its advance was plainly perceptible. The craft of the
+white people had lost the momentum imparted by the poling, and was now
+controlled only by the current, which was so sluggish close to the land
+that the motion was hardly noticeable.
+
+The hopes of our friends steadily rose until the other boat was almost
+directly abreast. It would seem that if the occupants intended
+attacking they would have veered inward before this, but there could be
+no assurance so long as they remained visible.
+
+Every one started when the gaunt, sloping figure suddenly became
+upright at the prow of the boat and stood motionless. He had ceased
+using the pole that he had been plying with so much vigor. At the same
+moment the noise of the paddles ceased, proving that the men
+controlling them had also stopped work. What could it mean?
+
+No one of the white people stirred or whispered. Could they have done
+so they would have checked the beating of their hearts through fear of
+being betrayed. Surely something had awakened the suspicion of the
+natives.
+
+Suddenly some one spoke on board the craft. The voice was audible, but
+the doctor, who was a master of Hindoostanee, could not catch what was
+said. At the same instant a splash was heard, and the lank form bent
+over, as he pressed the long pole against the bottom of the river and
+resumed his slow walking toward the stern. The noise of paddles, too,
+was heard again. The craft had resumed its progress, and for an
+instant every one believed it was about to pass by. Then Jack Everson
+said:
+
+"By heaven! they're coming for us!"
+
+All saw that the boat was swinging around so as to head toward them.
+
+"Into the cabin, quick!" commanded the doctor, and the women quickly
+scrambled out of sight, while the men lay down, so as to screen their
+bodies as much as possible.
+
+"It won't do to let them come too near," added the physician. "Try to
+make every shot tell."
+
+As he spoke he took the best aim he could and fired. Jack Everson was
+but a moment behind him, and Anderson discharged his gun almost
+simultaneously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+A WHITE MAN'S VICTORY.
+
+It was clear that the reception was a stunning surprise to the Asiatics
+in the other boat. In times of confusion and terror strong men often
+sit dazed and meekly submit to massacre when sturdy resistance would
+leave a far different tale to tell. Such was the case at Meerut, at
+Delhi, at Cawnpore, at Lucknow and scores of places where the human
+fiends revelled in massacre and crime.
+
+But here, where evidently the same submissiveness was expected, the
+miscreants were fired upon before they had discharged a single shot
+themselves. Not only that, but the Caucasians kept the thing up. This
+was contrary to all rule and precedent.
+
+If, however, the white men did not wait to be slain, neither did the
+dusky barbarians sit still and allow themselves to be shot down. They
+ceased paddling and appealed to their guns, whose bullets began
+whistling about the heads of the defenders in the other boat.
+
+Who of our friends did it will never be known, but one of them
+perforated the gaunt scoundrel who, with his form bent over, was
+pushing the pole while he stalked the length of the boat, returning
+again to the prow to repeat the performance. The fellow emitted a
+screech like a wounded tiger and leaped several feet in air, coming
+down on the gunwale, over which he toppled into the water and was seen
+no more. It was the spirited defiance of the white men that told.
+Screening themselves as best they could they continued firing, Jack
+Everson occasionally adding a shot from his revolver by way of variety.
+The conformation of the other boat and its crowded condition prevented
+the natives from sheltering themselves as did those who were using them
+as targets. In short, the wretches were getting the worst of the
+business, and it did not take them long to learn the fact. Left
+without control, their boat began drifting with the current, which
+being stronger than along shore gradually carried it down stream and
+out of sight. So long, however, as it was visible its occupants
+continued firing, while the white people did still better, for they
+sent several shots after their enemies when they could see nothing and
+fired wholly by guess.
+
+There could be no question that the promptness of Dr. Marlowe and the
+vigor of the resistance threw their foes into a sort of panic from
+which they did not recover until beyond range. They had been taught a
+lesson that they were sure to remember for a long time; though, when
+our friends came to think the matter over, after finding no one of them
+had been hurt, they could not escape the belief that the consequences
+were certain to be of the most serious nature to themselves, and in
+this conclusion, sad to say, they were not mistaken.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+UNDER THE BANK.
+
+A few minutes later an open space appeared in front of the boat. It
+was the month of the tributary flowing into the Ganges from the left or
+north, and was more than a hundred yards across. Since it was
+necessary to stem the current in order to take advantage of this
+refuge, the doctor contemplated it with misgiving, for the work of
+poling it up stream promised to be laborious. He had not forgotten his
+original plan of abandoning the boat and striking across the country on
+foot, taking advantage of the less-frequented roads and paths that were
+well known to him. He was relieved, however, to find the flow so
+languid that it was easy to make headway against it.
+
+"I have never followed this stream far," he remarked, "and, therefore,
+have less knowledge of it than the rest of the country, but my
+impression is that it cannot serve us long."
+
+"It will be time enough to leave the boat and take to the woods when we
+can go no further," said Jack Everson; "but we cannot get away from the
+main stream too soon."
+
+This was self-evident. It was not likely that the natives after their
+decisive repulse would abandon their purpose of massacring the party,
+but they would be more guarded in what they did and probably secure
+reinforcements, an easy thing to do when the sanguinary wretches
+everywhere were thirsting for victims.
+
+Jack had seized one of the poles, and he and young Wharton plied them
+with so much sturdiness that the heavy craft made better progress than
+at any time since it was used as a vehicle of safety. The course of
+the tributary was winding, and our friends had not gone far when they
+were shut out from the sight of any persons passing up and down the
+main river, even if close to the northern bank.
+
+Would the natives suspect the course taken by the whites? That was the
+all-important question that must soon be answered. After searching up
+and down the Ganges without success, it was likely they would penetrate
+the stratagem and follow them, in which event the fugitives would be in
+a critical situation, since the straightness of the stream and the
+wooded shores would place them at much greater disadvantage than if
+they remained upon the Ganges.
+
+When the boat had ascended the tributary for perhaps an eighth of a
+mile it was deemed safe to lessen the work of poling. Careful
+listening failed to detect any sound of pursuit, and there was ground
+for hoping that their enemies neither knew nor suspected what had been
+done.
+
+Several facts had become apparent. The densely wooded shores offered
+excellent concealment. By running the boat beneath the dense branches
+and among the heavy vegetation the keenest-eyed Asiatics might pass up
+or down stream almost within arm's length without suspecting its
+presence. But the tributary had perceptibly narrowed and its current
+was swifter than at the mouth. All this pointed to the truth of what
+Dr. Marlowe suspected--the stream could not serve them much further.
+
+The night was now so far advanced that the women took the advice of
+their friends and withdrew to the cabin for slumber. Their quarters
+were cramped, but they made themselves fairly comfortable. The night
+was cooler than the day, but only sufficiently so to be pleasant. It
+was not deemed probable that anything would be seen of their enemies
+before the morrow, and perhaps not even then.
+
+Dr. Marlowe insisted upon taking his turn in poling, but since there
+were four vigorous men without him, they would not consent. When two
+had toiled for an hour or more, they gave way to the other couple, and
+the progress thus continued without interruption, while the time slowly
+dragged along. The resting spells gave each the opportunity for sleep,
+thus husbanding their vigor for the morrow. Finding that there was
+nothing to which he could turn his hand, the physician reclined at the
+bow and soon joined the others in dreamland.
+
+It was probably one o'clock when Jack Everson, who had been sleeping
+for nearly an hour, was awakened by a gentle shaking of his shoulder.
+Opening his eyes and looking up he saw Wharton bending over him.
+
+"All right," remarked the American; "I'm ready for my turn," and he
+rose, yawning, to his feet.
+
+"I think we had better rest until morning."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"The current has become so rapid that it is hard to make progress; this
+stream can't be of much further use to us."
+
+It needed but a glance around in the gloom to see that it was as his
+friend had declared. The boat was so close to the left-hand shore that
+it was held motionless by Anderson at the bow, who gripped an
+overhanging branch, with one hand. The water rippled around the front
+of the craft, and when Jack dipped the end of one of the poles into the
+current it swept downward at a rate that astonished him.
+
+"I esteem your advice good," he said, "but it will not do to leave the
+boat in sight."
+
+With the help of the limbs and the use of the poles it was easy to
+force the craft under the bank, where it was screened from observation.
+Then it was secured in place against drifting and all work for the time
+was over.
+
+Wharton and Jack Everson were the only persons awake. The women had
+been sleeping for several hours, while Anderson and Turner had long
+since joined the venerable doctor in the realms of unconsciousness.
+The two young men sat down where they could speak in low tones without
+being overheard.
+
+"It won't do for all of us to sleep at the same time," remarked Jack;
+"the scoundrels may be creeping up stream after us."
+
+"That is hardly possible; I am sure that for the present we are as safe
+as if in the heart of London."
+
+"I cannot believe as you do; since I have just enjoyed an hour's sleep
+I will act as sentinel until daybreak. I can easily keep awake for the
+few hours that remain."
+
+"As you think best, though I am sure it is an unnecessary precaution."
+
+"We must not forget that there are perils from the jungle as well as
+from the river. There is no saying what wild beast may pay us a visit."
+
+Inasmuch as Jack could not be dissuaded from his purpose, and Wharton
+began to suspect his friend was half right, the question was decided.
+Wharton stretched out on the deck, falling asleep almost immediately,
+and Jack thus found himself the only one with his senses at command and
+with the safety of the others dependent upon him.
+
+He took his place near the cabin, where the women were slumbering, with
+his breechloader in hand. He was never more wide awake and was sure he
+would remain so for hours to come. Wharton had offered to divide the
+duty with him in acting as sentinel, but our hero preferred to keep the
+matter in his own hands. He was sure his friend did not realize the
+full peril of their situation.
+
+The stillness was broken only by the peculiar cries in the jungle,
+which it may be said were never wholly silent. First on the right,
+then on the left, then from the front, and again from different points
+on both sides of the stream he heard the sounds, some faint and far
+away, with others alarmingly close. The hoarse snarl of the tiger, the
+finer cry of the leopard, the squawking of night birds, with other
+noises that he could not identify, were continually in the air. Had
+they been heard for the first time he would have been in a tremor of
+fear and nervousness; but man soon becomes accustomed to danger, and
+the nearest must come still nearer to cause his pulse an additional
+throb.
+
+Jack Everson was sensible that through this medley of strange noises
+there was one sound that was continuous and never changing. So faint
+that at first he and Wharton failed to notice it, it now impressed
+itself too distinctly upon his consciousness for him to be mistaken.
+It was a low, steady hum or moaning, such as the traveller hears when
+miles inland from the ocean. He could not identify it, though he made
+several guesses, and was still speculating unsatisfactorily, when he
+received a startling reminder that there was a new peril at his very
+feet.
+
+The first notice was a faint purring sound, as if made by a gigantic
+cat, accompanied by a rustling of the vegetation scarcely a dozen feet
+away. He instantly grasped his rifle with both hands and was alert.
+It was impossible to distinguish ordinary objects in the gloom, but
+suddenly two small circles glittered with a greenish light and the
+purring was succeeded by a low, cavernous growl. Then it all became
+clear to him: a royal Bengal tiger was stealing upon the boat and was
+probably gathering himself for a leap at that very moment.
+
+Had all the occupants been asleep the frightful terror would have
+played sad havoc with them before they could defend themselves. As it
+was, it looked as if more than one fatality must follow his attack.
+
+But for that phosphorescent gleam of the brute's eyes Jack Everson
+would not have been able to locate him, but the glow of the two objects
+defined the outlines and locality of the horrible thing as unmistakably
+as if the sun were overhead. The occasion was one in which everything
+depended upon promptness. The tiger was likely to shift his position
+and turn his head so that the eyes would fail to show.
+
+Jack reflected that there probably were a number of spots in the
+anatomy of the jungle terror that were more vulnerable than others;
+that a well-aimed bullet might be instantly fatal in one, while able to
+inflict only a partial wound in another. Be that as it may, he was
+sure that a conical bullet driven between the eyes and through bone,
+muscle and brain by a rifle that could kill a man at the distance of a
+mile must do effective work when that brain was not a dozen feet
+distant from the muzzle of the weapon. At any rate, there was no time
+for inquiry and he did not hesitate.
+
+Aiming for a point midway between the gleaming orbs he pressed the
+trigger. It takes a well-aimed weapon to kill a royal Bengal tiger,
+even at a short distance, but Jack's rifle was well aimed. The tiny
+sphere of lead darted through the brain and along the spinal marrow as
+if fired with the vicious energy of a charge of dynamite.
+
+It so happened that the tiger was in the act of making his graceful but
+fearful leap that was to land him upon the breast of the young man, who
+had risen to his feet just before firing. The check at that instant
+produced a queer result, the like of which is not often seen. The
+shock of the bullet crashing into the head of the muscular beast at the
+instant he was calling into play his prodigious strength intensified
+that strength to a sudden and astonishing degree. The consequence was
+that the tiger, instead of making the leap he intended, made one twice
+as great and overshot the mark. From out the gloom the beautiful
+sinewy body, of which only a glimpse could be caught, emerged as if
+fired from the throat of a Columbiad and, curving over the shoulders of
+the man and the boat, dropped into the stream with a splash that sent
+the water flying in every direction.
+
+Beyond the line of shadow, where the faint moonlight fell upon him, the
+tiger was seen to be a beast of extraordinary size. He emitted one
+rasping snarl while sailing through the air, but was already dead when
+he fell into the water, where it could not be seen he had made a
+struggle. The sinewy body dipped out of sight, bobbed up again and the
+next minute was swept beyond view by the rapid current.
+
+Rather strangely, not one of the women was awakened by the report of
+the rifle so near them, and of the men Dr. Marlowe and Anderson were
+the only ones who rose to a sitting posture and anxiously inquired the
+cause of the firing.
+
+"I discovered an animal prowling near the boat," replied Jack, who
+thought it well not to disturb them with the whole truth, "and I winged
+him."
+
+"You are sure you killed him?" asked the doctor; "most likely it was a
+tiger."
+
+"I am quite sure of that, and am just as sure that, considered strictly
+as a tiger, he is of no further account. I made another bull's-eye in
+his case."
+
+"How many is that?" asked the physician, entering into the spirit of
+the jest.
+
+"My fifth, counting only those that I am sure of."
+
+"You are doing well; keep it up; let the good work go on," replied the
+elder, again adjusting himself for slumber, quite content to leave the
+valiant young American in charge of the boat and its occupants. Jack
+had it in mind to question him about that distant murmuring sound that
+puzzled him, but when ready to do so he discovered that the doctor was
+again asleep and he did not disturb him.
+
+The fact that one denizen of the jungle had paid the boat a visit was
+ground for looking for a call from another. Jack remained, therefore,
+on the alert, and though under ordinary circumstances he would have
+fallen asleep he kept wide awake until the growing light in the sky
+told of the coming day. Before the sun was fairly above the horizon
+all were astir. They bathed faces and hands in the roiled water and
+greeted one another with thankfulness that the night had passed without
+harm to any member of the little company.
+
+When the three men and their wives fled from Meerut they took with them
+enough food to last for several days. There is little excuse for
+people dying of starvation in any part of India, though sad to say it
+is only recently that thousands were swept away by famine. Fruit is
+abundant and little meat is necessary in hot countries. Before the
+morning meal was partaken of Jack Everson asked Dr. Marlowe to explain
+the cause of the low moaning noise that had been in his ears for moat
+of the night. The elder listened for a minute and replied:
+
+"What I expected! We are very near the head of navigation; that sound
+comes from falls or rapids, above which we cannot go with this boat."
+
+This announcement precipitated a discussion as to what was the best
+course to follow. The physician left no doubt of his sentiments.
+
+"The devils will be prowling up this stream within a few hours; I
+should not be surprised if they are near us this moment; the boat is of
+no further use to us."
+
+The three, Anderson, Turner and Wharton, did not agree with him. The
+craft had served them so well that they were unwilling to abandon it.
+They seemed to believe that it offered a much safer means of defense
+than they could find anywhere on land.
+
+"But you cannot stay forever on it," protested the doctor impatiently.
+
+"We do not expect to," replied Anderson; "we may decide to descend to
+the Ganges again, and continue down the river."
+
+"Whither?"
+
+"To Cawnpore or some point nearer."
+
+The doctor was aghast.
+
+"You mean to leap straight into the hornet's nest; those are the
+places, of all others, that must be avoided."
+
+"It may be as you say, but I am hopeful that the English garrisons have
+been able to hold out against the mutineers."
+
+"It is a woeful mistake, my friend; if you persist in it we must part
+company."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE SOUND OF FIRING.
+
+Jack Everson was hardly less impatient than the doctor over the
+obstinacy of their lately made friends. He reminded them that the
+physician had spent a score of years in that part of the world, with
+which he was so familiar that his judgment ought to outweigh theirs,
+but the argument was useless. They had decided to stick to the boat
+that had served them so well and could not be dissuaded. Their plan,
+as they had intimated, now that they found they could go little further
+up stream, was to descend to the Ganges, with a view of working their
+way down to some of the cities, where they hoped to find the English
+had succeeded in holding out against the mutineers.
+
+Could this be done, and could such a haven be reached, all would be
+well, but the doctor assured them they were leaning upon a broken reed.
+When it became evident that all persuasions were useless the parties
+separated. A common peril had brought them near to one another and it
+was impossible that that they should part except as friends. All felt
+the solemnity of the hour. Each wife kissed and embraced Mary Marlowe,
+and like her shed tears at what they felt was probably the final
+parting, so far as this world was concerned. The men warmly shook
+hands and there was more than one tremulous voice when the three passed
+over the side of the boat and said farewell.
+
+The latter walked some distance through the jungle, which was so dense
+that they were obliged to follow one of the numerous paths made by the
+animals in going to and coming from the water. The doctor, by virtue
+of his superior knowledge, took the lead, with his daughter close
+behind, and Jack Everson bringing up the rear. They were silent and
+thoughtful, for their spirits were oppressed by a deep gloom and the
+feeling that something dreadful impended.
+
+Not far off the path which they were following expanded into a natural
+clearing two or three rods in extent. When they reached the spot the
+doctor halted and faced his companions.
+
+"I now know where we are," he said in an undertone; "we have to follow
+this path a little way back, when we enter a hilly and rough country,
+where the jungle is more open. It is cut up by numerous trails like
+this, most of which have been made by the feet of wild animals, but one
+of them leads northward and finally enters a highway, which if followed
+far enough will land us in the Nepaul country."
+
+"I assume from what you have said that it will not be safe to stick to
+this road?" said Jack.
+
+"No; for two or three days while travelling over it we shall be in
+constant danger; our task will be to make our way over it without
+attracting the notice of any of our enemies who are scouring the
+country for us."
+
+"Is the thing possible?"
+
+"I should not undertake it did I not think so; the danger will threaten
+for probably a hundred miles, though growing steadily less as we
+proceed."
+
+"Will it not be safer to do our travelling by night?" asked the
+daughter.
+
+"That is what I mean to do after reaching the more plainly marked path,
+which connects with the highway. I see no risk in pushing through the
+jungle by day, since the only foes we are likely to encounter are
+four-footed ones. If we meet any such we must refrain from firing,
+since the reports of our guns will be sure to draw attention to us. I
+mean, of course," explained the doctor, "that our weapons are not to be
+appealed to unless there is no escape otherwise, as was the case with
+the tiger."
+
+While he was speaking, Mary gave a faint gasp and caught his arm. She
+and Jack were facing the point toward which his back was turned.
+Seeing that it was something behind him that had startled both, the
+doctor turned his head. As if to emphasize the words just spoken, he
+saw an immense spotted leopard, motionless in the trail not more than
+fifty feet away. Evidently he was trotting to the stream, when he
+caught sight of the three persons, stopped short, raised his head and
+stared wonderingly at them.
+
+The leopard shares the reputation of the tiger for deadly ferocity and
+daring. When more than 20,000 persons are killed in India every year
+by wild animals and serpents, it will be found that the leopard is one
+of the most active among these factors of death, and holds his own well
+up with the tiger.
+
+Like the venomous serpent, the leopard had a terrible beauty all his
+own. As he stood with head raised, eyes glaring, mouth slightly parted
+and his long tail lashing his sides with a force that made the thumping
+against his glossy ribs plainly audible, his pose was perfect. What a
+picture he made!
+
+The question that was to be quickly answered was whether the fearful
+brute would allow himself to be turned aside from the path and withdraw
+again into the jungle with his thirst unslaked. If he did he would not
+be molested; if he presumed to advance upon the party, whom he
+evidently held in slight fear, let him be prepared for the consequences!
+
+Jack Everson fumbled his rifle and looked with sparkling eyes at the
+beast.
+
+"What a chance for another bull's-eye!" he said, in a low voice. "I
+would take him right between and above his forelegs, where I should be
+sure of reaching his heart."
+
+"Don't fire unless he advances to attack us," warned the elder.
+
+It would be hard to say what induced the leopard to retreat, for, as
+has been said, he is one of the most dangerous denizens of the jungle;
+but, while our friends were expecting a charge from him, he wheeled
+about and trotted off.
+
+"It looks as if he had learned something of your skill," remarked the
+doctor with a smile.
+
+Again, while the words were in the mouth of the speaker, he was
+interrupted, this time in a more terrifying manner than before.
+
+From the direction of the stream which they had left but a short time
+previous, and undoubtedly from the boat itself, came the reports of
+firearms. There were no shouts or outcries, but the firing was rapid
+and apparently made by gun and pistol.
+
+"They have been attacked!" exclaimed Mary; "we must go to their help!"
+
+She impulsively started along the path, but her father seized her arm
+and said sternly:
+
+"Remain here! It is no place for you; Jack and I will do what we can."
+
+Perhaps in the excitement of the moment the parent did not fully
+comprehend the danger of leaving his daughter alone in the jungle, even
+at so slight a distance and for so brief a time as he anticipated, with
+nothing but a revolver as a means of defence; but he and Jack Everson
+were eager to rush to the aid of their friends, and they hurried over
+the trail without even looking back at her.
+
+The young man was slightly behind his companion and both broke into a
+loping trot. Each held his rifle in hand, on the alert to use it the
+instant the opportunity presented itself.
+
+It will be borne in mind that the distance from the slight natural
+opening to the boat was short, and a few minutes sufficed for the two
+men to cover it; but a strange thing happened. The reports of firearms
+which had broken out with such suddenness ceased with the same
+abruptness, and the silence because of the contrast was tenfold more
+oppressive than before.
+
+"What can that mean?" asked Jack, as his companion slackened his pace.
+
+"_It means that they are through_!" replied the doctor, whose face was
+of deathly paleness. "My God! what have we escaped!"
+
+"We shall soon know," replied Jack, catching the awful significance of
+the words; and then he added to himself:
+
+"We may have escaped it, but for how long?"
+
+A few rods further and they were at the side of the stream, and the
+boat loomed to view through the thick undergrowth and vegetation.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+GONE!
+
+Neither Jack Everson nor Dr. Marlowe forgot his own personal danger in
+hurrying to the help of their imperilled friends. If the two were too
+late to be of any assistance they were imminently likely to precipitate
+themselves into the same whirlpool of woe and death. They had slowed
+their gait to a walk as they neared the spot, and when they caught the
+dim outlines of the boat the two stood still.
+
+So far as they could see there was no change in its surroundings. It
+was still moored against the bank, so close that any one could step
+aboard, but no sign of living person was visible on or about it. There
+was something so uncanny in it all that but for their mutual knowledge
+they would have doubted the evidence of their senses.
+
+"I don't understand it," whispered Jack. "Suppose you stay here while
+I steal nigh enough to learn something that will help clear up the
+horrible mystery."
+
+"You are running frightful risk," said the doctor; "I cannot advise you
+to try it."
+
+"All the same, I shall do it."
+
+Thus, it will be observed that the three persons composing the little
+party became separated from one another for greater or less distances.
+The daughter was waiting, two or three hundred yards away, for the
+return of her father and lover, while they had just parted company,
+though they expected to remain in sight of each other.
+
+Dr. Marlowe stood in the path, partly sheltering himself behind a
+couple of tree trunks, but with his eyes fixed upon his young friend,
+who walked cautiously but unhesitatingly forward. Jack held his rifle
+in a trailing position at his side, his shoulders bent slightly
+forward, while he stepped lightly, his senses alert, like those of a
+scout entering the camp of an enemy. That he was running into great
+danger was self-evident, but he was determined not to turn back until
+he learned something of the strange occurrences.
+
+Watching his young friend, the doctor saw him stop when at the side of
+the motionless boat. His profile showed first on one side and then, on
+the other, while he listened for the slightest sound that could give an
+atom of knowledge. Apparently the effort was useless, for the next
+moment he placed his left hand on the gunwale and vaulted lightly upon
+deck. He stood a few moments as if transfixed, then turning abruptly
+about leaped to the ground, and, breaking into a run, hurried back to
+his friend, who noticed that his face was more ghastly than before,
+while his eyes stared as if they still looked upon unutterable things.
+
+"What is it?" asked the elder in a ghostly whisper.
+
+"My God! don't ask me to tell!"
+
+"You forget that we are both physicians."
+
+"But not that we are human beings; thank Heaven forever that you did
+not look upon the sight my eyes saw a moment ago. Let it suffice,
+doctor, to say that of the three men and women to whom we bade good-bye
+within the past twenty minutes not one is alive! The fiends have been
+there."
+
+Not the least singular fact connected with this hideous incident was
+that the devils who committed the unspeakable crime had vanished, so
+far as could be seen, as utterly as if the ground had opened beneath
+their feet and swallowed them. Two men had come back upon the scene
+within a few minutes after all this was done, and yet the doers were
+nowhere in sight. What was the meaning of their hasty departure?
+
+It was unreasonable to think they had gone far. They must be in the
+vicinity. They must have noticed the absence of the doctor and his
+companions; doubtless they were looking for them along shore; possibly
+they had started over some of the trails and ere long would strike the
+one along which the three had fled.
+
+"A wonderful Providence has preserved us thus far," said Jack Everson;
+"but it is too much to expect we shall emerge unscathed from this hell
+hole."
+
+"I hope nothing will happen to Mary before we rejoin her."
+
+"We shall be with her in a minute."
+
+Nevertheless, a vague fear disturbed both. The parent was again
+leading, and he unconsciously hastened his footsteps. Only a slight
+distance beyond they came to the small opening where they had left her
+standing but a brief while before. Since the men had passed over the
+intervening distance to the river it was unlikely that anything had
+occurred to alarm the young woman, but there was no saying what might
+happen in those times and in that part of the world.
+
+The real shock came to the parent when he turned in the trail and saw
+the open space but failed to observe his daughter. He hurried on
+without speaking, but Jack, directly behind him, had made the
+discovery, for a moment he was so breathless and dizzy that he barely
+saved himself from falling. His heart became lead, and the awful
+conviction got hold of him that the most woeful affliction of all had
+come upon them, and that his betrothed was lost irrecoverably.
+
+But the sight of the anguish of the parent when he turned about and
+faintly gasped, "Where is my child?" brought the self-command of the
+young man back.
+
+It was the despairing question wrung from the heart of the parent, with
+a grief that was no keener than that of Jack Everson himself. Here was
+another instance of the appalling suddenness with which tragedies began
+and were completed in this infernal country. A band of half a dozen
+was cut off within the space of a few minutes, and now, in still less
+time, a young woman vanished as if she had never been.
+
+Jack did not dare trust his voice in the effort to speak, but when his
+eyes met those of the parent he shook his head, saying by the gesture:
+
+"God have mercy, I cannot answer."
+
+But strong men do not remain dazed and helpless in the presence of a
+shuddering calamity. If any one thing could be set down as certain it
+was that Miss Marlowe had left the place by fleeing deeper into the
+jungle. She could not have approached them without being observed:
+therefore they must seek her by taking the same direction.
+
+The energy of the man more than threescore under the spur of his
+anguish was like that of the athlete of one-third of his years. He
+still led the way, and, after the brief halt under the fearful blow, he
+rallied and compelled Jack Everson to keep upon a trot to save himself
+from falling behind.
+
+A hundred paces from the opening they reached a point where the trails
+forked. They stopped, the parent being the first to do so.
+
+"Jack," said he, using the less formal name, for under the awful shadow
+they had drawn nearer to each other, "we can't afford to make any
+mistake."
+
+"There shall be none if you tell me how to prevent it."
+
+"She must have followed one of these paths, but who shall say which?"
+
+He stooped over and peered at the ground. Within the dim hush of the
+jungle he was unable to discern the slightest disturbance of the earth.
+
+"No use of that," said the doctor, reading his intention; "therefore we
+will separate; one of us will overtake them."
+
+"Have you any idea of the identity of these devils?"
+
+"I think they are Ghoojurs, but it makes no difference; Mussulmans and
+Hindoos are the same; each of us has a rifle and revolver; if you get
+sight of them don't wait to notify me; shoot to kill; you know how to
+do it."
+
+"I shall shrink from nothing, but the case may be hopeless."
+
+"If it is will you promise me one thing?" asked, the parent of the
+young man looking him in the eye.
+
+"I do; what is the pledge?"
+
+"That you point your gun at her?"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+A SHADOWY PURSUIT.
+
+It was a fearful pledge to exact, but Jack Everson gave it without
+hesitation.
+
+"You understand me; enough; let us lose no more time; I will turn to
+the right; good-bye; we are all in the hands of God."
+
+There was not a tear in the eye of the parent. His heart might be torn
+by grief, but he was now the Roman from whose lips no murmuring was
+heard.
+
+It seemed to Jack Everson that the strangeness of the incidents of the
+past hour had lifted him into a state of exaltation. He never felt
+calmer nor more self-possessed than when hurrying over the path, rifle
+in hand, revolver at his hip with the belief that there was not one
+chance in a thousand that he would ever again look upon the one who had
+won his heart when the two were on the other side of the world and for
+whose sake he was ready to go to the uttermost lengths of the earth.
+
+His feeling was: "They have stolen her from us, but by the Eternal she
+shall cost them dear!"
+
+There was no thought of what all this implied to himself. He did not
+care what the consequences were, so far as he was concerned. It came
+to be a legend among the men desperately defending their families and
+themselves during the horrors of the Sepoy mutiny, that in fighting the
+unspeakable fiends, the European should save a bullet apiece for his
+dear ones and one for himself.
+
+Such was the resolve of the young American who was now making all haste
+to find his beloved and her captors, and settling down into that
+resolution he acted with the coolness of a veteran.
+
+The first truth that impressed itself upon him was that the path which
+he was following steadily ascended, being quite steep in many places.
+This showed as a matter of course that he was attaining higher ground.
+He was not familiar enough with the country to know that he was
+approaching a steep ridge of hills, for the doctor had told him nothing
+of the fact, and the elevated section had been passed in the boat at
+night. He observed, too, that his course trended to the right, proving
+that he was penetrating deeper into the country.
+
+"If the line that the doctor is following holds straight on we must
+approach each other, but his may turn more than mine--confound it!"
+
+He had reached a point where the paths forked again. Supposing he had
+been fortunate enough to take the right course at the beginning, how
+could he maintain it?
+
+Swallowing his exasperation, he reflected coolly. The trail to the
+left was less travelled than the one which kept directly forward. He
+believed the Ghoojurs had kept to it possibly because there was less
+danger of pursuit. One fact was self-evident: nothing was to be gained
+by standing still, while there was a chance of accomplishing something
+by going on. With scarcely a minute's hesitation he advanced at a
+rapid stride over the more faintly marked course, peering in advance
+for a glimpse of his enemies.
+
+Since the latter had not gained much start it would seem that he ought
+to be close upon them, always provided he was traveling in their actual
+footsteps. The ground continued rough and broken, but it had no effect
+on his progress. Something like a shadow whisked across the path in
+front at the moment of his passing round a turn. Some animal had
+caught sight of him, and, scared by the vision, had leaped into the
+jungle at the side. Whether it was a tiger, leopard, cheetah, wild
+boar or another brute he did not know or care. If it dared to dispute
+his way he would shoot.
+
+He was pressing forward in this reckless, desperate fashion, when he
+dropped as if he had collided with a stone wall, and his heart almost
+ceased its beating. He had caught the faint report of a firearm. It
+came from a point on his right and sounded as if caused by a revolver,
+rather than a larger weapon. The thought that came to him was that it
+was the pistol of Mary Marlowe!
+
+"She is at bay; she may have fired it at herself, and yet I do not
+think she would do that until some of the bullets had reached the
+wretches who have captured her. I am following the wrong path, for
+this one leads me away from her."
+
+Without an instant's hesitation he turned and began his return on a
+loping trot. He was incensed with himself because of his mistake, and
+yet there was no reasonable cause for such feeling, but grief is as
+thoughtless as love, and he was stirred to the very depth of his soul
+by both. Reaching the last forking, he did not pause, but set out over
+the main trail.
+
+In front of him towered a mass of rocks higher than any he had yet
+seen. The path wound about these, but instead of following it, he
+climbed to the highest part.
+
+"I may gain sight of something from up there," was his thought as he
+pushed on, "that will be of some help."
+
+And he did see something from the crest which fairly took away his
+breath.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+ALMOS.
+
+Mary Marlowe was an obedient daughter, and when her father checked her
+move to go to the aid of the imperilled ones on the boat, and
+peremptorily ordered her to wait where she was, she obeyed without
+protest. She would have been glad to bear them company, but knew she
+would be more of a hindrance than a help.
+
+It was less than five minutes after the disappearance of her father and
+betrothed when she was frightened by hearing a slight sound directly
+behind her in the path. Her thought naturally was that some wild
+animal was stealing upon her, but the first glance told a more dreadful
+story. Five men, who, from their ragged, scant attire, their dark
+complexion and wild expression of features, she knew to belong to the
+terrible bandits called Ghoojurs, had come upon her unnoticed, and
+pausing within a half dozen paces, were looking fixedly at her.
+
+The sight was so startling that the young woman gasped and recoiled.
+She would have fled after her friends had not the leader made a
+gesture, accompanied by the command:
+
+"Stay where you are or you shall be killed! I know you as the daughter
+of the doctor, and we seek you and him."
+
+Each of the Ghoojurs carried a long, muzzle-loading gun, and every one
+had a yataghan thrust into a girdle around his waist, the weapon being
+a foot or more in length, and with a point of needle-like fineness.
+The leader spoke in Hindustani, which was as familiar to the young
+woman as her own tongue.
+
+The young woman possessed quick wit. She could not doubt that the
+five, including Almos and Mustad, were now her deadly enemies. Whether
+they had taken part in the massacre of those left on the boat could not
+be conjectured, but the probabilities were the other way, since it
+would have been well-nigh impossible for them to reach their present
+position from the river without colliding with Dr. Marlowe and Jack
+Everson.
+
+Mary showed her shrewdness by acting as if the two men were the friends
+they had always shown themselves when their former meetings took place.
+
+"Why, Almos," she said, forcing a smile in which there was no pleasure,
+"we have not met before since you came to my home and my father gave
+you medicine that cured your illness. How do you do?"
+
+And she had the courage to advance a step and offer her dainty hand,
+but the brute refused it. With a shake of his head he retreated a step
+and said:
+
+"My caste will not allow me."
+
+"But it allowed you to take drink and food from my hand and medicine
+from that of my father," she said, stung by the repulse.
+
+"I did evil, for which Allah has pardoned me; the faithful have been
+summoned to drive the infidels from India; the followers of Islam have
+heard the call, and they are flocking to the banner of the Prophet from
+all parts of Hindostan; not one infidel shall be left in all the land."
+
+During these few moments Mustad stood directly behind the leader, with
+a fixed grin in which there was a certain shamefacedness, for with all
+his fierce fanaticism he could not forget the gentle, sweet nature of
+the one who had become a prisoner nor the unvarying kindness he had
+received at her hands. True, the devil in his nature was roused, and
+there could be little question that he was acting as guide to these
+murderers while they hunted for the doctor and his family.
+
+"And do you mean to help kill those who have been your friends,
+Mustad?" she asked, with her penetrating eyes fixed upon him.
+
+Had the two been alone, it is possible the edge would have been taken
+off the response, but with four Ghoojurs at his elbow, and one of them
+the furious Almos, he dared not be behind them in savagery.
+
+"This is a war for our deen; when we fight for that we know none but
+the followers of the Prophet! The Inglese loge stole our homes and our
+land from us! They have put lard on the cartridges of the Sepoys that
+the faithful may become unclean and be shut out of paradise! I hate
+them all! I have no friends among them! I shall never sheath my knife
+nor stay my hand while one remains alive in India."
+
+"Let it be as you say," she calmly replied, seeing that it was useless
+to hold converse with the wretch.
+
+Her wish was to keep the party where they were until Jack and her
+father could have time to return. Here would be an opportunity for the
+young man to make a few more bull's-eyes, but Almos was too wise to run
+the risk. He was not afraid to fight two men, even though not so well
+armed as they, but his wish was first to place the young woman beyond
+their reach--for when the fight came it would be to the death.
+
+"No harm shall come to you," said the leader in a gentler tone. "Walk
+forward over the path and we will guard you against harm."
+
+"Whither do you intend to take me?" she asked, debating whether to obey
+or to make a fight then and there and force matters to an issue.
+
+"To Akwar."
+
+"Why there?"
+
+"To place you among friends that your enemies may not reach you."
+
+"Why not take me to my home?"
+
+"It has been burned and the men are hiding among the trees that they
+may slay you when you and your father return."
+
+After a moment's hesitation she obeyed, taking the path along which her
+parent soon after pressed in the desperate effort to recover her from
+her captors.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+DOCTOR AND PATIENT.
+
+The bright wits of Miss Marlowe were active. Mustad took the lead
+along the path, she following next, while Almos, the leader of the
+Ghoojurs, and his three companions, brought up the rear. Like most of
+the trails through the Asiatic jungles, this was inclosed on each side
+by a growth of trees, undergrowth and matted vegetation of such density
+that it was next to impossible for any one to pick his way forward or
+backward except by keeping within the path itself. To step aside into
+the jungle would immediately involve one in so inextricable a tangle
+that he could move only with the greatest difficulty.
+
+An attempt to escape, therefore, by darting to one side was not to be
+thought of, and she knew that her only hope lay with her absent
+friends. She was confident that they would speedily return, and,
+finding her gone, start in immediate pursuit. A collision between them
+and the Ghoojurs was imminent.
+
+The latter acted as if their only interest lay in their prisoner. So
+far as she could judge no attention was paid to the rear, whence the
+danger of attack threatened. The place of Mustad, at the head,
+confirmed her suspicion that he had been playing the part of guide for
+the rest from the first.
+
+She did not doubt that her home and its contents had been burned by the
+wretches, but under the circumstances the matter gave her little
+concern. She was inclined to believe that her captors meant to conduct
+her into the town of Akwar, nearby, and with her knowledge of the
+fanatical hatred of the population against all Christians she still
+hoped to find some friends there who would protect her from harm. And
+thus it was that she was not in the state of collapse or despair that
+might be supposed.
+
+Suddenly a pistol was fired from some point at the rear beyond her
+captors, and out of sight. All the men instantly stopped, grasped
+their arms and looked back, the young woman doing the same. Her
+thought was: "That was father or Jack, but he did not hit any one;
+therefore, it wasn't Jack."
+
+While the six were looking expectantly to the rear Dr. Marlowe, his
+face flushed, and his whole appearance, showing his intense excitement,
+came into sight. He was panting from his severe exertion, and raised
+his hand as a signal for the Ghoojurs to wait for him. It is probable
+that he would have received a shot, but for an interruption that was as
+unexpected as it was remarkable. Almos, the leader of the Ghoojurs,
+emitted a yell that could have been heard a half-mile away, and leaped
+several feet in the air, while his companions with exclamations of
+terror hastily recoiled from him.
+
+"Great Allah! He has been bitten!" exclaimed the horrified Mustad,
+almost knocking the young woman off her feet in his rush towards his
+master; but one of the others had perceived the monstrous cobra, and,
+clubbing his gun, he beat the life out of it with one blow, before it
+could glide away into the jungle. It looked as if this part of the
+country was specially pestered by the dreadful reptiles.
+
+Almos knew he was doomed. All hope had vanished, and, dropping to the
+ground, he bared his bronzed ankle, looked at the tiny points where the
+horrible poison had been injected into his system, and then, like the
+fatalist be was, he calmly folded his arms and waited for the last
+moment that was rushing upon him. He was a faithful follower of the
+Prophet and knew how to meet the inevitable that awaits us all. His
+companions, awed and silent, stood around, unable to say or do anything
+that could give him comfort. Miss Marlowe, after walking part way to
+the group, paused and looked at them and at her father, who was
+hurrying to the spot. She wondered that Almos had permitted the
+killing of the cobra, since the snake is looked upon as sacred in
+India, and few natives can be induced to injure one. The Ghoojurs
+probably slew it in the flurry of the moment.
+
+Dr. Marlowe had heard the cry and noted the excitement, but did not
+suspect the cause until he drew near the spot. Then Mustad, familiar
+with the skill of the medical man, beckoned to him and said:
+
+"Make haste, great sahib, Almos has been bitten by a snake; no one can
+save him but you."
+
+The stricken chief, from his seat on the ground, looked up in the face
+of the white man, of whose wonderful skill he had received proof in his
+own self. The countenance of the Ghoojur was of ashen hue, and the
+yearning expression of his eyes told of the hope that had been kindled
+within his breast.
+
+Now that the physician had dropped into what may be called his
+professional character, he was himself again. He set down the caba
+containing his instruments, and medicaments, adjusted his glasses, and
+stooping over, intently studied the wound made by the cobra. Then he
+drew out his watch, as if he were timing the pulse beats of a patient.
+
+"It is one minute and a half since you were bitten," he said, still
+holding the timepiece in his hand, but looking into the face of Almos;
+"in three more minutes and a half no power but Allah can save you."
+
+Catching the full meaning of these words, the Ghoojur leader quivered
+with suddenly renewed hope.
+
+"Can you save me?" he asked in Hindustani.
+
+"I have in there," replied the physician, tapping his caba with his
+long forefinger, "that which will render the bite of the snake as
+harmless as the peck of a bird that flies in the air, but barely three
+minutes remain in which to apply it."
+
+"Then I beseech you, do not wait," said the eager Almos, shoving his
+foot towards the doctor; "great is the English doctor; be quick; why do
+you tarry?"
+
+"Before I heal you," replied Dr. Marlowe, with maddening deliberation,
+"I must be paid my fee; I have attended you before and refused to
+accept what you offered, but now I demand payment before applying the
+remedy."
+
+"You shall have it; name it, I beg you; all that I have shall be yours
+if you will save me, but haste, O great physician, haste!"
+
+"It is strong, and will do its work well, if it be given the chance."
+
+He next drew out a lancet, with its edge like a razor's. Almos
+breathlessly watched him, but when he expected the doctor to begin
+work, he leaned back and said:
+
+"Why should I bring you back from death, when you are seeking the lives
+of my daughter and myself? The best thing I can do is to let you die,
+as you will do in two minutes and a half more," he added, looking again
+at his watch; "the venom of the cobra works fast and it will soon
+strike your heart."
+
+"You promised to save me if I would pay you in advance.
+
+"So I will."
+
+"Name your fee; be quick with it!"
+
+"It is that you and the rest of the Ghoojurs shall leave me and mine
+alone; that you shall depart at once; that you shall not attempt to
+follow, nor harm us in any way. Without that pledge on your part, I
+shall let you die like the dog that you are. What is your answer?"
+
+"I promise; I promise!" exclaimed Almos, almost beside himself with
+excitement and renewed hope. "I will guide you through the jungle to a
+safe point, and will watch over you till all danger is gone."
+
+"You have given me your promise, but you may break it; swear by the
+mantle of the Prophet, or I shall let you die."
+
+"I swear by the mantle of the Prophet!" the Ghoojur chieftain fairly
+shrieked, "that I will do as I have promised! Quick, quick, or it will
+be too late!"
+
+"You have made the most sacred vow that a Mussulman can make; I will
+test it by saving your life."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ASIATIC HONOR.
+
+One quick movement with the lancet made an incision across the red
+specks left by the fangs of the cobra, and into the opening he poured a
+teaspoonful of the yellowish fluid, which was so much like liquid fire
+and pepper that even the dusky scoundrel gasped with agony. Then he
+was made to open his mouth and swallow something from a large bottle,
+which, as regards strength and flavor, was a twin of that which was
+consuming his flesh.
+
+All at once the countenance of the physician expanded with a beaming
+smile as he looked at his patient and said gently as if speaking to his
+own child:
+
+"All danger is past, Almos."
+
+From the abundance of rags which fluttered about his person, the doctor
+tore a piece and bandaged the wound. Then he said in a business-like
+tone:
+
+"I am through; now you and the rest of you may go."
+
+Almos hesitated.
+
+"You have saved my life: is there nothing I can do for you?"
+
+"I have just told you what to do--_leave_?"
+
+Probably there would have been less promptness in complying with the
+command had there been less in uttering it. As it was, Almos, without
+a word, motioned to the rest of his band, and led the way down the path
+in the direction of the stream, the four tramping after him like so
+many ragged phantoms.
+
+Dr. Marlowe was more eager to leave the place than he would permit his
+child to know. He had no faith in Almos's promise, knowing that the
+Ghoojur chieftain would break his oath, which he and his brother
+fanatics did not consider binding when made to infidels, and the only
+hope, therefore, was for the fugitives to conceal themselves from the
+miscreants--a thing which the physician's intimate knowledge of the
+country would enable him to do.
+
+Footfalls sounded along the path over which the two had just come, and
+a minute later Almos, Mustad and their three companions emerged into
+the opening and approached the couple, one of whom suspected nothing
+until her father spoke.
+
+"Well, Almos, what do you want?" demanded Dr. Marlowe, calmly looking
+up at the Ghoojur chieftain, as he paused in front of him and made a
+salaam.
+
+"We have come for the infidel and his daughter; our deen commands us to
+put them to death."
+
+"What does the oath you gave me a little while ago command you to do?"
+
+"That was made to an infidel; it is not binding upon a true son of the
+Prophet."
+
+"A true son of the devil!" exclaimed the physician, unable to repress
+his rage.
+
+Turning to his daughter, he said:
+
+"My child, you have a pistol; when they make a move, shoot; leave Almos
+to me and save your last bullet for yourself."
+
+"The infidels shall be destroyed everywhere," said Almos; "none of the
+Inglese loge shall be left in India. The faithful have risen and they
+will crush them all, for so commands the Prophet----"
+
+Dr. Marlowe had placed his hand on the butt of his revolver at his hip,
+meaning to whip out the weapon and fire before the miscreant had
+finished his high-sounding tomfoolery. His daughter had also grasped
+hers, intending to obey to the letter the command of her parent, when
+the Ghoojur chieftain abruptly paused in his speech, staggered for a
+moment, and then sank to the ground like a bundle of rags, with the
+breath of life gone from his body.
+
+The incident would have been as inexplicable to parent and child as to
+the Ghoojurs, had they not caught the faint, far-away report of a
+rifle, which, if heard by the bandits, was not associated by them with
+the startling thing that had taken place before their eyes. But the
+doctor and Mary knew the connection.
+
+And about half-a-mile away, on the top of that huge rock, hot enough
+under the flaming sun to roast eggs, Jack Everson had assumed the same
+position that he held the afternoon before on the bank of the Ganges,
+when he checked the advance of the Ghoojur horsemen across the river.
+With the aid of the glasses, he had descried the forms of his beloved
+and her father when the bright eyes failed to detect his own. Then,
+when about to start to join them, he observed their visitors, and the
+glass again helped to identify them, after which he "proceeded to
+business."
+
+The instant he made his aim sure he pulled the trigger, came to a
+sitting position, readjusted a cartridge, and placing the glasses to
+his eyes that he might see the more plainly, watched the result of his
+shot.
+
+"By Jove; another bull's-eye!" he gleefully exclaimed, as he saw his
+man stagger and fall almost at the feet of Dr. Marlowe. "I don't know
+the gentleman's name, but a first-class obituary notice is in order.
+That makes six, and now for the seventh. I really hope the doctor is
+keeping score for me."
+
+The professional eye of the physician saw where the pellet of lead had
+passed through the chest of Almos, but it was not observed by Mustad or
+the other Ghoojurs, who probably attributed it in some way to the bite
+of the cobra, in spite of the miraculous cure that seemed to have been
+wrought before their eyes. The three remained in the background, but
+the fall of the leader appeared to add flames to the hatred of Mustad,
+who, assuming the mantle of the fallen chieftain, stepped to the front.
+
+"You shall not escape us!" he hissed; "all the Inglese loge shall die!"
+
+"But before any more of them perish, you shall go to the infernal
+regions to keep company with the imp that has just gone thither."
+
+The doctor had learned from the exhibition of the preceding afternoon
+the time required by Jack Everson to repeat his marvelous shots. He
+knew, therefore, about the moment when a second was due, and he decided
+to make its arrival as dramatic as possible.
+
+"You stand almost on the same spot where stood Almos; he dropped dead
+before me, and," raising his hand impressively, "I command you to do
+the same."
+
+Mustad obeyed.
+
+Again the faint report swept across the extent of jungle, travelling
+with almost the same speed as the bullet, which, like its predecessor,
+bored through the dusky chest of the victim and lost itself in the
+vegetation beyond. Mustad gasped, convulsively clasped one hand to his
+breast, flung out both arms, groped blindly for an instant, and then
+slumped down as dead as one of the mummies of the Pyramids.
+
+And the young American, still reclining on that gray, blistering rock,
+again rose to a sitting posture and clapped the glasses to his eyes to
+observe more clearly the result of his last trial at markmanship.
+
+"That makes seven bull's-eyes!" was his delighted exclamation, "but I
+have done as well when the distance was twice as great. I must keep
+the number in mind, for it will be like the doctor to insist that I
+made but six out of a possible eight. I notice that three gentlemen
+are left and require attention."
+
+With the same care as before, he lay back and drew bead on the group,
+but the next moment uttered an impatient exclamation and straightened
+up again.
+
+"They have fled; only Mary and her father are left, and there's no call
+to send any bullets in their direction."
+
+The fall of Mustad at the command of the wrathful physician was more
+than the other Ghoojurs could stand. Suspecting no connection between
+the almost inaudible reports and the terrifying incidents, they
+believed their only hope was in headlong flight. Without a word they
+dashed down the trail, quickly passing from sight, and were seen no
+more.
+
+Meanwhile Jack Everson, finding no demand for long shooting, sprang
+from the rock and made all haste to the spot where he had recognized
+his friends, and where they awaited his coming with an anxiety that
+could not have been more intense. That others of their enemies were in
+the neighborhood was certain, and their vengeance could not be
+restrained or turned aside as had been that of the Ghoojurs. A
+collision between them and the fugitives must be fatal to the latter.
+
+Great, therefore, was the delight of father and daughter when the brave
+fellow bounded into sight, his whole concern, as it seemed, being to
+learn whether the score kept by the doctor agreed with his own. When
+assured that it did, he announced that he was at the disposal of the
+venerable physician and his daughter.
+
+The three pushed steadily toward Nepaul, cheered by the knowledge that
+with every mile passed their danger lessened. They were in great peril
+more than once. Twice they exchanged shots with marauding bands, and
+once their destruction seemed inevitable; but good fortune attended
+them, and at the end of a week they entered the wild, mountainous and
+sparsely-settled region, where at last all danger was at an end.
+
+So it came about that when the young people took their final departure
+down the Ganges for Calcutta, thence to return to the United States,
+Dr. Marlowe went with them. He and his son-in-law formed a partnership
+in the practice of their profession, and it is only a few years since
+that the aged physician was laid to rest. He was full of years and
+honors, and willing to go, for he knew that the happiness of his
+daughter could be in no safer hands than those of Jack Everson.
+
+
+
+
+LOST IN THE WOODS.
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+THE CABIN IN THE WOOD.
+
+Harvey Bradley had been superintendent of the Rollo Mills not quite a
+year when, to his annoyance, the first strike in their history took
+place.
+
+Young Bradley was a college graduate, a trained athlete, and a bright
+and ambitious man, whose father was president of the company in New
+York which owned the extensive mills. It was deemed best to have a
+direct representative of the corporation on the ground, and Harvey
+qualified himself for the responsible situation by a six-months'
+apprenticeship, during all of which he wrought as hard as any laborer
+in the establishment.
+
+He made his home in the remote village of Bardstown, where the Rollo
+Mills had been built. He lived with his Aunt Maria, (who went all the
+way from New York with her favorite nephew that she might look after
+him), and his sister Dollie, only six years old. The plan was that she
+should stay until Christmas, when her father was to come and take her
+home. Aunt Maria, with the help of honest Maggie Murray, kept house
+for Harvey, who found his hands and brains fully occupied in looking
+after the interests of the Rollo Mills, which gave employment to two
+hundred men, women and children.
+
+All went well with the young superintendent for some months after the
+assumption of his duties. He was alert, and surprised every one by his
+practical knowledge. He was stern and strict, and, after warning
+several negligent employes, discharged them. This did not help his
+popularity, but, so long as the directors were satisfied, Harvey cared
+for the opinion of no one else.
+
+When dull times came, Superintendent Bradley scaled down the wages of
+all, including his own. The promise to restore them, as soon as
+business warranted the step, averted the threatened strike. Within a
+month the restoration took place, but every employe was required to
+work a half hour over time without additional pay.
+
+A strike was averted for the time, but the friendly feeling and mutual
+confidence that ought to exist between the employer and the employed
+was destroyed. The latter kept at work, and the former felt that he
+had not sacrificed his dignity nor his discipline.
+
+But the discontent increased. One day Hugh O'Hara, the chief foreman,
+and Thomas Hansell, one of the most influential of the workmen, called
+upon Mr. Bradley, and speaking for the employes, protested against the
+new arrangement. They said every man, woman and child was willing to
+work the extra half hour, but inasmuch as the need for such extra time
+indicated an improvement in business, they asked for the additional pay
+to which they were clearly entitled.
+
+Harvey was looking for such protest and he was prepared. He said it
+was an error to think there was an improvement in business. While in
+one sense it might be true, yet the price of the manufactured goods had
+fallen so low that the mills really made less money than before. The
+wages that had been paid were better than were warranted by the state
+of trade. Now, when the employes were asked to help in a slight degree
+their employers who had done so much for them, they would not do so.
+O'Hara and Hansell, showing a wish to discuss the matter, the
+superintendent cut them short by saying that it was idle to talk
+further. He would not make any reduction in their time, nor would he
+pay any extra compensation.
+
+That night 200 employes of the Rollo Mills quit work, with the
+intention of staying out until justice was done them. Harvey asserted
+that he would never yield; he would spend a few days in overhauling the
+machinery and in making a few needed repairs; then, if the employes
+chose, they could come back. All who did not do so would not be taken
+back afterwards. New hands would be engaged and in a short time the
+mills would be running the same as before.
+
+O'Hara and Hansell warned the superintendent that serious trouble would
+follow any such course. While making no threat themselves, they told
+him that blood was likely to be shed. Harvey pooh-poohed and reminded
+them that a few men and children would make sorry show in fighting the
+whole state, for, in the event of interference by the strikers, he
+meant to appeal to the authorities.
+
+The repairs needed at the mills were soon made. Steam was gotten up
+and the whistle called the hands to work. Only O'Hara and Hansell came
+forward. They explained that all would be glad to take their places if
+the superintendent would allow them a slight increase of pay for
+overwork. They had held a meeting and talked over the matter, and now
+abated a part of their first demand; they were willing to accept
+one-half rate for overtime.
+
+The superintendent would not yield a jot. The most that he would
+consent to do was to wait until noon for them to go to work. The two
+men went away muttering threats; not one of the hands answered the
+second call to work.
+
+Quite sure that such would be the result, Harvey had telegraphed to
+Carville, fifty miles away, for sixty men, to take the place of those
+who had quit work. He asked only for men, since it would have been
+unwise to bring women and children to become involved in difficulties.
+
+By some means this step became known, and, as is always the case, it
+added fuel to the flames. Warning notices were sent to the
+superintendent that if the new hands went to work they would be
+attacked; Bradley himself was told to keep out of sight unless ready to
+come to the terms of the strikers. Even in his own home, he could not
+be guaranteed safety. His house as well as the mills would be burnt.
+
+Harvey felt no special alarm because of these threats; he did not
+believe that those who made them dare carry them out. But that night
+the mills escaped destruction only by the vigilance of the extra
+watchmen. The same evening Aunt Maria was stopped on the village
+street and told that it was best she should lose no time in moving away
+with her little niece Dollie, since it was more than likely the
+innocent would suffer with the guilty. For the first time, Harvey
+understood the earnestness of the men; but he clung to his resolution
+all the same.
+
+You can see how easily the trouble could have been ended. The employes
+had abated their first demand and were willing to compromise. Had
+Harvey spoken his honest thoughts, he would have said the men were
+right, or at any rate he ought to have agreed to their proposal to
+submit the dispute to arbitration; but he was too proud to yield.
+
+"They will take it for weakness on my part," was his thought; "it will
+make an end of all system and open the way for demands that in the end
+will destroy the business."
+
+The sixty new hands reached Bardstown and were about as numerous as the
+men who wrought in the mills before the strike. They looked like a
+determined band, who would be able to take care of themselves in the
+troubles that impended.
+
+The arrivals were received with scowls by the old employes, who hooted
+and jeered them as they marched grimly to the mills. No blows were
+struck, though more than once an outbreak was imminent. It was too
+late in the day to begin work, but the new hands were shown through the
+establishment, with a view of familiarizing them to some extent with
+their new duties. Most of them had had some experience in the same
+kind of work, but there was enough ignorance to insure much vexation
+and loss.
+
+The night that followed was so quiet that Harvey believed the strikers
+had been awed by his threat to appeal to the law and by the determined
+front of the new men.
+
+"It's a dear lesson," he said to himself, "but they need it, and it is
+high time it was taught to them."
+
+The next morning the whistle sent out its ear-splitting screech, whose
+echoes swung back and forth, like so many pendulums between the hills,
+but to the amazement of Harvey Bradley, not a person was seen coming
+toward the mills. The whistle called them again, and Hugh O'Hara and
+Tom Hansell strolled leisurely up the street to the office, where Mr.
+Bradley wonderingly awaited them.
+
+"You'll have to blow that whistle a little louder," said O'Hara, with a
+tantalizing grin.
+
+"What do you mean, sir?"
+
+"Those chaps all left town last night; they must be about forty miles
+away; you see we explained matters to them; I don't think, if I was
+you, I would feel bad about it; they believe they can get along better
+at Carville than at Bardstown."
+
+For the first time since the trouble began, Harvey Bradley lost his
+temper. To be defied and taunted in this manner was more than he could
+bear. He vowed over again that not one of the strikers should do
+another day's work for him, even if he begged for it on his knees and
+he was starving. He at once telegraphed to Vining, fully one hundred
+miles away, where he knew there were many people idle, for one hundred
+men who would not only come, but stay. He preferred those who knew
+something about the business, but the first need was that the men would
+remain at their posts, and if necessary fight for their positions. He
+guaranteed larger wages than he had ever paid experienced hands, but he
+wanted no man who would not help hold the fort against all comers. The
+superintendent was on his mettle; he meant to win.
+
+Having sent off this message, for which it cannot be denied, Harvey had
+every legal and moral warrant, he set out on a long tramp through the
+woods at the rear of Bardstown. It was a crisp autumn day, and the
+long brisk walk did him much good. The glow came to his cheeks, his
+blood was warmed, and his brain cleared by the invigorating exercise.
+So much indeed did he enjoy it that he kept it up until, to his
+surprise, he saw that it was growing dark, and he was several miles
+from home.
+
+It was snowing, though not heavily. He walked fast, but, when night
+had fully come, paused with the uncomfortable discovery that he was
+hopelessly lost in the woods.
+
+"Well, this is pleasant!" he exclaimed, looking around in vain for some
+landmark in the gloom. "I believe I shall have to spend the night out
+doors, though I seem to be following some sort of path."
+
+He struck a match, shading it with his hand from the chilly wind, and
+stooped down. Yes; there was an unmistakable trail, and with renewed
+hope he hurried on, taking care not to stray to either side. Within
+the next ten minutes, to his delight, he caught the twinkle of a
+star-like point of light among the trees, a short distance ahead.
+
+While making his way hopefully forward, Harvey became aware of a
+singular fact. The air around him was tainted with a peculiar odor,
+such as he had never met before. It was of a rank nature, and, while
+not agreeable, could not be said to be really unpleasant. It might
+have interested him more, but for his anxiety to reach the shelter
+which was now so near at hand.
+
+Arriving at the cabin, he found the latch-string hanging out. A sharp
+pull, the door was swung inward and Harvey stepped into a small room,
+lit up by a crackling wood-fire on the hearth.
+
+As he entered, two men who were smoking their pipes, looked up. The
+visitor could not hide his expression of surprise, for they were Hugh
+O'Hara and Thomas Hansell, the last persons in the world he wished to
+see.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+A POINTED DISCUSSION.
+
+Hugh O'Hara was in middle life. He was of Scotch descent, and, in his
+younger days, had received a fair education. Even now he spent much
+time over his books. He talked well, and was not without a certain
+grace of manner founded, no doubt, on his knowledge of human nature,
+which gave him great influence with others. It was this, as much as
+his skill, that made him the leading foreman at a time when a score of
+others had the right by seniority of service to the place.
+
+But Hugh had dipped into the springs of learning just enough to have
+his ideas of right and wrong turned awry and to form a distaste for his
+lot that made his leadership dangerous. Besides, he had met with
+sorrows that deepened the shadows that lay across his pathway. In that
+little cabin he had seen a young wife close her eyes in death, and his
+only child, a sweet girl of five years, not long afterward was laid
+beside her mother. Many said that Hugh buried his heart with Jennie
+and had not been the same man since. He was reserved, except to one or
+two intimate friends. Shaggy, beetle-browed and unshaven, his looks
+were anything but pleasing to those who did not fully know him.
+
+Tom Hansell was much the same kind of man, except that he lacked the
+book education of his companion and leader. He had strong impulses,
+and was ready to go to an extreme length in whatever direction he
+started, but he always needed a guiding spirit, and that he found in
+Hugh O'Hara.
+
+The latter, after burying his child, moved into the village, saying
+that he never wanted to look again upon the cabin that had brought so
+much sorrow to him. Most people believed he could not be led to go
+near it, and yet on this blustery night he and Tom Hansell were seated
+in the structure without any companions except the well known hound
+Nero, and were smoking their pipes and plotting mischief.
+
+Hugh and Tom were in their working clothes--coarse trousers, shirts,
+and heavy shoes, without vest or coat. Their flabby caps lay on the
+floor behind them, and their tousled hair hung over their foreheads
+almost to their eyes. Tom had no side whiskers, but a heavy mustache
+and chin whiskers, while the face of Hugh was covered with a spiky
+black beard that stood out from his face as if each hair was charged
+with electricity.
+
+Nero, the hound, raised his nose from between his paws and looked up at
+the visitor. Then, as if satisfied, he lowered his head and resumed
+his nap.
+
+Bradley, as I have said, was angry with himself for walking into such a
+trap. It was not fear, but a deep dislike of the man who was the head
+and front of the trouble at the mills. He was the spokesman and leader
+of the strikers, and he was the real cause of the stoppage of the
+works. Harvey looked upon him as insolent and brutal, and he was sure
+that no circumstances could arise that would permit him to do a stroke
+of work in the Rollo Mills again.
+
+"Good evening," said Harvey stiffly, "I did not expect to find you
+here."
+
+Hansell nodded in reply to the salutation, but Hugh simply motioned
+with the hand that held the pipe toward a low stool standing near the
+middle of the apartment.
+
+"Help yourself to a seat, Mr. Bradley; the presence of Tom and myself
+here is no odder than is your own."
+
+"I suppose not," replied Harvey with a half-laugh, as he seated
+himself; "I started out for a walk to-day and went too far--that is, so
+far that I lost my way. I had about made up my mind that I would have
+to sleep in the woods, when I caught the light from your window and
+made for it."
+
+The glance that passed between Hugh and Tom--sly as it was--did not
+elude the eye of Harvey Bradley. He saw that his explanation was not
+believed, but he did not care; there was no love between him and them,
+and, had it not looked as if he held them in fear, he would have turned
+and walked away after stepping across the threshold. As it was, he
+meant to withdraw as soon as he could do it without seeming to be
+afraid.
+
+"Is this the first time you have taken a walk up this way?" asked Hugh.
+
+"The fact that I lost my way ought to answer that question; how far is
+it, please, to Bardstown?"
+
+"An even mile by the path you came."
+
+"But I didn't come by any path, except for a short distance in front of
+this place."
+
+"Then how did you get here?"
+
+"Is there no way of traveling through the woods except by the road that
+leads to your door?"
+
+The conversation was between Harvey and Hugh alone. Tom was abashed in
+the presence of two such persons, and nothing could have led him to
+open his mouth unless appealed to by one or the other. Neither made
+any allusion to the strike. After the superintendent's rebuff, Hugh
+scorned to do so, while Harvey would have stultified himself had he
+invited any discussion. The repugnance between the two men was too
+strong for them calmly to debate any question. Besides Hugh and Tom
+were suspicious; they did not believe that the presence of the
+superintendent was accidental; there was a sinister meaning in it which
+boded ill for Hugh and his friends, and the former, therefore, was in a
+vicious mood.
+
+With the conditions named, a wrangle may be set down as one of the
+certainties. But Harvey Bradley had defied the fury of half a hundred
+men, and he meant to teach this marplot his proper place. There was a
+threatening gleam in his eye, but he puffed a few seconds at his pipe,
+and then, glaring through the rank smoke that curled upward from his
+face said:
+
+"There are a good many ways by which Hugh O'Hara's cabin can be found,
+but those who come on honest errands stick to the path."
+
+"Which explains why the path is so little worn," was the reply of
+Harvey.
+
+"Aye, and your feet have done mighty little to help the wearing of the
+same."
+
+"If those who live in the cabin were honest themselves, they would not
+tremble every time the latch-string is pulled, nor would they be scared
+if they saw a visitor stop to snuff the air in this neighborhood."
+
+This was an ill-timed remark, and Harvey regretted the words the moment
+they passed his lips. He saw Hugh and Tom glance at each other; but
+the words, having been spoken, could not be recalled, nor did the
+superintendent make any attempt to modify them. Before the others
+could answer, he added:
+
+"I have heard it said that Hugh O'Hara held this place in such strong
+disfavor that nothing could lead him to spend a night here, yet he
+smokes his pipe and plots mischief as if the cabin is the one place in
+the world with which he is content."
+
+These words were not soothing in their effect, nor did the speaker mean
+that they should be. Hugh was insolent, and the superintendent
+resented it.
+
+The only proof of the rising anger in the breast of O'Hara was the
+vigorous puffing of his pipe. Tom, as I have said, was too awed to say
+anything at all.
+
+"I am of age and free born," growled Hugh, looking into the glowing
+embers and speaking as if to himself; "where I go and what I do
+concerns no one but myself."
+
+"Not so long as you go to the proper place and do only what is right,"
+said Harvey, who, sitting back a few feet from the fire, looked calmly
+at the fellow whose rough profile was outlined against the fiery
+background behind him.
+
+"Men interpret right according to their own ideas, and they seldom
+agree, but most people will pronounce that person the worst sort of
+knave who robs poor men of what they earn and looks upon them as he
+looks upon the beasts of the field--worth only the amount of money they
+bring to him."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+MISSING.
+
+The conversation was taking a dangerous shape. Harvey saw that it
+would not do for him to stay. Both these men were fierce enough to fly
+at his throat. That little cabin in the woods was liable to become the
+scene of a tragedy unless he bridled his tongue or went away.
+
+Disdaining to say so much as "good-night," he rose to his feet, opened
+the door, shut it behind him, and walked out in the blustery darkness.
+
+"I would rather spend the night fighting tigers than to keep the
+company of such miscreants. But the new hands will be here in a few
+days, and the fellows will be taught a lesson which they will remember
+all their lives. I suppose I ought to pity their dupes, but they
+should have enough sense to see that these men are their worst enemies.
+It will be a bright day for the Rollo Mills and for Bardstown when they
+are well rid of them."
+
+The superintendent did not pause to think where he was going when he
+stepped into the open air. The cold wind struck his face and a few
+fine particles touched his cheek. The sky had partly cleared, so that
+he could see the fine coating of snow around him, but after all, very
+little had fallen.
+
+"If I can keep the path," he thought, "I will reach the village, but
+that is no easy matter--ah! there it is again."
+
+The peculiar odor that had mystified him before was in the air. He
+recalled that Hugh and Tom had made an allusion to it that he did not
+understand.
+
+"It may come from their chimney and be caused by something burning; but
+I looked closely at the wood on the hearth and saw nothing else."
+
+A natural impulse led him, after walking a few rods, to look behind
+him. He had heard nothing, but knowing the surly mood of the couple,
+he thought it probable they might follow him.
+
+The door of the cabin, was drawn wide open and the form of a man stood
+out to view, as if stamped with ink on the flaming background made by
+the fire beyond. His lengthened shadow was thrown down the path almost
+to the feet of Harvey. The fellow no doubt was peering into the gloom
+and listening.
+
+"I wonder whether they mean to dog me," said Harvey; "it will be an
+easy matter to do so, for they know every part of the wood, while I am
+a stranger. They are none too good to put me out of the way; it is
+such men who have no fear of the law, but they shall not take me
+unawares."
+
+While still looking toward the cabin, all became dark again. The door
+was closed, but he could not be sure whether the man stood outside or
+within.
+
+"If he means to do me harm he will soon be at my heels."
+
+But the straining eyes could not catch the outlines of any one, and the
+only sound was the moaning wind among the bare branches.
+
+"He has gone back into the house, but may come out again."
+
+And so, while picking his way through the dim forests, you may be sure
+that Harvey Bradley looked behind him many times. It makes one shiver
+with dread to suspect that a foe is softly following him. Harvey had
+buttoned his pea jacket to his chin and he now turned up the collar, so
+that it touched his ears. His hands were shoved deep into the side
+pockets and the right one rested upon his revolver that he had
+withdrawn from its usual place at his hip. He was on the alert for
+whatever might come.
+
+He was pleased with one fact: the path to which so many references were
+made, was so clearly marked that he found it easy to avoid going wrong.
+
+"If I had had sense enough to take the right course when I first struck
+it, I would have been home by this time."
+
+After turning around several times without seeing or hearing anything
+suspicious, he came to believe that however glad O'Hara and Hansell
+might be to do him harm, they lacked the courage, unless almost sure
+against detection.
+
+"Hugh will stir up others to go forward, but he will take good care to
+protect himself."
+
+The dull roar that he once fancied he heard when tramping aimlessly
+during the day, was now so distinct that he knew he must be near a
+stream. The path crossed it at no great distance.
+
+Sure enough, he had only turned a bend and gone down a little slope
+when he reached the margin of a deep creek, fully twenty feet wide. It
+flowed smooth and dark at his feet, but the turmoil to the left showed
+that it tumbled over the rocks, not far away.
+
+Harvey was anything but pleased, when he saw the bridge by which the
+stream had to be passed. It was merely the trunk of a tree, that lay
+with the base on the side where he stood, while the top rested on the
+other bank. Whoever had felled the tree had trimmed the trunk of its
+branches from base to top--the result being more ornamental than
+useful, for the protuberances would have served to help the footing of
+a passenger. The trunk in the middle was no more than six inches in
+diameter, and being a little worn by the shoes that had trod its
+length, the footing was anything but secure. With the sprinkling of
+snow it was more treacherous than ever.
+
+"Must I cross _that_?" Harvey said aloud, with a feeling akin to dismay.
+
+"You can do so or swim, whichever you choose."
+
+These words were spoken by a man standing on the other side, and who
+was about to step on the support, when he paused on seeing another on
+the point of doing the same from the opposite bank. In the dim light,
+Harvey saw him only indistinctly, but judged that he himself was
+recognized by the other.
+
+"I suppose it's safe enough for those accustomed to it," said Harvey in
+reply, "but I prefer some other means; do you intend to use it?"
+
+"That I do; I want no better; if you are afraid, get out of the way,
+for I am late."
+
+Harvey moved to the right, and watched the other, who stepped upon the
+support and walked over with as much certainty as if treading a
+pavement on the street.
+
+Harvey looked closely, and as the fellow came toward him, he recognized
+him as one of his former employes. He was Jack Hansell--a brother of
+Tom, and like him a close associate of Hugh O'Hara, the leader.
+
+"You are out late, Jack," remarked the superintendent, as the other
+left the log. To his surprise, Jack did not answer, but quickly
+disappeared up the path by which the superintendent had reached the
+spot.
+
+"He is surly and ill-mannered, like all of them; no doubt he is on his
+way to the cabin to plot mischief with the others."
+
+Since nothing was to be gained by waiting, Harvey now stepped on the
+trunk and began gingerly making his way across. It was a hard task,
+and just beyond the middle, he lost his balance. He was so far along,
+however, that a vigorous jump landed him on the other bank.
+
+A little beyond he caught the twinkling lights of the village, and he
+hastened his steps, now that, as it may be said, home was in sight. He
+felt as if he was famishing, and the thought of the luscious supper
+awaiting his return, gave him such speed that he was soon at his own
+door.
+
+Though it was late, he saw his aunt was astir, for the lights were
+burning brightly. Before he could utter the greeting on his tongue, he
+was terrified by the scared face of his relative.
+
+"Why, aunt, what is the matter? Are you ill?"
+
+"Oh, Harvey!" she wailed; "haven't you brought Dollie with you?"
+
+"Dollie!" repeated the other; "I haven't seen her since I left home."
+
+"Then you will never see her again," and, overcome by her terrible
+grief, the good woman sank into the nearest chair, covered her face
+with her apron and wept.
+
+Harvey Bradley stood petrified. Bright-eyed Dollie, whom he had left a
+few hours before, rosy, happy, overflowing with bounding spirits, was
+gone, and the sobbing Aunt Maria declared she would never be seen again.
+
+Stepping into the room, Harvey laid his hand on his aunt's shoulder and
+in a trembling voice said:
+
+"Why, aunt, what does this mean? Are you in earnest? What has become
+of Dollie? Tell me, I beseech you."
+
+"She is lost; she is lost! Oh, why did we ever bring her to this
+dreadful country? I wish none of us had ever seen it."
+
+"But what about Dollie? Where is she? How long has she been gone?
+Compose yourself and tell."
+
+It was not until he spoke sharply that the hysterical woman was able to
+make known that the child had been absent for hours, no one knew where.
+When she learned that noon that her big brother would not be back till
+night, Dollie had pouted because he had gone off without telling her.
+She was not sure she could ever forgive him. However, she ate her
+dinner, and soon after went out to play. Some hours later her aunt
+went to the door to call her, but she was not within sight or hearing.
+Maggie was sent to look for her, but soon came back with word that she
+could not be found.
+
+The child had been seen a couple of hours before, running in the
+direction of the path that led into the mountains, as if she was
+fleeing from some one, Maggie had gone as far as she dared in quest of
+her, but her loudest shouts brought no reply and she returned.
+
+The word brought by the servant, as may well be believed, filled the
+aunt with the wildest grief. Beyond all doubt, Dollie had formed a
+sudden resolve to hunt up her brother Harvey, who had gone away and
+left her at home. She had strayed so far into the mountains that she
+was lost. Fortunately, she was warmly dressed at the time, but exposed
+as she must be to the wintry winds and cold, she could not hold out
+until morning unless rescued very soon.
+
+Harvey was stricken with an anguish such as he had never known before,
+but he knew that not a minute was to be lost. Dollie must be found at
+once or it would be too late. It added a poignancy to his woe to know
+that in coming down the mountain path, he must have passed close to
+her, who was in sore need of the help he was eager to give.
+
+"Have you made no search for her?" he asked.
+
+"I could not believe she would not come back until it began to grow
+dark. I thought she could not be far away; Maggie and I hunted through
+the village, inquiring of every one whom we saw; many of the people
+were kind, and two or three have gone to hunt for her; I started to do
+so, but did not go far, when I was sure she had come back while I was
+away, and I hurried home only to find she was not here."
+
+"Are you sure any one is looking for her?"
+
+"There are several."
+
+"Well," said Harvey, impatient with the vacillation shown by his aunt,
+"I shall not come back until she is found."
+
+His hand was on the knob of the door when his distressed relative
+sprang to her feet.
+
+"Harvey;" she said in a wild, scared manner, "shall I tell you what I
+believe?"
+
+"Of course."
+
+"Dollie did not lose herself: some of those awful men did it."
+
+"Do you mean the strikers?"
+
+"Yes; they have taken her away to spite you."
+
+"Impossible!" exclaimed the young man, passing out the door and
+striding up the single street that ran through the village.
+
+But though unwilling to confess it to himself, the same shocking
+suspicion had come to him at the moment he learned that Dollie was
+lost. Could it be that some of the men, grown desperate in their
+resentment, had taken this means of mortally injuring him? Was there
+any person in the wide world who would harm an innocent child for the
+sake of hurting a strong man? Alas, such things had been done, and why
+should they not be done again? The words that he overheard between
+Hugh O'Hara and Tom Hansell proved them capable of dark deeds. Could
+it be that some of the hints thrown out by them during that brief
+interview in the cabin bore any relation to the disappearance of Dollie.
+
+At the moment Harvey turned away from his own house it was his
+intention to rouse the village and to ask all to join in the hunt for
+the child, but a feeling of bitter resentment led him to change his
+purpose. No; they would rejoice over his sorrow; they would give him
+no aid, and, if they had had a hand in her taking off, they would do
+what they could to baffle him in his search. Slight as was his hope,
+he would push on alone.
+
+"O'Hara and Hansell know all about it; I will search the neighborhood
+of the path all the way to their cabin and then compel them to tell
+what they know; if they refuse----"
+
+He shut his lips tight and walked faster than ever. He strove to fight
+back the tempestuous emotions that set his blood boiling. He was moved
+by a resolve that would stop at nothing; he would not believe that
+there was no hope; he knew he could force the miscreants to give up
+their secret, and had a hair of his little sister's head been harmed
+the punishment should be swift and terrible.
+
+"When Dollie is found," he muttered, determined to believe she must be
+restored to him, "I will send her and Aunt Maria away, and then have it
+out with these fellows; I'll make them rue the day they began the
+fight."
+
+These were dreadful thoughts, but there was excuse for them, his grief
+made him half frantic.
+
+The path over which he believed Dollie had either strayed or been led
+or carried, entered the woods about a hundred yards from the village
+and gradually sloped and wound upward for a mile, when it passed the
+door of Hugh O'Hara's cabin and lost itself in the solitude beyond.
+
+The sky had cleared still more during the interval since he came down
+the mountain side, and he could not only see the course clearly, but
+could distinguish objects several rods away, when the shadow of the
+overhanging trees did not shut out the light. But the season was so
+far along that few leaves were left on the limbs and it was easy,
+therefore, for him to keep the right course.
+
+He had not gone far when he stopped and shouted the name of Dollie.
+The sound reached a long way, and he repeated the call several times,
+but only the dismal wind among the limbs gave answer.
+
+Striding forward, he stood a few minutes later on the margin of the
+creek that was spanned by the fallen tree.
+
+"She would not have dared to walk over," was his thought: "she must
+have been on this side, if she wandered off alone."
+
+A moment later he added:
+
+"No; for the very reason that it is dangerous, Dollie would run across;
+it would be no trouble for her to do so, and there is just enough peril
+to tempt her. Could she have fallen in?"
+
+He looked at the dark water as it swept forward and shivered.
+
+"Rivers and lakes and seas and streams are always thirsting for human
+life, and this may have seized her."
+
+Tramping through the undergrowth that lined the bank he fought his way
+onward until he stood beside the rocks where the waters made a foaming
+cascade, as they dashed downward toward the mills far away.
+
+"If she did fall in, she must be somewhere near this spot----"
+
+His heart seemed to stop beating. Surely that dark object, half
+submerged and lying against the edge of the bank, where the water made
+an eddy, must be her body. He ran thither and stooped down.
+
+"Thank God," was his exclamation, after touching it with his hands, and
+finding it a piece of dark wood that had been carried there from the
+regions above.
+
+Back he came to where the fallen tree spanned the creek, and hurried
+across. No snow was falling, but the earth was white with the thin
+coating that had filtered down hours before.
+
+"Had it come earlier in the day," he thought, "it would help us to
+trace her, but now it will hide her footprints."
+
+Hardly a score of steps from the creek his foot struck something soft,
+and he stooped down. Straightening up, he held a small hood in his
+hand, such as children wear in cold weather. Faint as was the light,
+he recognized it as Dollie's; he had seen her wear it many times.
+
+"What can it mean?" he asked himself; "I must have stepped over or on
+that on my way down, but did not notice it. Yes, Dollie is on this
+side the stream, but where?"
+
+Aye, that was the question. Once more he raised his voice and shouted
+with might and main, but as before no answer came back.
+
+Harvey was now master of himself. He had recovered from the shock that
+at first almost took away his senses and he was able to think and act
+with his usual coolness. But with this, the belief that Hugh and Tom
+had something to do with the disappearance of Dollie grew until at
+times he was without any doubt at all. Occasionally, however, he
+wavered in his belief.
+
+Thus it was that two theories offered themselves. The first was that
+Dollie had set out to find him and had wandered up the mountain path to
+some point above the bridge and then had strayed from it and become
+lost. Worn out, she had laid down and was at that moment asleep.
+
+The corollary of this theory was that she had perished with cold, or
+would thus perish before daylight. True, she was well clad when she
+went out that afternoon to play, but her hood was gone and she could
+not escape the biting wind that pierced the heavy clothing of Harvey
+himself. Then, too, there was the danger from the wild beasts, of
+which he had had too late an experience to forget.
+
+Should it prove that Dollie went off in the manner named, then Harvey
+made a great error in setting out alone to search for her. He ought to
+have roused the village, and, with the hundreds scouring the mountains,
+helped by torches and dogs, discovery could not be delayed long.
+
+The other and darker theory was that she had been seen by some of his
+enemies as she went into the woods and had been coaxed to some
+out-of-the-way place, where her abductors meant to hold and use her as
+a means of bringing the superintendent to terms. All must have known
+that no method could be so effective as that.
+
+It was hard to believe that the evil-minded men would go any further.
+Yet it was easy for them to do so; they could make way with a little
+child like her and have it seem that her death was caused by falling
+over the rocks or by some other accident that might easily come to her.
+
+"O'Hara and Hansell must have known all about it when I was in their
+cabin. They were afraid to assail me in the cabin, for I was prepared,
+and the fear of the law kept them from following me after I left their
+place."
+
+Harvey was thinking hard when he caught the well-known light, among the
+trees in the cabin.
+
+"He, Tom and Jack, precious scamps all of them, are exulting over the
+sorrow they have caused, but they shall pay for it."
+
+The latch-string had not yet been withdrawn. Harvey gave it a jerk,
+followed by a spiteful push that threw the door wide open.
+Disappointment awaited him. Neither Hugh nor Tom was there, but Jack,
+looking like a twin brother of Tom, was in the act of lighting the pipe
+that his relative had probably left for his use. He was alone, not
+even the hound being present.
+
+Jack had partly risen to his feet to reach the pouch of tobacco on the
+short mantel above the fireplace. He paused and looked over his
+shoulder with a startled expression at the visitor who made such an
+emphatic entrance.
+
+"Why--why, Mr. Bradley," he stammered, "I didn't know it was you; will
+you take a seat?"
+
+"Where are Hugh and Tom?"
+
+"They went out some time ago."
+
+"Where did they go?" demanded Harvey in an angry voice.
+
+"Down to--the--that is, I don't know."
+
+"Yes, you do know. I want no trifling; I will not stand it."
+
+The fellow, though flustered at first, quickly regained his
+self-possession. He had evidently checked himself just in time to keep
+back some important knowledge.
+
+"Where have they gone?" repeated the superintendent, bursting with
+impatience.
+
+But Jack Hansell was himself again--sullen and insolent as ever. He
+had an intense dislike of his employer--a dislike that had deepened
+within the past few days. He slowly sat down and smoked a full minute
+before making reply to Harvey, who felt like throttling him.
+
+"I told you I didn't know," he finally said, looking into the embers
+and speaking as if to the glowing coals.
+
+"But you do know."
+
+"So I do, but I know another thing as well, and that is that there
+ain't any reason why I should tell you if I don't choose to."
+
+It took a great effort of the will for Harvey to hold himself from
+doing violence to the man who said he was not bound to tell what he
+preferred to keep to himself: but the superintendent saw that nothing
+could be gained by violence. The man who can keep cool during a
+dispute has ten-fold the advantage over one who does not restrain
+himself.
+
+After all, Jack Hansell was of small account. It was O'Hara, his
+master, and mayhap his companion, whom Harvey Bradley must see. If Tom
+chose to tell the truth he could do so, but if he would not, no one
+could force him to say the words.
+
+All this was clear to the young man, who, checking his anger, added in
+a lower tone:
+
+"You are not bound to answer any question I ask you, even when you have
+no reason for your refusal, but you cannot decline to say when they are
+likely to be back."
+
+"Yes, I can, for I don't know."
+
+"I wish to see O'Hara on a matter of the first importance."
+
+"But he may not want to see you, and I ain't the man to make things
+unpleasant for a friend."
+
+"You certainly expect them back to-night, do you not?"
+
+Jack smoked his pipe a few seconds before giving heed to this simple
+question. Then, turning slowly toward Harvey, who was still standing
+in the middle of the room, he said:
+
+"You had better sit down, for you won't find Hugh and Tom any sooner by
+keeping your feet. What do you want to see 'em for?"
+
+"That I can explain only to them, though it is Hugh whom I particularly
+want to meet."
+
+The superintendent took the seat to which he was invited. It was the
+stool on which he sat when in the cabin before. It cost him a greater
+effort than can be explained to defer to this defiant fellow, who a few
+weeks or even days before would have cringed at his feet like a dog.
+
+"That being the case," added Jack, between the puffs at his pipe, "why
+you'll have to wait till they come back. That may be inside of five
+minutes, and not for an hour; maybe," added Jack in the game
+exasperating manner, "that nothing will be seen of 'em till daylight.
+You see that since they have been cheated out of their work they have
+plenty of time to loaf through the country."
+
+"Any man who is too lazy to work can find time to turn his hand to
+dishonest tricks," said the superintendent, meaning that the words
+should not be misunderstood.
+
+"Sometimes the tricks that you call dishonest pay better than working
+for a superintendent who wants all the wages himself," was the impudent
+reply of Jack Hansell.
+
+"That is the excuse of the man who is bad at heart and who prefers
+wrong to right. Our state prisons are full of that sort of people."
+
+"Yes--and there are a good many people that ought to be in prison that
+ain't there."
+
+"I am sure no one is better qualified than you to speak on that matter."
+
+"Except yourself."
+
+It struck Harvey just then that he was doing an unworthy thing in
+holding such a conversation with any man. If he had anything of the
+kind to say, he ought to speak it openly. He now did so.
+
+"There is not a particle of doubt, Jack Hansell, that you and your
+brother and Hugh O'Hara are engaged in business that ought to place you
+all behind the bars."
+
+"If you think it safe to talk that way before Tom and Hugh you will now
+have the chance."
+
+"I will be glad to tell them to their faces what I have told you."
+
+"All right; there they come."
+
+Footsteps and voices in such low tones were heard outside that it was
+clear the men brought important news with them. And such indeed proved
+to be the case.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE SEARCH BY HUGH AND TOM.
+
+Never did one person do another a greater injustice than did Harvey
+Bradley when he believed that either Hugh O'Hara or any one else had
+aught to do with the absence of his little sister Dollie. No men had a
+hand in the sad business, nor could any one have been led to harm a
+hair of her head. Had Harvey asked for help, no one in the village
+would have held back from doing all that could be done to restore the
+child to her friends.
+
+The first news that came to Hugh O'Hara's cabin of the loss of the
+child was brought by Jack Hansell, who went thither on a far different
+errand. After a long talk on business, he gave the tidings, adding:
+
+"I met him at the creek, but thought I wouldn't tell him, for it would
+do no good. I kept my eyes open for the gal, but seen nothing of her."
+
+Hugh jerked the pipe from his mouth.
+
+"What's that you are saying? The little girl lost?"
+
+"That's it; she's been missing since noon; they think she come up the
+path and got lost in the mountains."
+
+"Good gracious!" gasped Hugh, starting to his feet, "that is bad; do
+you know," he added, turning to Tom and speaking with a slight tremor,
+"that that little girl Dollie is about the age my Jennie was when she
+died?"
+
+"I hadn't thought of that," replied Tom.
+
+"And," continued Hugh, swallowing a lump in his throat, "she looks so
+much like Jennie that I've often felt as if I would give all I
+have--which ain't much--to hold the little one on my knee as I used to
+hold my baby. She is a sweet child and likes me; we've had many a talk
+together that no one beside us knows about. She's so gentle, so
+innocent, so good that it seems to me I see my own darling before me
+when she looks up in my face. Come, boys," he added, decisively, as he
+walked to the farther end of the room, picked up a lantern and lit the
+candle inside.
+
+"Come where?" asked Tom, in amazement.
+
+Hugh turned half angrily toward him.
+
+"Do you think that I could rest while that child is lost in the
+mountains? Mr. Bradley hasn't acted right toward us and I bear him no
+good will, but this isn't _he_--it's a little child--she looks and acts
+like my Jennie, that's dead and gone."
+
+"But, Hugh, you forget--what about the place?"
+
+"Let it go to the dogs for all I care! What does it amount to against
+the life of the little one? But we'll let Jack stay; if any of the
+boys come, send them out to help in the hunt; it'll do them more good
+than to break the law."
+
+"Suppose some that are strangers come?" said Jack with a grin.
+
+Hugh O'Hara gave a hollow laugh.
+
+"Send them out, too, to help in the search; we'll be sure to find her
+when the whole country gets to work. If I was down in the village I
+would have every man, woman and child in the woods, and wouldn't let
+them eat or drink or sleep till she's found. Tom, there's no one that
+knows the woods better than we and Nero. Let's be off!"
+
+The door was drawn inward, and Jack Hansell was left alone. He lit his
+pipe, smoked it out, refilled it and was in the act of refilling it,
+when Harvey Bradley came in--as has been made known in another place.
+While the man sat smoking and alone in the cabin, he fell to brooding
+over the troubles at the mills. Thus it came to pass that his feelings
+were so bitter at the time the superintendent entered that he kept back
+every hint that the absent men were engaged in the most "honest"
+business in the world--that is, they were looking for the missing child.
+
+Meanwhile Hugh and Tom went at the task not only with zeal, but with a
+sagacity that gave promise of good results. As Hugh had said, they
+knew every foot of the mountains for miles, they were free from the
+flurry that at first ran away with the judgment of the superintendent,
+and they were used to prowling through the woods. Still further Nero
+had been trained to follow the faintest footprints.
+
+"Now, Tom," said the leader, when they had walked a short ways, "we
+can't do anything till we get on the trail of the little one."
+
+"What do you think has become of her?"
+
+"She's somewhere in the woods asleep or dead, with the chances about
+even for either."
+
+"Jack says she was seen coming up the mountain path early this
+afternoon."
+
+"Well, she has kept to it till she has either slipped out of the path
+without knowing it or she has done it on purpose. She has strolled
+along until it became dark or she was tired. Then she has lain down on
+the leaves and gone to sleep. Nero, find the trail of the little girl."
+
+"But," said Tom, "the night is so cold."
+
+"So it is, but if the girl went out to play she was well clad, and, if
+she knew enough, she has crept under the lee of a rock or into the
+bushes, where the wind can't reach her. If she did the same, she
+hasn't frozen to death."
+
+"But there are wild animals in these parts."
+
+"I know that, and she would make a meal that any of them would be glad
+to get; we can only hope they didn't find her."
+
+Just then Nero, who had been nosing the path in front, uttered a whine
+and turned aside. Hugh held up the lantern and saw that he had gone to
+the right. He was following a trail of some kind; whether it was that
+of the one whom they were seeking was to be learned. It would take a
+fine scent to trace the tiny footsteps under the carpet of snow, but
+such an exploit is not one-tenth as wonderful as that of the trained
+dogs in Georgia, which will stick to the track of a convict when it has
+been trampled upon by hundreds of others wearing similar dress and
+shoes, and will keep to it for miles by running parallel to the trail
+and at a distance of a hundred feet.
+
+But in the latter case the canines have an advantage at the start; they
+are put upon the track or directed to hunt for it where it is known to
+exist; they are given a clew in some form.
+
+The hound Nero was skilful in taking a scent, but his ability was not
+to be compared to that of the dogs to which I have referred, nor indeed
+was it necessary that it should be. But he had great intelligence, and
+acted as if he understood every word said to him by his master. He had
+saved Hugh and his friends many a time by giving warning from afar of
+the approach of strange parties. It may seem incredible that he should
+know what was wanted of him, but there is the best reason for saying he
+understood it all. Having no part of the little one's clothing to
+help, he was without the clew which would appear to be indispensable.
+His master, however, was satisfied the dog had struck the right trail.
+
+"Stick to it, Nero," said Hugh, encouragingly, "not too fast, but be
+sure you're right."
+
+Without pause, the two followed the dog, Hugh in front with lantern in
+hand. The woods were so cluttered with undergrowth that they could not
+go fast, seeing which Nero suited his pace to theirs. Now and then he
+ran ahead, as if impatient with the slow progress of the couple, and
+then he calmly awaited their approach.
+
+"Hark!"
+
+The single word "_Dollie_!" rang through the arches of the woods. They
+recognized the voice as that of the superintendent, who was hurrying
+over the path they had left, and who was not far away. In fact, Hugh
+held the lantern in front of him so as to hide its rays.
+
+"I am sorry for him," he said, "but we don't want him with us."
+
+"It cannot be," remarked Tom, after they had struggled further, "that
+she has gone as far as this; Nero must be off the track."
+
+At this moment the dog emitted a low, baying whine that would have
+startled any one had he not known its meaning. It was the signal which
+the remarkable animal always gave when close to the end of a trail.
+
+"We shall soon know the worst," said Hugh, crashing through the wood
+with such haste that Tom had to hurry almost into a trot to save
+himself from dropping behind.
+
+The singular call of the dog was heard again. He wanted his friends to
+move faster. It came from a point slightly to the left.
+
+"Here he is!" exclaimed Hugh, making a sharp turn and showing more
+excitement than at any time during the evening.
+
+"I see him! There he stands!" added Tom, stumbling forward.
+
+With his right hand Hugh raised the lantern above his head, so that its
+glare was taken from their eyes. The hound was close to a rock that
+rose some six or eight feet above the ground, and his nose was pointed
+toward the base of the black mass. At the same moment the men saw
+something dark and light mixed together, like a bundle of clothing.
+One bound and Hugh was on his knees, the lamp held even with his
+forehead while he peered downward and softly drew the clothing aside.
+Tom was also stooping low and leaning forward with bated breath.
+
+There lay little Dollie Bradley, sleeping as sweetly as if nestling
+beside her big brother in the warm bed at home. She must have wandered
+through the woods until, worn out, she reached this spot. Then she had
+thrown herself on the earth beside the rock and had fallen asleep.
+Having lost her hood, her head was without any covering, except her own
+native hair, which was abundant. Besides, rugged people do not need to
+cover their heads while asleep, even in cold weather.
+
+It was fortunate for Dollie that she was so warmly wrapped. One arm
+was doubled under her head, and the cheek that rested on it was pushed
+just enough out of shape to add to her picturesqueness. Her heavy coat
+having been buttoned around her body, kept its form and could not have
+been better arranged. The chubby legs were covered by thick stockings,
+and the feet were protected by heavy shoes. True, she ran much risk in
+lying upon the cold earth, with nothing between her and the ground, but
+there was hope that no serious harm would follow.
+
+The rock not only kept off the wind, but screened her from the snow.
+It was almost certain that the little one had been asleep several hours.
+
+Hugh gently examined the limbs and body to see whether there was any
+hurt. Her peaceful sleep ought to have satisfied him, but he was not
+content. Not a scratch, however, was found, though her clothing had
+suffered a good deal.
+
+"Take the lantern," said he in a husky voice to his companion. Then,
+softly pushing his brawny arms under the dimpled form, he lifted it as
+tenderly as its mother could have done. Tom smoothed the clothing so
+as to cover the body as fully as possible. Hugh doffed his coarse cap
+and covered the mass of silken tresses that streamed over his shoulder.
+
+Dollie muttered as a child will do when disturbed in its slumber, but,
+fitting her head to the changed position, she slept on as sweetly as
+ever.
+
+"Now lead the way," added Hugh, "and be careful where you step."
+
+Tom was only too glad to do his part. Nero, as happy as the others,
+walked in advance, in his dignified manner, now and then wagging his
+tail and whining with delight. None knew better than he the noble work
+he had done.
+
+Tom used great care. When the bushes could not be avoided, Hugh shoved
+them aside with one hand, that they might not brush against the face
+resting so close to his own. Perhaps he held the velvety cheek nearer
+his shaggy beard than was needed, but who can chide him when his heart
+glowed with the sorrowful pleasure that came from the fancy that his
+own Jennie, whom he had so often pressed to his breast, was resting
+there again?
+
+A tear dropped on the cheek of the little one. In that hour new
+resolves entered the heart of O'Hara. He had been sullen,
+discontented, and had long led a life that grieved his conscience.
+
+By and by when they came back to the path they found the walking easier
+than before.
+
+"Hugh," said Tom, stopping short and facing about, "ain't you tired of
+carryin' the kid? 'cause if you are, I'm ready to give you a lift."
+
+"No; I wish I could carry her forever!"
+
+All too soon the glimmer from the cabin window fell upon them, and they
+paused at the door to make sure the clothing of the child was arranged.
+They acted as if they were getting ready to go into the presence of
+company.
+
+"I don't know as I've done right in not carrying her home," said Hugh,
+"but she has been out too long already in the night air; we'll take her
+in and keep her while you run down to the village and let the folks
+know she is safe."
+
+"Is she still asleep?"
+
+"Yes, hark! some of the boys seem to be inside," added Hugh, as the
+sound of voices came to them from within.
+
+The door was pushed open and the two men and dog entered.
+
+Harvey Bradley had risen to his feet, and for one second he stared
+angrily at the newcomers. You will recall that hot words had just
+passed between him and Jack Hansell, and both were in an ugly mood.
+Then Harvey quickly recognized the form in the arms of Hugh and rushed
+forward.
+
+"Is she alive?"
+
+"Aye, alive and without a scratch," replied Hugh, deftly taking the hat
+from the head of the little sleeper and placing her in the outstretched
+arms.
+
+"How thankful I am," exclaimed Harvey, kissing the cold red cheeks over
+and over again, and pressing her to his heart; "yes--she is well--she
+was lost and is found--she was dead and is alive again."
+
+"What are you laughing at?" demanded Hugh, wiping his eyes and glaring
+savagely at Jack Hansell, who, with open mouth, was looking on in a
+bewildered way; "haven't you manners enough to know when gentlemen are
+present?"
+
+Jack seemed to think that the only way to behave was by keeping his
+mouth closed. He shut his jaws with a click like that of a steel trap
+and never said a word.
+
+Harvey Bradley sat down on the stool from which he had arisen, first
+drawing it closer to the fire, and unfastened the outer clothing of the
+little one. He saw that all was well with her. Then he looked up with
+moistened eyes and said in a tremulous voice:
+
+"Hugh, tell me all about it."
+
+The short story was soon told. The hardy fellow made light of what he
+had done, but the superintendent, who kept his eyes fixed on his face,
+saw the sparkle of tears that the speaker could not keep back. It was
+hard for any one of the three to believe that only a brief while before
+they were ready to fly at each other's throats. Harvey was melted not
+only by the rescue of his sister, but by the remembrance of the
+dreadful injustice done Hugh O'Hara and his friends, when he allowed
+himself to think they had taken part in the disappearance of Dollie,
+who, through all the talk, continued sleeping.
+
+"I can never thank you for what you have done," said the
+superintendent, hardly able to master his emotion, "but I shall show
+you that the charge of ingratitude can never be laid at my door."
+
+"That's all right," replied Hugh, in his off-hand fashion; "Tom and I
+are glad to do a turn like that; nobody could want to see any harm come
+to such a child, no matter how they might feel toward others related to
+her. Do you mean to take her home to-night?"
+
+"Yes; her aunt is frantic with grief."
+
+"But Tom can run down there quicker than you can with the little one."
+
+"No doubt, but we shall feel better to have her with us. She seems to
+be well, and we can bundle her up warmly. There may, after all, be
+serious results from this exposure, and it is best that we should have
+her where we can give her every care."
+
+And drawing the hood from his pocket he fixed it upon Dollie's head.
+She opened her eyes for a moment and mumbled something, but sank into
+sleep again. Harvey explained how it was he came to have the headgear
+with him.
+
+"I have a favor to ask of you, Mr. Bradley," said O'Hara, shifting from
+one foot to another and as confused as a school-boy.
+
+"Anything that you ask shall be granted, if it be in my power to grant
+it," replied Harvey with a fervor that could leave no doubt of his
+sincerity.
+
+"It's a long distance to the village, and I will be glad if you will
+let me carry her."
+
+He made as if he simply wished to assist the superintendent. The
+latter knew better, but he did not say so.
+
+"I shall be glad to have your aid; you have had a rest for several
+days, and a little exercise like this won't hurt you."
+
+Hugh brought forth his best coat and gathered it around Dollie, as if
+he was tucking her up in her trundle bed. Then Harvey placed her with
+much care in his arms and made sure they were fully prepared to go out
+doors.
+
+The Hansell brothers quietly looked on during these proceedings. They
+felt that there was no special use for them, and therefore they kept in
+the background. The hound Nero showed much interest. He walked around
+Hugh and Harvey, whining and wagging his tail as if he thought his
+views ought to have some weight in the questions the couple were called
+upon to consider.
+
+"Come, Nero," said his master, as he drew the door inward. The dog
+shot through like a flash and the tramp to the village was begun.
+
+Hardly a word was spoken on the way, but when the house was reached
+Hugh handed his burden over to Harvey and, refusing to go in, started
+to move off. The superintendent put out his free hand.
+
+"Hugh, I want you to come and see me to-morrow afternoon; will you do
+so?"
+
+"I will. Good-night."
+
+"Good-night."
+
+Hugh O'Hara had walked but a short distance up the mountain path when
+he was caught in a driving snow-storm. He cared little for it,
+however, and reached the cabin in due time, there to perform a strange
+duty.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+A LITTLE CHILD SHALL LEAD THEM.
+
+When Hugh O'Hara came to the door of Harvey Bradley, he was in his best
+dress--the same that he wore to church on Sundays. Aunt Maria met him
+on the threshold, and, in tremulous tones, thanked him. Then she led
+the way to the back parlor, where the young superintendent awaited him.
+The moment he entered, there came a flash of sunshine and a merry
+exclamation, and with one bound, little Dollie (none the worse,
+apparently, for her adventure the night before) landed in the iron-like
+arms and kissed the shaggy-bearded fellow, who laughingly took a chair
+and held her a willing captive on his knee.
+
+Harvey sat smiling and silent until the earthquake was over. Then, as
+his chief foreman looked toward him, he said:
+
+"As I said last night, Hugh, the service you have done is beyond
+payment. You know what a storm set in just after Dollie was brought
+home, she never could have lived through that."
+
+"It would have gone hard with her, I'm afraid," replied the embarrassed
+visitor; "does the little one feel no harm?"
+
+"We observe nothing except a slight cold, which the doctor says is of
+no account. I have made up my mind to give to you, Hugh----"
+
+The latter raised his hand in protest. He could accept money for any
+service except that of befriending the blue-eyed darling on his knee.
+
+"Never refer to that again."
+
+Harvey laughed.
+
+"I looked for something of the kind; I have a few words to add. I
+found out this morning that there was a mortgage of $600 against your
+little home in the village. I don't believe in mortgages, and that
+particular one has now no existence. If you see any way to help undo
+what I have done go ahead, but I beg you not to refuse another small
+present that I have prepared for you."
+
+And Harvey turned as if about to take something from his desk, but
+stopped when he saw Hugh shake his head almost angrily.
+
+"I would do a good deal to oblige you, Mr. Bradley, but you must not
+ask that. I would have been better pleased had you let the mortgage
+alone; my wife and little one are under the sod, and it matters nought
+to me whether I have a place to lay my head. But," he added with a
+faint smile, "what's done can't be undone, and, since you have asked
+me, I will drop the matter, but nothing more, I pray you, on the other
+subject."
+
+"Hugh," said the superintendent, like one who braces himself for a duty
+that has its disagreeable as well as its pleasant features, "you know
+that I had sent to Vining for men to take the places of those who are
+on strike?"
+
+"I heard something of the kind, sir."
+
+"They were to start for Bardstown to-night and are due to-morrow."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"I countermanded the order by telegraph this morning; not a man will
+come."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"The whistle will blow to-morrow as usual, ten minutes before 7
+o'clock, and I shall expect every one of you to be in place; I have
+agreed to your terms."
+
+Hugh looked at the superintendent a moment and then asked a singular
+question:
+
+"Is it because I found Dollie that you agree to our terms?"
+
+"Why do you ask that?"
+
+"Because, if that is the reason, I will not accept the terms, for you
+would be doing out of gratitude an act which your judgment condemned."
+
+Harvey Bradley felt his respect for this man increase tenfold. Such
+manliness was worthy of all admiration. He hastened to add:
+
+"There's where, I am glad to say, you are in error. Now you know as
+well as I do that in order to keep discipline the employer must insist
+upon his rights. If he were to give all that is asked his business
+would be destroyed. But, on the other hand, labor has rights as well
+as capital, and the two can never get along together until this truth
+is respected by both. In all disputes, there should be an interchange
+of views, a full statement of grievances by those who are dissatisfied,
+and a fair consideration of them by the party against whom they exist."
+
+O'Hara was not afraid to look his employer in the face and say:
+
+"That has been my opinion all along, Mr. Bradley, and had it been yours
+this lock-out would never have come."
+
+"I admit it. You came to me from the employes and asked for a
+discussion of the differences between us. I thought you insolent, and
+refused to listen to you. Therein I did you all an injustice, for
+which I apologize."
+
+"It gives me joy to hear you speak thus, Mr. Bradley."
+
+"Seeing now my mistake, there is but the one course before me. I am
+convinced that in all cases of trouble like ours the court of first
+resort should be arbitration. The wish to be just is natural to every
+one, or at least to the majority of mankind. If the parties concerned
+cannot agree, they should appeal to those in whom both have confidence
+to bring about an agreement between them; that is according to the
+golden rule. Employer and employed, labor and capital, should be
+friends, and arbitration is the agent that shall bring about that happy
+state of things."
+
+"But I do not see that there has been any arbitration in this dispute."
+
+"But there has been all the same."
+
+"Where is the arbitrator?"
+
+"She sits on your knee wondering what all this talk means. I tell you,
+Hugh, there is a good deal more in those little heads than most people
+think. Yesterday morning, when Dollie sat in her high chair at the
+breakfast-table, she heard her aunt and me talking about the strike.
+Though she could not understand it all, she knew there was trouble
+between me and my employes. I was out of patience and used some sharp
+words. She listened for a few minutes while busy with her bread and
+milk, and then what do you think she said?"
+
+"I am sure I have no idea," replied O'Hara, patting the head of the
+laughing child, "but whatever it was, it was something nice."
+
+"She says, 'Brother Harvey, when I do anything wrong, you take me on
+your knee and talk to me and that makes me feel so bad that I never do
+that kind of wrong again. Why don't you take those bad men on your
+knee and talk to them, so they won't do so again?' I showed her that
+such an arrangement was hardly practicable, and then she fired her
+solid shot that pierced my ship between wind and water: 'Brother
+Harvey, maybe it's _you_ that has done wrong; why don't you sit down on
+their knees _and let them give you a talking to_? Then you won't be
+bad any more."
+
+Hugh and Harvey broke into laughter, during which Dollie, who had
+become tired of sitting still full two minutes, slid off O'Hara's knee
+and ran out of the room.
+
+"We smile at the odd conceits of the little ones," continued Harvey,
+"but you know that the truest wisdom has come from the mouths of babes.
+I hushed her, but what she said set me thinking--'_Why don't you let
+them give you a good talking to_?' _That_ was the very thing you had
+asked and I had refused. I set out to take a long walk, and was absent
+most of the day. Her question kept coming up to me, and I tried to
+drive it away. The effort made me angry and ended in a decision to be
+sterner than ever. I would not yield a point; I would import a body of
+men at large expense and keep them at work, just because I was too
+proud to undo what I knew was wrong.
+
+"Still my conscience troubled me, but for all that I don't think I
+would have yielded. Pride, the greatest of all stumbling-blocks, was
+in my way. Reaching home, I learned that Dollie was lost; then, of
+course, every other thought went from my head. Nothing else could be
+done until she was found."
+
+Harvey was about to tell his guest his suspicion that he had had a hand
+in the abduction of the child, but he was ashamed, and really there was
+no call for such a confession.
+
+"Well, it was you who found her. I repeat that my debt to you can
+never be paid. And yet I do not believe that that obligation would
+have led me to yield, where I felt that a principle was at stake. It
+was the words of Dollie, spoken yesterday, that stuck to me. They kept
+me awake most of the night and played a part in the dreams that I had
+about her being lost in the woods and eaten up by panthers and all
+sorts of creatures. When I awoke this morning, the mists had cleared
+away. I saw my error, and fully made up my mind to do all I could to
+correct it. I went to the telegraph office before breakfast and sent a
+message to Vining countermanding the order for the men. Then I came
+back and had just finished my meal when a message was brought to my
+house. Odd, wasn't it?"
+
+"I see nothing odd in a telegram for you."
+
+"I mean in the telegram itself."
+
+"I could not answer that unless I saw it."
+
+"Of course," said Harvey with a laugh, wheeling about in his chair and
+picking up one of the yellow slips of paper which the Western Union
+furnishes its patrons gratis.
+
+"There, read _that_," he added, passing it to Hugh O'Hara, who looked
+at it with no little curiosity.
+
+It was dated in the city of New York and signed by Johnson W. Bradley,
+father of Harvey, and President of the Rollo Mills Company. This was
+the body of the telegram:
+
+"Don't lose sight of the interests of your men. Before hiring other
+hands _try arbitration_."
+
+"That _is_ rather odd," said Hugh; leaning forward, so as to hand the
+telegram back to his employer, "but it is sound wisdom all the same."
+
+"Undoubtedly; but are you convinced that I agree to your terms not
+because of gratitude, but because I believe them right?"
+
+"I am satisfied," said Hugh; "have you sent the notice to the hands?"
+
+"Yes. I wonder that you did not hear of it on the way here."
+
+Hugh smiled.
+
+"Of course I heard of it. I knew it long ago, but I did not know _why_
+you had decided to restore our time to what it was and to pay the same
+wages; _that_ I have learned from yourself. And now that you have done
+your part so well," added Hugh, rising to leave, "I assure you that we
+shall do ours; we shall give you the best service we can. No one shall
+misinterpret your action or try to take advantage of it."
+
+The superintendent was wise enough to avoid a mistake to which persons,
+placed as was he, are liable--that is, he did not overdo his part. He
+was so happy over the return of his little sister that he was willing
+not only to give the old wages and time asked for by his employes, but
+he felt like adding to them. He meant to make the pay of O'Hara
+greater than before, but changed his purpose at the last moment.
+
+Had he added to the pay of his chief foreman it would have changed the
+ratio between that and the wages of the others, unless theirs, too, was
+increased. In that event, a reproof was likely to come from the
+directors, and he would find it hard to retrace his steps.
+
+Justice called for him to do just what he had done; it would be weak to
+do more. "Hugh," said he, also rising to his feet, "I am not quite
+through with you; I am now going to ask you to do _me_ a favor."
+
+"I guess it's safe to promise in advance that I will do it--that is, of
+course, if it be in my power to do it."
+
+"It is in your power. Last night, when I was in the woods near your
+cabin, I noticed a strange odor in the air; I could not imagine its
+cause, but I know now what it was."
+
+"What was it?" asked O'Hara, turning crimson.
+
+"You and some of your friends have been illicitly making whiskey. You
+have a distillery somewhere in the mountains, and, while working in the
+mills during the day, you have taken turns in running the still at
+night. I will not ask you to tell me how long you have been doing
+this, but you know as well as I that it is a crime."
+
+The two men were silent a moment and then Hugh, without any appearance
+of agitation, said:
+
+"You have spoken the truth; the still was not more than a hundred feet
+from the cabin, and caused the smell you noticed."
+
+"How could you three attend to it when you were in the cabin?"
+
+"Some one was generally close by. The pipe that carried off the fumes
+ran into the chimney of our cabin and mixed with the smoke. We took
+turns in looking after it. Tom and I had been there earlier in the
+evening, and Jack was to look in now and then against our coming back.
+But," added Hugh, "you said you had a favor to ask of me."
+
+"So I have; I ask you to destroy that still, root and branch, and never
+take a hand in anything of the kind again."
+
+"I cannot do that."
+
+"Why not? You are engaged in breaking the laws of your country, for
+which there is a severe penalty. Now that you will have steady work,
+you cannot make the plea that would have been yours if the strike
+continued. Why can't you do as I ask you to do?"
+
+"Because it has already been done. After I got back to the cabin last
+night, Tom and Jack and I went out and wound up the business. The worm
+has been thrown down the rocks, where it can never be found, the mash
+has been scattered to the four winds, and everything smashed to general
+flinders. It took us nearly to daylight to finish it, but we stuck to
+it till the job was done."
+
+"I am delighted to hear that, what was the cause of all this?"
+
+"I guess it must have been the little arbitrator," said O'Hara, with a
+smile; "they say that when a man does a bad act he feels like doing
+others. That may or may not be true, but I know that when a man does a
+good deed, the impulse to do more is awakened, and whatever good there
+is in him is strengthened. I have been a bad man; I grew desperate
+after the death of Jennie; but when I held your Dollie in my arms it
+seemed that some of her goodness found its way into my heart. I
+resolved with the help of heaven to be a better man. The first step
+toward becoming so was to stop the unlawful work in which I had been
+engaged only a short time.
+
+"I thought that Tom and Jack would make trouble, but I didn't care, for
+I could manage them. To my surprise, however, they seemed to feel just
+as I did. So they fell to work with a will, and the job couldn't have
+been done more thoroughly. Now, if you will allow me to kiss Dollie,
+who has come back, I will bid you both good day."
+
+Harvey Bradley shook hands with his visitor, during which he handed him
+a liberal sum of money for Tom Hansell, who had taken part in the
+search for Dollie. He sent naught to Jack, for he deserved none. Then
+he went with Hugh to the outer door, giving him a number of encouraging
+words on the way.
+
+The whistle of the Rollo Mills never screeched more cheerily than it
+did the next morning, and there was never a happier band of employes
+than the 300, young and old, who took their places again in the works.
+
+A short time afterward Harvey Bradley opened and furnished a room where
+the best of reading was given free to all who chose to accept the
+privilege. Still later in the season a night school was started, and
+the skilled teacher who took charge was liberally paid by the board of
+directors, who never made a better investment of money.
+
+The interest shown by the superintendent in the welfare of his employes
+proved to be seed sowed in good ground. All wrought faithfully and
+well, and when on the 1st of January the balance sheet was made up, lo!
+the net profits of the Rollo Mills were greater than ever before.
+
+
+
+
+IN THE NICK OF TIME.
+
+It may sound like slander for me to say that the elephant, which is
+admittedly one of the most intelligent members of the animal creation,
+is also one of the most vicious and treacherous. But it is a fact all
+the same. I have seen one of those beasts, that had been fed and
+treated with the greatest kindness for years by his keeper, turn upon
+him like a tiger, and, seizing him with that wonderful trunk of his,
+dash him to death before he could do more than utter a cry of protest
+and terror.
+
+I have seen another, after waiting weeks for the opportunity, suddenly
+grasp an innocent person, and, kneeling upon him with his beam-like
+legs, knead him out of all semblance of humanity.
+
+Columbus, who was the main attraction of Barnum's establishment some
+forty years ago, killed several keepers, and was likely to start on one
+of his terrible rampages at any moment. The giving away of a bridge in
+New England so injured him that he died, long before any of my young
+readers were born.
+
+An elephant, fully as bad as Columbus, was Vladdok, who was brought to
+this country when quite young. A glimpse at his enormous ears told his
+African nativity at once, those from Asia and Ceylon having much
+smaller ears. He belonged to the old traveling circus of Blarcom &
+Burton, and made several journeys through our country in the days when
+those establishments found no use for the railways, but patiently
+plodded from town to town, delighting the hearts and eyes of our
+grandfathers and grandmothers when they were children just as we are
+now.
+
+Vladdok had killed two keepers, besides badly wounding a couple of
+spectators in Memphis, when he yielded to one of his vicious moods. He
+had been fired upon and wounded more times than any one could remember,
+and Mr. Blarcom, who always traveled with his show, had been on the
+point more than once of ordering his destruction; but he was of such
+large size and possessed such extraordinary intelligence, that he
+constituted the main attraction of the exhibition and he hesitated,
+well aware that sooner or later, the wicked fellow would die "with his
+boots on."
+
+It was after an afternoon performance in one of the Western States that
+Vladdok indulged in his last rampage. His sagacious keeper had come to
+understand the animal so well, that he knew the outbreak was coming.
+While Vladdok was unusually tractable and obedient, there was a
+dangerous glitter in his small eyes, and an occasional nervous movement
+of his head, which proved that he was only biding his time and waiting
+for the grand chance to present itself.
+
+Fortunately, he did not rebel until after the exhibition was over, and
+the crowds had departed. Then, with a fierce trumpeting and one vast
+shiver of his enormous bulk, he made a dash which snapped his chains
+like so much whip-cord and went through the side of the tent as though
+it were cardboard.
+
+On his wild charge, which set all the rest of the animals in a panic,
+he reached for his keeper, who with prodding spear and shouts,
+interposed himself in his path and tried to check him. But the man's
+inimitable dexterity and good fortune enabled him to dodge the beast
+and escape by a hair's breadth. The next minute, the elephant reached
+the public highway, down which he swung awkwardly but swiftly, on an
+excursion that was destined to be the most tragic in his whole career.
+
+The first object on which he vented his wrath was a team of horses,
+driven by a farmer, whose wife was sitting beside him on the front
+seat. Neither they nor the team knew their danger until the avalanche
+of fury was upon them. The animals screamed in an agony of fright, and
+were rearing and plunging, when Vladdok grasped one with his trunk,
+lifted him in the air and dashed him to death. The other broke loose
+and plunged off at such headlong speed, that the elephant followed him
+only a few paces, when he turned to attack the man and woman.
+
+But they were nowhere in sight, and, with a trumpet of disgust, he
+wheeled about, and turning from the highway, took to the woods.
+
+The couple were saved by a singular occurrence. The violent rearing
+and backing of the horses overturned the wagon body, and the farmer and
+his better half were caught beneath it, before they could escape. They
+had sense enough to remain quiet, until the brute left, when they crept
+out, none the worse for their mishap.
+
+"Consarn his pictur!" exclaimed the husband; "if that don't beat all
+creation! I allers said that circuses and shows was a burnin' shame,
+and now I _know_ it; I'll make the owner of that elephant pay ten
+thousand dollars for the damage he done us, for he scart you and me so
+bad Betsy, that we'll never grow another inch."
+
+Meanwhile, the runaway kept things moving. He knew his keeper and
+attendants were hot on his trail, and his sudden change of course was
+undoubtedly with a view of misleading them. It is hardly to be
+supposed that he expected to find any "game" in the woods, but
+nevertheless he did.
+
+It so happened that Jack Norton and Billy Wiggins, a couple of boys not
+more than fourteen years of age, were engaged on a little hunt that
+same afternoon. The teachers had sent such bad reports home about them
+that their parents inflicted the most awful kind of punishment; they
+did not permit them to attend the circus, to which they had been
+looking forward for weeks. The father of Billy was specially stern,
+and forbade his hopeful to take his gun, when he joined Jack on a
+little hunting ramble in the woods. Mr. Norton felt some slight
+compunctions, when he noted how patiently his boy accepted his fate,
+and relented to that degree that he permitted him to take his rifle,
+though he knew there was little chance of his securing any game.
+
+The boys had walked about a mile, and, coming to a fallen tree, sat
+down to rest awhile, for the day was warm and the gun which they had
+taken turns in carrying, was heavy.
+
+"I guess this hunt ain't agoin' to amount to much," sighed Jack, as he
+leaned the rifle against the prostrate trunk, on which they were seated.
+
+"Why not?" asked Billy.
+
+"'Cause there ain't nothin' to hunt; I heerd Budge Jones say that when
+he was a boy, these woods used to be full of bears and deers and tigers
+and lions and giraffes and that sort of thing."
+
+"Yes, and the folks were so mean they killed 'em all, but I've the
+idea, Jack, that maybe some of the lions or tigers has hid somewhere in
+the woods and we might find 'em."
+
+"Golly! I don't know whether I'd want to find 'em or not," replied
+Jack, looking about him, with a scared expression.
+
+"Why not? Hain't you got a gun?"
+
+"Yes, but while I was killin' one the others might chaw me all to
+pieces; but if there was only one, I wouldn't care, if he was an
+elephant as big as a barn----"
+
+"My gracious! there he comes!"
+
+A terrific crashing of the undergrowth caused both lads to glance
+affrightedly behind them, and there, sure enough, was Vladdok, the
+fearful elephant, almost upon them. They started to run, their courses
+so diverging that the beast was forced to select one and let the other
+alone for the moment. He fixed upon Billy Wiggins, who had taken
+barely twenty steps, when the trunk of the beast inclosed his waist and
+he was lifted, as if he was a feather from the ground, and the next
+instant he felt himself whizzing through space.
+
+A marvelous providence saved him. Instead of dashing him against a
+tree, or upon the ground, the elephant, in one of his mad freaks, flung
+him from him as though he was a ball. He spun through the air, the
+leaves and limbs whizzing against his face and body, and instinctively
+clutching with both hands, succeeded in grasping enough branches to
+support the weight of his body and check his descent.
+
+Then, when he collected his senses and stared around, he found that he
+was a dozen yards above the ground, with the elephant beneath, looking
+up, and apparently waiting for him to fall within his reach, that he
+might finish him.
+
+"Not much," muttered Billy; "I'm going to stay here and I don't believe
+you know how to climb a tree. Helloa! how do you like _that_?"
+
+Jack Norton had dashed only a few yards, when the terrified look he
+cast over his shoulder told him the elephant was giving his whole
+attention to Billy, and seemed to have forgotten all about him.
+Instantly he was filled with alarm for his young friend, and started
+back to the log to get his rifle, that neither had thought of in the
+panic.
+
+As he knelt behind the fallen tree, to make his aim sure, he descried a
+queer object going through the limbs of a large oak, and did not
+identify it, until it lodged fast, as his friend Billy Wiggins.
+
+Jack had no more idea of the fatal point at which to aim his weapon
+than you have, but knowing that he must do something, and, with a dread
+that the elephant after all, might succeed in climbing the oak and
+getting at his friend, he let fly.
+
+Gordon Cumming himself could not have done better. The tiny bullet
+bored its way into the vast bulk, just back of the fore leg and went
+directly through the heart. The huge brute, as if conscious that he
+was mortally hurt, swung part way round, so as to face the point whence
+the shot had come. Catching sight of the kneeling youngster, with the
+muzzle of his rifle still smoking, he plunged toward him. He took a
+couple of steps, swayed to one side, moved uncertainly forward again,
+then stopped, tried to steady himself, and finally went over sideways,
+like a mountain, crashing the saplings and undergrowth near him, and
+snapping one of his magnificent tusks into splinters. He was dead.
+
+When the boys fully comprehended what had taken place, they were not a
+little alarmed and puzzled, and started home, wondering whether their
+game was a descendant of the creatures that used to inhabit that
+section, or whether he was a visitor to these parts. They had not gone
+far, however, when they met the attaches of the menagerie and circus to
+whom they related what had occurred.
+
+The proprietors were relieved on learning the whole truth, for there
+could be little doubt that the sudden ending of the career of Vladdok
+was the means of saving more than one person from death.
+
+As for Jack Norton and Billy Wiggins, it was generally conceded that
+they spoke the truth, when they declared:
+
+"Our fathers wouldn't let us go to the circus that afternoon, but I
+guess we had a bigger circus than any of you all to ourselves."
+
+
+
+
+LOST IN THE SOUTH SEA.
+
+Captain William Gooding was commander of the _Tewksbury Sweet_, of
+Portland, Maine, and was lost in the South Pacific in the spring of
+1889. This fine American bark sailed from New Castle, New South Wales,
+on the 17th of March, bound for Hong Kong. Everything went well until
+the 9th of the following month, when she encountered a severe gale.
+Despite all that skillful seamanship could do, and in the face of the
+most strenuous exertions, she struck the dangerous Susanne Reef, near
+Poseat Island, one of the Caroline group of the South Sea.
+
+The wreck was a total one. The vessel broke up rapidly, and seeing
+that nothing could be done, the captain and crew, numbering ten men in
+all, took to one of the boats, carrying with them only a single
+chronometer belonging to the ship. Even after entering the small boat
+they were still in great danger, and only succeeded after the utmost
+difficulty in reaching a small islet some miles to the southward. The
+storm was still raging so violently that the shelter was a most welcome
+one, though as there were no animals or vegetation, or even water upon
+the island, their stay of necessity could be only temporary. They had
+saved nothing to eat or drink, and to remain where they were meant a
+lingering death.
+
+After several hours waiting, the tempest abated somewhat, and launching
+their boat once more, they rowed toward the main island.
+
+"The end is likely to be the same in either case," remarked the captain
+to the second mate, George W. Harrison, as they approached the land.
+
+"And why?" inquired the latter: "we shall find food and water there."
+
+"True enough; but there are no fiercer savages on the South Sea than
+those of this island, and I have never heard that they were
+particularly friendly toward the crews of shipwrecked vessels."
+
+"They may not discover us until we can signal some passing ship."
+
+"There is no possibility of any such good fortune as that."
+
+"Stranger things have happened, and--"
+
+"Does that look like it?" interrupted the captain in some excitement,
+pointing toward the island.
+
+The sight that met the gaze of every one was startling. Fully thirty
+canoes, each filled with eight or ten natives, were putting off from
+shore and heading toward them. Several of the crew favored turning
+about, and putting to sea; but that would have been not only hopeless,
+but would have invited attack. Nothing is so encouraging to an enemy
+as flight on the part of his opponent. It impels him to greater
+exertions and gives him a bravery which otherwise he may not feel.
+
+The savages, in their light, graceful craft, and with their great skill
+in manipulating them, would have overhauled the white men "hand over
+hand." There was a faint hope that by presenting a bold front, and
+acting as though they believed in the friendship of the savages that
+they might spare the unfortunates. At any rate, it was clear there was
+no choice but to go ahead, and the white men did so, rowing leisurely
+and calmly, though the chances in doing so were hastening their own
+doom.
+
+There could be no mistaking the ardor of the ferocious natives. They
+paddled with might and main, and fully a dozen, in their eagerness,
+leaped into the sea and swam ahead of their canoes. They were
+magnificent swimmers, speeding through the water like so many dolphins.
+The Americans, even in their frightful peril, could not repress their
+admiration.
+
+"Did you ever see anything like it?" asked first mate Watchman; "they
+are like so many sharks."
+
+"They are indeed," was the significant response of Captain Gooding,
+"and I would like it better if they were real sharks."
+
+"Here they are!"
+
+Sure enough; they surrounded the boat in a twinkling, and shouting and
+screeching like so many demons, clambered over the gunwales until there
+was danger of swamping the craft.
+
+Had our friends possessed firearms, they would have made a desperate
+resistance, and possibly might have beaten off their assailants; but,
+as it was, they acted the part of wisdom in offering no opposition to
+the presence or actions of their unwelcome visitors.
+
+The latter proved that they meant business from the first, for hardly
+were they in the boat when they began stripping the officers and
+sailors of their property. When they ceased the men had nothing left
+but their undershirts, their despoilers flinging the garments into the
+canoes that now crowded around.
+
+No more plunder being obtainable, the fleet headed for land, with their
+captives in anything but a cheerful frame of mind. The shore was lined
+with women and children, who answered the shouts of their friends in
+the boats by running back and forth, screeching and yelling and
+dancing, as if unable to restrain themselves until the arrival of their
+victims.
+
+The sailors believed they would be speedily killed and eaten, the
+latter horror might have been escaped had they known, what they
+afterward learned, that the savages of those islands are not cannibals.
+
+The poor fellows stepped from their boat upon the shore, where they
+were immediately environed by the fierce men, women and children, half
+naked, wild, boisterous, and seemingly impatient to rend them to
+pieces. The prisoners could do nothing but meekly await the next step
+in the tragedy.
+
+It was during these trying moments that the sailors were astounded to
+hear, amid the babel of voices, several words spoken in English.
+Staring about them to learn the meaning of such a strange thing, they
+saw a man attired as were the others, that is with only a piece of
+cloth about his hips, whose complexion and features showed that he
+belonged to the same race with themselves.
+
+He advanced in a cheery, hearty way, and shaking hands with the new
+arrivals, said:
+
+"I think you did not expect to find me here."
+
+"Indeed we did not," was the reply; "you appear to be an Englishman."
+
+"So I am, and I am anxious to give you all the help I can, for your
+situation is anything but a desirable one."
+
+"There can be no doubt of that. But how is it that you are here? Were
+you shipwrecked like ourselves?"
+
+"No; I may say I was deserted. My name is Charles Irons, and I was
+left at Poseat by a trading vessel four years ago."
+
+"How came that?"
+
+"I was to act as the agent of a company of traders on the Cocoanut
+Islands. Well, the vessel left me, as I first told you, and that was
+the last of it. They forgot all about me, or more likely, did not care
+to keep their promise, for I have never seen anything of the vessel
+since."
+
+"What an outrage!"
+
+"It was, and there couldn't have been a more wretched person than I was
+for several months. I looked longingly out to sea for the ship that
+never came, and chafed like a man who is bound hand and foot. But,"
+added the Englishman with a smile, "there is nothing like making the
+best of things. You can accustom yourself almost to anything if you
+will only make up your mind to do so. I was among these people and
+there was no help for it, so I decided to adopt their ways and become
+one of them."
+
+"You decided when in Rome to do as the Romans do," suggested the
+captain, who, like his companions, was greatly cheered, not only by the
+presence and friendship of the Englishman, but by the fact that the
+savages, who watched the interview with interest, showed no disposition
+to interfere.
+
+"That's it. There are a great many worse people in this world than
+these. They are not cannibals, as are many of their neighbors, and
+they have never harmed me."
+
+"But what about us?" was the anxious inquiry.
+
+The Englishman looked grave.
+
+"I cannot say what their intentions are, but I am afraid they are bad.
+They have been used ill by some of the vessels that have stopped here,
+and are naturally suspicious of all white people. Then, too, they are
+revengeful, and like all barbarians are satisfied, if aggrieved against
+our race, to get their satisfaction out of any member of it, whether he
+is the one who injured them, or is entirely innocent."
+
+"You seem to be regarded with high favor here."
+
+"I am. I stand next to the chief in authority, so you see I have
+reason to believe I may be of some service to you. You may be sure
+that I shall leave no stone unturned to help you."
+
+The captain and his companions gave expression to their deep gratitude,
+and Irons continued in his bluff, pleasant manner:
+
+"I guess I am about as much a savage as any of them. If I hadn't been
+I never would have obtained any control over them. I have seven native
+wives, and find I am forgetting a great many details of civilization,
+while my desire to return home is growing less every day. After all,
+what difference does it make where you are? A man has only a few years
+to live, and as long as he is contented, he is a fool to rebel."
+
+There may have been good philosophy in all this, and the captain did
+not attempt to gainsay it, but, all the same, it was hard for him to
+understand how any one could be so placed as to lose his yearning for
+his home and his native land.
+
+It was several days afterward, when the captives had become somewhat
+accustomed to their surroundings, that Captain Gooding found he and his
+men were mixed in their reckoning.
+
+"It is a question among us whether this is Thursday or Friday," said
+he, addressing Irons; "can you settle it for us?"
+
+The Englishman looked at the captain in an odd way and replied:
+
+"I haven't the remotest idea of what day in the week it is, nor what is
+the month. It seems four years ago that I was left here, but I am not
+sure of it. Will you please give me the year and month?"
+
+"This is April, 1889."
+
+The Englishman bent his head for a few minutes in deep thought. He was
+recalling the past, with its singular incidents of his career. When he
+looked up he said:
+
+"Yes; it is four years and more since I was abandoned, and if you stay
+that long you will be content to remain all your lives."
+
+The captain shook his head, and his eyes were dimmed as he replied:
+
+"I never could forget the loved ones at home, Irons; I would prefer
+death at once to a lingering imprisonment here."
+
+"Well, I am going to help you all to leave just as soon as it can be
+done. I understand how you feel, and sympathize with you."
+
+The Englishman proved himself the most valuable kind of a friend. The
+authority which he possessed over these savage South Sea Islanders was
+stretched to the utmost, but he never hesitated to employ it. But for
+his presence the Americans would have been put to death within a few
+hours at most of their arrival on the mainland, and without his aid it
+would have been impossible for them ever to have gotten away.
+
+When everything was in shape, Irons hired a canoe of the natives for
+the use of his friends. The craft was not large enough to contain all
+the party, and since all real peril had passed, there was no fear in
+following the course that had been agreed upon.
+
+Captain Gooding, second mate Harrison; and one of the sailors left
+Poseat in the canoe, first mate Watchman and his six companions
+remaining on the island. This was ten days after the loss of the
+_Tewksbury Sweet_.
+
+Captain Gooding and all the sailors were in the best of spirits, for
+they were confident that their wearisome captivity was substantially
+over. The three made their way from island to island, stopping at
+eight different points, sometimes for days, and even weeks. Finally
+they arrived at Ruk, where they found a missionary station, and
+received the most hospitable treatment.
+
+The good men owned a boat abundantly large enough to carry twenty
+persons, and the captain asked its use with which to bring the rest of
+his crew from Poseat. This was asking more than would be supposed, for
+the missionaries told them that they were surrounded by hostile
+natives, who were liable to an outbreak at any hour, in which event the
+only means of escape the white men possessed was the boat.
+
+The missionaries, however, gave their consent, and Captain Gooding,
+hoisting sail in the staunch centre-boarder, set sail for Poseat, where
+he safely arrived, without unnecessary delay. He found the first mate
+and his sailors well and in high spirits, though they were beginning to
+wonder whether their captain, like the friends of Irons, had not
+forgotten, and concluded to leave them to themselves.
+
+No objection was offered to their departure, and bidding an
+affectionate good-by to the Englishman, who had proven the best kind of
+a friend, they returned to the missionary island. Two months later the
+missionary vessel, the _Morning Star_, arrived, and carried them all to
+Honolulu, which was reached in November. Thence Captain Gooding and a
+part of the crew were brought by the steamer _Australia_ to San
+Francisco, from which point the captain made his way to his home in
+Yarmouth, where his family and friends welcomed him back as one risen
+from the dead, for they had long given up hope of ever seeing him again.
+
+
+
+
+AN UNPLEASANT COMPANION.
+
+"Say, Jack, the shellbarks are droppin' thick down in Big Woods. What
+a chance for a fellow to lay up a bushel or two before the crowd gets
+down there in the morning."
+
+"Wouldn't it, though, Ned!" I replied wistfully, for if there was
+anything I had a fondness for, it was shellbarks.
+
+We were trudging home to our dinner, for Ned and I lived close to the
+schoolhouse, much to the envy of some less fortunate pupils who brought
+their noonday meal with them in tin pails. It was a late September
+Friday, and a soft golden haze lay on hillside and woodland, and the
+quail were whistling in the furrows; and, as Ned spoke, I could see in
+my mind's eye just how Big Woods would look that afternoon with the
+soft sunlight slanting through the trees, and glimmering on the quiet
+waters of the creek.
+
+"Well, Jack, will you go?" said Ned abruptly.
+
+"You mean will I play truant?" I asked, a little startled.
+
+"Yes; there's no danger, Jack; we'll tell the teacher we had to stay
+home to cut corn."
+
+At first, I resisted Ned's appeal. I had played truant once before, a
+long time ago, and the memory of the punishment that I received in the
+woodshed at home was still strongly impressed on my memory.
+
+But this, I thought, was an exceptional case, I badly wanted a bushel
+or two of shellbarks, and I knew full well that, unless they were
+gathered that afternoon, they wouldn't be gathered at all; for bright
+and early the next morning all the boys in the neighborhood would be
+down in Big Woods, armed with clubs and baskets and sacks, and even the
+squirrels would stand a poor show after that invasion.
+
+In our selfishness, we never thought that other people might have a
+fondness for shellbarks as well as ourselves. So, after a little more
+pleading on Ned's part, I gave in, and we agreed to meet down at the
+foot of our orchard, as soon as dinner was over, for Ned lived right
+across, on the next farm. In a corner of the barn, I found my old
+chestnut club, a hickory stave, well coiled with lead at the top.
+Shoving this under my jacket, so no prying eyes could see it, I joined
+Ned at the meeting-place, and off we went in high spirits for the
+Yellow-breeches.
+
+It was a good mile to Big Woods, for we had to circle away down to
+Hake's Mill to get across the creek, but we felt well repaid for our
+trouble when we arrived there. The fallen nuts lay thick amid the dead
+leaves, and up on the half-naked trees the splitting hulls hung in
+clusters, willing to drop their burden at the least rustle of the
+breeze.
+
+We heaped the shellbarks in great piles, ready to stow away in Ned's
+big wheat bag; and, when the ground was cleaned up pretty well, and the
+leaves had been thoroughly raked, we turned our attention to a close
+cluster of trees that stood close by the creek. These nuts were
+unusually large, and thin-shelled. The hulls were cracked apart, but
+very few nuts lay on the ground, so I hauled out my club, and drove it
+fairly into the heart of the tree. A shower of nuts came down, with a
+merry clatter that gladdened our hearts; but the club, striking the
+trunk of the tree, bounded sideways and lodged in the crotch of a limb
+overhanging the creek, some twenty or thirty feet above the water.
+
+Here was a dilemma. I didn't want to lose that club, for it had done
+good service in past autumns, and had gone through a great many
+hairbreadth escapes.
+
+If we tried to dislodge it by hurling sticks or stones, it would fall
+into the water, and just at that point the creek was very deep, and
+moreover, as popular tradition held, a treacherous undertow existed
+which would render the recovery of the club impossible.
+
+"Climb the tree, Jack," said Ned; "that's your only chance."
+
+I was always considered a pretty good climber, so, after a little
+hesitation (for this was an unusually difficult tree), I started up the
+slippery trunk, and, with Ned's friendly aid, pulled myself among the
+lower limbs.
+
+It was an easy matter to reach the particular bough that I wanted, but
+then came the tug. I was half-inclined to give up the whole thing and
+go down to the ground, but Ned kept egging me on so confidently that I
+determined to go through with it.
+
+Straddling the limb, I took a firm hold with both hands in front of me,
+for no other boughs were close enough to be grasped, and thus inch by
+inch I moved cautiously forward.
+
+The branch creaked and groaned, and at last began to bend in such an
+alarming fashion that I stopped short.
+
+There was the club, not four feet away now, and far below I could see
+the quiet waters of the creek, wrinkling the reflected foliage as a
+dropping nut or stray leaf rippled the surface.
+
+"You're nearly there, now," cried Ned, with hearty encouragement; "just
+a little more, Jack, and you'll have it.
+
+"But the limb will break," I called down.
+
+"No, it won't," he insisted, "don't be afraid."
+
+That settled it. I wasn't afraid, and Ned should know it.
+
+I took a firmer grip on the bough, and slid forward half a foot.
+
+Crack, crack,--the big branch slowly began to split, and as I made a
+frantic effort to crawl back, a strange noise from the bushy part of
+the tree overhead turned my gaze upward.
+
+It's a wonder my hair didn't turn white that very instant, for what I
+saw was a big, tawny wild-cat, with blazing eyes and quivering claws,
+crouched on a narrow limb. I knew the animal was going to spring, and
+I tried to shout as loudly as I could, but my tongue stuck to the roof
+of my mouth, and the only sound I made was an odd cry that caused Ned
+to laugh, for he couldn't see what was the matter from where he stood.
+
+Then like a streak the brute plumped down on my back, and with a
+tremendous splash, limb, wildcat, and myself went into the creek.
+
+I heard Ned shout, as the water closed over me, and then everything
+became dark.
+
+I rose to the surface terribly frightened, for, sad to relate, I had
+never learned to swim, and Ned could do very little in that direction.
+Instead of clutching at the empty air, as most drowning persons do, I
+caught hold of something substantial; and when the water was out of my
+eyes and out of my stomach, for I had swallowed about a pint, I saw
+that I was hanging to the bushy end of the broken limb. That was all
+very well, but the next thing I observed was not so pleasant, for six
+feet distant, on the thick part of the branch, sat the wild-cat,
+apparently none the worse for his fall. His sharp claws were driven
+into the bark, and he was calmly licking his dripping fur. Meanwhile
+the current was sweeping us down stream, and Ned was running along the
+bank in a sad state of fright and excitement. My back began to hurt
+pretty badly, and I discovered that my face was torn and bleeding in
+one or two places, though whether this was caused by the fall or by the
+wild-cat I did not know.
+
+"Swim, Jack, let go and swim," shouted Ned, and then, remembering
+perhaps that I was unable to follow his instructions, he suddenly
+turned and ran back through the woods at the top of his speed, instead
+of making any effort to help me.
+
+I was badly scared before, and now, when I saw, as I supposed, my last
+hope vanish, I began to shout for help as loudly as I could.
+
+But at the very first cry the wild-cat lifted his head, and emitted a
+vicious snarl. As I howled louder than ever, he advanced a foot or two
+along the limb, ripping off the bark, and fixing his big glaring eyes
+savagely on my face.
+
+I was terrified into silence, and, as soon as I ceased shouting, the
+brute stopped and coolly proceeded to lick his fur again.
+
+Apparently, he did not object to my presence so long as I remained
+quiet. The worst of it was that my end of the branch was pretty far
+down in the water, and threatened every moment to carry me entirely
+under the surface.
+
+In this precarious situation, I drifted down the creek, until the bend
+drew near that sweeps round to Hake's Mill. Here the country was a
+little more open, and a farmhouse came into sight over the brow of a
+hill.
+
+There was a chance of rescue, and in spite of my previous experience, I
+decided to try it, for my limbs were becoming chilled, and I knew I
+could not hold on much longer.
+
+"Help! Help!" I cried with might and main. No answer came back, but
+before I could shout a third time the wild-cat uttered a snarl, and
+began creeping toward me, inch by inch, and lashing the water fiercely
+with his tail. Lower and lower sank the branch, until my shoulders
+were submerged, and still the beast kept advancing.
+
+I continued to shout, but no welcome voice responded, only empty echoes
+floating back from the hills.
+
+Then I must have given up all hope, for I remember wondering vaguely
+what had become of Ned, and what they were doing in school, and whether
+my absence was noticed or not.
+
+The cold water was rippling about my neck now, and the wild-cat was so
+close that I could note the horrible colors of the glaring eyes, and
+feel the hot breath in my face. I wondered how it would feel when
+those two rows of needle-like teeth met in my flesh; and then, before I
+could think any more, a deafening report filled my ears, and, through
+the cloud of smoke that rolled over the creek, the wild-cat bounded
+high in air, and fell into the water with a loud splash. That was all
+I remembered then. The next thing I knew, I was lying in a grassy
+hollow, alongside the creek, while Ned and an old farmer bent over me,
+and threw water in my face. Ned's desertion was explained. He had cut
+off the bend in the creek by running over the hill, and, accompanied by
+the farmer, who happened to be down in the woods hunting rabbits, they
+had arrived just in time to shoot the wild-cat and drag me out of the
+water. That was the last time I played truant. I didn't lose my share
+of the shellbarks, for Ned went down early the next morning and got
+them, but I did lose the chestnut club, and what was worse, in spite of
+my sore back, I spent a very unpleasant quarter of an hour out in the
+woodshed, just two days later, and Ned, I am happy to say, passed
+through the same edifying experience.
+
+
+
+
+A STIRRING INCIDENT.
+
+India is the home of the deadliest serpents and fiercest wild beasts on
+the globe. When it is stated that more than twenty thousand persons
+are killed annually by the snakes and animals of that country, some
+idea may be formed of its attractions in the way of a residence. To
+this should be added the fact that, during certain seasons, the climate
+is like that of Sahara itself. For days and nights the thermometer
+stands above one hundred degrees in the shade and in the city of
+Madras, unacclimated persons have died at midnight in their beds from
+apoplexy caused by the appalling temperature.
+
+Among the venomous serpents of India, the _cobra di capello_ holds
+foremost rank, though it is claimed that a still more deadly reptile
+has been found in the interior, and I believe the British Museum has
+one of these terrible creatures, whose bite brings death with the
+suddenness of the lightning stroke. However, the cobra has been known
+to strike two persons in instant succession, proving fatal to both
+within ten minutes of each other. It is hard to conceive of any
+serpent more venomously destructive than this.
+
+On one of the flaming Sunday mornings, when there was not a cloud in
+the brazen skies, a well known missionary came home from early service
+and seated himself at the breakfast-table with his family. The door of
+the dining-room was open and the Teluga school-teacher was outside,
+when he became interested in a novel sight. A frog was hopping along
+the front veranda, with an immense cobra chasing it. The serpent
+struck at it repeatedly, but the fugitive, in its desperation, eluded
+each blow, giving utterance to pitiful cries, as a frog will do when
+pursued by a snake.
+
+The end of the veranda reached, the frog leaped off, and the cobra
+dropped to the ground in hot pursuit, but a box, standing near, offered
+shelter. The creature scrambled beneath, just in time to avoid another
+swift blow of the reptile, which was unable to follow it. The cobra
+glided around the box, seeking some avenue by which to reach his
+victim, but, finding none, moved off in the grass and disappeared.
+
+The teacher hurried into the dining-room, with the announcement of what
+he had seen. The missionary listened gravely and then inquired:
+
+"Where is the cobra now?"
+
+"I cannot tell, sir; he moved off among the flower-pots, but I do not
+know whither he went."
+
+"It is not my practice to go shooting on Sunday," remarked the
+minister, "but it won't do to have that serpent where it is liable to
+bite one of us. He must have a hole somewhere near the flower-pots;
+please keep watch while I get my pistol."
+
+The missionary always kept a loaded revolver for use when traveling
+through the jungle at night, and he speedily stepped out on the
+veranda, with the weapon in hand, and started to find the cobra.
+
+Two large native flower-pots stood within a couple of yards of the
+veranda. Each contained a fragrant rose, of which the good man's wife
+was very fond. Every day she spent some time sprinkling them with
+water or removing the dead leaves, never suspecting what proved to be
+the fact that while thus employed, she continually moved about a spot
+where an immense cobra lay coiled.
+
+An opening was discovered directly between the flower pots, partly
+concealed by the grass. It was about as thick as a man's wrist, and
+descended perpendicularly, expanding into a small chamber.
+
+The minister called for a hand-mirror, and with little trouble threw
+the bright reflection of the sun into the hole, a little more than a
+foot deep, fully lighting up the interior.
+
+The cobra was there! It lay motionless in a glistening coil, as if
+resting from its fruitless pursuit of the frog and brooding over its
+disappointment. It was an alarming sight, but the good man kept cool,
+and meant business from the start.
+
+Taking a piece of broken wagon tire, he thrust it slantingly into the
+hole, to hold the serpent a prisoner, and shoving the muzzle of his
+revolver forward, he let fly.
+
+Not the slightest motion followed. He had missed. He now gently
+turned the tire edgewise and fired again. A furious writhing followed,
+proving that the snake had been hit hard. The tire was instantly
+turned over flat to prevent its coming out. It struck fiercely at the
+iron, which in a minute was shifted on its edge again, and the
+missionary emptied the remaining chambers of his revolver down the
+hole. Then he turned up the tire once more, and allowed the hideous
+head to dart forth.
+
+The minister had brought with him a pair of large hedge shears, with
+which he seized the protruding neck, drew out the snake and gave it a
+flirt toward the compound. He was so absorbed with his task that he
+had not noticed the crowd of men, women and children that had gathered
+to watch the results of his hunt. When they saw a huge cobra flying
+through the air toward them, there was a scampering and screaming,
+which might have been less had they known that the grip of the shears
+had dislocated the serpent's neck.
+
+The good man did not forget that whenever you find one deadly serpent,
+another is quite certain to be close at hand. He had passed the wagon
+tire to the teacher, when he began pulling out the wounded cobra, and
+asked him to insert it again without an instant's delay. This was
+done, and returning with the hand-glass, the missionary once more
+conveyed the rays into the underground chamber.
+
+Sure enough a second cobra was there, wriggling and squirming in a way
+to show that he had received some of the bullets intended for his
+companion. The revolver was reloaded and a fusillade opened, standing
+off a few paces, the marksman waited for the head to come forth that he
+might seize and draw it out as he had done with the other.
+
+The wounded reptile continued its furious squirming and striking, but
+its head did not appear, until shot after shot had been fired. At last
+it showed itself, and was immediately gripped with the shears.
+Dropping the pistol, the missionary employed both hands in the effort,
+and running backward a few steps, the whole frightful length of the
+serpent was drawn out upon the ground.
+
+Remembering their former experience, the crowd moved away, but the
+missionary spared them a second fright.
+
+Both cobras being helpless, an examination was made of them. The
+second one showed the marks of fourteen pistol balls through his body,
+any three of which would have proved fatal, but he was still full of
+fight, and died while trying to strike the persons near him.
+
+The serpents were now stretched out on the veranda and measured one of
+them five feet eleven inches long, and the other six feet two inches.
+The last is an extraordinary size, rarely seen even in the favorite
+haunts of the reptile. An investigation of their home left no doubt
+that they had been living for months right among the flower pots that
+were attended to daily, and within six feet of the veranda and twelve
+feet of the door of the missionary's study.
+
+As for the frog that crawled under the box just in time to save
+himself, he was well and flourishing at the last accounts.
+
+
+
+
+CYCLONES AND TORNADOES.
+
+Science as yet has not been able to grasp the laws that govern
+cyclones. They seem to be the result of some intensely electric
+condition of the elements, which finds an expression in that form.
+Cyclones, until within a few years, meant those circular tempests
+encountered in the Pacific and Indian oceans. They are the most
+destructive of all storms, being far more deadly than monsoons and
+tornadoes.
+
+All navigators, when caught in a cyclone know how to get out of it.
+They have only to sail at right angles to the wind, when they will
+either pass beyond the outer rim of the circular sweep, or reach the
+center, where the ocean is calm.
+
+The diameters of the ocean cyclones range from fifty to five hundred or
+a thousand miles. Professor Douglas, of Ann Arbor University,
+entertains his friends now and then by manufacturing miniature
+cyclones. He first suspends a large copper plate by silken cords. The
+plate is heavily charged with electricity, which hangs below in a
+bag-like mass. He uses arsenious acid gas, which gives the electricity
+a greenish tint. That mass of electricity becomes a perfect little
+cyclone. It is funnel-shaped and spins around like a top. When he
+moves the plate over a table, his cyclone catches up pennies, pens,
+pith balls and other small articles, and scatters them in every
+direction.
+
+Cyclones never touch the equator, though the ocean ones are rare
+outside the torrid one. They are caused by the meeting of contrary
+currents of winds, and are known under the names of hurricanes,
+typhoons, whirlwinds or tornadoes. Those terrifying outbursts which
+now and then cause so much destruction in our own country seem to be
+the concentration of the prodigious force of an immense ocean cyclone
+within a small space, which renders them resistless.
+
+A writer in the _N. Y. Herald_ gives some interesting facts regarding
+these scourges of the air. While the cyclone, as we have shown, may
+have a diameter of hundreds of miles, the track of a tornado is often
+limited to a few hundred feet, and rarely has the width of half a mile.
+
+The cyclone carries with it a velocity of as much as 100 to 140 miles
+an hour. It sends a certain amount of warning ahead of its track, and
+the acceleration of the wind's speed at any given point, is gradual.
+
+The tornado falls almost without notice, or rather the indications are
+often so similar to those of an ordinary thunderstorm that only a
+skilled and careful observer can detect the difference.
+
+The phenomena and effects of cyclones in the West Indies have long been
+subjects of study and observation. As the center approaches a ship she
+is assaulted by wind of a terrible force and a sea that is almost
+indescribable. The water no longer runs in waves of regular onward
+motion, but leaps up in pyramids and peaks. The wind swirls and
+strikes until wherever there is a chance for vibration or flutter, even
+in tightly furled sails, the fabric soon gives way. I once saw a brig
+go drifting past us in a West Indies cyclone with everything furled and
+closely lashed with sea gaskets. We were in company nearly at the
+height of the storm, when the center was only a few miles away. There
+was a spot in the bunt of the foretopsail where the sail was not
+tightly stowed, and for several hours it had doubtless been fluttering
+under tremendous pressure. As I watched her a little white puff went
+out of the bunt of the topsail, and then the destruction of the sail
+was rapid. Long ribbons of canvas went slithering off as if a huge
+file had rasped the yard arm, and in a short time there was nothing
+left on the yard except the bolt ropes and the reef tackles. We could
+do nothing to help the crew, for it was doubtful whether we could keep
+off the reefs ourselves, and the brig passed out of sight to her
+certain doom.
+
+The local tornado that so frequently plays havoc with property and life
+in the West is, like the cyclone, a revolving force, but it carries
+with it a variety of phenomena wholly distinct from those that
+accompany the larger storm. Many of the effects of one tornado are
+wholly absent in others, and the indications that in one case have been
+followed by a terrible disaster are not infrequently found at other
+times to presage merely a heavy thunder shower.
+
+The freaks of a tornado are wholly unaccountable. In some cases not an
+object in its track will fail to feel its power for long distances; in
+other instances it will seem to act like a cannon-ball that plows up
+the earth on striking, then rises and strikes again, leaving the space
+between untouched. Sometimes it will go through a forest leveling the
+trees as though a gang of axemen had plied their tools on lines laid
+out by surveyors, nothing outside the track being touched; but again in
+similar windfalls there will be found occasional pockets scored in the
+forest growth jutting off the right line, like small lagoons opening
+into a flowing stream. These seem to have been caused by a sort of
+attendant whirlwind--a baby offspring from the main monster, which,
+having sprung away from the chief disturbance, scoops a hole in the
+woods and then expires or rejoins the original movement.
+
+I have seen one of the most violent and, so to speak, compressed of
+these storms, cut a road through thick woods so that at a distance the
+edges stood out clear and sharp against the sky as would those of a
+railway cutting through earth. Trees standing at the edge of the track
+had their branches clean swept one side while on the other there was no
+perceptible disturbance of the foliage.
+
+Sometimes the tornado acts like an enormous scoop, catching up every
+movable thing and sweeping it miles away: and again it becomes a
+depositor, as if, tired of carrying so much dead weight, it dumped it
+upon the earth preparatory to grabbing up a new cargo. These effects
+are particularly noticeable in the tornado that goes by jumps. When it
+strikes and absorbs a mass of debris it seems to spring up again like a
+projectile that grazes the surface. For a space there will be a very
+high wind and some damage, but no such disaster as the tornado has
+previously wrought. Out of the clouds will come occasional heavy
+missiles and deluges of water. Then down goes the tornado again
+crashing and scattering by its own force and adding to its destructive
+power by a battery of timbers and other objects brought along from the
+previous impact. Relieved of these masses, it again gathers up
+miscellaneous movables and repeats its previous operation.
+
+The force with which these objects strike is best seen when they fall
+outside of the tornado's path, since the work done by the missile is
+not then disturbed by the general destructive force of the storm.
+Thus, near Racine, Wis., I have known an ordinary fence rail, slightly
+sharpened on one end, to be driven against a young tree like a spear
+and pierce it several feet. The velocity of the rail must have been
+something enormous, or otherwise the rail would have glanced from such
+a round and elastic object.
+
+Many of the settlers in the tornado districts of Southern Minnesota,
+Iowa, Kansas, and Nebraska excavate a deep cellar beneath their houses
+and cover it with heavy timbers as a place of refuge for their families
+when a tornado threatens to strike them. While these dugouts are
+usually effective, they are not always so. There have been instances
+where families having only time to descend and not time enough to close
+the trap door have been exposed to the storm's full fury by the tornado
+getting into the opening and lifting off the whole roof after having
+first swept away the house above. Another pathetic case resulted in
+the death of a whole family by an extraordinary freak of the tornado.
+The storm first struck a large pond and swept up all the water in it.
+Its next plunge deposited this water on one of these dugouts, and the
+family were drowned like chipmunks in a hole.
+
+Some of the western tornadoes are accompanied by electrical
+manifestations to an extent that has originated a belief in electricity
+as their cause. These disturbances are very marked in some cases,
+while in others they have not been noticed. In one tornado in Central
+Illinois electricity played very peculiar antics not only in the
+tornado's track, but also at some distance from it. In the ruined
+houses all the iron work was found to have been strongly magnetized, so
+that pokers, flatirons and other metal objects were found adhering to
+each other. Just off the tornado's track the same effects were
+noticed, and several persons experienced sharp electric shocks during
+the passage of the storm. Afterward it was found that the magnetic
+influence was so strong that clocks and watches were stopped and
+rendered wholly useless.
+
+The scooping action of the tornado sometimes makes considerable changes
+in the topography of the country, as when it gathers up the water of a
+large pond or water course and makes a new pond or opens a new channel.
+At Wallingford the water in a pond of very large size was taken bodily
+from its bed, carried up a hill and dropped nearly in one mass, so that
+gullies and ravines were cut in every direction.
+
+There is a divide in Northeastern Illinois between streams flowing into
+Lake Michigan and those running to the Mississippi. So level is a
+portion of the land on the summit, and so slight the elevation above
+the lake, that in wet seasons the surface-water seems almost as willing
+to go one way as the other; and on one occasion the upper streams of
+the Desplaines River were nearly permanently diverted toward the lake
+by a tornado that gathered up the water and scored the surface in its
+track toward the east.
+
+Many are the stories told of the way in which objects are carried away
+by the wind and left in strange places. In one Illinois tornado two
+children and an infant were caught up. The dead bodies of the children
+were found only a few hundred feet distant, but the infant was picked
+up alive more than a mile away from the spot where the tornado swept
+the children up. An accordion that must have come a long distance--for
+it was never claimed--was found so entangled in the branches of a tree
+that it was alternately pulled apart and pressed together by the wind,
+thus creating such weird and uncanny music during a whole night that an
+already sufficiently scared settlement of negroes were kept in a state
+of frantic dismay until daylight revealed the cause.
+
+In another case a farmer who followed the tornado's track in search of
+missing cattle was astonished to discover one of his cows lodged about
+twenty feet above the ground in the branches of a half-stripped maple.
+
+"I allers knew that was an active heifer," he remarked, as he came in
+sight of her hanging over the slanting limb, "but I never allowed she
+could climb a tree."
+
+
+
+
+LOST IN A BLIZZARD.
+
+If I were given my choice between a visit from a cyclone or a blizzard,
+I would unhesitatingly choose the former. True, there is no resisting
+its terrific power, and a man caught in its embrace is as helpless as a
+child when seized by a Bengal tiger; but there is a chance of escape,
+and the whole thing is over in a few minutes. You may be lifted into
+the air and dropped with only a few broken bones, or, by plunging into
+a "cyclone pit," the fury of the sky may glide harmlessly over your
+head; but in the case of a blizzard, however, let me tell you the one
+woeful experience of my life.
+
+The snow fell steadily for two days and nights, and looking out from my
+home in western Kansas I saw that it lay fully three feet on a level.
+By a strange providence my wife, who had been my brave and faithful
+helper for several years, was away on a visit to her friends in Topeka,
+and my only companion was my servant Jack, a middle-aged African, who
+in his youth was a slave in Kentucky.
+
+Things had not gone well with us of late. The grasshoppers and drought
+played the mischief with out crops, and it was a question with me for
+months whether the wisest course to take was not to throw up my hands,
+let everything go to the bow-wows and, in the dry-goods firm, that I
+knew was returning to St. Louis, resume my situation still open for me.
+A man hates to confess himself beaten, and I decided to remain where I
+was one more year. Then, if there was no improvement, I would turn my
+back on Kansas forever.
+
+"Master Thomas," said Jack, as the dismal December afternoon drew to a
+close, "thar isn't a pound ob flour in de house. Shall I go to de
+village and get some?"
+
+"No; I will go myself."
+
+It was the sudden realization of the unutterable loneliness I would
+feel without any companion that led me to this rash declaration. The
+town was only a mile distant, but it would require hours to make the
+journey there and back, and I could not bear the thought of being
+without the society of any one for that time. I had read everything in
+the house; the single horse and cow I owned had been looked after, and
+there was absolutely nothing to do but to sit down before the scant
+fire, listen to the sifting of the snow against the window panes, and
+give way to gloomy reverie.
+
+Anything was preferable to this, and it was with a feeling akin to
+relief that I added:
+
+"I might do so had I not noticed this afternoon that he had gone lame."
+
+"Better let de flour go, den, for de snow am too deep and de storm to
+heavy for you to tramp all de way to town and back again."
+
+"No; while I haven't much fear of our starving, yet, if the snow-fall
+continues, we shall be in a bad way. I can carry twenty-five pounds
+without trouble, and will be back in a few hours; then the storm may
+rage as hard as it pleases, for all we care."
+
+The preparations were quickly made, and, to shorten my story, I may say
+that, after a laborious tramp, I reached the village without mishap,
+bought my quarter of a hundred of flour, slung it over my shoulder, and
+started on my return.
+
+By this time I had made several disquieting discoveries. The snow was
+falling faster than ever, the cold was increasing, a gale was blowing,
+and, under the circumstances, of course there was not a glimmer of
+light in the sky. My course was directly across the prairie, and in
+the event of my tracks being obliterated by the snow--as was almost
+certain to be the case--it was almost impossible for me to prevent
+myself from going astray.
+
+My hope lay in Jack's promise that he would keep a bright light burning
+in the upper story to guide me on my course. On a clear night this
+light was visible from the village, but somehow or other I failed to
+take into account the state of the weather. The air was full of
+eddying flakes, which would render the headlight of a locomotive
+invisible a hundred yards distant. Strange that this important fact
+never occurred to me until I was fully a fourth of a mile from the
+village. Then, after looking in vain for the beacon light, the danger
+of my situation struck me, and I halted.
+
+"I am certain to go wrong," I said to myself.
+
+"It is out of my power to follow a direct course without something to
+serve as a compass. I will go back to the village and wait till
+morning."
+
+Wheeling about in my tracks, I resumed my wearisome tramp through the
+heavy snow, and kept it up until I was certain I had travelled fully a
+fourth of a mile. Then when I paused a moment and gazed ahead and
+around, I was confronted by blank darkness on every hand. What a proof
+of a man's tendency to go wrong, that in aiming at a village of fifty
+dwellings, and only a fourth of a mile away, I had missed it altogether!
+
+This discovery gave me my first thrill of real alarm. I shouted, but
+my voice fell dead in the snowy air. The gale was blowing more
+furiously than ever, and the cold was so intense that it penetrated my
+thick clothing and caused my teeth to rattle together!
+
+"You can be of no use to me," I exclaimed, flinging away the small bag
+of flour. "The village can't be far off, and I will find it."
+
+Determined to retain my self-possession, I made a careful calculation
+of the proper course to follow, and plunged into my work with more
+vigor than ever. I continually glanced up in quest of the flickering
+lights, and listened, in the hope of hearing some sound that could
+guide me, but nothing of the kind was seen or heard, and it was not
+long before the terrible truth burst upon me that I was lost.
+
+Aye, and lost in a blizzard! The wind had risen almost to a hurricane;
+the cold cut through the thickest clothing, and the snow struck my
+face like the prick of millions of needles. I shouted again, but,
+convinced that it was a useless waste of strength, I soon ceased.
+
+It was certain death to remain motionless, and almost equally fatal to
+push on; but there _was_ a possibility that I might strike the right
+direction, and anything was preferable to remaining idle. And so, with
+a desperation akin to despair, I threw all the vigor at my command into
+my benumbed limbs, and bent every possible energy to the life and death
+task before me.
+
+The sleet drove against my cheeks with such spiteful and penetrating
+fierceness that I could make no use of my eyes, I could only bend my
+head to the blast and labor through the snow, praying that Providence
+would guide my footsteps in the right direction.
+
+I was plodding forward in this heavy, aimless fashion when I noticed
+that the violence of the gale was drifting the snow. Sometimes I would
+strike a space of several yards where it did not reach to my ankles.
+Then I would suddenly lurch into a wall that reached to my shoulders.
+After wallowing through this, I might strike a shallow portion again,
+where, while walking quite briskly, a windrow of snow would be hurled
+against my breast and face with such fury as to force me backward and
+off my feet.
+
+Bracing myself, I waited until there was a sufficient lull in the
+blizzard for me to make some use of my eyes. I blinked and peered
+toward the different points of the compass, but without catching the
+first twinkle of light.
+
+"I am lost--lost--" I moaned; "there is no help for me!"
+
+An extraordinary collapse must have come over me, for my senses seemed
+to forsake me on the instant. I went down in the eddying, blinding
+snow, and knew no more.
+
+At the moment of giving way I was less than a hundred yards from the
+easternmost house of the village. My despairing cry was heard, and
+hospitable hands carried me into the dwelling within a quarter of an
+hour after losing my consciousness. Intelligent and prompt treatment
+prevented any serious consequences, but the remembrance of that brief
+time exposed to the fury of the blizzard will remain with me to my
+dying day.
+
+
+
+
+THROWING THE RIATA.
+
+The skill shown by cattlemen in throwing the riata or lasso often
+approaches the marvelous. What is more wonderful than the duel
+described in the _San Francisco Examiner_, between Mexican vaqueros, in
+which the only weapons used were their riatas? The victor overcame the
+other by throwing his noose, so that his enemy's noose passed right
+through it, and the conqueror lassoed the other man's arms against his
+side and jerked him from his steed.
+
+The despatch then went on to tell of the skill of the victorious riata
+man, and mentioned among other wonderful feats, his lassoing an
+antelope running at high speed 100 feet away. To make the test more
+extraordinary, the correspondent wrote that he would pick out one of
+the animal's feet and get the noose around that alone.
+
+An _Examiner_ reporter called on Louis Ohnimus, Superintendent of
+Woodward's Gardens, who wielded a riata for many years, and probably
+knows as much about throwing the lasso as any man on the coast, and
+asked him if the feats referred to were possible.
+
+"The Mexican may have won the duel by lassoing his adversary, riata and
+all," was the answer. "It is not an uncommon thing for them to settle
+their differences by such a fight, and I have heard of the trick of
+ringing the other man's rope, but if that man can catch an antelope one
+hundred feet away, by the foot or any other way, he is a better riata
+man than I ever encountered. In the first place mighty few men are
+strong enough to throw a rope such a distance. Then an ordinary riata
+is only fourteen or sixteen yards long--twenty yards is a very long
+one. So, you see, a forty-foot throw is a pretty good one."
+
+He was asked to explain how to throw a lasso, and consented to do so.
+
+"The first thing about this business," said Mr. Ohnimus, "is to have a
+perfect riata. If you have one perfectly stretched, oiled, and in a
+thoroughly good condition, you can throw well; if your rope is kinky or
+uneven, you will find it impossible to do accurate work."
+
+"What do you consider a good riata?"
+
+"Well, I can only tell you how a good one is made. First, the rawhide
+is cut in thin strips, as long as possible, and half tanned with the
+hair on. Then these strips are soaked and stretched over a block.
+Then they are braided into a rope, care being taken, of course, to pull
+the strands as tight as possible. When the riata is made it should be
+buried for a week, ten days, or even a fortnight, in the sand. It
+takes up moisture from the ground, without getting hard. Soaking it in
+water won't do, nor will anything else that I know of except, as I say,
+burying it. When the riata is resurrected it should again be left for
+a time stretched over a block, with a weight to hold it taut. Then the
+hair should be sandpapered off the outside, and when the riata is
+greased with mutton tallow and properly noosed it is ready for use.
+Every vaquero that pretends to take care of his apparatus will bury his
+riata and stretch it every six or eight months.
+
+"A hair rope does not make a good riata. It is useful to stretch
+around camp at night to keep snakes away. For some reason snakes will
+not cross a hair rope.
+
+"Now, as to throwing it:
+
+"The riata, say, is hanging from the horn of the saddle--not tied, but
+ready for use. No vaquero who understands his trade ties his rope to
+his saddle. He knows that his life may depend on his ability to let go
+of his rope in an instant, and he isn't going to chance killing himself
+or his horse. You see, the vaquero might be on a side hill, and a bull
+or steer he wishes to catch be on a trail below him, and the ground
+between them to be too steep to admit of his riding down to it. Now,
+suppose the noose, instead of catching around the horns of the steer,
+should circle his neck and draw down to his shoulders? Accidents are,
+of course, as likely to happen in catching cattle as in anything else,
+and give a bull such a hold and he could pull a house, let alone a
+mustang. That would be one case where it would be very handy to let go
+quickly. Then a man is likely to get his hand caught, and if he can't
+let his rope go free he is likely to lose a finger or two.
+
+"Our vaquero is trotting along with his rope hanging at his saddle bow
+or fastened behind him. He sees a deer or whatever else he wants to
+catch, and grabs his rope with the left hand if he is a right-handed
+man, though a man to really excel in this business should be
+ambi-dextrous. A right-handed man can, under ordinary circumstances,
+rope a steer; but he has frequently to turn his horse to gain a good
+position. Now it sometimes happens that your horse is in a position
+where you can't turn; then it would be awkward, unless you could throw
+with either hand. I usually throw with my left hand, though I can use
+either.
+
+"I take up the rope from the saddle bow, so."
+
+He lifted his riata in his right hand. His little finger held the
+standing end of the rope, the third and middle finders supported the
+coil, and the noose dangled from his first finger, while his thumb
+steadied the whole rope and held it from slipping. The coils were not
+more than a foot or a foot and a half in diameter. The noose was the
+same size.
+
+"That's a smaller noose than you would use on the range, is it not?"
+
+"No," answered Mr. Ohnimus, "the vaquero never carries his noose long.
+If he did, it would be constantly getting tangled up in the horse's
+legs. He makes it larger when he swings it. But to get back to the
+process of lassoing. As our cowboy gets close to his quarry, he takes
+the noose in his lasso hand. I will use my left, as it is a trifle
+handier for me. He grips the rope, not too firmly, holding the
+standing part and the side of the noose about half the length of the
+loop away from the knot. That is to enable him to swing the noose so
+that it will fall open. If he holds it at the knot he will throw a
+long, narrow noose that is very likely to cross and kink.
+
+"Meanwhile I, representing our cowboy, hold the remaining coils in my
+other hand, only changing the position of my forefinger so as to secure
+better control of the coils. Then comes the third maneuver--enlarging
+the noose. Of course, you have to have a larger noose than one a foot
+in diameter to drop over a steer's horns forty feet away. The noose is
+enlarged by swinging the noose in your lasso hand until the centrifugal
+force pulls it out the size you wish (this is the reason you do not
+grasp it too firmly), letting go with the other hand, of course, as
+many coils as are necessary to make the noose the right size. Now you
+have the noose in the air you do not cease making it circle around your
+head until you let it go. When the noose has been let out to the right
+size the next trouble is to keep it open and to avoid entangling it in
+the brush or other surrounding obstructions. You keep it open, as I
+said, by holding the noose from quarter to half its length from the
+knot, and by a peculiar twist of the wrist that is only attainable by
+practice. To keep it clear of the brush is often a more difficult job,
+for the cowboy is not always in a clear place when he wants to throw
+his rope. Then it is that his judgment comes into play and determines
+whether his cast is a lost one or not. I have seen vaqueros swing a
+lasso swiftly almost in the midst of a thicket, and keep it clear
+without losing speed, and then let it drive straight as an arrow
+between two close trees and rope an object that could not pass where
+the noose had gone. Such skill, to be sure, comes only after long
+practice.
+
+"Well, now we have got the noose circling about the vaquero's head, and
+the next thing is to let it fly. There is not much to describe about
+this part of throwing a riata, important though it may be. It is only
+incessant practice that will enable a man to make a certain cast. The
+main thing is to swing the rope just long enough--neither so long as to
+give it a side-wise motion when you throw it, nor short enough to
+prevent its getting all the force you require. Then the riata man must
+throw at a particular limb or projection. This thing of tossing
+blindly at an object and trusting to luck that the animal will get into
+the rope somehow will not do. You must pick out your mark as carefully
+as if you were shooting at it, and then time it. A steer jumping along
+changes his position constantly as regards you. If you throw at his
+head high up the chances are that it will be away down when your rope
+reaches him, and you will overthrow. Now, if you pick out a foot you
+must reckon so that that foot will be off the ground when your rope
+reaches him. The noose does not travel like a bullet, and this element
+of time is most important.
+
+"Of even more importance is it that the distances are gauged correctly.
+You remember I spoke about holding the coils lightly in two or three
+fingers. Well, that is done in order that as many coils as may be
+considered necessary may be let go. If you are wielding a riata you
+know that each of your coils is almost two feet or two and one half
+feet long. So if you want to lasso something twenty feet away you let
+go ten coils.
+
+"As to letting go, you simply open your hand at the correct time and
+the rope slips off.
+
+"But even after you have roped your steer your work is not over.
+Almost any animal can pull you from your horse, and to prevent this you
+must get your rope around the horn of your saddle. There is where you
+have to be quick. There are two ways of making this hitch that are
+used ordinarily. The one I prefer is simply to take two turns around
+the horn, taking care that the second turn comes lower and overlaps the
+other. No pull in the world could make that rope slip, while I can,
+simply by throwing off one turn, let it all slide off. This other
+fashion, which is really taking a 'half-inch' around the horn, holds
+just as fast, but you have to push the rope through to loosen it. You
+see, in making this sudden twist, a finger is very likely to get
+caught, and I have known many fingers being taken off before such a
+hitch could be unfastened.
+
+"It is often advisable to take an extra twist around anything you have
+lassoed, and this is done by simply throwing a coil. Practice again is
+the only thing that can teach this.
+
+"Now you have the whole theory of throwing a rope.
+
+"There are four sorts of throws, but they are all made alike, only the
+position of the arm being different. They are the overthrow, the
+underthrow, the sidethrow, and the backthrow."
+
+"Backthrow?"
+
+"Yes, backthrow--catching an object behind you--something that you need
+not even see. That sounds difficult, does it? Well, you stand behind
+me and you can see it done."
+
+The reporter took his station twenty feet behind Mr. Ohnimus, quite out
+of sight, of course. He swung the loop around his head, and, without
+turning, let it fly backward. It circled the newspaper man exactly,
+and by pulling it quickly Ohnimus had his arms pinioned to his side.
+
+"Are there any more trick throws?" asked the reporter.
+
+"Lots of them. I never put myself up as a crack riata man, and I am
+out of practice now, but I can lay the noose on the ground at my feet
+and kick it around your neck, or pick it off the ground from my horse
+and land it around you while the horse is going at full speed, and do
+lots of things like that, but none of them is any good. That backthrow
+has been used by the Mexican highwaymen to considerable advantage. You
+see, in that country the traveler always looks out for danger from the
+rear and is prepared for it, but when a pleasant horseman rides past
+him, playing with his riata, and wishing him 'Good-day' as he passes,
+he is likely to consider the danger as gone by, as well as the man.
+That has caused the death of a good many. The bandit gets the right
+distance ahead and then lassoes him as I did you. A touch of his spur
+jerks his victim from the saddle and that ends it."
+
+"How is the lasso as a weapon of defence?"
+
+"Good. A quick riata man can beat a fellow with a pistol at fairly
+close quarters."
+
+"How?"
+
+"Well, here is a pistol. Put it in your pocket and draw it on me as I
+come toward you."
+
+The reporter did as he was directed. He had not raised the weapon when
+the noose was around his hand and the pistol was jerked a dozen feet.
+
+"Try again, and tighter," said Ohnimus.
+
+The reporter did so. The pistol was not jerked from his hand this
+time, but before he could snap it Ohnimus had thrown a coil around his
+neck and pulled his pistol hand up over his shoulder. In another
+instant a second coil was around the reporter's body, and both arms
+were fastened firmly to his sides. He could not move that pistol an
+inch. No clearer demonstration of the use of the lasso as a weapon of
+defence was possible.
+
+"What is the most difficult animal, in your opinion, to catch with the
+lasso?" was asked.
+
+"A sea lion," answered the rope thrower. "I have caught them off the
+southern coast. They go right through a noose. The only way to get
+them is to throw the rope around his neck and back of one flipper. A
+hog is hard to catch, too. He pulls his legs out of a noose without
+half trying, and you can't hold him by the neck or body. The only way
+is to get him like the sea lion--back of one foreleg."
+
+
+
+
+A WATERSPOUT.
+
+Doubtless many of my readers have heard of the dreadful encounters of
+vessels with waterspouts, when the ship escaped destruction by firing a
+cannon-ball into the waterspout, thus causing it to break apart.
+
+Now these things are by no means such terrible objects as many believe.
+No doubt the vessels of the present day are larger and stronger than
+formerly, and perhaps waterspouts have become smaller. Be as it may,
+the people who go down to the sea in ships need give themselves no
+uneasiness about them, for really they amount to little.
+
+The _Slavonia_, of the Hamburg line left Brunshausen, on the Elbe, on
+February 26 last, under the command of Capt. H. Schmidt. She had only
+two passengers. The weather was squally and the air full of mist when
+she reached the outer Banks, 900 miles from New York, shortly after
+sunrise on Sunday, March 16. The big vessel was heading west by north,
+when, at 7 o'clock, Second Mate Erichsen, who was on the bridge, saw
+emerge through the mist on the starboard side of the ship, at the
+distance of about a thousand feet, a towering column which united sea
+and sky. The column was in front of the ship to starboard, and was
+moving in a southeasterly direction, apparently at the rate of eight
+knots an hour.
+
+Although the Slavonia was running 9 1/2 knots, the column seemed likely
+to pass in front of the steamship when their paths crossed.
+Accordingly Erichsen did not try to alter the course of the Slavonia;
+indeed, he would not have altered it had he known ship and spout were
+sure to meet, for he had encountered waterspouts before and wasn't
+afraid of them. All he did--in fact, all he had time to do--was to
+call Third Mate Lorentzen, also an expert in waterspouts.
+
+On rushed the _Slavonia_, heading west by north: nearer came the
+waterspout, heading south by east. It soon became evident that the
+spout could not get by before the _Slavonia_ reached it, and it was now
+too late to slow up--indeed, a collision was manifestly unavoidable
+from the start. Lorentzen had scarcely reached the bridge when the
+watery Philistine was upon the Samson. It just hit the steamer's bows
+on the starboard side, as depicted in the second cut. A rushing noise
+accompanied the column, and the water foamed in its wake. Immediately
+above was a great black cloud from which clouds less dark descended to
+form a funnel, or inverted cone. The middle of the column was white,
+apparently because it contained snow.
+
+The column's narrowest diameter was about twelve feet, while it was
+three times as broad as its base, which reproduced in water and
+inverted the cloud-formed funnel above. The whole column rotated with
+a spiral motion.
+
+The waterspout, when it approached, took all the wind out of the
+fore-staysail of the steamship, which went blind, but the schooner-sail
+still kept full, and presently the fore-staysail filled again.
+
+The Slavonia shook under the shock caused by contact with the column of
+water, but kept on her course none the worse for the collision. A few
+flakes of snow on her bow were the only evidence of the collision after
+the pillar of water had passed off to port.
+
+While the vessel was uninjured, the waterspout soon showed signs that
+it had received its death-blow. As it sailed off to the southeast it
+parted in the middle, and the cone of water which formed its base and
+the cone of cloud which formed its top began to grow smaller by
+degrees. The waterspout was slowly but surely ceasing to be a
+waterspout when it disappeared from view in the misty distance some
+fifteen minutes or more from the time it was sighted.
+
+The _Slavonia's_ encounter with the waterspout took place in latitude
+42 degrees 22 minutes north and longitude 52 degrees 35 minutes west.
+This is rather far north for waterspouts so early in the year. The
+waterspout crop is generally more plentiful when thunder and lightning
+are on top, which is in warmer weather. The temperature of the air at
+the time of the encounter was 37 degrees; water 54 degrees. It had
+been cold during the night, but grew warmer in the morning. The clouds
+which overspread the firmament were of the cumulus pattern.
+
+Erichsen and Lorentzen have not only seen other waterspouts, but the
+first, when on a sailing vessel in the tropics, ran into the very
+middle of one with no worse result than to deluge the deck of the ship
+with water as a heavy shower would have done. He thinks an unusually
+large waterspout might possibly sink a very small vessel, say a pilot
+boat, but with a ship of ordinary size he considers bombarding a
+waterspout with cannon a waste of powder.
+
+
+
+
+AN HEROIC WOMAN.
+
+Every boy and girl should learn to swim. When one recalls how easily
+the art is acquired, and the many occasions that are liable to arise,
+we cannot but wonder that the accomplishment is so universally
+neglected by the other sex. It is pleasant to note, however, that
+swimming is growing to be popular among women, and the day is not far
+distant, when the majority of young ladies will become the rivals of
+their brothers in their ability to keep their heads above water.
+
+Torres Strait separates Australia from Papua or New Guinea; and
+connects the Arafura Sea on the west, with the Coral Sea on the east.
+Its current is swift and the waters from time immemorial have been
+dangerous to navigation. It has been the scene of many shipwrecks, and
+it is only a few months since that the steamer _Quetta_ was lost in
+those waters. One hundred and sixteen persons perished on that
+terrible night in the South Pacific, but among the survivors was Miss
+Lacy, whose experience was not only among the most interesting and
+thrilling ever recorded, but emphasizes the statement we have made at
+the opening of our sketch.
+
+Miss Lacy says she was sitting in the saloon, engaged in writing a
+letter, the other ladies practicing for a concert which it was intended
+to give on shipboard. Everything was going along, merrily, and all
+were in high spirits, when, without the least warning, they were
+startled by a harsh, grating noise, the steamer rocked violently, and
+nearly every one was thrown into the wildest panic.
+
+The confusion and shouts above showed that some fearful disaster had
+occurred. Instantly Miss Lacy made a rush for the deck to learn what
+it meant. Quick as were her movements, she found the ship was already
+sinking. Going aft was like climbing a steep hill, but she saw that
+one portion was high above water, and she struggled bravely to reach
+it. But, so rapidly did the _Quetta_ go down that she had hardly gone
+forward, when the steamer was swallowed up in the furious waters.
+
+That which followed is beyond description. In an instant, two hundred
+human beings were struggling frantically, shrieking in their terror for
+the help which was nowhere to be found, clutching each other, praying
+and drowning by the score.
+
+Miss Lacy was caught in this fearful swirl, and was in imminent danger
+of being dragged down by those around her, who were crazed by the one
+wild, despairing hope of saving themselves, no matter at what cost.
+But she was a powerful swimmer, and retaining her self-command, she
+shook herself free of several who attempted to cling to her. The
+whirlpool caused by the sinking of the steamer pulled her beneath the
+water, but, with the same wonderful presence of mind she had shown from
+the first, she fought her way to the surface, and swam from the
+dangerous spot.
+
+Finding herself her own mistress, and fully aware that her life now
+depended on her ability to swim, she removed all her superfluous
+clothing and moved hither and thither in the darkness, in the hope of
+coming upon some of the survivors.
+
+It was about midnight, that she heard some one shout. The gloom was
+too powerful for her to distinguish anything, but she swam toward the
+point, whence the call issued, and came upon a raft, that had been
+hastily thrown together by the chief officer of the _Quetta_. Several
+persons were clinging to it, and she accepted the invitation to avail
+herself of the temporary refuge and give her weary limbs a rest.
+
+The dismal hours wore slowly away, and at last the growing light in the
+eastern sky told that the longed-for day was breaking. As soon as the
+rays of the sun illumined the wild waste of waters, every eye scanned
+the ocean in quest of some sail; but on every side was the vast heavy
+sea, with no sign of life except on the little raft. It was water,
+water everywhere, with not a drop to drink nor a morsel of food to eat,
+and with no prospect of escaping a lingering death of the most
+distressing nature.
+
+The discouraging feature of the situation to Miss Lacy was that their
+rude support was making no progress at all. They had no means of
+propelling it, and, had they possessed such means, no one knew what
+course to follow. It looked as if days and nights must be passed on
+the raft, until one by one the survivors succumbed or ended their
+sufferings by plunging into the sea which they had striven so hard to
+escape.
+
+Far away, however, on the verge of the horizon, an object rose dimly to
+view, which, after carefully studying for some time, the shipwrecked
+people agreed was a small island, but, as we have stated, they were
+powerless to propel their craft thither, and could only gaze and sigh
+for the refuge that was as much beyond their reach, as though it were a
+thousand leagues distant.
+
+"I am going to swim to it!" exclaimed Miss Lacy.
+
+"Are you mad?" demanded the astonished chief-officer; "it is utterly
+impossible."
+
+"I prefer to risk it rather than remain here."
+
+"But it is much further off than it seems to be; these waters are full
+of sharks and you will never live to swim half the distance. Dismiss
+the idea at once."
+
+"Good-by!"
+
+And the brave woman took a header into the sea, and with a long
+graceful stroke, that compelled the admiration of every one of the
+amazed survivors, began swimming toward the supposed refuge.
+
+But the chief-officer knew more about the difficulties in her way than
+she did. She grievously miscalculated the distance, and, though she
+was a swimmer of amazing skill and endurance, she began to believe she
+had undertaken a task beyond her power of accomplishment.
+
+She swam directly toward the island, husbanding her strength like a
+wise person, but making steady progress, until before the afternoon was
+half gone, she knew she had placed many a long mile behind her. When
+she looked back she could see nothing of the raft and her friends, but
+as she rose on the crest of an immense swell, she plainly discerned the
+island. It still was in the verge of the horizon, and it was hard for
+her to see that she was apparently no nearer to it than when she
+started.
+
+Besides this alarming fact, she was threatened by a still greater
+peril. As the chief-officer had warned her, the waters abounded with
+sharks, of the man-eating species, who were liable to dart forward and
+seize her at any moment; but, in recalling her extraordinary
+experience, Miss Lacy says that at no time did she feel any fear of
+them. She knew they were liable to discover her at any moment, but
+they did not, and fortunately indeed she escaped their ferocious jaws.
+
+Her greatest suffering was from the blazing sun, whose rays shot
+downward upon her head with pitiless power. When she found her brain
+growing dizzy, she averted the danger of sunstroke by dropping or
+swimming for some distance below the surface. This always cooled or
+refreshed her, though she felt her face and neck blistering under the
+fierce rays.
+
+In striving to recall her experience, Miss Lacy is unable to remember a
+large portion of the time she spent in the water. She believes she
+slept for several hours. What an extraordinary situation! Alone in
+the midst of the vast strait in the southern Pacific, surrounded by
+sharks, with no friendly sail in sight, and yet slumbering and
+unconscious.
+
+Of course she was not swimming all this time. When she found herself
+growing weary, she floated on her back for long periods, then propelled
+herself first upon one side and then upon the other, and all the time
+the dim misty object in the distance remained as far away as ever.
+Finally, when she raised her head and looked for it, she was dismayed
+at being unable to detect it at all. It had vanished.
+
+Then she knew that it had been an optical delusion from the first.
+There was no island or land in sight. She was alone on the vast deep.
+
+But the heroic woman did not despair. After she had been in the water
+twenty hours altogether, and was in the last stage of exhaustion, she
+was picked up by a boat belonging to the search steamer _Albatross_.
+For several hours succeeding her rescue she was delirious, but it was
+not long before she was entirely herself, having given a signal proof
+of the value of swimming as a lady's accomplishment.
+
+
+
+
+THE WRITING FOUND IN A BOTTLE.
+
+Let me assure the readers, at the beginning of this sketch, that it is
+strictly true in every particular. I have no ambition to shine as a
+writer of fiction, and, at the request of a number of friends
+acquainted with the remarkable circumstances, have sat down to relate,
+in a straightforward manner as is at my command; the part that I took
+in the history of the famous _Buried Treasure_.
+
+Not the least singular part of this strange business was that, of the
+three individuals concerned two were boys, one being my son Frank
+(named for his father) and a playmate, Arthur Newman. The latter was
+thirteen years old, while Frank was only a few months his senior.
+
+They were inseparable playmates from early childhood; and as we lived
+near a broad, deep inlet, which put in from the Atlantic, they learned
+to swim at the age of ten, and soon learned to manage a yacht as well
+as veterans. I was sometimes anxious because of their venturesome
+disposition, but although they frequently ventured outside, sometimes
+in very nasty weather, no accident ever befell them, and the parents of
+both boys gradually learned to dismiss all fear concerning them, under
+the belief that, as they grew older, they became better fitted to take
+care of themselves.
+
+One day in March Frank told me that a suspicious brig had been standing
+off shore for the better part of a week, and he and Arthur had come to
+the conclusion that it was a pirate. I laughed heartily at their
+fancy, and assured them that the days of buccaneers and sea rovers were
+long since past, and they must dismiss all such absurd ideas from their
+minds.
+
+The following week the Atlantic sea-board was devastated by one of the
+fiercest storms that had been known for years. Reports of wrecks and
+disasters to shipping reached us for several days after, and Frank
+remarked one evening at supper that he believed his suspected pirate
+was one of the unfortunate vessels that had gone down with all on
+board. I smiled at his words, but when I learned that the beach was
+strewn with wreckage, and that a great deal of it had washed into the
+inlet, I thought it probable that he was right, so far as the fate of
+the strange ship was concerned.
+
+It was near the close of the month that my boy brought home a tightly
+corked bottle, which he and Arthur had found while cruising in the
+inlet. When he said that there was a piece of rolled paper inside, I
+felt enough curiosity to withdraw the stopper with the aid of a strong
+corkscrew, and to make an examination.
+
+Sure enough there was a small roll of thick, vellum-like paper, on
+which, in a cramped hand, evidently written years before, was the
+following:
+
+"_Three feet under the Beacon Tree_."
+
+For a minute or two I was puzzled, and then, as if by inspiration, the
+whole truth burst upon me.
+
+The Beacon Tree was the name of an immense poplar that stood near the
+mouth of the inlet. The fish-hawks had builded their nests in the
+forked tops for a half century. I remember hearing my father say it
+was struck by lightning long before and although its upper branches
+were shattered, and it had been as dead as a fence-post ever since, yet
+its immense size, great height, and peculiar, silver-like appearance
+caused it to become a prominent landmark to the vessels when
+approaching the coast, and long before I was born it gained the name of
+the Beacon Tree, by which title it was known to unnumbered hundreds of
+sailors and sea-faring men.
+
+"There is a treasure buried under that tree," I said to Frank,
+suppressing my excitement so far as I could. "More than likely it was
+placed there by some freebooter a long time ago, and these people were
+awaiting a chance to dig it up."
+
+"Maybe Captain Kidd buried it," suggested the boy.
+
+"Possibly he did, for there is reason to believe that he hid a great
+deal of treasure along the Atlantic coast. Now, since Arthur was with
+you when you found this bottle, he has the same claim to the treasure
+that you have. We will not say anything to his father, and you must
+take particular care not to give a hint to a living soul. Go over and
+tell Arthur to come here this evening. I will furnish the shovels and
+lantern, and when we are sure that no one will see us, we will slip
+over to the Beacon Tree and dig."
+
+I recall that I was never so absolutely sure of anything in my life as
+I was that valuable treasure lay buried under the old poplar. My wife,
+to whom I showed the little roll of paper, expressed a doubt, and
+smilingly hinted that perhaps I was too much impressed by that
+brilliant sketch of Edgar A. Poe called "The Gold Bug."
+
+"Of course," I answered, "disappointment may await us, and I know these
+bottles picked up at sea are frequently frauds; but the age of the
+writing and the peculiar circumstances convince me that this is
+genuine. I am sure _something_ will be found under the Beacon Tree."
+
+Meantime Frank had hurried off to acquaint Arthur with the amazing
+discovery, and to warn him against dropping a hint to any one. My son
+soon returned with the word that his friend was "b'iling" with
+excitement, but alas! his parents were going to spend that evening with
+a neighbor, and since they would not be back until late, there was no
+possible way of his joining us.
+
+The boys were not more disappointed than I, and the impulse was strong
+upon me to make the venture without the help of Arthur, meaning, of
+course that such a proceeding should not affect his share in the find;
+but it did not strike me that that would be exactly right, and Arthur
+was informed that we three would attend to the business the following
+evening.
+
+I could not avoid strolling out to the Beacon Tree the next day. I did
+so in the most off-hand manner and with the most unconcerned expression
+I could assume; but had any one scrutinized my countenance, I am sure
+he would easily have detected the deep agitation under which I was
+laboring.
+
+I was considerably disturbed, upon examining the immediate surroundings
+of the tree, to discover signs which looked as if some one had been
+digging there quite recently.
+
+"The secret has become known and the treasure has been carried off," I
+gasped, with a rapidly throbbing heart.
+
+Reflection, however, reassured me. No one had seen the writing in the
+bottle beside myself (though evidently it must have been known to
+others), and it was certain that if any person had succeeded in
+unearthing the hidden wealth, he would not have taken the trouble to
+hide all signs with such extreme care. Closer examination, too,
+convinced me there had been no digging about the tree at all. And yet
+I was mistaken.
+
+We three reached the old poplar the next evening between ten and eleven
+o'clock. Arthur had escaped inquiry by slipping out of his bedroom
+window after bidding his parents good-night; and, inasmuch as the
+lantern which I carried was not lit until we arrived at the tree, we
+were confident of escaping attention. Still I watched sharply, and was
+greatly relieved to discover no persons abroad at that hour beside
+ourselves.
+
+Since the treasure was located but three feet below the surface, in
+sandy soil, I brought only one shovel, while the boys watched me, one
+holding the lantern, and both casting furtive glances around to guard
+against eavesdroppers. It would be useless to deny my excitement. My
+heart at times throbbed painfully, and more than once I was on the
+point of ceasing until I could regain mastery of myself.
+
+"Pop, you must be nearly deep enough," said Frank, in a guarded
+undertone.
+
+"I'm pretty near to the place," I replied stopping a minute to draw my
+handkerchief across my perspiring forehead.
+
+"I'm afraid there's somebody watching us," added Arthur.
+
+"Where?" I asked in affright, staring around in the gloom.
+
+"I thought I saw a man moving out yonder."
+
+"Well, it's too late for him to interfere now," I said, compressing my
+lips and renewing my digging more determinedly than ever; "I carry a
+revolver with me, and I don't mean to be robbed."
+
+The next moment my heart gave a great throb, for the shovel struck
+something hard.
+
+"Hold the lantern down here, Frank, quick!" I commanded in a hoarse
+voice.
+
+He obeyed, but to my disappointment the object proved to be a large
+stone.
+
+"I guess it's under that," I whispered, stopping work for a moment.
+
+"Pop, there's another piece of paper," said Frank.
+
+I stooped over and picked it up. I saw that there was writing on it,
+and holding it up beside the lantern read:
+
+"Dig three feet under the Beacon Tree and you will be an April fool."
+
+Once again the truth flashed across me. The whole thing was a
+practical joke.
+
+"Boys," said I, "what day of the month is this?"
+
+They reflected a moment and answered:
+
+"Why, it's the first of April."
+
+"Let's go home," I added, stepping out of the excavation, "and here's a
+half a dollar apiece if you don't tell anybody about it."
+
+As we moved mournfully away I was sure I heard a chuckling laugh
+somewhere near in the darkness, but the author of it was prudent enough
+to keep beyond reach.
+
+It was not until three months afterward that I learned all the facts
+connected with the writing found in a bottle. My neighbor, the father
+of Arthur Newman, on whom I had played several jokes, adopted this
+means of retaliating on me. He took my son and his own into his
+confidence, and I am grieved to say that the young rascals were just as
+eager as he. When I proposed to make the search on the last day of
+March, my friend resorted to the subterfuge I have mentioned, so as to
+insure that it should not take place until the following evening, which
+was unquestionably appropriate for my first and last essay in digging
+for buried treasure.
+
+
+
+
+THAT HORNET'S NEST.
+
+There was an indignation meeting of the boys at Bushville school, one
+sultry day in August. From stress of circumstances it was held at the
+noon recess, in the piece of woods back of the old stone building, and
+on the banks of the crystal stream in which the youngsters swam and
+revelled at morning, noon and night, during the long, delicious days of
+summer.
+
+All the lads, not quite a score, belonging to the Bushville school,
+were present at the impromptu convention, but the proceedings were
+chiefly in charge of the lads, Tom Britt, Dick Culver and Fred
+Armstrong. There were but a few months' difference in their ages, none
+of which was more than fourteen years, but all were so much larger and
+older than the rest that they were looked up to as leaders in
+everything except study.
+
+It cannot be denied that the three were indolent by nature, inclined to
+rebel at authority, and their enforced attendance at school was the
+affliction of their lives. They had given their teachers no end of
+trouble, and more than once had combined in open rebellion against
+their instructors. Tom's father was a trustee, and like the parents of
+many ill-trained youths, including those of Dick and Fred, he could see
+nothing wrong in the conduct of his son. As a consequence, discipline
+at times was set at naught in the Bushville institutions, and one of
+the best teachers ever employed by the district threw up his situation
+in disgust, and went off without waiting to collect his month's salary.
+
+The successor of this gentleman was Mr. Lathrop, a young man barely
+turned twenty, with a beardless face, a mild blue eye, a gentle voice,
+and such a soft winning manner that the three leaders gave an
+involuntary sniff of contempt when they first saw him and agreed that
+he would not last more than a week at the most.
+
+"We'll let up on him, for a few days," Tom explained to some of his
+friends, "so as to give him time to get acquainted. I b'lieve in
+letting every fellow have a show, but he's got to walk mighty straight
+between now and the end of this week," added the youth impressively; "I
+ain't in favor of standing any nonsense."
+
+A nodding of heads by Dick and Fred showed that Tom had voiced their
+sentiments.
+
+But, somehow or other, Mr. Lathrop was different from the teachers that
+had preceded him. He never spoke angrily or shouted, and his first act
+on entering the schoolroom was to break up the long tough hickory "gad"
+lying on his desk and to fling it out of the window. The next thing he
+did, after calling the school to order, was to tell the gaping,
+open-eyed children the most entertaining story to which they had ever
+listened. The anecdote had its moral too, for woven in and out and
+through its charming meshes was the woof of a life of heroic suffering,
+of trial and reward.
+
+At its conclusion, the teacher said to the pupils that if they were
+studious and transgressed no rules, he would be glad to tell them
+another story the next day, if they would remain a few minutes after
+the hour of dismissal. The treat was such a rare one that all the
+girls and most of the boys resolved to earn the right to enjoy it.
+
+"I'm going to hear the yarn, too," muttered Tom Britt, "for he knows
+how to tell 'em, but as for behaving myself that depends."
+
+On the following afternoon, when five o'clock arrived (in those days
+most of the country schools opened at eight and closed at five, with an
+hour at noon, and not more than two weeks vacation in summer. I have
+attended school on more than one Saturday, Fourth of July and
+Christmas), the school was all expectation. When Mr. Lathrop saw the
+bright eyes turned eagerly toward him, a thrill of pleasure stirred his
+heart, for he felt that his was the hand to sow good seed, or this was
+the soil where it could be made to spring up and bear fruit a hundred
+fold.
+
+"I am glad," said he, in his winning voice, "to know that you have done
+well and earned the right to hear the best story that I can tell. You
+have been studious, obedient and careful to break no rules, and I am
+sure that as we become better acquainted, we shall like each other and
+get on well together.
+
+"I wish I could say you had _all_ done well, but it grieves me to tell
+you, what you know, that one boy has neglected his lessons, been tardy
+or so indifferent to my wishes that it would not be right that he
+should be allowed to sit with the rest of you and listen to the
+incident I am about to relate. I refer to Thomas Britt. Thomas, you
+will please take your books and hat and go home."
+
+The words came like a thunderclap. No one expected it, least of all
+the youth himself. Every eye was turned toward him and his face
+flushed scarlet. He quickly rallied from the daze into which he was
+thrown at first, and with his old swagger, looked at the teacher and
+replied with an insolence that was defiance itself:
+
+"My father is trustee, and I've as much right here as you or any one
+else, and I'm going to stay till I'm ready to go home and you
+can't----" but, before he had completed his defiant sentence, the
+slightly built teacher was at his side and had grasped the nape of his
+coat. It seemed to the lad, that an iron vise had caught his garment
+and a span of horses were pulling at him. He clutched desperately at
+everything within reach and spread his legs apart and curled up his
+toes in the effort to hook into something that would stay proceedings,
+but it was in vain. Out he came from the seat, and to the awed
+children who were looking on it seemed that his body was elongated to
+double its length during the process,--and he was run through the open
+door, and his hat tossed after him. Then the teacher walked quietly
+back to his seat behind the desk on the platform, and without the
+slightest sign of flurry or mental disturbance, he told one of the
+sweetest and most delightful incidents to which his pupils had ever
+listened. He closed with the promise to give them another at the end
+of the week, if they continued in the good course on which they were so
+fairly started.
+
+"He catched me foul," explained the indignant Tom Britt the following
+day in discussing his hurried exit from the schoolroom; "if he had only
+let me know he was coming, it would be him that dove out the door
+instead of me."
+
+The sullen youth did not receive much sympathy at first, for Mr.
+Lathrop was steadily winning the affections of the pupils; but Dick and
+Fred rebelled at such quiet submission to authority, and acted so
+sullenly that they, too, were shut out from the privilege of listening
+to the next story related by the teacher to the rest of the school. It
+had been agreed among the three boys that they should refuse to depart
+when ordered to do so by the instructor, and that when he made a move
+toward them, they would assail him simultaneously and rout him "horse,
+foot and dragoons."
+
+But the business was conducted with such a cyclone rush that the plan
+of campaign was entirely overturned. Before the rebels could combine,
+all three were out doors, so shaken up that they agreed that a new
+system of resistance would have to be adopted.
+
+And thus it came about that at the noon recess, one day of the
+following week, the boys of Bushville school gathered in the cool shade
+of the woods to listen to the plan of the three malcontents for
+destroying the authority of the school. It was mainly curiosity on the
+part of the younger portion, who had little sympathy with the motives
+of the leaders and were quite sure they would meet with failure.
+
+"I've made up my mind that I won't stand it," announced Tom, after the
+situation had been freely discussed; "no boy with any spirit will allow
+a teacher to run him out of school in the style he served me."
+
+"What then made you let him do it?" asked little freckled-face Will
+Horton, from where he lay on the ground.
+
+"Didn't I tell you he catched me foul?" demanded Tom, glaring at the
+urchin; "if I'd knowed what was coming things would have been
+different."
+
+"Dick and Fred knowed he was coming for _them_," added Will, "for he
+walked clear across the schoolroom."
+
+"You've got too much to say," retorted Dick Culver, angrily; "when we
+want your advice we'll ask for it."
+
+"Well, boys, you had better make up your minds to behave yourselves and
+then there won't be any trouble," was the sensible advice of Jimmy
+Thompson, who had perched himself on a log, and was swinging his bare
+feet back and forth; "Mr. Lathrop is the best teacher we ever had and
+he suits the rest of us first rate."
+
+"Of course he suits all boys that ha'n't any spirit," was the crushing
+response of the leader, "but I've a plan that'll teach him that me and
+Dick and Fred ain't that kind of chaps."
+
+"How are you going to help yourself?"
+
+After several mysterious hints and nods of the head, Tom revealed his
+stupendous scheme for bringing the teacher to terms.
+
+"You know the big hornet's nest over in Bear Hollow?"
+
+Inasmuch as there wasn't a boy in the crowd who hadn't shied stones at
+the object named (always without hitting it), no further information
+was necessary.
+
+"Well, I'm going to put that nest in the teacher's desk, and when he
+comes in, takes his seat and raises the lid, won't there be music?"
+
+The scheme was so prodigious that for a full half minute all stared
+open mouthed at their leader without speaking.
+
+"The teacher never locks his desk at noon, so it will be easy enough to
+slip it in before he gets back."
+
+"But when he opens the desk and the hornets sail out, what will become
+of _us_?" was the pertinent inquiry of Will Horton.
+
+"Why the minute the things begin to swarm out I'll yell, and we'll all
+rush out doors."
+
+"Won't the teacher do the same thing?"
+
+"But he'll be the last and he'll catch it the worst. He'll be right
+among the critters, and they'll just go for him, so his head will swell
+up like a bushel basket and we'll have a week's vacation. By that time
+he'll learn how to treat us fellers."
+
+"_I_ am," was the proud reply; "come on and I'll show you."
+
+As he spoke, Tom sprang to his feet and started on a trot toward Bear
+Hollow, with the others streaming after him.
+
+It cannot be denied that the youth displayed considerable pluck and
+coolness when he came to the test. There hung the hornet's nest from
+the lower limb of an oak, so near the ground that it could be easily
+reached by one of the larger boys. It was gray in color and of
+enormous size. It resembled in shape an overgrown football or
+watermelon, pendant by one end. In some portions faint ridges were
+visible, like the prints left by tiny wavelets on the sand. Near the
+base was a circular opening about as large as an old-fashioned penny.
+This was the door of the hornets' residence, through which all the
+occupants came and went.
+
+The boys halted at a safe distance, and even Tom paused a few minutes
+to make a reconnoissance before going nearer.
+
+"You fellows stay here, and don't any of you throw stones or yell!" he
+said, in a guarded undertone; "for if them hornets find out what is up,
+they'll come swarming out by the million and sting us all to death."
+
+The promise was readily made, and Tom went forward like a hero, the
+eyes of all of his playmates fixed upon him. It was noticed be carried
+a large silken handkerchief in his hand--one that he had secured at
+home for this special purpose.
+
+He advanced stealthily until within some ten feet, when he halted
+again. With his gaze centered on the gray, oblong object, he saw one
+of the dark insects suddenly crawl to view through the opening.
+
+"I wonder if he suspects anything," thought Tom, half disposed to turn
+about and run; "no--he's all right," he added, as the hornet spread his
+wings, and shot off like a bullet through the air.
+
+Still intently watching the orifice, the boy moved softly forward until
+directly under the nest. Then, with the deliberation of a veteran, he
+deftly enfolded it with the large silk handkerchief, easily wrenched it
+loose from its support, tied the covering over the top so securely that
+not an inhabitant of the nest could possibly escape, and rejoined in
+triumph his companions.
+
+"Now you'll see fun!" he exclaimed, as he led the whole party trooping
+in the direction of the schoolhouse; "keep mum, and don't tell any of
+the girls what's up."
+
+It was a grand scheme and it looked as if there could be no hitch in
+it. What compunctions the other boys might have felt against the
+attempt to cause pain to their teacher were forgotten in the excitement
+of the coming sport.
+
+The residents of the oblong home must have been surprised, to put it
+mildly, when they found the house swinging along, in the grasp of some
+great giant, themselves enveloped in gloom, and the only avenue of
+escape sealed up. They hummed, and buzzed and raised a tempest within,
+but it was in vain: they were prisoners and must remain such until the
+ogre chose to release them.
+
+Everything seemed to join to help the young rebel. The girls were
+playing so far from the school building, that they gave no heed to the
+procession which passed into the structure. One glance told Tom that
+it was without an occupant, and he strode hastily to the desk, the
+others pausing near the door, ready to dash out in the event of
+disaster.
+
+The desk was unlocked and Tom raised the lid. The nest was laid on its
+side, in the middle, but it was so big that he had to displace several
+books to make room for it. Then the knots were untied, the
+handkerchief flirted free, the lid lowered, and the deed was done.
+
+Tom joined his companions with a radiant face. "Not a word," he
+cautioned, "be extra good this afternoon; even I'll try to behave
+myself for once, but we won't have to wait long."
+
+"S'posin' them hornets lift the lid of the desk and come out before the
+teacher gets here?" suggested Will Horton.
+
+"What are you talking about?" was the scornful question of Dick Culver;
+"how can a hornet raise the lid of a desk?"
+
+"I don't mean that _one_ will do it, but, if they all join together and
+put their shoulders to it, they'll lift more than you think."
+
+But this contingency was too vague to be feared. A quarter of an hour
+later, Mr. Lathrop entered the building with his brisk step, bidding
+such children as he met a pleasant good afternoon, and hanging his hat
+on the peg in the wall behind his desk, rang the bell for the children
+to assemble, and took his seat in his chair on the platform.
+
+The observant instructor quickly saw that something unusual was in the
+wind. There was a score of signs that he detected in the course of a
+few minutes, but he could have no idea what it all meant. He was on
+the alert, however, and did not remain long in suspense.
+
+The first hint was the sound of loud and angry buzzing within his desk.
+While wondering what it meant, and in doubt whether to investigate, he
+observed a hornet emerging through the key-hole. Before it could shake
+itself free, he shoved him back with his key, which was inserted and
+turned about, so effectually blocking the opening, that the insects
+were held secure.
+
+The teacher read the whole story, and it needed only a brief study of
+Tom Britt's actions to make sure that he was the guilty one.
+
+Much to the disappointment of the boys, Mr. Lathrop seemed to find no
+occasion for opening his desk. It remained closed through the whole
+afternoon and, when the moment for dismissal arrived, the only one to
+remain was Tom Britt, who, while conducting himself fairly well, had
+made a bad failure with every recitation. His mind seemed to be too
+pre-occupied with some other matter to absorb book knowledge.
+
+The boys loitered around the playground, waiting to see the end of it
+all. Tom sat with his hands supporting his head, and his elbow on the
+desk, morose, sullen and disappointed.
+
+"I wonder if he suspects anything," he muttered; "I don't see how he
+can, for nobody told him. It's queer he has never opened his desk all
+the afternoon. I never knew him to do anything like that
+before--Gracious alive!"
+
+Just then Tom felt as if some one had jabbed a burning needle into his
+neck. Almost at the same instant came a similar dagger thrust on the
+top of his head, where he always wore his hair short. Uttering a gasp
+of affright, he leaped from his seat, with a score of fierce hornets
+buzzing about his ears. The terrified glance around the room showed
+that the teacher had slipped noiselessly out of the door, but, before
+doing so, he had raised the lid of his desk to its fullest extent.
+
+The next moment Tom bounded through the door, striking at the insects
+that were doing painful execution about the exposed parts of his body.
+It was not until after a long run that he was entirely freed of them
+and was able to take an inventory of his wounds.
+
+It was a lesson the lad never forgot. In the final contest between him
+and his teacher, he was conquered and he admitted it. Mr. Lathrop made
+a study of his character, and having proven himself physically his
+master, set out to acquire the moral conquest that was needed to
+complete the work. It need hardly be added that he succeeded, for he
+was a thoughtful, conscientious instructor of youth, who loved his
+work, and who toiled as one who knows that he must render an account of
+his stewardship to Him who is not only loving and merciful, but just.
+
+
+
+
+A YOUNG HERO.
+
+Reuben Johnson leaned on his hoe, and, looking up at the sun, wondered
+whether, as in the Biblical story, it had not been stationary for
+several hours. He was sure it was never so long in descending to the
+horizon.
+
+"Wake up, Rube," sharply called his Uncle Peter, smartly hoeing another
+row a few paces behind him, "doan be idlin' your time; de sun am foah
+hours high yit."
+
+The nephew started and raised his implement, but stopped. He was
+staring at the corner of the fence just ahead, where sat the jug of
+cold water, with the Revolutionary musket leaning against the rails.
+The crows were so annoying that the double-loaded weapon was kept ready
+to be used against the pests when they ventured too near.
+
+"See dar, uncle!" said Rube in a scared voice. The old man also ceased
+work, adjusted his iron-rimmed spectacles, and looked toward the fence.
+
+Within a few feet of where the flint lock musket inclined against the
+rails, a yellow dog was trying to push his way through. Watching his
+efforts for a few minutes, the elder said:
+
+"Rube, I wish we had de gun; dat dog ain't peaceable."
+
+"He am mad; dis ain't de place fur us."
+
+"Slip down to de fence and got de gun; dat's a good boy!"
+
+"Gracious!" gasped the youth; "it am right dar by de dog."
+
+"He won't notice you; run behind him and be quick 'bout it, or he'll
+chaw us bofe to def."
+
+"He'll chaw _me_ suah if I goes near him," was the reply of Rube, who
+felt little ardor for the task his relative urged upon him.
+
+"Ain't it better dat _one_ ob us should go dead, dan bofe should be
+obstinguished?" asked the uncle reproachfully.
+
+"Dat 'pends which am de one to go dead; if it am _me_, it am better for
+_you_, but I don't see whar _I'm_ to come in; 'spose you see wheder you
+can got de gun--"
+
+"Dar he comes!" whispered Uncle Pete.
+
+Sure enough the cur, having twisted his body between the rails, began
+trotting toward the couple that were watching him with such interest.
+
+There was good reason for fear, since the canine was afflicted with the
+rabies in the worst form. He showed no froth at the jaws, for animals
+thus affected do not, but his eyes were fiery, his mouth dry, the
+consuming fever burning up all moisture. He moaned as if in pain, his
+torture causing him to snap at everything in reach. He had bitten
+shrubbery, branches, wood and other objects, and now made for the
+persons with the purpose of using his teeth on them.
+
+"Rube," said his uncle, "stand right whar you am! No use ob runnin',
+for he'll cotch you; when he gets nigh 'nough bang him wid your hoe; if
+dat don't fotch him, I'll gib him anoder whack and dat'll finish him
+suah."
+
+Fate seemed to have ordered that the younger person should hold the van
+in the peril, though he was tempted to take his place by his relative,
+so that the attack of the dog should be met by both at the same
+instant. This promised to be effective, but the time was too brief to
+permit any plan of campaign.
+
+The brute was already within a hundred yards of Rube, who, with his hoe
+drawn back, as though it were a club, tried to calm his nerves for the
+struggle. He would have fled, had he not known that that would draw
+pursuit to himself. He was inclined to urge his uncle to join him in a
+break for freedom, the two taking diverging routes. Since the canine
+could not chase both at the same time, such a course was certain to
+save one, but, inasmuch as the youth was at the front, he knew he must
+be the victim, and the prospect of a mad dog nipping at his heels, with
+fangs surcharged with one of the most fearful venoms known, was too
+terrifying to be borne. He, therefore, braced himself, and, with a
+certain dignity and courage, held his ground.
+
+A dog suffering from the rabies often shows odd impulses. This one was
+within fifty feet of Rube, when he turned at right angles and trotted
+toward the other side of the cornfield.
+
+"_Now's_ your time, chile!" called Uncle Pete; "got de gun quick, and
+if he comes back we'll be ready for him."
+
+It was the first suggestion that struck the nephew favorably, and he
+acted upon it at once. The dog might change his mind again and return
+to the attack, in which event no weapon could equal a loaded gun.
+
+As Rube ran with his broad-brimmed hat flapping in his eyes, he kept
+glancing over his shoulder, to make sure the brute was not following
+him, while his uncle held his position, with his hoe grasped and his
+eye fixed on the animal, trotting between the hills of corn. He
+managed also to note the action of his nephew, who was making good
+time, and whose progress caused the hearts of the two to heat high with
+hope.
+
+Had the fence ahead of the dog been open, doubtless he would have soon
+passed out of sight; but, as if recalling his trouble in entering the
+field, and possibly seeing his error in leaving two victims, he stopped
+only an instant in front of the rails, when he turned and came at a
+swifter gait than before, straight for Uncle Pete.
+
+The latter stared a second or two and then shouted:
+
+"Quick, Rube! he means _me_ dis time!" And he dashed off, not to join
+his nephew, but to reach the side of the field opposite the nose of the
+animal.
+
+By this time the youth had his hands on the smoothbore musket and his
+courage came back. He saw his uncle crashing over the hills, the
+picture of dismay, while the dog rapidly gained on him.
+
+"Hey dar! hey dar!" shouted Rube, breaking into a run and trying to
+draw attention to himself. But the brute only sped the faster. He was
+near the middle of the procession, but gaining on the fugitive, who had
+thrown aside his hoe, flung his hat to the ground, and was making
+better progress than when he used to run races with the boys in his
+younger days.
+
+The fence was near and he strained every nerve. It looked as if man
+and dog would reach it at the same moment, but the former put forth an
+extra spurt and arrived a pace or two ahead, with the cur at his heels.
+
+Rube, however, was not far to the rear. Seeing the crisis had come, he
+stopped short, brought the musket to his shoulder, and, taking the best
+aim he could, let fly with the whole load that clogged several inches
+of the barrel.
+
+He did not observe at the moment of pressing the trigger that his uncle
+and the dog were in line, but it could have made no difference, since
+the shot had to be made at that instant or not at all.
+
+Just as the weapon was fired, Uncle Pete with a great bound cleared the
+fence, landing on his hands and knees; and, rolling over on his back,
+kicked the air with such vigor that his shoes flew off, one after the
+other, as if keeping time with his frenzied outcries.
+
+The yellow cur was scared, as a shark is sometimes driven off by the
+loud splashing of a swimmer, and, though he leaped the fence, he
+wheeled again, and, without harming the man, ran down the highway
+toward the Woodvale school.
+
+For a moment after firing, Rube Johnson believed he was killed. The
+flint shot a spark among the powder grains, there was a flash, a hiss,
+and then, as the fire worked its way to the charge inside, the
+explosion came and he toppled over, half stunned, with the gun flying a
+dozen feet away.
+
+But his fear for his relative brought him to his feet, and he hurried
+to the old gentleman, who was climbing uncertainly to an upright
+posture.
+
+"What's de matter?" asked Rube; "you ain't bit."
+
+"I know dat; I warn't yellin' on _dat_ 'count."
+
+"What fur den?"
+
+"You black rascal, you shot me instid ob de yaller dog."
+
+"Lemme see," said Rube, turning his uncle round and scanning him from
+head to foot.
+
+"I done pepper you purty well, uncle, but dare ain't any ob de slugs
+dat hit yer--only de fine bird shot."
+
+"How many ob dem?" was the rueful question.
+
+"I don't tink dar's more dan five or six hundred; Aunt Jemimer can gib
+her spar time de next six weeks pickin' 'em out; she'll enj'y it, but
+dat shot ob mine scared off de mad dog, and yer oughter be tankful to
+me, uncle, all yer life."
+
+It was recess at the Woodvale school, and the forty-odd boys and girls
+were having a merry time on the playgrounds, which included the broad
+highway. Within the building, Mr. Hobbs, the young teacher was busy
+"setting copies," his only companion just then being Tod Clymer, a
+pale-faced cripple, who, unable to take part in the sports of the other
+boys, preferred to stay within doors and con his lessons, in which he
+was always far in advance of the rest.
+
+A strange confusion outside caused him to raise his head and look
+through the window near him.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Hobbs," he said, "there's a mad dog!"
+
+The teacher started up, and saw the yellow cur running about the
+grounds, snapping at the children, while a couple of boys had already
+raised the fearful cry, and there was a scattering in all directions.
+Although without any weapon, the instructor was on the point of
+hurrying out to the help of the children, when he observed the canine
+coming toward the outer door. He tried to close it in his face, but
+the brute was too quick and was inside before he could be stopped. He
+made for the second door, leading into the session-room, but, in this
+instance, the teacher slammed it shut just in time.
+
+Instead of going out the dog slunk into the entry and crawled under a
+bench, so nearly behind the outer door that he was invisible to any one
+beyond.
+
+"Mr. Hobbs," said Tod Clymer a moment later, "will you please help me
+out of the window?"
+
+"I think you are safer here," replied the teacher, "for he cannot reach
+you, but you will not be able to get away from him outside."
+
+"I want to leave, please, very much."
+
+It was a strange request, and the teacher waited some minutes before
+complying, but the heart of the lame boy was so set upon it, that he
+finally assisted him to the window furthest from where the dog was
+crouching, gently lifted him down to the ground, and then passed his
+crutches to him.
+
+"Now, Tod," said he kindly, "don't tarry a moment, for there's no
+saying how soon he will be outside again. The other children are away,
+but you cannot run like them."
+
+"Thank you," replied Tod, who never forgot to be courteous, as he
+carefully adjusted the collars of his crutches under his shoulders.
+
+Mr. Hobbs motioned from the window for several of the boys to keep off.
+With a natural curiosity, they were stealing closer to the building, in
+the hope of finding out what the rabid dog was doing.
+
+The teacher, seeing his gestures were understood, turned back, when to
+his surprise, he noticed the top of Tom Clymer's straw hat, as it
+slowly rose and sank, moving along the front of the building toward the
+front door.
+
+Instead of hurrying off, as he should have done, the lad was making his
+way toward the very spot where the dreadful animal was crouching.
+
+"Why, Tod, what are you doing?" called Mr. Hobbs through the open
+window; "you will surely be bitten."
+
+Instead of replying or heeding the words, the lad turned his pale face
+toward his friend and shook his head, as a warning for him to make no
+noise. Then he resumed his advance to the open outer door, doing so
+with great care and stealth, as if afraid of being heard by the brute.
+
+The entrance to the old Woodvale school building was reached by two
+steps, consisting of the same number of broad high stones worn smooth
+by the feet of the hundreds of children that had trod them times
+without number. To make his way into the entry where the pupils hung
+their hats and bonnets on the double rows of pegs, Tod had to move
+slowly and carefully use his crutches. Being tipped with iron he could
+not set them down on the smooth stones without causing noise.
+
+But he acted without hesitation. The teacher read his purpose and knew
+it was useless to try to check him. He leaned his head out of the
+window and held his breath, while he watched him.
+
+Tod never faltered, though none could have understood the danger he ran
+better than he. He had a brother and sister among the children that
+had scattered in such haste before the snapping cur, and who were
+gathering again around the building despite the warning gesture of the
+teacher.
+
+He could not know whether they had all escaped or not, but he was sure
+that if the dog came forth again, more than one of them must suffer,
+and in those days there was no Pasteur with his wonderful cure to whom
+the afflicted ones could be taken.
+
+Tod did not tremble, though it seemed to him the brute must hear the
+tumultuous throbbing of his heart and rush forth. Puny as was his
+strength, he meant that, if he did so, he would steady himself on his
+one support, and grasping the other with both hands, strike the dog
+with might and main. It is doubtful whether the blow would have
+stunned the dog, for the little fellow's confidence in himself was
+greater than his bodily powers warranted.
+
+At the moment he rested the end of the crutch on the smooth surface of
+the second stone, it slipped, and only by a strong wrench did he save
+himself from falling. The noise was heard by the animal, who was not
+six feet distant, and he emitted another moan, which can never be
+forgotten by those that have heard it.
+
+Certain that the cur was about to rush forth, Tod steadied himself on
+the single crutch, and, reversing the other, held it firmly in his weak
+hands. He knew the shuffling sound was caused by the animal moving:
+uneasily about the entry, and it was strange he did not burst through
+the open door. But he did not do so, and, like a flash, the cripple
+shifted his weapon in place under his shoulder. Then, with the same
+coolness he had shown from the first, he reached his hand forward and
+grasped the latch.
+
+The smart pull he gave, however, did not stir it. It resisted the
+effort, as though it was fastened in position. If such were the fact,
+his scheme was futile.
+
+Setting down both crutches, Tod now leaned against the jamb to prevent
+himself from falling, seized the handle with both hands, and drew back
+suddenly and with all his might. This time the door yielded and was
+closed.
+
+As it did so, the rabid animal flung himself against it with a violence
+that threatened to carry it off its hinges, but it remained firm and he
+was a prisoner.
+
+"You are a hero!" called the teacher in a voice tremulous with
+suppressed emotion.
+
+"I guess we've got him fast, but look out, Mr. Hobbs, that he doesn't
+reach you."
+
+"I think there is little danger of that," said the other, looking
+anxiously at the inner door, "but we must get help to dispose of him
+before he can do further injury."
+
+By this time, so many of the children had come back to the playgrounds
+that several of those living near were sent home for assistance. It
+quickly arrived; for Reuben Johnson and his uncle lost no time in
+spreading the news, and three young men, each with a loaded gun,
+appeared on the scene, eager to dispose of the dangerous animal. The
+latter was at such disadvantage that this was done without trouble or
+risk.
+
+Providentially none of the children had been bitten, though more than
+one underwent a narrow escape. Such animals as had felt the fangs of
+the rabid cur were slain, and thus no harm resulted from the brief run
+of the brute.
+
+
+
+
+OVERREACHED.
+
+Bushrod, or "Bush" Wyckoff was only twelve years old when he went to
+work for Zeph Ashton, who was not only a crusty farmer, but one of the
+meanest men in the country, and his wife was well fitted to be the life
+partner of such a parsimonious person.
+
+They had no children of their own, and had felt the need for years of a
+willing, nimble-footed youngster to do the odd chores about the house,
+such as milking cows, cutting and bringing in wood, running of errands,
+and the scores of odd little jobs which are easy enough for boys, but
+sorely try the stiff and rheumatic limbs of a man in the decline of
+life.
+
+Bush was a healthy little fellow--not very strong for his years, but
+quick of movement, bright-witted, willing, and naturally a general
+favorite. The misfortunes which suddenly overtook his home roused the
+keenest sympathy of his neighbors. His father was a merchant in New
+York, who went to and from the metropolis each week day morning and
+evening, to his pleasant little home in New Jersey. One day his
+lifeless body was brought thither, and woe and desolation came to the
+happy home. He was killed in a railway accident.
+
+The blow was a terrible one, and for weeks it seemed as if his stricken
+widow would follow him across the dark river; but her Christian
+fortitude and her great love for their only child sustained her in her
+awful grief, and she was even able to thank her Heavenly Father that
+her dear boy was spared to her.
+
+But how true it is that misfortunes rarely come singly. Her husband
+had amassed a competency sufficient to provide comfortably for those
+left behind; but his confidence in his fellow-men was wofully betrayed.
+He was one of the bondsmen of a public official who made a hasty
+departure to Canada, one evening, leaving his business in such a shape
+that his securities were compelled to pay fifty thousand dollars. Two
+others were associated with Mr. Wyckoff, and with the aid of their
+tricky lawyers they managed matters so that four-fifths of the loss
+fell upon the estate of the deceased merchant.
+
+The result swept it away as utterly as were the dwellings in the
+Johnstown Valley by the great flood. The widow and her boy left their
+home and moved into a little cottage, with barely enough left to keep
+the wolf of starvation from the door.
+
+It was then that Bush showed the stuff of which he was made. He
+returned one afternoon and told his mother, in his off-hand way, that
+he had engaged to work through the summer months for Mr. Ashton, who
+not only agreed to pay him six dollars a month, but would allow him to
+remain at home over night, provided, of course, that he was there early
+each morning and stayed late enough each day to attend to all the
+chores.
+
+The tears filled the eyes of the mother as she pressed her little boy
+to her heart, and comprehended his self-sacrificing nature.
+
+"You are too young, my dear child, to do this; we have enough left to
+keep us awhile, and I would prefer that you wait until you are older
+and stronger."
+
+"Why, mother, I am old enough and strong enough now to do all that Mr.
+Ashton wants me to do. He explained everything to me, and it won't be
+work at all, but just fun."
+
+"Well, I hope you will find it so, but if he does not treat you kindly,
+you must not stay one day."
+
+Bush never complained to his mother, but he did find precious little
+fun and plenty of the hardest kind of work. The miserly farmer bore
+down heavily on his young shoulders. He and his wife seemed to be
+continually finding extra labor for the lad. The little fellow was on
+hand each morning, in stormy as well as in clear weather, at daybreak,
+ready and willing to perform to the best of his ability whatever he was
+directed to do. Several times he became so weak and faint from the
+severe labor, that the frugal breakfast he had eaten at home proved
+insufficient, and he was compelled to ask for a few mouthfuls of food
+before the regular dinner hour arrived. Although he always remained
+late, he was never invited to stay to supper, Mr. Ashton's
+understanding being that the mid-day meal was the only one to which the
+lad was entitled.
+
+But for his love for his mother, Bush would have given up more than
+once. His tasks were so severe and continuous that many a time he was
+hardly able to drag himself homeward. Every bone in his body seemed to
+ache, and neither his employer nor his wife ever uttered a pleasant or
+encouraging word.
+
+But no word of murmuring fell from his lips. He resolutely held back
+all complaints, and crept away early to his couch under the plea that
+it was necessary in order to be up betimes. The mother's heart was
+distressed beyond expression, but she comforted herself with the fact
+that his term of service was drawing to a close, and he would soon have
+all the rest and play he wanted.
+
+Bush allowed his wages to stand until the first of September, when his
+three months expired. He had counted on the pride and happiness that
+would be his when he walked into the house and tossed the whole
+eighteen dollars in his mother's lap. How her eyes would sparkle, and
+how proud he would be!
+
+"Lemme see," said the skinflint, when settling day arrived; "I was to
+give you four dollars a month, warn't I?"
+
+"It was six," replied Bush, respectfully.
+
+"That warn't my understanding, but we'll let it go at that; I've allers
+been too gin'rous, and my heart's too big for my pocket. Lemme see."
+
+He uttered the last words thoughtfully, as he took his small
+account-book from his pocket, and began figuring with the stub of a
+pencil. "Three months at six dollars will be eighteen dollars."
+
+"Yes, sir; that's right."
+
+"Don't interrupt me, young man," sternly remarked the farmer, frowning
+at him over his spectacles. "The full amount is eighteen
+dollars--Kerrect--L--em--m--e see; you have et seven breakfasts here;
+at fifty cents apiece that is three dollars and a half. Then,
+l--em--m--e see; you was late eleven times, and I've docked you
+twenty-five cents for each time; that makes two dollars and
+seventy-five cents."
+
+Inasmuch as Bush's wages amounted hardly to twenty-five cents a day, it
+must be admitted that this was drawing it rather strong.
+
+"L--em--m--e see," continued Mr. Ashton, wetting the pencil stub
+between his lips, and resuming his figuring; "your board amounts to
+three dollars and a half; your loss of time to two seventy-five; that
+makes six and a quarter, which bein' took from eighteen dollars, leaves
+'leven seventy-five. There you are!"
+
+As he spoke, he extended his hand, picked up a small canvas bag from
+the top of his old-fashioned writing-desk, and tossed it to the
+dumfounded boy. The latter heard the coins inside jingle, as it fell
+in his lap, and, as soon as he could command his voice, he swallowed
+the lump in his throat, and faintly asked:
+
+"Is that--is that right, Mr. Ashton?"
+
+"Count it and see for yourself," was the curt response.
+
+This was not exactly what Bush meant, but he mechanically unfastened
+the cord around the throat of the little bag, tumbled the coins out in
+his hat and slowly counted them. They footed up exactly eleven dollars
+and seventy-five cents, proving that Mr. Ashton's figuring was
+altogether unnecessary, and that he had arranged the business
+beforehand.
+
+While Bush was examining the coins, his heart gave a sudden quick
+throb. He repressed all signs of the excitement he felt, however.
+
+"How do you find it?" asked the man, who had never removed his eyes
+from him, "Them coins have been in the house more'n fifty year--that
+is, some of 'em have, but they're as good as if they's just from the
+mint, and bein' all coin, you can never lose anything by the bank
+bustin'."
+
+"It is correct," said Bush.
+
+"Ar' you satisfied?"
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+"Then sign this receipt, and we're square."
+
+The lad sat down at the desk and attached his name in a neat round hand
+to the declaration that he had received payment in full for his
+services from Mr. Zephaniah Ashton, up to the first of September of the
+current year.
+
+"This is all mine, Mr. Ashton?"
+
+"Of course--what do you mean by axin' that?"
+
+"Nothing; good-day."
+
+"Good-day," grunted the miser, turning his back, as a hint for him to
+leave--a hint which Bush did not need, for he was in a tumult of
+excitement.
+
+"That is the queerest thing that ever happened," he said to himself
+when he reached the public highway, and began hurrying along the road
+in the direction of Newark. "If he had paid me my full wages I would
+have told him, but all these are mine, and I shall sell them; won't
+Professor Hartranft be delighted, but not half as much as mother and I
+will be."
+
+
+That evening Mr. Ashton and his wife had just finished their supper
+when Professor Hartranft, a pleasant, refined-looking gentleman,
+knocked at their door.
+
+"I wish to inquire," said he, after courteously saluting the couple,
+"whether you have any old coins in the house."
+
+"No," was the surly response of the farmer, "we don't keep 'em."
+
+"But you _had_ quite a collection."
+
+"I had 'leven dollars and seventy-five cents' worth, but I paid 'em out
+this mornin'."
+
+"To a boy named Bushrod Wyckoff?"
+
+"Yas."
+
+"They were given to him unreservedly?--that is, you renounce all claim
+upon them?"
+
+"What the blazes ar' you drivin' at?" demanded the angry farmer. "I
+owed him 'leven dollars and seventy-five cents for wages, and I paid
+him purcisely that amount, and have his receipt in full. I'd like to
+know what business it is of yours anyway."
+
+Now came the professor's triumph.
+
+"Young Wyckoff called at my office this afternoon, and I bought a
+number of the coins from him."
+
+"What!" exclaimed the amazed farmer, "you didn't pay him nothin' extra
+for that rusty old money, did you? You must be crazy."
+
+"I did, and shall make a handsome thing of it. For instance, among the
+coins which you gave him was a copper penny, with a liberty cap, of
+1793; I paid Bush three dollars for that; I gave him twenty-five
+dollars for a half dime coined in 1802; twenty dollars for a quarter
+dollar of 1827; the same sum for a half dollar, fillet head, of 1796;
+and, what caps all, five hundred dollars for a silver dollar of 1804.
+There are only five or six of the latter in existence, and I shall sell
+this specimen for at least eight hundred dollars. Mr. Ashton,
+sometimes a mean man overreaches himself, and it looks as though you
+had made a mistake. I bid you good-day, sir."
+
+The numismatist spoke the truth; and when the miserly old farmer
+realized how completely he had turned the tables on himself, it is
+enough to say that his feelings may be "better imagined than described."
+
+
+
+
+A BATTLE IN THE AIR.
+
+One of the most interesting towns I ever visited is New Braunfels,
+Texas. It was founded by a colony of Germans, and experienced the most
+distressing trials during its early days; but it is now a picture of
+thrift and industry. The cowboy who attempts to ride through New
+Braunfels, with his revolvers displayed, is promptly pulled off his
+mustang and compelled to pay a round fine for violating a city
+ordinance. If he undertakes to "kick," it won't help him a bit, and
+probably will increase the penalty imposed. Our German cousins propose
+to run that town to suit themselves, and they succeed quite well.
+
+The rivers of Texas are subjected to violent rises, often as great as
+twenty feet in an hour or less. Such sudden floods play havoc with the
+bridges along the bank, but I noticed in riding into New Braunfels an
+ingenious arrangement of the wooden structure by which, no matter how
+high the stream may rise, the bridge accommodates itself, and floats on
+the surface, while securely held from being carried away by the current.
+
+But I set out to tell you a true incident of what happened a few years
+since, to a bright, lively youngster, sixteen years old, who lives in
+New Braunfels, and is brimful of pluck. His name is Lee Hemingway; he
+is an orphan, and if his life is spared, he is certain to be heard from
+when he reaches man's estate.
+
+Prof. McInery, the well-known naturalist, spent several weeks last
+spring in the neighborhood of New Braunfels, hunting ornithological
+specimens for his collection, and he offered fifty dollars to any one
+who would bring him an eagle's nest, with living eaglets or with eggs
+in it.
+
+When Lee Hemingway learned of the offer, he determined to earn it. It
+was rather early in the season for our emblematical birds to hatch
+their young, but, by carefully watching a pair, he succeeded in finding
+where their nest was made. It was on the summit of an almost
+insurmountable bowlder, rising nearly a hundred and twenty-five feet in
+the valley of the Guadaloupe.
+
+The bravest man might well shrink from attempting to scale the
+perpendicular sides of this mass of rock, but as young Hemingway gazed
+longingly up the side to the nest, he noticed that the stone had become
+coated, in the course of time, with earth, which was covered with
+tangled vines and stunted vegetation.
+
+"I believe I can climb that," thought the sturdy lad, after
+scrutinizing the herculean task, and watching one of the eagles soaring
+far above the summit. "I think there is enough foothold, and I can use
+the vines to help pull me up; but, if the eagles should catch me at it,
+they would make music."
+
+It was the birds that caused him more dread than the forty odd yards of
+rock. We knew their fierce nature, and, if they discovered his designs
+against their home, as they were almost certain to do, they would
+assail him with a fury that must be resistless in his cramped position.
+
+The professor advised him not to make the attempt, but the daring youth
+had to earn his own living, and the prize of fifty dollars was too
+tempting to be resisted.
+
+"_I'll do it_!" he exclaimed, after considering the question, "if you
+will keep watch with your gun for the eagles."
+
+"Of course I'll do _that_," replied the professor, delighted with the
+prospect of securing that which he had sought so long in vain.
+
+The preparations for the work were simple. With a basket, furnished
+with a lid, slung to his back, in which to secure the eggs or eaglets,
+young Hemingway began his laborious and dangerous ascent, while the
+professor, gun in hand, watched him from the ground below.
+
+The boy quickly proved the possession of unusual skill as a climber.
+With the help of the vines he went steadily upward, hunting secure
+places for his feet and testing every support before trusting his
+weight to it. Once or twice, the professor thought the lad had made a
+mistake and was on the point of paying the penalty, but he never
+faltered nor slipped. Higher and higher he ascended until at last the
+feat was accomplished, and the very summit reached.
+
+His heart throbbed with pleasure when he discovered two young eagles in
+the nest. They were no more than a couple of days old, and he had no
+trouble in placing them and a portion of the nest in the basket, which
+was again strapped to his back, and, after a brief rest, he started to
+descend.
+
+Nothing was seen of the parent eagles, and he was congratulating
+himself on his good fortune, when bang went the professor's gun. At
+the same moment a shadow flitted over his head, and looking up he saw
+that instead of one, both of the eagles had arrived.
+
+The lad had not descended half-way and the professor's shot did not
+harm either of them. They landed on the summit of the rocks, and, if a
+bird can feel astonishment, they must have felt it when they looked
+around and discovered nothing of their home.
+
+But the great American bird is not the one to submit tamely to such an
+outrage. They began an immediate investigation, and, when they caught
+sight of a boy scrambling down the side of the rocks with a basket
+strapped to his back, from which came a number of familiar squeak-like
+chirpings, they had no trouble in understanding matters.
+
+The style in which they went for that same boy was a sight to behold.
+There was no hesitation or maneuvering; but, with outstretched wings
+and hoarse screeches, they dashed toward him like a couple of cyclones.
+The youth saw that he was caught in a desperate fix, for he had no
+weapons, and had to cling to the vines with one hand to save himself
+from being dashed to the ground below.
+
+He ducked his head to ward off their beaks and talons from his eyes,
+and tried hard to beat them back with his free hand.
+
+This was impossible. Their beaks struck him repeatedly in the head,
+bringing blood, which flowed over his face and almost blinded him,
+while they savagely buffeted him with their great wings, until he was
+in danger of being knocked from his position.
+
+Meanwhile, the alarmed professor could do nothing for his young friend.
+The eagles kept so close to him, that, if he tried, he was as likely to
+hit one as the other. He walked back and forth, on the alert for such
+a chance, and fortunately had not long to wait. One of the furious
+birds, circled off a few feet, as if to gather impetus for a decisive
+charge, when, taking a quick aim, the gentleman fired.
+
+The shot was unerring and killed the female. She fluttered into a
+large sapling that sprouted from a large crevice in the rocks, about
+eight feet above the boy's head, and lay motionless. Although nearly
+blinded by blood, young Hemingway now attempted a feat which he was
+convinced offered the only means of saving his life.
+
+He drew himself up to the foot of the tree, and once there, braced
+himself firmly with his feet, and tied his handkerchief around his
+forehead, to keep the blood out of his eyes. Seizing the dead bird by
+the feet, he swung it around with might and main and struck the male,
+which had continued beating him incessantly.
+
+It was a strange weapon--a dead eagle against a live one, and the boy's
+constrained position prevented his using it with much effect. So
+lacking, indeed, were the blows in force, that the male flew directly
+at his face. The sorely beset lad dropped the dead bird and fastened
+both hands around the throat of his assailant. The latter fought
+desperately, but the young hero never released his grip, until it
+ceased its struggles. Then he flung it from him, and it tumbled
+downward to the professor's feet.
+
+This gentleman had done his best to help his young friend, but was
+unable to do so. The lad, after resting awhile, picked his way down to
+the ground, where his feet had hardly touched when he fainted in the
+professor's arms. He soon rallied, however, though his wounds were so
+severe that he was obliged to keep his bed for several weeks.
+
+The two eaglets were found uninjured, and were safely carried to the
+professor's home, as were the bodies of the dead birds. They were
+mounted by Professor McInery, who, in consideration of the danger
+undergone by the boy, and the two extra birds, presented Lee with $100,
+and no one will deny that the money was well earned.
+
+
+
+
+WHO SHALL EXPLAIN IT?
+
+Let me begin by saying that I was never a believer in signs, omens, or
+the general superstitions which, it must be admitted, influence most
+people to a greater or less degree. I have been the thirteenth guest
+at more than one table, without my appetite being affected; I have
+tipped over my salt-cellar without a twinge of fear; I have never
+turned aside to avoid passing under a leaning ladder, and I do not care
+a jot whether the first glimpse of the new moon is over my right or
+left shoulder.
+
+I had a little boy Bob, who was fourteen years old on the last
+anniversary of American independence. Being our only son, his mother
+and myself held him close to our hearts. In fact, I am sure no little
+fellow was ever regarded with more affectionate love than our Bob. The
+painful story which, with much hesitation, I have set out to tell is
+one, therefore, that no member of our little family can ever forget.
+
+We always tried to act the part of sensible parents toward our little
+boy. He never stepped inside of a school-house until he was seven
+years old, and, when he did so, it was to stay only a brief while. It
+was six months before he became acquainted with every letter of the
+alphabet, and no youngster of his years ever ruined more clothing than
+he. The destruction of shoes, hats, and trousers was enough to
+bankrupt many a father, and it often provoked a protest from his
+mother. I have seen him, within a half hour after having his face
+scrubbed until it shone like an apple, present himself in such ragged
+attire and with so soiled a countenance, that it took a second glance
+to identify him.
+
+And yet, as I sit here writing by the evening lamp, I am glad to recall
+that I never scolded Bob. I would have been sadly neglectful of my
+duty had I failed to reprove and advise him, and I am sure he honestly
+strove to obey my wishes; but the sum and substance of it all was, he
+couldn't do it. He was a vigorous little fellow, overrunning with
+animal spirits, high health, and mischief; and it was a pleasure to me
+to see him laying the firm foundation of a lusty constitution, which,
+in later years, could laugh at disease.
+
+And then when he did take a start in his studies, he advanced with a
+speed that astonished his teacher. At the age of twelve there was not
+a girl or boy in school (and some of them were several years older than
+he) who could hold his own with him. I took some credit to myself for
+all this, for I believed it was largely due to the common-sense I used
+in his early youth. The foundation was strong and secure, and the
+building erected upon it was upon solid rock.
+
+During the last two or three years I suffered from a great fear.
+Between the school-house and our home was a mill-pond, which in many
+places was fully a dozen feet deep. I knew what a temptation this was
+to the boys during the long, sultry summer weather, and there was not a
+day when a dozen youngsters, more or less, were not frolicking and
+splashing in it.
+
+One afternoon, when I sauntered thither, I found fully a score of them
+in the height of enjoyment, and the wildest and most reckless fellow
+was my Bob. When he observed me standing on the shore he was so
+anxious to astonish me that he ventured into the water up to his chin,
+I shouted to him to come to shore, for he was in fearful peril, and it
+needed only a few inches further advance for him to drown before help
+could reach him.
+
+"Bob," said I, in a voice and manner that could not be mistaken, "if
+you ever do that again I'll whip you within an inch of your life."
+
+"I won't, pop," he replied, in such meek tones that, parent-like, my
+heart reproached me at once.
+
+"Now," I added more gently, "every boy ought to learn to swim, and
+until he is able to do so, he should keep out of deep water. If you
+will promise me that you will never venture into a depth above your
+waist until a good swimmer, you may bathe here; otherwise you shall
+never come near it."
+
+He gave me his promise, and, telling him that he had been in the water
+long enough for that afternoon, I asked him to dress himself and come
+home with me.
+
+I felt that I had been weak. I ought to have forbidden him ever to
+enter the mill-pond unless in my company, and thus that which followed
+never could have occurred. I did not tell his mother what had taken
+place, for I knew she would insist on a strict prohibition of his
+aimless swimming efforts.
+
+To tell the truth, there were two reasons why I did not forbid Bob to
+enter the mill-pond. I knew it would be the most cruel kind of
+punishment, and, I may as well confess it, I didn't believe the boy
+would obey me if he gave the pledge. The temptation was too strong to
+be resisted. Alas! how often our affection closes our eyes to the
+plainest duty!
+
+And now I have reached a point which prompts me to ask the question at
+the head of this sketch, "Who Shall Explain It?" I have my own theory,
+which I shall submit, with no little diffidence, later on.
+
+It was on Saturday afternoon, the ninth of last August, that I became a
+victim to a greater depression of spirits than I had known for years.
+I felt nothing of it during the forenoon, but it began shortly after
+the midday meal and became more oppressive with each passing minute. I
+sat down at my desk and wrote for a short time. I continually sighed
+and drew deep inspirations, which gave me no relief. It was as if a
+great and increasing weight were resting on my chest. Had I been
+superstitious, I would have declared that I was on the eve of some
+dreadful calamity.
+
+Writing became so difficult and distasteful that I threw down my pen,
+sprang from my chair, and began rapidly pacing up and down the room.
+My wife had gone to the city that morning to visit her relatives, and
+was not to return until the following day; so I was alone, with only
+two servants in the house.
+
+I couldn't keep the thoughts of Bob out of my mind. Saturday being a
+holiday, I had allowed him to go off to spend the afternoon as he
+chose; and, as it was unusually warm, there was little doubt where and
+how he was spending it. He would strike a bee-line for that shady
+mill-pond, and they would spend hours plashing in its cool and
+delicious depths.
+
+I looked at the clock; it was a few minutes past five, and Bob ought to
+have been home long ago. What made him so late?
+
+My fear was growing more intense every minute. The boy was in my mind
+continually to the exclusion of everything else. Despite all my
+philosophy and rigid common-sense, the conviction was fastening on me
+that something dreadful had befallen him.
+
+And what was that something? He had been drowned in the mill-pond. I
+glanced out of the window, half expecting to see a party bearing the
+lifeless body homeward. Thank Heaven, I was spared that woful sight,
+but I discerned something else that sent a misgiving pang through me.
+
+It was Mrs. Clarkson, our nearest neighbor, rapidly approaching, as if
+the bearer of momentous tidings.
+
+"She has come to tell me that Bob is drowned," I gasped, as my heart
+almost ceased its beating.
+
+I met her on the threshold, with a calmness of manner which belied the
+tumult within. Greeting her courteously, I invited her inside, stating
+that my wife was absent.
+
+"I thank you," she said, "but it is not worth while. I thought I ought
+to come over and tell you."
+
+"Tell me what?" I inquired, swallowing the lump in my throat.
+
+"Why, about the awful dream I had last night."
+
+I was able to smile faintly, and was partly prepared for what was
+coming.
+
+"I am ready to hear it, Mrs. Clarkson."
+
+"Why, you know it was Friday night, and I never had a dream on a Friday
+night that didn't come true--never! Where's Bob?" she abruptly asked,
+peering around me, as if to learn whether he was in the hall.
+
+"He's off somewhere at play."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Havens, you'll never see him alive again!"
+
+Although startled in spite of myself, I was indignant.
+
+"Have you any positive knowledge, Mrs. Clarkson, on the matter?"
+
+"Certainly I have; didn't I just tell you about my dream?"
+
+"A fudge for your dream!" I exclaimed, impatiently; "I don't believe in
+any such nonsense."
+
+"I pity you," she said, though why I should be pitied on that account
+is hard to understand.
+
+"But what was your dream?"
+
+"I saw your Bob brought home drowned. Oh, I can see him now," she
+added, speaking rapidly, and making a movement as if to wring her
+hands; "his white face--his dripping hair and clothes--his half-closed
+eyes--it was dreadful; it will break his mother's heart--"
+
+"Mrs. Clarkson, did you come here to tell me _that_?"
+
+"Why, of course I did; I felt it was my duty to prepare you--"
+
+"Good day," I answered, sharply, closing the door and hastily entering
+my study.
+
+She had given me a terrible shock. My feelings were in a tumult
+difficult to describe. My philosophy, my self-command, my hard sense
+and scepticism were scattered to the winds, I had fought against the
+awful fear, and was still fighting when my neighbor called; but her
+visit had knocked every prop from beneath me.
+
+She had hardly disappeared when I was hurrying through the woods by the
+shortest route to the mill-pond. I knew Bob had been there, and all
+that I expected to find was his white, ghastly body in the cold, cruel
+depths.
+
+"Oh, my boy!" I wailed, "I am to blame for your death! I never should
+have permitted you to run into such danger. I should have gone with
+you and taught you to swim--I can never forgive myself for this--never,
+never, never. It will break your mother's heart--mine is already
+broken--"
+
+"_Pop, just watch me_!"
+
+Surely that was the voice of my boy! I turned my head like a flash,
+and there he was, with his hands together over his head, and in the act
+of diving into the mill-pond. Down he went with a splash, his head
+quickly reappearing, as he flirted the hair and water out of his eyes,
+and struck out for the middle of the pond.
+
+"What are you doing, Bob?"
+
+"You just wait and see, pop."
+
+And what did that young rascal do but swim straight across that pond
+and then turn about and swim back again, without pausing for breath?
+Not only that, but, when in the very deepest portion, he dove, floated
+on his back, trod water, and kicked up his heels like a frisky colt.
+
+"How's that, pop? You didn't know I could swim, did you?" he asked, as
+he came smilingly up the bank.
+
+"I had no idea of such a thing," I replied, my whole being fluttering
+with gratitude and delight; "I think I'll have to reward you for that."
+
+And when he had donned his clothes, and we started homeward, I slipped
+a twisted bank-bill into his hands. I am really ashamed to tell its
+denomination, and Bob and I never hinted anything about it to his
+mother.
+
+And now as to the question, Who shall explain it? I think I can. I
+have a weakness for boiled beef and cabbage. The meat is healthful
+enough, but, as every one knows, or ought to know, cabbage, although
+one of the most digestible kinds of food when raw, is just the opposite
+in a boiled state. I knew the consequences of eating it, but in the
+absence of my good wife that day I disposed of so much that I deserved
+the oppressive indigestion that followed.
+
+That fact, I am convinced, fully explains the dreadful "presentiment"
+which made me so miserable all the afternoon.
+
+On our way home we passed the house of Mrs. Clarkson. I could not
+forbear stopping and ringing her bell. She answered it in person.
+
+"Mrs. Clarkson, Bob is on his way home from swimming, and I thought I
+would let him hear about that wonderful dream--"
+
+But the door was slammed in my face.
+
+I said at the opening of this sketch that I "had" a boy named Bob. God
+be thanked, I have him yet, and no lustier, brighter, or more manly
+youth ever lived, and my prayer is that he may be spared to soothe the
+declining years of his father and mother, whose love for him is beyond
+the power of words to tell.
+
+
+
+
+A FOOL OR A GENIUS.
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+Josiah Hunter sat on his porch one summer afternoon, smoking his pipe,
+feeling dissatisfied, morose and sour on account of his only son Tim,
+who, he was obliged to confess to himself, gave every indication of
+proving a disappointment to him.
+
+Mr. Hunter was owner of the famous Brereton Quarry & Stone Works,
+located about a mile above the thriving village of Brereton, on the
+eastern bank of the Castaran river, and at a somewhat greater distance
+below the town of Denville. The quarry was a valuable one and the
+owner was in comfortable circumstances, with the prospect of acquiring
+considerable more of a fortune out of the yield of excellent building
+stone. The quarry had been worked for something like ten years, and
+the discovery that he had such a fine deposit on his small farm was in
+the minds of his neighbors equivalent to the finding of a gold mine,
+for as the excavation proceeded, the quality of the material improved
+and Mr. Hunter refused an offer from a company which, but for the
+stone, would have been a very liberal price for the whole farm.
+
+Mr. Hunter had been a widower ever since his boy was three years old,
+and the youth was now fourteen. His sister Maggie was two years his
+senior, and they were deeply attached to each other. Maggie was a
+daughter after her father's own heart,--one of those rare, sensible
+girls who cannot be spoiled by indulgence, who was equally fond of her
+parent and who stood unflinchingly by her brother in the little
+differences between father and son, which, sad to say, were becoming
+more frequent and serious with the passing weeks and months. It is
+probable that the affection of the parent for the daughter prevented
+him from ever thinking of marrying again, for she was a model
+housekeeper, and he could not bear the thought of seeing anyone come
+into the family and usurp, even in a small degree, her functions and
+place.
+
+Mr. Hunter was getting on in years, and nothing was more natural than
+that he should wish and plan that Tim should become his successor in
+the development of the valuable quarry that was not likely to give out
+for many a year to come. But the boy showed no liking for the
+business. He was among the best scholars in the village school, fond
+of play and so well advanced in his studies that his parent determined
+to begin his practical business training in earnest. He looked upon a
+college education as a waste of so many years, taken from the most
+precious part of a young man's life, and it must be said that Tim
+himself showed no wish to attend any higher educational institution.
+
+Tim had assisted about the quarry, more or less for several years. Of
+course he was too young to do much in the way of manual labor, but
+there were many errands that he ran, beside helping to keep his
+father's accounts. He wrote an excellent hand, was quick in figures
+and had such a command of language that all his parent had to do was to
+tell him the substance of the letter he wished written, to have the boy
+put it in courteous but pointed and clear form. The elder had never
+detected an error in the computations of the younger, who had no
+trouble at all when the operations included difficult fractions.
+
+All this was good in its way, but it could not be denied that Tim had
+no liking for the business itself. His father had told him repeatedly
+that he must prepare himself for the active management of the stone
+works, and that to do so required something more than quickness in
+figures and skill in letter writing. But it was in vain. Tim was
+never at the works unless by direct command of his parent, and seized
+the first opportunity to get away.
+
+"No person can succeed in a business which he dislikes," remarked Mr.
+Hunter to Maggie who on this summer afternoon sat on the front porch,
+plying her deft needle, while the waning twilight lasted, with Bridget
+inside preparing the evening meal.
+
+"I think that is true, father," was her gentle reply.
+
+"And that boy hates the stone business and I can't understand why he
+should."
+
+"Isn't it also true, father, that one cannot control his likes and
+dislikes? Tim has told me he can't bear the thought of spending his
+life in getting out great blocks of stone and trimming them into shape
+for building. He said he wished he could feel as you do, but there's
+no use of his trying."
+
+"Fudge!" was the impatient exclamation; "what business has a boy of his
+years to talk or think about what sort of business he prefers? It is
+my place to select his future avocation and his to accept it without a
+growl."
+
+"He will do that, father."
+
+"Of course he will," replied the parent with a compression of his thin
+lips and a flash of his eyes; "when I yield to a boy fourteen years
+old, it will be time to shift me off to the lunatic asylum."
+
+"Why, then, are you displeased, since he will do what you wish and do
+it without complaint?
+
+"I am displeased because he is dissatisfied and has no heart in his
+work. He shows no interest in anything relating to the quarries and it
+is becoming worse every day with him."
+
+"Didn't he help this forenoon?"
+
+"Yes, because I told him he must be on hand as soon as he was through
+breakfast and not leave until he went to dinner."
+
+"Did you say nothing about his working this afternoon?"
+
+"No; I left that out on purpose to test him."
+
+"What was the result?"
+
+"I haven't seen hide or hair of him since; I suppose he is off in the
+woods or up in his room, reading or figuring on some invention. Do you
+know where he is?"
+
+"He has been in his room almost all the afternoon and is there now."
+
+"Doing what?"
+
+"I guess you have answered that question," replied Maggie laying aside
+her sewing because of the increasing shadows, and looking across at her
+father with a smile.
+
+"That's what makes me lose all patience. What earthly good is it for
+him to sit in his room drawing figures of machines he dreams of making,
+or scribbling over sheets of paper? If this keeps up much longer, he
+will take to writing poetry, and the next thing will be smoking
+cigarettes and then his ruin will be complete."
+
+Maggie's clear laughter rang out on the summer air. She was always
+overflowing with spirits and the picture drawn by her parent and the
+look of profound disgust on his face as he uttered his scornful words
+stirred her mirth beyond repression.
+
+"What are you laughing at?" he demanded, turning toward her, though
+without any anger in his tones, for he could never feel any emotion of
+that nature toward such a daughter.
+
+"It was the idea of Tim writing poetry or rhyme and smoking cigarettes.
+I'll guarantee that he will never do either."
+
+"Nor anything else, you may as well add."
+
+"I'll guarantee that if he lives he will do a good many things that
+will be better than getting out and trimming stone."
+
+This was not the first time that Maggie had intimated the same faith,
+without going into particulars or giving any idea upon what she based
+that faith. The parent looked sharply at her and asked:
+
+"What do you mean? Explain yourself."
+
+But the daughter was not yet ready to do so. She had her thoughts or
+dreams or whatever they might be, but was not prepared as yet to share
+them with her parent. He was not in the mood, and for her to tell all
+that was in her mind would be to provoke an outburst that would be
+painful to the last degree. She chose for the present to parry.
+
+"How can I know, father, what ambition Tim has? He is still young
+enough to change that ambition, whatever it may be."
+
+"And he's _got_ to change it, as sure as he lives! I am tired of his
+fooling; he is fourteen years old, big, strong, and healthy; if he
+would take hold of the work and show some interest in it, he would be
+able in a couple of years to take charge of the whole business and give
+me a rest, but he is frittering away valuable time until I've made up
+my mind to permit it no longer."
+
+The parent knocked the bowl of his pipe against the column of the porch
+and shook his head in a way that showed he meant every word he said.
+Maggie was troubled, for she had feared an outbreak between him and
+Tim, and it seemed to be impending. She dreaded it more than death,
+for any violence by her beloved parent toward her equally beloved
+brother would break her heart. That parent, naturally placid and
+good-natured, had a frightful temper when it was aroused. She could
+never forget that day when in a quarrel with one of his employes, he
+came within a hair of killing the man and for the time was a raging
+tiger.
+
+There was one appeal that Maggie knew had never failed her, though she
+feared the day would come when even that would lose its power. She
+reserved it as the last recourse. When she saw her father rise to his
+feet, and in the gathering gloom noted the grim resolute expression on
+his face, she knew the crisis had come.
+
+"Tell him to come down-stairs; we may as well have this matter settled
+here and now."
+
+"Father," she said in a low voice of the sweetest tenderness, "you will
+not forget what he did two years ago?"
+
+The parent stood motionless, silent for a minute, and then gently
+resumed his seat, adding a moment later,
+
+"No; I can never forget that; never mind calling him just now."
+
+And what it was that Tim Hunter did "two years ago" I must now tell you.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Bear in mind that Tim Hunter was twelve years old at the time, being
+the junior by two years of his sister Maggie.
+
+On the day which I have in mind, he had spent the forenoon fishing, and
+brought home a mess of trout for which he had whipped one of the
+mountain brooks, and which furnished the family with the choicest sort
+of a meal. The father complimented him on his skill, for that was
+before the parent's patience had been so sorely tried by the
+indifference of the lad toward the vocation to which the elder meant he
+should devote his life. He left the lad at liberty to spend the rest
+of the day as he chose, and, early in the afternoon, he proposed to his
+sister that they should engage in that old game of "jackstones" with
+which I am sure you are familiar.
+
+Years ago the country lads and lassies generally used little bits of
+stones, instead of scraggly, jagged pieces of iron, with which they
+amuse themselves in these days. Tim had seen some of the improved
+jackstones; and, borrowing one from a playmate, he made a clay mould
+from it, into which he poured melted lead, repeating the operation
+until he had five as pretty and symmetrically formed specimens as one
+could wish. It was with these in his hands, that he led the way to the
+barn for a game between himself and sister.
+
+The big, spacious structure was a favorite place for spending their
+leisure hours. The hard, seedy floor, with the arching rafters
+overhead could not be improved for their purpose. The shingles were so
+far aloft that the shade within was cool on sultry summer days, and it
+was the pleasantest kind of music to hear the rain drops patter on the
+roof and the wind whistle around the eaves and corners. The mow where
+the hay was stored was to the left, as you entered the door, and under
+that were the stalls where the horses munched their dinner and looked
+solemnly through the opening over the mangers at the two children
+engaged at play. Between where they sat and the rafters, the space was
+open.
+
+Maggie took her seat in the middle of the floor, and her brother placed
+himself opposite. Before doing so, he stepped to the nearest stall and
+picked up a block of wood six inches in diameter and two feet in
+length. This he laid on the floor and seated himself upon it, tossing
+the jackstones to his sister to begin the game.
+
+She was his superior, for her pretty taper fingers were more nimble
+than his sturdy ones, and, unless she handicapped herself by certain
+conditions, she invariably won in the contest of skill. She tossed
+them one after the other, then two or three or more at a time,
+snatching up the others from the floor and going through the varied
+performance with an easy perfection that was the wonder of Tim. Once
+or twice, she purposely missed some feat, but the alert lad was sure to
+detect it, and declared he would not play unless she did her best, and,
+under his watchful eye, she could not escape doing so. As I have said,
+the only way to equalize matters was for her to handicap herself, and
+even then I am compelled to say she was more often winner than loser.
+
+Sitting on the block of wood tipped up on one end, Tim kept his eyes on
+the bits of metal, popping up in the air and softly dropping into the
+extended palm, and wondered again why it was so hard for him to do that
+which was so easy for her. Finally she made a slip, which looked
+honest, and resigned the stones to him.
+
+Now, you know that in playing this game, you ought to sit on the floor
+or ground; for if your perch is higher, you are compelled to stoop
+further to snatch up the pieces and your position is so awkward that it
+seriously interferes with your success.
+
+The very first scramble Tim made at the stones on the floor was not
+only a failure, but resulted in a splinter catching under the nail of
+one of his fingers. Maggie laughed.
+
+"Why do you sit way up there?" she asked; "you can't do half as well as
+when you are lower down like me."
+
+"I guess you're right," he replied, as he pushed the block away and
+imitated her. "I 'spose I'll catch the splinters just the same."
+
+"There's no need of it; you mustn't claw the stones, but move your hand
+gently, just as I do. Now, watch me."
+
+"It's a pity that no one else in the world is half as smart as you,"
+replied the brother with fine irony, but without ill nature. "Ah,
+wasn't that splendid?"
+
+Which remark was caused by the plainest kind of fluke on the part of
+Maggie, who in her effort to instruct her brother, forgot one or two
+nice points, which oversight was fatal.
+
+"Well," said she, "I didn't fill my fingers with splinters."
+
+"Nor with jackstones either; if I can't do any better than you I'm sure
+I can't do any worse."
+
+"Well, Smarty, what are you waiting for?"
+
+"For you to pay attention."
+
+"I'm doing that."
+
+With cool, careful steadiness, Tim set to work, and lo! he finished the
+game without a break, performing the more difficult exploits with a
+skill that compelled the admiration of his sister.
+
+"I'm glad to see that you're not such a big dunce as you look; I've
+been discouraged in trying to teach you, but you seem to be learning at
+last."
+
+"Wouldn't you like me to give you a few lessons?"
+
+"No; for, if you did, I should never win another game," was the pert
+reply; "I wonder whether you will ever be able to beat me again."
+
+"Didn't you know that I have been fooling with you all the time, just
+as I fool a trout till I get him to take the hook?"
+
+Maggie stared at him with open mouth for a moment and then asked in an
+awed whisper:
+
+"No; I didn't know that: did _you_?"
+
+"Never mind; the best thing you can do is to tend to bus'ness, for I'm
+not going to show you a bit of mercy."
+
+During this friendly chaffing, both noticed that the wind was rising.
+It moaned around the barn, and enough of it entered the window far
+above their heads for them to feel it fan their cheeks. An eddy even
+lifted one of the curls from the temple of the girl. This, however,
+was of no special concern to them, and they continued their playing.
+
+Each went through the next series without a break. Tim was certainly
+doing himself honor, and his sister was at a loss to understand it.
+But you know that on some days the player of any game does much better
+than on others. This was one of Tim's best days and one of Maggie's
+worst, for he again surpassed her, though there could be no doubt that
+she did her very best, and she could not repress her chagrin. But she
+was too fond of her bright brother to feel anything in the nature of
+resentment for his success.
+
+"There's one thing certain," she said, shaking her curly head with
+determination; "you can't beat me again."
+
+"I wouldn't be so rash, sister; remember that I mean bus'ness to-day."
+
+"Just as if you haven't always done your best; it's you that are
+bragging, not I."
+
+Tim had taken the stones in his right hand with the purpose of giving
+them the necessary toss in the air, when a blast of wind struck the
+barn with a force that made it tremble. They distinctly felt the
+tremor of the floor beneath them. He paused and looked into the
+startled face of his sister with the question:
+
+"Hadn't we better run to the house?"
+
+"No," she replied, her heart so set on beating him that she felt less
+fear than she would have felt had it been otherwise; "it's as safe here
+as in the house; one is as strong as the other; if you want to get out
+of finishing the game, why, I'll let you off."
+
+"You know it isn't that, Maggie; but the barn isn't as strong as the
+house."
+
+"It has stood a good many harder blows than this; don't you see it has
+stopped? Go on."
+
+"All right; just as you say," and up went the pronged pieces and were
+caught with the same skill as before. Then he essayed a more difficult
+feat and failed. Maggie clapped her hands with delight, and leaned
+forward to catch up the bits and try her hand.
+
+At that instant something like a tornado or incipient cyclone struck
+the barn. They felt the structure swaying, heard the ripping of
+shingles, and casting his eyes aloft, Tim saw the shingles and
+framework coming down upon their heads.
+
+It was an appalling moment. If they remained where they were, both
+would be crushed to death. The door was too far away for both to reach
+it; though it was barely possible that by a quick leap and dash he
+might get to the open air in the nick of time, but he would die a
+hundred times over before abandoning his sister. The open window was
+too high to be reached from the floor without climbing, and there was
+no time for that.
+
+The action of a cyclone is always peculiar. Resistless as is its
+power, it is often confined to a very narrow space. The one to which I
+am now referring whipped off a corner of the roof, so loosening the
+supports that the whole mass of shingles and rafters covering the
+larger portion came down as if flung from the air above, while the
+remainder of the building was left unharmed, the terrified horses not
+receiving so much as a scratch.
+
+There was one awful second when brother and sister believed that the
+next would be their last. Then Tim threw his arm around the neck of
+Maggie and in a flash drew her forward so that she lay flat on her face
+and he alongside of her; but the twinkling of an eye before that he had
+seized the block of wood, rejected some time before as a chair, and
+stood it on end beside his shoulder, keeping his right arm curved round
+it so as to hold it upright in position, while the other arm prevented
+Maggie from rising.
+
+"Don't move?" he shouted amid the crashing of timbers and the roaring
+of the gale; "lie still and you won't be hurt."
+
+She could not have disobeyed him had she tried, for the words were in
+his mouth when the fearful mass of timber descended upon them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+Do you understand what Tim Hunter did? Had the mass of timber
+descending upon him and his sister been unchecked, they would not have
+lived an instant. Had it been shattered into small fragments by the
+cyclone, the ingenious precaution which a wonderful presence of mind
+enabled hint to make, would have been of no avail.
+
+Take a block of seasoned oak, six inches through, and two feet in
+height, and interpose it squarely against an approaching body and it is
+almost as powerful in the way of resistance as so much metal. It would
+take an ironclad to crush it to pulp, by acting longitudinally or along
+its line of length. This block stood upright, and received a portion
+of the rafters, covered by the shingles and held them aloft as easily
+as you can hold your hat with your outstretched arm. From this point
+of highest support, the debris sloped away until it rested on the
+floor, but the open space, in which the brother and sister lay, was as
+safe as was their situation, before the gale loosened the structure.
+
+Tim called to his sister and found that not so much as a hair of her
+head had been harmed, and it was the same with himself. All was
+darkness in their confined quarters, but the wrenched framework gave
+them plenty of air to breathe.
+
+Who can picture the feelings of the father, when he saw the collapse of
+the roof of the barn and knew that his two children were beneath? He
+rushed thither like a madman, only to be cheered to the highest
+thankfulness the next moment at hearing their muffled assurances that
+both were all right. A brief vigorous application of his axe and the
+two were helped out into the open air, neither the worse for their
+dreadful experience.
+
+The parent could hardly believe what had been done by his boy, when
+Maggie told him, until an examination for himself showed that it was
+true. He declared that neither he nor anyone would have thought of the
+means and applied it with such lightning quickness. It certainly was
+an extraordinary exhibition of presence of mind and deserved all the
+praise given to it. The Brereton _Intelligencer_ devoted half a column
+to a description of the exploit and prophesied that that "young man"
+would be heard from again. For weeks and months there was nothing at
+the disposal of Mr. Hunter which was too good for his boy and it is
+probable that the indulgence of that period had something to do with
+making Tim dissatisfied with the prospect of spending all his life as a
+"hewer of stone."
+
+Gradually as the effects of the remarkable rescue wore off, the
+impatience of the parent grew until we have seen him on the point of
+calling to account the boy who had really been the means of saving two
+lives, for his own was as much imperilled as the sister's. Once more
+she appealed to that last recourse, and once more it did not fail her.
+When he recalled that dreadful scene, he could not help feeling an
+admiring gratitude for his boy. Although silent and reserved some time
+later, when the three gathered round the table for their evening meal,
+nothing unpleasant was said by the parent, though the sharp-witted Tim
+felt a strong suspicion of the cause of his father's reserve.
+
+Later in the evening, the latter sat down by the table in the sitting
+room and took up his copy of the Brereton _Intelligencer_, which had
+arrived that afternoon. He always spent his Thursday evenings in this
+manner, unless something unusual interfered, the local news and
+selected miscellany affording enough intellectual food to last him
+until retiring time.
+
+While he was thus occupied, Tim and Maggie played checkers, there being
+little difference in their respective skill. They were quiet, and when
+necessary to speak, did so in low tones, so as not to disturb the
+parent.
+
+An hour had passed, when he suddenly turned, with his spectacles on his
+nose, and looked at the children. The slight resentment he still felt
+toward Tim caused him to address himself directly to his sister:
+
+"Maggie, do you know who has been writing these articles in the paper
+for the last few weeks?"
+
+She held a king suspended as she was on the point of jumping a couple
+of Tim's and asked in turn:
+
+"What articles?"
+
+"They are signed 'Mit' and each paper for the last two or three months
+has had one of them."
+
+"No, sir; I do not know who wrote them."
+
+"Well, whoever he is he's a mighty smart fellow."
+
+"Maybe it's a 'she,'" suggested Maggie, as she proceeded to sweep off
+the board the two kings of Tim that had got in the path of her single
+one.
+
+"Fudge! no woman can write such good sense as that. Besides, some of
+them have been on the tariff, the duties of voters, the Monroe Doctrine
+and politics: what does any woman know about such themes as those?"
+
+"Don't some women write about them?"
+
+"I haven't denied that, but that doesn't prove that they know anything
+of the subjects themselves."
+
+The miss could make no suitable response to this brilliant remark and
+did not attempt to do so, while Tim said nothing at all, as if the
+subject had no attraction to him.
+
+By and by the parent uttered a contemptuous sniff. He was reading
+"Mit's" contribution, and for the first time came upon something with
+which he did not agree.
+
+"He's 'way off there," remarked the elder, as if speaking to himself.
+
+"What is it, father?" asked Maggie, ceasing her playing for the moment,
+for her affection always led her to show an interest in whatever
+interested him.
+
+"The article is the best I have read until I get toward the end.
+Listen: 'No greater mistake can be made than for a parent to force a
+child into some calling or profession for which he has no liking. The
+boy will be sure to fail.' Now, what do you think of _that_?"
+
+"The latter part sounds very much like what you said to me this
+afternoon."
+
+"It isn't that, which is true enough, but the idea that a boy knows
+better than his father what is the right profession for him to follow.
+That doctrine is too much like Young America who thinks he knows it
+all."
+
+"Read on, father; let me hear the rest."
+
+The father was silent a minute or two, while he skimmed through the
+article.
+
+"It isn't worth reading," he remarked impatiently, thereby proving that
+he had been hit by the arguments which he found difficult to refute.
+Maggie made no comment, but smiled significantly at Tim across the
+board, as they resumed their game.
+
+In truth, Mr. Hunter had come upon some sentiments that set him to
+thinking, such, for instance, as these: "It may be said with truth in
+many cases, that the father is the best judge of what the future of his
+son should be. In fact no one can question this, but the father does
+not always use that superior knowledge as he should. Perhaps he has
+yielded to the dearest wish of the mother that their son should become
+a minister. The mother's love does not allow her to see that her boy
+has no gifts as a speaker and no love for a clergyman's life. He longs
+to be a lawyer or doctor. Will any one deny that to drive the young
+man into the pulpit is the greatest mistake that can be made?
+
+"Sometimes a father, with an only son, perhaps, intends that he shall
+be trained to follow in his footsteps. The boy has a dislike for that
+calling or profession,--a dislike that was born with him and which
+nothing can remove. His taste runs in a wholly different channel;
+whatever talent he has lies there. While it may be convenient for him
+to step into his parent's shoes, yet he should never be forced to do
+so, but be allowed to select that for which he has an ability and
+toward which he is drawn. Parents make such sad mistakes as these, and
+often do not awake to the fact until it is too late to undo the
+mischief that has been done. Let them give the subject their most
+thoughtful attention and good is sure to follow."
+
+It was these words, following on the talk he had had with Maggie a
+short time before that set Mr. Hunter to thinking more deeply than he
+had ever done over the problem in which his son was so intimately
+concerned. After his children had retired and he was left alone, he
+turned over the paper and read the article again. It stuck to him and
+he could not drive it away. Laying the journal aside, he lit his pipe
+and leaned back in his chair.
+
+"It is not pleasant," he mused, "to give up the idea of Tim becoming my
+successor, for he is the only one I have ever thought of as such. But
+there is force in what 'Mit' says about driving a boy into a calling or
+profession that he hates; he will make a failure of it, whereas he
+might become very successful if left to follow his own preferences. I
+wonder who 'Mit' is; his articles are the best I have ever read in the
+_Intelligencer_; I must ask the editor, so I can have him out here and
+talk over this question which is the biggest bother I ever had."
+
+Before Maggie and Tim separated to go to their rooms, and while at the
+top of the stairs they whispered together for a few minutes. The
+parent had got thus far in his musings, when he heard the voice of
+Maggie calling from above:
+
+"Father, do you think 'Mit' is a smart fellow?"
+
+"Of course, even though I may not agree with all his views," replied
+the parent, wondering why his child was so interested.
+
+"Would you like to know who he is?"
+
+"Of course, but you told me you didn't know."
+
+"I didn't at that time, but I have learned since. If you will spell
+the name backwards and put it before your surname, you will have that
+of the youth who wrote the articles you admire so much."
+
+The parent did as suggested, and behold! the name thus spelled out was
+that of his only son, whose writings he had praised before the young
+man's face.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+When the chuckling Tim told his sister the secret as he paused to kiss
+her good-night at the head of the stairs, he did not dream that she
+would reveal it to their father; but, before he could exact a promise,
+she emitted the truth, despite his attempts to place his hand over her
+mouth. Then she darted off, and, humiliated and chagrined, he went to
+his own room.
+
+But the parent was given more to think about. He was pleasant to both
+the next morning at breakfast and made no reference to the matter that
+was in the minds of all. Just as the meal was finished, he remarked:
+
+"Tim, the load of stone is ready and we will take it over to Montvale
+to-day; wouldn't you like to go with us?"
+
+"Thank you, father; I shall be glad to go."
+
+"All right; as soon as you and Maggie are through with your nonsense,
+come out to the wharf and join us."
+
+The method of transporting stone from the Brereton quarries to
+Montvale, on the other side of the river, was simple. The canal ran
+directly in front of the quarries, and there the boat was loaded with
+the heavy freight. It was then drawn by horse through the canal
+Denville, several miles to the north, where the waterway touched the
+level of the Castaran river. Passing through a lock, the boat was
+pulled across the stream by means of a rope, and wheel arrangement (a
+heavy dam furnishing comparatively deep and smooth water), when another
+lock admitted it to the canal on the opposite side.
+
+The boat, which lay against the bank of the canal near the quarries,
+was loaded so heavily that it was brought as low in the water as was
+safe. Then a horse was hitched fast, and with Tim driving, and with
+Warren and his father and two men on board, the craft began slowly
+moving against the sluggish current.
+
+The start was made in the morning, and before the forenoon was half
+gone they were at the lower end of Denville, where preparations were
+quickly made for crossing the river. The horse was taken on board, the
+boat securely fastened by a strong rope at the bow and stern, so as to
+hold her broadside against the current, and then the contrivance began
+dragging her slowly toward the opposite shore.
+
+During the spring months and the period of high water, a great many
+rafts of lumber descend the Castaran, though the number is not so great
+of late years as formerly. They are sold at various points along the
+river, and occasionally two or three rafts float down stream during the
+summer months. A long sweeping paddle (sometimes a couple) at either
+end of the raft enable the men to clear the abutments of the bridges
+and to shoot the rapids at different points.
+
+The canal boat, with its cargo of stone had no more than fairly left
+the eastern side, when a large raft was observed emerging from between
+two abutments of the bridge above. The men at the oars began toiling
+with them with a view of working the structure toward the rapids,
+through which the only safe passage can be secured.
+
+Those on the boat having nothing to do had seated themselves here and
+there, and were watching their surroundings, as they moved at right
+angles to the current. The raft was heading toward a point just ahead
+of the boat, and was so near that Tim, who was sitting beside his
+father on the cabin, started to his feet and said:
+
+"I believe they are going to strike us."
+
+"Sit down; there is no danger; these people know their business; we
+shall be well out of their way before they can reach us."
+
+Nevertheless a collision seemed so imminent a moment later, that Mr.
+Hunter rose to his feet and motioned to those working the rope to give
+the boat greater speed. At the same time he shouted to the raftsmen:
+
+"Keep off; don't you see we are in danger?"
+
+"Get out of the way, then!" was the reply; "we must go through there."
+
+Such manifestly was their right, and the gentleman again waved his
+hands to those on both shores. But they saw the danger, and applying
+all the power at their command, the boat began moving so much faster
+that Mr. Hunter resumed his seat.
+
+"It's all right now," he remarked; "but it looked mighty squally a
+minute ago."
+
+The canal boat was now crossing the rapid current, where a passage-way
+had been left on purpose for rafts. It had not quite reached the
+middle, toward which the structure was aiming, but its speed was
+sufficient to take it well out of the way, provided no accident
+occurred.
+
+And this is just what did occur. The unusual strain on the gearing
+caused something to give way, and the forward motion of the craft
+ceased at the very moment it reached the middle of the strong current.
+Those on the bank who were managing the apparatus saw the trouble at
+once, and strove desperately to extricate the boat from its perilous
+situation, but they were powerless.
+
+"For Heaven's sake, keep off!" shouted Mr. Hunter to the raftsmen; "if
+you don't we shall be ruined!"
+
+As he spoke he caught up a long pole, and pressing one end against the
+bed of the river exerted himself with might and main to impel the boat
+forward. He called to the two men to do the same, and under their
+united propulsion the boat advanced, but at a snail's pace.
+
+The lumbermen, seeing the alarming state of affairs, put forth all
+their strength to swing the raft over so that it would pass between the
+boat and the eastern shore. There was scant room for this, but they
+were hardly less anxious than the imperilled boatmen, to whom the
+consequences were certain to be more serious than to themselves.
+
+Had the distance been greater they might have succeeded, but under the
+circumstances it was impossible. Dipping the broad blades of the long
+oars, balanced at the ends of the raft, the men almost lay on their
+faces as they held their breath and pushed with every ounce of strength
+at their command. Then, when they reached the edge of the raft, they
+bore down so as to lift the blade from the water, ran back to the other
+side, dipped the oar again and shoved as before.
+
+Meanwhile Mr. Hunter and his assistants were panting and red in the
+face, as they desperately strove to force the boat from the path of the
+approaching raft, which came plunging down upon them with increasing
+speed.
+
+"No use!" he suddenly exclaimed, flinging the wet pole in the center of
+the boat on top of the stone; "we shall be shivered to atoms! Be ready
+to jump on the raft as it crushes through us! Leave the horse to take
+care of himself! Tim, you know how to swim, but jump on the raft with
+us--Heavens! what have you done, my son?"
+
+A few seconds before the boy had caught up the sharp hatchet lying near
+the cabin, and intended for use of splitting fuel for the stove. With
+two quick blows he severed the rope which held the stern. The latter
+yielded to the strong current dashing against it, and began swinging
+around, so that it quickly lay parallel with the river, with the bow
+pointing up stream, and held securely by the rope fastened at that end.
+
+This was no more than fairly done when the enormous raft swept past, so
+close that the nearest log was heard scraping the entire length of the
+boat. The impact drove it clear, and before any one beside the boy
+realized how it was done the entire structure had gone by, no damage
+was done and all were safe.
+
+"Jim," said Mr. Hunter, a minute after, when the flurry was over, "what
+a set of fools we were that we didn't think of that."
+
+"I don't agree with you," replied the other, "because no one would have
+thought of it except _that_ youngster."
+
+"Tim," added the father, placing his hand affectionately on his head,
+"I am proud of you."
+
+And the little fellow blushed and replied:
+
+"I'm glad I happened to think of it in time, but it _was_ rather close,
+wasn't it?"
+
+"It couldn't have been more so, and but for you boat and cargo would
+have been a dead loss, and more than likely some of us would have lost
+our lives."
+
+That night at the supper table, Mr. Hunter remarked with a meaning
+smile:
+
+"Maggie, the Hunter family contains a fool and a genius, I'm not the
+genius and 'Mit' isn't the fool."
+
+"Father, you are not just to yourself," the boy hastened to say; "I
+have done wrong in not appreciating your kindness or indulgence, and I
+have resolved to do my best to please you. I think I have some talent
+for composition and invention, but I can use it just as well, without
+neglecting the quarries and stone works, and if you will permit, I
+shall give you all the help I can in the business with the hope that
+some day, which I pray may be far distant, I shall become your
+successor."
+
+Tears filled the eyes of all, as the parent, rising from his chair,
+placed his hand on the head of Tim and said, in a tremulous voice:
+
+"God bless you, my son!"
+
+
+
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