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+Project Gutenberg's The Girl From Tim's Place, by Charles Clark Munn
+
+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 Girl From Tim's Place
+
+Author: Charles Clark Munn
+
+Illustrator: Frank T. Merrill
+
+Release Date: November 3, 2010 [EBook #34202]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "For God's sake give me suthin' to eat."]
+
+
+
+
+THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE
+
+
+
+
+THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE
+
+BY CHARLES CLARK MUNN
+
+Author of "Pocket Island," "Uncle Terry,"
+"The Hermit," "Rockhaven."
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY FRANK T. MERRILL
+
+New York
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP
+
+PUBLISHERS
+
+
+
+
+Published, March, 1906.
+
+Copyright, 1906, by LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO.
+
+All rights reserved.
+
+The Girl from Tim's Place.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+When we leave the world's busy haunts and penetrate the primal solitude
+of a vast wilderness, a new realm peopled by mystic genii opens to
+us. Each sombre gorge, where twisted roots clasp the moss-coated walls,
+discloses fabled gnomes and dryads. Nymphs and naiads outline their
+shadowy forms in the mist of every cascade. Elfin sprites dance in
+the ripples of a laughing brook, and brownies scamper away over the
+leaf-swept hilltops.
+
+A wondrous Presence, multiform, omnipresent, and ever fascinating, meets
+us on every hand, and there in those magic aisles and sombre glades,
+where man seems far away and God very near, Nature sits enthroned.
+
+It is with the hope that a few of my readers may feel this forest-born
+mood, and in its poetic spirit forget worldly cares, that I have written
+the story of "The Girl from Tim's Place."
+
+ THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ "For God's sake give me suthin' to eat"
+ (_Frontispiece_) 23
+ All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old
+ Tomah's fancy were rushing and leaping about 21
+ Nearer and nearer that unconscious girl it crept! 123
+ He grasped and struck at this enemy in a blind
+ instinct of self-preservation 195
+ "Won't you please give me a lift an' a chance
+ to earn my vittles for a day or two?" 260
+ "Thank God, little gal, I've found what belongs
+ to ye" 272
+ "Quit takin' on so, girlie," he said 325
+ "I did mean to hate you, but I--I can't" 416
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+CHIP MCGUIRE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Chip was very tired. All that long June day, since Tim's harsh, "Come,
+out wid ye," had roused her to daily toil, until now, wearied and
+disconsolate, she had crept, barefoot, up the back stairs to her room,
+not one moment's rest or one kindly word had been hers.
+
+Below, in the one living room of Tim's Place, the men were grouped
+playing cards, and the medley of their oaths, their laughter, the thump
+of knuckles on the bare table, and the pungent odor of pipes, reached
+her through the floor cracks. Outside the fireflies twinkled above the
+slow-running river and along the stump-dotted hillside. Close by, a
+few pigs dozed contentedly in their rudely constructed sty.
+
+A servant to those scarce fit for servants, a menial at the beck and call
+of all Tim's Place, and laboring with the men in the fields, Chip, a
+girl of almost sixteen, felt her soul revolt at the filth, the brutality,
+the coarse existence of those whose slave she was.
+
+And what a group they were!
+
+First, Tim Connor, the owner and master of this oasis in the wilderness,
+sixty miles from the nearest settlement; his brother Mike, as coarse;
+their wives and a half a dozen children who played with the pigs,
+squealed as often for food, and were left to grow up the same way;
+and Pierre Lubec, the hired man, completed the score.
+
+There was another transient resident here, an old Indian named Tomah,
+who came with the snow, and deserted his hut below on the river bank when
+spring unlocked that stream.
+
+Two occasional visitors also came here, both even more objectionable
+to Chip than Tim and his family. One was her father, known to her to be
+an outlaw and escaped murderer in hiding; the other a half-breed named
+Bolduc, but known as One-eyed Pete, a trapper and hunter whose abode
+was a log cabin on the Fox Hole, ten miles away. His face was horribly
+scarred by a wildcat's claws; one eye-socket was empty; his lips,
+chin, and protruding teeth were always tobacco-stained. For three months
+now, he had made weekly calls at Tim's Place, in pursuit of Chip. His
+wooing, as might be expected, had been a persistent leering at her with
+his one sinister eye, oft-repeated innuendoes and insinuations of
+lascivious nature, scarce understood by her, with now and then attempted
+familiarity. These advances had met with much the same reception once
+accorded him by the wildcat.
+
+Both these visitors were now with the group below. That fact was of
+no interest to Chip, except in connection with a more pertinent one--a
+long conference she had observed between them that day. What it was
+about, she could not guess, and yet some queer intuition told her that it
+concerned her. Ordinarily, she would have sought sleep in her box-on-legs
+bed; now she crouched on the floor, listening.
+
+For an hour the game and its medley of sounds continued; then
+cessation, the tramp of heavily shod feet, the light extinguished,
+and finally--silence. A few minutes of this, and then the sound of
+whispered converse, low yet distinct, reached Chip from outside.
+Cautiously she crept to her window.
+
+"I gif you one hunerd dollars now, for ze gal," Pete was saying, "an'
+one hunerd more when you fotch her."
+
+"It's three hundred down, I've told ye, or we don't do business,"
+was her father's answer, in almost a hiss.
+
+A pain like a knife piercing her heart came to Chip.
+
+"But s'pose she run away?" came in Pete's voice.
+
+"What, sixty miles to a settlement? You must be a damn fool!"
+
+"An' if she no mind me?"
+
+"Wal, thrash her then; she's yours."
+
+"But I no gif so much," parleyed Pete; "I gif you one-feefty now, an'
+one hunerd when she come."
+
+"You'll give what I say, and be quick about it, or I'll take her out
+to-morrow, and you'll never see her again; so fork over."
+
+"And you fotch her to-morrow?"
+
+"Yes, I told you." And so the bargain was concluded.
+
+Only a moment more, while Chip sat numb and dazed, then came the sound of
+footsteps, as the two men separated, and then silence over Tim's Place.
+
+And yet, what a horror for Chip! Sold like a horse or a pig to this
+worse than disgusting half-breed, and on the morrow to be taken--no,
+dragged--to the half-breed's hut by her hated father.
+
+Hardly conscious of the real intent and object of this purchase, she yet
+understood it dimly. Life here was bad enough--it was coarse, unloved,
+even filthy, and yet, hard as it was, it was a thousand times better
+than slavery with such an owner.
+
+And now, still weak and trembling from the shock, she raised her head
+cautiously and peeped out of the window. A faint spectral light from
+the rising moon outlined the log barn, the two log cabins, and pigsty,
+which, with the frame house she was in, comprised Tim's Place. Above
+and beyond where the forest enclosed the hillside, it shone brighter,
+and as Chip looked out upon the ethereal silvered view, away to the
+right she saw the dark opening into the old tote road. Up this they
+had brought her, eight years before. Never since had she traversed it;
+and yet, as she looked at it now, an inspiration born of her father's
+sneer came to her.
+
+It was a desperate chance, a foolhardy step--a journey so appalling,
+so almost hopeless, she might well hesitate; and yet, escape that way was
+her one chance. Only a moment longer she waited, then gathering her few
+belongings--a pair of old shoes, the moccasins Old Tomah had given her, a
+skirt and jacket fashioned from Tim's cast-off garments, a fur cap,
+and soft felt hat--she thrust them into a soiled pillow-case and crept
+down the stairs.
+
+Once out, she looked about, listened, then darted up the hillside,
+straight for the tote road entrance. Here she paused, put on her
+moccasins, and looked back.
+
+The moon, now above the tree-tops, shone full upon Tim's Place,
+softening and silvering all its ugliness and all its squalor. Away to
+the left stood Tomah's hut, across the river, a shining path bright
+and rippled.
+
+In spite of the awful dread of her situation and the years of her hard,
+unpaid, and ofttimes cursed toil, a pang of regret now came to her. This
+was her home, wretched as it was. Here she had at least been fed and
+warmed in winters, and here Old Tomah had shown her kindness. Oh, if
+he were only in his hut now, that she might go and waken him softly,
+and beg him to take her in his canoe and speed down the river!
+
+But no! only her own desperate courage would now avail, and realizing
+that this look upon Tim's Place was the last one, she turned and fled
+down the path. Sixty miles of stony, bush-encumbered, brier-grown,
+seldom-travelled road lay ahead of her! Sixty miles of mingled swamp,
+morass, and rock-ribbed hill! Sixty miles through the sombre silence
+and persistent menace of a wilderness, peopled only by death-intending
+creatures, yellow-eyed and sharp-fanged!
+
+With only a sickening, soul-nauseating fate awaiting her at Tim's
+Place, and her sole escape this almost insane flight, she sped on. The
+faint, spectral rifts of moonlight through interlaced fir and spruce
+as often deceived as aided her; bending boughs whipped her, bushes
+and logs tripped her, sharp stones and pointed sticks bit her; she
+hurried over hillocks, wallowed through sloughs and dashed into tangles
+of briers, heedless of all except her one mad impulse to escape.
+
+Soon the ever present menace of a wilderness assailed her,--the yowl
+of a wildcat close at hand; in a swamp, the sharp bark of a wolf; on a
+hillside above her, the hoot of an owl; and when after two hours of this
+desperate flight had exhausted her and she was forced to halt, strange
+creeping, crawling things seemed all about.
+
+And now the erratic, fantastic belief of Old Tomah returned to her. With
+him the forest was peopled by a weird, uncanny race, sometimes visible
+and sometimes not--"spites," he called them, and they were the souls
+of both man and beast; sometimes good, sometimes evil, according as
+they had been in life, and all good or ill luck was due to their ghostly
+influences. They followed the hunter and trapper day and night, luring
+him into safety or danger, as they chose. They were everywhere, and in
+countless numbers, ready and sure to avenge all wrongs and reward all
+virtues. They had a Chieftain also, a great white spectre who came forth
+from the north in winter, and swept across the wilderness, spreading
+death and terror.
+
+Many times at Tim's Place, Chip had sat enthralled on winter evenings,
+while Old Tomah described these mystic genii. They were so real to him
+that he made them real to her, and now, alone in this vast wilderness,
+spectral in the faint moonlight and filled with countless terrors, they
+returned in full force. On every side she could see them, creeping,
+crawling, through the undergrowth or along the interlaced boughs above
+her. She could hear the faint hiss of their breath in the night wind,
+see the gleam of their little eyes in dark places--they were crossing
+the path in front of her, following close behind, and gathering about
+her from every direction.
+
+Beneath bright sunlight, a vast wilderness is at best a place peopled
+by many terrors. Its solitude seems uncanny, its shadow fearsome, its
+silence ominous. The creaking of limbs moving in the breeze sounds like
+the shriek of demons; the rush of winds becomes the hiss of serpents.
+Vague terrors assail one on every hand, and the rustle of each dry
+leaf, or breaking of every twig, becomes the footfall of a savage
+beast. We advance only with caution, oft halting to look and listen. A
+stern, defiant _Presence_ seems everywhere confronting us, and the weird
+mysticism of Nature bids us beware. By night this invisible Something
+becomes of monstrous proportions. Ghosts fashion themselves out of each
+rift of light, and every rock, thick-grown tree-top, or dark shadow
+becomes a goblin.
+
+To Chip, educated only in the fantastic lore of Old Tomah, these terrors
+now became insanity-breeding. She could not turn back--better death
+among the spites than slaving to the half-breed; and so, faint from
+awful fear, gasping from miles of running, she stumbled on. And now a
+little hope came, for the road bent down beside the river, and its low
+voice seemed a word of cheer. Into its cool depths she could at least
+plunge and die, as a last resort.
+
+Soon an opening showed ahead, and a bridge appeared. Here, for the first
+time, on this vantage point, she halted. How thrice blessed those knotted
+logs now seemed! She hugged and patted them in abject gratitude. She
+crawled to the edge and looked over into the dark, gurgling water. Up
+above lay a faint ripple of silver. Here, also, she could see the
+moon almost at the zenith, and a few flickering stars.
+
+A trifle of courage and renewal of hope now came. Her face and hands were
+scratched and bleeding, clothing torn, feet and legs black with mud. But
+these things she neither noticed nor felt--only that blessed bridge of
+logs that gave her safety, and the moon that bade her hope.
+
+Then she began to count her chances. This landmark told her that five
+miles of her desperate journey had been covered and she was still alive.
+She began to calculate. How soon would her escape be discovered, and
+who would pursue her? Only Pete, her purchaser, she felt sure, and
+there was a possible chance that he might return to his cabin before
+doing so. Or perhaps he might sleep late, and thus give her one or two
+hours more of time.
+
+[Illustration: All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old Tomah's
+fancy were rushing and leaping about.]
+
+And now she began to review the usual morning movements at Tim's
+Place--Tim the first one up, calling her, then going out to milking; the
+others, slower to arise, getting out and about their special duties.
+Pete, she knew, always slept in one of the two empty log cabins which
+were first built there. Her father slept in the other or in the barn.
+Neither would be called, she knew--it was get around in time for
+breakfast at Tim's Place or go hungry. And so she speculated on her
+chances of early pursuit. Here on this bridge she now meant to remain
+until the first sign of dawn, then push on again with all speed. She
+already had a five-mile start, she was weary, footsore, and still faint
+from the awful terrors of her flight; to go on meant to rush into the
+swarm of spites once more, and so she lay inert on the hard logs
+watching, listening, calculating.
+
+And now cheered by this trifling hope and lessening sense of danger,
+her past life came back. Her childhood in a far-off settlement; the
+home always in a turmoil from the strange men and women ever coming and
+going; the drinking, swearing, singing, at all hours of the night, her
+constant fear of them and wonder who they were and why they came. There
+were other features of this disturbed life: frequent quarrels between
+her father and mother; curses, tears, and sometimes blows, until at
+last after a night more hideous than any other her mother had taken her
+and fled. Then came a long journey to another village and a new life
+of peace and quietness. Here it was all so different--no red-shirted men
+to be afraid of, no loud-voiced women drinking with them. She became
+acquainted with other children of her own age, was sent to school and
+taken to church. Here, also, her mother began to smile once more, and
+look content. For two years, and the only ones Chip cared to recall,
+she had been a happy schoolgirl, and then came a sudden, tragic end to
+it all. Of that she never wished to think. It was all so horrible, and
+yet so mercifully brief.
+
+The one friend life held, her mother, had been brought home, wounded
+to death amid the whirring wheels of the mill where she worked; there
+were a few hours of agonized dread as her life ebbed away, a whisper or
+two of love and longing, and then the sad farewell made doubly awful by
+her father's frowning face and harsh voice. At its ending, and in spite
+of her fears and tears, she was now borne away by him. For days they
+journeyed deeper and deeper into a vast wilderness, to halt at last at
+Tim's Place.
+
+Like a dread dream it all came back now, as she lay there on this one
+flat spot of security--the bridge--and listened to the river's low
+murmur.
+
+The moon was lowering now. Already the shadow of the stream's bordering
+trees had reached her. First the stars vanished, then the moon faded
+into a dim patch of light, finally that disappeared, a chill breeze
+swept down from a neighboring mountain, and the trees began to moan
+and creak. Then a fiercer blast swept through the forest, the great
+firs and spruces bent and groaned and screamed. Surely the spites were
+gathering in force again, and this was their doing.
+
+Once more she began to hear them creeping, crawling, over the bridge.
+They spit, they snarled, they growled. The darkness grew more intense,
+no longer could the river's course be seen, but only a black chasm.
+
+All through her mad flight the wilderness had been ghostly and spectral
+in the moonlight; now it had become lost in inky blackness, yet alive
+with demoniac voices. All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old
+Tomah's fancy were rushing and leaping about. Now high up in the
+tree-tops, now deep in the hollows, they screamed and shrieked and moaned.
+
+And now, just as this fierce battle of sound and spectral shape was at
+its worst, and Chip, a hopeless, helpless mite of humanity, crouched low
+upon the bridge, suddenly a vicious growl reached her, and raising her
+head she saw at the bridge's end two gleaming eyes!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+Martin Frisbie and his nephew Raymond Stetson, or Ray, were cutting
+boughs and carrying them to two tents standing in the mouth of a
+bush-choked opening into the forest. In front of this Angie, Martin's
+wife, was placing tin dishes, knives, and forks, upon a low table of
+boards. Upon the bank of a broad, slow-running stream, two canoes were
+drawn out, and halfway between these and the table a camp-fire burnt.
+
+Here Levi, Martin's guide for many trips into this wilderness, was also
+occupied, intently watching two pails depending from bending wambecks,
+a coffee-pot hanging from another, and two frying-pans, whose sputtering
+contents gave forth an enticing odor.
+
+Twilight was just falling, the river murmured in low melody, and a few
+rods above a small rill entered it, adding a more musical tinkle.
+
+Soon Levi deftly swung one of the pails away from the flame with a
+hook-stick and speared a potato with a fork.
+
+"Supper ready," he called; and then as the rest seated themselves at
+the table, he advanced, carrying the pail of steaming potatoes on the
+hooked stick and the frying-pan in his other hand.
+
+The meal had scarce begun when a crackling in the undergrowth back of
+the tent was heard, and on the instant there emerged a girl. Her clothing
+was in shreds, her face and hands were black with mud, streaks of blood
+showed across cheek and chin, and her eyes were fierce and sunken.
+
+"For God's sake give me suthin' to eat," she said, looking from one
+to another of the astonished group. "I'm damn near starved--only a
+bite," she added, sinking to her knees and extending her hands. "I
+hain't eat nothin' but roots 'n' berries for three days."
+
+Angie was the first to recover. "Here," she said, hastily extending
+her plate, "take this."
+
+Without a word the starved creature grasped it and began eating as only a
+desperate, hungry animal would, while the group watched her.
+
+"Don't hurry so," exclaimed Martin, whose wits had now returned.
+"Here, take this cup of coffee."
+
+Soon the food vanished and then the girl arose. "Sit down again, my poor
+child," entreated Angie, who had observed the strange scene with moist
+eyes, "and tell us who you are and where you came from."
+
+"My name's Chip," answered the girl, bluntly, "an' I'm runnin'
+away from Tim's Place, 'cause dad sold me to Pete Bolduc."
+
+"Sold--you--to--Pete--Bolduc," exclaimed Angie, looking at her
+wide-eyed. "What do you mean?"
+
+"He did, sartin," answered the girl, laconically. "I heerd 'em
+makin' the bargain, 'n' I fetched three hundred dollars."
+
+Martin and his wife exchanged glances.
+
+"Well, and then what?" continued Angie.
+
+"Wal, then I waited a spell, till they'd turned in," explained
+the girl, "and then I lit out. I knowed 'twas sixty miles to the
+settlement, but 'twas moonlight 'n' I chanced it. I've had an awful
+time, though, the spites hev chased me all the way. I was jist makin' a
+nestle when I seed yer light, an' I crept through the brush 'n'
+peeked. I seen ye wa'n't nobody from Tim's Place, 'n' then I cum
+out. I guess you've saved my life. I was gittin' dizzy."
+
+It was a brief, blunt story whose directness bespoke truth; but it
+revealed such a pigsty state of morality at this Tim's Place that the
+little group of astonished listeners could scarce finish supper or
+cease watching this much-soiled girl.
+
+"And so your name is Chip," queried Angie at last. "Chip what?"
+
+"Chip McGuire," answered the waif, quickly; "only my real name ain't
+Chip, it's Vera; but they've allus called me Chip at Tim's Place."
+
+"And your father sold you to this man?"
+
+"He did, 'n' he's a damn bad man," replied Chip, readily. "He
+killed somebody once, an' he don't show up often. I hate him!"
+
+"You mustn't use swear words," returned Angie, "it's not nice."
+
+The girl looked abashed. "I guess you'd cuss if you'd been sold to
+such a nasty-looking man as Pete," she responded. "He chaws terbaccer
+'n' lets it drizzle on his chin, 'n' he hain't but one eye."
+
+Angie smiled, while Martin stared at the girl with increased
+astonishment. He knew who this McGuire was, and something of his
+history, and that Tim's Place was a hillside clearing far up the
+river, inhabited by an Irish family devoted to the raising of
+potatoes. He had halted there once, long enough to observe its somewhat
+slothful condition, and to buy pork and potatoes; but this tale was a
+revelation, and the girl herself a greater one.
+
+This oasis in the wilderness was fully forty miles above here, its only
+connection with civilization was a seldom-used log road which only an
+experienced woodsman could follow, and how this mere child had dared it,
+was a marvel.
+
+But there she was, squat on the ground and watching them with big black,
+pleading eyes. There was but one thing to do, to care for her now,
+as humanity insisted, and Angie made the first move. It was in the
+direction of cleanliness; for entering the tent, she soon appeared with
+some of her own extra clothing, soap, and towels, and bade the girl
+follow her up the river a few rods.
+
+The moon was shining clearly above the tree-tops, the camp-fire burned
+brightly, and Martin, Ray, and Levi were lounging near it when the two
+returned, and in one an astonishing transformation had taken place.
+
+Angie had gone away with a girl of ten in respect to clothing, her skirt
+evidently made of gunny cloth and reaching but little below her knees,
+and for a waist, what was once a man's red flannel shirt, and both in
+rags. Soiled with black mud, and bleeding, she was an object pitiable
+beyond words; she returned a young lady, almost, in stature, her face
+shining and rosy, and her eyes so tender with gratitude that they were
+pathetic.
+
+Another change had also come with cleanliness and clothing--a sudden
+bashfulness. It was some time ere she could be made to talk again,
+but finally that wore away and then her story came. What a tale it
+was--scarce credible.
+
+At first were growing terrors as she plunged deeper and deeper into
+the shadowy forest, the brush and logs that tripped her, the mud holes
+she wallowed through, the ever increasing horrors of this flight, the
+blood-chilling cries of night prowlers, the gathering darkness while
+she waited on the bridge, the awful moment when she saw two yellow eyes
+watching her, not twenty feet away, her screams of agonized fear, and
+then time that seemed eternity, while she expected the next moment to
+feel the fangs of a hungry panther.
+
+How blessed the first dawn of morning had seemed, how she ran on and
+on, until faint with hunger she halted to eat roots, leaves,
+berries--anything to sustain life! The river had been her one boon
+of hope and consolation, and even beyond the fear of wild beast had
+been the dread of pursuit and capture by this half-breed. When night
+came, she had crept into a thicket, covering herself with boughs;
+when daylight dawned, she had pushed on again, ever growing weaker and
+oft stumbling from faintness.
+
+Hope had almost vanished, her strength had quite left her, the last day
+had been a partial blank so far as knowledge of her progress went, but
+filled with eerie sights and sounds. From first to last the spites of
+Old Tomah had kept her company--by day she heard them, swifter-footed
+than she, in the undergrowth; by night they were all about, dodging
+behind trees, hopping from limb to limb, and sometimes snapping and
+snarling. The one supreme moment of joy, oft referred to, was when she
+had seen her rescuers' camp-fire, with human, and possibly friendly,
+faces about it.
+
+It was a fantastic, weird, almost spookish tale,--the spectres she had
+seen were so real to her that the telling made them seem almost so to
+the rest, and beyond that, the girl herself, so like a young witch, with
+her shadowy eyes and furtive glances, added to the illusion.
+
+But now came a diversion, for Levi freshened the fire, and at a nod
+from Angie, Ray brought forth his banjo. It was his one pet foible, and
+it went with him everywhere, and now, with time and place so in accord,
+he was glad to exhibit his talent. He was not an expert,--a few jigs and
+plantation melodies composed his repertory,--but with the moonlight
+glinting through the spruce boughs, the river murmuring near, somehow one
+could not fail to catch the quaint humor of "Old Uncle Ned," "Jim
+Crack Corn," and the like, and see the two dusky lovers as they floated
+down the "Tombigbee River," and feel the pathos of "Nellie Grey"
+and "Old Kentucky Home."
+
+Ray sang fairly well and in sympathy with each theme. To Angie and the
+rest it was but ordinary; but to this waif, who never before had heard
+a banjo or a darky song, it was marvellous. Her face lit up with keen
+interest, her eyes grew misty at times, and once two tears stole down
+her cheeks.
+
+For an hour Ray was the centre of interest, and then Angie arose.
+
+"Come, Chip," she said pleasantly, "it's time to go to bed, and you
+are to share my tent."
+
+"I'd rather not," the girl replied bluntly. "I ain't fit. I kin jist
+ez well curl 'longside o' the fire."
+
+But Angie insisted and the girl followed her into the tent.
+
+Here occurred another incident that must be related. Angie, always
+devout, and somewhat puritanical, was one who never forgot her nightly
+prayer, and now, when ready for slumber, she knelt on the bed of fir
+twigs, and by the light of one small candle offered her usual petition,
+while Chip watched her with wide and wondering eyes. As might be
+expected, that waif was mentioned, and with deep feeling.
+
+"Do ye s'pose God heard ye?" she queried with evident candor, when
+Angie ceased.
+
+"Why, certainly," came the earnest answer; "God hears all prayers."
+
+"And do the spites hear 'em?"
+
+"There are no such creatures as 'spites,'" answered Angie,
+severely; "you only imagine them, and what this Indian has told you is
+superstition."
+
+"But I've seen 'em, hundreds on 'em, big and little," returned the
+girl, stoutly.
+
+Angie looked at her with pity.
+
+"Put that notion out of your head, once for all," she said, almost
+sternly. "It is only a delusion, and no doubt told to scare you."
+
+And poor Chip, conscious that perhaps she had sinned in speech, said no
+more.
+
+For a long time Angie lay sleepless upon her fragrant bed, recalling the
+waif's strange story and trying to grasp the depth and breadth of her
+life at Tim's Place; also to surmise, if possible, how serious a taint
+of evil she had inherited. That her father was vile beyond compare seemed
+positive; that her mother might have been scarce better was probable.
+No mention, thus far, had been made of her; and so Angie reflected
+upon this pitiful child's ancestry and what manner of heritage she had
+been blessed or cursed with. Some of her attributes awoke Angie's
+admiration. She had shown utter abhorrence of this brutal sale of
+herself, a marvellous courage in endeavoring to escape it. She seemed
+grateful for what had been done for her, and a partial realization of
+her own unfitness for association with refined people. Her speech was no
+worse than might be expected from her life at Tim's Place. Doubtless,
+she was unable to read or write. And so Angie lay, considering all the
+pros and cons of the situation and of this girl's life.
+
+There was also another side to it all, the humane one. They were on
+their way out of the wilderness, for a business visit to the nearest
+settlement, intending to return to the woods in a few days--and what
+was to be done with this child of misfortune?
+
+Most assuredly they must protect her for the present. But was there any
+one to whom she could be turned over and cared for? It seemed possible
+this brutal buyer of her would follow her out of the woods, to abduct her
+if found, and then the moral side of this episode with all its abominable
+possibilities occurred to Angie, who was, above all, unselfish and
+noble-hearted. Vice, crime, and immorality were horrible to her.
+
+Here was a self-evident duty thrusting itself upon her, and how to meet
+it with justice to herself, her husband, and her own conscience, was a
+problem. Thus dwelling upon this complex situation, she fell asleep.
+
+The first faint light of morning was stealing into the tent when Angie
+felt her companion stir. She had, exhausted as she doubtless was, fallen
+asleep almost the moment she lay down; but now she was evidently awake.
+
+Curious to note what she would do, Angie remained with closed eyes and
+motionless. From the corner of the tent where she had curled up the night
+before, the girl now cautiously crept toward the elder woman. Inch by
+inch, upon the bed of boughs, she moved nearer, until Angie, watching
+with half-open eyes, saw her head lowered, and felt two soft warm lips
+touch her hand.
+
+It was a trifle. It was no more than the act of a cat who rubs herself
+against her mistress or a dog who licks his master's hand, and yet it
+settled once for all that waif's fate and Angie's indecision.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+ Women are like grasshoppers--ye kin never tell which
+ way they're goin' to jump.--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Levi was starting a fire, Ray washing potatoes, and Martin, in his
+shirt-sleeves, using a towel vigorously near the canoes, when Angie and
+Chip emerged that morning; and now while breakfast is under way, a
+moment may be seized to explain who these people were and their mission
+in this wilderness.
+
+Many years before, in a distant village called Greenvale, two brothers,
+David and Amzi Curtis, had quarrelled over an unfortunate division of
+inherited land. The outcome was that Amzi, somewhat misanthropic over
+the death of his wife, and of peculiar make-up, deserted his home and
+little daughter Angeline, and vanished. For many years no one knew of
+his whereabouts, and he was given up as dead.
+
+In the meantime his child, cared for by a kindly woman known as Aunt
+Comfort, had grown to womanhood. About this time a boyhood sweetheart of
+Angeline's, named Martin Frisbie, who had been gathering wealth in a
+distant city, invited a former schoolmate, now the village doctor in
+Greenvale, to join him on an outing trip into the wilderness.
+
+Here something of the history of a notorious outlaw named McGuire
+became known to Martin, and more important than that, a queer old
+hermit was discovered, dwelling in solitude on the shore of a small
+lake. Who he was, and why this strange manner of life, Martin could not
+learn, and not until later, when he returned to Greenvale to woo his
+former sweetheart once more, did he even guess. Here, however, from a
+description furnished by a village nondescript,--a sort of Natty Bumpo
+and philosopher combined, known as Old Cy Walker, who had been Martin's
+youthful companion,--he was led to believe that the queer hermit and
+the long-missing Amzi were one and the same.
+
+Another trip into this wilderness with Old Cy, taken to identify the
+hermit, resulted in proving the correctness of the surmise. Then Martin
+set about making this misanthropic recluse more comfortable in all ways
+possible; and then, leaving Old Cy to keep him company, he returned to
+Greenvale and Angie.
+
+A marriage was the outcome of his return to his native village, and then,
+with his nephew, Ray, and long-tried guide, Levi, as helpers on this
+unique wedding trip, the hermit was visited.
+
+It was hoped that meeting his child once more would result in inducing
+him to abandon his wildwood existence and to return to civilization;
+and it did--partially. He seemed happy to meet his daughter again,
+consented to return with them when ready, and after a couple of weeks'
+sojourn here, the canoes were packed and all set out for civilization and
+Greenvale once more.
+
+But "home, sweet home," albeit it was, as in this case, a lonely
+log cabin in a vast wilderness, proved stronger than parental love or
+aught else; and sometime during first night's camp on the way out,
+this strange recluse stole away in his canoe and returned.
+
+"It's natur," Old Cy observed when morning came, "an' home is the
+hardest spot in the world to fergit. Amzi's lived in that old shack all
+'lone for twenty years. He's got wonted to it like a dog to his kennel,
+an' all the powers o' the univarse can't break up the feelin'."
+
+It seemed an indisputable, if disappointing, fact, and Martin led his
+party back to the hermit's home once more.
+
+Another plan was now considered by Martin--to buy the township, or at
+least a large tract enclosing this lake, build a more commodious log
+cabin for the use of himself and his wife, and spend a portion of each
+summer there. There were several reasons other than those of affection
+for this decision.
+
+This lake, perhaps half a mile in diameter, teemed with trout. The low
+mountains enclosing it were thickly covered with fine spruce and fir,
+groves of pine with some beech and birch grew in the valleys; deer,
+moose, and feathered game abounded here, and best of all, no vandal
+lumbermen ever encroached upon this region.
+
+It was, all considered, a veritable sportsman's paradise. Most likely
+a few thousand dollars would purchase it, and so, for these collective
+reasons, Martin decided to buy it.
+
+Old Cy was left to keep the hermit company; Martin, his wife, and Ray,
+with Levi, started for civilization to obtain needed supplies, and had
+been four days upon the way when this much-abused waif appeared on
+the scene. The party were journeying in two canoes, one manned by Ray,
+who had already learned to wield a paddle, which carried the tents and
+luggage; while the other was occupied by Martin, his wife, and Levi. The
+only available seat for the new arrival was in Ray's canoe, and when
+breakfast was disposed of and the voyagers ready to start, she was given
+a place therein.
+
+The river at this point was broad and of slow current, only two days'
+journey was needful to reach the settlement, and no cause for worry
+appeared--but Levi felt otherwise.
+
+"You'd best hug the futher shore," he observed to Ray quietly when
+the boy pushed off, "an' don't git out o' sight o' us." "I ain't
+sartin 'bout the outcome o' this matter," he said to Martin later. "I
+know that half-breed, Bolduc, and he's a bad 'un. From the gal's
+story he paid big money fer her. He don't know the meanin' o' law,
+and if he follers down the tote road, as I callate he will, 'n' ketches
+sight o' her, the first we'll know on't 'll be the crack o' a rifle.
+The wonder to me is he didn't ketch her 'fore she got to us. He could
+track her faster'n she could run. I don't want to 'larm you folks,
+but I shan't feel easy till we're out o' the woods."
+
+It wasn't reassuring.
+
+But no thought of this came to Ray, at least, and these two young
+people, yielding to the magic of the morning, the rippled river that
+bore them onward, the birds singing along the fir-clad banks, and all the
+exhilaration of the wilderness, soon reached the care-free converse
+of youthful friends.
+
+"I never had nothin' but work 'n' cussin'," Chip responded, when
+Ray asked if she never had any time she could call her own. "Tim
+thinked I couldn't get tired, I guess. He'd roust me up fust of all
+'n' larrup me if he caught me shirkin'. Once I had a little posey
+bed back o' the pig-pen. I fixed it after dark an' mornin's when I
+ketched the chance. He ketched me thar one mornin' a-weedin' it
+'n' knocked me sprawlin' an' then stomped all over the posies.
+That night I went out into the woods 'n' begged the spites to git him
+killed somehow. 'Nother time I forgot to put up the bars, an' the cows
+got into the taters. That night he tied me to a stump clus to the bars,
+an' left me thar all night. I used to be more skeered o' my dad 'n
+I was o' Tim, tho'. He'd look at me like he hated me, an' say,
+'Shut up,' if I said a word, an' I 'most believed he'd kill me,
+just fer nothin'. Once he said he'd take me out into the woods at
+night 'n' bait a bear trap with me if he heerd I didn't mind Tim. I
+told Old Tomah that, an' he said if he did, he'd shoot him; but Old
+Tomah wasn't round only winters. I hated dad so I'd 'a' shot him
+myself, I guess, if I cud 'a' got hold o' a gun when he wa'n't
+watchin'."
+
+"It's awful to have to feel that way toward your own father,"
+interrupted Ray, "for he was your father."
+
+"I s'pose 'twas," admitted Chip, candidly, "but I never felt
+much different. I've seen him slap mother when she was on her knees
+a-bawlin', an' the way he would cuss her was awful."
+
+"But you had some friendship from this old Indian," queried Ray, who
+began to realize what a pitiful life the girl had led; "he was good to
+you, wasn't he?"
+
+"He was, sartin," returned Chip, eagerly; "he used to tell me the
+spites 'ud fix dad 'fore long, so he'd never show up agin, 'n'
+when I got big 'nuff he'd sneak me off some night 'n' take me to
+the settlement, whar I could arn a livin'. Old Tomah was the only
+one who cared a cuss fer me. I used to bawl when he went away every
+spring, an' beg him to take me 'long 'n' help him camp 'n' cook.
+I'd 'a' done 'most anything fer Old Tomah. I didn't mind havin'
+to work all the time fer Tim. I didn't mind wearin' clothes made
+out o' old duds 'n' bein' cussed fer not workin' hard 'nuff.
+What I did mind was not havin' nobody who cared whether I lived or
+died, or said a good word to me. Sometimes I got so lonesome, I used
+to go out in the woods nights when 'twas moonlight 'n' beg the spites
+to help me. I used to think mother might be one on 'em 'n' she'd
+keer fer me. I think she was, an' 'twas her as kept me goin' till I
+found you folks's camp. I got awful skeered them nights I was runnin'
+away, an' when 'twas so dark I couldn't see no more, an' I heerd
+wildcats yowlin', I'd git on my knees 'n' beg mother to keep 'em
+away. I think she did, an' allus shall."
+
+Much more in connection with the wild, harsh life Chip had led for
+eight years was now told by her. Old Tomah's superstition and belief
+in hobgoblins were enlarged upon. Life at Tim's Place, with all its
+filth, brutality, and nearly animal existence, was described in full;
+for Chip's tongue, once loosened, ran on and on, while Ray, spellbound
+by this description, was scarce conscious he was wielding a paddle.
+Never before had he heard such a tale, so unusual and so pathetic.
+Naturally of chivalrous and manly nature, it appealed to him as naught
+else could. Then the girl herself, with her big, pleading eyes, her
+queer belief in those woodsy, spectral forms she called spites, and her
+free and easy confidence in him, and his sympathy also, surprised Ray.
+Her speech was coarse and crude--the vernacular of Tim's Place. Now and
+then a profane word crept in; yet it was absolute truth, and forceful
+from its very simplicity.
+
+But another influence, more potent than her wrongs, was now appealing
+to Chip--her sense of joy at her rescue, and with it a positive faith
+that the spites had been the means of her escape.
+
+"I know they did it," she said time and again, "an' I know mother was
+one on 'em. I wished I cud do suthin' to show 'em how thankful I am
+'n' how happy I am now." And Ray, astonished that so keen-witted and
+courageous a girl should have such a fantastic belief, made no comment.
+
+A more serious subject was under discussion in the other canoe, meantime,
+as to the future disposition of Chip herself.
+
+"I feel it my duty to take care of her," Angie said, after relating
+her conversation with Chip and that morning's incident. "She is a
+homeless, outcast waif, needing education and everything else to
+Christianize her. We must bring her to the settlement, but to turn
+her adrift might mean leaving her to a life of vice, even if she
+escapes her brutal father and this worse half-breed. Then, again, I am
+not sure that her parentage will bear inspection. She has told me
+something about her earlier life, and about her mother, who evidently
+loved her. One course only seems plain to me,--to take care of and
+educate this unfortunate."
+
+"I am willing, my dear," responded Martin, who, like all new husbands,
+was ready to concede anything, "only I suggest that you go a little
+slow. You can't tell yet what this girl will develop into. She has had
+the worst possible parentage, without doubt. Her life at Tim's Place,
+and contact with lumbermen or worse, has been no benefit. She is grossly
+ignorant, and may be ill-tempered, and once given to understand that
+you have practically adopted her, you can't--or won't--have the heart
+to turn her off. Now we are to return to the lake and remain a month, as
+you know, and in the meantime, what will you do with this girl?"
+
+This was reducing Angie's philanthropic impulses to a focus, as it were,
+and it set her thinking. Something more of this discussion followed,
+and finally Angie announced her decision.
+
+"We must take the girl back with us," she said, "and begin her
+reformation at the camp. If she shows any aptitude and willingness to
+obey, we will take her to Greenvale. If not, you must arrange to get
+her into some institution."
+
+"And suppose the half-breed finds where she is, what then?" inquired
+Martin.
+
+"What do you say, Levi?" he added, turning to his guide, "you know
+this fellow; what will he be apt to do?"
+
+"I s'pose you know what a panther'll do, robbed of her cub," Levi
+answered, "an' how a bull moose acts in runnin' time, mebbe. Wal,
+this Pete is worse'n both on 'em biled into one, I callate. If you're
+goin' ter take the gal back, you've got to keep her shady, or some day
+you'll find her missin'. Besides, Pete, ez I told ye, don't know the
+meanin' o' law and is handy with a gun."
+
+But Martin did not quite share Levi's fears, and so Angie's decision
+was agreed to. Levi's advice to "keep shady" was accepted, however,
+and all through that summer's somewhat thrilling experiences it was the
+rule of conduct.
+
+When noon came, Levi led the way into a lagoon; in a secluded spot at its
+head dinner was cooked, and when the sun was well down and a tributary
+stream was reached, he turned into it, and halted not for the night camp
+until a full half-mile separated them from the river.
+
+A certain vague sense of impending danger began to impress both Martin
+and his wife, and the woods seemed to hold a one-eyed, malicious villain
+who might appear at any moment. A danger which we know actually exists,
+we can avoid or meet squarely; but one merely imaginary becomes irksome
+and really more annoying.
+
+No hint of this was dropped by the three older ones, and when the tents
+were pitched, long before twilight, and Martin and Ray had captured a
+goodly string of trout and the camp-fire was alight, this wildwood life
+seemed absolutely perfect, to the young folks at least.
+
+Chip also showed one of the best features of her training. She wanted to
+help everybody and do everything, and Levi, who always did the cooking,
+was importuned to let her help. Strong as a young Amazon, she fetched
+and carried like a man, and the one thing that gladdened her most was
+permission to work.
+
+When supper was over came the lounging beside the cheerful fire, and as
+the shadows thickened, forth came Ray's banjo once more, and with it the
+light of admiration in Chip's eyes.
+
+All that day he had been her charming companion; his open, manly face,
+his bright brown eyes, had been ever before her. His well-bred ways, so
+unlike all the men at Tim's Place, had impressed her as those of a youth
+of eighteen will a maid of sixteen; and now, with his voice appealing
+to the best in her, he seemed like Pan of old, once more wooing a nymph
+with his pipes.
+
+No knowledge of this was hers, no consciousness of why she was happy came
+to her. She knew what spites were; but the god Pan and Apollo with his
+harp were unknown forms.
+
+Neither did she realize that born in her soul that day, on the broad
+shining river, was a magic impulse woven out of heart throbs, and
+destined to mete out to her more sorrow than all else in her life
+combined.
+
+She had entered the wondrous vale of love whose paths are flower-strewn,
+whose shores are rippled with laughter, and whose borders, alas! are ever
+hid in the midst of tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+ "The wilderness allus seems full o' spectres 'n' creepin'
+ crawlin' panthers. Sometimes I think it's God, an' then
+ agin, the devil."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Tim's Place, this refuge in the wilderness, cleared and colonized by
+Tim Connor, was neither better nor worse than such pioneer openings in
+Nature's domain are apt to be. Tim, a hardy Irishman of sod-hovel and
+potato-diet ancestors, had been blacksmith for a lumber camp on this
+broad river and at its junction with a tributary called the Fox Hole
+years before Chip was born.
+
+When all the adjacent lumber was cut and sent down this river, the camp
+was abandoned, and then Tim saw his opening. With his precious winter's
+wages he purchased a large tract of this now worthless land, induced a
+robust Bridget, his brother Mike, and his consort to join fortunes with
+him, brought in cows, horses, pigs, and poultry, and began farming with
+the lumber camp as domicile.
+
+Another log cabin was soon added, the first crop of potatoes sold
+readily to other lumbermen farther in the wilderness, the pigs in a
+sty adjacent to his own throve, the poultry multiplied, children came,
+and the red-shirted men coming into the wilderness or going out found
+Tim's Place convenient.
+
+With this added business came an enlargement in Tim's ideas, the
+outcome of which was a framed house containing a kitchen and dining room
+and half a dozen others of closet-like proportions, furnished with
+box-on-legs beds. It was not a pretentious hostelry. Paint, shutters,
+and carpets were absent, benches served for chairs, the only mirror in
+it was eight by twelve inches, and used in common by Bridget and Mary.
+The toilet conveniences consisted of a wash-basin in the kitchen sink and
+a "last year's" towel, used semi-occasionally. A long table bare of
+cloth and set with tinware served in the dining room, warmed in winter by
+a round sheet-iron stove; above it usually hung an array of socks and
+mittens, and a capacious cook stove half filled the kitchen. It was the
+crudest possible backwoods abode, and yet compared to the log cabin
+first occupied by Tim, it was a palace, and he was proud of it.
+
+In autumn swarms of lumbermen halted there, content to sleep on the floor
+if need be. In spring they came again, log-driving down stream; later
+a few sportsmen occasionally tried it, and all fared alike.
+
+There was no sentiment about Tim. If the citified fishermen objected to
+what they found, "Be gob, you kin kape away," he readily told them. A
+quarter for each meal, or a night's lodging, was the price, whether a
+bed or the floor was provided, and from early spring until frost came,
+all the occupants went barefoot.
+
+When snow had made the sixty miles of log road to the nearest settlement
+passable, Tim invariably journeyed hither with horse and bob-sled for
+clothing and supplies.
+
+No knowledge or news from the world reached here, unless brought by
+chance visitors. Sundays were an unknown factor, the work of clearing
+land and potato-raising became a continuous performance from spring
+until autumn; and the change of seasons, the rise and fall of the river,
+were the only measure of time.
+
+An addition to Tim's Place, other than babies and pigs, came one fall in
+an old Indian who, by ample presents of game, soon won Tim's good-will
+and help in the erection of a log wigwam; but this relic of a vanishing
+race--reckoned by Tim as partially insane--remained there only winters,
+and when spring returned, disappeared into the wilderness.
+
+There were also two other occasional visitors both meriting description.
+First, a beetle-browed, keen-eyed, red-haired man garbed as a hunter,
+whose speech disclosed something of the Scotch dialect, and who,
+presenting Tim with a deer and two bottles of whiskey as a peace-offering
+on his first arrival, soon obtained a welcome. He told a plausible
+tale of having been pursued for years by enemies seeking his life;
+how he had been robbed and driven away from the settlements; and how
+two of these enemies had even followed him into the woods. He had
+been shot at by them, had killed one in self-defence, a price had been
+set upon his capture, dead or alive, and, all in all, he was a sorely
+abused man.
+
+How much of this lurid and fantastic tale Tim believed, is not pertinent
+to this narrative. The stranger, calling himself McGuire, was evidently
+a good fellow, since he brought good whiskey, and Tim made him welcome.
+
+The facts as to McGuire, however, were somewhat at variance with his
+assertions. He had originally been a dive-keeper in a focal city for
+the lumbering interests of this wilderness, had entertained swarms of
+log-drivers just paid off and anxious to spend money, and when the law
+interfered, he retreated to a smaller town.
+
+In the interval, strange to say, his moral nature--or rather
+immoral--suffered a brief relapse, during which he persuaded an
+excellent if confiding young woman to share his name and infamy.
+
+His second business venture came to grief, however, and his wife deserted
+him and met with a fatal accident a few years after. In the meantime
+he had kept busy, exercising his peculiar talents and tastes in an
+individual manner, and evading officers, and his ways of money-getting
+were peculiar and diverse.
+
+The Chinese Exclusion Act had just become operative, and the admission
+of Celestials into the land of the free, and of good wages, became a
+valuable matter. McGuire conceived the brilliant, if grewsome, idea of
+passing "Chinks" over the border line concealed in coffins. It worked
+admirably, and with accomplices on both sides to obtain certificates
+and permits, and take charge of the "corpses," a few dozen almond-eyed
+immigrants at two hundred dollars each obtained admission.
+
+In time, this budding industry met an official quietus, and McGuire,
+with several warrants out against him, took to the woods. He still
+continued business, however, in various ways. He smuggled liquor over
+the border by canoe loads, hiding it at convenient points, to exchange
+for log-drivers' wages. He killed game out of season, and dynamited
+trout and salmon on spawning beds for the same purpose; and, handy
+with cards, did not disdain their use in lumbering camps.
+
+In all and through all his various ways of money-getting, one purpose
+had governed him--that of money-saving. Trusting no one, as he had reason
+to feel no one trusted him, he continually emulated the squirrels and
+hid his savings in the woods. A trapper and hunter by instinct, as well
+as thief, dive-keeper, smuggler, poacher, and gambler, he had in his
+wanderings discovered a cave in a slate ledge upon the shores of a small
+lake far into the wilderness. It was while trapping here that he found
+this by the aid of a fox which, while dragging a trap, became caught
+and held in a crevasse while attempting to enter it.
+
+The fox thus secured, McGuire made further investigation, and by removing
+a loose slab of slate, he was enabled to enter a roomy cavern, or rather
+two small ones partially separated by slate walls. A little light
+entered the larger one, through a seam crossing it lengthwise. They were
+free from moisture at this time--early autumn--and so secluded was the
+spot that McGuire decided at once to use this place as a hiding-spot
+for his money. The entrance could be kept concealed, its location served
+his purpose, and, fox-like himself, he decided to occupy what he
+would never have found without the aid of a fox, believing no one
+else would find it. It could also be used as a domicile for himself as
+well. A fireplace of slate could be built in it, an escape for smoke
+might be formed through the crack, if enlarged, and so this cave's
+possibilities increased.
+
+There were still several other advantages. This lake was surrounded by
+precipitous mountains; no lumbermen, even, were likely to operate there;
+the stream flowing out of it soon crossed the border line, finding escape
+into the St. Lawrence valley at a point some twenty miles distant; a
+short carry enabled him to reach the Fox Hole which flowed by Tim's
+Place, and so this served as an excellent whip road in case of pursuit.
+
+His transient asylum at Tim's Place also served as a vantage point in
+another way.
+
+Here all who entered this portion of the wilderness invariably
+halted,--officers and wardens as well,--and as by this time McGuire
+had become an outlaw murderer, with a reward offered for his capture,
+this outpost was of double advantage.
+
+Caution was a strong point in his make-up, yet he was daring as well.
+He still visited the settlements occasionally, to sell furs and obtain
+ammunition and whiskey; and when he, as ill luck would have it, happened
+there at the time his child was left motherless, some malign impulse led
+him to take her to Tim's Place and leave her in servitude there.
+
+There was also another chance caller at this outpost--a half-breed
+trapper and hunter named Bolduc, who had established himself in a
+lone cabin on the Fox Hole, some ten miles up from Tim's Place. He
+was a repulsive minor edition of McGuire. A wildcat, with laudable
+intentions, had essayed putting an end to his career, and succeeded to
+the extent of one eye and some blood. He had been the accomplice and
+partner of McGuire in many a whiskey-smuggling trip. He also dealt in
+this pernicious, but valuable, fluid, was a poacher ever ready to
+pot-hunt for a lumbering camp in winter, or find a moose yard on
+snow-shoes, after slaughtering the helpless inmates of which, he
+would sell them to the busy wood-choppers.
+
+He, too, could be classed as brigand of the wilderness, and while no
+warrants or charges against him were rife, he felt it wise to avoid
+meeting minions of the law. Tim's Place was a convenient point to
+obtain information as to location of new lumber camps or possible visits
+of officers. An occasional bottle of whiskey secured Tim's favor.
+The evenings and meals there impressed Pete with the advantages of
+owning a woman's services, and as Chip matured in domestic and other
+possibilities, a desire to possess her began to increase his visits.
+
+His wooing met no response, however, and when persisted in always awoke
+on her part the same instinct once displayed toward him by a wildcat.
+
+Then recourse to her father's greed for money was taken, with results as
+described.
+
+The only thing that saved poor Chip from pursuit and capture, however,
+was his wholesome fear of her finger-nails, and the belief that it was
+best to let her father earn the balance of her price and fetch her, as
+agreed. Acting upon this theory, Pete had departed from Tim's Place at
+dawn, to await her arrival at his cabin, quite oblivious of the fact that
+his bird had flown.
+
+All that long day he waited in great expectancy. Toward evening he
+returned to Tim's Place to learn that Chip had not been seen since
+the previous night; that her father had also vanished without comment.
+That he was a party to this trick and deception, and, after securing his
+three hundred dollars, had taken her away, was Pete's conclusion,
+and he vowed a murderous revenge. He returned to his cabin, little
+realizing that twenty miles away poor Chip, faint with hunger and the
+terror of a vast wilderness, was fighting her way through bush, bramble,
+and swamp in a mad attempt to escape.
+
+Neither did Tim, while regretting the loss of his slave, know or care
+that one of his occasional visitors was now a mortal enemy of the other,
+and that a tragedy, dark and grewsome, would be its outcome.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+ "The size o' a toad is allus reg'lated by the size o' the
+ puddle."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+A week was spent by Martin and his party at the settlement, during which
+he acquired the title to township forty-four, range ten, which included
+the little lake near the hermit's hut, and made a foursquare-mile tract
+about it.
+
+Chip, thanks to Angie, secured a simple outfit of apparel and--surprising
+fact--evinced excellent taste in its selection, thereby proving that
+eight years of isolation and a gunny-sack and red-shirt garb had not
+obliterated the deepest instinct of woman.
+
+To Levi, Martin's woodwise helper, was left the selection of fittings
+for the new camp. A couple of husky Canucks were engaged to bring them in
+in a bateau, and then the party started on its return.
+
+Only one incident of importance occurred during the wait at this
+village known as Grindstone. Angie and Chip had just left the only
+store there, in front of which a group of log-drivers had congregated,
+when Angie, glancing back, saw that one of the group was following
+them. She quickened her pace, and so did he, until just as they turned
+into a side street, he passed them, halted, and turned about.
+
+"Wal, I'm damned if 'tain't Chip, an' dressed like a leddy," he
+exclaimed, as they drew near.
+
+"Hullo, Chip," he added, as they passed, "when did you strike luck?"
+
+Chip made no response and he muttered again, "Wal, I'm damned, jest
+like a leddy!"
+
+It was annoying, especially to Angie, and neither of the two realized
+how soon this blunt log-driver's discovery would reach Tim's Place.
+
+And now, leaving the bateau to follow, the party started once more on
+their journey into the wilderness. No sight or sign of pursuit from the
+half-breed had been thus far observed. A few idle lumbermen in the
+village--the only visible connection between the vast forest and a
+busy world--were little thought of, as their canoes crept slowly up
+the narrowing river and gave no hint of interference from this low
+brute to any one except Levi.
+
+He, however, seldom speaking, but ever acting, kept watch and ward
+continually. At every bend of the stream his eyes were alert to catch
+the first sight of a down-coming canoe in time to conceal Chip, as
+he decided must be done. When night camps were made, a site at the
+head of the lagoon or up some tributary stream was selected, and while
+not even hinting his reason for this, he felt it wise. As they drew
+near to Tim's Place, it began to occur to Martin that Chip's presence
+had best be concealed until that point was passed. He also desired
+to learn the situation there. He had always halted at this clearing in
+all his up-river journeys, so far, usually to buy pork and potatoes, and
+he now intended to do so again. He also felt it imperative to conceal
+Chip in Ray's canoe, before they reached Tim's Place, and let Ray
+paddle slowly on while the halt was made. But Levi dissented.
+
+"'Tain't best," he said, "to let Tim know there's two canoes of
+us and one not stoppin'. It'll make him s'picious o' suthin, 'n'
+what he 'spects, Pete'll find out. I callate we'd best pass thar in
+the night, leave the wimmen above, 'n' you 'n' I go back 'n' git
+what we want."
+
+"But what about the Canucks following us with the bateau?" returned
+Martin. "They'll tell who is with us, won't they?"
+
+"They didn't see us start," answered Levi, "'n' can't swear wimmen
+came. We'll say we're alone, 'n' bein' so'll make it plausible,
+'n' you might say we're goin' to build a camp 'n' 'nother season
+fetch our wimmen in."
+
+"But how about our men, on the return trip, after finding we have women
+at the camp?" rejoined Martin. "They will be sure to tell all they know
+on the way back."
+
+"We've got to keep the wimmen shady, an' fool 'em," answered Levi.
+And so his plan was adopted.
+
+It was in the early hours of morning when the two canoes crept
+noiselessly past Tim's Place. The stars barely outlined the river's
+course, the frame dwelling, log cabin, and stump-dotted slope back of
+them. All the untidiness existent about this dwelling was hid in
+darkness, and only the faint sounds and odors betrayed these conditions.
+But every eye and ear in the two canoes was alert, paddles were dipped
+without sound, and Chip's heart was beating so loudly that it seemed
+to her Tim and all his family must be awakened. Her recent escape
+from this spot and all the reasons forcing it, the fear that both her
+father and the half-breed might even now be there, added dread; and
+not until a bend hid even the shadowy view of this plague spot did she
+breathe easier.
+
+"I was nigh skeered to death," she whispered to Ray when safety seemed
+assured, "an' if ever Pete finds I'm up whar the folks is goin',
+I'm a goner."
+
+"Oh, we'll take care of you," returned that boy, with the boundless
+confidence of youth; "my uncle can shoot as well as any one, and then
+Old Cy is up at the camp, and he's a wonder with a rifle. Why, I've
+seen him hit a crow a half-mile off!"
+
+Smoke was ascending from the chimney, and the rising sun was just visible
+when Martin and Levi returned to Tim's. Mike was out in an enclosure,
+milking; Tim was back of the house, preparing the pigs' breakfast. The
+pigs were squealing, and a group of unwashed children were watching
+operations, when Martin appeared. A pleasant "Good morning" from him
+and a gruff one from Tim was the introduction, and then that stolid
+pioneer started for the sty. Not even the unusual event of a caller
+could hinder him from the one duty he most enjoyed,--the care of his
+beloved swine.
+
+"You have some nice thrifty pigs," began Martin, when the pen was
+reached, desiring to placate Tim.
+
+"They are thot," he returned.
+
+"My guide and I are on our way into the woods, to build a camp,"
+continued Martin, anxious to have his errand over with, "and we halted
+to buy a few potatoes of you and some pork. I have a couple of men
+following with a bateau," he continued, after pausing for a reply
+which did not come; "they will be along in a day or two with most of
+our supplies; but I felt sure I could get some extra good pork of you
+and some choice potatoes."
+
+"You kin thot same," replied Tim, his demeanor obviously softening
+under this flattery, and so business relations were established.
+
+Martin had intended asking some cautious question regarding Chip or her
+father; but Tim's surly face, his unresponsive manner, and a mistrust
+of its wisdom prevented. He was blunt of speech, almost to the verge of
+insolence, and the arrival of Martin with all his polite words evoked
+not a vestige of welcome; and yet back of those keen gray eyes of his a
+deal of cunning might lurk, thought Martin.
+
+Two slovenly women peered out of back door and window while the interview
+was in progress. Mike came and looked on in silence; two of the
+oldest children were down by the canoe where Levi waited; the rest,
+open-eyed and astonished, seemed likely to be trodden on by some one
+each moment. When the stores were secured and paid for, and Martin
+had pushed off with Levi, he realized something of the life Chip must
+have led there.
+
+He had intended not only to obtain potatoes, but some information of
+value. He obtained the goods, paying a thrifty price, also a good bit
+of cold shoulder, and that was all.
+
+But Levi, shrewd woodsman that he was, fared better.
+
+"I larned Chip's gone off with old McGuire," he asserted with a quiet
+smile when they were well away, "an' that Pete's swearin' murder agin
+him."
+
+"And how?" responded Martin, in astonishment. "I felt that silence
+was golden with that surly chap, and didn't ask a question."
+
+"I'm glad," rejoined Levi. "I wanted to tell you not to, and I've
+larned all we want. Children are easy to pump, an' I did it 'thout
+wakin' a hint o' 'spicion. Tim's folks all believe Chip's gone
+with her dad. Pete thinks so, an' is watchin' for him with a gun, I
+'spect, an' if so, the sooner they meet, the better."
+
+It was gratifying news to Martin, and when the other canoe was reached,
+the two again pushed on, with Martin, at least, feeling that the ways
+of Fate might prove acceptable.
+
+Three days more were consumed in reaching the lake now owned by him, for
+the river was low, carries had to be made around two rapids, and when at
+last the sequestered, forest-bordered sheet of water was being crossed,
+Martin wished some titanic hand might raise an impassable barrier about
+his possessions.
+
+Old Cy's joy at their return was almost hilarious. To a man long past
+the spasmodic exuberance of youth, loving nature and the wild as few do,
+the six months here with the misanthropic old hermit, then a month of
+more cheerful companionship, followed by the departure of Martin and
+Angie, made this forest home-coming doubly welcome.
+
+But Chip's appearance, and the somewhat thrilling episode of her escape
+from Tim's Place and her rescue, astonished him. Like all old men
+who are childless, a young girl and her troubles touched a responsive
+chord in his heart, and on the instant Chip's unfortunate condition
+found sympathy. Her bluntly told story, with all its details, held him
+spellbound. He laughed over her description of spites, and when she
+seemed hurt at this seeming levity, he assured her that spites were a
+reality in the woods--he had seen hundreds of them. It was not long ere
+he had won her confidence and good-will, as he had Ray's, and then he
+took Martin aside.
+
+"That gal's chaser's bin here 'bout a week ago," he said, "an' the
+worst-lookin' cuss I ever seen. I know from his description 'twas
+him. He kept quizzin' me ez to how long we'd been here, if I knew
+McGuire, or had seen him lately, until I got sorter riled 'n' began
+to string him. I told him finally that I'd been foolin' all 'long;
+that McGuire was a friend o' mine; that he'd been here a day or two
+afore, borrowed some money 'n' lit out fer Canada, knowin' there
+was a bad man arter him. Then this one-eyed gazoo got mad, real mad,
+'n' said things, an' then he cleared out."
+
+When Martin explained the situation, as he now did, Old Cy chuckled.
+
+"'Tain't often one shoots in the dark 'n' makes a bull's eye," he
+said.
+
+"I think you and I had better keep mum about this half-breed's call,"
+Martin added quietly, "and if Angie mentions it, you needn't say that
+you know who he was. It will only make my wife and the girl nervous."
+
+The two tents were now pitched at the head of a cove, some rods away from
+the hermit's hut, and well out of sight from the landing, and to these
+both Angie and Chip were assured they must flee as soon as the expected
+bateau entered the lake, and remain secluded until it had departed.
+
+In a way, it was a ticklish situation. All knowledge that this waif
+was with Martin's party must be kept from Tim's Place and this
+half-breed, or she wouldn't be safe an hour; and until the Canucks
+had come and gone, she must be kept hidden. Another and quite a serious
+annoyance to Martin was the fact that he had counted on these two men
+as helpers in cutting and hauling logs for this new camp. Only man-power
+was available, and to move logs a foot in diameter and twenty feet
+long, in midsummer, was no easy task; but Levi, more experienced in
+camp-building, made light of it.
+
+"We'll cut the logs we need, clus to the lake," he said, "float 'em
+'round, 'n' roll 'em up on skids. It's easy 'nough, 'n' we don't
+need them Canuckers round a minit."
+
+It was four days of keen suspense to Chip before they appeared. Neither
+she nor Angie left the closed tent while they remained over night, or
+until they had been gone many hours, and then every one felt easier.
+
+The ringing sound of axes now began to echo over the rippled lake, logs
+were towed across with canoes, a cellar under the new cabin site was
+excavated, and home-building in the wilderness went merrily on.
+
+While the men worked, Angie and Chip were not idle. Not only did they
+have meals to prepare over a rude outdoor fireplace, but they gathered
+grass and moss for beds, wove a hammock and rustic chair seats out of
+sedge grass, and countless other useful aids.
+
+Chip was especially helpful and more grateful than a dog for any and all
+consideration. Not a step that she could take or a bit of work that she
+could do was left to Angie; her interest and do-all-she-could desire
+never flagged, and from early morn until the supper dishes were washed
+and wiped, Chip was busy.
+
+But Martin, and especially Levi, had other causes for worry than those
+which camp-building entailed. The fact that this "Pernicious Pete," as
+Angie had once called him, would soon learn of their presence here,
+and hating all law-abiding people, as such forest brigands always do,
+would naturally seek to injure them, was one cause. Then, there were
+so many ways by which he could do harm. A fire started at one corner
+of the hut at midnight, the same Indian-like malice applied to their
+two tents, the stealing of their canoes or the gashing of them with a
+hunting-knife, and countless other methods of venting spite, presented
+themselves. In a way, they were helpless against such a night-prowling
+enemy. Over one hundred miles separated them from civilization and all
+assistance; an impassable wilderness lay between. The stream and their
+canoes were the only means of egress. These valuable craft were left
+out of sight and sound each night, on the lake shore, and so their
+vulnerability on all sides was manifest.
+
+Then, Chip's presence was an added danger. If once this brute found that
+she was here, there was no limit to what he would do to secure her and
+take revenge. They had smuggled her past Tim's Place, but concealment
+here was impossible; if ever this half-breed returned, she would be
+discovered, and then what?
+
+And so by day, while Martin and Levi were busy with hut-building, or
+beside the evening camp-fire when Ray picked his banjo and Chip watched
+him with admiring glances, these two guardians had eyes and ears ever
+alert for this expected enemy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+ "It allus makes me coltish to see two young folks a-weavin'
+ the thread o' affection."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+There were three people at Birch Camp,--as Angie had christened
+it,--namely, herself, Ray, and Chip, who did not share Martin's
+suspicion of danger. A firm belief that a woman's aid in such a
+complication was of no value, coupled with a desire to save her
+anxiety, had kept his lips closed as to the situation.
+
+Life here at all hours soon settled itself into a certain daily
+routine of work, amusement, and, on Chip's part, of study. True to
+her philanthropic sense of duty toward this waif, Angie had at once
+set about her much-needed education. A reading and spelling book
+suitable for a child of eight had been secured at the settlement, and
+now "lessons" occupied a few hours of each day.
+
+It was only a beginning, of course, and yet with constant reminders
+as to pronunciation, this was all that Angie could do. The idioms of
+Tim's Place, with all its profanity, still adhered to Chip's speech.
+This latter, especially, would now and then crop out in spite of all
+admonitions; and so Angie found that her pupil made slow progress.
+
+There was also another reason for this. Chip was afraid of her, and oft
+reproved for her lapses in speech, soon ceased all unnecessary talk when
+with Angie.
+
+But with Ray it was different. He was near her own age, the companionship
+of youth was theirs, and with him Chip's speech was ready enough. This,
+of course, answered all the purposes of benefit by assimilation, and
+so Angie was well satisfied that they should be together. Beyond that
+she had no thought that love might accrue from this association.
+
+Chip, while fair of face and form, and at a sentimental age, was so crude
+of speech, so grossly ignorant, and so allied to the ways and manners of
+Tim's Place, that, according to Angie's reasoning, Ray's feelings
+were safe enough. He was well bred and refined, a happy, natural boy now
+verging upon manhood. In Greenvale he had never shown much interest in
+girls' society, and while he now showed a playmate enjoyment of Chip's
+company, that was all that was likely to happen.
+
+But the winged god wots not of speech or manners. A youth of eighteen and
+a maid of sixteen are the same the world over, and so out of sight of
+Angie, and unsuspected by her, the by-play of heart-interest went on.
+
+And what a glorious golden summer opportunity these two had!
+
+Back of the camp and tending northwest to southeast was a low ridge of
+outcropping slate, bare in spots--a hog-back, in wilderness phrase.
+Beyond this lay a mile-long "blow-down," where a tornado had levelled
+the tall timber. A fire, sweeping this when dry, left a criss-cross
+confusion of charred logs, blueberry bushes had followed fast, and now
+those luscious berries were ripening in limitless profusion. Every fair
+day Ray and Chip came here to pick, to eat, to hear the birds sing, to
+gather flowers and be happy.
+
+They watched the rippled lake with now and then a deer upon its shores,
+from this ridge; they climbed up or down it, hand in hand; they fished in
+the lake or canoed about it, time and again; and many a summer evening,
+when the moon served, Chip handled the paddle, while Ray picked his
+banjo and sang his darky songs all around this placid sheet of water.
+
+And what a wondrous charm this combination of moonlight on the lake and
+love songs softened and made tender by the still water held for Chip! As
+those melodies had done on that first evening beside the camp-fire, so
+now they filled her soul with a strange, new-born, and wonderful sense of
+joy and gladness.
+
+The black forest enclosing them now was sombre and silent. Spites still
+lurked in its depths and doubtless were watching; but a protector was
+near, his arm was strong; back at the landing were kind friends, and the
+undulating path of silvered light, the round, smiling orb above, the
+twinkling stars, and this matchless music became a new wonder-world to
+her.
+
+Her eyes glistened and grew tender with pathos. She had no more idea than
+a child why she was happy. Each day sped by on wings of wind, each hour,
+with her one best companion, the most joyful, and so, day by day, poor
+Chip learned the sad lesson of loving.
+
+But never a word or hint of this fell from her lips. Ray was so far above
+her and such a young hero, that she, a homeless outcast, tainted by the
+filth and service of Tim's Place, could only look to him as she did
+to the moon.
+
+They laughed and exchanged histories. Ofttimes he reproved her speech.
+They fished, picked berries, and worked together like two big children,
+and only her wistful eyes told the other why they were wistful.
+
+Martin, busy at camp-building and watching ever for an enemy's coming,
+saw it not. Angie was as obtuse; the old hermit, misanthropic and verging
+into dotage, was certainly oblivious, and so no ripples of interest
+disturbed these workers.
+
+Such conditions were as sunshine to flowers in aiding the two young
+lovers, so this forest idyl matured rapidly. Chip, perhaps more
+imaginative than Ray, since most of her education had been the weird
+superstition of Old Tomah, felt most of its emotional force, though
+unconscious of the reason.
+
+"I dunno why I feel so upset all the time lately," she said one
+afternoon to Ray as, returning from the berry field, they halted on
+top of the ridge to scan the lake below. "Some o' the time I feel so
+happy I want to sing, 'n' then I feel jes' t'other way, 'n'
+like cryin'. When the good spell is on, everything looks so purty,
+'n' when I come on to a bunch o' posies, then I feel I must go right
+down on my knees 'n' kiss 'em. When I was at Tim's Place, I never
+thought about anything 'cept to get my work done 'n' keep from
+gettin' cussed 'n' licked. I was scart, too, most o' the time,
+'n' kept feelin' suthin awful was goin' to happen to me. Now that's
+'most gone, but I feel a heartache in place on't. I allus hev a spell
+o' feelin' so every mornin' when I wake up 'n' hear the birds
+singin'. They 'fect me so that I'm near cryin' 'fore I git up. You
+'n' Mis' Frisbie 'n' everybody's been so good to me, I guess it's
+made me silly. Then thar's 'nother thing worries me, an' that's
+goin' to the settlement whar you folks is from. I feel I kin sorter earn
+my keepin' here, but I s'pose I can't thar, 'n' that bothers me.
+If only you 'n' all the rest was goin' to stay here all the time
+'n' I could work some, same as I do now, an' be with you odd spells
+'n' evenin's, I'd be so happy. It 'ud be jest like the spot Old
+Tomah said we're goin' to when we die. He used to tell how 'twas
+summer thar all the time, with game plenty, berries ripe, flowers
+growin', too, all the year 'round, 'n' birds singin'. He believed
+thar was two places somewhar: one for white folks and one fer Injuns;
+that when we died we turned into spites, stayed 'round till we got
+revenge for everything bad done us, or got a chance to pay up what good
+we owed for."
+
+"I don't know where we go to when we quit this world, and neither
+does anybody else, I believe," Ray answered philosophically, and
+scarce understanding Chip's mood. "I believe, as Old Cy does, that
+the time to be happy is when we are young and can be; that when we
+are ready to leave this world is time enough for another one. As to your
+worrying about your going to Greenvale," he added confidently, and
+encircling Chip's waist with one arm, "why, you've got me to look
+out for you, and then Angie won't begrudge you your keep, so don't
+think about that." And then this young optimist, quite content with
+what the gods had provided in this maid of sweet lip and appealing eye,
+assured her she had everything to make her happy, including himself for
+companion; that all her moody spells were merely memories of Tim's
+Place, best forgotten, and much more of equally tender and silly import.
+
+Not for one instant did he realize the growing independence and
+self-reliance of this wilderness waif, or how the first feeling that
+she was a burden upon these kind people would chafe and vex her defiant
+nature, until she would scorn even love, to escape it.
+
+Just now the tender impulse of first love was all Ray felt or
+considered. This girl of sweet sixteen and utter confidence in him was
+so enthralling in spite of her crude speech and lack of education, her
+kisses were so much his to take whenever chance offered, and himself
+such a young hero in her sight, that he thought of naught else.
+
+In this, or at least so far as his reasoning went, they were like two
+grown-up children entering a new world--the enchanted garden of love. Or
+like two souls merged into one in impulse, yet in no wise conscious why
+or for what all-wise purpose.
+
+For them alone the sun shone, birds sang, leaves rustled, flowers
+bloomed, and the blue lake rippled. For them alone was all this charming
+chance given, with all that made it entrancing. For them alone was life,
+love, and lips that met in ecstasy.
+
+Oh, wondrous beatitude! Oh, heaven-born joy! Oh, divine illusion that
+builds the world anew, and building thus, believes its secret safe!
+
+But Old Cy, wise old observer of all things human, from the natural
+attraction of two children to the philosophy of content, saw and
+understood.
+
+Not for worlds would he hint this to Angie or Martin. Full well he knew
+how soon this "weavin' o' the threads o' affection," would be
+frowned upon by them; but he loved children as few men do.
+
+This summer-day budding of romance would end in a few weeks, these two
+were happy now--let them remain so, and perhaps in Chip's case it might
+prove the one best incentive to her own improvement.
+
+And now as he watched them day by day, came another feeling. Homeless all
+his life so far, and for many years a wanderer, these two had awakened
+the home-building impulse in his. He could not have a home himself, he
+could only help them to one in the future, and to that end and purpose
+he now bent his thought.
+
+The weeks there with Ray had opened Old Cy's heart to him. Even sooner,
+and with greater force, had Chip's helpless condition made the same
+appeal, and as he watched her wistful eyes and willing ways, in spite
+of her speech and in spite of her origin, he saw in her the making of a
+good wife and mother. Her heritage, as he now guessed, was of the worst,
+her education was yet to be obtained; but for all that, a girl--no, a
+child--of sixteen who would dare sixty miles of wilderness alone to save
+herself from a shameful fate, was of the metal and fibre to win, and
+more than that, deserved the best that life afforded.
+
+How he could at present aid her, he saw not. A few years of help and time
+to study must be given her, and as Old Cy realized how much must be done
+for her and how uncertain it was whether Angie would find time, or be
+willing to do it, then and there he determined to share that duty with
+her.
+
+It was midsummer when Martin and his party returned to the lake with
+Chip. In two weeks the new log cabin--a large one, divided into three
+compartments--was erected and ready for occupation, and so convenient
+and picturesque a wildwood dwelling was it that a brief description may
+be tolerated.
+
+All log cabins are much alike--a square enclosure of unhewn logs thatched
+with saplings and chinked with mud and moss. A low door of boards or
+split poles is the usual entrance, with one small window for light; its
+floor may be of small split logs or mother earth, and at best it is a
+cramped, cheerless hovel.
+
+But Martin's was a more pretentious creation. Its location, well out on
+the birch-clad point, back of which stood the hermit's hut, commanded a
+view of the lake. A group of tall-stemmed spruce, amid which it stood,
+gave shade, yet allowed observation. It was of oblong shape, with a
+wide piazza of white birch poles and roof of same; two four-pane windows
+to each room gave ample light; a small Franklin stove had been brought
+for the sitting room, and a cook stove occupied the "lean-to" cook
+room back of the main cabin. Beds, chairs, and benches were fashioned
+from the plentiful white birch stems, and floor and doors were of planed
+boards.
+
+It was but a crude structure, compared to even the humblest of civilized
+dwellings; and yet with all its fittings conveyed into this wilderness in
+one bateau, and with only axes, a saw, and hammer for tools, as was
+the case, it was a marvel.
+
+Working as all the men had done from dawn until dark to complete this
+cabin, no recreation had been taken by any one except Ray and Chip; and
+now Martin, a keen sportsman, felt that his turn had come. The trout were
+rising night and morn all over the lake, partridges so tame that they
+would scarce fly were as plenty as sparrows, a half-dozen deer could be
+seen any time along the lake shore--in fact, one had already furnished
+them venison--and so Martin now anticipated some relaxation and sport.
+
+But Fate willed otherwise.
+
+One of Old Cy's first and most far-sighted bits of work, after being
+left with the hermit the previous autumn, had been the erection of an
+ice-house out of large saplings. It stood at the foot of a high bank
+on the north of the knoll and close to the lake, and here, out of the
+sunshine, yet handy to fill, stood his creation. Its double walls of
+poles were stuffed with moss, its roof chinked with blue clay, a sliding
+door gave ingress, and even now, with summer almost gone, an ample supply
+of ice remained in it.
+
+In the division of duties among these campers, Levi usually started the
+morning fire while Old Cy visited the ice-house for anything needed. One
+morning after the new cabin was completed, he came here as usual.
+
+A fine string of trout caught by Martin and Ray the day before were
+hanging in this ice-house, and securing what was needed, Old Cy closed
+the door and turned away. As usual with him, he glanced up and down
+the narrow beach to see if a deer had wandered along there that morning,
+and in doing so he now saw, close to the water's edge and distinctly
+outlined in the damp sand, the print of a moccasined foot.
+
+It was of extra large size, and as Old Cy bent over it, he saw it had
+recently been made. Glancing along toward the head of this cove, he saw
+more tracks, and two rods away, the sharp furrow of a canoe prow in the
+sand.
+
+"It's that pesky half-breed, sure's a gun," he muttered, stooping
+over the track, "fer a good bit o' his legs was turned up to walk on,
+and he wore moccasins t'other day."
+
+Curious now, and somewhat startled, he looked along where the narrow
+beach curved out and around to the landing, and saw the tracks led that
+way. Then picking his way so as not to obscure them, he followed until
+not three rods from the new cabin they left the beach and were plainly
+visible behind a couple of spruces, in the soft carpet of needles, which
+was crushed for a small space, where some one had stood.
+
+Returning to camp, Old Cy motioned to Levi and Martin. All three returned
+to the ice-house, looked where the canoe had cut its furrow, took up
+the trail to its ending beside the two trees, and then glanced into one
+another's eyes with serious, sobered, troubled faces.
+
+And well they might; for the evening previous they had all been grouped
+upon the piazza of this new cabin until late, while scarce three rods
+away a spying enemy, presumably this half-breed, had stood and watched
+them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+ "Blessed be them that 'spects nothin', they won't git
+ fooled."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Christmas Cove was never disturbed by aught except small boats, and few
+of them. It was a long, crescent-shaped arm of the sea, parallel to the
+ocean, and separated from it by a spruce-clad cliff; its placid surface
+scarcely more than rippled or undulated outside, and so shallow was it
+that each ebb tide left its sandy bottom bare.
+
+A stream found devious way along this crescent when the outflow left it
+bare. Mottled minnows, schools of white and green smelts, crabs of all
+sorts and sizes, swam and sported up and down this broad, shallow brook
+while the tide was away, and few of human kind ever watched them.
+
+Alongside this cove and inward a dozen or more brown houses and a few
+white ones faced its curving shore, a broad street with many elms and
+ruts between which the grass grew separated the houses and cove, and a
+small white church with a gilt fish for weather-vane on its steeple stood
+midway of these dwellings.
+
+A low range of green hills to the northward of this village shut off
+the wintry winds, at the upper end of the street a stream from a cleft
+in the hills crossed it, and here stood a mill, its roof green with
+moss, its clapboards brown and whitened with mill dust, the log dam
+above it half obscured by willows. To the right of this a short flume
+was entirely hidden by alders, and above the dam lay a pond, entirely
+covered with green lily-pads, and dotted by white blossoms all summer.
+
+Beside the mill and nearer the roadway stood an ancient dwelling,
+also moss-coated; two giant elms shaded it, and the entire impression
+conveyed by the mill's drowsy rumble and splashing wheel on a hot
+August afternoon was--find a shady spot and take a nap.
+
+These were the summer conditions existent at Christmas Cove. The winter
+ones may be left undescribed.
+
+Just beyond where the mill stream crossed the road the highway divided,
+one fork following the trend of these hills to where a railroad crossed
+them, ten miles away; the other, running close to the upper and marshy
+end of Christmas Cove to where a spile bridge connected the two uplands
+and thence over to another village called Bayport. This, the larger
+of the two, had once contained a shipyard, now idle, a score of its
+dwellings were vacant, and the two hundred or more of its population
+existed by farming, fishing, lobster-catching, and a small factory
+devoted to the production of sardines duly labelled with a French name.
+
+Christmas Cove, however, was more respectable, with its hundred
+residents, mostly retired sea captains with an income, and no litter of
+lobster pots or nets to obstruct its one long, narrow wharf which
+reached out to deep water at the mouth of the cove. A few small pleasure
+craft were tethered to the wharf, and gardens, cows, and poultry were
+merely diversions here.
+
+One other income it had, however, which was considered less plebeian than
+Bayport's--the money a score of city-bred people left each summer.
+
+Keeping boarders was all right at Christmas Cove. It did not smack of
+trade and commerce. No smoke of engines, no dust of coal, no noise of
+hammer and saw, were parts of it. No odor from a canning factory, no
+wrack of dismantled boats, tarred nets, and broken traps, was connected
+with it. The dwellings at Christmas Cove were roomy, few children were
+now a part of its population--scarce enough to fill the one schoolhouse
+presided over by Mr. Bell, and so each season a few dozen of the uneasy
+horde, always anxious to leave home and board somewhere, came here.
+
+A daily stage line--an ancient carryall drawn by one sleepy
+horse--connected this village with the railroad. Its church bell called
+the faithful to Thursday evening prayer-meeting and Sunday service with
+unfailing regularity. Its one general store and post-office combined, was
+the evening rendezvous for a score of sea captains--grizzled hulks who
+had sailed into safe harbor here at last, and who watched the
+weather, discussed the visitors, and swapped yarns year in and year out.
+
+Here also, many years before, when Bayport was more prosperous, the
+threads of a romance had been woven, and two brothers, Judson and Cyrus
+Walker, born at Bayport, and sailing out of it, had paid court to two
+sisters, Abigail and Amanda Grey, here at Christmas Cove.
+
+It was, as such sailors' courtships ever are, intermittent. Six, eight,
+and sometimes twelve months marked its interims, until finally only
+one brother, Judson, returned to announce a shipwreck in mid-ocean,
+a separation of their crew in two boats, and Abbie Grey, whom Cyrus
+had smiled upon, was left to wait and watch and hope.
+
+In time, also, Judson and "Mandy" joined fortunes. In time, and after
+many voyages, during which he vainly tried to find some tidings of his
+brother, Judson, now Captain Walker, gave up the sea, and with wife
+and two young sons retired inland, purchased an abandoned farm in a
+sequestered valley, and began another life.
+
+Another mating had also occurred at Christmas Cove, for Abbie, the other
+sister and the sweetheart of Cyrus, giving him up for lost, finally
+consented to share the ancestral home of Captain Bemis--once a sailor and
+now the miller, who had exchanged the sea's perils for that peaceful
+vocation.
+
+His father had ground grist here for a lifetime, and passed on. His
+mother still survived when Abbie Grey, once the belle of the village and
+a boarding-school graduate, married Captain Bemis, twice her age, and
+her old-time romance became only a memory.
+
+No children came to fill this great, cheerless house with laughter. The
+old mother was laid away in due time, Abbie, once a handsome girl, grew
+portly and became Aunt Abbie to neighboring children, and finally all
+the village; and disappointed as she had cause to be, she turned her
+thoughts to good works and religion.
+
+But Cyrus, adrift in an open boat with half the crew, was finally
+rescued by a whaler, after starvation had left him almost an imbecile.
+A four-year, compulsory voyage to southern seas followed; then
+another wreck and a year on an island, and then a chance meeting with
+another sailor from Bayport, and from whom he learned two unpleasant
+facts,--first that his sweetheart, Abbie Grey, was married; and secondly
+that his brother had been lost at sea.
+
+One was true, of course, and somewhat disheartening to Cyrus; the
+other, as discomforting, but not true. It was simply a case of mistaken
+identity, his own disappearance being confounded with that of his brother.
+
+This story served the purpose of so affecting Cyrus that he resolved
+never to set foot in either Christmas Cove or Bayport, and also never
+to allow any one there to know that he was alive.
+
+From now on, also, he deserted the sea and became a wanderer. He first
+lived in the wilderness, where as trapper and hunter and lumberman he
+learned the woodsman's habits; and when mid-life was reached, having
+become sceptical of all things, he finally settled down at Greenvale.
+Here, loving children and the woods, fields, brooks, and Nature more than
+raiment, religion, and respectability, he became a village nondescript,
+a social outcast, and--Old Cy Walker.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+ "The poor 'n' pious kin callate the crumbs fallin' from the
+ rich man's table'll be few 'n' skimpy."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+An enemy we can meet in the open need not appall us; but an enemy who
+creeps up to us by day, or still worse by night, in a vast wilderness,
+becomes a panther and an Indian combined.
+
+Such a one had spied upon Martin's camp that night, and all the tales
+of this half-breed's cunning and fierce nature, told by Levi, were now
+recalled. Like a human brute whose fangs were tobacco-stained, whose one
+evil eye glared at them out of darkness, the half-breed had now become a
+creeping, crawling beast, impossible to trail, yet certain to bide his
+time, seize Chip, or avenge her loss upon her protectors.
+
+Now another complication arose as Martin, Old Cy, and Levi left the
+spot where this enemy had watched them--what to do about Angie and the
+girl? From the first warning from Levi that they were in danger from
+the half-breed, Martin had avoided all hint of it to them. Now they
+must be told, and all peace of mind at once destroyed. Concealment was
+no longer possible, however, and when Angie was told, her face paled. Her
+first intuition, and as the sequel proved, a wise one, was for them
+to at once pack up and quit the woods as speedily as possible.
+
+But Martin was of different fibre. To run away like this was cowardly,
+and besides he cherished only contempt for a wretch who had played the
+rôle of this fellow, and was so vile of instinct. With no desire to
+do wrong, he yet felt that if sufficient provocation and the need of
+self-defence arose, the earth, and especially this wilderness, would be
+well rid of such a despicable creature.
+
+Then Levi's advice carried weight.
+
+"We ain't goin' to 'scape him," he said, "by startin' out o'
+the woods now. Most likely he's got his eye on us this minute. He
+knows every rod o' the way out whar we'd be likely to camp. He'd
+sure follow, an' if he didn't cut our canoes to pieces some night,
+he'd watch his chance 'n' grab the gal 'n' make off under cover
+o' darkness. We've got a sort o' human panther to figger on, an'
+shootin' under such conditions might mean killin' the gal. We've got
+to go out sometime, but I don't believe in turnin' tail fust go-off,
+'n' we may get a chance to wing the cuss, like ez not," and the
+glitter in Levi's eyes showed he would not hesitate to shoot this
+half-breed if the chance presented itself.
+
+Old Cy's opinion is also worth quoting:--"My notion is this hyena's a
+coward, 'n' like all sich'll never show himself by daylight. He knows
+we've got guns 'n' know how to use 'em. The camp's as good as a
+fort. One on us kin allus be on guard daytimes, an' when it's time
+to go out--wal, I think we ought to hev cunnin' 'nuff 'mongst us to
+gin one hyena the slip. Thar's one thing must be done, though, 'n'
+that is, keep the gal clus. 'Twon't do to let her go over the hog-back
+arter berries, or canoein' round the lake no more."
+
+And now began a state of semi-siege at Birch Camp.
+
+Chip was kept an almost prisoner, hardly ever permitted out of
+Angie's sight. One of the men, always with rifle handy, remained on
+guard--usually Old Cy, and for a few nights he lay in ambush near the
+shore, to see if perchance this enemy would steal up again.
+
+With all these precautions against surprise, came a certain feeling of
+defiance in Martin. With Ray for companion he went fishing once more,
+and with Levi as pilot he cruised about for game.
+
+Only a few more weeks of his outing remained, and on sober second
+thought, he didn't mean to let this sneaking enemy spoil those.
+
+But Old Cy never relaxed his vigil. This waif of the wilderness and her
+pitiful position appealed to him even more than to Angie, and true to
+the nature that had made all Greenvale's children love him, so now did
+Chip find him a kind and protecting father.
+
+With rifle always with him, he took her canoeing and fishing; sometimes
+Angie joined them, and so life at Birch Camp became pleasant once more.
+
+A week or more of happiness was passed, with no sight or sign of their
+enemy, and then one morning when Old Cy had journeyed over to the
+ice-house, he glanced across the lake to a narrow valley through which a
+stream known as Beaver Brook reached the lake, and far up this vale,
+rising above the dense woods, was a faint column of smoke.
+
+The morning was damp, cloudy, and still--conditions suitable for
+smoke-rising, and yet so faint and distant was this that none but
+the keen, observant eyes of a woodsman would have noticed it. Yet there
+it was, a thin white pillar, clearly outlined against the dark green
+of the foliage.
+
+Old Cy hurried back, motioned to Levi, and the two watched it from the
+front of the camp. Martin soon joined them, then Angie and Chip, and all
+stood and studied this smoke sign. It was almost ludicrous, and yet not;
+for at its foot must be a fire, and beside it, doubtless, the half-breed.
+
+"Can you locate it?" queried Martin of his guide, as the delicate
+column of white slowly faded.
+
+"It's purty well up the brook," Levi answered; "thar's a sort of
+Rocky Dundar thar, 'n' probably a cave. I callate if it's him, he's
+s'pected a storm, 'n' so sneaked to cover."
+
+And now, as if to prove this, a few drops of rain began to patter on
+the motionless lake; thicker, faster they came, and as the little group
+hurried to shelter, a torrent, almost, descended. For weeks not a drop of
+rain had fallen here. Each morn the sun had risen in undimmed splendor,
+to vanish at night, a ball of glorious red.
+
+But now a change had come. Wind followed the rain, and all that day the
+storm raged and roared through the dense forest about. The lake was
+white with driving scud, the cabin rocked, trees creaked, and outdoor
+life was impossible. When night came, it seemed a thousand demons were
+wailing, moaning, and screeching in the forest, and as the little party
+now grouped around the open stove in the new cabin watched it, the fire
+rose and fell in unison with the blasts.
+
+"It's the spites," whispered Chip to Ray. "They allus act that way
+when it's stormin'."
+
+The next day the gale began to lessen, and by night the moon, now half
+full, peeped out of the scurrying clouds. At bedtime it was smiling
+serenely, well down toward the tree-tops, and Chip's spites had ceased
+their wailing.
+
+Fortunately, however, Martin's quest for game had been successful. A
+saddle of venison, a dozen or more partridges, and two goodly strings of
+trout hung in cold storage.
+
+But utter and almost speechless astonishment awaited Old Cy at the
+ice-house when he visited it the next morning, for the venison was
+gone, not a bird remained, and one of the two strings of trout had
+vanished.
+
+In front, on the sand, was the same tell-tale moccasin tracks.
+
+"Wal, by the Great Horn Spoon! if that cuss hain't swiped the hull
+business," Old Cy ejaculated, as he looked in and then at the tracks.
+"Crossed over last night," he added, noting where a canoe had cut its
+furrow, "an' steered plumb for my ice-house! The varmint!"
+
+But Martin was angry, thoroughly angry, at the audacious insolence of
+the theft, and the thought that just now this sneaking half-breed was
+doubtless enjoying grilled venison and roast partridge in some secure
+shelter. It also opened his eyes to the fact that this chap would hang
+about, watching his chance, until they started out of the wilderness, and
+then capture the girl if he could. For a little while Martin pondered
+over the situation and then announced his plans.
+
+"There's law, and officers to execute it," he said, "if a sufficient
+reward be offered; and to-morrow you and I, Levi, will start for the
+settlement and fetch a couple in. I'll gladly give five hundred dollars
+to land this sneak behind the bars. If he can't be caught, we can at
+least have two officers to guard us going out."
+
+All that day he and Levi spent in hunting. Another deer was captured,
+more birds secured, and when evening came plans to meet the situation
+were discussed.
+
+"You or Ray must remain on guard daytimes near the cabin," Martin said
+to Old Cy. "My wife and Chip had better keep in it, or near it most of
+the time; and both of you must sleep there nights. One or the other can
+fish or hunt, as needed. We must be gone a week or more, even if we have
+good luck; but fetching the officers here is the best plan now."
+
+Levi was up early the next morning, and had the best canoe packed for
+a hurry trip ere breakfast was ready. No tent was to be taken, only
+blankets, a rifle, a bag of the simplest cooking utensils, pork, bread,
+and coffee. A modest outfit--barely enough to sustain life, yet all a
+woodsman carries when a long canoe journey with many carries must be
+taken.
+
+There were sober faces at the landing when Martin was ready to
+start,--Chip most sober of all,--for now she realized as never before
+how serious a burden she had become.
+
+No time was wasted in good-bys. Martin grasped the bow paddle, and with
+"Old Faithful" Levi wielding the stern one, they soon crossed the lake
+and vanished at its outlet.
+
+And now, also, for the first time, Angie realized how much the
+presence of these two strong and resourceful men meant to her. All
+that day she and Chip clung to the cabin, while Old Cy, a long, lanky
+Leatherstocking, patrolled the premises, rifle in hand.
+
+"We hain't a mite o' cause to worry," he said, when nightfall drew
+near. "That pesky varmint's a coward, 'n' knows guns are plenty
+here, an' we folks handy in usin' 'em. I've rigged a fish line to
+the ice-house door, so it'll rattle some tinware in the cabin if he
+meddles it again. I sleep with one eye 'n' both ears open, an' if he
+comes prowlin' round night-times, he'll hear bullets whizzin' an'
+think Fourth o' July's opened up arly."
+
+But for all his cheerful assurance, time passed slowly, and a sense of
+real danger oppressed Angie and Chip as well. Ray shared it also. He was
+not as yet hardened to the wilderness, and like all who are thus tender,
+its vast sombre solitude seemed ominous.
+
+Only the hermit, with his moonlike eyes and impassive ways, showed no
+sign of trouble. What this half-breed wanted, other than food, he seemed
+not to understand; and while he helped about the camp work and followed
+Old Cy like a dog, he was of no other aid.
+
+One, two, three days of watchful guard and evenings when even Old Cy's
+cheerful philosophy or Ray's banjo failed to dispel the gloom, and then,
+just as the sun was setting once again, a canoe with one occupant was
+seen to enter the lake and head for the landing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+ "The more I see o' the world, the better I like the
+ woods."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Martin's journey to the settlement was a rushing one. The first day
+they wielded paddles without rest, and aided by the current made
+rapid progress. Both carries were passed before sunset, a halt made
+for a supper of frizzled pork, coffee, and hard tack; then on again
+by moonlight, and not until wearied to the limit at almost midnight did
+they pause, and hiding themselves in the entrance to an old tote road,
+they slept the sleep of weariness.
+
+Tim's Place was sighted the next day, and now, at Levi's suggestion,
+Martin lay down in the canoe as they passed it, concealed beneath a
+blanket.
+
+"It's best to be keerful," Levi said, when proposing this; "I
+wouldn't trust Tim a minute. Most likely he's found out whar the
+gal is, an' knows what Pete's up to. The two are cahoots together,
+'n' if Tim saw you an' I both leavin', no tellin' what'd happen."
+
+The journey from here on was slower, as no current aided, and yet in
+three days and nights of paddling, Martin and Levi covered that
+hundred-mile journey and reached the settlement.
+
+A stage and rail journey, consuming one day and night more, enabled
+Martin to reach the man he wanted--a well-informed and fearless officer
+named Hersey, and then, securing an assistant and a warrant for one Pete
+Bolduc, on the charge of theft, the three returned to the settlement
+where Levi had waited.
+
+"I'm glad to get track of this half-breed," Hersey said on the way.
+"He has been the pal of the notorious McGuire for many years, and
+besides has been smuggling whiskey into lumber camps and slaughtering
+game out of season all the time. Like McGuire, he is hard to locate.
+No guide or lumberman dare betray him, and so it's a fruitless task to
+try to catch either. We have been after this McGuire for years. He
+killed one deputy and wounded another, as you may have heard. This
+Bolduc is a cat of the same color, but less courageous, I fancy, and
+yet as hard to catch. I think, for the sake of your guide," he added,
+"we'd better not enter the woods together. You two go on, saying
+nothing. My mate and I will say we are on a pleasure trip, and follow
+and overtake you in a few hours. This will protect your man, and evade
+suspicion. Even these people at the settlement are half-hearted in
+aiding an officer. Most of them are fearful of house or barn burning if
+they give any information to us, a few are in secret league with these
+outlaws; and so you see our position."
+
+Martin saw, and marvelled that any of the simple, honest dwellers at this
+small settlement, law-abiding as they seemed, would either aid or warn so
+red-handed a criminal as McGuire.
+
+That fear of consequences might influence them, was possible, and yet all
+the more reason for assisting the law in ridding the forest of two such
+criminals.
+
+But Martin, thorough sportsman that he was, and keen to all the world's
+affairs, understood but little of the conditions existent in the
+wilderness, or about the lives and morals of those who find a living thus.
+
+He knew, as all do, that a few thousand lumbermen entered each autumn,
+and, much to his regret, made steady inroads toward its despoilment. He
+knew, also, that these men included many of excellent habits--sober,
+industrious workers with families which they cheerfully supported, and
+that there were also many among them whose sole ambition was to earn a
+few hundred dollars in a season of hard work, that they might spend it
+in a few weeks, or even days, of drunken debauchery.
+
+He was well aware that a few wandering hunters and trappers plied their
+calling here, and many of a mixed occupation, guiding sportsmen like
+himself in season, were engaged in lumbering or farming between times.
+This mixed and transient population, he knew, were neither better nor
+worse than the average of such pioneers--good-natured and good-hearted,
+though somewhat lax in speech and morals.
+
+What he did not know, however, was that a few unscrupulous and
+disreputable men, half gamblers, half dive-keepers, followed these
+lumbermen into camp as ostensible hunters and trappers, but really
+gamblers, ready to turn a trick at cards, convoy a keg of whiskey in,
+or follow a moose on snow-shoes, kill and sell him, as occasion
+offered. Or that, when spring opened the streams, these same itinerant
+purveyors of vice spotted their possible victims, as a bunco man does a
+rural "good thing" visiting the metropolis, and when they reached town
+or city, steered them where harpies waited to share the spoil. A
+brief explanation of these facts were furnished to Martin by Warden
+Hersey, when, after overhauling him, the parties joined about one
+camp-fire.
+
+"We have," Hersey said, "in the case of this McGuire, a fair
+sample of the outcome liable to follow or attach to a man who makes a
+business of preying upon the vices and follies of the lumbering
+class. It is a sort of evolution in law-evasion and opportunity,
+encouraged and aided by the animosity which is sure to arise between the
+lumberman and us, whose duty it is to enforce the fish and game laws.
+These lumbermen, or a majority of them, feel and believe that the forest
+and all it contains is theirs by natural right; that no law forbidding
+them to obtain all the fish and game they can, is just; that such laws
+are enacted and accrue for the sole benefit of city sportsmen who,
+like yourself, come here for rest and recreation. It is all a wrong
+conclusion, as we know, and yet it exists. Now come these leeches
+like McGuire, who prey upon this hard-working class. Such as McGuire
+foster the prejudice and antagonism of the lumbermen in all ways
+possible, arguing that moose and deer are the natural perquisites of
+those who go into the woods for a livelihood, and belong to them as much
+as the trees which they have paid stumpage to cut. Also that we who come
+in to execute the laws are interlopers, who draw pay for the sole
+purpose of robbing them of their rights. Of course, we receive no welcome
+at a lumbering camp, and not one iota of information as to what is
+going on or where a law-breaker may be found. More than that, they will
+protect the leeches who fatten on them in every way possible, even
+after, as in McGuire's case, they become murderers and outlaws, with a
+price set upon their capture. And here comes in the factor of terrorism.
+A few of these lumbermen might give information from a desire to aid the
+law, or to obtain a reward, did they not know that to do so would expose
+them to the inevitable fate of all betrayers.
+
+"It is a community of interest, a sort of freemasonry that exists
+between these lumbermen and all who thrive upon their labors and
+hardships. Now this McGuire has preyed upon them for years, a notorious
+example of dive-keeper, gambler, smuggler, and pot-hunter. He is now in
+hiding somewhere in this wilderness, or, maybe, creeping up some
+stream with a canoe load of liquor bought in some Canadian town. He
+will meet and be welcomed by any lumber-cutting party just making camp
+next fall, sell them liquor at exorbitant prices, shoot and sell them
+venison, and when the snow is deep enough, he will follow and find
+moose yards, and do a wholesale slaughter act, and not satisfied with
+this, will absorb any and all money these lumbermen have left by card
+games. And yet the moment I enter the woods to arrest him, their camps
+are closed to me, and word of my coming is passed along to others. The
+guides even, who are at the beck and call of you sportsmen, are,
+many of them, in secret sympathy with such as McGuire; or if not, dare
+not give any clews, and many a wild-goose chase has resulted from
+following their supposed information. Some of the wisest among them are
+beginning to realize that they must cooperate with us in the protection
+of fish and game, or their occupation will be gone. But even those
+sensible fellows--and they are increasing--hate to become informer,
+fearing consequences.
+
+"There is still another side to this game situation," continued Hersey,
+filling and lighting his pipe, "and this is our laws, or rather, the
+selfishness of our lawmakers. We have plenty of laws--and good ones.
+We impose a license tax upon all non-residents for the privilege of
+shooting or fishing. We limit the season and number of moose, deer,
+or trout which may be taken. This license, which is all right, produces
+an annual fund sufficient to employ ten wardens, where the State only
+employs one. The result is that this vast wilderness is so poorly
+patrolled that a game warden is as much of a rarity as a white deer.
+Now and then one may be seen canoeing up or down some main stream,
+or loafing a week or two at some backwoods farm and having a good time.
+One may certainly be found at all points of egress; but a portion of the
+wilderness--the greater way-back region--is rarely visited by wardens.
+
+"There is still one more point, and that is the pay which wardens
+receive. It is so small that capable, honest men cannot be obtained
+for what the State allows; and considering the large sums raised from
+this license tax, it is a mere pittance. The result is, we have to employ
+a class of men, many of whom are no respecters of the law themselves,
+or who may be bribed."
+
+It was a full and complete explanation of the conditions then existing in
+the wilderness, and as Martin glanced at "Old Faithful" Levi lounging
+on his elbow, he understood why that astute guide had always avoided all
+possible reference to McGuire.
+
+"This half-breed, Bolduc, is another sample of his class," continued
+Hersey, "and while we have no criminal charge, we can prove we know he
+is a pot-hunter, and I'll be glad to nab him, for an example. I judge
+he is lurking about your camp, watching a chance to abduct this girl,
+and while it's an unusual case, it may serve our purpose nicely--a sort
+of bait, useful in alluring him into our hands. How we can catch him,
+however, is not an easy problem. He knows the forest far better than
+we do; every stream, lake, defile, or cave is familiar to him, and,
+cunning as a fox, all pursuit would be useless. Our only hope is to
+patrol the woods about your camp as hunters, or watch for another night
+visit, and halt him, at the muzzle of a rifle."
+
+And now Martin turned the conversation to a more interesting
+subject--Chip herself.
+
+"I saw the girl at Tim's Place," Hersey said, "and knowing her
+ancestry, felt curious to observe her. She appeared bright as a new
+dollar and a willing worker for Tim. Of course, it seemed unfortunate
+that she should be left to grow up there without education; and while
+her natural guardian being an outlaw gave the State an ample right to
+interfere, the proper officer has never seen fit to do so. It has been a
+case of 'out of sight, out of mind,' I presume, and while we have
+a law obliging parents to send their children to public schools so
+many months a year until a certain age, this is a case where no one has
+seen fit to enforce it."
+
+"But what about her parents?" queried Martin, curious on this point.
+"Do you know whether they were legally married?"
+
+"Why, no-o, only by hearsay," Hersey responded. "I've been told
+her mother was a Nova Scotia girl, a mill worker in one of our larger
+cities, and as no one ever hinted otherwise, I think it safe to assume
+that they were married. If not, there would surely have been some one to
+spread the sinister fact. It's the way of the world. I presume Tim
+knows the girl's history, but he is such a surly Irishman that I never
+questioned him. In fact, his surroundings, as you may have noticed, do
+not invite long visits."
+
+But no visit or even halt at Tim's Place was now considered advisable.
+In fact, as Levi said, it was best to pass that spot at midnight. This
+suggestion was carried out, and in five days from leaving the settlement,
+Martin and the officers made their last camp at the lake where he had
+once seen a spectral canoeist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+ "A swelled heart may cost ye money, but a swelled head'll
+ cost ye ten times more."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+An unexpected canoe entering a lake so secluded and so seldom visited as
+this lake must needs awaken the keenest surprise, and especially in the
+case of a party situated as this one was. Ray, who had just returned
+from a berry-picking trip over at the "blow down," and Old Cy, carrying
+his suggestive rifle, were at the landing some time before this canoe
+reached it, while Angie and Chip waited almost breathlessly on the cabin
+piazza. A stout, bare-headed Indian, clad in white man's raiment, was
+paddling. He glanced at the two awaiting him at the landing, with big
+black, emotionless eyes, and then up to the cabin.
+
+As his canoe now grated on the sandy beach close by, he laid aside his
+paddle, stepped forward and out, drew his craft well up, and folding
+his arms glanced at Old Cy again, as if waiting for a welcome. None was
+needed, however, for on the instant, almost, came an exclamation of joy
+from Chip, and with a "Hullo, Poppy Tomah," she was down the bank,
+with both her hands in his.
+
+A faint smile of welcome spread over his austere face as he looked down
+at the girl, but not a word, as yet, came.
+
+Old Cy, quick to see that he was a friend, now advanced.
+
+"We're glad to see ye," he said, "an' as ye seem to be a friend o'
+the gal's, we'll make ye welcome."
+
+The Indian bowed low, and a "How do," like a grunt, was his answer. A
+calm, slow, motionless type of a now almost extinct race, as he seemed
+to be, he would utter no word or move a step farther until invited. But
+now, led by Chip, he advanced up the path.
+
+"It's Tomah, old Poppy Tomah," she said with pride, as Angie rose to
+meet them, "and he's the only body who was ever good to me."
+
+"I am glad to see you, sir," Angie said, with a gracious bow and smile,
+"and you are welcome here."
+
+"I thank the white lady--I not forget," came the Indian's dignified
+answer with a stately bow.
+
+Not a word of greeting for Chip or of surprise at finding her here--only
+the eagle glance, accustomed to bright sunlight or to following the
+flight of a bird far out of white man's vision.
+
+"We shall have supper soon," Angie added, uncertain what to say to this
+impassive man, "and some for you."
+
+It was a deft speech, for Angie, accustomed to take in every detail of a
+man from the condition of his nails to the cut of his clothing, as all
+women will, had ere now absorbed the appearance of this swarthy redskin,
+and was not quite sure whether to invite him to share their table or say
+nothing.
+
+But the Indian solved his own problem, for spying the outdoor fire to
+which Old Cy now retreated, he bowed again and strode away toward it.
+
+"Me cook here?" he said to Old Cy. With an "Of course, an' you're
+welcome to," the question was settled.
+
+Chip soon drew near, and now for the first time the Indian's speech
+seemed to return, and while Old Cy busied himself about the cooking,
+these two began to visit.
+
+Chip, as might be expected, did most of the talking, asked questions as
+to Tim's Place, when he was there, and what they said about her running
+away, in rapid succession. Her own adventures and how she came here soon
+followed, and it was not long before he knew all that was to be known
+about her.
+
+His replies were blunt and brief, after the manner of such. Now and then
+an expressive nod or grunt filled in the place of an ordinary answer.
+He knew but little about the recent happenings at Tim's Place, as he
+had stayed there only one night since Chip departed with her father--as
+he was told. He had been away in the woods, looking for places to set
+traps later, and had no idea Chip was here.
+
+As to Pete's movements, he was equally in the dark, and when Chip told
+him what her friends here suspected, he merely grunted. As he seemed to
+wish to do his own cooking, Old Cy, having completed his task, offered
+him a partridge and a couple of trout fresh from the ice-house, also pork
+and potatoes, and left him to care for himself.
+
+He became more sociable later, and when supper was over and the rest had,
+as usual, gathered on the piazza of the new cabin, he joined them.
+
+And now came a recital from Ray of far more interest to these people than
+they suspected.
+
+"I saw a bear over back of the ridge this afternoon," he said, "or I
+don't know but it was a wildcat. I'd just filled my pail with berries,
+when way up, close to the rocks, I saw something moving. I crouched down
+back of a bush, thinking it might be a bear, and if it was, I'd get
+a chance to see it nearer. I could only see the top of its back above
+the bushes, and once I saw its head, as if it was standing up. Then I
+didn't see it for quite a spell, and then I caught sight of its back
+again, a good deal nearer, and then it went into one of the gullies in
+the hog-back. I didn't wait to see if it came out, but cut for home."
+
+"Did this critter sorter wobble like a woodchuck runnin'?" put in Old
+Cy.
+
+"No, it just crept along evenly," answered Ray, "I'd see it when it
+would come out between the bushes."
+
+"'Twa'n't a b'ar," muttered Old Cy, and then, as if the unwisdom of
+waking suspicion in Angie's mind occurred, he added hastily, "but mebbe
+'twas a doe, walkin' head down 'n' feedin'."
+
+No further notice was taken of Ray's adventure. The sight of deer
+everywhere about was a ten-times-daily occurrence, and Old Cy's
+dismissal of the matter ended it.
+
+His thoughts, however, were a different matter. Full well he knew it was
+no bear thus moving. A deer would never enter a crevasse, nor a wildcat
+or lynx ever leave the shelter of woods to wander in open sunlight.
+
+"I'll go over thar in the mornin'," he said to himself; "I may git a
+chance to wing that varmint 'n' end our worryin'."
+
+And now Angie, more interested in spites and the weird belief which she
+heard that this Indian held than in the sight of a doe, began to ply Old
+Tomah with questions, and bit by bit she led him on toward that subject.
+
+It was not an easy task. His speech came slowly. Deeds, not words, are an
+Indian's form of expression, and this fair white lady, serene as the
+moon and as suave and smiling as culture could make her, was one to awe
+him.
+
+With Chip he had been fluent enough. She had been almost a protégée of
+his, a big pappoose whom he had taught to manage a canoe, for whom he had
+made moccasins, a fur cap and cape, who had listened to all his strange
+theories with wide-open, believing eyes, and, best of all, a helpless
+waif whom he had learned to love.
+
+But this white lady, awe-inspiring as she was, now failed to induce him
+to talk.
+
+Chip, however, keen to catch the drift of Angie's wishes and anxious
+to have her own faith defended, soon came to the rescue and induced Old
+Tomah to speak--not fluently at first, the "me" in place of "I"
+always occurring, adjectives following nouns, prepositions left out in
+many cases; and yet, as he warmed up to his subject, his coal-black eyes
+were fierce or tender, and the inborn eloquence of his race glowed in
+face and speech.
+
+And what a wild tale he told! Some of it was the history of his own
+race, beginning long before white men came. He related the contests of
+his people with wild animals, their deeds of valor, their torturing
+of prisoners, their own scorn of death and stoical endurance of pain.
+His own ancestors had been mighty chieftains. They had led the tribe
+through many battles, swept down upon their white enemies, an avenging
+horde, and were now roaming the happy hunting-grounds where he would soon
+join them. Mingled with this tale of warfare and conquest, and always
+an unseen force for good or evil, were the spites--the souls of all
+brute creation. How they followed or led the hunter! How they warned
+their own kind of his coming! How they lured him into unseen danger,
+and how they continually sought to avenge their own deaths! There were
+also two kinds of them,--some evil and the others good. The evil ones
+predominated, the good ones feared them, yet sought to interfere in all
+evil effort. These two hosts also had their own warfares. They fought
+oftenest when storms raged in the forest. Then they swept the tree-tops
+and scurried over the hills in vast numbers, shrieking and screaming
+defiance.
+
+Another apparition was oft referred to in this weird talk. A great
+white spectre and chieftain of all spites, who sprang from his abode
+in the north, whose breath was a blast of snow, howling as it swept
+over the wilderness--this ghost, so vast that it covered miles and
+miles of wilderness, was altogether evil. It spared neither man nor
+beast. The hunter trailing his game met death on the instant and was
+left rigid and upright in his tracks. Squaws and children huddled in
+wigwams shared the same speedy fate. Lynxes and panthers, deer and
+moose by the score, were touched by the same mystic and awful wand of
+death.
+
+It was all an uncanny, eerie, ghostly recital; yet all real and true
+to Chip, whose eyes never once left the Indian's face while he was
+speaking. Angie, too, was spellbound. Never had she heard anything
+like it; and while believing it was all a mere myth and legend, a
+superstitious fancy, maybe, of this strange Indian, its telling was
+none the less interesting.
+
+Ray was also enthralled, and he was half convinced that the forest might,
+after all, contain spooks and goblins.
+
+But Old Cy was only a curious listener. He, too, had woven many a
+fantastic tale of the sea, its storms and monsters leaping from the
+crests of waves, and all such figments of the imagination, and this
+fable was but the same. The only feature of passing interest to him was
+the fact that any Indian had such a vivid imagination and could relate
+such a mingled ghost story so coherently.
+
+Old Tomah ceased speaking even more abruptly than he began, then looked
+from one to another of the group, perhaps to see if they all believed
+him, and then without a word or even "good night," he rose and stalked
+out of the cabin.
+
+For a few moments Chip watched Angie and the rest, anxious to see how
+this explanation of her own belief affected them, and then Old Cy spoke.
+
+"I'd hate to be campin' with that Injun," he said, "or sharin' a
+wigwam with him night-times. It 'ud be worse'n a man I sot up with
+once that had the jim-jams, 'n' I'd see spites and spooks for a week
+arter."
+
+Angie's sleep was troubled that night, and in her dreams she saw white
+spectres and a man with a hideously scarred face and one eye watching her.
+
+Ray also felt the uncanny influence of such a tale and "saw things"
+in his sleep. But Old Cy, who had securely barred the doors and then had
+rolled himself in a blanket with rifle handy, thought only of what Ray
+had seen that day and who it might be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+ "An honest man's the best critter God ever made, an' the
+ skeercest."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Old Cy's suspicions were correct. It was neither bear, deer, nor wildcat
+that Ray saw skulking along the ridge, but the half-breed.
+
+Believing Chip's father had taken her out of the wilderness, or more
+likely up-stream to find a place with these campers, he had come here
+to seek her. To find her here, as he of course did, only convinced him
+that his suspicions were true and that her father had thus meant to rob
+him.
+
+Two determined impulses now followed this discovery: first, to make the
+girl he had bought a prisoner, carry her into the woods, and then, when
+the chance came, revenge himself on McGuire. No sense of law, or decency
+even, entered his calculation. He was beyond such scruples, and what he
+wanted was his only law.
+
+The fear of rifles, which he knew were plenty enough at this camp, was
+the only factor to be considered. For days he watched the camp from
+across the lake, hoping that the girl he saw canoeing with a boy so
+often might come near enough for him to make a capture. Many times,
+when darkness served, he paddled close to where the cabin stood, and
+once landed and watched it for hours.
+
+Growing bolder, as the days wore on, he hid his canoe below the outlet
+of the lake and taking advantage of this outcropping slate ledge with
+its many fissures, secreted himself and watched.
+
+But some shelter, at least to cook and eat in, he must have, and this he
+found in a distant crevasse of this same ledge, and from this he sneaked
+along back of it until he could hide and watch the camp below. From this
+vantage-point, he saw that the girl no longer went out upon the lake,
+but remained near the cabin; then later, he noticed the two men leave
+the lake one morning. This encouraged him, and now he grew still bolder,
+even descending the ridge and watching those remaining at the cabin,
+from a dense thicket.
+
+From this new post he saw that but one man seemed on guard, and almost
+was he tempted to shoot him from ambush and make a dash to capture his
+victim. Cautious and cunning, he still waited a chance involving less
+risk.
+
+And now he saw that certain duties were performed by these people;
+that one man and the boy always started the morning fire; that the girl
+invariably went to the landing alone for water, at about the same time.
+Here for the moment she was out of sight from either cabin, and now in
+this act of hers, he saw his opportunity to land from his canoe near
+this spot before daylight, and hide in the bushes fringing the shore here
+and below the bank, watch his chance and seize and gag her before an
+outcry could be made. To tie her hands and feet and to push the other
+canoe out into the lake, thus avoiding pursuit until they could get a
+good start, was an easy matter.
+
+It was risky, of course. She might hear or see him in time to give one
+scream. The old man who had said foolish things to him, and now seemed
+to be on guard, would surely send bullets after him as he sped away; but
+once out of the lake, he would be safe. It was a dangerous act; yet the
+other two men might return any day, and with this in prospect, this wily
+half-breed now resolved to act.
+
+Old Cy was up early that fatal morning. Somehow a sense of impending
+danger haunted him, and calling Ray, he unlocked the cabin door and began
+starting the morning fire. He wanted to get breakfast out of the way as
+speedily as possible, and then visit this ridge, feeling almost sure
+that he would find where this half-breed had been watching them.
+
+When Ray came out, and before the hermit or Chip appeared, Old Cy hurried
+over to the ice-house, and now Chip came forth as usual, and without a
+word to any one, she took the two pails and started for the landing. It
+was, perhaps, ten rods to this, down a narrow path winding through the
+scrub spruce. The morning was fair, the lake without a ripple.
+
+Above the ridge, and peeping through its topping of stunted fir, came
+the first glance of the sun, and Chip was happy.
+
+Old Tomah, her one and only friend for many years, was here. A something
+Ray had whispered the night before, now returned like a sweet note of
+music vibrating in her heart, and as if to add their cheer, the birds
+were piping all about.
+
+For weeks the cheerful words of one of Ray's songs had haunted her with
+its catchy rhythm:--
+
+ "Dar was an old nigger and his name was Uncle Ned,
+ He died long 'go, long 'go."
+
+They now rose to her lips, as she neared the lake. Here she halted,
+filled a pail, and set it on the log landing.
+
+[Illustration: Nearer and nearer that unconscious girl it crept!]
+
+From behind a low spruce one evil, sinister eye watched her.
+
+And now Chip, still humming this ditty, glanced up at the rising sun and
+out over the lake.
+
+A crouching form with hideous face now emerged from behind the bush;
+step by step, this human panther advanced. A slow, cautious, catlike
+movement, without sound, as each moccasined foot touched the sand. Nearer
+and nearer that unconscious girl it crept! Now twenty feet away, now
+ten, now five!
+
+And now came a swift rush, two fierce hands enclosed the girl's face
+and drew her backward on to the sand.
+
+Ray and the hermit were beside the fire, and the Indian just emerging
+from the hut where he had slept, when Old Cy returned from the ice-house.
+
+"Where's Chip?" he questioned.
+
+"Gone after water," answered Ray. And the two glanced down the path.
+
+One, two, five minutes elapsed, and then a sudden suspicion of something
+wrong came to Old Cy, and, followed by Ray, he hurried to the landing.
+
+One pail of water stood on the float, both their canoes were adrift on
+the lake, and as Old Cy looked out, there, heading for the outlet, was
+a canoe!
+
+One swift glance and, "My God, he's got Chip!" told the story,
+and with face fierce in anger, he darted back, grasped his rifle, and
+returned.
+
+The canoe, its paddler bending low as he forced it into almost leaps,
+was scarce two lengths from the outlet.
+
+Old Cy raised his rifle, then lowered it.
+
+Chip was in that canoe!
+
+His avenging shot was stayed.
+
+And now Old Tomah leaped down the path, rifle in hand.
+
+One look at the vanishing canoe, and his own, floating out upon the lake,
+told him the tale, and without a word he turned and, plunging into the
+undergrowth, leaping like a deer over rock and chasm, vanished at the
+top of the ridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+ "The man that won't bear watchin' needs it."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+While Chip, bound, gagged, and helpless in the half-breed's canoe,
+was just entering the alder-choked outlet of this lake, twenty miles
+below and close to where the stream entered another lake, four men were
+launching their canoes.
+
+"It was here," Martin was saying to Hersey, "one moonlight night a
+year ago, that a friend of mine and myself saw a spectral man astride
+a log, just entering that bed of reeds, as I told you. Who or what it
+was, we could not guess; but as that spook canoeman went up this stream,
+we followed and discovered our hermit's home."
+
+"Night-time and moonshine play queer pranks with our imagination,"
+Hersey responded. "I'm not a whit superstitious, and yet I've many
+a time seen what I thought to be a hunter creeping along the lake shore
+at night, and I once came near plugging a fat man in a shadowy glen. I
+was up on a cliff watching down into it, the day was cloudy, and 'way
+below I saw what I was sure was a bear crawling along the bank of the
+stream. I had my rifle raised and was only waiting for a better sight,
+when up rose the bear and I saw a human face. For a moment it made me
+faint, and since then I make doubly sure before shooting at any object
+in the woods."
+
+And now these four men, Levi wielding the stern paddle of Martin's
+canoe, and Hersey's deputy that of his, entered the broad, winding
+stream. The tall spruce-tops meeting darkened its currentless course,
+long filaments of white moss depended from every limb, and as they
+twisted and turned up this sombre highway, the air grew stifling. Not
+a breeze, not a sound, disturbed the solemn silence, and except for the
+swish of paddles and faint thud as they touched gunwales, the fall of a
+leaf might have been heard. So dense was this dark, silent forest,
+and so forbidding its effect, that for an hour no one scarce spoke,
+and even when the two canoes finally drew together, converse came in
+whispers. Another hour of steady progress, and then the banks began to
+outline themselves ahead, the trees opened more, a sign of current was
+met, and the sun lit up their pathway.
+
+By now the spectral beard had vanished from the trees, white clouds were
+reflected from the still waters, and the gleam of sandy bottom was seen
+below. The birds, inspired perhaps by the absence of gloom, also added
+their cheering notes, Nature was smiling once more, and not a hint or
+even intuition of the fast-nearing tragedy met those men.
+
+And then, as a broad, eddying bend in the stream held their canoes, by
+tacit consent a halt was made.
+
+Martin, his paddle crossed on the thwarts in front, dipped a cup of
+the cool, sweet water and drank. Levi wiped the sweat from his face, and
+Hersey also quenched his thirst. The day was hot. They had paddled ten
+miles. There was no hurry, and as pipes were drawn forth and filled,
+conversation began. But just at this moment Levi's ears, ever alert,
+caught the faint sound of a paddle striking a canoe gunwale. Not as
+usual, in an intermittent fashion, as would be the case with a skilled
+canoeist, but a steady, rhythmic thud.
+
+"Hist," he said, and silence fell upon the group.
+
+In the wilderness all sounds are noticed and noted, by night especially,
+because then they may mean a bear crawling softly through the
+undergrowth, or a wildcat, yellow-eyed and vicious, creeping near. But by
+day as well they are always heeded, and the crackle of a twig, or the
+sound of a deer's foot striking a stone, or any slight noise, becomes
+of keen interest.
+
+And now, from far ahead, came the steady tap, tap, tap. It soon
+increased, and then it assured those waiting, listening men that some
+canoe was being urged down-stream.
+
+Without a word they glanced at one another, and then, as if an intuition
+came to both at the same time, Martin and Hersey reached for their rifles.
+
+On and on came the steady thump, thump.
+
+Just ahead the stream narrowed and curved out of sight. A few foam flecks
+from an unseen rill above floated down. The white sandy bottom showed
+in the clear water.
+
+And then, as those stern-faced, watching, listening men, rifles in hand,
+almost side by side, waited there, out from behind this bend shot a canoe.
+
+"My God, it's Pete Bolduc! Look out!" almost yelled Levi, and "Halt!
+Surrender!" from Hersey, as two rifles were levelled at the oncomer.
+Then one instant's sight of a red and scarred face, a quick reach for
+a rifle, a splash of water, an overturned canoe, and with a curse the
+astonished half-breed dived into the undergrowth.
+
+Two rifles spoke almost at the same instant from the waiting canoes, one
+answered from out the thicket. A thrashing, struggling something in the
+filled canoe next caught all eyes, and Levi, leaping into the waist-deep
+stream, grasped and lifted a dripping form.
+
+It was Chip!
+
+A brief yet bloodless tragedy, all over in less time than the telling;
+yet a lifetime of horror had been endured by that waif, for as Levi bore
+her to the bank, cut the thongs that bound her, and freed her mouth from
+a pad of deerskin, she grasped his hand and kissed it.
+
+And then came another surprise; for down a sloping, thick-grown hillside,
+something was heard thrashing, and soon Old Tomah, his clothing in
+shreds, his face bleeding, appeared to view.
+
+Calculating to a nicety where he could best intercept and head off the
+escaping half-breed, he had crossed four miles of pathless undergrowth
+in less than an hour, and reached the stream at the nearest point after
+it left the lake.
+
+How Chip, still sobbing from the awful agony of mind, and dripping
+water as well, greeted Old Tomah; how Hersey, chagrined at the escape of
+the half-breed, gave vent to muttered curses; how Martin joined them
+in thought; and how they all gathered around Chip and listened to her
+tale of horror, are but minor features of the episode, and not worth
+the telling.
+
+When all was said and done, Old Tomah, grim and silent as ever, although
+he had done what no white man could do or would try to do, washed his
+bloody face in the stream, drank his fill of the cool water, and lifting
+Pete's half-filled canoe as easily as if it were a shingle, tipped
+it, turned the water out, and set it on the sloping bank.
+
+"Me take you back and watch you now," he said to Chip. "You no get
+caught again."
+
+And thus convoyed, poor Chip, willing to clasp and caress the feet or
+legs of any or all of those men, and more grateful than any dog ever was
+for a caress, was escorted back to the lake.
+
+All those waiting at the cabin were at the landing when the rescuers
+arrived. Angie, her eyes brimming, first embraced and then kissed the
+girl. Ray would have felt it a proud privilege to have carried her to the
+cabin, and Old Cy's wrinkled face showed more joy than ever gladdened
+it in all his life before.
+
+Somehow this hapless waif had grown dearer to them all than she or they
+understood.
+
+There was also feasting and rejoicing that night at Martin's wildwood
+home, and mingled with it all an oft-repeated tale.
+
+Old Cy told one end of it in his droll way, Martin related the other,
+and Chip filled up the interim. Levi had his say, and Hersey supplied
+more or less--mostly more--of this half-breed's history.
+
+Old Tomah, however, said nothing. To him, who lived in the past of a
+bygone race which looked upon lumbermen as devastating vandals ever
+eating into its kingdom, and whose thoughts were upon the happy
+hunting-grounds soon to be entered, this half-breed's lust and
+cunning were as the fall of the leaf. Were it needful he would, as he
+had, plunge through bramble and brier and leap over rock and chasm to
+rescue his big pappoose, but now that she was safe again, he lapsed into
+his stoical reserve once more. Shadowy forms and the mysticism of the
+wilderness were more to his taste than all the pathos of human life;
+and while his eyes kindled at Chip's smile, his thoughts were following
+some storm or tempest sweeping over a vast wilderness, or the rush and
+roar of the great white spectre.
+
+"Chip is good girl," he said to Angie the next morning, "and white
+lady love her. Tomah's heart is like squaw heart, too; but he go away
+and forget. White lady must not forget," and with that mixture of
+tenderness and stoicism he strode away, and the last seen of him was
+when he entered the outlet without once looking back at the cabin where
+his "big pappoose" was kept.
+
+More serious, however, were the facts Martin and Hersey now had to
+consider, and a council of war, as it were, was now held with Levi, Old
+Cy, and the deputy as advisers.
+
+What the half-breed would now do, and in what way they could now capture
+him were, of course, discussed, and as usual in such cases, it was of
+no avail, because they were dealing with absolutely unknown quantities.
+The facts were these: Bolduc, a cunning criminal, fearless of all
+law, had set his heart upon the possession of this girl. Her story,
+unquestionably true, that he had paid a large sum for this right and
+title, must inevitably make him feel that he would have what was his at
+any cost. His first attempt at securing her had been thwarted. He had
+been shot at by minions of the law,--an act sure to make him more
+vengeful,--his canoe had been taken, and what with the loss of the
+girl, money, and canoe also, one of his stamp would surely be driven to
+extreme revenge.
+
+He was now at large in this wilderness, knew where the girl and his
+enemies were, and as Hersey said, "He had the drop on them."
+
+"I believe in standing by our guns," that officer continued, after all
+these conclusions had been admitted. "We are here to rid the woods of
+this scoundrel. We have five good rifles and know how to use them. The
+law is on our side, for he refused to surrender, and returned our shots;
+and if I catch sight of him, I shall shoot to cripple, anyway."
+
+Old Cy's advice, however, was more pacific.
+
+"My notion is this feller's a cowardly cuss," he said, "a sort o'
+human hyena. He'll never show himself in the open, but come prowlin'
+'round nights, stealin' anything he can. He may take a pop at some on
+us from a-top o' the ridge; but I callate he'll never venture within
+gunshot daytimes. His sort is allus more skeered o' us'n we need be
+o' him."
+
+In spite of Old Cy's conclusions, however, the camp remained in a state
+of siege that day and many days following.
+
+Angie and Chip seldom strayed far from the cabin. Ray assumed the
+water-bringing, night and morning. Old Cy and Levi patrolled the
+premises, while Martin, Hersey, and his deputy hunted a little for game
+and a good deal for moccasined footprints or a sight or a sign of this
+half-breed.
+
+Hersey, more especially, made him his object of pursuit. He had come
+here for that purpose, his pride and reputation were at stake, and
+the thousand dollars Martin had agreed to pay was a minor factor. He
+and his mate passed hours in the mornings and late in the afternoon
+watching from wide apart outlooks on the ridge. They made long jaunts
+up the brook valley to where the smoke sign had been seen, they found
+where this half-breed had built a fire here, and later another lair,
+a mile from the cabins and in this ridge. Long detours they made in
+other directions. Old Tomah's trail through the forest was crossed;
+but neither in forest nor on lake shore were any recent footprints of
+the half-breed found. Old ones were discovered in plenty. An almost
+beaten trail led from his lair in the ridge to a crevasse back of the
+cabins, but to one well versed in wood tracks, it was easy to tell how
+old these tracks were.
+
+A freshly made trail in the forest bears unmistakable evidence of its
+date, and no woodwise man ever confounds a two or three days' old one
+with it. One footprint may not determine this occult fact; but followed
+to where the moss is spongy or the earth moist, a matter of hours, even,
+can be decided.
+
+A week of this watchfulness, with no sign of their enemy's return, not
+even to within the circuit patrolled time and again, began to relieve
+suspense and awaken curiosity. They had been so sure, especially Martin,
+that he would come back for revenge, that now it was hard to account for
+his not doing so.
+
+"My idee is he got so skeered at them two shots," Old Cy asserted,
+"he hain't stopped runnin' yit." And then the old man chuckled at
+the ludicrous picture of this pernicious "varmint" scampering through
+a wilderness from fright.
+
+But Old Cy was wrong. It was not fear that saved them from a prompt
+visitation from this half-breed, but lack of means of defence. The one
+shot remaining in his rifle at the moment of meeting had been sent on
+its vengeful errand, all the rest of his ammunition was in his canoe, and
+now on the bottom of the stream. Being thus crippled for means to act,
+the only course left to him was a return to his cabin seventy-five miles
+away, with only a hunting-knife to sustain life with.
+
+Even to a skilled hunter and trapper like him, this was no easy task. It
+meant at least a week's journey through almost impassable swamps and
+undergrowth, with frogs, raw fish, roots, and berries for food.
+
+How that half-breed, unconscious that the mills of God had ground him
+the grist he deserved, fought his way through this pathless wilderness;
+how he ate mice and frogs to sustain his worthless life; how he cursed
+McGuire as the original cause of his wretched plight and Martin's party
+as aids; and how many times he swore he would kill every one of them,
+needs no description.
+
+He lived to reach his hut on the Fox Hole, and from that moment on, this
+wilderness held an implacable enemy of McGuire's, sworn to kill him,
+first of all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+ "The biggest fool is the man that thinks he knows it all."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+For two weeks the little party at Birch Camp first watched and then
+began to enjoy themselves once more. September had come, the first
+tint of autumn colored every patch of hardwood, a mellow haze softened
+the outline of each green-clad hill and mountain, the sun rose red and
+sailed an unclouded course each day, and gentle breezes rippled the
+lake. The forest, the sky, the air and earth, all seemed in harmonious
+mood, and the one discordant note, fear of this half-breed, slowly
+vanished.
+
+Chip resumed her hour of study each day; a little fishing and hunting
+was indulged in by Martin and the two officers; wild ducks, partridges,
+deer, and trout supplied their table; each evening all gathered about
+the open fire in Martin's new cabin, and while the older people chatted,
+Ray took his banjo or whispered with Chip.
+
+These two, quite unguessed by Angie, had become almost lovers, and as it
+was understood Chip was to be taken to Greenvale, all that wonder-world,
+to her, had been described by Ray many times. He also outlined many
+little plans for sleigh-rides, skating on the mill-pond, and dances
+which he and she were to enjoy together.
+
+His own future and livelihood were a little hazy to him. These matters do
+not impress a youth of eighteen; but of one thing he felt sure,--that
+Chip with her rosy face and black eyes, always tender to him, was to
+be his future companion in all pleasures. It was love among the spruce
+trees, a summer idyl made tender by the dangers interrupting it, and
+hidden from all eyes except Old Cy's, who was these young friends'
+favorite.
+
+How many times he had taken these two over the ridge during the first
+two weeks, and picked berries while they played at it, or crossed the
+lake in his canoe to leave them on the shore while he cast for trout,
+no one but himself knew, and he wasn't telling.
+
+Even now, with these two strangers about, Old Cy, Chip, and Ray somehow
+seemed to "flock by themselves." Old Cy took them canoeing. They
+paddled up streams entering the lake. He showed them where muskrats
+were house-building, where mink had runways, and otter had sliding
+spots; and to forestall a plan of his own, he enlarged upon the fun
+and profit of trapping here when the time came. If these two young
+doves cooed a little meantime, he never heard it; if they held hands
+unduly long, he never saw it; and if they exchanged kisses behind his
+back--well, it was their own loss if they didn't.
+
+But these days of mingled romance and tragic happenings, of shooting,
+fishing, story-telling, and wildwood life, were nearing their end, and
+one evening Martin announced that on the morrow they would pack their
+belongings and, escorted by the officers, leave the wilderness.
+
+The next morning Old Cy took Ray aside.
+
+"I want a good square talk with ye, my boy," he said, "an' I'm
+goin' to do ye a good turn if I kin. Now to begin, I s'pose ye know
+yer aunt's goin' to take Chip to Greenvale 'n' gin her a chance at
+the schoolin' she sartinly needs. Now you're callatin' to go 'long
+'n' have a heap o' fun this winter. I'm goin' to stay here 'n'
+keer for Amzi. This is the situation 'bout as it is. Now you hev got yer
+eddication, 'n' the next move is to make yer way in the world 'n'
+arn suthin', an' ez a starter, I want ye to stay here this winter
+with me 'n' trap. The woods round here is jist bristlin' with spruce
+gum that is worth a dollar-fifty a pound, easy. We've got two months
+now, 'fore snow gits deep. We kin live on the top shelf in the way
+o' fish 'n' game. We'll ketch a b'ar and pickle his meat 'n'
+smoke his hams, and when spring comes, I'll take ye out with mebbe
+five hundred dollars' worth of furs 'n' gum ez a beginnin'.
+
+"Thar's also 'nother side to consider. Chip wants schoolin', 'n'
+she's got to study night 'n' day fer the next eight months. If you
+go back with 'em, an' go gallivantin' 'round with her, ez you're
+sure to, it won't be no help to her. I've given you two all the chances
+fer weavin' the threads o' 'fect-shun I could this summer, an' now
+let's you 'n' I turn to and make some money. I've asked your uncle
+'n' aunt. They're willin', 'n' now, what do ye say?"
+
+Few country boys with a love for trapping, such as Ray had, ever had a
+more alluring prospect spread before them. He knew Old Cy was right in
+all his conclusions, and almost without hesitation he agreed to the plan.
+
+It was far-sighted wisdom on Old Cy's part, however, in not giving
+Ray time to reflect, else the magnet of Chip's eyes on the one hand,
+and eight months of separation on the other, would have proved too
+strong, and trap-setting and gum-gathering, with five hundred dollars as
+reward, would have failed.
+
+As it was, he came near weakening at the last moment when the canoes were
+packed and Angie and Chip came to take their seats in them.
+
+He and his crude, rude, yet winsome little sweetheart had suffered a
+brief preliminary parting the evening previous. A good many sweet and
+silly nothings had been exchanged, also promises, and now the boy's
+heart was very sore.
+
+Chip was more stoical. Her life at Tim's Place and contact with Old
+Tomah had taught her reserve, and yet when she turned for the last
+possible look at Old Cy and Ray, waving good-bye at the landing, a mist
+of tears hid them.
+
+Old Cy's face was also a study. To him these parting clouds were as the
+white ones hiding the sun; yet he felt their chill. His own life shadow
+was lengthening. He had now but a brief renewal of youth in the lives
+of these two, and then forgetfulness, as he knew full well, and yet he
+pitied them.
+
+More than that, he had set his hand to guiding the bark of their young
+lives into the safe harbor of a home, and all feelings of his own
+subserved to that.
+
+"Come, come, my boy," he said to Ray as the two turned away, and he
+noted the lad's sad face, "she's gone now, an' ye'd best ferget her
+fer a spell. Ye won't, I know, 'n' she won't; but ye'd best make
+believe ye do. This ain't no spot fer love-sick spells. We've got work
+to do, 'n' money to arn; ye've got the chance o' yer life now, an'
+me to help ye to it, so brace up 'n' look cheerful.
+
+"Think o' what we got to do to git ready fer winter 'n' six foot
+o' snow. Think o' the traps we're goin' to set, an' the fun o'
+tendin' 'em. Why, girls ain't in it a minnit with ketchin' mink,
+marten, otter, an' now 'n' then a lynx or bobcat. Then when ye go
+back with a new suit 'n' money in yer pocket, ye'll feel prouder'n a
+peacock, 'n' Chip a-smilin' at ye sweeter'n new maple syrup."
+
+Verily Old Cy had the wisdom of age and the cheerfulness of morning
+sunshine.
+
+All that day these wilderness-marooned friends worked hard. An ample
+stock of birch wood must be cut and split, a shed of poles to cover it
+must be erected alongside of the cabin, the hermit's log hut was to
+be divested of its fittings, which were to be removed to the new cabin
+which all were now to occupy.
+
+Realizing how vital to their existence the canoes were, Old Cy had also
+planned a shelter of small logs for them on one side of the log cabin,
+that could be locked. Here the canoes not in use must be stored at once
+to guard against a night call from the malignant half-breed. His canoe
+had been taken along by Martin's party, to be left at Tim's Place, for
+even Hersey would have scorned to appropriate it.
+
+There were dozens of other needs to prepare for during the next two
+months, all of which were important. An ample supply of deer meat must be
+secured, to be pickled and smoked. All the partridges they could shoot
+would be needed, and later, when south-bound ducks halted at the lake, a
+few of these would add to their larder.
+
+In this connection, also, another need occurred to Old Cy. Trout could be
+caught all winter in the lake, but live bait must be had, and so a
+slat car to be sunk in some swift-running stream, which would hold
+them, must be constructed, also a scoop of mosquito net to catch them.
+These minnows were to be found now by the million in every brook, and
+forethought was Old Cy's watchword.
+
+All these duties and details he discussed that first day with Ray, while
+they worked, for a purpose.
+
+But the first evening here, with its open fire, yet empty seats, was the
+hardest to pass. In vain Old Cy enlarged upon the joys of trap-setting
+once more, and how and where they were to secure gum. In vain he
+described how deadfalls were built and where they must be placed,
+how many signs of lynx and wildcat he had seen that summer, and how
+sure they were to secure some of these valuable furs.
+
+Ray's heart was not here. Far away in some night camp, Chip was thinking
+of him. He knew each day would bear her farther away. No word of her
+safe arrival could reach them now. Long months must elapse ere he and she
+could meet again, and in prospect they seemed an eternity.
+
+"Come, git yer banjo, my boy," Old Cy ejaculated at last, seeing Ray's
+face grow gloomy. "Tune 'er up, an' play us suthin' lively. None
+o' them goody-goody weepin' sort o' tunes; but give us 'Money Musk'
+'n' a few jigs. I'm feelin' our prospects are so cheerful, I'd
+like to cut a few pigeon-wings out o' compliment."
+
+But Old Cy's hilarity was nearly all put on. He, too, felt the effect
+of the empty seats and missed every one that had gone, and Ray's jig
+tunes lacked their spirit. He essayed a few, and then quite unconsciously
+his fingers strayed to "My Old Kentucky Home," and Old Cy's feelings
+responded.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+ "I jist nachly hate a person that talks as tho' he'd bin
+ measured fer a harp."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Chip's arrival in Greenvale produced astonishment and gossip galore. It
+began when the stage that "Uncle Joe" Barnes had driven for twenty
+years started for that village. There were other passengers besides
+Martin, his wife, and Chip. The seats inside were soon filled, and Chip,
+seeing a coveted chance, climbed nimbly to a position beside the driver.
+
+"Gee Whittaker," observed one bystander to another, as Chip's
+black-stockinged legs flashed into view, "but that gal's nimbler'n
+a squirrel 'n' don't mind showin' underpinnin'. I wished I was
+drivin' that stage. I'll bet she's a circus."
+
+Uncle Joe soon found her a live companion at least, for he had scarce
+left the village ere she began.
+
+"Your hosses are fatter'n Tim's hosses used to be," she said. "Do
+ye feed 'em on hay and taters?"
+
+Uncle Joe gave her a sideways glance.
+
+"Hay and taters," he exclaimed; "we don't feed hosses on taters down
+here. Where'd you come from?"
+
+"I used to live at Tim's Place, up in the woods, 'n' we fed our
+hosses on taters, 'n' they had backs sharp 'nuff to split ye."
+
+This time Uncle Joe faced squarely around.
+
+"I know all about hosses," she continued glibly, "I used to take keer
+on 'em 'n' ride one ploughin', an' I've been throwed more'n a
+hundred times when we struck roots, an' ye ought to 'a' heerd Tim
+cuss. I used to cuss just the same, but Mrs. Frisbie says I mustn't."
+
+"Wal, I swow," ejaculated Uncle Joe, realizing that he had a "case."
+"What's your name, 'n' whar's Tim's Place?"
+
+"My name's Chip, Chip McGuire, only 'tain't, it's Vera; but they
+allus called me Chip, an' Tim's Place is ever so far up in the woods.
+I runned away 'cause dad sold me, an' fetched up at Mrs. Frisbie's
+camp, 'n' she's goin' to eddicate me. My mother got killed when I
+was a kid, 'n' my dad killed 'nother one, too; he's a bad 'un."
+
+Uncle Joe gasped at this gory tale of double murder, not being quite sure
+that the girl was sane.
+
+"Hain't they ketched yer dad yit?" he queried.
+
+"No, nor they won't," Chip rattled on, as if such killing were a daily
+occurrence in the woods. "He's a slick 'un, they say, an' now he's
+got Pete's money, he'll lay low."
+
+"Worse and worse, and more of it," Uncle Joe thought.
+
+"You must 'a' had middlin' lively times up in the woods," he said.
+"Did yer dad kill anybody else 'sides yer mother 'n' this man?"
+
+"He didn't kill mother," Chip returned promptly; "he used to lick
+her, though, but she got killed in a mill, 'n' I wisht it 'ud bin him.
+I wouldn't 'a' bin an orfin then. Say," she added, as they entered
+a woods-bordered stretch of road, "did ye ever see spites here?"
+
+"Spites," he responded, now more than ever in doubt as to her sanity,
+"what's them?"
+
+"Why, they's just spites--things ye can't see much of 'ceptin' it's
+dark. Then they come crawlin' round. They's souls o' animals mostly,
+Old Tomah says. I've seen thousands on 'em."
+
+Uncle Joe shifted his quid, turned and eyed the girl once more. First,
+a wild and wofully mixed tale of murder, and then spookish things! Beyond
+question she had wheels, and he resolved to humor her.
+
+"Oh, yes, we see them things here now 'n' then," he said, "but it
+takes considerable licker to do it. We hain't had a murder, though, for
+quite a spell. This is a sorter peaceful neck o' woods ye're comin'
+to."
+
+But Chip failed to grasp his quiet humor, and all through that
+twenty-mile autumn day stage ride she chattered on like a magpie.
+
+He soon concluded she was sane enough, however, but the most voluble
+talker who ever shared his seat.
+
+"I never seen the beat o' her," he said that night at Phinney's
+store,--the village news agency,--"she clacked every minit from the
+time we started till we fetched in, an' I never callated sich goin's
+on ez she told about cud ever happen. Thar was murder 'n' runnin'
+away, 'n' she got ketched 'n' carried off 'n' fetched back, 'n'
+a whole lot o' resky business. She believes in ghosts, too, sorter
+Injun sperits, 'n' she kin swear jist ez easy ez I kin. It seems
+the Frisbies hev kinder 'dopted her, 'n' I guess they'll hev their
+hands full. She's a bright 'un, though, but sich a talker!"
+
+At Aunt Comfort's spacious, old-fashioned home, where Chip was now
+installed, she soon began to create the same impression. This had been
+Angie's former home, and her Aunt Comfort Day had been her foster-mother.
+
+This family, in addition to the new arrival, consisted of Aunt Comfort,
+rotund and warm-hearted; Hannah Pettibone, a well-along spinster of
+angular form and temper, thin to an almost painful degree, with a
+well-defined mustache; and a general helper on the farm, and a chore
+boy about Chip's age named Nezer, completed the list.
+
+Once included in this somewhat diverse group, Chip became an immediate
+bone of contention.
+
+Aunt Comfort, of course, opened her heart to her at once; but Hannah
+closed hers, almost from the first day, and in addition she began to
+nurse malice as well. There was some reason for this, mainly due to
+Chip's startling freshness of speech.
+
+"I thought ye must be a man wearin' wimmin's clothes, the first time I
+see ye," she said to Hannah the next day after her arrival, and without
+meaning offence. "It was all on account o' yer little whiskers, I
+guess. I never see a woman with 'em afore. Why don't ye shave?"
+
+This was enough; for if there was any one thing more mortifying than
+all else to Hannah, it was her facial blemish, and a mention of it she
+considered an intentional insult.
+
+From this moment onward she hated Chip.
+
+Nezer, however, took to her as a duck to water, and her story, which
+he soon heard, became a real dime novel to him, and not content with
+one telling, he insisted on repetition. This was also unfortunate
+for--blessed with a vivid imagination and sure to enlarge upon all
+facts--he soon spread the story with many blood-curdling additions.
+
+These stories, with Uncle Joe's corroboration, resulted in a direful
+tale believed by all. Neighbors flocked in to see this heroine of many
+escapades, villagers halted in front of Aunt Comfort's to catch a sight
+of this marvel, and so the wonder spread.
+
+Angie was, of course, to blame. More impressed with the seriousness of
+the task she had undertaken than the need of caution, she had failed to
+tell Chip she must not talk about herself, and so a wofully distorted
+history became current gossip.
+
+When Sunday came, the village church was packed, and Parson Jones
+marvelled much at the unexpected increase of religious interest. He
+had heard of this new arrival, but when the Frisbie family with Chip,
+in suitable clothing, entered their pew, the cynosure of all eyes,
+this unusual attendance was accounted for.
+
+And what a staring-at Chip received!
+
+On the church steps a group of both young and old men had awaited her
+arrival and gazed at her in open-eyed astonishment. All through service
+she was watched, and not content with this, a dozen or so, men and women,
+formed a double line outside, awaiting the Frisbies' exit.
+
+Angie also failed to understand the principal cause of this interest. Her
+last appearance at this church had been as a bride. Naturally that fact
+would produce some staring, and so the curious and almost rude scrutiny
+the family received, was less noticed by her.
+
+But Chip's eyes were observant.
+
+"I don't like goin' to meetin'," she said, "an' bein' stared at
+like I was a wildcat. I seen 'em grinnin', too, some on 'em, when we
+went in, an' one feller winked to another. What ailed 'em?"
+
+Her vexations, however, had only just begun, for Angie had seen and made
+arrangements with Miss Phinney, one of the village school-teachers, and
+the next morning Chip was sent to school. And now real trouble commenced.
+
+Not knowing more than how to read and spell short words, and unable to
+write, she, a fairly well-developed young lady, presented a problem
+which was hard for a teacher to solve. To put her in the class where she
+belonged was absurd. She must sit with older girls, or look ridiculous.
+If she recited with the eight-year-old children, the result would be
+the same, and so a species of private tuition with recitations at noon or
+after school became the only possible course and the one her teacher
+adopted.
+
+This also carried its vexations, for Chip was as tall as Miss Phinney
+and a little larger. Not one of that band of pupils was over twelve.
+To join in their games was no sport for Chip, while they, having heard
+about her thrilling experiences, with a hint that she wasn't quite right
+in her head, felt afraid of her.
+
+"I feel so sorry for her," Miss Phinney explained to Angie, a week
+later, "and yet, I don't know what to do. She is so big the children
+won't play with her, or she with them. I am the only one with whom she
+will talk, and she seems so humble and so grateful for every word. I
+can't be as stern with her or govern her as I should, on account of her
+temper and size.
+
+"Only yesterday I heard screaming at recess, and going out, I found
+that Chip had one of the girls by the hair and was cuffing her. It
+transpired that this girl had called her an Indian and asked if she had
+ever scalped anybody. I can't punish such a pupil, and I can't help
+loving her, so you see she is a sore trial."
+
+She also became a trial to Angie in countless ways.
+
+Of a deep religious conviction, and believing this waif needed to be
+brought into the fold, Angie set about that task at once. But Chip was
+impervious to such instruction. By no argument or persuasion could
+Angie force her protégée to renounce her belief in the heathenism of
+Old Tomah, or convince her that God and the angels were any different
+from his collection of spirit forms, or that heaven was anything more
+than another name for his happy hunting-grounds. Old Tomah had been her
+wise and only friend, so far. She had seen all the ghostly forms he had
+described, had felt all the occult influences which he said existed,
+and neither coaxing nor derision served to make her disown them.
+
+Of course, Angie took her to church regularly. She sat through services
+and bowed as all did. Sabbath-school instruction would have been forced
+upon her but for the reason that made her a class of one under Miss
+Phinney, and Parson Jones's attention was finally enlisted.
+
+He spent an hour in pointing out her heathenish sins, assured her that
+Old Tomah was a wicked reprobate and an ignorant savage combined, that
+all influences so far surrounding her had been the worst possible,--a
+self-evident fact,--and unless she confessed a change of heart, and
+soon, too, all her friends here would desert her and the devil would
+overtake her by and by, and then closed this well-intended effort with a
+prayer.
+
+Chip sat through it all, mute and cowering. The parson's white hair,
+sharp eyes, and solemn voice awed her, and when he had departed, she
+began to cry.
+
+"I don't see the need o' makin' me say I don't believe suthin' when
+I do," she said. "I've seen spites 'n' I know I've seen 'em, an'
+nobody can make me believe Old Tomah a bad man, if he is an Injun. He
+runned after me when I got ketched, 'n' near got his eyes scratched
+out"--a logic it was useless to contend with.
+
+"You're jest a little spunky devil," Hannah said to her later on with
+a vicious accent, "an' if I was Mrs. Frisbie I'd larrup ye till ye
+confessed penitence, I would. The idee o' you settin' thar a-mullin'
+all the time the minister was tryin' to save ye! It's scand'lus!"
+
+And that night Chip was back in the wilderness with Old Cy and Ray in
+thought, and so homesick for them that she cried herself to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+ "While yer argufyin' with a fool, jes' figger thar's two on
+ 'em."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+The streams and swamps contiguous to this lake were well adapted for the
+habitat of mink, muskrat, otter, fisher, and those large fur-bearing
+animals, the lynx and lucivee, and here a brief description of where
+such animals exist, and how they are caught, may be of interest.
+
+The habits of the muskrat, the least cunning of these, are so well
+known that they merit only a few words. They are amphibious animals,
+their food is succulent roots, bulbs, and bark, and they frequent small,
+marshy ponds, sluggish streams, and swamps. In summer they conceal
+themselves by burrowing into soft banks; in winter they erect houses
+of sedge-grass, roots, and mud, and are caught in small steel traps
+set in shallow water at the entrance of their paths out of lake or stream.
+
+Mink, marten, otter, and fisher are much alike in shape and habit. All
+belong to the same family, but vary in size, also slightly in the matter
+of food. Mink and marten live on fish, frogs, birds, mice, etc.; otter on
+fish and roots; and fishers, as their name implies, subsist largely on
+fish. All these are more valuable fur-bearing animals than muskrats.
+Their abiding places are swamps and shallow streams, in the banks of
+which they burrow, and they are usually caught in steel traps baited
+with fish or meat.
+
+The lucivee, or lynx, and bobcat, more ferocious and cunning than their
+smaller cousins, roam the woods and swamps, live on smaller animals,
+hide in caves, crevices, and hollow trees, and they as well as otter
+occasionally are caught in deadfalls.
+
+Old Cy, familiar as he was with the homes, habits, and the manner of
+catching these cunning animals, soon began his trap-setting campaign.
+A few dozen steel traps were first set along the stream and lagoons
+entering the lake, and then he and Ray pushed up Beaver Brook, and
+leaving their canoe, followed its narrow valley in search of suitable
+spots to set the more elaborated deadfalls, which also merit description.
+
+A deadfall is made by placing one end of a suitably sized log--one
+perhaps fifteen feet long and a foot in diameter--on a figure four trap,
+so adjusted that its spindle end, to which the bait is secured, shall
+be poised beneath the upraised end of the log. Alongside of this log
+a double row of stakes is driven to form a pen with entrance leading
+to the bait. When this deadly contrivance is properly adjusted, the
+log and its pen of stakes is concealed with green boughs piled lightly
+over it, and all the hungry lynx sees is a narrow opening under green
+boughs, and in it a tempting morsel awaiting him. As those creatures,
+as well as now and then an otter, are sure to roam up and down all
+small streams, a spot where one emerges from a narrow defile, or joins a
+larger one, is usually selected for a deadfall.
+
+It is also quite a task to clear a suitable space, fell a right-sized
+tree, and construct one of these penlike traps; and although Old Cy and
+Ray started early, it was mid-afternoon that day ere they had the third
+one ready and awaiting its possible victim.
+
+As gum-gathering was also a part of their season's plan, they now left
+the swamp valley, and, ascending the spruce-clad upland, began this work,
+which is also worthy of description.
+
+The chewing gum of commerce, so delightful to schoolgirls and small boys,
+is the refined, diluted, and sweetened product of gum nuts, or the small
+excrescences of spruce sap that exudes and hardens around knot-holes and
+cracks in the bark of those trees. These form into hardened nuts or
+knobs of gum, from the size of a hazelnut to that of butternut, and
+are worth from a dollar to a dollar and fifty cents a pound. A long pole
+with a sharpened knife or chisel fastened to its tip is used by gum
+seekers. It can be gathered from the time frost first hardens it until
+spring, and to gather three to five pounds is considered a good day's
+work.
+
+Ray's first attempt at this labor seemed like nut-gathering at home,
+only more romantic, and when they were well into the vast spruce growth
+bordering one side of the Beaver Brook valley, he became so interested in
+hunting for the brown knobs, loosening them, and picking them up that
+he would have soon lost all points of the compass, except for Old Cy.
+
+There is also a spice of danger seasoning this pursuit. A wildcat might
+at any moment be seen watching from the crotch of a tree, or a bear might
+suddenly emerge from the thicket. It was hard work also, for while some
+parts of a spruce forest may be free from undergrowth, not all portions
+are, and this tangle is one not easy to move about in.
+
+There was also another element that entered into the trapping and
+gum-gathering life,--the possible return of the half-breed.
+
+"He hain't nothin' agin us," Old Cy asserted, when the question came
+up. "We didn't chase him the day he stole Chip, 'n' yet I s'pose
+he'll show up some day, 'n' mebbe do us harm."
+
+It was this fear that had led Old Cy to leave one of their canoes in a
+log locker, securely barred, and also to caution the hermit to remain
+on guard at the cabin while he and Ray were away.
+
+A canoe is the one most vital need of a wildwood life, for the reason
+that the streams are the only avenues of escape and afford the only
+opportunities for travel.
+
+The wilderness, of course, can be traversed, but not easily. Swamps
+will be met and must be avoided, for a wilderness swamp is practically
+impassable. Streams can be forded, but lakes must be encompassed,
+and even an upland forest is but a tangled jungle of fallen trees and
+undergrowth.
+
+Old Cy knew, or at least he felt almost sure, that the half-breed would
+return in good time. He had also reasoned out his failure to do so at
+once, and knew that left canoeless, as he had been that tragic day, his
+only course must be the one he actually followed. A month had elapsed
+since then, with no sign of this "varmint's" return, and now Old Cy
+was on the watch for it.
+
+Each morning, when he traversed the lake shore from ice-house to landing,
+he looked for tell-tale footprints. He watched for them wherever he went,
+and the distant report of a rifle would have been accepted as a sure
+harbinger of this enemy.
+
+It became their custom now each day, first to visit all small traps
+in the near-by streams, then pushing their canoe as far as possible
+up the Beaver Brook, to leave it, continue up the valley, and after
+inspecting their deadfalls, turn to the right out of this swale, and
+begin the gathering of gum.
+
+And now, one day, in carrying out this programme, a discovery was made.
+
+They had first visited the small traps near the lake, securing a couple
+of mink and three muskrats, which were left in the canoe. An otter was
+found in one of the deadfalls, and taking this with them, they entered
+the spruce timber and hung it on a conspicuous limb. Then the search for
+gum began.
+
+As usual, they worked hard. The days were short, the best of sunlight
+was needful to see the brown nuts in the sombre forest, and so they
+paid no heed to aught except what was overhead. When time to return
+arrived, Old Cy picked up his rifle and led the way back to where the
+otter had been left, but it had vanished. Glancing about to make sure
+that he was right, he advanced to the tree, looked down, and saw two
+footprints. Stooping over to examine them better in the uncertain light,
+he noted also that they were not his own, but larger, and made by some
+one wearing boots.
+
+"Tain't the half-breed," he muttered, with an accent of relief, and
+looking about, he saw a well-defined trail leading down the slope and
+thence onward toward the swamp.
+
+Some one had crossed this broad, oval, spruce-covered upland while they
+were not two hundred rods away from this tree, had stolen their otter,
+and gone on into the swamp.
+
+Any freshly made human footprint found in a vast wilderness awakens
+curiosity; these seemed ominous.
+
+"He must 'a' seen us 'fore he did the otter," Old Cy ejaculated,
+"an' it's curis he didn't make himself known. Neighbors ain't over
+plenty, hereabout."
+
+But the sun was nearing the tree-tops, the canoe was a mile away, and
+after one more look around, Old Cy started for it. There was no use in
+following this trail now, for it led into the tangled swamp, and so,
+skirting this until a point opposite the canoe was reached, Old Cy and
+Ray then plunged into it.
+
+Twilight had begun to shadow this vale ere the canoe was reached. And
+here was another surprise, for the canoe was found turned half over, and
+on its broad oval bottom was a curious outline of black mud. The light
+was not good here. A fir-grown ledge shadowed the spot; but as Old Cy
+stooped to examine this mud-made emblem, it gradually took shape, and
+he saw--a skull and cross bones!
+
+"Wal, by the Great Horn Spoon!" he exclaimed, "I never s'posed a
+pirate 'ud fetch in here! An' he's swiped our muskrats and mink," he
+added, as he looked under the canoe, "durn him!"
+
+Then the bold bravado of it all occurred to Old Cy. The theft was
+doubtless made by whosoever had taken their otter, and not content
+with robbing them, he had added insult.
+
+"I s'pose we'd orter be grateful he left the paddles 'n' didn't
+smash the canoe," Old Cy continued, turning it over. "I wonder who't
+can be?"
+
+One hasty look around revealed the same boot-marks in the soft earth near
+the stream, and then he and Ray launched their craft and started for home.
+
+"I'm goin' to foller them tracks to-morrer," Old Cy said, when they
+were entering the lake and a light in the cabin just across reassured
+him. "It may be a little resky, but I'm goin' to find out what sorter
+a neighbor we've got."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+ "When a man begins talkin' 'bout himself, it seems as tho'
+ he'd never run down."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+All fellow-sojourners in the wilderness awaken keen interest, and the
+unbroken silence and solitude of a boundless forest make a fellow human
+being one we are glad to accost.
+
+A party of lumbermen wielding axes causes one to turn aside and call on
+them. A sportsman's camp seen on a lake shore or near a stream's bank
+always invites a landing to interview whoever may be there.
+
+All this interest was now felt by Old Cy and Ray, and with it an added
+sense of danger. No friendly hunter or trapper would thus ignore them
+in the woods. This piratically minded thief must have seen them, for
+the spruce-clad oval, perhaps half a mile in width, was comparatively
+free from undergrowth where they had been working. He had crossed it
+within fairly open sight of them, had found the otter hanging from a
+limb, had taken it, and thence on to rob their canoe, daub it with that
+hideous emblem, world-wide in meaning, and then had gone on his way.
+Almost could Old Cy see him watching them from behind trees, skulking
+along when their backs were turned, a low, contemptible thief.
+
+Old Cy knew that bordering this oval ridge on its farther side was a
+swamp, that a stream flowed through it, and surmising that this fellow
+might have come up or down this stream, he left their cabin prepared
+for a two or three days' sojourn away from it, which meant that food,
+blankets, and simple cooking utensils must be taken along.
+
+No halt was made to visit traps. Old Cy was trailing bigger game now;
+and when the point where they had left the canoe the day previous was
+reached, the canoe was pulled out on the stream's bank, the rifles only
+taken, and the trailing began. He followed up the brook valley a little
+way, to find that only one track came down; he then circled about the
+canoe, until, like a hound, he found where the clearly defined trail left
+the swamp again.
+
+Here in the soft carpet under the spruce trees one could follow this
+trail on the run, and here also Old Cy found where this enemy had halted
+beside trees evidently while watching them, as the tracks indicated.
+When the bordering swamp was reached, the trail turned in a westerly
+direction, skirting thus for half a mile, and here, also, evidences of
+skulking along were visible.
+
+Another trail was now come upon, but leading directly over the ridge,
+and just beyond this juncture both the trails now joined, entered the
+swamp, and ended at a lagoon opening out from the stream. Here, also,
+evidences of a canoe having been hauled up into the bog were visible.
+
+"That sneakin' pirate come up this stream," Old Cy observed to Ray, as
+the two stood looking at these unmistakable signs. "He left his canoe
+here 'n' crossed the ridge above us 'n' down to whar we left the
+otter 'n' on to our canoe. Then he come back the way we follered,
+'n' my idee is he had his eye on us most o' the time. I callate he
+has been laughin' ever since at what we'd say when we found that mud
+daub on our canoe, durn him!"
+
+But their canoe was now a half-mile away, and for a little time Old Cy
+looked at the black, currentless stream and considered. Then he glanced
+up at the sun.
+
+"I've a notion we'd best fetch our canoe over here," he said at last,
+"an' follow this thief a spell farther. We may come on to suthin'."
+
+"Won't he shoot at us?" returned Ray, more impressed by this possible
+danger than was Old Cy.
+
+"Wal, mebbe and mebbe not," answered the old man. "Shootin's a game
+two kin play at, an' we've jist ez good a right to foller the stream
+ez he has."
+
+But when their canoe had been carried over and launched in this lagoon,
+Ray's spirits rose. It was an expedition into new waters, somewhat
+venturesome, and for that reason it appealed to him.
+
+Then they had two rifles, Old Cy had taught him to shoot, he had already
+killed one deer and some smaller game, and the go-west-and-kill-Indian
+impulse latent in all boys was a part of Ray's nature. Besides, he had
+an unbounded faith in Old Cy's skill with the rifle.
+
+And now began a canoe journey into and through a vast swamp, the upland
+border of which could scarce be seen. The stream they followed was black,
+and so absolutely motionless that it was a guess which way they were
+going. The mingled hack-matack and alder growth along each bank was so
+dense that no view ahead could be seen, and they must merely follow the
+winding pathway of dark waters and hope to come out somewhere.
+
+For two hours they paddled along this serpentine highway, and then the
+vastness of this morass began to impress them. No sign of current had
+been met. All view of the spruce-grown upland they had left was obscured
+by distance. Now and then a dead tree, bleached and spectral, marked a
+turn in the stream, and hundreds of them, rising all about above the low
+green tangle, added a ghostly haze. It was as if they were venturing into
+a new world--a boundless morass, covered by an impenetrable tangle, and
+made grewsome by the bleaching trunks of dead trees.
+
+"I'm goin' to find which way we're goin'," Old Cy exclaimed at
+last, as they neared a small dead cedar that pointed out over the stream,
+and seizing a projecting limb of this, he broke off bits of dry twigs,
+and tossed them into the stream. For a long moment not one stirred, and
+then at last a movement backward could be discovered.
+
+"We're goin' up-stream, anyhow," he added, glancing at the sun, now
+marking mid-afternoon; "but we've got to git out o' this 'fore dark,
+or we'll be in a bad fix, an' hev to sleep in the canoe."
+
+No halt for dinner had yet been made. They were both faint from need of
+food, and so Old Cy reached for a small wooden pail containing their sole
+supply of provisions. Neither was it a luxurious repast which was now
+eaten. A couple of hard-tacks munched by each and moistened with a cup
+of this swamp water and a bit of dried deer meat was all, and then Old
+Cy lit his pipe, dipped his paddle handle in the stream, and once more
+they pushed on. Soon a low mound of hard soil rose out of the tangle
+just ahead, an oasis in this unvarying mud swamp, and gaping at them
+from amid its cover of scrub birch and cedar stood a deadfall. It faced
+them as they neared this small island, and with log upraised between
+a pen of stakes it much resembled the open mouth of a huge alligator.
+
+"Hain't been built long," Old Cy exclaimed, after they had landed to
+examine it. "I've a notion it's the doin's of our pirate friend,
+an' he's trappin' round about this swamp. He's had good luck lately,
+anyhow, for he's got six o' our pelts to add to his string."
+
+From here onward signs of human presence in this swamp became more
+visible. Now and then an opening cut through the limbs of a lopped-over
+spruce was met; a spot where drift had been pushed aside to clear the
+stream was found at one place; signs of a canoe having been nosed into
+the bog grass were seen; and here were also the same footprints they
+had followed.
+
+Another bit of hard bottom was reached, and here again was another
+deadfall. Tracks evidently made within a few days were about here,
+and tied to its figure-four spindle was a freshly caught brook sucker.
+
+"The scent's gettin' warm," Old Cy muttered, as he examined these
+signs of a trapper's presence, and then, mindful of the sun, he paddled
+on again.
+
+And now an upland growth of tall spruce was seen ahead, the banks became
+in evidence, and a slight current was met. One more long bend in the
+stream was followed, then came curving banks and large-bodied spruce.
+They were out of the swamp.
+
+Soon a more distinctive current opposed them, a low murmur of running
+water came from ahead, and then a pass between two abutting ledges was
+entered. Here the stream eddied over sunken rocks, and pushing on, the
+forest seemed suddenly to vanish as they emerged from the gloom of this
+short cañon, and the next moment they caught sight of a long, narrow
+lakelet.
+
+The sun, now almost to the tree-tops, cast a reddish glow upon its placid
+surface, and so welcome a change was it from the ghostly, forbidding
+swamp just left, that Old Cy halted their canoe at once to look out upon
+it. It was seemingly a mile long, but quite a narrow lake. A bold, rocky
+shore rising in ledges faced them just across, and extended along
+that side, back of these a low, green-clad mountain, to the right,
+and at the end of this lanelike lake a bolder, bare-topped cliff was
+outlined clear and distinct.
+
+This strip of water, for it was not much more, seemingly filled an oblong
+gorge in these mountains, only one break in them, to the left of this
+bare peak; and as Old Cy urged their canoe out of the alder-choked
+stream, now currentless once more, a margin line of rushes and reeds
+was seen to form that shore. Back of these, also, rose the low ledge
+they had passed.
+
+"Looks like a good hidin' spot fer a pirate," he exclaimed, glancing
+up and down the smiling lakelet. "Thar ain't many folks likely to
+tackle that swamp--it took us 'most all day to cross it. I'll bet
+no lumberman ever tried it twice, 'n' if I wanted to git absolutely
+'way from bein' molested, I'd locate here. I dunno whether we'd
+best cross 'n' make camp 'mong them ledges, or go back into the woods.
+Guess we'd best go back 'n' take a sneak round behind the ledge. I
+noticed a loggin[1] leadin' up that way 'fore we left the swamp."
+
+But now something was discovered that proved Old Cy's wisdom, for as
+they, charmed somewhat by the spot, yet feeling it forbidding, still
+glanced up and down the bold shore just across, suddenly a thin column
+of smoke rose from away to the right, amid the bare ledges.
+
+First a faint haze, rising in the still air, then a burst of white,
+until the fleecy pillar was plainly outlined as it ascended and drifted
+backward into the green forest.
+
+------
+
+[Footnote 1: Lagoon.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ "Licker allus lets the cat out."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When the half-breed, Pete Bolduc, reached Tim's Place, he was more
+dead than alive. A week of crawling through swamps, wading or swimming
+streams, sleeping under fallen trees, while sustaining life on frogs,
+raw fish, and one muskrat, had eliminated about all desire to obtain
+Chip, and left a murderous hate instead. And McGuire was its object.
+
+Pete reasoned that he had bought the girl and paid for her. Her father,
+never intending to keep faith, had connived at her escape, and knowing
+of these campers, had hired her for a serving maid, and they would
+inevitably take her out when they left. It was all a part of McGuire's
+plot and plan, and no doubt this stranger had also paid him for her
+possession.
+
+Two other facts also seemed proof positive that these conclusions were
+correct. First, McGuire had never been seen at Tim's Place since the
+girl's escape; second, it would have been impossible for her to reach
+these campers without aid. But she was lost to him for all time, as Pete
+now realized. The stern faces and ready rifles of her protectors had
+convinced him of that, and all that remained was to find McGuire, force
+him to give back the money, then obtain revenge.
+
+Neither was this an easy task, for McGuire was a dangerous man, as Pete
+well knew, and the more he considered the matter, sojourning at Tim's
+Place and nursing his hate meanwhile, the more he realized that the
+killing of McGuire must precede the obtaining of his money. And now,
+where to find McGuire became a question.
+
+Pete knew that at this season he usually devoted a month or more to a
+trapping trip, that in starting out he always ascended the Fox Hole, and
+that his location for this purpose was the head waters of another stream,
+reached by a carry from the Fox Hole.
+
+For a week Pete remained at Tim's Place, and then, obtaining a canoe,
+returned to his hut on this stream.
+
+And now, in the seclusion of his own domicile, certain other facts and
+conclusions bearing upon the present whereabouts of McGuire occurred to
+him.
+
+For many years they had been friends in a way, or at least as much so
+as two such scamps ever are. Together they had made many canoe trips
+to the Provinces to obtain liquor. In these expeditions, McGuire had
+furnished the means; but outlawed as he was, had remained in hiding while
+Pete transacted the business and later shared the profits. Pete's hut
+had also been used as headquarters, and near by it the smuggled liquor
+had been secreted.
+
+On rare occasions, also, McGuire had broken away from his usual
+abstemiousness, and here, with Pete for companion, had indulged in an
+orgie. At these times he invariably boasted how cunning he had been
+in eluding all hated officers of the law, how much money he was worth,
+and how securely he had it hidden. The one most pertinent fact, the
+location of this hiding spot, he never betrayed. But now Pete--almost as
+shrewd as he--reasoned that it would most likely be somewhere in this
+region annually visited by him.
+
+To find this was a hard problem; to find McGuire's hiding spot for
+his money more so. It meant trailing a human being of greater cunning
+than any animal that roamed this wilderness; and yet with the double
+incentive of robbing and revenge now decided upon by this half-breed,
+he set about solving it.
+
+A day's journey up the Fox Hole brought him to the carry over into
+another stream, and here a probably month-old trail, crossing and
+recrossing it, was found. Whoever left the tell-tale footprints wore
+boots, and as McGuire was the only hunter or trapper in this region
+known to wear them, this seemed evidence that it was he. Then as two
+trails led over, with only one returning, that proved he had made two
+trips across to carry his canoe and belongings and had not returned.
+This was plain enough, but when once over, the question of whether he
+went up or down stream was another matter. It was an even chance,
+however, and Pete decided to go up, and keep sharp watch for any signs
+which would indicate that he was on the right track. To trail any animal
+in this wilderness was child's play to Pete; but to follow another
+trapper journeying by canoe was not so easy. Halts for night camps he
+must of course make, collections of drift in some narrow part of the
+stream he would inevitably disturb, and where a carry around a rapid
+came, a trail would be left. These were the only signs possible to
+discover, and for these Pete now watched.
+
+The slow-running waterway he ascended the first day wound through a
+stately forest of spruce. Its banks were low and well defined, yet
+always covered by undergrowth. No breaks in them, no openings where a
+night halt would naturally be made; but ever of the same unvarying
+character, and shadowed by the overhang of interlaced boughs. With one
+eye keen to any even the slightest signs of human progress up this
+stream, and ears ever alert, Pete paddled on. Wildwood sights and
+sounds, however, were met in plenty. Once a lordly moose, seeing or
+smelling him, snorted and plunged away, crashing through the undergrowth.
+Deer were seen or heard at every turn of the stream, and dozens of
+muskrats were noticed swimming or diving off the bank, with now and then
+an otter or a mink, to vary this monotony.
+
+But these were of no interest to Pete. He was trailing other game,
+and like an avenging Nemesis, slowly crept through this vast, sombre,
+and forbidding forest. When nightfall neared, he hauled his canoe out
+where a stretch of hard bank favored, and camped for the night, and
+when daylight came again, he pushed on. For three days this watchful,
+up-stream journey was continued, and then a range of low mountains began
+to close in, short rapids needing the use of a setting-pole were met,
+and at last a series of stair-like falls was sighted ahead. The sun was
+well down when these were reached. How long the necessary carry might
+be, he could not tell, and hauling out below the rapids, Pete took
+his rifle and crept up along the bank. So far not a sign indicating
+whether or not McGuire had gone up this stream had been found, but here,
+if anywhere, they must be met, and Pete watched eagerly for them.
+
+Every rock where a human foot might scrape away the moss was scanned.
+Each bending bough and bush was observed, and when, perforce, he had to
+leave the rock-lined bank and make a detour, he still watched for signs.
+
+At the top of this long pitch, the tall trees also ended, and here the
+stream issued from a vast bush-grown swamp devoid of timber. A few dead
+trees rose from it, and climbing a low spruce, Pete saw this whitened
+expanse of spectral cones extended for miles. It was a forbidding
+prospect. The stream's course appeared visible only a few rods. It
+seemed hardly probable the man he was trailing would cross this swamp. No
+signs of his ascending this waterway had so far been met, and Pete,
+now discouraged, was about to return to his canoe and on the morn go
+back, when, glancing across the stream, he saw a tiny opening in the
+bushes, as if they had been pushed aside.
+
+To cross, leaping from rock to rock in the rapids below, was his next
+move, and returning to where the fall began, there, just back from this
+point, and beside a ledge, were the charred embers of a camp-fire.
+
+Weeks old, without doubt, for rain had fallen on them, and all about were
+the footprints of some one wearing boots.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+ "'Tain't allus the bell cow that gives the most milk."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+Old Cy was, above all, a peaceable man, and while curiosity had led him
+to follow the trail of this robber and to cross this vast swamp, now that
+he saw the suggestive smoke sign, he hesitated about venturing nearer.
+
+"I guess we'd best be keerful," he whispered to Ray, "or we may
+wish we had been. I callate our pirate friend's got a hidin' spot
+over thar, 'n' most likely don't want callers. He may be only a queer
+old trapper a little short o' scruples ag'in' takin' what he finds,
+'n' then ag'in he may be worse'n that. His campin' spot's ag'in'
+him, anyhow."
+
+But the sun was now very low; a camp site must soon be found, and scarce
+two minutes from the time he saw this rising column of smoke, Old Cy
+dipped his paddle and slowly drew back into the protecting forest. Once
+well out of sight, the canoe was turned and they sped back down-stream
+and into the swamp once more. Here he turned aside into a lagoon they
+had passed, and at its head they pulled their canoe out into the bog.
+
+The two gathered up their belongings, and picking their way out of
+the morass, reached the belt of hard bottom skirting the ridge. They
+were now out of sight from the lake, but still too near the stream
+to risk a camp-fire, and so Old Cy led the way along this belt until
+a more secluded niche in the ridge was reached, and here they began
+camp-making. It was a simple process. A level spot was cleared from
+brush, two convenient saplings denuded of their lower limbs, a cross
+pole was placed in suitable crotches, near-by spruces were attacked with
+the axe, and a bark wigwam soon resulted, and just as the darkness began
+to gather, a fire was started.
+
+Both Old Cy and Ray had worked with a will, and none too soon was so much
+accomplished, for night was upon them, and only by the firelight could
+they see to complete the needful preparations.
+
+A peculiar effect of the time, place, and their position was also
+noticeable; for although at least a mile away from where this smoke
+sign had warned them, and screened from it by a high ridge, both spoke
+only in whispers. More than that, the camp-fire was kept low, barely
+enough to cook a modest meal, and when the flame chanced to flare up,
+Old Cy glanced aloft into the tree-tops to see if they were illumed.
+Not much was said, for Old Cy's thoughts were far away, and when
+supper was eaten he lit his pipe and sat watching the embers while Ray
+studied him. Ray, too, spoke scarcely a word. All that day he had felt
+much the same, and while he had the most implicit confidence in Old
+Cy's wisdom, now that he had advised retreat, the reasons for it
+became ten times more ominous to Ray.
+
+Then again, the sombre nook in which they had camped and the vast swamp
+that lay between them and the protecting cabin, all had an effect. This
+weird feeling was also added to by the occasional cry of some night
+prowler far away in the forest or out in the swamp. Chip's spites,
+those uncanny creatures of the imagination, also began to gather, and
+Ray fancied he could hear them crawling cautiously about.
+
+"I don't like this," he whispered at last, "and I wish we hadn't
+come. Don't you think we had better go back soon as it's daylight?"
+
+"Wal, mebbe," answered Old Cy, smiling at Ray's nervousness. "I've
+kinder figgered we might watch out from a-top o' the ridge when mornin'
+came 'n' see what we kin see. We might ketch sight o' the pirate
+chap 'cross the lake."
+
+"But suppose he catches sight of us," returned Ray, "what then?"
+
+"I don't mean he shall," answered Old Cy, "so don't git skeered.
+I'll take keer on ye."
+
+That night, however, was the longest ever passed by Ray, for not until
+near morning did he fall into a fitful slumber, and scarcely had he lost
+himself before Old Cy was up and watching for the dawn.
+
+Its first faint glow was visible when Ray's eyes opened, and without
+waiting for fire or breakfast, they started for the top of the ridge.
+From here a curious sight met their eyes, for the lake and also the
+ridges out of which the smoke had risen were hidden beneath a white pall
+of fog. Back of them also, and completely coating the immense swamp, was
+the same sea of vapor. It soon vanished with the rising sun, and just as
+the ledges across the lake outlined themselves, once more that smoke
+sign rose aloft.
+
+And now the two watchers could better see whence it came. Old Cy had
+expected to obtain sight of some hut or bark shack nestling among these
+rocks; but none was visible. Instead, the smoke rose out of a jagged
+rock, and there was not a cabin roof or sign of one anywhere.
+
+"That feller's in a cave," he whispered to Ray, "an' the smoke's
+comin' out o' a crack, sure's a gun!"
+
+It seemed so, and for a half-hour the two watched it in silent amazement.
+
+Then came another surprise, for suddenly Old Cy caught sight of a man
+just emerging from behind a rock fully ten rods from the rising smoke; he
+stooped, lifted a canoe into view, advanced to the shore, slid it halfway
+into the water, returned to the rock, picked up a rifle, then pushed
+the canoe off, and, crossing the lake, vanished into the outlet.
+
+The two watchers on the ridge exchanged glances.
+
+"He's goin' to tend his traps, an' mebbe ourn," Old Cy said at
+last, and then led the way back to their bark shack. Here he halted,
+and placing one hand scoop-fashion over his ear, listened intently until
+he caught the faint sound of a paddle touching a canoe gunwale. First
+slightly, then a more distinctive thud, and then less and less until the
+sound ceased.
+
+"The coast's clear," he added, now in an exultant whisper, "an'
+while the old cat's away we'll take a peek at his den."
+
+A hurried gathering of their few belongings was made, the canoe was
+shoved into the lagoon, and no time was lost until the lake was crossed
+and they drew alongside of where the smoke was still rising in a thin
+film. No landing was possible here, for the shore was a sheer face of
+upright slate, and only where this lone trapper had launched his canoe
+could they make one.
+
+From here a series of outcropping slate ledges rose one above another,
+and between them and parallel to the shore, narrow, irregular passages
+partially closed by broken rock. It was all of slaty formation, jagged,
+serrated, and gray with moss.
+
+Following one of these passages, Old Cy and Ray came to the ledge out
+of which the smoke was rising from a crevasse. It was a little lower
+than one in front, perhaps forty feet in breadth, double that in length,
+and of a more even surface. At each end was a short transverse passage
+hardly wide enough to walk in, and a few feet deep.
+
+And now, after a more careful examination of the crevasse out of which
+the thin film of smoke rose, Old Cy began a search. Up and down each
+narrow passway he peeped and peered, but nowhere was a crack or cranny
+to be found in their walls. In places they were as high as his head,
+sheer faces of slate, then broken, serrated, moss-coated, or of yellow,
+rusty color. Here and there a stunted spruce had taken root in some
+crack, and over, back from the topmost ledge, this green enclosure began
+and continued up the low mountain. Here, also, in a sunny nook below
+this belting tangle of scrub spruce, were ample signs of a trapper's
+occupation in the way of pelts stretched upon forked sticks and hanging
+from a cord crossing this niche. They were of the usual species found
+in this wilderness,--a dozen muskrat, with a few mink and otter skins
+and one lynx.
+
+Another sign of human presence was also noted, for here a log showing
+axe-marks, with split wood and chips all about, was seen.
+
+"Some o' them pelts is ourn," Old Cy ejaculated, glancing at the
+array, "an' I've a notion we'd best hook on to 'em. Mebbe not,
+though," he added a moment later, "it might git us into more trouble."
+
+But Ray was getting more and more uneasy each moment since they had
+landed there. It seemed to him a most dangerous exploit, and while Old Cy
+had hunted over this curious confusion of slate ledges and stared at
+the rising film of smoke, Ray had covertly watched the lake's outlet.
+
+"I don't think we'd better stay here much longer," he said at last.
+"We can't tell how soon that man may come back and catch us."
+
+"Guess you're right," Old Cy asserted tersely, and after one more look
+at the inch-wide crack out of which the smoke rose, he led the way to
+their canoe.
+
+"Thar's a cave thar, sure's a gun," he muttered, as they skirted the
+bold shore once more, "an' that smoke's comin' out on't. I wish I
+dared stay here a little longer 'n' hunt fer it."
+
+Old Cy was right, there was a cave there beneath the slate ledge--in
+fact, two caves; and in one, safe and secure, as its owner the notorious
+McGuire believed, were concealed the savings of his lifetime.
+
+More than that, so near do we often come to an important discovery and
+miss it, Old Cy had twice leaned against a slab of slate closing the
+entrance to this cave and access to a fortune, the heritage of Chip
+McGuire.
+
+Ray's fears, while well founded, were needless, however. McGuire--for it
+was this outlaw whom they had ample reason to avoid--was many miles away.
+And yet so potent was the sense of danger, that neither Old Cy nor Ray
+thought of food, or ceased paddling one moment, until they had crossed
+the vast swamp and once more pulled their canoe out at the point where
+they had entered it the day before.
+
+Here a brief halt for food and rest was taken; then they shouldered their
+light craft and started for Birch Camp.
+
+In the meantime another canoe was ascending this winding stream, and long
+before nightfall, Pete Bolduc, sure that he was on the trail of McGuire,
+entered the ledge-bordered lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+ "If most on us cud see ourselves as the rest see us, we'd
+ want to be hermits."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+To trail an enemy who is never without a rifle and the will to use it,
+requires courage and Indian cunning as well. Pete Bolduc had both, and
+after observing the many signs of a trapper's presence in the swamp,
+he knew, after he crossed it and reached this lake, that somewhere on
+its shores, his enemy, McGuire, had his lair.
+
+He paused at the outlet, as did Old Cy, to scan every rod of its rocky
+shores, not once, but a dozen times.
+
+The sun was now halfway down. A mellow autumn haze softened the
+encircling mountains and the broad, frowning peak to the right. A
+gentle breeze rippled the upper end of the lake, and here, in the
+wild rice growing along its borders, stood a deer, belly-deep in the
+green growth.
+
+No thought of the blessed harmony of lake, sky, and forest, or the
+sequestered beauty of this spot, came to the half-breed. Revenge and
+murder--twin demons of his nature--were in his heart, and the Indian
+cunning that made him hide while he watched for signs of his enemy. The
+bare peak overlooking the lake soon impressed him as a vantage point, and
+after a half-hour of watchful listening he laid his rifle across the
+thwart, handy to grasp on the instant, and, seizing his paddle once
+more, crossed the lake to the foot of the peak.
+
+To hide his canoe here, ascend this with pack and rifle, was the next
+move of this human panther, and here in a sheltering crevasse he lay and
+watched for his enemy.
+
+Two hours later, and just at sunset, McGuire returned to the lake.
+
+As usual, he, too, paused at the outlet to scan its shores. He believed
+himself utterly secure here, and thought no human being was likely to
+find this lakelet. But for all that, he was watchful. Some exploring
+lumberman or some pioneer trapper might cross this vast swamp and find
+this lake during his absence.
+
+A brief scrutiny assured him that he was still safe from human eyes, and
+he crossed the lake.
+
+From the bare cliff a single keen and vengeful eye watched him.
+
+As usual, also, McGuire made his landing at a convenient point, some
+fifty rods from his cave, and carried his canoe up and turned it over,
+back of a low-jutting ridge of slate. He skinned the half-dozen prizes
+his traps had secured that day and followed a shallow defile to his
+lair. Here his pelts were stretched, a slab of slate was lifted from
+its position in a deep, wide crevasse between two of these ledges, and
+McGuire crawled into his den.
+
+Most of these movements were observed by the half-breed, who, watching
+ever while he plotted and planned how best to catch his enemy unawares,
+saw him emerge from amid the ledges again, go down to the lake, return
+with a pail of water, and vanish once more.
+
+All this was a curious proceeding, for he, like Old Cy, had expected to
+find McGuire occupying some bark shelter, and even now he supposed there
+was one among this confusion of bare rocks.
+
+Another surprise soon came to this distant watcher, for he now saw a thin
+column of smoke rise from a ledge and continue in varying volume until
+hidden by twilight.
+
+And now, secure in his cave and quite unconscious of the watcher with
+murderous intent who had observed his actions, McGuire was enjoying
+himself. He had built a little slate fireplace within his cave. A funnel
+of the same easily fitted material carried the smoke up to a long,
+inch-wide fissure in the roof. He had a table of slate to eat from,
+handy by a bed filled with moss and dry grass, also pine knots for
+needed light.
+
+Opening into this small cave was a lesser one, always cool and dry, for
+no rain nor melting snow could enter it, and here was McGuire's pantry,
+and here also a half-dozen tin cans, safely hidden under a slab of slate,
+stuffed with gold and banknotes.
+
+To still further protect this inner cave, he had fitted a section of
+slate to entirely fill its entrance.
+
+When the last vestige of sunset had vanished and twinkling stars were
+reflected from the placid lake, the half-breed descended from his lookout
+point, and, launching his canoe, followed close to the shadowed shore
+and landed just above where McGuire disembarked. Indian that he was, he
+chose the hours of night and darkness to crawl up to the bark shelter
+which he expected to find, his intention being to thrust a rifle muzzle
+close to his enemy's head and then pull the trigger.
+
+But to do this required a long wait and extreme caution. His enemy
+surely had a camp-fire behind a ledge, and shelter as well. The smoke
+had seemed to rise out of a ledge, but certainly could not, and so--still
+unaware of McGuire's position, yet sure that he was amid these ledges,
+and near a shelter--Pete grasped his rifle and crept ashore.
+
+It was too early to surprise his enemy--time to fall asleep must be
+allowed. Yet so eager was the half-breed to deal death to him, that he
+must needs come here to wait. No chances must be taken when he did crawl
+up to his victim, for a false step or the rattle of a loose stone, or
+his form outlined against the starlit sky as he crawled over a ledge,
+might mean death to him instead of McGuire. And so, crouching safely
+in a dark nook above the landing, Pete waited, watched, and listened.
+
+One hour passed--it seemed two--and then the half-breed crept stealthily
+up to where the smoke had been seen. Not by strides, or even steps, but
+as a panther would, lifting one foot and feeling where it would rest and
+then another, and all the while listening and advancing again.
+
+It was McGuire's habit, while staying here, to look at the weather
+prospects each night, and also to obtain a drink of cool lake water
+before going to sleep.
+
+Often when the evenings were not too cold, he would sit by the lake shore
+for a half-hour, smoking and watching its starlit or moon-glittering
+surface, and listening to the calls of night prowlers.
+
+In spite of being an outlaw, devoid of moral nature, and one who preyed
+upon his fellow-man, he was not without sentiment, and the wild grandeur
+of these enclosing mountains, and the sense of security they gave, were
+pleasant to him. His life had been a harsh and brutal one. He had dealt
+in man's lust and love of liquor. He measured all humankind by his own
+standard of right and wrong, and believed that he must rob others or
+they would rob him. He had followed that belief implicitly from the
+start, and would so long as he lived. He felt that every man's hand
+was against him, and no reproaches of conscience had resulted from his
+cold-blooded killing of an officer. Never once did the thought return
+of the few years when a woman's hand sought his in tenderness, nor any
+sense of the unspeakable horror he had decreed for his own child.
+
+So vile a wretch seemed unfit for God's green earth; and yet the silence
+of night beside this lake, and the stars mirrored on its motionless
+surface, soothed and satisfied him.
+
+[Illustration: He grasped and struck at this enemy in a blind instinct of
+self-preservation.]
+
+He had now and then another impulse--to some day take his savings of many
+years, secreted here, and go to some other country, assume another name,
+and lead a different life.
+
+And now, while an unsuspected enemy was waiting for him to enter a sleep
+that should know no waking, he left his cave and seated himself on a
+shelf-like projection close to the lake, which was deep here, and the
+ledge shore a sheer face rising some ten feet above the water.
+
+One hour or more this strange compound of brute and man sat there
+contemplating the stars, and then he suddenly detected a sound--only
+a faint one, the mere click of one pebble striking another.
+
+He arose and listened.
+
+Soon another soft, crushing sound reached him. Some animal creeping along
+in the passage between the ledges, he thought.
+
+He stepped quickly to the end of the shelf. On that instant a crouching
+form rose upward and confronted him.
+
+He had one moment only, but enough to see a tall man a step below him,
+the next a flash of spitting fire, a stinging pain in one shoulder, and
+this human panther leaped upon McGuire!
+
+But life was sweet, even to McGuire, and as he grasped and struck at
+this enemy in a blind instinct of self-preservation as both closed in
+a death-grapple, one instant of awful agony came to him as a knife
+entered his heart--a yell of mingled hate and deadly fear, as two
+bodies writhed on the narrow shelf, a plunging sound, as both struck
+the water below--and then silence.
+
+Death and vengeance were clasped in one eternal embrace.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+ "Thar's two things it don't pay to worry 'bout,--those ye
+ can help 'n' and those ye can't."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When Old Cy and Ray once more made their way up the Beaver Brook valley,
+it was with the feeling that this lone and sinister trapper might be
+met at any moment. They dared not leave their canoe where it might be
+easily found, but adopting Indian tactics, Old Cy cunningly hid it in a
+rank growth of swamp grass, and oft doubling on their own tracks and
+wading the shallow stream, left only a confusing trail.
+
+When the deadfalls had been visited and they began gum-gathering again,
+they watched constantly for an enemy.
+
+A dense forest of tall spruces is at best a weird and ill-omened spot.
+Its vastness appalls, its shadows seem spectral, and every natural object
+becomes grotesque and distorted. An overturned stump with bleaching
+roots appears like a hideous devilfish with arms ready to entwine and
+crush. A twisted tree trunk, prone, rotting, and coated with moss, looks
+like a huge green serpent, and even a knot in the side of a big spruce
+will resemble a grinning gnome. Even the sunlight flitting through the
+dense canopy plays fantastic tricks, and every breath of wind becomes
+the moan of troubled spirits.
+
+Something of this weird impress now assailed Old Cy and more especially
+Ray, and after two days of unpleasant work in this part of the
+wilderness, they gave it up.
+
+"I don't like feelin' I'm bein' watched," Old Cy observed when
+they once more started for home, "an' to-morrer I guess we'd best
+go 'nother way. Thar's a good spruce growth over beyond the hog-back,
+'n' I'd feel safer leavin' the canoe whar Amzi kin keep an eye on't.
+We kin come up now once a week 'n' tend the deadfalls 'n' not leave
+the canoe more'n an hour."
+
+Little did Old Cy realize how groundless his fears now were, or that
+fathoms deep, in a cold, mountain-hid lake, the thieving McGuire and
+the implacable half-breed were now locked in the clasp of death.
+
+A change of location, however, banished somewhat of this spectral
+presence, and although Old Cy was ever alert and watchful, he showed
+no sign of it.
+
+Ray, more volatile and with implicit faith in his protector, soon
+returned to normal condition of mind and once more entered into the
+spirit of their work and sport with a keen zest.
+
+The traps gave increased returns, the little bin where they stored their
+gum was filling slowly but surely, and their life at this wildwood home
+became enjoyable.
+
+Neither was it all labor, for the ducks now migrating southward were
+alighting in the lake by thousands, a few hours' shooting at them from
+ambush made glorious sport, and what with all the partridges they had
+secured and these additions, their ice-house was soon unable to hold
+another bird.
+
+But the halcyon days of autumn were fast passing and signs of nearing
+winter were now visible. Ice began to form in little coves, the ducks
+ceased coming, soon the last of them had departed, the leaves of all
+hardwood trees were now joining in a hurry-scurry dance with every
+passing breeze, the days were of a suggestive shortness, and soon the
+grim and merciless snow--the White Spirit of Old Tomah--would be sweeping
+over the wilderness.
+
+And then one night the Frost King silently touched that rippled lake
+with his wand and the next morning Old Cy and Ray looked out upon its
+motionless expanse of black ice. The sky was also leaden, an ominous
+stillness brooded over forest, lake, and mountain, and midway of that
+day, the first snowfall came.
+
+Old Cy and Ray were a mile away from the cabin, busy at gum-gathering,
+when the first flakes sifted down through the canopied spruce tops. Soon
+the carpet of needles began to whiten, and by mid-afternoon they had to
+abandon work and return.
+
+"I guess we come pretty clus to bein' prisoners now," Old Cy
+ejaculated when he shook himself free from the white coating on the
+cabin porch, "but we've got to make the best on't. We'll git warm
+fust 'n' then go 'n' fetch our canoe up 'n' stow it in the
+shed. We ain't like to want it ag'in 'fore spring. One thing is
+sartin," he added, when the fire began to blaze in the open fireplace,
+"we are sure o' keepin' warm 'n' 'nuff to eat this winter, 'n'
+that's all we really need in life, anyway. The rest on't is mostly
+imagination."
+
+But in spite of his serene philosophy, Old Cy had dreaded the coming
+of winter more than Ray could guess, and all on account of that lad. He
+himself knew what a winter meant in this wilderness cabin, while Ray did
+not. Separated as they were from civilization by a full hundred miles,
+and from Tim's place by forty, they were, as he stated, practically
+prisoners for the next five months.
+
+To escape on snow-shoes was possible, of course, if the need arose, and
+yet it would be a pretty serious venture, after all.
+
+They were in no particular danger, however. With plenty of food and
+fuel, they need not suffer. If the cabin burned, they could erect another
+shelter or use the old one. Something of diversion could be obtained
+from ice-fishing or gum-gathering on warm days; but not enough, as Old
+Cy feared, to keep Ray content and free from the megrims.
+
+None of these fears escaped Old Cy, however. He was too wise for that;
+and moreover, in order to inspire Ray, he now began to affect an almost
+boyish interest in the snow coming and its enjoyments.
+
+"We can't do much more trappin'," he said that first winter evening
+beside the fire while the snow beat against the windows, "but we kin
+hev some fun keepin' warm an' cookin', 'n' when the snow hardens a
+bit we kin go fer gum again, or set tip-ups. We've got more'n a million
+shiners in the cage up the brook, 'n' 'fore it gits too cold, we'll
+ketch a lot o' trout."
+
+It was this faculty for adaptation to the situation, this making the
+best of all circumstances and seizing all opportunities for pleasure
+or profit, that was Old Cy's woodwise characteristic. No matter if
+it stormed, he knew that the sun shone behind the clouds. No matter
+if they were utterly isolated in this wilderness, he still saw ways
+of enjoyment, and even when snowbound, or shut in by zero weather, he
+would still find interest in cooking, keeping warm, or getting ready
+to fish, or in gathering gum, when the chance came.
+
+But winter had now come upon them with a sudden swoop. The next day snow
+fell incessantly, and when the sun shone again, a two-foot level of it
+hid the lake.
+
+Then, as if to test Ray's spirits, the temperature kept well below
+freezing for the next week, the wind blew continuously, sweeping the
+snow into drifts, and all the three could do, as Old Cy said, was to
+"cook vittles and keep warm."
+
+And now for the first time, Ray began to show homesickness. From the day
+Chip had left, not once had he mentioned her or his aunt or uncle in any
+way. He had kept step, as it were, with Old Cy in all things adventurous
+as well as labor and sport.
+
+The possible, even certain gain in the money value of the furs and gum
+which they had secured, coupled with their adventurous life, had occupied
+his every thought; but now that he could only help Old Cy indoors, he
+began to mope.
+
+"I wonder what they are doing now down in Greenvale," he said one
+evening after they had gathered about the fire. "I wish we could hear
+from 'em."
+
+It was the first sign of homesickness which Old Cy had so long dreaded
+to see in him.
+
+"Oh, they ain't havin' half the fun we are," Old Cy answered
+cheerfully. "Jest now I callate Chip's studyin' 'longside o' Aunt
+Comfort's fire; mebbe Angie 'n' Martin's over to Dr. Sol's,
+swappin' yarns. To-morrer Chip'll go ter school, ez usual, 'n' when
+Sunday comes they'll all dress up 'n' go ter meetin'. One thing
+is sartin, they ain't takin' any more comfort'n we are, or gittin'
+better things to eat. If the weather warms up, ez I callate it will in a
+day or two, we'll pull some trout out o' the lake that 'ud make
+all Greenvale stare. They allus bite sharp arter a cold spell. Ez fer
+Chip," he continued, eying Ray's sober face, "she ain't goin'
+to fergit ye, never fear, an' when I take ye out o' the woods in the
+spring 'n' start ye fer Greenvale with five hundred dollars in yer
+inside pocket, ez I callate, ye'll feel's though ye owned the hull
+town when ye git thar, an' Chip'll feel ez tho' she owned ye."
+
+"I wish I could hear how they are once in a while," Ray rejoined.
+"They may be sick."
+
+That "they" meant Chip was self-evident.
+
+Once a mood comes upon a person, it is hard to change it, and of all
+the moods that torture poor human beings, the love mood is the most
+implacable. While the zest of trapping was upon Ray, he was himself and a
+cheerful enough lad. There had also been the spice of danger from this
+unknown, thieving trapper; but when both had vanished, and all that was
+left for excitement was the monotony of indoor life, with occasional
+half-days when fishing through the ice was permissible, his spirits
+fell to low tide.
+
+Old Cy had feared this from the outset, but believing that the
+experience here was the best possible for the boy, to say nothing of the
+financial side, he had brought it about. And now he had his hands full.
+
+But he was equal to it. Next to sport, work, he knew, was the best
+panacea for any mental disorder, and work a-plenty he now found for
+Ray. First, it had been the making of tip-ups for use on the lake, then
+snow-shoes for both of them, and then cutting and splitting more wood.
+They had an ample supply already, piled high in a lean-to alongside the
+big cabin, but Old Cy asserted that it was not enough, and so more was
+added.
+
+The paths, one to the lake to obtain water and one to the ice-house, were
+allotted to Ray to keep open.
+
+A few days were consumed in filling the ice-house once more, and when
+a warm day came, Old Cy led the way to the sheltered side of the lake,
+as enthusiastic as a boy, to begin cutting holes and setting lines for
+fishing.
+
+This especially interested Ray, and one good day with a fine catch of
+trout would revive his spirits for some time.
+
+Each and every evening, also, when the social side came, Old Cy, always a
+prolific story-teller, would engage in his favorite pastime for a purpose.
+
+And what a marvellous fund he had to draw from! All the years when he,
+a sailor boy, had sailed afar, all the strange countries and people he
+had visited, and all the mishaps he had met were now levied upon.
+
+When these failed--and it was not soon--his wilderness wanderings before
+he settled down at Greenvale furnished tales, and when facts became
+scarce, his fancies came into play, and many a thrilling shipwreck and
+hair-breadth escape that never happened, held Ray's attention for a
+long evening.
+
+The banjo also helped out for many an hour. The old hermit with his
+jews'-harp joined in, and although Ray's fingers were prone to stray
+to "solemn" tunes, Old Cy persisted in his calls for livelier songs,
+even to the extent of adding his voice; and so the first few weeks of
+winter wore away.
+
+When Christmas neared, however, Ray had a "spell." It had been a
+calendar day in his memory, and he had been one of the crowd of young
+folks who made merry in the usual ways; but now no cheer was possible,
+he believed, and once more he began to look glum.
+
+It may seem rank foolishness and doubtless was, yet Ray, like all
+humanity, must be measured by his years and judged by his surroundings.
+
+In Greenvale he had been one of fifty schoolmates whose lives and moods
+were akin, and whose enjoyments must be much the same. Here he was, in a
+way, utterly alone so far as age means companionship, and worse than
+that, one of his two companions was morose and misanthropic. True, he
+twanged his jews'-harp in tune with Ray's plantation melodies, but
+when that bond of feeling ceased, he lapsed into chill silence once more.
+
+But Old Cy, wise philosopher that he was, saw and felt every mood and
+tense that came to Ray, and, seeing thus, forestalled each and every one.
+
+"Christmas is 'most here," he said to Ray, a few days before, "an'
+I've been figgerin' we three ought to celebrate it 'cordin' to
+the best o' our means. We can't do much in the way o' gifts, but we
+kin bust ourselves with vittles 'n' have some fun, just the same.
+I've kinder mapped out the day sorter this way, if it's pleasant.
+Fust, we'll hev an arly breakfast, then pack a lot o' things on the
+hand-sled, go 'cross the lake 'n' round to the cove facin' the south.
+Here we'll cut a few holes, set some lines, 'n' while you're tendin'
+'em, Amzi 'n' me'll clear a spot under the bank, build a bough
+lean-to facin' the sun, spread blankets in it, 'n' when noon comes,
+cook a meal fit fer the gods. We kin hev briled venison, fried trout
+jist out o' the water, boiled taters, hot coffee, 'n' an appetite
+that'll make ye lick yer fingers 'n' holler fer more. If only the
+sun shines, we kin hev a heap o' fun."
+
+It was all a boyish diversion as planned by Old Cy, and the sole object
+was to tide Ray over a day that might add to his homesickness. The
+weather favored this kindly interest.
+
+Christmas morn opened warm, and but for the deep snow it might have
+been an October day. Old Cy's romantic plan also materialized to the
+fullest, and when his green bough shed, with carpet of the same, was
+completed, the fire in front blazing cheerfully and dinner cooking, it
+was all a picture well worth a study.
+
+Then as if to prove that good luck trots in double harness, about this
+time the trout began to bite, and the line of tip-ups across the cove
+were flagging exciting signals that kept Ray and the old hermit on the
+jump. Even when their picturesque Christmas dinner was spread upon an
+improvised table in front of the bough shelter, Ray could hardly leave
+the sport to eat, and Old Cy had to interfere.
+
+"We ain't ketchin' fish to sell," he said to Ray, "but jist fer fun.
+You've got more'n we kin eat in two weeks, so give 'em a rest."
+
+When dinner was over there came a lazy lounging hour on the fir boughs in
+the warm sun, while Old Cy smoked his pipe of content.
+
+Ray, however, could not resist the signal flags any longer, and as soon
+as the meal was eaten he was out tending them again.
+
+When the sun was halfway down, again the happy trio broke camp and
+returned to the cabin, carrying fish enough to feed a multitude. That
+evening Old Cy told stories as usual, Ray picked his banjo and sang
+lively songs, and so ended Christmas in the wilderness.
+
+Our lives are but a succession of moods, varying ever as our surroundings
+change; and so it was with Ray, isolated as he was with two old men for
+companions. With work or sport to interest him, he was cheerful and
+content. But when, as now happened, another long and heavy snowfall
+succeeded that mellow Christmas Day, he grew morose. It was selfish,
+perhaps, and thoughtless, as youth ever is, and yet not surprising; for
+when the sun shone again, they were practically buried under snow. It
+took an entire day, with all three working, to shovel paths to the lake
+and ice-house, and when that was done there was naught else except to
+cook and keep the fire going. A few days of this bore heavily on
+Ray's spirits, and he became so glum that Old Cy took him to task.
+
+"You've got to brace up, my boy," he said one evening, "an' likewise
+count yer blessin's. We are shut up fer a spell, but think how much
+worse off ye might be. We've got plenty to eat 'n' keep warm with,
+thar's a good three hundred pounds o' gum we got, an' it's worth over
+four hundred dollars, say nothin' o' the furs, 'n' all yourn. Then,
+'nother thing, ye mustn't keep broodin' over yer own lonesomeness
+so much. I'll 'low ye're kind o' anxious to see the little gal
+ag'in, as is nat'ral; but s'pose it was two years ye hed to look
+forrard to, a-waitin', an' then on top o' that, arter waitin' so
+long, ye hed to face three more, with never a chance to larn whether
+she was dead or alive!"
+
+And now Old Cy paused, and watched the low-burning fire as if living once
+more in bygone days.
+
+"It seems a long time, these months," he continued at last, glancing
+at Ray, "an' so 'tis; but I had a longer spell on't once, an' it
+ended the way I hope your waitin' won't. It all happened more'n forty
+years ago, 'n' I've never told nobody 'bout it since.
+
+"I was born in Bayport, that's a seaport town, an' me 'n' my only
+brother took to the sea at an arly age. We had sweethearts, too, and,
+curislike, they was sisters. Mine was Abbie Grey--sweet Abbie Grey they
+used to call her, an' she well desarved it.
+
+"Wal, I used to see her 'tween viages, mebbe a week or two, onct in
+six or twelve months o' waitin', an' them was spells I've lived over
+hundreds o' times, I kin tell ye. We 'greed to hitch up finally arter
+I made one more viage, 'n' I went off, feelin' life ahead was all
+apple orchards 'n' sunshine."
+
+He paused, looked long at the dying embers once more, and then continued:
+"Life is all a mix-up o' hopes 'n' disapp'intments, tho', an' the
+brighter the hopes the more sartin they are to be upset. I started on
+that viage feelin' heaven was waitin' fer me at shore, 'n' I seemed
+to 'a' sailed right into the other place, fer our ship sprung a
+leak 'n' foundered. We took to the boats, ez I told ye onct. Most
+o' my crew died afore I was picked up, 'n' then the whaler that
+took me aboard was bound on a four years' viage. That was bad enough,
+but worse was possible, fer she fetched up on a coral island one
+night toward the last on't, and 'twas plumb six years 'fore I heard
+from home 'n' Abbie. Things had happened thar in that time, too, an' I
+was told my brother had been given up ez lost, 'n' Abbie, believin'
+we both was dead, had married 'nother man. I was so upsot I never let
+her know I was alive, 'n' she don't know it to-day, if she's
+still livin', which I hope she is."
+
+For a long time now Old Cy remained silent, his head bowed, his eyes
+closed, as that long-ago page of memories returned, while Ray watched him.
+
+"Life is a curis puzzle," he added at last, "an' we all live in
+to-morrers. Fust we are like boys chasin' Jack-lanterns, rushin' on all
+the time, 'spectin' most o' the trouble is past 'n' the future
+is all rosy. We don't figger much on to-day, but callate next week, next
+month, next year, is goin' to be more sunshiny, till we get old 'n'
+gray 'n' grumpy, 'n' nobody wants us 'round."
+
+Once more he ceased speaking, and once more his eyes closed. Five, ten,
+twenty minutes passed while Ray watched Old Age in repose and the fire
+quite died away.
+
+"It's gittin' chilly," Old Cy said at last, suddenly rousing himself
+from his dream of the long ago and sweet Abbie Grey, "an' we'd best
+turn in."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+ "The biggest fool thing--an' we all do it--is shakin'
+ hands with trouble 'fore ye meet it."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+For two months life at Birch Camp much resembled that of a woodchuck or
+a squirrel. Now and then a day came when the crusted snow permitted a
+gum-gathering trip into the forest, or a few midday hours at ice-fishing;
+and never were the first signs of spring more welcome than to those
+winter-bound prisoners. The wise counsel and patient example of Old Cy
+had not been lost upon Ray, either; and that winter's experience had
+changed him to an almost marvellous degree. He was no longer a moody and
+selfish boy, thinking only of his own privations, but more of a man, who
+realized that he had duties and obligations toward others, as well as
+himself.
+
+With the returning sun and vanishing snow, animal life was once more
+astir, and a short season of trapping was again entered upon, and
+mingled with that a few days more of gum-gathering. It was brief and at a
+disadvantage, for ice still covered the lake, and until that disappeared
+no use of the canoes could be made.
+
+Once well under way, however, spring returned with speed, the brooks
+began to overflow, the lake to rise, and one morning, instead of a white
+expanse of watery ice, it was a blue and rippled lake once more.
+
+And now plans for Ray's return to Greenvale were in order, and the sole
+topic of discussion. He was as eager as a boy anxious for the close of
+school, and for a double reason, which is self-evident.
+
+It was agreed that Old Cy and himself should make the trip out together
+in two canoes, and convey their stores of gum and firs. At the settlement
+these were to be packed, to await later sale and shipment. Old Cy would
+then return to camp, and Ray would go on to Greenvale.
+
+A change in this plan came in an unexpected manner, however, for a few
+days before the one set for departure, Old Cy, always on watch, saw a
+canoe enter the lake, and who should appear but Levi, Martin's old guide.
+
+"I've been cookin' up at a lumber camp on the Moosehorn," he
+explained, after greetings had been exchanged, "an' I thought I
+would make a trip up here an' call on ye 'fore I went out."
+
+How welcome he was, and how all, even Amzi, of those winter-bound
+prisoners vied with each other in making him the guest of honor, need not
+be asserted. He had been a part of their life here the previous summer,
+with all its joys and dangers, and now seemed one of them.
+
+When mutual experiences and their winter's history had been exchanged,
+of course Chip's rescue, the half-breed's escape, and the whereabouts
+of her father came up for discussion that evening.
+
+"I've heard from Tim's Place two or three times this winter," said
+Levi, "an' neither Pete nor old McGuire has been seen or heard on
+since early last fall. Pete got thar all safe, but vowed revenge on
+McGuire, as Martin and I found, when we went out. He stayed round a week
+or so, I heard later, and then started for his cabin on the Fox Hole,
+'n' since then hain't never been seen or heard of by nobody. Tim
+an' Mike went over to his cabin 'long in the winter, but no signs of
+him was found, or even of his bein' thar since snow came. McGuire also
+seems to hev dropped out o' business and ain't been heard on since
+in the summer. We've expected him all winter at the lumber camp, but
+he didn't show up."
+
+"We've seen him," put in Old Cy, flashing a smile at Ray, "leastwise
+I callated 'twas him, though I never let on to that effect. He was
+trappin' over beyond a big swamp last fall, 'n' he paid us a visit,
+stole a half-dozen o' our catches 'n' left his trade-mark on our
+canoe." And then Old Cy told the story of their adventure, omitting,
+however, any reference to the supposed cave.
+
+"It's curis what has become o' him," Levi said, when the tale was
+told, "and our camp crowd all believe that thar's been foul play,
+with Pete at the bottom on't. Nobody's shed any tears, though, an'
+I'm thinkin' the woods is well rid o' him. He's been a terror to
+everybody long enough."
+
+Much more of this backwoods gossip and change of experience filled in
+the evening, and next morning Old Cy gave Ray a word of caution.
+
+"I kept whist 'bout our findin' what we callated was a cave," he
+said, "an' I want you to. This matter o' McGuire and the half-breed
+ain't blowed over yit, an' we don't want to git mixed up in it. Ez
+fer the cave, if we 'lowed we found one, the folks at Tim's Place 'ud
+go huntin' fer it, sure, 'n' I've my reasons for not wantin' they
+should go. So mum's the word to Levi 'bout it."
+
+Levi's arrival, however, changed their plans, for he at once offered to
+convoy Ray out of the woods, thus relieving Old Cy, and three days later
+these two, with well-laden canoes, started on the out-going journey.
+
+It was not without incident, for when the main stream was reached, it was
+dotted with floating logs and the red-shirted drivers with the bateaux
+and spike shoes were in evidence. A monster jam was met at the first
+rapid, the bags of gum nuts, bundles of firs, and canoes had to be
+carried around it, and when Tim's Place was reached, a score of the
+good-natured woodsmen were in possession.
+
+Levi discreetly avoided all questions as to what Tim knew of Chip,
+her father, or the half-breed. Ray's lips were also sealed, and so
+both escaped much questioning. Here, also, they learned what both had
+guessed--that McGuire and Pete had either left the wilderness or had
+perished that winter. Where and how, if such was the case, no one seemed
+to know or care, and a close observer would have said that every one at
+Tim's Place hoped that these two outlaws had met their fate.
+
+Old Tomah was also found at Tim's Place, and he was undeniably glad to
+see both Ray and Levi, and to learn that Chip was likely to be well cared
+for.
+
+When these two voyagers were ready to start, he joined and kept with
+them until the settlement was reached. Knowing full well the value of
+gum and furs, he soon found a purchaser for Ray's store and stock at
+its full value; and when that youth, now elated as never before, was
+ready to start for Greenvale, this fine old Indian showed almost a white
+man's emotion.
+
+"Take this to little girl," he said, handing Ray a package, "and tell
+her Old Tomah not forget. He hope she come back to see him soon."
+
+"Tell Mr. Frisbie I shall be here, waitin' to meet him, when he sends
+word," Levi said; and shaking hands with both of his good friends, Ray
+now bade them good-by with many thanks for all they had done.
+
+Of his homeward trip and all the charming anticipations now his, no
+mention need be made. They are but the flowers wisely strewn in the
+pathway of youth, and Ray--now more a man than when he entered the
+woods--full well deserved all that lay before him.
+
+But Old Tomah's heart was sad, and far away beside a rippled lake was
+another who felt the same.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+ "When ye see two hearts tryin' to beat ez one, gin 'em the
+ chance."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Chip's success and popularity in Greenvale was practically nullified
+by Hannah, who from wounded vanity and petty jealousy became her enemy
+from the outset.
+
+Aunt Comfort did not know it. Angie was not conscious of the facts, or,
+busy with her own social duties and home-making, gave them no thought.
+And yet, inspired by Hannah's malicious tongue, Greenvale looked upon
+poor Chip as one it was best to avoid.
+
+With Angie as sponsor, she had been made one of the Christmas church
+decorators, and had been twice invited to parties, only to exasperate
+Hannah all the more and cause an increase of sneers.
+
+"She's nobody an' an upstart," Hannah said at the first meeting of
+the village sewing circle after Chip's advent, "an' I've my doubts
+about her father an' mother ever bein' married. Then she's an infiddle
+an' believes in Injun sperrits an' hobgoblin things she calls spites,
+an' is a reg'lar heathen. I don't trust her a minit, an' never leave
+the house 'thout I lock up my things."
+
+Much more of this sort fell from Hannah's lips whenever occasion
+offered, though never within hearing of Aunt Comfort or Angie. Neither
+did the townspeople enlighten them, and so the undercurrent of innuendo
+and gossip, once started by Hannah, spread until all Greenvale looked
+askance at Chip.
+
+There was also some color for this ill repute, for Angie had concealed
+nothing, and Chip, foolishly perhaps, had asserted her belief when it
+would have been better to conceal it.
+
+The parson also, chagrined at his failure to make a convert of the girl,
+referred to her as "rebellious, obstinate in her ideas, and one who
+needed chastening."
+
+Her teacher, however, was her stanch friend. Aunt Comfort beamed upon her
+morning and night, while Angie, having provided her with home, raiment,
+opportunity for schooling, escort to church, and much good advice, felt
+that she had fulfilled her duty. And in a way, she had.
+
+But social recognition in a country village can be made or marred by
+such a person as Hannah, and quite unknown to those most interested,
+Chip's popularity was not decreed. Neither was she conscious of this
+undercurrent. Each day she went to and returned from school in a sturdy
+sort of way. A most devoted pupil, she never failed to thank her teacher
+for every word of help, and if--thanks to Hannah--she failed to make
+friends about the village, she won a place near to Aunt Comfort's heart.
+
+But somehow Aunt Comfort, who loved everybody alike, good or bad, or
+at least spoke no ill of the bad ones, didn't count. That she must
+inevitably take Chip under her motherly wing, all recognized. She had
+taken Hannah, then Angie and Nezer, and now this waif who, as Hannah
+insisted, was all bad; and according to Greenvale's belief, Aunt Comfort
+would keep on "taking in" homeless waifs and outcast mortals as long
+as she lived, or house room held out. And it was true.
+
+By midwinter Martin's new house was all furnished, and social
+obligations began to interest Angie, which made matters all the worse for
+Chip, for now Hannah could persecute her with less danger of exposure.
+
+But Chip was hard to persecute. She had known adversity in its worst
+form. Her life at Tim's Place had been practical slavery, and the worst
+that Hannah could do was as pin pricks compared to it.
+
+It is certain, also, if Chip had "spunked up," as Hannah would call
+it, now and then, it would have been better for her; but it wasn't
+Chip's way. To work and suffer in silence had been her lot at Tim's
+Place. Angie had said, "You must obey everybody and make friends," and
+impelled by experience, and this somewhat broad order, Chip was doing
+her best.
+
+One hope cheered her all that long, hard winter of monotonous study--the
+return of Ray, and possibly Old Cy, when summer came. Somehow these two
+had knit themselves into her life as no one else had or could. Then
+she wondered how Ray would seem to and feel toward her when he came,
+and if the little bond--a wondrous strong one, as far as her feelings
+went--would still call him to her side.
+
+Of love and its real meaning she was scarce conscious as yet. She simply
+felt that this youth with his sunny face and brown eyes was the one
+being on earth she wished to please. All the romance and pathos of
+that summer idyl, all the moonlight and canoeing, all the songs he had
+charmed her with, and every word and act of his from that first evening
+when, ragged and starving, she had stumbled into the camp, until she had
+parted from him with misty eyes, had been lived over by her countless
+times.
+
+It had all been a beacon of hope to her in the uphill road toward the
+temple of learning; and how hard she had studied, and how patiently she
+had tried to correct her own speech, not even her teacher guessed.
+
+Few of us can see ourselves as others see us, and yet Chip, mature
+of mind as one just entering womanhood, realized somewhat her own
+condition. Perhaps, also, she was conscious in some degree as to why
+she was not more popular, but that was a matter of scant interest to
+her. All she wished and all she strove for was to learn what others knew,
+speak as others spoke, and act as they acted; and all for one end and
+purpose--to win favor in the eyes of Ray.
+
+And so no one, not even Hannah, whose prying eyes saw all things, guessed
+her secret.
+
+A little of gall and bitterness was now and then meted out to Hannah
+in return for all her sneers, for Chip's teacher occasionally spent an
+evening at Aunt Comfort's, and every word of praise she let fall for
+her pupil was a thorn to Hannah. But she revenged herself, as might be
+expected.
+
+"I think that Injun gal's a witch," she said once to her bosom friend
+after one of these unpleasant evenings, "the way she pulls wool over
+Miss Phinney's eyes by pretending she's so anxious to learn. You'd
+think to hear her go on that learnin' was all she was livin' for, and
+her teacher almost an angel. I think Angie must 'a' ben spellbound
+the same way when she fetched her here to crowd out her betters."
+
+But Chip, fortunately, was still unconscious of the extent and injury
+of Hannah's malice.
+
+With the coming of springtime and green grass, life for Chip assumed
+a more smiling face, for now she could fly to the hillsides, and for
+the time being imagine herself at the lake once more. Somehow Greenvale
+as a whole had impressed her as cold and unloving, and to escape it was
+a relief. Her teacher was dear to her, Aunt Comfort a kindly mother,
+Angie a good friend; but none were kin to her and never could be, as
+she more and more realized.
+
+Then, too, poor Chip, in spite of Tim's Place, was growing homesick for
+the wilderness again; or, to be more accurate, for the little lake where
+her heart had been touched by the wand of love.
+
+With some insight into books and a developing mind came a keener
+sensitiveness, and what people thought of her and how they felt toward
+her became of more consequence. Her life was simple. She rose early,
+assisted as a housemaid in Aunt Comfort's home, departed at a set time
+for school with its six hours of almost unbroken study, and, most prized
+of all, a few moments' companionship with her teacher. To her Chip
+had confided all her joys and sorrows and most of her history as well.
+And be it said to Miss Phinney's credit, she had discretion and honor
+enough not to betray Chip's confidence.
+
+It is also possible, in fact almost certain, that that unfortunate
+waif's somewhat pitiful tale had won her teacher's interest and
+affection as naught else could. Only one reservation was made by
+Chip--her own feelings toward Ray. All else became an open book to
+Miss Phinney.
+
+When school was out, the two walked homeward together as far as their
+ways permitted, and then Chip obtained the one hour of the day which she
+felt was quite her own. At first, during the autumn days, she had used it
+for a scamper through the nutbrown woods. When winter came and it was
+not too cold, she occasionally visited the mill pond above the village,
+where, if the conditions were right, all the skating and sliding youth
+were gathered; and when blessed spring returned, it was away to the
+hills and fields once more.
+
+On Saturdays she seldom left the house, unless sent on an errand, and
+Sunday became a day of penance.
+
+"I don't know why folks watch me so much when I go to meetin'," Chip
+complained once to her teacher, "but they do, and I don't like it. I
+can see now why they did when I first came. I guess they thought I was
+an Injun, maybe; but what do I do now to make 'em so curious?"
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't mind them," Miss Phinney answered soothingly, "no
+one intends to annoy you; but it takes a long time for people here to
+become accustomed to a stranger."
+
+Miss Phinney dared not tell her pupil that her somewhat wild belief
+and unquestionably rude origin and early life formed the basis of this
+curiosity.
+
+And now, when the flowers and birds had once more returned to Greenvale,
+and Ray might return any day, a little plan that Chip had had in mind
+for many weeks took shape. She knew Ray must come on the stage, and eager
+for a sight of his face as only love can make one, she meant to be the
+first to meet and greet him.
+
+A mile down the village street and beyond the last house was a sharp
+hilltop. The stage usually reached here about an hour after the close of
+school, and to this vantage point, where she could hide behind a stone
+wall, Chip now betook herself each day.
+
+Her plans for meeting her young hero were well considered. She was sure
+he would, like herself, prefer a seat with Uncle Joe. That important
+person, whose heart she had won by her admiration of his horses on her
+arrival, would surely invite her to ride into the village, if he saw her.
+If he was alone, she would remain hid; but if _some one_ was with him,
+she would then disclose herself and the coveted invitation and meeting
+with Ray would follow.
+
+It was a vague, uncertain plan. No one in Greenvale had the remotest idea
+when Ray would return. Chip only knew that he was expected in the spring.
+The day, or even week, was a long-range guess. But even that slim chance
+poor, lonesome, heart-longing Chip would not miss, and so each day at
+close of school she hurried to her lookout point to watch and wait.
+
+It was a silly, almost hopeless sentinelship, as she knew well enough;
+but with the dog's heart that was hers, she would keep her vigil, and
+like one of those dumb brutes, wait weeks, months, ay, years even, for a
+master coming.
+
+It was mid-April when Chip began her daily watch, and missed no day
+unless a pelting rain prevented. It was June ere she won her reward, and
+then one balmy afternoon when she saw the stage afar, there, perched
+beside Uncle Joe, was--a companion!
+
+How sure that weary, waiting waif was that her heart was not mistaken!
+How her pulses leaped and thrilled as the slow-moving stage crept up
+the hill; and how Ray, eager to catch the first glimpse of his native
+village, saw a winsome, smiling face shaded by a flower-decked hat,
+peeping at him over a wall, was but a minor episode in the lives of
+these two; yet one to be recalled many, many times afterward and always
+with a heartache.
+
+None came to them now, for on the instant Ray saw who was waiting for him
+he halted the stage, and the next moment he was beside his sweetheart.
+And Uncle Joe, with the wisdom and sympathy of old age, discreetly
+averted his face, and said "Go-lang" to his horses, and drove on alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+ "There ain't but few folks smell woollen quite quick enough."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+During all the long weeks while Chip had awaited her lover's coming,
+one hope had been hers--that his return would end all her loneliness and
+begin a season of the happy, care-free days like those by the lake once
+more.
+
+And there were many reasons for it.
+
+In this quiet, strictly religious, gossip-loving village, a dependant
+upon charity, as it were, and with Hannah's sneers, Chip had slowly but
+surely learned how little akin she was to them all, and how distrustful
+they all were of her. This knowledge had come by degrees: first, from
+the way in which the older pupils at school regarded her, having
+always kept aloof; then the insistent staring she received each Sunday
+at church; the somewhat chilly reception she had met in a social
+way; and lastly, a seeming indifference on Angie's part. There was no
+reason for it all, so far as Chip could understand. She walked in
+the straight and narrow path laid out for her each day, made herself
+useful between school hours at Aunt Comfort's, studied hard, thanked
+Angie for every trifle, and after her first unfortunate experience in
+defending her belief in spites and Old Tomah's hobgoblins, she had
+never referred to them again. But the seeming fact that she was disliked
+and unwelcome here had slowly forced itself upon her and added to her
+loneliness.
+
+It was all to end, however, when Ray came. In him or from him she would
+find a welcome. He knew her as she was, and what she was. He had not been
+distrustful, but tender and loving, and all clouds and sorrow and all
+humiliations would fade away when he came.
+
+She had pictured to herself, also, how much they would be together
+and where; how he would come to Aunt Comfort's the first evening and
+tell all about his winter in the wilderness and Old Cy,--all about
+the trap-setting, gum-gathering, and the deep snows she knew so much
+about. Maybe he would bring his banjo now and then and play and sing the
+darky songs she had hummed so many times. Possibly he might come and
+meet her occasionally on the way home from school; and when vacation
+came, how many long rambles they would take in the dear old woods, with
+no such ogre as the half-breed to spoil them. It had all been a rosy-hued
+dream with her, while she waited his coming. And now he was here!
+
+For the first few moments after he kissed her upraised lips, she could
+not speak for very joy; and then, as hand in hand they started toward
+the village, her speech came.
+
+"I've been so lonesome," she said simply, "I've counted the days,
+and come down here to meet you daily, for over a month. I don't like
+it here, and nobody likes me, I guess. I'm so glad you've come, though.
+Now I shan't be lonesome no more. I've studied hard, too," she added,
+with an accent of pride. "I can read and spell words of six syllables.
+I've ciphered up to decimal fractions, an' begun grammar."
+
+"I'm glad to get home, too," answered Ray, as simply. "It was
+lonesome in the woods all winter, when we couldn't tend the traps. But
+I've made a lot of money--'most five hundred dollars--all mine, too.
+How is everybody?" And so they dropped from sentiment into commonplace.
+
+At the tavern he secured his belongings. At the corner where their ways
+parted, he bade Chip a light good-by, and with an "I'll see you soon,"
+left her.
+
+Her hero had arrived. They had met, kissed as lovers should, and the
+lonely waiting and watching days were at an end and a new life was to
+begin for Chip.
+
+Little did she realize what it would mean for her, or how utterly her
+hopes were to fail.
+
+"He will come to-night," her heart assured her, and that evening,
+without a word to Aunt Comfort or Hannah as to whom she expected, she
+arrayed herself in her one best dress and awaited his expected visit.
+
+And what a propitious and all-favoring evening it was! The June night
+was balmy. Blooming lilacs and syringas half hid, as well as adorned, the
+porch of Aunt Comfort's home. Aunt Comfort had just departed to make
+a call, Hannah was away at prayer meeting, and "no one nigh to hinder."
+
+But Chip waited in vain!
+
+The drowsy hum of the Mizzy Falls, up the village street, came to her;
+the fireflies twinkled amid the dense-growing maples and over the broad
+meadows; whippoorwills called across the valley; but no lover came to
+Chip. One, two, almost three hours she waited and watched. Then came
+Aunt Comfort and Hannah, and heavy-hearted and lonesome once more, poor
+Chip retired.
+
+At school next day her mind and heart were at war. The parts of speech
+and rules of subtraction and division seemed complete chaos, and when
+homeward bound, she loitered slowly along, hoping Ray would make amends
+and meet her on the way. But again he failed to appear.
+
+And that night, when alone with Hannah, a worse blow came.
+
+"I heerd young Stetson got back yesterday," she said, fixing her
+steely blue eyes on Chip, "an' you went down the road to meet him. I
+should think you'd be 'shamed o' yourself. If you're callatin'
+on settin' your cap for him, 'twon't do a mite o' good. His aunt
+wouldn't think o' havin' sich an outcast ez you for him--that I can
+tell ye."
+
+But not a word of reply came from poor Chip. Such speeches were not new
+to her, and she had long before ceased to answer them. But this one, from
+its very truth, hurt more than all others had, and, crushed by it, she
+stole away out of the house.
+
+No thought that Ray might call came to her. She only wished to escape
+somewhere, that she might cry away her misery and shame in solitude.
+
+The evening was but a repetition of the previous one. The same sweet
+influence and silvered light was all about, but no heed of its beauty
+came to Chip. Instead, she felt herself a shameful thing of no account.
+Her lover had failed her--now she knew why, and as she sped along the
+lonely way to the schoolhouse, scarce conscious of her steps, all hope
+and all joy left her. Why or for what purpose she was hurrying toward
+this deserted little building, she knew not. Hot tears filled her eyes.
+Shame surged in her heart. She was a nobody in the eyes of all her
+world, and once she had reached the worn sill, so often crossed by
+her, she threw herself upon it and sobbed in utter despair.
+
+For a long hour she sat there while the tide of feeling ebbed and tears
+came unchecked, and then the reaction came. With it, also, came something
+of the old courage and defiance that had once led her to face night,
+danger, and sixty miles of wilderness alone.
+
+"I have made a mistake," she said, sitting up, "and Hannah was right.
+I am a nobody here, and Ray has been told so and has kept away."
+
+And now with returning calm, and soothed, maybe, by the still, ethereal
+night, she saw herself, her past and present, as it all was. Back in
+an instant she sped in thought to the moment when, kneeling to these
+people, she begged for food; back to that first prayer she ever heard
+in the tent, and the offer of rescue that followed.
+
+And then her life here, with all its hopes and humiliation, rose before
+her.
+
+"It was all wrong, my coming here," she said, looking away to the
+village where lights twinkled; "I am not their sort, nor they mine.
+I'd better go away."
+
+Then, lifted a wee bit by this new resolve, she rose and returned to the
+house.
+
+The tall clock in the sitting room was just chiming ten when she entered,
+and Aunt Comfort was there alone.
+
+"Raymond was here this evening," she said kindly, "and waited quite
+a spell. Where have you been?"
+
+"Oh, nowhere," answered Chip, pleasantly, "only I was lonesome and
+went out for a walk."
+
+Little did good Aunt Comfort realize what a volcano of hope, despair,
+shame, and tender love was concealed beneath that calm answer, or the
+new resolve budding in Chip's heart.
+
+No more did Ray suspect it when he met her coming home from school the
+next afternoon.
+
+For during those two wretched hours when she was alone on the worn
+schoolhouse step, poor Chip McGuire, the low-born, pitiful waif, had
+become a woman and put away girlish impulses.
+
+"I couldn't come to see you that first evening," he said at once,
+"for uncle and aunty kept me talking till bedtime. Where were you last
+night?"
+
+"Oh, I didn't much think you would come," answered Chip, calmly,
+smiling at him in a far-off way. "I am a nobody here, as you will soon
+find out, and I don't expect--anything. I got lonesome last night and
+went off for a walk."
+
+Ray looked at her in wide-eyed astonishment. And well he might, for only
+two short days since she had met him, an eager, simple girl, and now she
+spoke like a woman. No word, no hint of his neglect, escaped her; but
+a cool indifference was apparent.
+
+"Tell me about the woods and Old Cy," she said, not waiting for him
+to speak again, "and how is the hermit? I want to know all about them."
+
+"Oh, I left 'em all right," answered Ray, sullenly, for like a boy
+he wanted to be coaxed. And then, urged a little by Chip, he told his
+winter's experience.
+
+One episode interested her most of all--the strange trapper's doings,
+his theft of their game, their pursuit of him and discovery of his hiding
+spot.
+
+"I know who that was," she said, when it was all described. "It was
+my father, and if he had caught you spying upon him, I guess he'd shot
+you both. He always used to go somewhere trapping every fall; but nobody
+could ever find where."
+
+This return to the memories of the wilderness wore away something of
+Chip's cool reserve, and when the house was reached her eyes had grown
+tender.
+
+"I shall be glad to see you often--as--as your folks will let you
+come," she said, somewhat timidly when they parted; and scarce
+understanding this speech, Ray left her.
+
+"Chip has changed a whole lot," he said to his aunt a little later,
+"and I wish she hadn't; she don't seem the same any more."
+
+"I'm glad of it if she has," answered Angie, smiling at him. "There
+was need enough of it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+Old Cy had builded wiser than he realized when he coaxed Ray to spend
+a winter in the woods.
+
+The long tramps through the vast wilderness; the keen hunt for signs of
+mink, fisher, otter, and wildcat, with constant guard against danger;
+the unremitting though zestful labor of gum-gathering; the far-sighted
+need for winter preparation; and last but not least Old Cy's cheerful
+philosophy, had broadened the lad and developed both muscle and mind.
+
+His success, too, had encouraged him. He was eager to try another season
+there, and planned for hiring men to gather gum, and saw in this vocation
+possible future.
+
+But the change in Chip puzzled him. He had returned, expecting to find
+her the same timid, yet courageous little girl, ready to be his companion
+at all times and to kiss him when he chose--a somewhat better-educated
+girl, of course, using more refined language, but otherwise the same
+confiding child, as it were.
+
+She was all this the day of his return; and then, presto! like a sudden
+blast of cold air came a change. Too loyal to her to question any one,
+he could only wonder why this change.
+
+He called again soon after that first, unsatisfying walk home with her,
+to find her the same cool, collected young lady. She was nice to him,
+induced him to talk of the woods once more and his own plans; but it was
+not the Chip of old who listened, but quite another person.
+
+"I am going back to the lake with uncle and aunt," he said at last,
+"and I mean to coax them to take you along. You have been shut up in
+school so long, it will do you good."
+
+"Please don't say a word to them about it," she urged, in hurt tone,
+"for it will do no good. I wouldn't go, anyway."
+
+"Not go to the woods if you could," he exclaimed in astonishment;
+"why, what do you mean?"
+
+"Just what I say," she returned firmly, and then added wistfully,
+"I'd fly there, if I had wings. I'd give my life, almost, for one more
+summer like the last. But I shall not go again now, and maybe never."
+
+It was unaccountable and quite beyond Ray's ken--this strange decision
+of hers--and her "Please don't say any more about it," closed the
+subject.
+
+Another and even greater shock came to Ray when late that evening, on the
+porch, he essayed to kiss her.
+
+"No, no; please don't," she said with almost a sob, pushing him away.
+"It's silly now, and--and--you mustn't."
+
+A week later school closed, and Chip's conduct was then also a puzzle
+to Miss Phinney. As usual on these occasions, when the hour came, each
+pupil, young and old, filed past the teacher at her desk, the boys to
+shake hands, the girls to be kissed, and all bade good-by, after which
+they trooped away, glad to escape.
+
+This ceremony now took place as usual. All departed except Chip, and
+she remained at her desk. Some intuition of pity or sympathy drew Miss
+Phinney to her at once; and then, at the first word from her, Chip gave
+way to tears--not light ones, but sobs that shook her as a great grief.
+Vainly Miss Phinney tried to cheer and console her, stroking the bowed
+head until her own eyes grew misty.
+
+"I didn't mean to give way," Chip said at last, looking up and
+brushing away the tears, "but you've been so good and patient with
+me, I couldn't help it. I hain't many friends here, I guess, and--"
+choking back another sob--"I shall be more lonesome'n ever."
+
+It was true enough, as Miss Phinney well understood, and somehow her
+heart went out to this unfortunate girl now, as never before.
+
+"You mustn't think about that," she said at last, in her most soothing
+voice, "but come and see me as often as you can--every day, if you
+like, for I shall always be glad to have you. I'd keep on studying, if I
+were you," she added, as Chip brightened, "it will help you on, and I
+will gladly hear you recite every day."
+
+Then hand in hand, like two sisters, they left the dear old schoolhouse.
+Little did Miss Phinney, good soul that she was, realize how recently
+poor Chip had cried her heart almost out on its well-worn sill, or that
+never again would this strange, winsome, woman-grown pupil enter that
+temple.
+
+At the parting of their ways the two embraced, kissed, and with
+tear-dimmed eyes separated.
+
+"I can't account for it," Miss Phinney said to herself when well away.
+"It may be a love-affair with young Stetson, or it may be something
+worse."
+
+That evening she called on Angie. The result was fruitless, so far as
+obtaining any light upon this puzzling matter was concerned, for Angie
+was either blind to the situation, or feigned ignorance.
+
+"They were together all last summer, of course," she said, "in fact,
+they were forced to be like two children, you know. I was glad to have
+it so, feeling it would benefit the girl. If any love flame was started
+then, it has had ample time to die out since."
+
+"There is something else the matter with Chip, then," Miss Phinney
+rejoined, "she has been moody and quite upset at times for the past few
+weeks, and to-day when school closed, she sobbed like a brokenhearted
+woman. It was quite pathetic, and I had to cry myself."
+
+That night Angie took counsel of her husband.
+
+"Well, what if it is so," he responded, to her suggestion that a
+love-affair might have started between them. "It won't harm either.
+So far as I've observed, the girl couldn't have been better behaved
+since she came here. She has never missed an hour at school all winter,
+no matter how cold it has been. Her teacher says she has made wonderful
+progress. She has attended church with you every Sunday, and as for
+Ray--well, if I were in his shoes, I'd be in love with her myself."
+
+It was clear enough that Angie's fears were not shared by Martin.
+
+"But think of her origin and parentage," answered Angie, "and that
+outlaw father who might appear at any time! The very idea of Ray marrying
+her is preposterous. It would wreck his life."
+
+"But what about Chip?" returned Martin, who had broader views of life.
+"You brought her here to Christianize and educate her; do you propose
+to turn her adrift because she has a pretty face and the boy sees it? She
+isn't to blame for her origin. As for Ray, if he shows that he is able
+to support a wife and wants her, I honor him for it, and I'll give him
+a house to start with."
+
+At Aunt Comfort's, however, no signs of love troubles were visible;
+in fact, no signs of any sort, except the malicious "hanging around"
+interference of Hannah whenever Ray was there. She seemed to feel it
+her duty to remain on guard at such times, much to Ray's disgust. No
+annoyance at this was apparent in Chip. She helped at housework, studied
+at odd hours, and when Ray came she met and talked with him as if he were
+a brother.
+
+The day he was to leave Greenvale was close at hand, however, and the
+evening before he came early, bringing his banjo, and by tacit consent,
+perhaps to escape Hannah, they both left the house at once.
+
+Just above the village there was a long, narrow pond, wooded upon one
+side and around its upper end, with partially cleared land and scattered
+trees along the opposite bank. One of these trees was a monster beech
+near the water's edge, the trunk of which was scarred by many entwined
+initials.
+
+To this lovers' trysting tree now came Ray and Chip.
+
+The evening was not one for romance, for no moon graced it--only stars
+were reflected from the pond's motionless surface, while fireflies
+twinkled above it.
+
+The shadow of the near parting also hovered over these two as, hand
+in hand, they picked their way up and along the bank; and once seated
+beneath the tree, it seemed to forbid speech.
+
+"I wish you'd play some of the songs you used to," Chip said at last
+hurriedly, "I'd like to think I'm back at the lake again."
+
+Glad to do so, Ray drew out his banjo and began to tune it. He started
+a song also--one of the "graveyardy" ones which Old Cy had interdicted,
+but choked at once and stopped abruptly.
+
+"I can't sing to-night," he said, "I'm too blue about going away."
+
+There were two in this frame of mind, evidently, for Chip made no
+protest, and for another long interval they watched the fireflies
+and listened to the whippoorwills.
+
+"I wish you were going back with us," Ray said at last. "It breaks
+my heart to go away so soon and leave you. Why won't you let me ask my
+uncle to take you? He might be glad to do it, just for me."
+
+"No," answered Chip, firmly, "you mustn't. It would shame me so that
+I couldn't look them in the face." Then, as if this subject and their
+own feelings must be avoided, she added hurriedly, "Tell me what you
+will do when the folks come back--whether you will come with them or stay
+at the lake?"
+
+"Stay there, I suppose," answered Ray, somewhat doggedly, for
+money-making and love were in conflict. "Old Cy says we can make a
+lot of money if I will. I wish I were rich," he added with a sigh.
+
+He was not the first young man to whom that wish had come at such a
+moment. But converse between them was at ebb tide just now, and the
+parting moment, ever creeping nearer, overshadowed all else. To
+Chip--known only to herself--it meant forever. To Ray, another long
+isolation from all the world and young associates, and all for a few
+hundred dollars sorely needed by him, yet seeming of scant value
+compared to the sweet companionship of this maid.
+
+Then Chip's feelings and the reason for them were quite beyond him.
+He could not see why she was unwilling to ask to be taken to the woods
+again, nor why she held herself aloof from him. She had not done so at
+the lake, or when they met again, and why should she now?
+
+Something of this might have been inferred by Chip, for she suddenly
+arose.
+
+"I think we'd best go back," she said. "It's time, and Hannah will
+be watching for me."
+
+What Ray might have said had he been a world-wise man, does not matter.
+What he did was to pick up his useless banjo, and clasping Chip's arm,
+led her along the winding walk.
+
+Below the falls and near the house they paused, for now the last moment
+alone together had come, and with it the real parting.
+
+"Tell Old Cy I--I haven't forgot him," whispered Chip, her voice
+quivering, "and--and--you won't forget me either, will you, Ray?"
+
+That little sob in her speech was all that was needed to break away the
+barrier between them, for the next instant Ray's arms were about the
+girl.
+
+No words of love, no protestations, no promises. Only one instant's
+meeting of soul and impulse, fierce as love of life, sacred as the hand
+of death.
+
+Love consecrated it. The shadowing maples blessed it. The stars hallowed
+it.
+
+And yet it was a long, long parting.
+
+When Ray rode away next morning, he watched for her at the first sharp
+hilltop.
+
+It was in vain, for Chip's resolve had been taken, and he never saw the
+forlorn figure crouching behind that bush-topped wall, or knew that two
+wistful, misty eyes had seen him depart.
+
+Few of us ever see even a faint image of ourselves as others see us;
+and yet, calm reflection spurred to self-analysis by a hungry heart
+occasionally effects that almost miracle.
+
+In Ray's case it did; for after his eager eyes had scanned every rod
+of that roadside trysting-place in vain, a revelation came to him--not
+a wide open one, such as he deserved, but a glance at himself and his
+conduct as it had been. First he saw Chip just as she entered their camp
+that night in the wilderness, so pitiful in appearance, so pathetic in
+her abject gratitude. Once again he looked at her appealing eyes growing
+misty while he played and sang his old-time love songs. He remembered
+that during all the days, weeks, and months following, he had never
+failed to find the love-light of admiration when his eyes met hers.
+It had all been a summer idyl, so sweet, so romantic, so tender, and
+so unexpected that he had scarce realized its value--not at all then,
+but faintly now.
+
+For all that up-hill, down-dale journey to Riverton, he lived over
+this moonlit lake and wilderness camp episode, and every hour and
+every thought shared with him by this girl--a playmate and lover
+combined--returned again like echoes of past and gone heart throbs,
+each time a little sweeter, each time a trifle more piercing, until
+his own self-complacency faded quite away and an abject penitence
+began to replace it. For the first time in his callow youth he began to
+reflect, and once started on this beneficial course, the barometer of
+his vanity fell rapidly. It was not long ere his own conduct since he
+returned to Greenvale also added an assault. He had utterly failed to
+realize the meaning of Chip's abject devotion--her pitiful
+first-hour confessions of how hard she had studied, and all for his
+sake; how she had counted days and hours until he was likely to
+return; how many times she had gone to the hilltop to watch for him; and
+even the eagerness of her arms and the warmth of her lips at that first
+moment of meeting, now came back to him.
+
+Another and even a more painful self-reproach followed this--his own
+neglect of opportunities and the result.
+
+He had returned to Greenvale feeling that Chip was his devoted slave
+and had found that she was. Like many another arrogant youth, he had
+plumed himself upon that fact, taking everything for granted. He had
+yielded to his aunt's and other friends' coaxings to tell his past
+winter's history of life in the woods, feeling that Chip could and
+would wait; and then, an unexpected and most vexatious frost had fallen
+upon his little love-garden, and presto! his confiding sweetheart, his
+almost abject slave, was one no longer.
+
+At the moment of starting, that wildwood camp and charming lake had
+seemed a Mecca which he must hasten to reach once more. When he again
+beheld it, it had lost its fairness, and to return to Greenvale and
+beg and implore Chip's forgiveness--ay, even kneel to her, if need
+be--seemed the only duty life held.
+
+His punishment had only just begun.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+VERA RAYMOND
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+For a few more days, Chip lived the life that had now become unbearable,
+and then the end came. It was hastened, perhaps, by Hannah, for that
+ill-tempered spinster had been ever watchful, and with shrewd insight
+had seen or guessed all that had transpired.
+
+"I s'pose ye know why the Frisbies hurried away so soon after Ray got
+back," she said to Chip that last day. "If you don't, I can tell ye.
+It was 'cos they noticed the goin's on 'tween you an' him, an'
+wanted to head it off."
+
+Not a word of protest came from the poor child in response to this sneer,
+and that night she wrote two notes, one to Miss Phinney, the other to
+Aunt Comfort. Then, making a bundle of the few belongings she could call
+her own--the beaded moccasins, cap, and fur cape old Tomah had given
+her, and other trifles--she waited until almost midnight and stole out
+of the house.
+
+Once before she had left her only shelter, in a more desperate mood.
+Now the same impulse nerved her, and for ample reason. Dependent upon
+the bounty of those in no wise kin to her, tortured by the sarcastic
+tongue of Hannah, her heart hungering for a love she believed could
+never be hers, no other outcome seemed possible; and defiant still,
+yet saddened beyond all words, she set out to escape it all.
+
+Where to go, she knew not nor cared--only to leave Greenvale and all the
+shame, sorrow, and humiliation it held for her, and make her own way in
+the world as best she could.
+
+The village street was as silent as midnight always found it. The low
+murmur of the Mizzy Falls whispered down the valley. A half-moon was
+just rising, and as Chip reached the hilltop where she had waited for
+Ray, she halted. From here must be taken the last glance at Greenvale,
+and as she turned about a sob rose in her heart, in spite of her stern
+resolve, for ties cannot be sundered easily.
+
+And how vivid and life-lasting was that picture! The two long rows of
+white houses facing the broad street, the tall-spired church in the
+middle of them; scattered dwellings to the right and left; away to one
+side the little brown schoolhouse that had been her Mecca; the stream
+that wound through the broad meadows; and over all the faint sheen of the
+rising moon.
+
+Only for a moment she paused for this good-bye look, then turned and
+ran. On and on she sped mile after mile, up hill, down hill, halting now
+and then for breath until a cross-road was reached, and here she stopped.
+Here also came the question of direction. To follow the main road was
+to reach Riverton, between which and Greenvale the stage journeyed. To
+go there meant being recognized perhaps. In her study of geography,
+she had found that the village which was her birthplace lay northeast
+from Greenvale. She meant sometime and somehow to reach that spot and
+visit her mother's grave once more, and also, if possible, to send
+word to Old Tomah. And so guided by this vague plan, she turned to the
+left.
+
+From now on the road became narrow. Miles elapsed between houses, and
+Chip, wearied and heavy-eyed, could only creep along. The way became
+more devious now, bending around a wooded hill and then crossing a
+wide swamp to enter a stretch of forest. Direction became lost in these
+turnings, the road grew hilly and less travelled. The moon scarce showed
+it; and Chip, almost exhausted, stumbled over stones and felt that
+she was becoming lost in an unsettled country. And then, just as she
+emerged from a thicket and ascended a low hill, the light of coming
+dawn faced her, and with it the need of sleep and concealment.
+
+Full well she knew she must avoid all observing eyes and place many
+more miles between herself and Greenvale to be certain of escape. And
+then, as the daylight increased, she caught sight of an old, almost
+ruined dwelling half hid among bushes just ahead. Even if empty, as it
+appeared, it would serve for shelter, and finding it so, she crept in,
+so wearied that she fell asleep at once on the warped and mouldy floor.
+
+It was only a brief nap, for soon the rattle of a passing farm wagon woke
+her, but refreshed somewhat by it, she again pushed on.
+
+Soon a brook, singing cheerfully as it tumbled down a ledge, was reached,
+and here Chip bathed her face and hands and drank of the sweet, cool
+water.
+
+Hunger also asserted itself, but that did not daunt her. She had faced
+it once before.
+
+Then something of a plan as to her future movements began to shape itself
+in her mind, following which came an increased courage and self-reliance.
+Not a cent did she now possess. Food she could not have until she had
+made good her escape and could earn it somewhere.
+
+But the sun was shining, the birds were singing, her young, supple body
+was strong, life and the world were ahead; and, best of all, never again
+would she have to feel herself a dependent upon any one.
+
+With these blessings, scant to most of us, hardened as she had been by
+servitude at Tim's Place, came a certain buoyancy of spirit and defiance
+of all things human.
+
+No wild beasts were here to menace, no spites to creep and crawl along
+fence or hedgerow, no hideous half-breed to pursue, and as she counted
+her blessings, while her spirits rose, a new life and new hope came to
+her.
+
+And now another feeling came--the certainty that she had come so far that
+no one would recognize her. At first that morning, when she heard a team
+coming or overtaking her, she had hidden by the roadside until it passed.
+When a house was sighted ahead, she made a wide detour in the fields to
+avoid it. Now this sense of caution vanished, and she strode on fearless
+and confident.
+
+When night came again she crept into an unused sheep barn, and when
+daylight wakened her, she hurried on once more.
+
+During all that first day's journey, her one fear had been that some one
+she would meet might recognize her and report the fact in Greenvale. To
+avoid that had been her sole thought. Now that feeling of danger was
+vanishing, and when people were met, she looked at them fearlessly and
+kept on. When cross-roads were reached and a choice in ways became
+necessary, she followed the one nearest to northeast, and for the reason
+that her school map had shown that her birthplace lay in this direction.
+How far away it was, she had not the faintest idea, or whether she
+could live to reach it. Her sole thought was to escape Greenvale and
+the humiliating life of dependence there, and when she was so far away
+that no one could find her, obtain work at some farm-house.
+
+All that second day she plodded on that same patient up-hill, down-dale
+journey, never halting except to pick a few berries, or where a brook
+crossed the road to obtain a handful of watercress or some sweet-flag
+buds.
+
+Now and then villages were passed, again it was country sparsely settled,
+where farm-houses were wide apart, and when this day was waning, even
+these had vanished and she found herself in almost a wilderness once more.
+
+[Illustration: "Won't you please give me a lift an' a chance to earn
+my vittles for a day or two?"]
+
+Hills now met her already weary feet; they seemed never ending, for as
+the crown of one was reached, another met her eyes. The roadway also
+became badly gullied, always stony, with grass growing in the hollows.
+
+By now she was faint and dizzy from two days' fasting, and so footsore
+that she could scarce limp along. So far her defiant pride had kept her
+from begging food, but now that was weakening, and at the next house she
+would have asked a morsel. But no next house came. Only the same scrub
+growth along the wayside with now and then a patch of forest, with never
+a fence, even, to indicate human ownership.
+
+The sun had now vanished. Already the stretches of forest were shadowy,
+and as Chip reached the apex of another long hill, beyond and far below
+she could see another darkened valley. Night seemed creeping up from it
+to meet her. Not a house, not even a fence or recent clearing--only the
+unending tangle of green growth and this dark vale beyond.
+
+"I guess I'll starve 'fore I find another house," poor Chip muttered,
+and then as the utter desolation of her situation and surroundings were
+realized for a moment, her defiant courage gave way.
+
+For two days and half a night she had plodded on without food and with
+scarce a moment's rest. Her feet were blistered, her eyes smarted
+from sun and dust, her head swam. She was miles away from any human
+habitation, footsore, weary, and despondent, with night enclosing her--a
+homeless waif, still clinging to the small bundle that contained her all.
+
+But now as she crouched by the roadside, too exhausted to move on, the
+memory of those three days and nights of horror, one year ago, came to
+her. Her plight was bad enough now, but nothing to compare with what it
+was then, and as all the terror and desperation of that mad flight now
+returned, it renewed her courage.
+
+"I ain't so bad off as I was then," she said. "I'm sure of finding
+a house to-morrow."
+
+And now, as if this moment marked the turning-point of her fortunes,
+from far down the hill she had climbed, came the faint creak, creak,
+and jolting sound of an ascending wagon. Slowly it neared, until just
+at the hilltop where Chip sat, the tired horse halted, and its driver saw
+her rise almost beside the wagon.
+
+"Mister," she said, "I'm nearly tuckered out and 'bout starved.
+Won't you please give me a lift an' a chance to earn my vittles for
+a day or two?"
+
+The man gave a low whistle.
+
+"Why sartin, sartin," he answered in a moment, "but who be ye? I
+thought for a minute ye was a sperit. Git up here," he added, without
+waiting for a reply and moving to make room. Then as Chip obeyed, he
+chirruped to his horse and down the hill they rattled.
+
+"Who might be ye, girlie, an' whar'd ye come from?" he asked again,
+as they came to another ascent and the horse walked.
+
+"My name's Vera, Vera--Raymond," answered Chip, "an' I run away from
+where I was livin'."
+
+"That's curis," answered the old man, glancing at her; "whar'd ye
+run away from, some poor farm?"
+
+"No, sir," replied Chip, almost defiantly, "but I guess I was a sort
+o' pauper. I was livin' with folks that fetched me out o' the woods
+an' was schoolin' me, and I couldn't stand it, so I run away. I don't
+want to tell where they be, or where I came from either," she added
+in a moment, "for I don't want them ever to find me."
+
+"Wal, that's a proper sort o' feelin'," responded the man, still
+looking at his passenger, "an' I don't mind. I live down beyond here
+in what's called the Holler. Somebody called it Peaceful Valley once.
+We'll take keer o' ye to-night 'n' to-morrer we'll see what's best
+to be done. I guess ye need a hum 'bout ez bad ez a body kin, anyway."
+
+And so Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness and erstwhile protégée of a
+philanthropic woman, as Vera Raymond found another home, and began still
+another life with this old farmer, Judson Walker, and his wife Mandy.
+
+But a sorrow deeper far than Chip ever realized fell upon Aunt Comfort
+when her brimming eyes read her note the morning after her flight.
+
+ "Dear Aunt Comfort,
+
+ "I can't stand Hannah or being a pauper any longer. She as
+ good as told me I wanted your money and I never thought of
+ it. She said I wasn't good enough for Ray, either, and that
+ was the reason Mrs. Frisbie took him away so soon. I know I
+ ain't good for nothin' nor nobody, but I didn't ask to
+ be fetched here and I am going away, never, never, never to
+ come back. If ever I can, I will pay you and Mrs. Frisbie for
+ all I've eat and had.
+
+ "Good-bye Forever,
+ "Chip."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+ "There's a heap o' comfort in lookin' on the dark side o'
+ life cheerfully."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Old Cy especially found life dull after Ray had gone. The hermit also
+appeared to miss him and became more morose than ever. He never had
+been what might be termed social, speaking only when spoken to, and then
+only in the fewest possible words. Now Old Cy became almost a walking
+sphinx, and found that time passed slowly. His heartstrings had somehow
+become entwined with Ray's hopes and plans. He had bent every energy
+and thought to secure for Ray a valuable stock of furs and gum, and,
+as was his nature, felt a keen satisfaction in helping that youth to
+a few hundred dollars.
+
+Now Ray had departed, furs, gum, and all. He had promised to return with
+Martin and Angie later on, but of that Old Cy felt somewhat dubious, and
+so the old man mourned.
+
+There was no real reason for it, for all Nature was now smiling. The lake
+was blue and rippled by the June breezes; trout leaped out of it night
+and morning; flowers were blooming, squirrels frisking, birds singing
+and nest-building; and what Old Cy most enjoyed, the vernal season was
+at hand.
+
+Another matter also disturbed him--the whereabouts of McGuire and the
+half-breed, Pete Bolduc.
+
+Levi had brought the information that neither had been seen nor heard
+of since the previous autumn; but that was not conclusive, and somehow
+Old Cy felt that a certain mystery had attached itself to them, and once
+we suspect a mystery, it pursues us like a phantom. He did not fear
+either of these renegades, however. He had never harmed them. But he
+felt that any day might bring a call from one or the other, or that some
+tragic outcome would be disclosed.
+
+Another problem also annoyed him--who this thief of their game could be,
+and whether his supposed cave lair was a permanent hiding-spot.
+
+Two reasons had kept Old Cy from another visit to that sequestered lake
+during the fall trapping season: first, its evident danger, and then lack
+of time. But now, with nothing to do except wait for the incoming ones,
+an impulse to visit again this mysterious spot came to him.
+
+He had, at the former excursion, felt almost certain that this unknown
+trapper was either McGuire or the half-breed. Some assertions made by
+Levi seemed to corroborate that theory, and impelled by it, Old Cy
+started alone, one morning, to visit this lake again. It took him until
+midday to carry his canoe, camp outfit, rifle, and all across from
+stream to stream, and twilight had come ere he reached the lagoon where
+he and Ray had left the main stream and camped. Up here Old Cy now
+turned his canoe, and repairing the bark shack they had built, which
+had been crushed by winter's snow, he camped there again.
+
+Next morning, bright and early, he launched his canoe and once more
+followed the winding stream through the dark gorge and out into the
+rippled lake again.
+
+Here he halted and looked about.
+
+No signs of aught human could be seen. The long, narrow lakelet sparkled
+beneath the morning sun. The bald mountain frowned upon it, the jagged
+ledges just across faced him like serried ramparts, an eagle slowly
+circled overhead, and, best indication of primal solitude, an antlered
+deer stood looking at him from out an opening above the ledges.
+
+"Guess I'm alone here!" exclaimed Old Cy, glancing around; "but if
+this ain't a pictur worth rememberin', I never saw one. Wish I could
+take it with me into t'other world; an' if I was sure o' findin' a
+spot like it thar, I'd never worry 'bout goin' when my time comes."
+
+After a long wait, as if he wanted to observe every detail of this
+wondrous picture of wildwood beauty, he dipped his paddle, crossed the
+sheet of rippled water, and stepped ashore at the very spot where he
+and Ray had landed over eight months before.
+
+"Great Scott!" he exclaimed, glancing around, "if thar ain't a canoe,
+bottom up! Two, by ginger!" he added, as he saw another drawn out and
+half hid by a low ledge.
+
+To this second one he hastened at once, and looked into it.
+
+It had evidently rested there all winter, for it was partially filled
+with water, and half afloat in it were two paddles and a setting pole.
+A gunny-cloth bag, evidently containing the usual cooking outfit of a
+woodsman, lay soaking in one end, a frying-pan and an axe were rusting
+in the other, and a coating of mould had browned each crossbar and thwart.
+
+"Been here quite a spell, all winter, I guess," muttered Old Cy,
+looking it over, and then he advanced to the other canoe. That was,
+as he asserted, bottom up, and also lay half hid back of a jutting
+ledge of slate. Two paddles leaned against this ledge, and near by was
+another setting pole. All three of these familiar objects were brown
+with damp mould and evidently had rested there many months.
+
+"Curis, curis," muttered Old Cy again. "I callated I'd find nothin'
+here, 'n' here's two canoes left to rot, 'n' been here all winter."
+
+Then with a vague sense of need, he returned to his canoe, seized his
+rifle, looked all around, over the lake, up into the green tangle above
+the ledges, and finally followed the narrow passage leading to where he
+had once watched smoke arise. Here on top of this ledge he again halted
+and looked about.
+
+Back of it was the same V-shaped cleft across which a cord had held
+drying pelts, the cord was still there, and below it he could see the
+dark skins amid the confusion of jagged stones.
+
+Turning, he stepped from this ledge to the lower one nearer the lake,
+walked down its slope, and looked about again. At its foot was a long,
+narrow, shelf-like projection, ending at the corner of the ledge. Old Cy
+followed this to its end and stepped down into a narrow crevasse.
+
+"Great Scott!" he exclaimed, taking a backward step as he did so.
+
+And well he might, for there at his feet lay a rifle coated with rust
+beside a brown felt hat.
+
+Had a grinning skull met his eyes, he would not have been more astounded.
+In fact, that was the next object he expected to see, and he glanced up
+and down the crevasse for it. None leered at him, however, and picking
+up the rusted weapon, he continued his search.
+
+Two rods or so below where he had climbed the upper ledge, he was halted
+again, for there, at his hand almost, was a curious doorlike opening some
+three feet high and one foot wide, back of an outstanding slab of slate.
+
+The two abandoned canoes had surprised him, the rusty rifle astonished
+him, but this, a self-evident cave entrance, almost took his breath away.
+
+For one instant he glanced at it, stepped back a step, dropped the rusty
+rifle and cocked his own, as if expecting a ghost or panther to emerge.
+None came, however, and once more Old Cy advanced and peered into this
+opening. A faint light illumined its interior--a weird slant of sunlight,
+yet enough to show a roomy cavern.
+
+The mystery was solved. This surely was the hiding-spot of the strange
+trapper!
+
+"Can't see why I missed it afore," Old Cy muttered, kneeling that he
+might better look within, and sniffing at the peculiar odor. "Wonder
+if the cuss is dead in thar, or what smells so!"
+
+Then he arose and grasped the slab of slate. One slight pull and it fell
+aside.
+
+"A nat'ral door, by hokey!" exclaimed Old Cy, and once more he knelt
+and looked in.
+
+The bravest man will hesitate a moment before entering such a cavern,
+prefaced, so to speak, by two abandoned canoes, a rusty rifle, human head
+covering, each and all bespeaking something tragic, and Old Cy was no
+exception. That he had come upon some grewsome mystery was apparent.
+Canoes were not left to rot in the wilderness or rifles dropped without
+cause.
+
+And then, that hat!
+
+Surely here, or hereabout, had been enacted a drama of murderous nature,
+and inside this cavern might repose its blood-stained sequel.
+
+But the filtering beams of light encouraged Old Cy, and he entered.
+No ghastly corpse confronted him, but instead a human, if cramped,
+abode. A fireplace deftly fashioned of slate occupied one side of this
+cave; in front a low table of the same flat stone, resting upon small
+ones; and upon the table were rusty tin dishes, a few mouldy hardtack, a
+knife, fork, and scraps of meat, exhaling the odor of decay. A smell of
+smoke from the charred wood in the fireplace mingled with it all. In
+one corner was a bed of brown fir twigs, also mouldy, a blanket, and
+tanned deerskins.
+
+The cave was of oval, irregular shape, barely high enough for Old Cy to
+stand upright. Across its roof, on either side of the rude chimney, a
+narrow crack admitted light, and as he looked about, he saw in the dim
+light another doorlike opening into still another cave. Into this he
+peered, but could see nothing.
+
+"A queer livin' spot," he muttered at last, "a reg'lar human panther
+den. An' 'twas out o' this I seen the smoke come. An' here's his
+gun," he added, as, more accustomed to the dim light, he saw one in
+a corner. "Two guns, two canoes, an' nobody to hum," he continued.
+"I'm safe, anyhow. But I've got to peek into that other cave, sartin
+sure," and he withdrew to the open air.
+
+A visit to a couple of birches soon provided means of light, and he
+again entered the cave. One moment more, and then a flaring torch of bark
+was thrust into the inner cave, a mere crevasse not four feet wide, and
+stooping, as he now had to, Old Cy entered and knelt while he looked
+about.
+
+He saw nothing here of interest except the serried rows of jutting slate,
+across two of which lay a slab of the same--no vestige of aught human,
+and Old Cy was about to retreat when his flare burning close to his
+finger tips unnoticed, caused him to drop it on the instant, and drawing
+another from his pocket he lit it while the flame lasted in the first one.
+
+It is said that great discoveries are almost invariably made by some
+trifling accident--a gold mine found by stumbling over a stone, a valley
+prolific of diamonds disclosed by digging for water.
+
+In this case it was true, for as Old Cy bent to light his second torch
+ere he withdrew from the inner cave, a flash of reflected light came
+from beneath this slab--only for one second, but enough to attract his
+attention.
+
+He stooped again and lifted the slab. Six large tin cans had been hidden
+by it. He grasped one and could scarce lift it. Again his fingers closed
+over it. He crawled backward to the better-lighted cave and drew the
+cover off the can with eager motion, and poured a heap of shining,
+glittering coin out upon that food-littered table.
+
+Into that dark hole he dived again, as a starved dog leaps for food,
+seized the cans, two at a time, almost tumbled back, and emptied them.
+Four had been filled with gold coin and two stuffed with paper money.
+
+Folded with these bills of all denominations from one to fifty dollars
+was a legal paper yellowed by age, with a red seal still glowing like a
+spot of blood.
+
+It was an innholder's license, authorizing one Thomas McGuire to furnish
+food, shelter, and entertainment for man and beast.
+
+With eyes almost tear-dimmed and heart throbbing at having found poor
+Chip's splendid heritage, Old Cy now gazed at it.
+
+The sharp stones upon which he knelt nearly pierced his flesh, but he
+felt them not.
+
+The glint of sunlight from the crack above caressed his scant gray hairs
+and white fringing beard, forming almost a halo, yet he knew it not.
+
+He only knew that here, before him, on this rude stone table, lay
+thousands of dollars, all belonging to the child he loved.
+
+"Thank God, little gal," he said at last, "I've found what belongs
+to ye, 'n' ye hain't got to want for nothin' no more. I wish I could
+kiss ye now."
+
+Little did he realize that at this very moment of thankfulness for her
+sake, poor Chip was lost to all who knew her, and, half starved and
+almost hopeless, knew not where to find shelter.
+
+[Illustration: "Thank God, little gal, I've found what belongs to ye."]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+ "When life looks darkest to ye, count yer blessin's, boy,
+ count yer blessin's."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When the sun rose again and Chip awoke, she scarce knew where she was.
+Outside, and almost reaching the one window of her little room, was the
+top of an apple tree in full bloom. Below she could hear ducks quacking,
+now and then a barnyard monarch's defiant crow, from farther away came
+the rippling sound of running water, and as she lay and listened to the
+medley, a robin lit on the tree-top not ten feet away and chirped as he
+peered into her window. A scent of lavender mingled with apple blossoms
+became noticeable; then the few and very old-fashioned fittings of the
+room,--a chest of drawers with little brass handles, over it a narrow
+mirror with gilt frame, two wood-seated chairs painted blue, and white
+muslin curtains draped away from the window.
+
+And now, conscious that she was in some strange place, back in an
+instant came the three days of her long, weary tramp, the nights when she
+had slept in a sheep barn and in a deserted dwelling, and at last,
+faint, footsore, and almost hopeless, she had been rescued from another
+night with only the sky for a roof.
+
+Then the quaint old man, so much like Old Cy, whom she had accosted, the
+rattling, bumping ride down into this valley, and the halt where a cheery
+light beamed its welcome and a motherly woman made it real.
+
+It was all so unexpected, so satisfying, so protective of herself, that
+Chip could hardly realize how it had come about.
+
+No questions had been asked of her here. These two quaint old people had
+taken her as she was--dusty, dirty, and travel-worn. She had bathed and
+been helped to an ample meal and shown to this sweet-smelling room as if
+she had been their own daughter.
+
+"They must be awful kind sort o' people," Chip thought, and then
+creeping out of bed she dressed, and taking her stockings and sadly
+worn shoes in hand softly descended the stairs.
+
+No one seemed astir anywhere. The ticking of a tall clock in the sitting
+room was the only sound, the back door was wide open, and out of this
+Chip passed and, seating herself on a bench, began putting on stockings
+and shoes. This was scarce done ere she heard a step and saw the old man
+emerge from the same door.
+
+"Wal, Pattycake, how air ye?" he asked, smiling. "I heerd ye creepin'
+downstairs like a mouse, but I was up, 'n' 'bout dressed. Hope ye
+slept well. It's Sunday," he added, without waiting for a reply,
+"an' we don't git up quite so arly ez usual. Ye can help Mandy 'bout
+breakfast now, if ye like, 'n' I'll do the milkin'."
+
+And this marked the entry of Chip into the new home, and outlined her
+duties. No more questions were asked of her. She was taken at her own
+valuation--a needy girl, willing to work for her board, insisting on it,
+and yet, in a few days, so hospitable were these people and so winsome
+was Chip, that she stepped into their affection, as it were, almost
+without effort.
+
+"I don't think we best quiz her much," Uncle Jud (as he was known)
+said to his wife that first night. "I found her on the top o' Bangall
+Hill, where she riz up like a ghost. She 'lowed she run away from
+somewhar, but where 'twas, she didn't want to tell. My 'pinion is
+thar's a love 'fair at the bottom on't all; but whether it's so or
+not, it ain't none o' our business. She needs a home, sartin sure.
+She says she means to airn her keep, which is the right sperit, an'
+long as she minds us, she kin have it."
+
+That Chip "airned her keep" and something more was soon evinced, for
+in two weeks it was "Aunt Mandy" and "Uncle Jud" from her, and
+"Patty" or "Pattycake," the nickname given her that first morning,
+from them. More than that, so rapidly had she won her way here that
+by now Uncle Jud had visited the Riggsville store, some four miles
+down this valley, and materials for two dresses, new shoes, a broad sun
+hat, and other much-needed clothing were bought for Chip.
+
+Neither was it all one-sided, for these people, well-to-do in their
+isolated home, were also quite alone. Their two boys had grown up, gone
+away and married, and had homes of their own, and the company of a
+bright and winsome girl like Chip was needed in this home.
+
+Her adoption and acceptance of it were like a small stream flowing into
+a larger one, for the reason that these people were almost primitive in
+location and custom.
+
+"We don't go to meetin' Sundays," Uncle Jud had explained that
+first day after breakfast. "We're sorter heathen, I s'pose; but then
+ag'in, thar ain't no chance. Thar used to be meetin's down to the
+Corners, 'n' a parson; but he only got four hundred a year, an'
+hard work to collect that, 'n' so he gin the job up. Since then the
+meetin'-house has kinder gone to pieces, 'n' the Corner folks use
+it now for storin' tools. We obsarve Sundays here by bein' sorter
+lazy, 'n' I go fishin' some or pickin' berries."
+
+To Chip, reared at Tim's Place, and whose knowledge of Sunday was its
+strict observance at Greenvale, this seemed a relief. Sundays there had
+never been pleasant days to her. She could not understand what the
+preaching and praying meant, or why people needed to look so solemn
+on that day. She had been stared at so much at church, also, that the
+ordeal had become painful. The parson had, on two occasions, glared and
+glowered at her while he assured her that her opinions and belief in
+spites were rank heresy and that she was a wicked heathen; and, all
+in all, religion was not to her taste. With these people she was to
+escape it, and instead of being imprisoned for long, weary hours while
+being stared at each Sunday, she was likely to have perfect freedom and
+a chance to go with this nice old man on a fishing or berry-picking jaunt.
+
+And then Uncle Jud was so much like Old Cy in ways and speech that her
+heart was won. And besides these blessings, the old farm-house, hidden
+away between two ranges of wooded hills, seemed so out of the world and
+so secure from observation that she felt that no one from Greenvale ever
+could or would discover her. She had meant to hide herself from all who
+knew her, had changed her name for that purpose, and here and now it
+was accomplished.
+
+That first Sunday, also, became a halcyon one for her, for after chores,
+in the performance of which Chip made herself useful, Uncle Jud took his
+fish-pole, and giving her the basket to carry, led the way to the brook,
+and for four bright sunny hours, Chip knew not the lapse of time while
+she watched the leaping, laughing stream, and her second Old Cy pulling
+trout from each pool and cascade.
+
+And so her new life began.
+
+But the change was not made without some cost to her feelings, for
+heartstrings reach far, and Miss Phinney and her months of patient
+teaching were not forgotten.
+
+Aunt Comfort and her benign face oft returned to Chip, "and dear Old
+Cy," as she always thought of him, still oftener. Ray's face also
+lingered in her heart. Now and then she caught herself humming some
+darky song, and never once did the moon smile into this quiet vale that
+her thoughts did not speed away to that wildwood lake, with its rippled
+path of silver, the dark bordering forest, and how she wielded a paddle
+while her young lover picked his banjo.
+
+No word or hint of all this bygone life and romance ever fell from her
+lips. It was a page in her memory that must never be turned,--an idyl
+to be forgotten,--and yet forget it she could not, in spite of will or
+wishes.
+
+And now as the summer days sped by, and Chip helping Uncle Jud in the
+meadows or Aunt Mandy about the house, and winning love from both, saw a
+new realm open before her. There was in the sitting room of this quaint
+home a tall bookcase, its shelves filled with a motley collection of
+books: works on science, astronomy, geology, botany, and the like; books
+of travel and adventure; stories of strange countries and people never
+heard of by Chip; and novels by Scott, Lever, Cooper, and Hardy. These
+last, especially Scott and Cooper, appealed most to Chip, and once she
+began them, every spare hour, and often until long past midnight, she
+became lost in this new world.
+
+"I know all about how folks live in the woods," she said one Sunday
+to Uncle Jud, when half through "The Deerslayer." "I was brought up
+there. I know how Injuns live and what they believe. I had an old Injun
+friend once. I've got the moccasins and fur cape he gave me now. His
+name was Tomah, 'n' he believed in queer things that sometimes creep
+an' sometimes run faster'n we can."
+
+It was her first reference to her old life, but once begun, she never
+paused until all her queer history had been related.
+
+"I didn't mean to tell it," she explained in conclusion, "for I
+don't want nobody to know where I came from, an' I hope you won't
+tell."
+
+How near she came to disclosing what was of far more importance to
+herself and these people than old Tomah's superstition she never knew,
+or that all that saved her was her reference to Old Cy by that name only.
+
+More than that, and like Old Cy standing over the cave where her heritage
+lay hid, she had no suspicion that this kindly old man, so much like him
+in looks and speech, was his brother.
+
+With the coming of September, however, a visitor was announced. "Aunt
+Abby's comin' to stay with us a spell," Uncle Jud said that day;
+"she's Mandy's sister, Abigail Bemis, an' she lives at Christmas
+Cove. It's a shore town, 'bout a hundred miles from here. She ain't
+much like Mandy," he added confidentially to Chip; "she's more
+book-larned, so you'll have to mind your _p_'s and _q_'s. If ye like,
+ye can go with me to the station to meet her."
+
+And so it came to pass that a few days later, Chip, dressed in her best,
+rode to the station with Uncle Jud in the old carryall, and there met
+this visitor.
+
+She was not a welcome guest, so far as Chip was concerned, wonted as she
+had now become to Uncle Jud and Aunt Mandy, whose speech, like her own,
+was not "book-larned," and for this reason, Chip felt afraid of her. So
+much so, in fact, that for a few days she scarce dared speak at all.
+
+Her timidity wore away in due time, for Aunt Abby--a counterpart of her
+sister--was in no wise awe-inspiring. She saw Chip as she was, and soon
+felt an interest in her and her peculiar history, or what was known of
+it. She also noted Chip's interest in books, and guessing more than she
+had been told, was not long in forming correct conclusions.
+
+"What do you intend to do with this runaway girl?" she said one day to
+her sister, "keep her here and let her grow up in ignorance, or what?"
+
+"Wal, we ain't thought much about that," responded Mandy, "at least
+not yet. She ain't got no relations to look arter her, so far ez we kin
+larn. She's company for us, 'n' willin'. Uncle Jud sets lots of store
+by her. She is with him from morn till night, and handy at all sorts o'
+work. This is how 'tis with us here, an' now what do you say?"
+
+For a moment Aunt Abby meditated. "You ought to do your duty by her,"
+she said at last, "and she certainly needs more schooling."
+
+"We can send her down to the Corners when school begins, if you think
+we orter," returned her sister, timidly; "but we hate to lose her now.
+We've kinder took to her, you see."
+
+"I hardly think that will do," answered Aunt Abby, knowing as she
+did that the three _R_'s comprised the full extent of an education at
+the Corners. "What she needs is a chance to mingle with more people
+than she can here, and learn the ways of the world, as well as books.
+Her mind is bright. I notice she is reading every chance she can get,
+and you know my ideas about education. For her to stay here, even with
+schooling at the Corners, is to let her grow up like a hoyden. Now what
+would you think if I took her back to Christmas Cove? There is a better
+school there. She will meet and mingle with more people, and improve
+faster."
+
+"I dunno what Judson'll say," returned Aunt Mandy, somewhat sadly.
+"He's got so wonted to her, he'll be heart-broke, I'm afraid." And
+so the consultation closed.
+
+The matter did not end here, for Aunt Abby, "sot in her way," as
+Uncle Jud had often said, yet in reality only advocating what she felt
+was best for this homeless waif, now began a persuasive campaign. She
+enlarged on Christmas Cove, its excellent school and capable master, its
+social advantages and cultured people, who boasted a public library and
+debating society, and especially its summer attractions, when a few
+dozen city people sojourned there. Its opportunities for church-going
+also came in for praise, though if this worthy woman had known how
+Chip felt about that feature, it would have been left unmentioned.
+
+"The girl needs religious influence and contact with believers, as
+well as schooling," she said later on to Aunt Mandy, "and that must
+be considered. Here she can have none, and will grow up a heathen. I
+certainly think she ought to go back with me for a year or two, at least,
+and then we can decide what is best."
+
+"Thar's one thing ye ain't thought 'bout," Mandy answered, "an'
+that's her sense o' obligation. From what she's told me, 'twas that
+that made her run away from whar she was, 'n' she'd run away from
+here if she didn't feel she was earnin' her keep. She's peculiar in
+that way, 'n' can't stand feelin' she's dependent. How you goin'
+to get round that?"
+
+"Just as you do," returned Aunt Abby, not at all discouraged. "We live
+about as you do, as you know, only Mr. Bemis has the mill; and she can
+help me about the house, as she does here."
+
+But Chip's own consent to this new plan was the hardest to obtain.
+
+"I'll do just as Uncle Jud wants me to," she responded, when Aunt
+Abby proposed the change; "but I'd hate to go 'way from here. It's
+all the real sort o' home I've ever known, and they've been so good
+to me I'll have to cry when I leave it. You'd let me come here once
+in a while, wouldn't ye?"
+
+As she seemed ready to cry at this moment, Aunt Abby wisely dropped
+the subject then and there; in fact, she did not allude to it again
+in Chip's presence.
+
+But Aunt Abby carried her point with the others. Uncle Jud consented
+very reluctantly, Aunt Mandy also yielded after much more persuasion,
+and when Aunt Abby's visit terminated, poor Chip's few belongings were
+packed in a new telescope case; she kissed Aunt Mandy, unable to speak,
+and this tearful parting was repeated at the station with Uncle Jud. When
+the train had vanished he wiped his eyes on his coat sleeves, climbed
+into his old carryall, and drove away disconsolate.
+
+"Curis, curis, how a gal like that 'un'll work her way into a man's
+feelin's," he said to himself. "It ain't been three months since I
+picked her up, 'n' now her goin' away seems like pullin' my heart
+out."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+Christmas Cove had entered its autumn lethargy when Aunt Abby Bemis and
+her new protégée reached it. Captain Bemis, who "never had no say 'bout
+nothin'," but who had cooked his own meals uncomplainingly for three
+weeks, emerged, white-dusted, from the mill, to greet the arrivals,
+and Chip was soon installed in a somewhat bare room overlooking the
+cove. Everything seemed slightly chilly to her here. This room, with
+its four-poster bed, blue-painted chairs, light blue shades, and dark
+blue straw matting, the leafless elms in front, the breeze that swept in
+from the sea, and even her reception, seemed cool. Her heart was not in
+it. Try as she would, she could not yet feel one spark of affection
+for this "book-larned" Aunt Abby, who had already begun to reprove her
+for lapses of speech. It was all so different from the home life she
+had just left; and as Chip had now begun to notice and feel trifles,
+the relations of the people seemed as chilly as the room to which she
+was consigned.
+
+When Sunday came--a sunless one with leaden sky and cold wind bearing the
+ocean's moaning--Chip felt herself back at Greenvale with its Sundays,
+for now she was stared at the moment she entered the church. The singing
+was, of course, of the same solemn character, the minister's prayers
+even longer, and the preaching as incomprehensible as in Greenvale.
+
+To Chip, doubtless a heretic who needed regeneration, it seemed a
+melancholy and solemn performance. The sermon (on predestination, with a
+finale which was a description of the resurrection day) made her feel
+creepy, and when the white-robed procession rising from countless
+graves was touched upon, and a pause came when she could hear the
+ocean's distant moan once more, it seemed that spites were creeping
+and crawling all about that dim room.
+
+With her advent at school Monday came something of the same trouble first
+met at Greenvale, for the master, a weazen, dried-up little old man, who
+wore a wig and seemed to exude rules and discipline, lacked the kindly
+interest of Miss Phinney.
+
+Chip, almost a mature young lady, was aligned with girls and boys of
+ten and twelve, and once more the same shame and humiliation had to
+be endured. It wore away in time, however, for she had made almost
+marvellous progress under Miss Phinney. Her mind was keen and quick, and
+once at study again, she astonished Mr. Bell, the master.
+
+Something of her old fearless self-reliance now came to her aid, also.
+It had made her dare sixty miles of wilderness alone and helpless, it
+had spurred her to escape Greenvale and her sense of being a dependent
+pauper, and now that latent force for good or ill still nerved her.
+
+But Christmas Cove did not suit her. The sea that drew her eyes with
+its vastness seemed to awe her. The great house, brown and moss-coated,
+where she lived, was barnlike, and never quite warm enough. The long
+street she traversed four times daily was bleak and wind-swept. Aunt
+Abby was austere and lacking in cordiality; and Sundays--well, Sundays
+were Chip's one chief abhorrence.
+
+She may be blamed for it,--doubtless will be,--and yet she never had
+been, and it seemed never would be, quite reconciled to Sundays. At
+Tim's Place they were unknown. At Greenvale they had been dreaded,
+and now at Christmas Cove they were no less so.
+
+At Uncle Jud's, in Peaceful Valley, where she had found an asylum,
+loving care, and companionship akin to her, Sundays were only
+half-Sundays--days of chore-doing, of reading, of rest, or long
+strolls along shady lanes with Uncle Jud, or following the brook and
+watching him fish. It was not right, maybe. It was somewhat of
+sacrilege, perhaps, this lazy, summer-day-strolling, flower-picking,
+berry-gathering way of passing them, and yet, as the months with Martin
+and his party in the wilderness where Sunday could not be observed, and
+those with Uncle Jud were all that Chip had really enjoyed, she must
+not be blamed.
+
+Another influence--an insidious heart-hunger she could not put away--now
+added to her loneliness in the new life. It carried her thoughts back
+to the rippled, moonlit lake, where Ray had picked his banjo and sung to
+her; even back to that first night by the camp-fire when she had watched
+and listened to him in rapt admiration. It thrilled her as naught else
+could when she recalled the few moments at the lake when, unconscious
+of the need of restraint, she had let him caress her.
+
+Then the long days of watching for his return were lived over, and the
+one almost ecstatic moment when he had leaped from the stage and over
+the wall, with no one in sight, while he held her in his arms.
+
+And then--and this hurt the most--that last evening before they were to
+part again, when beside the firefly-lit mill-pond he had the chance to
+say so much, and said--nothing!
+
+It was all a bitter-sweet memory, which she tried to put away forever the
+night she left Greenvale. She was now Vera Raymond. No one could trace
+her; and yet, so at odds were her will and heart, there still lingered
+the faint hope that Ray would sometime and somehow find her out.
+
+And so, studying faithfully, often lonesome, now and then longing for
+the bygone days with Ray and Old Cy, and always hoping that she might
+sometime return to Peaceful Valley, Chip passed the winter at Christmas
+Cove.
+
+Something of success came to her through it all. She reached and retained
+head positions in her classes. A word of praise came occasionally from
+Mr. Bell. Aunt Abby grew less austere and seemed to have a little pride
+in her. She became acquainted with other people and in touch with young
+folks, was invited to parties and sleigh-rides. The vernacular of
+Tim's Place left her, and even Sundays were less a torture, in fact,
+almost pleasant, for then she saw most of the young folks she mingled
+with, and now and then exchanged a bit of gossip.
+
+Her own dress became of more interest to her. Aunt Abby, fortunately
+for Chip, felt desirous that her ward should appear well, and Chip, thus
+educated and polished in village life, to a degree, at least, fulfilled
+Aunt Abby's hopes.
+
+Another success also came to her, for handsome as she undeniably was,
+with her big, appealing eyes, her splendid black hair, and well-rounded
+form, the young men began to seek her. One became persistent, and when
+spring had unlocked the long, curved bay once more, Chip had become
+almost a leader in the little circle of young people.
+
+Her life with those who had taken her in charge also became more
+harmonious. In fact, something of affection began to leaven it, for the
+reason that never once had Aunt Abby questioned Chip as to her past.
+Aunt Mandy and Uncle Jud had both cautioned her as to its unwisdom, and
+she was broad and charitable enough to let it remain a closed book until
+such time as Chip was willing to open it; and for this, more than
+all else that she received, Chip felt grateful. But one day it came
+out--or at least a portion of it.
+
+"I suppose you have often wondered where I was born, and who my parents
+were," Chip said, one Sunday afternoon, when she and Aunt Abby were
+alone, "and I want to thank you for never, never asking." And then,
+omitting much, she briefly outlined her history.
+
+"I was born close to the wilderness," she said, "and my mother died
+when I was about eight years old. Then my father took me into the
+woods, where I worked at a kind of a boarding house for lumbermen. I
+ran away from that when I was about sixteen. I had to; the reasons I
+don't want to tell. I found some people camping in the woods when I'd
+been gone three days and 'most starved. They felt pity for me, I
+guess, and took care of me. I stayed at their camp that summer, and then
+they fetched me home with them and I was sent to school. Somebody said
+something to me there, somebody who hated me. She had been pestering
+me all the time, and I ran away. Uncle Jud found me and took care of
+me until you came, and that's all I want to tell. I could tell a lot
+more, but I don't ever want these people to find me or take me back
+where they live, and that's why I don't tell where I came from. Then I
+felt I was so dependent on them--I was twitted of it--that it's another
+reason why I ran away. I wouldn't have stayed with Uncle Jud more than
+over night except I had a chance to work and earn my board."
+
+"But wasn't it unkind of you--isn't it now--not to let these people
+know you are alive?" answered Aunt Abby. "They were certainly good to
+you."
+
+"I know that they were," returned Chip, somewhat contritely; "but I
+couldn't stand being dependent on them any longer. If they found where I
+was, they'd come and fetch me back; and I'd feel so ashamed I couldn't
+look 'em in the face. I'd rather they'd think I was dead."
+
+"Well, perhaps it is best you do not," returned Aunt Abby, sighing;
+"but years of doubt, and not knowing whether some one we care for is
+dead or alive, are hard to bear. And now that you have told me some of
+your history, I will tell you a lifelong case of not knowing some
+one's fate. Many years ago my sister and myself, who were born here,
+became acquainted with two young men, sailor boys from Bayport, named
+Cyrus and Judson Walker. Cyrus became attached to me and we were engaged
+to marry. It never came to pass, however, for the ship that Judson was
+captain of, with Cyrus as first mate, foundered at sea. All hands took to
+the two boats. The one Judson was in was picked up, but the other
+was never heard of afterward. In due time Judson and my sister Amanda
+married. He gave up a sailor's life, and they settled down where they
+now live. I waited many years, vainly hoping for my sweetheart's
+return, and finally, realizing that he must be dead, married Captain
+Bemis. That all happened so long ago that I do not care to count the
+years; and yet all through them has lingered that pitiful thread of
+doubt and uncertainty, that vain hope that somehow and someway Cyrus
+may have escaped death and may return. I know it will never happen. I
+know he is dead; and yet I cannot put away that faint hope and quite
+believe it is so, and never shall so long as I live. Now you have
+left those who must have cared something for you in much the same
+pitiful state of doubt, and it is not right."
+
+For one moment something almost akin to horror flashed over Chip.
+
+"And was he called--was he never--I mean this brother, ever heard
+from?" she stammered, recovering herself in time.
+
+"Why, no," answered Aunt Abby, looking at her curiously, "of course
+not. Why, what ails you? You look as if you'd seen a ghost."
+
+"Oh, nothing," returned Chip, now more composed; "only the story and
+how strange it was."
+
+It ended the conversation, for Chip, so overwhelmed by the flood of
+possibilities contained in this story, dared not trust herself longer
+with Aunt Abby, and soon escaped to her room.
+
+And now circumstances came trooping upon her: the shipwreck, which
+she had heard Old Cy describe so often; the name she knew was really
+his; the almost startling resemblance to Uncle Jud in speech, ways, and
+opinions; and countless other proofs. Surely it must be so. Surely Old
+Cy, of charming memory, and Uncle Jud no less so, must be brothers,
+and now it was in her power to--and then she paused, shocked at the
+position she faced.
+
+She was now known as Vera Raymond, and respected; she had cut loose
+forever from the old shame of an outlaw's child; of a wretched drudge
+at Tim's Place; of being sold as a slave; and all that now made her
+blush.
+
+And then Ray!
+
+Full well she knew now what must have been in his heart that last evening
+and why he acted as he did. Hannah had told her the bitter truth, as
+she had since realized. Ray had been assured that she was an outcast, and
+despicable in the sight of Greenvale. He dared not say "I love you;
+be my wife." Instead, he had been hurried away to keep them apart;
+and as all this dire flood of shame that had driven her from Greenvale
+surged in her heart, the bitter tears came.
+
+In calmer moments, and when the heart-hunger controlled, she had hoped
+he might some day find her and some day say, "I love you." But now, so
+soon, to make herself known, to tell who she was, to admit to these new
+friends that she was Chip McGuire with all that went with it, to have to
+face and live down that shame, to admit that she had taken Ray's first
+name for her own--no, no, a thousand times no!
+
+But what of Old Cy and Uncle Jud, and their lifelong separation?
+
+Truly her footsteps had led her to a parting of the ways, one sign-board
+lettered "Duty and Shame," the other a blank.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+ "Good luck comes now 'n' then; bad luck drops 'round
+ frequently."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When Old Cy emerged from the cave, his face glorified and heart
+throbbing with the blessings now his to give Chip, he looked about with
+almost fear. The two abandoned canoes and the trusty rifle had seemed
+an assurance of tragic import, and yet no proof of this outlaw's
+death. That this cave had been his lair, could not be doubted; and so
+momentous was this discovery, and so anxious was Old Cy to rescue this
+fortune, that he trembled with a sudden dread.
+
+But no sign of human presence met his sweeping look.
+
+The lake still rippled and smiled in the sunlight. Two deer, a buck and
+doe, were feeding on the rush-grown shore just across, while at his feet
+that rusty rifle still uttered its fatal message.
+
+Once more Old Cy glanced all about, and then entered the cave again.
+Here, in the dim light and with trembling hands, he filled the cans once
+more, and almost staggering, so faint was he from excitement, he hurried
+to the canoe, and packing them in its bow, covered the precious cargo
+with his blanket.
+
+Then he ran like a deer back to the cave, closed it with the slab,
+grasped his rifle, and not even looking at the rusty one, bounded down
+the path to his canoe again, launched it, and pushed off.
+
+Never before had it seemed so frail a craft. And now, as he swung its
+prow around toward the outlet, a curious object met his eyes.
+
+Far up the lake, and where no ripple concealed it, lay what looked like a
+floating log, clasped by a human arm.
+
+What intuition led him hither, Old Cy never could explain, for escape
+from the lake was now his sole thought. And yet, with one sweep of his
+paddle, he turned his canoe and sped across the lake. And now, as he
+neared this object, it slowly outlined itself, and he saw a grewsome
+sight,--two bloated corpses grasping one another as if in a death
+grapple. One had hair of bronze red, the other a hideously scarred face
+with lips drawn and teeth exposed.
+
+Hate, Horror, and Death personified.
+
+Only for a moment did Old Cy glance at this ghastly sight, and then he
+turned again and sped back across the lake.
+
+The bright sun still smiled calm and serene, the morning breeze still
+kissed the blue water, the two deer still watched him with curious eyes;
+but he saw them not--only the winsome face and appealing eyes of Chip as
+he last beheld them.
+
+And now in the prow of his canoe lay her fortune, her heritage, which
+was, after all, but scant return for all the shame and stigma so far
+meted out to her.
+
+It was almost sunset ere Old Cy, his nerves still quivering and wearied
+as never before, crossed the little lake and breathed a sigh of
+heart-felt gratitude as he drew his canoe out on the sandy shore
+near the ice-house. No one was in sight, nor likely to be. A thin
+column of smoke rising from the cabin showed that the hermit was still on
+earth, and now for the first time, Old Cy sat down and considered his
+plans for the near future.
+
+First and foremost, not a soul, not even his old trusted companion here,
+not even Martin, or Angie, and certainly not Ray, must learn what had
+now come into his possession. Neither must his journey to this far-off
+lake or aught he had learned there be disclosed.
+
+But how was he to escape from the woods and these people, soon to arrive
+for their summer sojourn? And what if Chip herself should come? Two
+conclusions forced themselves upon him now: first, he must so conceal
+the fortune that none of these friends even could suspect its presence;
+next, he must by some pretext leave here as soon as Martin and his
+party arrived, and cease not his watchful care until Chip's heritage
+was safe in some bank in her name.
+
+And now, with so much of his future moves decided upon, he hurried to the
+cabin, greeted Amzi, urged him to hasten supper, and, securing a shovel,
+returned to his canoe.
+
+In five minutes the cans of gold were buried deep in the sand, not two
+feet from where the half-breed had once landed, and upon Old Cy's person
+the bills found concealment. How much it all amounted to, he had not
+even guessed, nor scarce thought. To secure it and bear it safely away
+from this now almost accursed lake had been his sole thought, and must be
+until locks and bolts could guard it better. That night Old Cy hardly
+slept a moment.
+
+And now began days of waiting and watching, the slow course of which
+he had never before known. He dared not leave the cabin except to fish
+close by and within sight of the one focal point of his interest. Each
+midday, for not sooner would the expected ones be apt to arrive, he
+began to watch the lake's outlet, and ceased not this vigil until
+darkness came. A dozen times a day he covertly visited the ice-house to
+be certain no alien footprints had been stamped upon the sand near his
+buried treasure, and had the hermit been an alert and normal man, he must
+have noticed Old Cy's strange conduct.
+
+This burden of care also began to haunt his sleep, and in it he saw the
+open cave, and himself watched by vicious, leering faces. Once he saw
+those ghastly corpses still clasped together, but hovering over him, and
+then awoke with a sense of horror.
+
+A worse dream than this came later, for in it he saw the half-breed
+creeping along the lake's shore, and then, stooping where the gold was
+buried, he began to dig, at which Old Cy sprang from his bed in sudden
+terror.
+
+"I'll go crazy if I don't git rid o' that money 'fore long," he
+said to himself; and the next day another place of concealment occurred
+to him.
+
+There was, beneath the new cabin, a small cellar entered through a
+trap-door. It was some ten feet square, and had been used to store
+potatoes, pork, and the like. To carry out his new plan, which was to
+hide the gold in this cellar, it became necessary to keep Amzi out of
+sight until its transfer was made. That was an easy task, for Amzi,
+docile as a child, was sent out on the lake to fish, and then Old Cy,
+hastily constructing a bag of deerskin, hurried to the beach, dug up
+the treasure, poured the glittering coin into this bag, hid it in the
+cellar, nailed the trap-door down, and that night slept better.
+
+Two days after, just as the sun was nearing the mountain top, Martin,
+Angie, Levi, and Ray entered the lake.
+
+How grateful both Old Cy and Amzi were for their arrival, how eagerly
+they grasped hands with them at the landing, and how like two boys Martin
+and Ray behaved needs no description.
+
+All that had happened in Greenvale was soon told. Chip's conduct and
+progress were related by Angie. Ray's plans to remain here another
+winter were disclosed by him; and then, when the cheerful party had
+gathered about the evening fire, Martin touched upon another matter.
+
+"I met Hersey as we were coming in," he said, "and he says that
+neither McGuire nor the half-breed has been seen or heard of since early
+last fall. Hersey came in early this spring with one of his deputies;
+they visited a half-dozen lumber camps, called twice at Tim's Place, and
+even went over to Pete's cabin on the Fox Hole, but nowhere could
+they learn anything of these two men. More than that, no canoe was found
+at Pete's hut, and there was no sign of occupation at all this past
+winter. Nothing could be learned from Tim, either, although not much was
+expected from that source. It is all a most mysterious disappearance,
+and the last that we can learn of Pete was his arrival and departure
+from Tim's Place after we rescued Chip."
+
+"I think both on 'em has concluded this section was gittin' too warm
+for 'em," remarked Levi, "an' they've lit out."
+
+"It's good riddance if they have," answered Old Cy, "an' I'm sartin
+none on us'll ever set eyes on 'em agin."
+
+And Old Cy spoke the truth, for none of this party ever did. In fact,
+no human being, except himself and Martin, ever learned the secret that
+this mountain-hid lake could tell.
+
+But another matter now began to interest Old Cy--how Ray and Chip stood
+in their mutual feelings. That all was not as he wished, Old Cy soon
+guessed from Ray's face and actions, and he was not long in verifying it.
+
+"Wal, how'd ye find the gal?" he said to Ray when the chance came.
+"Was she glad to see ye?"
+
+"Why, yes," answered Ray, looking away, "she appeared to be. I wasn't
+in Greenvale but two weeks, you know."
+
+"Saw her 'most every evenin' durin' that time, I s'pose?"
+
+"No, not every one," returned Ray, vaguely; "her school hadn't closed
+when I got home, and she studied nights, you see."
+
+Old Cy watched Ray's face for a moment.
+
+"I ain't pryin' into yer love matters," he said at last, "but as
+I'm on your side, I'd sorter like to know how it's progressin'.
+Wa'n't thar nothin' said 'tween ye--no sort o' promise, 'fore ye
+come 'way?"
+
+"No, nothing of that sort," answered Ray, looking confused, "though
+we parted good friends, and she sent her love to you. I'm afraid Chip
+don't quite like Greenvale."
+
+Old Cy made no answer, though a smothered "hum, ha" escaped him at the
+disclosure of what he feared.
+
+"I wish ye'd sorter clinched matters 'fore ye left," he said, after
+a pause; "that is, if ye're callatin' to be here 'nother winter.
+It's 'most too long to keep a gal guessin'; 'sides, 'tain't right."
+
+Ray, however, made no defence, in fact, seemed guilty and confused, so
+Old Cy said no more.
+
+A few days later he made a proposal that astonished Martin.
+
+"I've been here now 'bout two years," he said, "an' I'm gittin'
+sorter oneasy. I callate ye kin spare me a couple o' weeks."
+
+No intimation of his real errand escaped him, and so adroitly had he laid
+his plans and timed his movements, that when his canoe was packed and he
+bade them good-bye, no one suspected how valuable a cargo it carried.
+
+But Old Cy was more than "sorter oneasy," for the only spot where he
+dared close his eyes in sleep during that three days' journey out of
+the wilderness was in his canoe, with his head pillowed on that precious
+gold.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+ "A miser was created to prove how little real comfort kin be
+ got out o' money."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When Old Cy joined the little party at the lake again, he seemed to
+have aged years. His sunny smile was gone. He looked weary, worn, and
+disconsolate.
+
+"Chip's run away from Greenvale," he said simply, "an' nobody can
+find hide nor hair on her. They've follered the roads for miles in
+every direction. Nobody can be found that's seen anybody like her 'n'
+they've even dragged the mill-pond. She left a note chargin' it to
+that durn fool, Hannah, and things she said, which I guess was true.
+I'd like to duck her in the hoss-pond!"
+
+Such news was like a bombshell in the camp, or if not, what soon followed
+was, for after a few days Old Cy made another announcement which upset
+the entire party.
+
+"I think I'd best go back to Greenvale," he said, "an' begin a
+sarch for that gal. I ain't got nobody in the world that needs me so
+much, or I them. I'm a sorter outcast myself, ez you folks know. That
+little gal hez crept into my heart so, I can't take no more comfort
+here. Amzi don't need me so much as I need her, 'n' I've made up my
+mind I'll start trampin' till I find her. I've a notion, too, she'll
+head for the wilderness ag'in, 'n' I'm most sartin she'll fetch
+up whar her mother was buried. I watched that gal middlin' clus all last
+summer. She's true blue 'n' good grit. She won't do no fool thing,
+like makin' 'way with herself, 'n' I'll find her somewhar arnin'
+her own livin' if I live long 'nuff. From the note she left, I know
+that was in her mind."
+
+Martin realized that there was no use in trying to change Old Cy's
+intent--in fact, had no heart to do so, for he too felt much the same
+toward Chip.
+
+"I'll give you all the funds you need, old friend," he made answer,
+"and wish you Godspeed on your mission. I'll do more than that even.
+I'll pay some one to watch at Grindstone for the next year, so if Chip
+reaches there, we can learn it."
+
+That night he held a consultation with his wife.
+
+"I suspect we are somewhat to blame for this unfortunate happening,"
+he said to her, "or, at least, some thoughtless admissions you may have
+made led up to it. It's a matter we are responsible for, or I feel so,
+anyway. I think as Old Cy does, that this girl must be found if money
+can do it, and I propose that we break camp and return to Greenvale.
+If Amzi can't be coaxed to go along, I must leave Levi with him. No
+power on earth can keep Old Cy here any longer."
+
+But the old hermit had changed somewhat since that night he broke away
+and returned to this camp, and when the alternative of remaining here
+alone, or going out with them all, was presented, he soon yielded.
+
+"If Cyrus is goin', I'll have to," he said. "I'd be lonesome
+without him." And to this assertion he adhered.
+
+Ray, however, was the most dejected and unhappy one now here, though
+fortunately Old Cy was the only one who understood why, and he kept
+silent.
+
+Old Cy's defection had influenced all alike, and wood life was no longer
+attractive. It was a pity, in a way, for no more charming spot than this
+sequestered lake could be found. The trout leaping or breaking its glassy
+surface night and morning seemed to almost urge an angler; not an hour
+in all the day but two to a dozen deer might be seen along its shore, and
+blueberries were ripening over in the "blow down." Amzi's garden,
+now doubled in size, was well along, and it seemed a sin to leave so
+many attractions.
+
+But Martin had lost heart for these allurements. The thought of poor,
+homeless Chip begging her way somewhere, spoiled it all. Conscious that
+her own neglect might have invited this calamity, Angie was almost
+heart-broken, and it was a saddened party that closed and barred the
+new cabin and left this rippled lake one morning.
+
+They were even more sad when Aunt Comfort showed them Chip's message,
+and Angie read it with brimming eyes.
+
+And now came Old Cy's departure, on a quest as hopeless as that of the
+Wandering Jew and as pathetic as the Ancient Mariner's.
+
+But the climax was reached when Old Cy gave Martin his parting message
+and charge:--"Here's a bank book," he said, "that calls fer 'bout
+sixty thousand dollars. It's the savin's o' McGuire, 'n' belongs
+to Chip. I found the cave whar 'twas hid. I found McGuire 'n' the
+half-breed, both dead 'n' floatin' in the lake clus by, an' 'twas
+to keer fer this money I quit ye three weeks ago.
+
+"If I never come back here,--an' I never shall 'thout I find
+Chip,--keep it fer her. Sometime she may show up. If ever she does,
+tell her Old Cy did all he could fer her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+ "Those who hev nothin' but a stiddy faith the Lord'll provide,
+ never git fat."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Life at Peaceful Valley and the home of Judson Walker fell into its usual
+monotony after Chip's departure.
+
+Each day Uncle Jud went about his chores and his crop-gathering and
+watched the leaves grow scarlet, then brown, and finally go eddying up
+and down the valley, or heap themselves into every nook and cranny for
+final sleep.
+
+Existence had become something like this to him, but he could no longer
+anticipate a vernal budding forth as the leaves came, but only the sear
+and autumn for himself, with the small and sadly neglected churchyard
+at the Corners for its ending.
+
+Snow came and piled itself into fantastic drifts. The stream's summer
+chatter was hushed. The cows, chickens, and his horse, with wood-cutting,
+became his sole care. Once a week he journeyed to the Corners for his
+weekly paper and Mandy's errands, always hoping for a message from
+Chip. Now and then one came, a little missive in angular chirography,
+telling how she longed to return to them, which they read and re-read
+by candlelight.
+
+Somehow this strange wanderer, this unaccounted-for waif, had crept into
+his life and love as a flower would, and "Pattycake," as he had named
+her, with her appealing eyes and odd ways, was never out of his thoughts.
+
+And so the winter dragged its slow, chill course. Spring finally unlocked
+the brook once more, the apple and cherry blossoms came, the robins began
+nest-building, and one day Uncle Jud returned from the corner with a
+glad smile on his face.
+
+"Pattycake's school's goin' to close in a couple o' weeks more,
+'n' then she's comin' home," he announced, and Aunt Mandy, her face
+beaming, made haste to wipe her "specs" and read the joyous tidings.
+
+For a few days Uncle Jud acted as if he had forgotten something and knew
+not where to look for it. He lingered about the house when he would
+naturally be at work. He peered into one room and then another, in an
+abstracted way, and finally Aunt Mandy caught him in the keeping room,
+with one curtain raised,--a thing unheard of,--seated in one of the
+haircloth chairs and looking around.
+
+"Mandy," he said, as she entered, "do you know, I think them picturs
+we've had hangin' here nigh on to forty year is homely 'nuff to stop
+a horse, 'n' they make me feel like I'd been to a funeral. Thar's
+that 'Death Bed o' Dan'l Webster,' an' 'Death o' Montcalm,'
+'specially. I jest can't stand 'em no longer, an' 'The Father
+o' his Country.' I'm gittin' tired o' that, 'n' the smirk he's
+got on his face. I feel jest as though I'd like to throw a stun at
+him this minute. You may feel sot on them picturs, but I'd like to
+chuck the hull kit 'n' boodle into the cow shed. An' them winder
+curtains," he continued, looking around, "things so blue they make me
+shiver, an' this carpet with the figgers o' green and yaller birds,
+it sorter stuns me.
+
+"Now Pattycake's comin' purty soon. She must 'a' seen more cheerful
+keepin' rooms'n ourn, 'n' I'm callatin' we'd best rip this
+'un all up an' fix it new. Then thar's the front chamber--in fact,
+both on 'em--with the yaller spindle beds 'n' blue curtains, an'
+only a square of rag carpet front o' the dressers. Say, Mandy," he
+continued, looking around once more, "how'd we ever happen to git so
+many blue curtains?"
+
+His discontent with their home now took shape in vigorous action, and
+Aunt Mandy came to share it. Trip after trip to the Riggsville store was
+made. Two new chamber sets and rolls of carpeting arrived at the station
+six miles away, and came up the valley. A paper-hanger was engaged and
+kept busy for ten days. The death-bed pictures were literally kicked into
+the cow shed, and in three weeks four rooms had been so reconstructed
+and fitted anew that no one would recognize them.
+
+Meanwhile Uncle Jud had utterly neglected his "craps," while he worked
+around the house. The wide lawn had been clipped close. A new picket
+fence, painted white, replaced the leaning, zigzag one around the garden.
+Weeds and brush disappeared, and only Aunt Mandy's protest saved the
+picturesque brown house from a coat of paint.
+
+And then "Pattycake" arrived.
+
+Nearly a year before she had been brought here, a weary, bedraggled,
+dusty, half-starved waif. Now Uncle Jud met her at the station, his face
+shining; Aunt Mandy clasped her close to her portly person; and as Chip
+looked around and saw what had been done in her honor and to make her
+welcome, her eyes filled.
+
+"I never thought anybody would care for me like this," she exclaimed,
+and then glancing at Uncle Jud, her eyes alight, she threw her arms about
+his neck and, for the first time, kissed him.
+
+And never in all his life had he felt more amply paid for anything he
+had done.
+
+Then and there, Chip resolved to do something that now lay in her
+power--to face shame and humbled pride and all the sacrifice it meant to
+her in the end, and reunite these two long-separated brothers. But not
+now, no, not yet.
+
+Before her lay two golden joyous summer months. Aunt Abby was coming up
+later. She could not face her own humiliation now. She must wait until
+these happy days were past, then tell her wretched story, not sparing
+herself one iota, and then, if she must, go her way, an outcast into the
+world once more.
+
+How utterly wrong she was in this conclusion, and how little she
+understood the broad charity of Uncle Jud, need not be explained. She
+was only a child as yet in all but stature. The one most bitter sneer of
+malicious Hannah still rankled and poisoned her common sense. Its effect
+upon Chip had been as usual on her nature and belief, and this waif
+of the wilderness, this gnome child, must not be judged by ordinary
+standards. Like reflections from grotesque mirrors, so had her ideas of
+right and duty been distorted by eerie influences and weird surroundings.
+There was first the unspeakable brutality of her father; then the
+menial years at Tim's Place, with no more consideration than a horse
+or pig received, her only education being the uncanny teachings of Old
+Tomah. Under this baleful tuition, coupled with the ever present menace
+and mystery of a vast wilderness, she passed from childhood into
+womanhood, with the fixed belief that human kind were no better than
+brutes; that the forest was peopled by a nether world of spites, the
+shadowy forms of both man and beast; and worse than this, that all
+thought and action here must be the selfish ones of personal gain and
+personal protection. Like a dog forever expecting a blow, like any
+dumb brute ever on guard against superior force, so had Chip grown to
+maturity, a cringing, helpless, almost hopeless creature, and yet one
+whose inborn impulses and desires revolted at her surroundings.
+
+Once removed from these, however, and in a purer atmosphere, she was
+like one born again. Her past impressions still remained, her queer
+belief of present and future conditions was still a motive force, and
+the cringing, blow-expecting nature was yet hers.
+
+For this reason, and because this new world and these new people were
+so unaccountable and quite beyond her ken in tender influence and
+loving care, what they had done and for what purpose seemed all the
+more impressive. But it was in no wise wasted; instead, it was like
+God-given sunshine to a flower that has never known aught except the
+chilling shadow of a dense forest.
+
+And now ensued an almost pathetic play of interest, for Chip set herself
+about the duty of giving instead of obtaining pleasure.
+
+She became what she was at Tim's Place,--a menial, so far as they would
+let her,--and from early morning until bedtime, some step, some duty,
+some kindly care for her benefactors, was assumed by her. She worked and
+weeded in the garden, she drove and milked the cows, she followed Uncle
+Jud to the hay-field, insisting that she must help, until at last he
+protested.
+
+"I like ye 'round me all the time, girlie," he assured her, "for
+ye're the best o' company, 'n' I'd rather see yer face'n' any
+posy that ever grew. But you've got to quit workin' so much in the sun.
+'Twill get yer hands all calloused 'n' face freckled, an' I won't
+have it. I want ye to injie yourself, read books, pick flowers, 'n'
+sit in the shade. I see ye've got into the habit o' workin', which
+ain't a bad 'un, but thar ain't no need on't here."
+
+One day a stranger happened up this valley, so seldom travelled that
+its roadway ruts were obscured by grass. Chip noticed him that morning
+where the brook curved almost to the garden, a fair-haired young man
+with jaunty straw hat, delicate, shining rod, and new fish basket. He
+was garbed in a spick-span brown linen suit. He saw her also, looking
+over the garden wall, and raising his hat gracefully, strode on.
+
+His appearance, so neat and dainty and so like pictures of fishermen in
+books, his courteous manner of touching his hat, without a rude stare
+or even a second glance at her, caught her attention, and she watched him
+a few moments.
+
+He did not look back until he had cast his line into a few eddies some
+twenty rods away; and then he turned, looked at her, the house, barns,
+garden, all as one picture, and then continued up the brook.
+
+He was not seen again until almost twilight by her, and then he and Uncle
+Jud entered the sitting room.
+
+"This is Mr. Goodnow, Mandy," Uncle Jud explained, nodding to the
+newcomer and glancing at Aunt Mandy and Chip. "He says he follered the
+brook further up'n he figgered on. It's four miles to the Corners,
+'n' he wants us to keep him over night. I 'lowed we could, if you was
+willin'."
+
+"I shall be most grateful if you kind ladies will permit my intrusion,"
+the stranger added. "I have been so captivated by this delightful brook
+that I quite forgot where I was or the distance to the village until I
+saw that the sun was setting. If you can take care of me until morning,
+any payment you will accept shall be yours."
+
+"I guess we can 'commodate ye," responded Aunt Mandy, pleasantly. And
+so this modern Don Juan found lodgement in the home of these people.
+
+"I am an enthusiast on trout-catching," he explained, after all had
+gathered on the vine-enclosed porch and he had presented Uncle Jud with
+an excellent cigar. "About all I do summers is to hunt for brooks. I
+came to the village below here yesterday, having heard of this stream,
+and never before have I found one quite so attractive."
+
+Then followed a more or less fictitious account of his own station
+and occupation in life, all very plausible, entirely frank, and quite
+convincing.
+
+"I am unfortunate in one respect," he said, "in that I have no fixed
+occupation. My father, now dead, was a prominent physician. I was
+educated for the same profession and had just begun its practice when he
+died. An uncle also left me a large bequest at about the same time. My
+mother insisted that I give up practice, and now I am an enforced idler."
+
+He was such an entirely new specimen of manhood, so charming of manner,
+so smooth of speech, that Chip watched and listened while he talked
+on and on, quite enthralled. She had seen similar gentlemen pass and
+repass Tim's Place, not quite so dainty and suave, perhaps, but dressed
+much the same. She had now and then noticed a pictured reproduction of
+one in some magazine. Insensibly, she compared this Mr. Goodnow with
+Ray, to the latter's discredit, and when the evening was ended and
+she was alone in her room, this new arrival's delicately chiselled
+face, smiling blue eyes, slightly curled mustache, and refined manners
+followed her.
+
+"He's a purty slick talker," Uncle Jud admitted to his wife later
+on, "a sorter chinaware, pictur-book feller 'thout much harm in him.
+I kinder felt sorry for him, so I 'lowed we'd keep him over night.
+Guess he ain't much use in the world."
+
+How little use and how much harm he was capable of may be gleaned from a
+brief résumé of this stranger's history.
+
+He was, as he stated, without occupation and with plenty of money. He
+also, as stated, loved trout brooks and wildwood life--not wildwood life
+in its true sense, but the summer-day kind, where, clad as he was,
+he could follow some meadow brook or sit in the shade and watch it
+while indulging in day-dreams and smoking. He loved these things, but
+he loved fair ladies--collectively--still more. He had stumbled upon
+Peaceful Valley by accident, coming to it from a fashionable resort to
+escape an intrigue with a foolish _grande dame_ and consequent irate
+husband. Chip's face and form had caught his eyes as he strolled by that
+day, and admission to the home of Uncle Jud and opportunity to meet,
+and, if possible, impress this handsome country lass, had been a matter
+of shrewd calculation with him. He had purposely remained up the brook
+until nightfall. He watched for and intercepted Uncle Jud in the nick
+of time, persuaded that confiding man that he was too tired to reach the
+village, and with all the blandishments of speech at his command, had
+obtained entry to this home.
+
+But he failed to impress Chip as he had hoped. She was no fool, if she
+had been reared at Tim's Place. A certain shiftiness in his eyes when he
+looked at her, a covert, sideways glance, never firm but ever elusive,
+was soon noted and awoke her suspicion. Then the glib story he had
+told of himself was soon contradicted by him in a few minor details.
+Like all liars, he lacked a perfect memory, and, talking freely, he
+occasionally crossed his own tracks.
+
+Unfortunately for him, he also showed more interest in her than in the
+brook the next day, and the following one he capped the climax by asking
+her to go fishing with him--an invitation which she promptly refused.
+
+"I don't like that Mr. Goodnow," she asserted to Uncle Jud a little
+later. "I think he's a deceitful man. He pesters me every chance he
+can, and I wish he'd go away."
+
+That was enough for Uncle Jud, and after supper he harnessed his horse
+and politely but firmly requested Mr. Goodnow's company to the village.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+For many weeks now Chip had suffered from a troubled conscience, and,
+like most of us, was unable to face its consequences and admit her sin.
+
+Time and again she had planned how she could best evade it and yet bring
+those two brothers together without first confessing. Old Cy must be
+told, of course. She could explain her conduct to him. He would surely
+forgive her, she thought, and then, maybe, find another home for her
+somehow and somewhere. Oversensitive as she was, to now confess her
+cowardly concealment and her deception of those who had loved and trusted
+her, seemed horrible.
+
+But events were stronger than her will, for one day in the last of
+August, Uncle Jud returned from the village store, bringing dress
+materials and startling information. "Cap'n Bemis is failin' purty
+fast," he said, "so Aunt Abby writes, an' she ain't comin' up here.
+It won't make no difference to you, girlie," he continued, turning to
+Chip. "I've brought home stuff to rig ye out fer school. Miss Solon
+the dressmaker's comin' to-morrer, 'n' we'll take keer o' ye in
+good shape. We've made up our minds ye belong to us fer good, me
+'n' Mandy," he added, smiling at Chip, "an' I shall go with ye
+to Christmas Cove, if Cap'n Bemis ain't improvin', 'n' find ye a
+boardin' place."
+
+"I'm awful sorry to hear 'bout the Cap'n," interrupted Aunt Mandy,
+as if the other matter and Chip's future were settled definitely;
+"but if he drops off, Aunt Abby must come here fer good. I dunno but
+it'll be a relief," she added, looking at Uncle Jud and sighing.
+"'Twa'n't no love-match in the first place, 'n' Abby's mind's
+always been sot on your brother Cyrus, 'n' she never quite gin up the
+idee he was alive."
+
+And now a sudden faintness came to Chip as the chasm in her own life was
+thus opened. Only one instant she faltered, and then her defiant courage
+rose supreme and she took the plunge.
+
+"Oh, your brother Cyrus isn't dead, Uncle Jud," she exclaimed, "he's
+alive and I know him. I've known it all summer and dare not tell
+because I'm a miserable coward and couldn't own up that I lied to you.
+My name isn't Raymond, it's McGuire; and my father was a murderer,
+and I'm nobody and fit for nobody. I know you'll all despise me now
+and I deserve it. I'm willing to go away, though," and the next
+instant she was kneeling before Uncle Jud and sobbing.
+
+It had all come in a brief torrent of pitiful confession which few would
+be brave enough to make.
+
+To Chip, seeing herself as she did, it meant loss of love, home, respect,
+and all else she now valued, and that she must become a homeless wanderer
+once more.
+
+But Uncle Jud thought otherwise, for now he drew the sobbing girl into
+his lap.
+
+"Quit takin' on so, girlie," he said, choking back a lump; "why,
+we'll all love ye ten times more fer all this, an' ez fer bein' a
+nobody, ye're a blessed angel to us fer bringin' the news ye hev."
+And then he kissed her, while Aunt Mandy wiped her eyes on her apron.
+
+The shower, violent for a moment, was soon over; for as Chip raised her
+wet eyes, a sunshiny smile illumined Uncle Jud's face.
+
+"If Cyrus is alive," he said, "as ye callate, I'll thank God till I
+set eyes on him, and then I think I'll lick him fer not huntin' me up
+all these years."
+
+"But mebbe he found Abby was married 'n' didn't want to," interposed
+Aunt Mandy. "We mustn't judge him yet."
+
+"No, I won't judge him," asserted Uncle Jud; "I'll jest cuff him,
+good 'n' hard, an' let it go at that.
+
+"Ez fer you, girlie, an' jest to set yer mind at rest, we found out
+what your right name was and where ye run away from last fall, but never
+let on to nobody. 'Twas your business and nobody else's, an' made no
+difference in our feelin's, ez ye must see; an' now I'll tell ye how
+I found out.
+
+"I was down to the Corners one day arter ye went to Christmas Cove,
+'n' a feller--nice-lookin' feller, too, with honest brown eyes--was
+askin' if anybody had seen or heard o' a runaway girl by the name o'
+McGuire. Said she'd run away from Greenvale--'That's 'bout a hundred
+miles from here,' he said--an' he was huntin' for her. Nobody at
+the Corners knew about ye 'n' I kept still, believin' ye had reason
+fer not wantin' to be found out."
+
+And now another tide--the thrill of love--surged in Chip's heart, and
+her face became glorified.
+
+And so the clouds rolled away. That night Chip wrote a brief but curious
+letter, so odd, in fact, it must be quoted verbatim:--
+
+[Illustration: "Quit takin' on so, girlie," he said.]
+
+ "Mr. Martin Frisbie,
+
+ "Please send word at once to Mr. Cyrus Walker that his brother
+ Judson, who lives in Riggsville, wants to see him. No one else
+ must be told of this, for it's a secret.
+
+ "One who Knows."
+
+But Chip's secret was a most transparent one, for when this missive
+reached Martin three days later, he recognized its angular penmanship
+and similarity to the note Aunt Comfort still treasured, and knew that
+Chip wrote it.
+
+It startled him somewhat, however, for Old Cy's youthful history was
+unknown to him, and suspecting that some mystery lay beneath this
+information, he told no one, but started for Riggsville at once.
+
+The tide of emotion that had upset the even tenor of Uncle Jud's home
+life slowly ebbed away, and a keen sense of expectancy took its place.
+
+Chip, after giving him her letter, explained that Old Cy was most likely
+in the wilderness, and that the letter might not reach him for weeks.
+
+And then one day a broad-shouldered, rather commanding, and somewhat
+citified man drove up to the home of Uncle Jud.
+
+"Does Mr. Judson Walker live here?" he inquired of Aunt Mandy, who met
+him at the door.
+
+Her admission of that fact was scarce uttered when there came a
+rustling of skirts, a "Why, Mr. Frisbie!" and Chip was beside her,
+at which Martin, collected man of the world that he was, felt an unusual
+heart-throb of thankfulness.
+
+A little later, when Uncle Jud had been summoned into their newly
+furnished "keeping room," disclosures astonishing to all followed.
+
+"We have been searching for you, Chip, far and near," Martin assured
+them, "and Old Cy is still at it. He left us at the camp, almost a year
+ago, came to Greenvale, found you had run away, and came back to tell
+us. It upset us all so that we broke camp at once, taking Amzi with us,
+and returned to Greenvale. Old Cy there bade us good-bye and started
+to find you. Ray also began a search as well. I've advertised in dozens
+of papers, have kept Levi on watch for you at Grindstone ever since, and
+now I hope you will return with me to Greenvale."
+
+"I thank you all, oh, so much," answered Chip, scared a little at this
+proposal, "but I don't want to. I'm nobody there and never can be.
+I'd be ashamed to face folks there any more."
+
+"I guess she best stay with us," put in Uncle Jud, "fer we sorter
+'dopted her, 'n' not meanin' no disrespect to you folks, I callate
+she'll be more content here. I'd like ye to get word to Cyrus, though,
+soon's possible. I hain't sot eyes on him fer forty years, 'n',"
+his eyes twinkling, "I'm jest spilin' to pull his hair 'n' cuff
+him."
+
+"I will help out in that matter at once, and more than gladly,"
+replied Martin, again looking at Chip and noting how improved she was;
+"but I still think Miss Runaway had better return with me. We need you,
+Chip," he continued earnestly, "and so does some else I can name,
+more than you imagine, I fancy, and my wife will welcome you with open
+arms, you may be sure. As for that foolish Hannah, she's the most
+penitent person in Greenvale. There's another reason still," he
+added, glancing around with a smile, "and no one is more glad of it
+than we all are. It's a sixty-thousand-dollar reason--your heritage,
+Miss Vera McGuire, for your father is dead, and that amount is now
+in the Riverton Savings Bank awaiting you."
+
+Martin had expected this news to be overpowering, and a "Good God!"
+from Uncle Jud, and a gasping "Land sakes!" from Aunt Mandy, proved
+that it was.
+
+Chip's face, however, was a study. First she grew pale, then flashed
+a scared glance from one to another of the three who watched her, and
+then almost did her shame and hatred of this vile parent find expression.
+
+"I'm glad he--no, I won't say so, for he was my father," she
+exclaimed; "but I want Old Cy to have some of the money, and Uncle
+Jud here, and you folks, all. I was a pauper long enough," and then,
+true to her instinct of how to escape from trouble, she ran out of the
+room.
+
+"She's a curis gal," asserted Uncle Jud, looking after her as if
+feeling that she needed explanation, "the most curis gal I ever saw.
+But we can't let her go, money or no money, Mr. Frisbie. I found her
+one night upon top o' Bangall Hill. She was so starved an' beat out
+from trampin' she couldn't hardly crawl up on to the wagon, 'n'
+yet she said she wouldn't be helped 'thout she could arn it. I think
+she's like folks we read about, who starve ruther'n beg. But she kin
+have all we've got some day, an' we jest can't let her go."
+
+And Martin, realizing its futility, made no further protest.
+
+Something of chagrin also came to him, for, broad-minded as he was,
+he realized how partial neglect, the narrow religious prejudice of
+Greenvale, and unwise notice of her childish ideas about spites and
+Old Tomah's superstitions had all conspired to drive her away. She was
+honest and self-respecting, "true blue," as Old Cy had said, grateful
+as a fawning dog for all that had been done for her, and in spite of
+her origin, a circumstance that carried no weight with Martin, she was
+one, he believed, who would develop into splendid womanhood. That she
+was well on her way toward that goal, her improved speech and devotion to
+these new friends gave ample evidence.
+
+And now Ray's position in this complex situation occurred to Martin;
+for this young man's interest in Chip and almost heart-broken grief over
+her disappearance had long since betrayed his attachment.
+
+"I suppose you may have guessed that there was a love-affair mixed up
+with this episode," he said to the two somewhat dazed people.
+
+"I callated thar was, that fust night," Uncle Jud responded, his eyes
+twinkling again, "an' told Mandy so. 'Twas that more'n anything
+else kept us from quizzin' the gal. I knowed by her face she had heart
+trouble, 'n' I've seen the cause on't."
+
+"You have," exclaimed Martin, astonished in turn, "for Heaven's sake,
+where?"
+
+"Oh, down to the Corners, 'most a year ago, 'n' a likely boy he was,
+too."
+
+"And never told her?"
+
+"No, why should I, thinkin' she'd run away from him. We didn't want
+to spile her plans. We found out, though, her name was McGuire, but
+never let on till she told us a spell ago." And then Uncle Jud told
+the story of Ray's arrival in Riggsville in search of Chip.
+
+"That fellow is my nephew, Raymond Stetson," rejoined Martin with
+pride, "he also is an orphan, and I have adopted him. Chip has no cause
+to be ashamed of his attachment."
+
+"I don't callate she is," replied Uncle Jud. "'Tain't that that
+jinerally makes a gal kick over the traces. Mebbe 'twas suthin some o'
+you folks said." And then a new light came to Martin.
+
+"Mr. Walker," he answered impressively, "in every village there is
+always a meddlesome old maid who invariably says things she'd better
+not, and ours is no exception. In this case it was a dependent of our
+family who took a dislike to Chip, it seems, and her escapade was its
+outcome."
+
+"Wal, ye've got to hev charity for 'em," replied Uncle Jud with a
+broad smile. "Never havin' suffered the joys 'n' sorrows o' love,
+they look at it sorter criss-cross, an' mebbe this 'un did. Old maids
+are a good deal like cider--nat'raly turn into vinegar. What wimmin need
+more'n all the rest is bein' loved, 'n' if they don't get it, they
+sour up in time an' ain't no comfort to themselves nor nobody else.
+Then ag'in, not havin' no man nor no babies to look arter, they take
+to coddlin' cats 'n' dogs 'n' parrots, which ain't nat'ral."
+
+"I think," continued Uncle Jud, "now that we've turned another
+furrow, you'd best stop a day or two with us, 'n' sorter git
+'quainted. We'll be mighty glad to hev ye, me an' Mandy, an' then
+ag'in thar's a lot o' good trout holes up the brook. We hev plenty
+to eat, 'n' mebbe a few days here in Peaceful Valley'll sorter
+reconcile ye to leavin' the gal with us." And nothing loath, Martin
+accepted.
+
+Aunt Mandy and Chip now bestirred themselves as never before. The
+dressmaker was left to her own resources, Martin and Uncle Jud rigged
+fish-poles and started for the brook. Chip, with pail in hand, hurried
+away to the fields, and when teatime arrived, the big platter of crisp
+fried trout, saucers filled with luscious blackberries, and ample
+shortcake of the same with cream that poured in clots, assured Martin
+that these people did indeed have plenty to eat.
+
+"How did this come to be named Peaceful Valley?" he queried, when they
+had all gathered around the table. "It's very appropriate."
+
+"Wal," answered Uncle Jud, "we got it from a feller that come up
+here paintin' picturs one summer, an'," chuckling, "'twas all we
+got for a month's board, at that. He was a sort o' skimpy critter,
+with long hair, kinder pale, and chawed tobacco stiddy. He 'lowed
+his name was Grahame, that he was in the show business 'n' gittin'
+backgrounds, as he called 'em, fer show picturs. He roved up 'n' down
+the brook, puttin' rocks 'n' trees 'n' waterfalls on paper, allus
+gittin' 'round reg'lar 'bout meal-time--must 'a' gained twenty
+pounds while here. An' then one mornin' he was missin', 'n' so
+was Aunt Mandy's gold thimble 'n' all her silver spoons. She'd sorter
+took to him, too, he was that palaverin' in his way."
+
+There now ensued a series a questions from Uncle Jud in regard to Old
+Cy--how long Martin had known him, and all that pertained to his history.
+
+It was gladly recited by Martin, together with all the strange happenings
+in the wilderness, the finding of Chip, the half-breed's pursuit and
+abduction of her, and much else that has been told.
+
+It was almost midnight ere Martin was shown to the best front chamber,
+and even then he lay awake an hour, listening to the steady prattle of a
+near-by brook and thinking of all that had happened.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A tone of regret crept into his voice, however, when, after thanking
+Uncle Jud and Aunt Mandy, and bidding them good-bye, he addressed Chip.
+
+"I wish I could take you back with me," he said, "your return would
+be such a blessing to Aunt Comfort and my wife. You may not believe it,
+but you are dear to them both. I must insist that you at least pay us a
+visit soon. Here is your bank book," he added, presenting it. "You
+are rich now, or at least need never want, for which we are all grateful.
+And what about Ray?" he added, pausing to watch her. "What shall I say
+to him? Shall I tell him to come and see you?"
+
+Chip shook her head firmly. "No, no," she answered, "please don't
+do that. Some day I may feel different, but not now."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+Sad news arrived in Peaceful Valley a week later, for Captain Bemis had
+passed on, Aunt Abby was in lonely sorrow, and wrote for Chip to come
+at once.
+
+Her fate was now linked with these people. Aunt Abby had been kind and
+helpful, and Chip, more than glad to return a little of the obligation,
+hurried to Christmas Cove.
+
+It was a solemn and silent house she now entered. Aunt Abby, despite
+the fact that it was not a love-match, mourned her departed companion.
+The mill's pertinent silence added gloom, and Chip's smiling face and
+affectionate interest was more than welcome to Aunt Abby.
+
+And now that concealment was no longer needed, Chip hastened to tell her
+story in full.
+
+How utterly Aunt Abby was astonished, how breathlessly she listened
+to Chip's recital, and how, when the climax came and Chip assured her
+that good Old Cy Walker was still alive, Aunt Abby collapsed entirely,
+sobbing and thanking God all at once, is but a sidelight on this tale.
+
+"I couldn't tell you before," Chip assured her, while her own tears
+still flowed. "I was so ashamed and guilty all in one, I couldn't
+bear to. I never did so mean a thing in all my life, and never will
+again. But when Uncle Jud told me what you didn't, and how much he
+cared for me, and how you once cared for Uncle Cy, I went all to pieces
+and told the whole story and sent word to Uncle Cy that day. I feel so
+guilty now, and so mean, I don't see how you can forgive me."
+
+But Aunt Abby's forgiveness was not slow in coming. The past ten days of
+sorrow had left her heart very tender. In spite of being "book-larned,"
+she was very humane. Chip's sad life and misfortunes appealed to
+her, as they had to Uncle Jud, and true Christian woman that she was, her
+heart opened to Chip.
+
+"I hope we shall never be parted while I live," she said, as the tears
+came again. "I have no children, and no one to live for but my sister.
+I am so wonted to Christmas Cove, I could not feel at home anywhere else.
+If Uncle Jud will consent, I will adopt you legally, and when I am laid
+away, all I have shall be yours."
+
+And so Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness, child of an outlaw, once
+sold to a human brute, yet fighting her way upward and onward to a better
+life, despite every drawback, now found a home and mother.
+
+No light of education had illumined her pathway, no Christian teaching
+and no home example, only the inborn and God-given impulse of purity,
+self-respect, and gratitude; and yet, like a bud forcing its way up out
+of a muck heap and into the sunshine, so Chip had emerged to win respect
+and love.
+
+But all her history is not told yet. She still lacked even a common
+education. There was still an old man seeking to find her, who was yet
+wandering afar. A homeless, almost friendless old man was he, whose
+life had gone amiss, and whose sole ambition was to do for her and
+find content in her happiness. A wanderer and recluse for many years, he
+was still more so now, and out of place as well among the busy haunts
+of men. More than that, he was an object of curiosity to all grown people
+and the jest of the young, as he tramped up and down the land in search
+of Chip.
+
+And what a pitiful quest it was,--this asking the same question thousands
+of times, this lingering in towns to watch mill operatives file out,
+this peering into stores and marts, to go on again, and repeat it for
+months and months.
+
+There was still another link in this chain,--a boy, so far as experience
+goes, who was only deterred from unwise haste by a cool-headed man.
+
+"You had better not go to Chip now," Martin said to him on his
+return from Peaceful Valley. "She is an odd child of nature, and you
+won't lose by waiting. My advice to you is to forget her for the
+present, find some profitable occupation, and then, when you have made a
+little advancement in life, go and woo her if you can. To try it now
+is foolish."
+
+It was cold comfort for Ray.
+
+One of Chip's first acts of emancipation was to write to Aunt Comfort
+and Angie, assuring both of her love and best wishes, and thanking them
+for all they had done. Both letters were cramped in chirography but
+correct in spelling, and in Angie's was a note for Martin, asking that
+he draw one hundred dollars of her money and send it to her, and as
+much more to pay some one to follow Old Cy. The latter request Martin
+ignored, however, for he had already set the machinery of newspaperdom at
+work, and an advertisement for information of that wanderer was flying
+far and wide.
+
+Of the money sent her, Chip made odd and quite characteristic uses, only
+one of which needs mention,--the purchase of a banjo. Had Ray known
+this, and that the tender memory it invoked was the reason for this
+investment, he would have had less cause for grief. But Ray did not,
+which was all the better for him.
+
+And now, while she is in good company at Christmas Cove, with Mr. Bell,
+syntax, decimal fractions, the planetary system, and divisions of the
+earth six hours of each school day, or with Aunt Abby sewing, or picking
+at the banjo, or attending church, we must leave Chip and follow Old Cy.
+
+With a hunter's instinct he had calculated that Chip would head for the
+place of her birth, and then, if possible, send word to either himself
+or the Indian. That she had made way with herself he did not consider
+probable. She was not of that fibre, he felt positive; but instead,
+would make her own way across country, working, if need be, to obtain
+food and shelter until she at last reached the one spot nearest her
+heart,--her mother's grave.
+
+Believing this of her, and judging rightly, he left Greenvale, and, as
+it happened, twice crossed and once followed the very route she had
+taken for miles. That he failed to hear of her from the many he asked
+was solely due to accident, added to her own caution in avoiding all
+observant eyes.
+
+And what an almost hopeless and interminable tramp he took! Back and
+forth across the section of country she was likely to follow for weeks
+and weeks, halting a day in every village and two or three in each city,
+asking the same question over and over again, until his indomitable
+courage and almost deathless faith slowly ebbed away.
+
+Autumn came, the leaves grew scarlet and brown, snow followed, and winter
+locked all streams, and still Old Cy journeyed on. Spring and sunshine
+once more warmed the earth into life, the fields grew green, and yet he
+paused not.
+
+With June and the real beginning of summer, however, came a new
+inspiration, which was to go at once by rail and stage to Chip's native
+town and learn if, perchance, she, or any news of her, had reached this
+village.
+
+Another thought also came with this,--that Martin might soon again visit
+the woods and perhaps he could intercept him.
+
+A little satisfaction was obtained by this advance move, for when this
+village was reached, Levi was found waiting.
+
+"I've been watchin' for the gal over eight months now, under pay from
+Mr. Frisbie," he assured Old Cy when they met. "I also sent word to Old
+Tomah late last fall, 'n' he came out o' the woods 'n' stayed here
+two months, but nothin's been heard o' poor Chip by any one, 'n' I
+doubt ever will be."
+
+"Mebbe not yet," answered Old Cy, "but thar will be some day, an'
+here, too. She hadn't a cent when she left Greenvale--only grit,
+'n' it's a long ways here fer a gal what's got to arn her vittles
+while she's trampin'. It may be one year, it may be two, but some
+day Chip'll show up here, if she lives to do it. I callate I'd best
+wait here a few weeks tho', an' then, if nothin' turns up, I'll
+start ag'in."
+
+Nothing did, however; but during his stay, Old Cy learned that Chip's
+entire history, from the night she left Tim's Place until she ran away
+from Greenvale, was known at this village. This fact was of no value
+whatever, except to prove the universal interest all humanity has in
+the fate and fortune of one another.
+
+"I never told what happened in the woods," Levi responded when Old
+Cy questioned him, "an' didn't need to, for it got here 'fore I
+did. I jest 'lowed it was true, 'n' that I was hired to wait and watch
+here for Chip. It's curis, too, how everybody here feels 'bout it.
+They're a poorish sort here, families o' lumbermen, men that work in
+the sawmills, some farmin', an' all findin' it hard work to git a
+livin'. An' yet they're so interested in Chip 'n' so sorry for
+her, if she shows up now she'd be carried 'round the village like
+some queen 'ud be, with everybody follerin'. Thar's 'nother curis
+thing happened since I've been here that I'd never believed o'
+these people neither. I told them, of course, who I was, 'n' what I
+was here for, 'n' who was payin' me, when I come, an' then as
+time kinder went slow, I began huntin' some 'round here. Wal, thar's a
+little graveyard up back o' the village 'n' all growed up to weeds
+'n' bushes, an' one day last fall I happened to be lookin' it
+over 'n' somebody come 'long. It was a man that keeps store here,
+an' I asked him if 'twas here Chip's mother was buried. He said
+'twas, an' pointed out the spot 'way up in one corner, 'thout any
+stone, 'n' the mound most hid in a tangle. I didn't say nothin'--jest
+looked, an' went on, 'n' that was all. Wal, the curis part is last
+spring they sot a couple o' men to work cleanin' up the graveyard
+o' bushes an' laid out walks 'n' built a new fence 'round it. That
+one unmarked grave got the most attention o' all, for they turfed it
+over nice and built a little fence 'round it. I kinder callated how
+'n' why it all come 'bout, 'n' feelin' I oughter do suthin, I
+had a little stun sot up with Chip's mother's name on it."
+
+But time also went "kinder slow" for Old Cy, and as the date for
+Martin's probable coming had now passed, he finally yielded to Levi's
+suggestion and the call of the wilderness as well, and the two started
+for Martin's camp.
+
+It was almost like a pilgrimage to one's boyhood home; for while scarce
+a year had elapsed since Old Cy and Martin's party left it, Nature,
+always seeking to hide human handiwork, had been busy, and the garden
+was a tangle of weeds. Amzi's old cabin was almost hid by bushes, the
+walks were choked with them, and a colony of squirrels frisked about,
+and now, alarmed at human presence, added a touch of pathos.
+
+One act of vandalism was in evidence, for some wandering trappers had
+apparently used the larger cabin the previous season. Its floor was
+littered with all manner of débris, the bones of a deer mouldered in the
+woodshed, and a family of porcupines had also found the premises
+available. The impression conveyed by the entire spot and its
+surroundings made even Levi gloomy, while Old Cy scarce spoke the entire
+first day there, except to exclaim at "varmints" who would break
+locks, use the cabin for months, and then leave a litter of garbage to
+draw vermin.
+
+"It's curis how near to hogs 'n' hyenas a few humans are," he
+said as he looked around and saw how these vandals had behaved. "They
+wa'n't satisfied with burglin' the cabin, turnin' it into a pig-pen,
+stealin' all they could carry off, but they was so durned lazy, they
+smashed up the furniture to burn."
+
+For a few days only these two fine old backwoodsmen tarried here, and
+then Old Cy proposed departure.
+
+"I can't take no comfort here, nohow," he said, "for the premises
+seem ha'nted. Whichever way I turn I 'spect to meet Amzi with his moon
+eyes, or see Chip watchin' me, or Angie steppin' out o' the cabin.
+If I stayed here long, I'd see Chip's spites crawlin' out o' the
+bushes soon ez it got dusky. I'm used to the woods, but this spot seems
+like a graveyard.
+
+"I never done no prayin'," he added sadly. "I don't b'lieve in't.
+But if I could set eyes on Chip this minit, I'd go right down on my
+knees 'n' say, 'Thank God for this blessin'.' I'm 'fraid I never
+will, though."
+
+The next morning these two friends left this abode of unseen forms,
+more disconsolate than ever. They halted at Tim's Place long enough
+to learn that no tidings of McGuire or the half-breed had even reached
+that filthy station, and then returned to the settlement once more. Here
+Old Cy waited until the summer waned, vainly hoping each day would at
+least bring some word from Martin or Chip, and then bade Levi good-bye,
+and departed.
+
+He had been gone a week, a wandering tramp once more, when Ray appeared,
+bearing the glad news that Chip had been found. And also another and a
+more astounding fact.
+
+But Old Cy was not there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+Life, always colorless at Christmas Cove, except in midsummer, now
+became changed for Aunt Abby. For all the years since her one girlish
+romance had ended, she had been a patient helpmate to a man she merely
+respected. Religion had been her chief solace. The annual visit to her
+sister's gave the only relief to this motionless life, monotonous as
+the tides sweeping in and out of the cove; but now a counter-current
+slowly flowed into it.
+
+Chip, of course, with her winsome eyes and grateful ways, was its
+mainspring, and so checkered had been her career and so humiliating all
+her past experiences, that now, escaped from dependence and feeling
+herself a valued companion, she tasted a new and joyous life. So true
+was this, that hard lessons at school, the regularity of church-going,
+and the unvarying tenor of it all seemed less by comparison.
+
+Another undercurrent, aside from Chip's devotion, also swept into Aunt
+Abby's feelings,--the strange emotions following the knowledge that
+her former lover was still alive. For many years she had waited and hoped
+for this sailor boy's return; then her heart had grown silent, as hope
+slowly ebbed, and then, almost forgetfulness--but not quite, however,
+for the long, lily-dotted mill-pond just above had now and then been
+visited by them. A certain curiously grown oak which was secluded near
+its upper end was once a trysting-place, and even the old mill with its
+plashing wheel held memories.
+
+And now after forty years, during which she had become gray-haired and
+slightly wrinkled, all these memories returned like ghosts of long ago.
+No word or hint of them fell from her lips, not even to Chip, who was
+now nearest to her; and yet had that girl been a mind-reader, she would
+have seen that Aunt Abby's persistent interest in all she had to tell
+about Old Cy meant something. Where he was now, how soon he would learn
+that his brother was still alive after all these years, was the one
+most pertinent subject oft discussed.
+
+How Chip felt toward him, not alone for the heritage he had secured
+for her, but for other and more valued heart interests, need not be
+specified. He had seemed almost a father to her at the lake. He was
+the first of her new-found friends whose feelings had warmed toward her,
+and Chip was now mature enough to value these blessings at their true
+worth.
+
+A certain mutual expectancy now entered the lives of Chip and Aunt Abby.
+Nothing could be done, however. Old Cy had gone out into the wide, wide
+world, as it were, searching for the little girl he loved. No manner
+of reaching him seemed possible; and yet, some day, he must learn what
+would bring him to them as fast as steam could fetch him.
+
+"I know that he loved me as his own child there at the lake," Chip said
+once in an exultant tone. "His going after me proves it; and once he
+hears where I am, he will hurry here, I know."
+
+Whether Aunt Abby's heart responded to that wish or not, she never
+disclosed.
+
+But the days, weeks, and months swept by, and Old Cy came not. Neither
+did any message come to Chip from Greenvale. At first, rebelling at
+Ray's treatment of her, Chip felt that she never wanted to see him
+again. She had been so tender and loving toward him at the lake, had
+striven so hard to learn and to be more like him, had waited and
+watched, counting the days until his return, only to be told what she
+could not forget and to find him so neglectful, so cool to her, when
+her girlish heart was so full of love, that her feelings had changed
+almost in one instant, and pride had made her bitter.
+
+Hannah had told an unpleasant truth, as Chip knew well enough; but truth
+and confiding love mixed illy, and Ray's conduct, leaving her as he did
+with scarce a word or promise, was an episode that had chilled and almost
+killed Chip's budding affection. As is always the case, such a feeling
+fades and flares like all others. There would now be a brief space when
+Chip hoped and longed for Ray's coming, and then days when no thought of
+him came.
+
+It was perhaps fortunate for him that Christmas Cove contained no serious
+admirer of Chip the while, else his cause and all memory of him would
+have been swept away. But that quaint village was peopled chiefly by old
+folk, those of the male persuasion being quite young, with a few girls
+of Chip's age. Few young men remained there to make their way, and so no
+added interest came to vary Chip's life.
+
+The coming of summer, however, brought the annual influx of city boarders
+once more. First came elderly ladies, more anxious about suitable rooms
+and food than aught else, and then came the younger ones, whose gowns
+and their display appeared the only motive for existence. A few young
+men followed in their wake. Now and then a small yacht anchored in the
+mouth of the cove. The long wharf became a rendezvous for promenaders,
+tennis courts were established, and gay costumes, bright parasols, and
+astounding hats were in evidence.
+
+It was all a new and fascinating panorama for Chip. Never before had she
+seen such butterflies of fashion, who glanced at her and her more modest
+raiment almost with scorn, and scarce conscious of them, she looked on
+with awe and admiration.
+
+The old mill, the quaint house where she dwelt, and especially the
+long pond, now sprinkled thickly with lilies, became a Mecca for these
+newcomers, and not a pleasant day passed but from two to a dozen of
+them came trooping about and around it. They peered into the mill,
+exclaimed over the great dripping wheel, and almost shouted at the sight
+of the white blossoms on the pond.
+
+One day a bevy of laughing and chattering girls with one gallant in
+white flannels approached the mill while Chip in calico was kneeling
+beside a flower-bed. She looked up at once and saw her erstwhile admirer
+at Peaceful Valley, Mr. Goodnow. One instant only their eyes met, his
+to turn quickly away, and then Chip, coloring at the slight, rose and
+entered the house. Once safe in this asylum, womanlike, she hastened
+to peep out at the arrivals. They halted for only a glance about and
+then, their protector (?) still in the lead, vanished behind the mill.
+
+The next afternoon, just as Chip was returning from the village store,
+she met Mr. Goodnow again, this time alone.
+
+With a bow and smile he raised his hat and halted.
+
+"Why, Miss Raymond," he exclaimed eagerly, "I am so glad to meet you
+again. Are you visiting here, and when did you leave Peaceful Valley?"
+
+"I am living here now," returned Chip, coolly, continuing on her way,
+"where you saw me yesterday."
+
+"Oh, yes," he answered, not the least abashed, "and you must pardon
+me for not recognizing you then. It's been a year, you know, since I
+saw you, and you have changed so in that time."
+
+"Of course," responded Chip, her eyes snapping, "you couldn't
+remember me so long. Why don't you tell the truth and say you didn't
+dare know me before those ladies?"
+
+"Why, Miss Raymond, you wrong me; but I admire your frankness--it is
+so unusual among your charming sex!"
+
+"Then you did know me," she returned sarcastically, "I knew well
+enough, and if they were with you now, you wouldn't know me. I'm no
+fool, if I do wear calico."
+
+It was blunt. It was truthful. It was Chip all over; but this polished
+rake never winced.
+
+"I never dispute a lady," he answered suavely; "it doesn't pay.
+Besides, I have found they all prefer sweet lies instead of truth. And
+now I will admit you looked so charming as you raised your face from
+among the flowers that I was dazed and didn't think to bow."
+
+"You weren't so dazed but that you managed to get away in a hurry."
+
+"Why, of course, I was piloting my friends up to the lily pond," he
+returned, still unruffled, "and much as I desired, I couldn't pause to
+visit with you."
+
+They had now reached Chip's home. She halted at the gate, turned, and
+looked at him.
+
+"I hope we may be friends, now that you have scolded me enough," he
+added. "I had a delightful week with you last summer. I've lived it
+over many times. May I not call here to-morrow, and you and I will gather
+some of the lilies?"
+
+A droll smile crept over Chip's face at this.
+
+"Yes, if you will bring your lady friends also," she answered. And
+with a "Thank you," and raising his hat once more, this smooth-spoken
+fellow, impervious to sarcasm, turned away.
+
+"Who was the young man?" Aunt Abby queried, when Chip entered the house.
+
+"It's a Mr. Goodnow, who spent a week with Uncle Jud," she answered,
+smiling. "He came by here yesterday with three ladies and was close to
+me when I was working in my posy bed. He made out he didn't remember
+me then, when I met him this afternoon. I guess I was saucy to him. I
+meant to be. He wouldn't take it, and walked home with me."
+
+Aunt Abby looked surprised.
+
+"I hope you weren't really saucy," she answered, "that wouldn't have
+been becoming."
+
+Mr. Goodnow appeared next day, not at all disturbed, and Chip, a little
+more gracious, consented to gather lilies with him. The leaky punt
+that had served for that purpose many years was bailed out. He manned
+the oars. Chip bared one rounded arm, and, thus equipped, two really
+enjoyable hours were passed.
+
+As Uncle Jud had said, he was a "slick talker." Truth was not
+considered by him; instead, subtile flatteries were his stock in
+trade, and Chip, for the first time in her life, felt their insidious
+influence. She was in no wise deceived. Her woman's wit and good sense
+detected the sham, and caring not one whit for him, she responded as
+saucily as she chose. It was not, perhaps, quite ladylike, but Chip
+was not as yet a polished lady; instead, she was a decidedly blunt-spoken
+girl who enjoyed exasperating this fashionable Lothario.
+
+And never before had he met her like or one so fearless of speech.
+
+"You are the sauciest girl I have ever had the pleasure of meeting,"
+he said, as they drew up to the landing and began sorting the lilies. "I
+didn't notice it so much last summer; and yet you are no less charming,
+mainly because you are so frank. Most ladies whom I know are not so.
+They are arrant hypocrites and not one assertion in ten can be taken
+at its face value."
+
+"You seem to have been an apt scholar," Chip responded, smiling. "If
+you like my blunt speech, as you say, why don't you imitate it and be
+truthful for once in your life?"
+
+"I dare not. No man ever yet won a woman's favor by plain speech."
+
+"And so you want my favor. What for? I am not of your sort. I do not
+spend my life playing golf and tennis and wearing fine clothes."
+
+"But you ought to. You have the face and form required, and once you
+got into the swim of society, you would become a leader."
+
+Chip greeted this with a laugh. "Do you plaster it on as thick as that
+with every one," she queried, "and will they stand it?"
+
+"Why, yes," he chuckled, "and almost beg for more. My ladies thrive on
+flattery, and unless a man doles it out to them, they think him stupid."
+
+When he had helped her out of the boat, holding and pressing her hand
+unduly long she thought, he gathered up the lilies and, with a graceful
+bow and "Sweets to the sweet," offered them to her.
+
+"I don't want them," she answered bluntly. "Take them to your arrant
+hypocrites and tell them a girl you couldn't fool sent 'em." And
+nonplussed a little at this speech, but still smiling, he followed Chip
+to the house. At the gate he halted and their eyes met.
+
+"I've had a most charming morning, for which I thank you," he said.
+And drawing two of the largest blooms from the bunch of lilies, he laid
+the rest on the gate-post. "You will have to take them," he added.
+"And now I have something else to propose. I own a small yacht. It is
+anchored down near the wharf. How would you like a sail to-morrow? I
+shall be highly pleased to have you for my guest. Will you go?"
+
+But Chip was not caught so easily.
+
+"I'll go if you will ask Aunt Abby also," she answered, "not
+otherwise."
+
+"Why, of course," he responded graciously, "that is understood."
+
+And still unruffled by this parting evidence of distrust, he bowed
+himself away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+ "A girl with a new ring allus hez trouble with her hair."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+_As_ might be expected, Chip gave Aunt Abby a full recital of her
+morning's episode as soon as she entered the house, and with it her
+comments upon this smooth-spoken young man.
+
+"He reeled off flattery by the yard," she said, "and no matter how I
+took it, or how sharply I set him back, he kept at it. The way he piled
+it on was almost funny, just as though he thought I believed it. Of
+course I didn't, not a word, and what's more I wouldn't trust him
+farther than I could see him. He's got shifty eyes, and Cy once told
+me never to believe a man with such eyes. He wants me to go sailing
+with him to-morrow, and I said I would go if you were asked. I knew you
+wouldn't go, however."
+
+"Of course not," answered Aunt Abby, severely, "and his asking you in
+such a way was almost an insult. If he had meant well, he would have
+said he was taking other friends out and would have asked us both to
+join them. I should not have consented to that even, however. These
+summer people are not our sort, and to accept such favors from them is to
+put ourselves in a fair way of being laughed at. I would advise, also,
+that you have no more to say to this young man. It will not reflect
+credit upon you if you do."
+
+That afternoon, while Chip practised upon her banjo, it being vacation
+time, Aunt Abby called upon several neighbors with news-gathering intent.
+She succeeded to the fullest, and that evening related it to Chip.
+
+"This Mr. Goodnow has been here about two weeks," she said, "and is
+boarding at Captain Perkins's. He came in a small steam yacht he claims
+he owns, and has been going about with three ladies who are stopping at
+the Mix House. Two of them are sisters, the Misses Wilson, and a Mrs.
+Simpson, a widow. He seems the most devoted to the widow. They have been
+out driving quite often, and once or twice she has been sailing with
+him alone. It's all right, of course, only she being a good deal older
+than he is, makes it seem curious. When he calls here to-morrow, as I
+suppose he will, I'd better see him."
+
+He called quite early the next morning, as may be guessed, and a more
+picture-book yachtsman Aunt Abby never set eyes upon. His white duck
+shoes, trousers, and cap, white flannel coat, dark blue silk shirt,
+jaunty sailor tie and russet belt, all completed an attire so spick and
+span that it seemed that he must have just emerged from a tailor shop.
+
+But Aunt Abby was not awed overmuch. She had seen his like before, and
+met him at her door with serene self-possession.
+
+"I am Mr. Goodnow," he explained with easy assurance, "and Miss
+Raymond has kindly consented to accept a few hours' enjoyment in my
+yacht if you will also honor me." And he bowed again.
+
+"We thank you very much, sir," Aunt Abby responded stiffly, "but I
+must decline for us both. We should hardly care to accept hospitalities
+which we could not return."
+
+"I regret it very much," he answered in a hurt tone, "and assure you
+I am the one to feel obligated." And then, as Aunt Abby drew back, and
+the door began to close very slowly, he bowed and retreated in good order.
+
+But he was not to be thus checkmated, and from now on he began to watch
+for chances to intercept and accost Chip.
+
+It was, and always had been, a part of her nature to be out of doors as
+much as possible, and since the close of school she was out more than
+ever. Somewhat akin to Old Cy in love of Nature, the fields, woods, and
+streams had always attracted her, and at Christmas Cove the sea added a
+new charm to which she yielded nearly every pleasant day. And her steps
+led her far and wide.
+
+Down to the seldom-used wharf to watch the tide ebb and flow between its
+mussel-coated piles, over the broad-rippled sands of the cove when the
+tide left them bare, around to the long, rocky barrier beyond the cove
+where the sea waves dashed, were her favorite strolls.
+
+The next afternoon she strayed to where the ocean spray was leaping. She
+had scarce reached her favorite lookout spot, a shaded cliff, when she
+saw Goodnow approaching.
+
+Her first impulse was to return home at once, the next to remain.
+
+She did not fear him, he seemed such an effeminate, foppish sort of man,
+that lithe and strong as she was, she felt she could outrun him, or, if
+need be, throw him into the sea. And so she waited, cool and indifferent.
+Although conscious that he was nearing her, she never turned her head
+until he was beside her. Then she looked up.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said, raising his hat, "but may I share this
+cliff with you?" And he seated himself near.
+
+"It isn't mine," answered Chip, rather ungraciously, "so there's no
+need to ask."
+
+"But every lady has a right to decline a gentleman's company wherever
+she is," he responded in his usual suave tone. "I saw you coming here,
+and I'll admit I was bold enough to follow."
+
+"And what for?" she answered, in her blunt way, "I never invited you."
+
+"No, you didn't, and I never expect you will. But you are such a saucy,
+fascinating little wood-nymph that I couldn't help it. I am sorry,
+though, that you and your worthy aunt refused my yacht yesterday. I
+wanted an opportunity to get better acquainted with her and yourself as
+well, and thought that a good way.
+
+"Do you love the ocean," he continued, as Chip made no response, "and
+is this village your real home, or do you reside at Peaceful Valley?"
+
+"I live here now," returned Chip, resolving to be brief in all her
+answers and hoping he would betake himself away.
+
+She did not like him, nor his smooth, polished speech. She felt that
+it was all affected, and that at heart he meant no good toward her.
+Then his failure to recognize her when with his lady friends still
+rankled. She knew well enough that he dared not admit acquaintance
+with a calico-clad country girl at that moment. And what the gossips of
+Christmas Cove insinuated about him and this widow awoke her contempt.
+
+Totally unused to the ways of fashionable society as she was, for him to
+play court to a widow evidently ten or fifteen years his senior seemed
+unnatural.
+
+His almost nauseating and persistent flattery of herself was equally
+objectionable. All this flashed over her now while he was talking.
+
+"You must find it lonesome here," he said, in response to her
+admission; "but perhaps you have a beau, a sweetheart, somewhere, whom
+you care for."
+
+Chip colored slightly, but made no answer.
+
+"I'm sure you haven't here," he went on, "for I've not seen an
+eligible fellow native to this village since I came." He paused a
+moment, awaiting an admission, and then continued: "How do you pass
+the time, anyway, and isn't life here monotonous? Don't you long for
+some excitement, some fun, some color to it all? I've watched these
+villagers now for three weeks and their lives seem so prosy, so dead
+slow, it is painful. They get up, eat, chase the cows and chickens, hoe
+in the gardens, mow hay, and every blessed woman wears the same calico
+gown six days in the week. Sundays they all spruce up, go to meeting,
+and the next week repeat the programme. Isn't it so?"
+
+"I presume it is," answered Chip, with rising ire; "but if folks here
+weren't satisfied, they could move away, couldn't they? And if it's
+all so dull, what did you come here for? Nobody asked you, did they?"
+
+"No," he responded, laughing, "no one did, and no one will miss me
+when I go--not even you. The only redeeming feature is that they all seem
+willing to take my money."
+
+"Would you stay if they weren't," she returned, still more hotly,
+"would you sponge on us folks and sneer at us as well?"
+
+"Keep cool, my dear girl," he answered unruffled, "keep cool, and
+let your lovely hair grow. I'm not sneering at you or any one. I am
+merely stating facts. To us who live in the whirl of city life, a few
+weeks here is a delightful change, and we are glad to pay well for it. I
+am only speaking of how it must seem to live this way all the time."
+
+He paused a moment, watching Chip's face turned half away, and then
+continued persuasively: "I am sorry you are so ready to believe ill
+of me or to think I am sneering at all things. In that you have changed
+very much since last summer. Then you seemed to enjoy talking with me;
+now you blaze up into wrath at my pleasantry. I am very sorry you feel
+as you do. I'd like to be better friends with you if possible, otherwise
+I wouldn't have risked the rebuff I received from your excellent aunt
+yesterday. I'd like very much to call on you, and nothing would give
+me greater pleasure than to entertain you and your aunt on my boat. I
+am an idle fellow, I'll admit, with nothing to do but spend my time
+and money, but that is my misfortune, and you ought to have pity on me."
+
+And so this smooth-tongued, persuasive talker ran on and on while Chip,
+fascinated, in spite of her dislike of him, listened.
+
+More than that, he grew eloquent and even pathetic at times in describing
+his hopes and ambitions in life. He even asserted that he longed to
+live differently and to become a useful man, instead of an idle one. It
+was all hypocrisy, of course, but Chip was scarce able to detect it, and
+lulled by his specious, pleading voice, she admitted that she had no
+real reason for distrusting or disliking him. Also, that she would
+enjoy a sail on his boat, and would try to persuade her aunt to accept
+another invitation.
+
+This especially was what he most wanted, for shrewd schemer that he was,
+he knew that if he could ingratiate himself with this guardian aunt,
+permission to call must follow, and with that, some opportunity to make
+a conquest of this simple country girl.
+
+Sated as he was with the society of more polished and therefore
+artificial womanhood, _blasé_ to all the purities of life and refined
+society, a roué and rake conversant with all vice, this fearless,
+wholesome, yet unsophisticated girl who seemed like a breath from the
+pine woods, attracted him as no other could.
+
+And now he had her almost spellbound on this lonely shore, with the sea
+murmuring at their feet and the cool winds whispering in the pine trees
+shading them.
+
+It was Don Juan and Haidee over again, only this Juan was a more selfish
+and heartless one, calculating on the ruin of this wood-born flower
+without thought of consequences.
+
+He made one mistake, however, after he had lulled her into almost
+believing him to be both honest and worthy,--he sneered at religion.
+
+"All that people go to church for is to see and be seen, ladies
+especially," he said. "They live to dress and show off their new
+gowns and hats, and were it not for the chance church-going gives
+them, not one parson in a hundred would have a corporal's guard for
+audience. As for the preaching, not one in ten understands a word of
+it, and most of those who understand fail to believe it. I don't, I am
+sure. I consider a minister is a man who talks to earn his money. A
+few old tabbies, of course, are sincere and believe in prayer and all
+that sort of foolishness, but the rest only make believe they do.
+There may be a God and maybe there isn't--I don't know. I doubt it,
+however. As for the hereafter, that is all moonshine. When we go,
+that is the end of us."
+
+"And so you don't believe in spirits and a future life," answered
+Chip, with sudden defiance. "Well, I do, and I know that people have
+souls that live again, for I've seen them, hundreds of times. As for all
+church-going people being hypocrites, that's a lie, and I know better.
+The best woman I ever knew believed in praying, and so did my mother,
+and I won't hear them called such a name."
+
+It was Chip, blazing up again, in defence of her own opinions, and this
+smooth-spoken fellow saw his mistake on the instant.
+
+"Oh, well, you may be right," he admitted at once. "I wasn't
+speaking of all womankind--only the fashionable ones whom I know. As
+for soul life, I want to believe as you do, of course, and wish you
+would convince me that it is true." And so peace was restored, and
+once more the lullaby of his wooing talk began.
+
+For two hours he spun to Chip the web of his blandishments, and then the
+sun warned her, and she rose to go.
+
+"It would be delightful to escort you home," he said, "but I fear I'd
+better not. Your aunt might see us returning, and scold you. Now if you
+will meet me here again to-morrow afternoon, and try to convince me that
+there is a future life, I shall be most happy. Will you?"
+
+But Chip was alert.
+
+"No, I don't think I shall," she responded bluntly; "I am not running
+after you--not a step. As for what you believe or don't believe, that
+isn't my lookout," and with an almost uncivil "Good day, sir," she
+left him.
+
+The farther away she got from this snakelike charmer, the more an
+intuitive belief in his real intentions possessed her. She was unskilled
+in the fine art of conversation, had only the inborn purity of her
+thoughts to protect her; and yet she half read this specious flatterer,
+and felt, rather than realized, his baseness.
+
+A change in her own convictions that now served as a mantle of protection
+against his persuasions had come to her during these dreamy hours by the
+sea. Accepting at first Old Tomah's superstitions, she had been led to
+contemplate the great question of future life and the existence of
+God. Aunt Comfort's unselfish character, combined with perfect faith
+in the Supreme Power, had had its influence. Angie's kindness and that
+first prayer Chip had heard in the tent were not lost. Aunt Abby's
+consistent belief and devotion to duty also had had its effect; and all
+these pertinent examples, combined with the impress of the vast ocean,
+the solitude of this lonely shore, and the echo of its ceaseless billows,
+had awakened true veneration in Chip's heart, and convinced her that
+some Unseen Power moved all human impulse and controlled all human
+destiny.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+After Chip had run away from Greenvale, concealment of her name and
+all else had forced itself upon her. It was not natural for her to
+deceive. She had kept it up for one unhappy year only under inward
+protest, which ended in abject confession and tears. Now recalling that
+unpleasant episode, she made haste to confess her long conversation with
+this fluent fellow.
+
+"Mr. Goodnow followed me over to the point this afternoon," she
+explained that evening to Aunt Abby, "and talked for two hours. He was
+nice enough, but he made me sick of him, he flattered me so much."
+
+Aunt Abby looked at her with a slight sense of alarm.
+
+"He certainly has the gift of impudence, at least," she said, "in
+view of the way I declined his invitation yesterday. I think you'd best
+discontinue your long rambles for the present, or until he leaves here.
+He is not our sort. He is not even a friend of ours, and if people see
+you together, they will say unkind things."
+
+That was warning enough for Chip, and from that time on she never even
+walked down to the village store except with Aunt Abby.
+
+A curious and almost ridiculous espionage followed, however, for a week,
+and not a pleasant afternoon passed but this fellow was noticed strolling
+somewhere near the old mill or past the house.
+
+Another amazing evidence of his intent was received a few days later, in
+the shape of a five-pound box of choicest candies, that came by express
+with his card. Aunt Abby opened this and saw the card, and the next day
+she commissioned the stage driver to deliver the box, card and all, to
+Mr. Goodnow at his boarding house.
+
+A long and adroitly worded letter to Chip came a day later, so humble,
+so flattering, and so importuning that it made her laugh.
+
+"I think that fellow must have gone crazy," she said, handing the
+letter to Aunt Abby, "he runs on so about how he can't sleep nights
+from thinking about me. He says that he must go away next week, and
+shall die if he can't see me once more. What ails him, anyway?"
+
+"Nothing, except evil intentions," responded Aunt Abby, perusing the
+missive. "He must think you a fool to believe such bosh," she added
+severely, after finishing it. "Honest love doesn't grow like a mushroom
+in one night, and the difference between his position and yours gives
+the lie to all he says. I hope he will go away next week, and never come
+back."
+
+Whether Chip's studied avoidance of him, combined with the snubbing,
+served its purpose, or he decided his quest was hopeless, could only be
+guessed, for he was seen no more near the mill, and the next week his
+yacht left Christmas Cove, and Chip felt relieved.
+
+It had been an experience quite new to her, and, in spite of its
+annoyance, somewhat exciting. It also served another purpose of more
+value,--it recalled Ray to her by sheer force of contrast. She had felt
+hurt ever since the night she left Greenvale. She had meant to put him
+out of her thoughts and forget all the silly hours and promises at the
+lake; and yet she never had succeeded. Instead, her thoughts turned
+to him in spite of her pride.
+
+And now, contrasting and comparing that honest, manly lad, a playmate
+only, and yet a lover as well, with this polished, fulsome, flattering,
+shifty-eyed fop, who sneered at everything good, only made Ray, with his
+far different ways, seem the more attractive.
+
+Then conscience began to smite her. She had yielded to pride and put
+him away from her thoughts. His uncle had almost pleaded for her to
+return to Greenvale, if only for a visit. She knew Ray had spent weeks
+in searching for her; yet not once in all the two years since they parted
+had she sent him a line of remembrance.
+
+More mature now, Chip began to see her own conduct as it was, and to
+realize that she had been both ungrateful and heartless; but she could
+not confess it to any one, not even Aunt Abby.
+
+Chip's life had been a strange, complex series of moods of peculiar
+effect, and her conduct must be judged accordingly.
+
+First, the dense ignorance of years at Tim's Place, with its saving
+grace of disgust at such surroundings and such a life. Then a few months
+with people so different and so kind that it seemed an entrance into
+heaven, to be followed by weeks of a growing realization that she was a
+nobody, and an outcast unfit for Greenvale.
+
+And then came the climax of all this: the bitter sneers of Hannah, Ray's
+cool neglect, the consciousness that she was only a dependent pauper,
+and then her flight into the world and away from all that stung her
+like so many whips.
+
+But a revulsion of feeling was coming. Chip, no longer a simple child of
+the wilderness, was realizing her own needs and her own nature. Something
+broader and more satisfying than school life and the companionship of
+Aunt Abby was needed; yet how to find it never occurred to her.
+
+With September came Aunt Abby's annual visit to Peaceful Valley. A
+few days before their departure, Chip received a letter which was so
+unexpected and so vital to her feelings that it must be quoted.
+
+It was dated at the little village of Grindstone, directed to Vera
+McGuire, care of Judson Walker, by whom it was forwarded to Christmas
+Cove.
+
+ "My dear Chip," it began.
+
+ "I feel that you will not care to hear from me, and yet I
+ must write. I know I am more to blame than any one for the way
+ you left Greenvale, and that you must consider me a foolish
+ boy, without much courage, which I have been, and I realize
+ it only too well now, when it is too late. But I am more of
+ a man to-day, I hope, and sometime I shall come and try to
+ obtain your forgiveness for being so blind. No one ever has
+ been, and I know no one ever will be, what you are to me. As
+ Old Cy says, 'Blessings brighten as they vanish,' and now,
+ after this long separation, one word and one smile from dear
+ little Chip would seem priceless to me, and I shall come and
+ try to win it before many months.
+
+ "I am here with Uncle Martin's old guide, Levi. We are going
+ into the woods to-morrow to gather gum and trap until spring.
+ I have hired two other men to help, and hope to do well and
+ make some money. I think you will be glad to know that Old
+ Cy was here this summer and was well. He does not know that
+ you have been found, and is still hunting for you. Levi told
+ me that the people here are much interested in you, that they
+ have fixed up the yard where your mother is buried, and he
+ put up a small stone.
+
+ "I wish I could hear from you, but there is no chance now.
+ Please try to forgive a foolish boy for being stupid, and think
+ of me as you did during those happy days by the lake.
+
+ "Good-bye,
+ "Ray."
+
+How every word of this half-boyish, half-manly letter was read and
+re-read by Chip; how it woke the old memories of the wilderness and of
+herself, a ragged waif there; and how, somehow, in spite of pride and
+anger, a little thrill of happiness crept into her heart, needs no
+explanation.
+
+But she was not quite ready yet to forgive him, and what he failed to
+say when he might, still rankled in her feelings.
+
+But Old Cy, that kindly soul, so like a father! Almost did she feel that
+to meet him would be worth more than to see any one else in the world.
+And to think he was still hunting for her, far and near!
+
+And now, quite unlike most young ladies, who deem their love missives
+sacred, Chip showed hers to Aunt Abby.
+
+"It's from Raymond Stetson," she said, rather bashfully, "a boy who
+was in the woods with those people who were kind to me, and we became
+very good friends."
+
+Aunt Abby smiled as she perused its contents.
+
+"And so he was the cause of your running away from Greenvale," she
+said. "Why didn't you write him a note of thanks after you learned
+he had been searching for you? I think he deserved that much, at least."
+
+"I wouldn't humble myself," Chip answered spiritedly, "and then I
+was ashamed to let any one know I had used his name. I hadn't time to
+think what name to give when Uncle Jud asked me, and his was the first
+that came to mind," she added naïvely.
+
+Aunt Abby laughed.
+
+"I guess Master Stetson won't find forgiveness hard to earn," she
+said, and then her face beamed at the disclosure of a romance while she
+read the letter a second time.
+
+But there was more to tell, as Aunt Abby knew full well, and now, bit by
+bit, she drew the story from Chip, even to the admission of the tender
+scenes between these two lovers, in which they promised to love each
+other and be married.
+
+"It was silly, I suppose," Chip continued blushingly, "but I didn't
+know any better then, and I was so happy that I didn't think about
+it at all. I never had a beau before, you see, and I guess I acted
+foolishly. Old Cy used to help us, too, and took us away so we could
+have a chance to hold hands and act silly. I was so lonesome, too, for
+Ray all that winter in Greenvale, and nobody knew it. I walked a mile
+to meet the stage every night for a month, to be the first to see him
+when he came. I guess he must have thought he owned me. I wouldn't
+do it now."
+
+Once more Aunt Abby laughed, a good, hearty laugh, and then, much to
+Chip's astonishment, she took her face in her hands and kissed it.
+
+"You dear little goose," she said, "and to think you ran away from
+a boy you cared for like that! I only hope he is good enough for you,
+for I can see what the outcome will be."
+
+That night when the tea-table had been cleared and the lamp lit, Aunt
+Abby once more began her adroit questioning of Chip; but this time it was
+of Old Cy, and all about him. For an hour, Chip, nothing loath, recited
+his praises, repeated his odd sayings, described his looks and ways and
+portrayed him as best she could, while Aunt Abby smiled content.
+
+"It makes me feel young again to hear your story and about Cyrus," she
+said when all was told. "I was just sixteen when he first came to see
+me. He was also my first beau, you know. I should judge he must have
+changed so I would never know him, and maybe he wouldn't recognize me.
+Forty years is a long time!" And she sighed.
+
+And now Aunt Abby closed her eyes, let fall her knitting, and lapsed into
+bygones.
+
+No longer was she a staid and matronly widow--not young, it is true, yet
+not old, but with rounded face, few wrinkles, and slightly gray hair.
+Instead was she sweet Abby Grey of the long ago, and once more the belle
+of this quiet village and Bayport, and the leader at every dance, every
+husking, and every party. Once more she primped and curled her hair,
+and donned her best, and waited her sailor boy's coming. Once more she
+heard the bells jingle and saw the stars twinkle as they sped away to a
+winter night's dance--and once more she felt the sorrow of parting, the
+long years of waiting, waiting, waiting, and at last the numb despair
+and final conviction that never would her lover return.
+
+And now he was still alive, though a wanderer, and some day he
+might--surely would come to see her, just once, if no more.
+
+"Ah, me," she said, rousing herself at last and looking at Chip's
+smiling, sunny face, "life is a queer riddle, and we never know how to
+guess it."
+
+Then she sighed again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+
+ "The milk o' human kindness 'most allus turns out old
+ cheese, 'n' all rind at that."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Some sneering critic once said that few young men ever start out in the
+world until they are kicked out, and there is a grain of truth in that
+assertion. It is seldom an actual kick, however, but some motive force
+quite as compelling.
+
+In Ray's case it was his uncle's assertion that if he hoped to win
+Chip he must first show the ability to provide a home for her, which is
+excellent advice for any young man to follow.
+
+"It won't be a pleasure trip," Martin said when Ray proposed to go to
+the wilderness and, with Levi and a couple of other assistants, make a
+business of gum-gathering and trap-setting, "but you can't lose much
+by it. You are welcome to the camp; Levi will see that you have game
+enough to eat, and boss the expedition. I will loan you five hundred,
+and with what you have, that is capital enough and you ought to do well.
+It would be better if Old Cy could take charge, but as it is, you must
+go it alone." And go it alone Ray did.
+
+Levi's services were easily secured. Two young fellows whom he knew
+were hired at Greenvale. A bateau was purchased, together with more traps
+and supplies, and after Ray had written Chip his plan, the party started
+for Martin's camp. They had been established there a month and were
+doing well. The first ice had begun forming in shallow coves when one
+afternoon, who should enter the lake and paddle rapidly across but Old Cy.
+
+"Ye can't git rid o' me when trappin's goin' on," he said cheerily,
+as Ray and Levi met him at the landing. "I fetched into the settlement
+kinder homesick fer the woods last week. I heard the good news 'bout
+Chip's bein' found 'n' you'd come here fer the winter, 'n' I
+didn't wait a minute 'fore I hired a canoe 'n' started." And then,
+in the exuberance of his joy, he shook hands with Ray and Levi once more.
+
+That evening, Ray, who had hard work to keep the secret so long, told
+Old Cy who lived in Peaceful Valley.
+
+It was like a thunderbolt out of a clear sky, a shock of joyful news that
+made Old Cy gasp.
+
+"Why, I feel jest like a colt once more," he said after the exclamation
+stage had passed. "An', do ye know, boys, I felt all the way comin'
+in ez though good news was waitin' fer me. I 'spose 'twas from
+hearin' Chip was all right ag'in."
+
+That evening was one that none who were in that wildwood camp ever
+forgot, for Old Cy was the central figure, and told as only he could
+the story of his year's wandering in search of Chip.
+
+It was humorous, pathetic, and tragic all in one, and a tale that held
+its listeners spellbound for three delightful hours.
+
+"I had dogs set on me, hundreds on 'em," Old Cy said, in conclusion,
+"an' I never knew afore how many kinds 'n' sizes o' dogs thar was in
+this world. I uster think thar warn't more'n two dozen or so kinds. I
+know now thar's two million 'n' a few more I didn't wait to count.
+I got 'rested a few times on account o' not havin' visible means o'
+support. I've been hauled over the coals by doctors tryin' to make me
+out a lunatic, 'n' I'd 'a' done time in jail if I hadn't had
+money to show. I tell ye, boys, this is an awful 'spicious world fer
+strangers, 'n' the milk o' human kindness is mostly old cheese,
+'n' all rind at that. I had a little fun, too, mixed in with all
+the trouble, 'n' one woman who owned a place where I 'plied for
+lodgin' jest 'bout told me she'd be willin' to marry me if I'd stay
+'n' work the farm. She had red hair, hard eyes, 'n' bossy sort o'
+ways, an' that's a dangerous combination. I watched my chance when
+she wa'n't lookin', 'n' lit out middlin' lively."
+
+And now life at this wilderness camp, less restrained than when womankind
+were here, became one of work, and persistent, steady, no-time-wasted
+work at that. Martin had said that Levi could boss matters, but it was
+Ray who assumed management instead. Two years had changed him almost
+from boy to man. His new ambition was the controlling power. He was
+here to make his mark, as it were, and the half-hearted, boyish interest
+in work had changed into a tireless leadership. Then, too, an unspoken,
+tacit interest in his ambition was felt by those who helped. They knew
+what he was striving for, and that Chip was the ultimate object. Her
+history, known as it now was to all who came into the wilderness,
+influenced these woodsmen. She had been of them and from them, and as
+an entire village will gather to help at a house-raising, so these
+three, Levi and the two helpers, now felt the same incentive.
+
+Success usually comes to all who strive for it, and now, with four
+willing workers to aid him, Ray was rapidly making a success of this
+venture. Old Cy, the most valuable assistant, was indefatigable. He
+not only kept the larder well supplied with game, but tended and set
+traps, worked in the woods with the rest between times, and his cheerful
+optimism and droll humor bridged many a stormy day and shortened many a
+weary tramp. And he seemed to grow younger in this new, helpful life
+for others. His eyes were bright, his step elastic, his spirits buoyant,
+his strength tireless.
+
+With Chip safe and provided for, with Ray succeeding in manhood's
+natural ambition, Old Cy saw his heart's best hopes nearing fruition,
+and for these two and in these two all his interest centred.
+
+Only once was the bond of feeling between Ray and Chip referred to by Old
+Cy, and then in response to a wish of Ray's that he might hear from her.
+
+"I don't think ye've cause to worry now, arter ye've sent her word
+what ye're doin' 'n' who for," he answered. "Chip's true blue, not
+one o' the fickle sort, 'n' once she keers fer a man, she won't give
+him up till he's married or dead. I think ye'd orter sent her word
+sooner,--ye know she run 'way out o' spunk,--but when ye go to her
+like a man 'n' say, 'I've been workin' 'n' waitin' fer ye all the
+time,' thar won't be no quarrellin'."
+
+"I'm not so sure about that," responded Ray, soberly. "From what
+Uncle Martin said, my chance is gone with Miss Chip, and I don't blame
+her for feeling so. Like every young fellow, I took it for granted that
+she was in love with me and ready to fall into my arms on call. Then I
+hadn't any plans in life, anyway, and, like a fool, believed it made no
+difference to her. To mix matters up still more, Hannah crowded herself
+into our affairs and said things to Chip, with the result that Chip got
+mad, ran away, and you know the rest."
+
+"Wal," asserted Old Cy, his eyes twinkling, "the time to hug a
+gal is when she's willin', 'n' ye orter spunked up that night
+'fore ye come away 'n' told her ye was callatin' to make yer fortin
+in the woods, an' that ye wanted her to wait 'n' share it--then
+hugged 'n' kissed her a little more by way o' bindin' the bargain,
+an'--knowin' that gal ez I do, she'd fought Hannah, tooth 'n' nail,
+'n' walked through fire 'n' brimstun fer ye. I think, 'stead o'
+hidin' herself fer two years, an' changin' her name, she'd 'a'
+tramped clear to Grindstun jest to tell ye her troubles, 'n', if
+need be, she'd 'a' starved fer ye. I tell ye, boy, wimmin like her is
+scarce in this world, 'n' when ye find one young 'n' pretty ez she
+is, hang on to her an' hang hard."
+
+"I know it now well enough," returned Ray, ruefully; "but that don't
+help matters. Then that fortune you found for her makes my case all the
+worse, and Chip quite independent."
+
+"It do, it do," chuckled Old Cy, as if glad of it, "an' all the more
+need o' you hustlin'. It's a case o' woodchuck with ye now. But
+don't git discouraged. Jest dig. Chip's worth it, ten times over,
+'n' no man ever worked to win a woman 'thout bein' bettered by it."
+
+It was terse and homely advice, and not only convinced Ray that he had
+neglected one whom he now felt meant home, wife, happiness, and all that
+life might mean for him, but made him realize that all possible striving
+and self-denial must be made in atonement. With whom and what sort of
+people Chip had found asylum, he knew not. What influence they would
+have upon her feelings was an equally unknown matter; and worse than
+that, the ogre of another suitor for Chip's favor now entered Ray's
+calculations, and the slang truism, "There are others," was with him
+every waking moment--a much-deserved punishment, all womankind will say.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+
+One day while Aunt Abby and Chip were enjoying the newly furnished home
+of Uncle Jud, a capacious carriage drawn by a handsome pair of horses
+halted there and Martin and Angie alighted.
+
+"We are taking a cross-country drive for an outing," he explained,
+after Angie had kissed Chip tenderly and greetings had been exchanged.
+"We have waited for you, Miss Runaway, to come and visit us," he added,
+turning to Chip, "until we couldn't wait any longer and so came to look
+for you. We have also some news that may interest you. Old Cy has been
+heard from at last. He spent a year looking for you. He has now gone
+into the woods, to my camp, where Ray located for the winter, and when
+spring comes, I can guess where they will head for."
+
+How welcome this news was to Chip, her face fully indicated; but neither
+Martin nor Angie realized how much or for what reason it interested
+this soft-voiced, gracious lady whom Chip called Aunt Abby. They knew
+Uncle Jud was Old Cy's brother and that they had once been sailors
+from Bayport, but the long-ago romance of Aunt Abby's life was unknown
+to them.
+
+And now ensued a welcome to the callers such as only Uncle Jud and Aunt
+Mandy could offer.
+
+"We sorter feel we robbed ye o' Vera," Uncle Jud explained, "though
+'twa'n't any intention on our part, an' so ye must gin us some chance
+to make amends. We callate 'twa'n't no fault of yourn, either, only
+one o' them happenin's that was luck for us."
+
+That evening was one long to be remembered by all who were present,
+for Chip's history, as told by Martin and Angie, was the entertaining
+topic, and its humorous side was made the most of by Martin. Chip was
+in no wise annoyed by Martin's fun-making, either. Instead, conscious of
+the good-will and affection of the friends who had rescued her from
+the wilderness, she rather enjoyed it and laughed heartily at Martin's
+description of various incidents, especially her first appearance in
+their camp, and the language she used.
+
+"I couldn't help swearing," she explained. "I never had heard much
+except 'cuss' words. I think also now, as I recall my life at Tim's
+Place, I would never have dared that desperate mode of escape had I not
+been hardened by such a life. I wish I could see Old Tomah once more,"
+she added musingly, "and I'd like to send him some gift. He was the
+best-hearted Indian I ever saw or heard of, and his queer teachings
+about spites and how they rewarded us for good deeds and punished us
+for evil ones was no harm, for it set me thinking. The one thought that
+encouraged me most during those awful days and nights alone in the woods
+was the belief that among the spites which I was sure followed me was
+my mother's soul. I've never changed in my belief, either, and shall
+always feel that she guided me to your camp."
+
+Uncle Jud also obtained his share of fun at Chip's expense, describing
+his finding of her with humorous additions.
+
+"She was all beat out that night I found her on top o' Bangall Hill,
+'n' yet when I asked her if she'd run away from some poor farm, she
+was ready to claw my eyes out, an' dunno's I blame her. I was innocent,
+too, fer I really s'posed she had."
+
+Martin's visit at this hospitable home was not allowed to terminate for
+a week, for visitors seldom came here, and Uncle Jud, as big a boy as
+his brother when the chance came, planned all sorts of trips and outings
+to entertain them, and quite characteristic affairs they were, too.
+
+One day they drove to a wood-bordered pond far up the valley, fished a
+few hours for pickerel and perch, and had a fish fry and picnic dinner.
+
+The next day they visited a strange, romantic grotto up in the mountains,
+known as the Wolf's Den, and here a table was set, broiled chicken,
+sweet corn, and such toothsome fare formed the meal, with nut-gathering
+for amusement.
+
+Squirrel and partridge shooting also furnished Martin a little
+excitement. When he and Angie insisted that they must leave, both
+host and hostess showed genuine regret. A few remarks made by Angie to
+her former protégée, in private, the last evening of this visit, may
+be quoted.
+
+"I must insist, my dear child," she said, "that you make us a visit
+in the near future. You left us under an entirely false impression and it
+has grieved me more than you can imagine. There was never a word of
+truth in anything that Hannah said. She was spiteful and malicious
+and desired to get even with you for a hurt to her pride. We had no
+thought of hurrying away to the woods to separate you and Ray for any
+reason whatever. Of course, as you must know, I had no suspicion of any
+attachment between you, and if I had, I certainly should not have tried
+to break it off in that way. That is a matter that concerns only you and
+him. My own life experience shows that first love is the wisest and
+best, and while you were both too young then for an engagement, you must
+believe me when I tell you that I had no wish to interfere."
+
+And so the breach was healed.
+
+This visit of the Frisbies to Peaceful Valley also awakened something
+of repentance in Chip's mind, and more mature now, it occurred to her
+that leaving Greenvale as she did, was, after all, childish.
+
+Then Angie's part in this drama of her life now returned to Chip in a
+new light. Once she began to reflect, her self-accusation grew apace and
+her repentance as well. Now she began to see herself as she was at Tim's
+Place.
+
+"I think I treated my Greenvale friends very ungratefully," she said
+to Aunt Abby one evening after they had returned to Christmas Cove once
+more, "and what Mrs. Frisbie said to me has made me realize it. I know
+now that few would have done what she did for me. I was an ignorant,
+dirty, homeless creature and no relation of hers, and yet she took charge
+of me, bought me clothes, paid all my expenses going to Greenvale,
+clothed me there, and always treated me nicely without my even asking
+for it.
+
+"The Frisbies certainly ran some risk by keeping me at their cabin when
+they knew that half-breed was after me. I don't know why they should
+have done all this. I was nothing to them. And yet when I recall the
+night I stumbled into their camp, how Mrs. Frisbie dressed me in her own
+clothes, shared her tent with me, and even prayed for me, I feel ashamed
+to think of what I have done. I did think that Mrs. Frisbie despised me
+from what Hannah said. I know now that I was wrong, and running away
+as I did, was very ungrateful."
+
+"I think it was, myself," responded Aunt Abby, "and yet believing
+as you did, Mrs. Frisbie ought not to blame you. I don't think she
+does, either. She seems a very sensible woman, and I like her. You made
+your mistake in not confiding in her more. You should have gone to her
+as you would to a mother, in the first place, and told her just what
+Hannah had said to you and how you felt about it. To brood over such
+matters and imagine the worst possible, is unwise in any one. I think
+from what you have told me, that this person who sneered against you so
+much must have had a spite against you."
+
+"Hannah was jealous, I know," Chip interrupted, smiling at the
+recollection, "and I hurt her feelings because I asked her why she
+didn't shave."
+
+"Didn't shave!" exclaimed Aunt Abby, wide-eyed, "what do you mean?"
+
+"Why, she has whiskers, you see," laughed Chip, "almost as much
+as some men--a nice little mustache and some on her chin. I told her
+the next day after I got there I thought she was a man dressed as a
+woman. I snickered, too, I remember, when I said it, for she looked so
+comical--like a goat, almost--and then I asked her why she didn't
+shave. I guess she laid it up against me ever after."
+
+"She revenged herself amply, it seems," answered Aunt Abby.
+
+When Christmas neared, and with it a vacation for Chip, new impulses
+came to her: a desire to visit Greenvale once more and make amends as
+best she could to her friends there; and her gift-giving desire was
+quickened by the coming holidays. She now felt that she had ample means
+to gratify this latter wish. Day by day, since meeting Angie again,
+her sense of obligation had increased, and now it was in her power at
+Christmas-tide to repay at least a little of the debt.
+
+Others were also included in this generous project: Uncle Jud, Aunt
+Mandy, her foster-mother, Aunt Abby, as well; and then there was Old Cy,
+whom most of all she now desired to make glad. That was impossible,
+however. He was still an absent wanderer, and so, as it ever is and
+ever will be, some thread of regret, some note of sorrow, must be woven
+into all joys.
+
+A rapid and almost wonderful growth of this yule-tide impulse now swept
+over Chip, so much so that it must be told. At first it took shape in
+the intended purchase of comparative trifles,--a fishing-rod for Uncle
+Jud, a pipe for Martin, gloves for Aunt Abby, and so on. Then as that
+seemingly vast fortune, now hers to spend, occurred to Chip, and her
+sense of obligation as well, the intended gifts increased in proportion
+until a costly picture of some camp or wildwood scene for Angie and a
+valuable watch for Miss Phinney were decided upon.
+
+Her plans as to how to obtain these presents also took shape. Riverton
+was the only place where they could be obtained. To that village she
+would go first, obtain the money needed, devote one entire day to making
+her purchases, and then go on to Greenvale and astonish these good
+friends from whom she was once so eager to escape.
+
+It was all a most delightful episode which was now anticipated by Chip.
+Again and again she lived it over, especially her arrival in Greenvale,
+and how like a Lady Bountiful she would present her gifts to her friends.
+
+So eager was she thus to make some compensation to them that lessons
+became irksome, the day seemed weeks in length, and she could scarce
+sleep when bedtime came.
+
+But the slow days dragged by at last, and then Chip, happier than ever
+before in her life, dressed in her best, bade Aunt Abby good-bye and
+started on her journey alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+
+ "A man braggin' gits riled if ye try 'n' choke him off."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+Riverton, less provincial than Greenvale, was a village of some two
+thousand inhabitants. A few brick blocks, with less pretentious
+wooden buildings, formed a nucleus of stores. A brownstone bank,
+four churches, two hotels, the Quaboag House and the Astor House were
+intermingled among these, and a railroad with two trains in each
+direction a day added life and interest to the place. Each of the hotels
+sent a conveyance to meet every train, with a loud-voiced emissary to
+announce the fact of free transportation. In each hostelry a bar
+flourished, and like rival clubs, each had its afternoon and evening
+gathering of loafers who swapped yarns and gossip, smoked and chewed
+incessantly, and contributed little else to support the establishments.
+Three times daily, at meal hours, each of the rival landlords banged a
+discordant gong in his front doorway, without apparent result.
+
+At about eleven in the forenoon each weekday in summer, Uncle Joe Barnes
+on his lumbering two-horse stage, arrived from Greenvale, paused at
+the post-office, threw off a mail-pouch, thence around to the Quaboag
+House stable, and cared for his horses. At two he was ready for the
+return trip and mounting his lofty seat, he again drove to the front
+of the hotel, shouting "All aboard!" dismounted to assist lady
+passengers, but let masculine ones do their own climbing, and after
+halting to receive a mail-bag, again departed on his return trip.
+
+A certain monotonous regularity was apparent in every move and every act
+and function of village life in Riverton. At precisely seven o'clock
+each morning the two landlords appeared simultaneously and banged their
+gongs. At twelve and six, this was repeated. At eight o'clock the three
+principal storekeepers usually entered their places of business; at
+nine, and while the academy bell was ringing near by, every village
+doctor might be seen starting out. At ten exactly, Dwight Bennett,
+the cashier of the bank, unlocked its front door, and the two hotel
+'buses invariably started so nearly together that they met at the
+first turn going stationward. Even the four church clocks had the same
+habit, and it was often related that a stranger there, a travelling man,
+on his first, visit, made an amusing discovery.
+
+"What kind of a fool clock have you got in this town?" he said to Sam
+Gates, the landlord of the Quaboag, next morning after his arrival. "I
+went to bed in good season last night an' just got asleep when I heard
+it strike thirty-two. I dozed off an' the next I knew it began clanging
+again, and I counted forty-four. What sort of time do you keep here,
+anyway? Do you run your town by the multiplication table?"
+
+The half-dozen chronic loafers who met every afternoon in the Quaboag
+House office arrived in about the same order, smoked, drank, told their
+yarns, gathered all the gossip, and departed at nearly the same moment.
+Their evening visits partook of the same clocklike regularity.
+
+These of the old guard were also dressed much the same, and "slouchy"
+best describes it. Gray flannel shirts in winter or summer alike.
+Collars, cuffs, and ties were never seen on them, though patches were,
+and as for shaving or hair-cutting, a few shaved once a week, some
+never did, and semi-annual hair-cuts were a fair average.
+
+The worst sinner in this respect, Luke Atwater, occasionally called
+"Lazy Luke," never had his beard shortened but once, and that was
+due to its being burnt off while he was fighting a brush fire in spring.
+
+It was related of him, and believed by many, that once upon a time many
+years previous he had had his hair cut, and on that occasion the barber
+had found a whetstone concealed in Luke's shock of tangled hair. It was
+also asserted that he admitted always carrying his whetstone back of his
+ear while mowing, and so losing it that way.
+
+All the news and every happening in Riverton, from the catching of an
+extra big trout to twins, was duly commented upon and discussed by this
+coterie. Village politics, how much money each storekeeper was making,
+crop prospects, the run of sap every spring, drouth, weather indications,
+rain or snow falls, each and all formed rotating subjects upon which
+every one of this faithful-to-the-post clique expressed opinions.
+
+Chip's arrival there with the Frisbie family, and her later history,
+learned from Uncle Joe, furnished a fertile topic, her escapade in
+running away from Greenvale a more exciting one, while Old Cy's
+visit and deposit of a fabulous sum in the bank in her name had been a
+nine days' wonder. That amount, hinted at only by the cashier as a
+comfortable fortune, soon grew in size until it was generally believed
+to be almost a million.
+
+This was Riverton and its decidedly rural status when late one December
+afternoon the Quaboag free 'bus (a two-seated pung, this time) swept
+up to that hotel's front door, where the porter assisted a stylish young
+lady to alight, and he, stepping like a drum major, led the way into the
+Quaboag's unwarmed parlor.
+
+"Young lady, sir, a stunner, wants room over night, sir," he announced
+to the landlord in the office a moment later. "Goin' to Greenvale
+to-morrer, she says."
+
+On the instant all converse in the office ceased, and the six constant
+callers hardly breathed until Sam Gates hastened to the parlor and
+returned.
+
+"It's that McGuire gal--lady, I mean," he asserted pompously; then to
+the porter, "Git a move on, Jim, 'n' start a fire in Number 6, an'
+quick, too!" And hastily brushing his untidy hair before the office
+mirror, he left the room again, followed by six envious glances. Then
+those astonished loafers grouped themselves, the better to observe the
+passage between parlor and office.
+
+Only one instant sight of this important guest was obtained by them as
+Chip emerged from the parlor and followed the landlord upstairs, and then
+the hushed spell was broken.
+
+"By gosh, it's her!" exclaimed one in an awed whisper, "an' Jim was
+right, she's a stunner!"
+
+"I 'member jest how she looked that fust day she came," asserted
+another. "Saw her legs, too, when she shinned up top o' the stage."
+
+"Ye won't git 'nother chance, I'll bet!" declared a third.
+
+"What do ye s'pose she's here for," queried a fourth, "to draw the
+int'rest on her money, or what?"
+
+It was precisely four-forty-five when Chip appeared before this judge and
+jury of all Riverton's happenings. At five-forty-five they had agreed
+that she was the handsomest young lady who had ever set foot in the
+town, that she must be going to get married soon, and that her mission
+there was to draw out a few thousand dollars for wedding finery. Then
+they dispersed, and at six-forty-five, when they assembled at the Quaboag
+again, half of Riverton knew their conclusions, and by bedtime all knew
+them.
+
+By eight-thirty next morning, this all-observant and all-wise clique
+had gathered in the hotel office once more, an unusual proceeding, and
+when Chip tripped out, eight pairs of eyes watched her depart. Then they
+dispersed.
+
+At nine o'clock Chip walked up the stone steps to the bank door, read
+the legend, "Open from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.," turned away, and once
+more resumed her leisurely stroll up and down the street while she peered
+into store windows. At ten precisely by the four church clocks she was
+back at the bank again, and the cashier lost count of the column he
+was adding when he saw her enter.
+
+"I would like three hundred dollars, if you please, sir," she said,
+presenting her little book, and he had to count it over four times,
+to make sure the amount was right. Then he passed the thick bundle of
+currency out under his latticed window, seeing only the two wide-open,
+fathomless eyes and dimpled face that had watched him, and feeling, as
+he afterward admitted, like fifty cents.
+
+And now ensued an experience the like of which poor Chip had never
+even dreamed,--the supreme joy of spending money without stint for
+those near and dear to her. And what a medley of gifts she bought!
+Two silk dress patterns, two warm wraps, three winter hats, a gold
+watch for Miss Phinney, an easy-chair, two of the finest pipes she
+could find, a trout rod, four pairs of gloves, and finally a gun for
+Nezer. Then as her roll of money grew less, she began to pick up smaller
+articles,--handkerchiefs, slippers, and the like.
+
+"Send them to the hotel, please," she said to one and all of whom she
+purchased articles of any size, "marked for Vera McGuire."
+
+That was enough!
+
+Riverton had sensations, mild ones, of course. Now and then a fire had
+occurred, once an elopement. Occasionally a horse ran away, causing
+damage to some one. But nothing had occurred to compare with the arrival
+of a supposed fabulously rich young lady who came without escort, who
+walked into and out of stores like a young goddess, noticing no one,
+and who spent money as if it were autumn leaves.
+
+A few of the Quaboag retinue followed her about in a not-to-be-observed
+manner. Women by the dozen hastily donned outdoor raiment, and visited
+stores, just to observe her. They crossed and recrossed the street to
+meet her, and a battery of curious eyes was focussed on her for two hours.
+
+When she returned to the hotel, the old guard, recruited by every idle
+man in town, filled the office, awaiting her. Uncle Joe, who had heard of
+her arrival the moment he came, was among them, recounting her history
+once more, and when she neared the hotel, he emerged to meet her.
+
+"Why, bless yer eyes, Chip," he said, extending a calloused hand, "but
+I'm powerful glad to see ye once more. Whatever made ye run away the way
+ye did, 'n' what be ye doin' here? Buyin' out the hull town? I've
+got the pung filled wi' bundles a'ready wi' yer name on 'em."
+
+He beaued her into the parlor, like the ancient gallant he was. He
+washed, brushed his hair and clothing, and awaited her readiness to dine,
+without holding further converse with the curious crowd. He ushered
+her into the dining room and made bold to sit and eat with her unasked,
+and when he assisted her to the front seat in his long box sleigh,
+crowded with her purchases, and drove away, he was envied by two dozen
+observers.
+
+"Why didn't ye send us word o' yer comin'," he said as they left
+Riverton, "so I cud 'a' spruced up some an' come down with a better
+rig, bells on the hosses and new buffler robes?"
+
+"There was no need of that," answered Chip, pleased, as well she might
+be. "I am just the same girl that I always was, only happier now that
+I have more friends. How is dear old Aunt Comfort, and every one in
+Greenvale? I am anticipating seeing them so much."
+
+And never during all the twenty years in which Uncle Joe had journeyed
+twice each day over this road had the way seemed shorter, or had he been
+blessed with a more interesting companion.
+
+The only regret Chip had, was that she had forgotten to buy Uncle Joe a
+present. She made up for it later, however.
+
+At Greenvale, Chip met almost an ovation. Aunt Comfort kissed her and
+cried over her. Nezer ran for Angie, who soon appeared on the scene,
+and Hannah was so "flustered" she was unable to speak after the first
+greeting. Martin, who had heard of Chip's arrival from Uncle Joe,
+hastened to Aunt Comfort's, and had Chip been a real "millionnairess"
+or some titled lady, she could not have awakened more interest or
+received half so cordial a welcome.
+
+Hannah was the one who felt the most embarrassed, however, and guilty as
+well. For half an hour, while Chip was the centre of interest, she could
+only stare at her in dumb amazement. Then she stole out of the room, and
+later Chip found her in the kitchen, shedding copious tears.
+
+"I'm a miserable sinner 'n' the Lord'll never forgive me," she
+half moaned, when Chip tried to console her. "An' to think ye feel the
+way ye say, 'n' to bring me a present, arter all the mean things I
+said. It's a-heapin' coals o' fire on my head, that it is." And the
+shower increased.
+
+"I have forgotten all about them, Hannah, truly I have," Chip assured
+her, "and I wish you would. You didn't understand me then, perhaps,
+or I you, so let us be friends now."
+
+The next afternoon Chip, who had learned that Miss Phinney's school was
+to close the day following, set out to call on her in time to arrive at
+its adjournment.
+
+No hint of her return had reached Miss Phinney, no letters had been
+exchanged, and not since that tearful separation had they met.
+
+And now as Chip followed the lonely by-road so often traversed by her,
+what a flood of bitter-sweet memories returned,--each bend, each tree,
+each rock, and the bridge over the Mizzy held a different recollection.
+Here at this turn she had first met Ray, after her resolve to leave
+Greenvale. At the next landmark, a lane crossing the meadows, she had
+always parted from her teacher, the last time in tears. And how long,
+long ago it all seemed!
+
+Then beyond, and barely visible, was the dear old schoolhouse. She
+could see it now, half hid in the bushes, a lone and lowly little brown
+building outlined on the winter landscape and apparently dwarfed in
+size. Once it had awed her; now it seemed pathetic.
+
+The last of its pupils were vanishing as Chip drew near, and inside, and
+as lonely as that lone temple, Miss Phinney still lingered.
+
+That day had not gone well with her. A note of complaint had come
+from one parent that morning, and news that a dearly loved scholar was
+ill as well, and Miss Phinney's own life seemed like the fields just
+now--cold, desolate, and snow-covered.
+
+And then while she, thus lone and lonesome, was putting away books,
+slates, ink-bottles, and all the badges of her servitude, Chip, without
+knocking, walked in.
+
+How they first exclaimed, then embraced, then kissed, and then repeated
+it while each tried to wink the tears away, and failed; how they sat
+hand in hand in that dingy, smoke-browned room with its knife-hacked
+benches, unconscious of the chill, while Chip told her story; and how,
+just as the last rays of the setting sun flashed from the icicles along
+its eaves, they left it, still hand in hand, was but an episode such as
+many a schoolgirl can recall.
+
+Of the few friends Greenvale held for Chip, none seemed quite so near
+and dear as Miss Phinney, and none lived longer in her memory. They had
+been for many months not teacher and pupil, but rather two sisters,
+confiding, patient, and tender. Life swept them apart. They might never
+meet again, and yet, so long as both lived, never would those school
+days be forgotten.
+
+With Sunday came Chip's most gratifying experience, perhaps, for her
+arrival was now known by the entire village and the fact that she was
+an heiress as well. Her fortune (also known) was considered almost
+fabulous according to Greenvale standards, and when Chip with Angie
+entered the church porch, it was crowded with people waiting to receive
+them. Chip, of course, now well clad and well poised, was once more the
+cynosure of all eyes except when the pastor prayed. At the close of
+service a score, most of whom she knew by sight only, waited to greet
+her and shake hands with her in the porch. The parson hurried down the
+aisle to add his smile and hand clasp, and, all in all, it was a most
+gratifying reception.
+
+And here and now, let no carping critic say it was all due to that bank
+account, but rather a country town's expression of respect and good-will
+toward one whom they felt deserved it.
+
+That it all pleased Angie, goes without saying. That Chip well deserved
+this vindication, no one will question; and when her visit ended and she
+departed, no one, not even Miss Phinney, missed her more than Angie.
+
+Only one thread of regret wove itself into Chip's feelings as she
+rode away with Uncle Joe, whose horses were now decked properly for
+this important event. She had received a most cordial reception on
+all sides--almost a triumph of good-will. Her gifts had brought an
+oft-repeated chorus of thanks and a few tears. On all sides and among all
+she had been welcome, even receiving a call and words of praise from
+Parson Jones. She was a _nobody_ no longer; instead, a _somebody_
+whom all delighted to honor and commend.
+
+But the one whose motherly pride would have been most gratified, she for
+whom Chip's heart yearned for oftenest, would never know it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL
+
+
+With the birds and flowers once more returning to Christmas Cove, came
+outdoor freedom for Chip again. Like the wood-nymph she was in character
+and taste, the wild, rock-bound coast outside and the low, wooded
+mountain enclosing this village were her playgrounds where she found
+companionship. Other associates she cared but little for, and a few
+hours alone on a wave-washed shore, watching the wild ocean billows
+tossing spray aloft, or a long ramble in a deep, silent forest, appealed
+to her far more than parties and girlish enjoyments.
+
+The wood-bordered road, leading from the village to the railroad ten
+miles away, was now a favorite walk of hers. It was suited to her in
+many ways, for it was seldom travelled; it followed the sunny side of
+the low mountain range back of Christmas Cove, not a house stood along
+its entire way, and to add charm, a brook kept it company, crossing
+and recrossing it for two miles. That feature was the most especial
+attraction, for beds of watercress waved beneath the limpid waters in
+deep pools, bunches of flag grew along its banks, their blue flowers
+bending to kiss the current; its ripples danced in the sunlight; its
+music was a tinkling melody, and these simple attractions appealed to
+Chip.
+
+There was also another reason for now choosing this byway walk. She knew,
+or felt sure, that Ray would visit Christmas Cove on his return from
+the woods. He must come in the old carryall,--about the only vehicle
+ever journeying along this road,--and now, like a brownie of the forest,
+she watched until she spied it afar and then hid in the bushes and
+peeped out until it passed each day.
+
+A curious and somewhat complex feeling toward this young man had also
+come to her. At first, like a child, she had loved him unasked. She had
+known no different. He had seemed like a young god to her, and to
+cling to him was supreme happiness. Then had come an awakening, a
+consciousness that this freedom was not right and must be checked.
+Following that also--a bitter lesson--it had come to her that she
+was a kind of outcast, a child of shame, as it were, whose origin
+was despicable, and who was dependent upon the charity of others.
+This awakening, this new consciousness, was like a black chasm in
+front of her, a horror and shame combined, and true to her nature, she
+fled from it like one pursued.
+
+But two years had changed her views of humanity. She had learned that
+money and social position did not always win friends and respect. That
+birth and ancestry were of less consideration than a pure mind and honest
+intentions, and that fine raiment sometimes covered a base heart and vile
+nature.
+
+Toward this boyish lover, also, her feelings had been altered. A little
+of the old-time fondness remained, however. She could not put that
+away. She had tried and tried earnestly, yet the wildwood illusion still
+lingered. She had meant, also, to put him and herself quite apart--so
+far, and in such a way, that she would never be found by him. That had
+failed, however; he knew where she was. He had said that he was coming
+here. Most likely he would expect to renew the old tender relations;
+but in that he would be disappointed. She was sure she would be glad
+to see him for old times' sake, however. She would be gracious and
+dignified, as Aunt Abby was. She wanted to hear all about the woods and
+Old Cy again, but caresses must be forbidden. More than that, every
+time she recalled how freely she had permitted them once, she blushed
+and felt that it would be an effort to look him in the face again.
+
+But she was anxious to see how he would appear now: whether the same boy,
+with frank, open face, or a commanding, self-possessed man.
+
+And so each pleasant afternoon she strolled up this byway road. When the
+ancient carryall was sighted, she hid and watched until it passed.
+
+But Captain Mix, its driver, also had observing eyes. He knew her now as
+far as he could see her, as every one in the village did, and he soon
+noticed her unusual conduct. He also watched along the wayside where she
+left it, and slyly observed her peeping out from some thicket. Just why
+this odd proceeding happened time and again, he could not guess, and not
+until a strange young man alighted from the train one day and asked to
+be left at the home of Mrs. Abby Bemis, did it dawn on him.
+
+Then he laughed. "Friend o' Aunt Abby, I 'spose?" he inquired in his
+Yankee fashion, after they had started.
+
+"No," answered Ray, frankly, "I have never seen the lady. I know some
+one who is living with her, however. A Miss Mc--Raymond, I mean."
+
+Captain Mix glanced at him, his eyes twinkling. "So ye're 'quainted
+with Vera, be ye," he responded. "Wal, ye're lucky." Then as
+curiosity grew he added, "Known her quite a spell, hev ye?"
+
+But Ray was discreet. "Oh, three or four years," he answered
+nonchalantly. "I knew her when she lived in Greenvale." Then to
+check the stage-driver's curiosity, he added, "She was only a little
+girl, then. I presume she has changed since."
+
+"She's a purty good-lookin' gal now," asserted Captain Mix, "but
+middlin' odd in her ways. Not much on gallivantin' round wi' young
+folks, but goin' to school stiddy 'n' roamin' round the woods when
+she ain't. Purty big gal to be goin' to school she is. I callate her
+arly eddication must 'a' been sorter neglected. Mebbe ye know 'bout
+it," and once more this persistent Yankee glanced at his companion.
+
+But Ray was too loyal to the little girl he loved to discuss her further,
+and made no answer. Instead, he began inquiries about Christmas Cove, and
+as they jogged on mile after mile, he learned all that was to be known
+of that quiet village. When they had reached a point some three miles
+from it, a kindly thought came to the driver.
+
+"If Vera ain't 'spectin' ye," he said, "mebbe ye'd like to
+s'prise her. If so be it, ye kin. She's 'most allus out this way
+'n', curislike, hides 'fore I get 'long whar she is. If I see her
+to-day, 'n' ye want to, I'll drop ye clus by 'n' let ye."
+
+And so it came to pass.
+
+Chip, as usual, had followed her oft-taken walk on this pleasant May
+afternoon. When the carryall was sighted also, as usual, she had hidden
+herself. With beating heart she saw two occupants this time, and looking
+out of her laurel screen, she saw that one was Ray.
+
+Then she crouched lower. The moment she had waited for had come.
+
+But now something unexpected happened, for after the carryall passed her
+hiding spot, Ray, brown and stalwart, leaped out. The carryall drove on,
+and she saw him returning and scanning the bushes.
+
+She was caught, fairly and squarely. One instant she hesitated, then,
+blushing rose-red, emerged from the undergrowth.
+
+And now came another capture, for with a "Chip, my darling," Ray sprang
+forward, and although she turned away, the next moment she was clasped
+in his arms.
+
+In vain she struggled. In vain she writhed and twisted. In vain she
+pushed him away and then covered her blushing face.
+
+Love, fierce and eager, could not be thus opposed. All her pride, anger,
+resentment, shame, and intended coldness were as so many straws, for
+despite her struggles, he pulled her hands aside and kissed her again and
+again.
+
+"My darling," he exclaimed at last, "say you forgive me; say you love
+me; say it now!"
+
+Then, as she drew away, he saw her eyes were brimming with tears.
+
+"I won't," she said, "I hate--" but his lips cut the sentence in
+two, and it was never finished.
+
+"I did mean to hate you," she declared once more, covering her face,
+"but I--I can't."
+
+"No, you can't," he asserted eagerly, "for I won't let you. You
+promised to love me once, and now you've got to, for life."
+
+And she did.
+
+When the outburst of emotion had subsided and they strolled homeward,
+Chip glanced shyly up at her lover.
+
+"Why did you pounce on me so?" she queried; "why didn't you ask me,
+first?"
+
+"My dear," he answered, "a wise man kisses the girl first, and asks
+her afterwards." Then he repeated the offence.
+
+[Illustration: "I did mean to hate you, but I--I can't."]
+
+And now what a charming summer of sweet illusion and castle-building
+followed for the lovers! How Aunt Abby smiled benignly upon them, quite
+content to accord ample chance for wooing! How many blissful, dreamy
+hours they passed on lonely wave-washed cliffs, while the marvel of
+love was discussed! How its wondrous magic opened a new world whose walks
+were flower-decked, whose sky was ever serene, where lilies bloomed,
+birds sang, sea winds whispered of time and eternity, and where Chip was
+an adored queen! How all the shame and humiliation of her past life
+faded away and joy supreme entered on the azure and golden wings of this
+new morning! Even Old Cy was almost forgotten; the spites, Old Tomah,
+and Tim's Place quite so; and all hope, all joy, all protection, and all
+her future centred in the will and wishes of this Prince Perfect.
+
+"Blind and foolish," I hear some fair critic say. Yes, more than that,
+almost idiotic; for selfish man never pursues unless forced to do so,
+and an object of worship once possessed, is but a summer flower.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI
+
+
+ "A man'll hev all the friends he kin keer for if he tends to
+ his own knittin' work."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Quite different from the meeting of the lovers was that which occurred
+when Old Cy reached Peaceful Valley. There were no heroics, no falling
+upon one another's necks, no tears. Just a "Hullo, Cyrus!" "Hullo,
+Judson!" as these two brothers clasped hands, and forty years were
+bridged.
+
+Aunt Mandy, however, showed more emotion, for when Old Cy rather
+awkwardly stooped to kiss her, the long ago of Sister Abby's sorrow
+welled up in her heart, and the tears came.
+
+That evening's reunion, with its two life histories to be exchanged, did
+not close until the tall clock had ticked time into the wee, small hours.
+
+All of Old Cy's almost marvellous adventures had to be told by him,
+and not the least interesting were the last few years at the wilderness
+home of the hermit. Chip's entry into it and her history formed another
+chapter fully as thrilling, with Uncle Jud's rescue of her for a
+_dénouement_.
+
+The most pathetic feature of this intermingled history--the years while
+sweet Abby Grey waited and watched for her lover--was left untold. Only
+once was it referred to by Aunt Mandy, in an indirect way; but the quick
+lowering of Old Cy's eyes and the shadow that overspread his face,
+checked her at once. Almost intuitively she realized its unwisdom, and
+that it was a sorrow best not referred to.
+
+Old Cy evidently felt it a subject to avoid, and not until the next
+day did he even ask how Aunt Abby looked or what had been her life
+experiences. A little of this reticence wore away in due time, however,
+and then Aunt Mandy once more referred to her sister.
+
+"I kinder feel you blame Abby somehow, Cyrus, the way you act," she
+said, "and yet thar ain't no cause for it. She'd waited 'most seven
+years. We'd all given you up for dead, and life in Christmas Cove
+wa'n't promisin' much for Abby."
+
+"I don't blame her a mite," Old Cy answered quickly, "an' no need
+o' yer thinkin' so. I don't blame no woman fer makin' the best shift
+they kin. They've got to hev a home 'n' pertecter, bless 'em, or
+be nobody in this world. Comin' here and findin' how things are, sorter
+makes me realize how much I've missed in life, though, an' how much
+sorrer I've had to outgrow. I don't lay up nothin' 'gainst Abby, not
+fer a minit. Only I hated to hev ye tell me what I knew ye'd hev to,
+that fust night."
+
+"But you're goin' to see her, ain't ye, Cyrus?" Aunt Mandy asked
+anxiously. "Ye won't shame her by not goin', will ye?"
+
+"Wal, mebbe," he answered slowly, and after a long pause. "I wouldn't
+want to hurt her knowin'ly. I callate I've done more grievin'n she
+has, though, ten times over, an' seein' her now's a good deal like
+openin' an old tomb--a sorter invitin' ghosts o' old heartaches to
+step out. Abby's outgrowed the old times, 'n' I'm sartin, too,
+won't be the happier by seein' me ag'in. I may be wrong, but I've a
+notion she'll sorter hate to see me. 'Twas to keep her from feelin'
+'shamed 'n' miserable 'n' spoilin' her life, I've never let
+her nor nobody that knew her find out I was alive. I'm doubtin' I
+would now if she hadn't larned it from Chip."
+
+He relented a little from this strange and almost cruel whim a week
+later, and after visiting the Riggsville store and obtaining what really
+amounted to a disguise in new garments, he announced his plans.
+
+"I've got to see Chip," he said, "an' see how she 'n' Ray's
+gittin' on. I've got to see Abby, I s'pose. I want to, an' I don't
+want to, both in one. Then ag'in, these two young folks--Chip 'n'
+the boy--hev sorter got tangled up in my feelin's, 'n' I can't rest
+content till I've seen 'em settled in life. I'm goin' to Christmas
+Cove fer a day. Then back here till they hitch up, 'n' then--wal,
+then mebbe I'd better go to the woods ag'in. I ain't fitted by natur
+fer dressed-up folks."
+
+No opposition to this unseemly outcome was made by Uncle Jud or Aunt
+Mandy. They knew, or hoped, the leaven of bygone memories and association
+would change the hermit-like impulse of Old Cy, and all in good time a
+better ending of his life would seem possible to him. To argue it now
+was apparently useless. A man so set in his ideas as to remain a homeless
+wanderer for almost a lifetime, was not to be changed in a month, or
+perhaps in a year.
+
+Neither did Old Cy seem in a hurry to visit Christmas Cove.
+
+"I don't look nat'ral or feel nat'ral in them new clothes," he said
+to Aunt Mandy one day, "an' while I want to see Abby, I've lived in
+the woods so long I'm sorter 'shamed to go 'mongst respectable people.
+Then I look like one o' them wooden men dressed up in a store winder
+with that new rig on, an' jest know folks'll all be laughin' at me.
+I've got to go, I callate, but I'd like to make the trip in a cage.
+I'm sartin sure Abby'll laugh at me arterwards." From which it may be
+seen how hard it was for Old Cy to fit himself into civilized life
+once more.
+
+He nerved himself for the trip to Christmas Cove in a few days, however,
+and how he met and renewed acquaintance with his old-time sweetheart
+shall be told in his own words.
+
+"Abby hain't changed near so much as I callated," he said on his
+return; "a leetle fuller in figger, but jest the same easy-spoken, sweet
+sorter woman I always knew she'd be. She was 'lone when I called,
+an' fer a minit arter we shook hands neither on us could speak ag'in.
+Then she kinder bit her lip 'n' swallered her feelin's, keepin'
+her face turned away, an' then we sot down 'n' begun talkin'. It
+was techin', too, the way she acted, fer she kept tryin' to smile,
+'n' all the while the tears kept startin'. It was like one o' them
+summer days when the rain patters while the sun is shinin'. I don't
+think she noticed my clothes much, either, an' we sot up till 'most
+midnight talkin' over old times. It all turned out 'bout the way I
+'spected--a sorter funeral o' old hopes with us two fer mourners.
+She's powerful considerate, too, Abby is, for all the time we was
+talkin' she never once spoke o' Cap'n Bemis, 'n' I didn't. It
+was jest ez if we started in whar we left off, 'n' skippin' the gap
+between. She 'lowed she hoped she'd see me soon ag'in, that she felt
+like a mother to Chip; an' when I bid her good-bye, she kinder choked
+once more.
+
+"I didn't see much o' Chip, either, which sorter hurt me. Take it all
+in all, my visit thar upsot me more'n I callated, 'n' I guess when
+Chip's settled, I'd best go to the woods 'n' forgit all that's past.
+My life's been a failure, anyway."
+
+And Old Cy was right; but it was grim and merciless Fate that made it
+so, and for that he was not responsible.
+
+Love in youth is a sweet song of joy and hope and promise. But love
+that spans a lifetime, that reaches and caresses our heartstrings once
+again as we enter the final shadows, has only the pathos of parting
+and the tender chords of almost forgotten melodies in it. Vainly do we
+strive to enter the enchanted garden once more. Vainly do our heart
+throbs beat against its adamant walls. Vainly do we hope to catch just
+one more of the old bygone thrills. It is useless, for none can live
+life over, and once age has locked the portals of youth and fervor, they
+are never opened again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII
+
+
+With September came a supreme event in the lives of Chip and Ray, when
+Mr. and Mrs. Frisbie, Aunt Comfort, Miss Phinney and Hannah, Uncle
+Jud and Aunt Mandy, and Old Cy, all gathered in Aunt Abby's quaint
+parlor to see her aged pastor join their hands and lives. Then came the
+kisses, the congratulations, the rice, and old-shoe throwing, and then
+solitude and tears for Aunt Abby. All the wedding guests except Old Cy
+hied themselves away with the new pair, and he left for Bayport.
+
+And thus closes the history of Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness and
+slave of Tim's Place.
+
+Bless her!
+
+Two days later Old Cy returned.
+
+No one was in the house when he knocked at Aunt Abby's door, and then,
+led perhaps by the invisible chord that spanned forty years, he slowly
+strolled up the path beside the old mill-pond, which he and she had often
+followed in the old, old days.
+
+His heart had led him aright, for there, at the foot of the ancient oak
+that had once been their trysting-place, she sat.
+
+"I thought I'd come over 'n' bid ye good-bye, Abby," he said gently,
+as she arose to meet him. "I've been doin' a good deal o' biddin'
+good-bye to-day. I bid good-bye to the old graveyard whar my folks
+is; it's all growed up to weeds 'n' bushes, I'm sorry to say. But
+that can't be helped. It's the way o' natur. I've been down to the
+p'int whar you 'n' I used to go, an' I bid that good-bye," he
+added, seating himself near her. "Ye 'member it, don't ye, Abby,
+'n' them days when we went thar to watch the waves?"
+
+"I do, Cyrus," she answered, her voice trembling. "I remember all the
+old days only too well."
+
+"They all come back to me, too," he continued in a lower tone, "an'
+I wish I could skip back to 'em, but I can't. I'm an old man now,
+an' no use to nobody, 'n' not much to myself. I've been a wanderer
+many years--ye know why, Abby. I've had a short spell o' joy, kinder
+helpin' this boy 'n' gal into sunshine 'n' a home. They've gone
+their way now 'n' sure to forgit me an' you. It's nat'ral they
+should, 'n' all that's left me is to go back to the woods 'n' stay."
+
+He paused a moment, glancing up the narrow pond to where it ended in
+shadow, and then continued: "It's curis, Abby, how life begins with
+how-de-do's 'n' smilin' friends 'n' cheerin' prospects, 'n' then
+ends with good-byes 'n' bein' forgot. It's what we must callate on,
+though, an' a good deal like a graveyard is left to weeds and bushes."
+
+Once more he paused, closed his eyes, and remained silent for a time.
+
+"Wal, I might as well be goin'," he said finally, rising and extending
+his hand, "so good-bye, Abby. I wish ye well in life."
+
+"But is there any need of it?" she answered, turning her face to hide
+the tears as his hand clasped hers.
+
+"Why, no, only to fergit my sorrer," he answered; "I can't do it
+here."
+
+"But who will care for you there--at last--and--must you go?" Then she
+turned to him again.
+
+And then he saw, not the gentle, saddened face upraised to his, but the
+tender face of sweet Abby Grey of the long, long ago.
+
+"Must you leave us--me?" she whispered once again.
+
+"Wal, mebbe not," he answered.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
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+A DAUGHTER OF THE SNOWS:
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+It is a book about a woman, whose personality and plan in the story
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+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
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+Cloth, 12 mo. Price, seventy-five cents, postpaid.
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+THE MENACE OF PRIVILEGE.
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+ROBERT HUNTER,
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+POVERTY.
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+THE GROSSET & DUNLAP EDITIONS OF GARDEN BOOKS.
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+GARDEN MAKING, by Professor L. H. Bailey, Professor of Horticulture,
+Cornell University.
+
+Suggestions for the Utilizing of Home Grounds. 12 mo., cloth, 350
+illustrations.
+
+Here is a book literally "for the million" who in broad America have
+some love for growing things. It is useful alike to the owner of a
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+BREWSTER'S MILLIONS
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+Mr. Montgomery Brewster is required to spend a million dollars in one
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+GRAUSTARK: A Story of a Love Behind a Throne.
+
+This work has been and is to-day one of the most popular works of fiction
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+THE SHERRODS. With illustrations by C. D. Williams
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+A novel quite unlike Mr. McCutcheon's previous works in the field of
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+Each volume handsomely bound in cloth. Large 12 mo. size.
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+Price 75 cents per volume, postpaid.
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+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
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+PROSE TALES--By Edgar Allan Poe.
+
+A large 12mo volume, bound in cloth, with decorative cover. Containing
+eleven striking drawings by Alice B. Woodward, a biography of the author,
+a bibliography of the Tales, and comprehensive notes. The best edition
+ever published in a single volume.
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+ISHMAEL and SELF-RAISED--By Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth.
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+on fine smooth wove paper of excellent quality, and embellished with
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+THE SAME, Two Volume Edition, in three-quarter Crushed Morocco, with gold
+tops and silk head bands. Encased in a flat box.
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+Price Five Dollars Per Set.
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+Sent postpaid, on receipt of price by the Publishers.
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
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+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
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+ With illustrations by Clare Angell.
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+ With illustrations by Clare Angell.
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+THE HERITAGE OF PERIL
+ With illustrations by Edith Leslie Lang.
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+Price 75 cents per volume, postpaid.
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
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+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
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+
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+No Field Collection is Complete Without this Book
+
+A LITTLE BOOK of TRIBUNE VERSE
+
+By EUGENE FIELD
+
+Compiled and edited by Joseph G. Brown, formerly city editor of the
+Denver Tribune, and an intimate friend and associate of the poet during
+the several years in which he was on the staff of that paper.
+
+This volume resurrects a literary treasure which has been buried for
+many years in the forgotten files of a newspaper, and it is, as nearly
+as it has been possible to make, an absolutely complete collection of
+the hitherto unpublished poems of the gifted author.
+
+These poems are the early product of Field's genius. They breathe the
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+which no other writer could imitate.
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+The book contains nearly three hundred pages, including an interesting
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+NEW EDITIONS IN UNIFORM BINDING
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+Works of
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+F. MARION CRAWFORD
+
+12mo, Cloth, each 75 cents, postpaid
+
+VIA CRUCIS: A Romance of the Second Crusade. Illustrated by Louis Loeb.
+
+Mr. Crawford has manifestly brought his best qualities as a student
+of history, and his finest resources as a master of an original and
+picturesque style, to bear upon this story.
+
+MR. ISAACS: A Tale of Modern India.
+
+Under an unpretentious title we have here one of the most brilliant
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+THE HEART OF ROME.
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+The legend of a buried treasure under the walls of the palace of Conti,
+known to but few, provides the framework for many exciting incidents.
+
+SARACINESCA
+
+A graphic picture of Roman society in the last days of the Pope's
+temporal power.
+
+SANT' ILARIO; A Sequel to Saracinesca.
+
+A singularly powerful and beautiful story, fulfilling every requirement
+of artistic fiction.
+
+IN THE PALACE OF THE KING: A Love Story of Old Madrid. Illustrated.
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+The imaginative richness, the marvellous ingenuity of plot, and the charm
+of romantic environment, rank this novel among the great creations.
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+GROSSET & DUNLAP, NEW YORK
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+POPULAR PRICED EDITIONS OF BOOKS BY LOUIS TRACY
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+THE WINGS OF THE MORNING
+
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+on the island until the rescuing crew find them there, there is not a
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+York Times._
+
+THE KING OF DIAMONDS
+
+Verily, Mr. Tracy is a prince of story-tellers. His charm it a little
+hard to describe, but it is as definite as that of a rainbow. The reader
+is carried along by the robust imagination of the author.--_San Francisco
+Examiner._
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
+
+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Girl From Tim's Place, by Charles Clark Munn
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Girl From Tim's Place, by Charles Clark Munn
+
+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 Girl From Tim's Place
+
+Author: Charles Clark Munn
+
+Illustrator: Frank T. Merrill
+
+Release Date: November 3, 2010 [EBook #34202]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div style='text-align:center; margin:5px auto;'>
+<img src='images/illus-cvr.jpg' alt='' />
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i1'></a><img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake give me suthin&#8217; to eat.&#8221;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<h1>THE GIRL FROM TIM&#8217;S PLACE</h1>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<p class='c fs20 mb40'>THE GIRL FROM<br />TIM&#8217;S PLACE</p>
+<p class='c mb10'>BY</p>
+<p class='c fs12 mb10'>CHARLES CLARK MUNN</p>
+<p class='c sc fs08 mb30'>Author of &#8220;Pocket Island,&#8221; &#8220;Uncle Terry,&#8221; &#8220;The<br />Hermit,&#8221; &#8220;Rockhaven.&#8221;</p>
+<p class='c i fs12'>ILLUSTRATED BY FRANK T. MERRILL</p>
+<div style='text-align:center; margin:50px auto;'>
+<img src='images/illus-emb.png' alt='' />
+</div><p class='c sc'>New York</p>
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP</p>
+<p class='c fs08'>PUBLISHERS</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<p class='c fs08 mb20'>Published, March, 1906.</p>
+<p class='c sc fs08'>Copyright, 1906, by<br />LOTHROP, LEE &amp; SHEPARD CO.</p>
+<hr class='books' />
+<p class='c fs08'><i>All rights reserved.</i></p>
+<hr class='books' />
+<p class='c fs08 sc'>The Girl from Tim&#8217;s Place.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<p class='c fs12'>INTRODUCTION</p>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>When</span> we leave the world&#8217;s busy haunts and
+penetrate the primal solitude of a vast wilderness,
+a new realm peopled by mystic genii opens to us.
+Each sombre gorge, where twisted roots clasp the
+moss-coated walls, discloses fabled gnomes and
+dryads. Nymphs and naiads outline their shadowy
+forms in the mist of every cascade. Elfin
+sprites dance in the ripples of a laughing brook,
+and brownies scamper away over the leaf-swept
+hilltops.</p>
+
+<p>A wondrous Presence, multiform, omnipresent,
+and ever fascinating, meets us on every hand, and
+there in those magic aisles and sombre glades,
+where man seems far away and God very near,
+Nature sits enthroned.</p>
+
+<p>It is with the hope that a few of my readers
+may feel this forest-born mood, and in its poetic
+spirit forget worldly cares, that I have written the
+story of &#8220;The Girl from Tim&#8217;s Place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>THE AUTHOR.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<table summary='LOI'>
+<tr><td colspan='3' class='center fs12'>ILLUSTRATIONS</td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan='3' class='center fs12'></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake give me suthin&#8217; to eat&#8221; (<i>Frontispiece</i>)</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i1'>23</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old Tomah&#8217;s fancy were rushing and leaping about</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i2'>21</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>Nearer and nearer that unconscious girl it crept!</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i3'>123</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>He grasped and struck at this enemy in a blind instinct of self-preservation</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i4'>195</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>&#8220;Won&#8217;t you please give me a lift an&#8217; a chance to earn my vittles for a day or two?&#8221;</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i5'>260</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>&#8220;Thank God, little gal, I&#8217;ve found what belongs to ye&#8221;</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i6'>272</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>&#8220;Quit takin&#8217; on so, girlie,&#8221; he said</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i7'>325</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td class='tcol1i'>&#8220;I did mean to hate you, but I&#8211;I can&#8217;t&#8221;</td><td class='tcol2i'><a href='#link_i8'>416</a></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<p class='fs16 c'>PART I<br />CHIP MCGUIRE</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_9'></a>9</span><a id='link_1'></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Chip</span> was very tired. All that long June day,
+since Tim&#8217;s harsh, &#8220;Come, out wid ye,&#8221; had roused
+her to daily toil, until now, wearied and disconsolate,
+she had crept, barefoot, up the back stairs to
+her room, not one moment&#8217;s rest or one kindly
+word had been hers.</p>
+
+<p>Below, in the one living room of Tim&#8217;s Place,
+the men were grouped playing cards, and the medley
+of their oaths, their laughter, the thump of
+knuckles on the bare table, and the pungent odor
+of pipes, reached her through the floor cracks.
+Outside the fireflies twinkled above the slow-running
+river and along the stump-dotted hillside.
+Close by, a few pigs dozed contentedly in their
+rudely constructed sty.</p>
+
+<p>A servant to those scarce fit for servants, a menial
+at the beck and call of all Tim&#8217;s Place, and laboring
+with the men in the fields, Chip, a girl of almost
+sixteen, felt her soul revolt at the filth, the brutality,
+the coarse existence of those whose slave she was.</p>
+
+<p>And what a group they were!</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_10'></a>10</span>First, Tim Connor, the owner and master of this
+oasis in the wilderness, sixty miles from the nearest
+settlement; his brother Mike, as coarse; their
+wives and a half a dozen children who played with
+the pigs, squealed as often for food, and were left
+to grow up the same way; and Pierre Lubec, the
+hired man, completed the score.</p>
+
+<p>There was another transient resident here, an
+old Indian named Tomah, who came with the snow,
+and deserted his hut below on the river bank when
+spring unlocked that stream.</p>
+
+<p>Two occasional visitors also came here, both
+even more objectionable to Chip than Tim and his
+family. One was her father, known to her to be
+an outlaw and escaped murderer in hiding; the
+other a half-breed named Bolduc, but known as One-eyed
+Pete, a trapper and hunter whose abode was a
+log cabin on the Fox Hole, ten miles away. His
+face was horribly scarred by a wildcat&#8217;s claws;
+one eye-socket was empty; his lips, chin, and protruding
+teeth were always tobacco-stained. For
+three months now, he had made weekly calls at
+Tim&#8217;s Place, in pursuit of Chip. His wooing, as
+might be expected, had been a persistent leering at
+her with his one sinister eye, oft-repeated innuendoes
+and insinuations of lascivious nature, scarce understood
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_11'></a>11</span>
+by her, with now and then attempted familiarity.
+These advances had met with much the
+same reception once accorded him by the wildcat.</p>
+
+<p>Both these visitors were now with the group
+below. That fact was of no interest to Chip, except
+in connection with a more pertinent one&#8211;a
+long conference she had observed between them
+that day. What it was about, she could not guess,
+and yet some queer intuition told her that it concerned
+her. Ordinarily, she would have sought
+sleep in her box-on-legs bed; now she crouched on
+the floor, listening.</p>
+
+<p>For an hour the game and its medley of sounds
+continued; then cessation, the tramp of heavily
+shod feet, the light extinguished, and finally&#8211;silence.
+A few minutes of this, and then the sound
+of whispered converse, low yet distinct, reached
+Chip from outside. Cautiously she crept to her
+window.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I gif you one hunerd dollars now, for ze gal,&#8221;
+Pete was saying, &#8220;an&#8217; one hunerd more when you
+fotch her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s three hundred down, I&#8217;ve told ye, or we
+don&#8217;t do business,&#8221; was her father&#8217;s answer, in
+almost a hiss.</p>
+
+<p>A pain like a knife piercing her heart came to Chip.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_12'></a>12</span>&#8220;But s&#8217;pose she run away?&#8221; came in Pete&#8217;s voice.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What, sixty miles to a settlement? You must
+be a damn fool!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;An&#8217; if she no mind me?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, thrash her then; she&#8217;s yours.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I no gif so much,&#8221; parleyed Pete; &#8220;I gif you
+one-feefty now, an&#8217; one hunerd when she come.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ll give what I say, and be quick about it,
+or I&#8217;ll take her out to-morrow, and you&#8217;ll never see
+her again; so fork over.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And you fotch her to-morrow?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Yes, I told you.&#8221; And so the bargain was concluded.</p>
+
+<p>Only a moment more, while Chip sat numb and
+dazed, then came the sound of footsteps, as the two
+men separated, and then silence over Tim&#8217;s Place.</p>
+
+<p>And yet, what a horror for Chip! Sold like a
+horse or a pig to this worse than disgusting half-breed,
+and on the morrow to be taken&#8211;no, dragged&#8211;to the half-breed&#8217;s hut by her hated father.</p>
+
+<p>Hardly conscious of the real intent and object
+of this purchase, she yet understood it dimly. Life
+here was bad enough&#8211;it was coarse, unloved, even
+filthy, and yet, hard as it was, it was a thousand
+times better than slavery with such an owner.</p>
+
+<p>And now, still weak and trembling from the shock,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_13'></a>13</span>
+she raised her head cautiously and peeped out of the
+window. A faint spectral light from the rising
+moon outlined the log barn, the two log cabins, and
+pigsty, which, with the frame house she was in, comprised
+Tim&#8217;s Place. Above and beyond where the
+forest enclosed the hillside, it shone brighter, and
+as Chip looked out upon the ethereal silvered view,
+away to the right she saw the dark opening into the
+old tote road. Up this they had brought her, eight
+years before. Never since had she traversed it;
+and yet, as she looked at it now, an inspiration born
+of her father&#8217;s sneer came to her.</p>
+
+<p>It was a desperate chance, a foolhardy step&#8211;a
+journey so appalling, so almost hopeless, she might
+well hesitate; and yet, escape that way was her one
+chance. Only a moment longer she waited, then
+gathering her few belongings&#8211;a pair of old shoes,
+the moccasins Old Tomah had given her, a skirt
+and jacket fashioned from Tim&#8217;s cast-off garments,
+a fur cap, and soft felt hat&#8211;she thrust them into
+a soiled pillow-case and crept down the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>Once out, she looked about, listened, then darted
+up the hillside, straight for the tote road entrance.
+Here she paused, put on her moccasins, and looked
+back.</p>
+
+<p>The moon, now above the tree-tops, shone full
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_14'></a>14</span>
+upon Tim&#8217;s Place, softening and silvering all its
+ugliness and all its squalor. Away to the left stood
+Tomah&#8217;s hut, across the river, a shining path bright
+and rippled.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of the awful dread of her situation and the
+years of her hard, unpaid, and ofttimes cursed toil,
+a pang of regret now came to her. This was her
+home, wretched as it was. Here she had at least
+been fed and warmed in winters, and here Old
+Tomah had shown her kindness. Oh, if he were
+only in his hut now, that she might go and waken
+him softly, and beg him to take her in his canoe and
+speed down the river!</p>
+
+<p>But no! only her own desperate courage would
+now avail, and realizing that this look upon Tim&#8217;s
+Place was the last one, she turned and fled down the
+path. Sixty miles of stony, bush-encumbered,
+brier-grown, seldom-travelled road lay ahead of
+her! Sixty miles of mingled swamp, morass, and
+rock-ribbed hill! Sixty miles through the sombre
+silence and persistent menace of a wilderness, peopled
+only by death-intending creatures, yellow-eyed
+and sharp-fanged!</p>
+
+<p>With only a sickening, soul-nauseating fate
+awaiting her at Tim&#8217;s Place, and her sole escape
+this almost insane flight, she sped on. The faint,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_15'></a>15</span>
+spectral rifts of moonlight through interlaced fir
+and spruce as often deceived as aided her; bending
+boughs whipped her, bushes and logs tripped
+her, sharp stones and pointed sticks bit her; she
+hurried over hillocks, wallowed through sloughs
+and dashed into tangles of briers, heedless of all
+except her one mad impulse to escape.</p>
+
+<p>Soon the ever present menace of a wilderness
+assailed her,&#8211;the yowl of a wildcat close at hand;
+in a swamp, the sharp bark of a wolf; on a hillside
+above her, the hoot of an owl; and when
+after two hours of this desperate flight had exhausted
+her and she was forced to halt, strange
+creeping, crawling things seemed all about.</p>
+
+<p>And now the erratic, fantastic belief of Old
+Tomah returned to her. With him the forest
+was peopled by a weird, uncanny race, sometimes
+visible and sometimes not&#8211;&#8220;spites,&#8221; he called
+them, and they were the souls of both man and
+beast; sometimes good, sometimes evil, according
+as they had been in life, and all good or ill
+luck was due to their ghostly influences. They
+followed the hunter and trapper day and night,
+luring him into safety or danger, as they chose.
+They were everywhere, and in countless numbers,
+ready and sure to avenge all wrongs and reward
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_16'></a>16</span>
+all virtues. They had a Chieftain also, a great
+white spectre who came forth from the north in
+winter, and swept across the wilderness, spreading
+death and terror.</p>
+
+<p>Many times at Tim&#8217;s Place, Chip had sat enthralled
+on winter evenings, while Old Tomah
+described these mystic genii. They were so real
+to him that he made them real to her, and now,
+alone in this vast wilderness, spectral in the faint
+moonlight and filled with countless terrors, they
+returned in full force. On every side she could
+see them, creeping, crawling, through the undergrowth
+or along the interlaced boughs above her.
+She could hear the faint hiss of their breath in
+the night wind, see the gleam of their little eyes in
+dark places&#8211;they were crossing the path in front
+of her, following close behind, and gathering about
+her from every direction.</p>
+
+<p>Beneath bright sunlight, a vast wilderness is
+at best a place peopled by many terrors. Its solitude
+seems uncanny, its shadow fearsome, its
+silence ominous. The creaking of limbs moving
+in the breeze sounds like the shriek of demons;
+the rush of winds becomes the hiss of serpents.
+Vague terrors assail one on every hand, and the
+rustle of each dry leaf, or breaking of every twig,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_17'></a>17</span>
+becomes the footfall of a savage beast. We advance
+only with caution, oft halting to look and
+listen. A stern, defiant <i>Presence</i> seems everywhere
+confronting us, and the weird mysticism of Nature
+bids us beware. By night this invisible Something
+becomes of monstrous proportions. Ghosts
+fashion themselves out of each rift of light, and
+every rock, thick-grown tree-top, or dark shadow
+becomes a goblin.</p>
+
+<p>To Chip, educated only in the fantastic lore
+of Old Tomah, these terrors now became insanity-breeding.
+She could not turn back&#8211;better
+death among the spites than slaving to the half-breed;
+and so, faint from awful fear, gasping
+from miles of running, she stumbled on. And
+now a little hope came, for the road bent down
+beside the river, and its low voice seemed a word
+of cheer. Into its cool depths she could at least
+plunge and die, as a last resort.</p>
+
+<p>Soon an opening showed ahead, and a bridge
+appeared. Here, for the first time, on this vantage
+point, she halted. How thrice blessed those
+knotted logs now seemed! She hugged and patted
+them in abject gratitude. She crawled to the
+edge and looked over into the dark, gurgling
+water. Up above lay a faint ripple of silver. Here,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_18'></a>18</span>
+also, she could see the moon almost at the zenith,
+and a few flickering stars.</p>
+
+<p>A trifle of courage and renewal of hope now
+came. Her face and hands were scratched and
+bleeding, clothing torn, feet and legs black with
+mud. But these things she neither noticed nor
+felt&#8211;only that blessed bridge of logs that gave
+her safety, and the moon that bade her hope.</p>
+
+<p>Then she began to count her chances. This
+landmark told her that five miles of her desperate
+journey had been covered and she was still alive.
+She began to calculate. How soon would her
+escape be discovered, and who would pursue her?
+Only Pete, her purchaser, she felt sure, and there
+was a possible chance that he might return to his
+cabin before doing so. Or perhaps he might
+sleep late, and thus give her one or two hours
+more of time.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i2'></a><img src='images/illus-021.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old Tomah&#8217;s fancy were rushing and leaping about.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_19'></a>19</span>And now she began to review the usual morning
+movements at Tim&#8217;s Place&#8211;Tim the first
+one up, calling her, then going out to milking;
+the others, slower to arise, getting out and about
+their special duties. Pete, she knew, always
+slept in one of the two empty log cabins which
+were first built there. Her father slept in the
+other or in the barn. Neither would be called,
+she knew&#8211;it was get around in time for breakfast
+at Tim&#8217;s Place or go hungry. And so she
+speculated on her chances of early pursuit. Here
+on this bridge she now meant to remain until the
+first sign of dawn, then push on again with all
+speed. She already had a five-mile start, she was
+weary, footsore, and still faint from the awful
+terrors of her flight; to go on meant to rush
+into the swarm of spites once more, and so she
+lay inert on the hard logs watching, listening,
+calculating.</p>
+
+<p>And now cheered by this trifling hope and
+lessening sense of danger, her past life came back.
+Her childhood in a far-off settlement; the home
+always in a turmoil from the strange men and
+women ever coming and going; the drinking,
+swearing, singing, at all hours of the night, her
+constant fear of them and wonder who they were
+and why they came. There were other features of
+this disturbed life: frequent quarrels between her
+father and mother; curses, tears, and sometimes
+blows, until at last after a night more hideous than
+any other her mother had taken her and fled. Then
+came a long journey to another village and a new
+life of peace and quietness. Here it was all so
+different&#8211;no red-shirted men to be afraid of,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_20'></a>20</span>
+no loud-voiced women drinking with them. She
+became acquainted with other children of her
+own age, was sent to school and taken to church.
+Here, also, her mother began to smile once more,
+and look content. For two years, and the only
+ones Chip cared to recall, she had been a happy
+schoolgirl, and then came a sudden, tragic end
+to it all. Of that she never wished to think. It
+was all so horrible, and yet so mercifully brief.</p>
+
+<p>The one friend life held, her mother, had been
+brought home, wounded to death amid the whirring
+wheels of the mill where she worked; there
+were a few hours of agonized dread as her life
+ebbed away, a whisper or two of love and longing,
+and then the sad farewell made doubly awful by
+her father&#8217;s frowning face and harsh voice. At
+its ending, and in spite of her fears and tears, she
+was now borne away by him. For days they
+journeyed deeper and deeper into a vast wilderness,
+to halt at last at Tim&#8217;s Place.</p>
+
+<p>Like a dread dream it all came back now, as
+she lay there on this one flat spot of security&#8211;the
+bridge&#8211;and listened to the river&#8217;s low murmur.</p>
+
+<p>The moon was lowering now. Already the
+shadow of the stream&#8217;s bordering trees had reached
+her. First the stars vanished, then the moon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_21'></a>21</span>
+faded into a dim patch of light, finally that disappeared,
+a chill breeze swept down from a neighboring
+mountain, and the trees began to moan
+and creak. Then a fiercer blast swept through
+the forest, the great firs and spruces bent and
+groaned and screamed. Surely the spites were
+gathering in force again, and this was their doing.</p>
+
+<p>Once more she began to hear them creeping,
+crawling, over the bridge. They spit, they snarled,
+they growled. The darkness grew more intense,
+no longer could the river&#8217;s course be seen, but
+only a black chasm.</p>
+
+<p>All through her mad flight the wilderness had
+been ghostly and spectral in the moonlight;
+now it had become lost in inky blackness, yet
+alive with demoniac voices. All the goblin
+forms and hideous shapes of Old Tomah&#8217;s fancy
+were rushing and leaping about. Now high up
+in the tree-tops, now deep in the hollows, they
+screamed and shrieked and moaned.</p>
+
+<p>And now, just as this fierce battle of sound and
+spectral shape was at its worst, and Chip, a hopeless,
+helpless mite of humanity, crouched low
+upon the bridge, suddenly a vicious growl reached
+her, and raising her head she saw at the bridge&#8217;s
+end two gleaming eyes!</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_22'></a>22</span><a id='link_2'></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Martin Frisbie</span> and his nephew Raymond
+Stetson, or Ray, were cutting boughs and carrying
+them to two tents standing in the mouth of
+a bush-choked opening into the forest. In front
+of this Angie, Martin&#8217;s wife, was placing tin dishes,
+knives, and forks, upon a low table of boards.
+Upon the bank of a broad, slow-running stream,
+two canoes were drawn out, and halfway between
+these and the table a camp-fire burnt.</p>
+
+<p>Here Levi, Martin&#8217;s guide for many trips into
+this wilderness, was also occupied, intently watching
+two pails depending from bending wambecks,
+a coffee-pot hanging from another, and two frying-pans,
+whose sputtering contents gave forth an
+enticing odor.</p>
+
+<p>Twilight was just falling, the river murmured
+in low melody, and a few rods above a small rill
+entered it, adding a more musical tinkle.</p>
+
+<p>Soon Levi deftly swung one of the pails away
+from the flame with a hook-stick and speared a
+potato with a fork.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_23'></a>23</span>&#8220;Supper ready,&#8221; he called; and then as the rest
+seated themselves at the table, he advanced, carrying
+the pail of steaming potatoes on the hooked
+stick and the frying-pan in his other hand.</p>
+
+<p>The meal had scarce begun when a crackling
+in the undergrowth back of the tent was heard,
+and on the instant there emerged a girl. Her
+clothing was in shreds, her face and hands were
+black with mud, streaks of blood showed across
+cheek and chin, and her eyes were fierce and sunken.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;For God&#8217;s sake give me suthin&#8217; to eat,&#8221; she
+said, looking from one to another of the astonished
+group. &#8220;I&#8217;m damn near starved&#8211;only a bite,&#8221;
+she added, sinking to her knees and extending
+her hands. &#8220;I hain&#8217;t eat nothin&#8217; but roots &#8217;n&#8217; berries
+for three days.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Angie was the first to recover. &#8220;Here,&#8221; she
+said, hastily extending her plate, &#8220;take this.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Without a word the starved creature grasped
+it and began eating as only a desperate, hungry
+animal would, while the group watched her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Don&#8217;t hurry so,&#8221; exclaimed Martin, whose
+wits had now returned. &#8220;Here, take this cup of
+coffee.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Soon the food vanished and then the girl arose.
+&#8220;Sit down again, my poor child,&#8221; entreated Angie,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_24'></a>24</span>
+who had observed the strange scene with moist
+eyes, &#8220;and tell us who you are and where you
+came from.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My name&#8217;s Chip,&#8221; answered the girl, bluntly,
+&#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;m runnin&#8217; away from Tim&#8217;s Place, &#8217;cause
+dad sold me to Pete Bolduc.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Sold&#8211;you&#8211;to&#8211;Pete&#8211;Bolduc,&#8221; exclaimed
+Angie, looking at her wide-eyed. &#8220;What do you
+mean?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He did, sartin,&#8221; answered the girl, laconically.
+&#8220;I heerd &#8217;em makin&#8217; the bargain, &#8217;n&#8217; I fetched
+three hundred dollars.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Martin and his wife exchanged glances.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, and then what?&#8221; continued Angie.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, then I waited a spell, till they&#8217;d turned
+in,&#8221; explained the girl, &#8220;and then I lit out. I
+knowed &#8217;twas sixty miles to the settlement, but
+&#8217;twas moonlight &#8217;n&#8217; I chanced it. I&#8217;ve had an
+awful time, though, the spites hev chased me all
+the way. I was jist makin&#8217; a nestle when I seed
+yer light, an&#8217; I crept through the brush &#8217;n&#8217; peeked.
+I seen ye wa&#8217;n&#8217;t nobody from Tim&#8217;s Place, &#8217;n&#8217; then
+I cum out. I guess you&#8217;ve saved my life. I was
+gittin&#8217; dizzy.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was a brief, blunt story whose directness bespoke
+truth; but it revealed such a pigsty state
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_25'></a>25</span>
+of morality at this Tim&#8217;s Place that the little group
+of astonished listeners could scarce finish supper
+or cease watching this much-soiled girl.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And so your name is Chip,&#8221; queried Angie
+at last. &#8220;Chip what?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Chip McGuire,&#8221; answered the waif, quickly;
+&#8220;only my real name ain&#8217;t Chip, it&#8217;s Vera; but
+they&#8217;ve allus called me Chip at Tim&#8217;s Place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And your father sold you to this man?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He did, &#8217;n&#8217; he&#8217;s a damn bad man,&#8221; replied
+Chip, readily. &#8220;He killed somebody once, an&#8217;
+he don&#8217;t show up often. I hate him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t use swear words,&#8221; returned
+Angie, &#8220;it&#8217;s not nice.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The girl looked abashed. &#8220;I guess you&#8217;d cuss
+if you&#8217;d been sold to such a nasty-looking man as
+Pete,&#8221; she responded. &#8220;He chaws terbaccer &#8217;n&#8217;
+lets it drizzle on his chin, &#8217;n&#8217; he hain&#8217;t but one eye.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Angie smiled, while Martin stared at the girl
+with increased astonishment. He knew who this
+McGuire was, and something of his history, and
+that Tim&#8217;s Place was a hillside clearing far up the
+river, inhabited by an Irish family devoted to the
+raising of potatoes. He had halted there once,
+long enough to observe its somewhat slothful condition,
+and to buy pork and potatoes; but this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_26'></a>26</span>
+tale was a revelation, and the girl herself a greater
+one.</p>
+
+<p>This oasis in the wilderness was fully forty miles
+above here, its only connection with civilization
+was a seldom-used log road which only an experienced
+woodsman could follow, and how this
+mere child had dared it, was a marvel.</p>
+
+<p>But there she was, squat on the ground and
+watching them with big black, pleading eyes.
+There was but one thing to do, to care for her now,
+as humanity insisted, and Angie made the first
+move. It was in the direction of cleanliness; for
+entering the tent, she soon appeared with some
+of her own extra clothing, soap, and towels, and
+bade the girl follow her up the river a few rods.</p>
+
+<p>The moon was shining clearly above the tree-tops,
+the camp-fire burned brightly, and Martin,
+Ray, and Levi were lounging near it when the two
+returned, and in one an astonishing transformation
+had taken place.</p>
+
+<p>Angie had gone away with a girl of ten in respect
+to clothing, her skirt evidently made of gunny
+cloth and reaching but little below her knees, and
+for a waist, what was once a man&#8217;s red flannel
+shirt, and both in rags. Soiled with black mud,
+and bleeding, she was an object pitiable beyond
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_27'></a>27</span>
+words; she returned a young lady, almost, in
+stature, her face shining and rosy, and her eyes so
+tender with gratitude that they were pathetic.</p>
+
+<p>Another change had also come with cleanliness
+and clothing&#8211;a sudden bashfulness. It was
+some time ere she could be made to talk again, but
+finally that wore away and then her story came.
+What a tale it was&#8211;scarce credible.</p>
+
+<p>At first were growing terrors as she plunged
+deeper and deeper into the shadowy forest, the
+brush and logs that tripped her, the mud holes she
+wallowed through, the ever increasing horrors of
+this flight, the blood-chilling cries of night prowlers,
+the gathering darkness while she waited on the
+bridge, the awful moment when she saw two yellow
+eyes watching her, not twenty feet away, her screams
+of agonized fear, and then time that seemed eternity,
+while she expected the next moment to feel
+the fangs of a hungry panther.</p>
+
+<p>How blessed the first dawn of morning had
+seemed, how she ran on and on, until faint with
+hunger she halted to eat roots, leaves, berries&#8211;anything
+to sustain life! The river had been her
+one boon of hope and consolation, and even beyond
+the fear of wild beast had been the dread of pursuit
+and capture by this half-breed. When night
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_28'></a>28</span>
+came, she had crept into a thicket, covering herself
+with boughs; when daylight dawned, she had
+pushed on again, ever growing weaker and oft
+stumbling from faintness.</p>
+
+<p>Hope had almost vanished, her strength had
+quite left her, the last day had been a partial blank
+so far as knowledge of her progress went, but
+filled with eerie sights and sounds. From first to
+last the spites of Old Tomah had kept her company&#8211;by day she heard them, swifter-footed than
+she, in the undergrowth; by night they were all
+about, dodging behind trees, hopping from limb
+to limb, and sometimes snapping and snarling.
+The one supreme moment of joy, oft referred to,
+was when she had seen her rescuers&#8217; camp-fire,
+with human, and possibly friendly, faces about it.</p>
+
+<p>It was a fantastic, weird, almost spookish tale,&#8211;the
+spectres she had seen were so real to her that
+the telling made them seem almost so to the rest,
+and beyond that, the girl herself, so like a young
+witch, with her shadowy eyes and furtive glances,
+added to the illusion.</p>
+
+<p>But now came a diversion, for Levi freshened
+the fire, and at a nod from Angie, Ray brought
+forth his banjo. It was his one pet foible, and it
+went with him everywhere, and now, with time
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_29'></a>29</span>
+and place so in accord, he was glad to exhibit his
+talent. He was not an expert,&#8211;a few jigs and
+plantation melodies composed his repertory,&#8211;but
+with the moonlight glinting through the spruce
+boughs, the river murmuring near, somehow
+one could not fail to catch the quaint humor of
+&#8220;Old Uncle Ned,&#8221; &#8220;Jim Crack Corn,&#8221; and the
+like, and see the two dusky lovers as they floated
+down the &#8220;Tombigbee River,&#8221; and feel the pathos
+of &#8220;Nellie Grey&#8221; and &#8220;Old Kentucky Home.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ray sang fairly well and in sympathy with each
+theme. To Angie and the rest it was but ordinary;
+but to this waif, who never before had heard
+a banjo or a darky song, it was marvellous. Her
+face lit up with keen interest, her eyes grew misty
+at times, and once two tears stole down her
+cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>For an hour Ray was the centre of interest, and
+then Angie arose.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come, Chip,&#8221; she said pleasantly, &#8220;it&#8217;s time
+to go to bed, and you are to share my tent.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d rather not,&#8221; the girl replied bluntly. &#8220;I
+ain&#8217;t fit. I kin jist ez well curl &#8217;longside o&#8217; the
+fire.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Angie insisted and the girl followed her
+into the tent.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_30'></a>30</span>Here occurred another incident that must be
+related. Angie, always devout, and somewhat
+puritanical, was one who never forgot her nightly
+prayer, and now, when ready for slumber, she
+knelt on the bed of fir twigs, and by the light of one
+small candle offered her usual petition, while Chip
+watched her with wide and wondering eyes. As
+might be expected, that waif was mentioned, and
+with deep feeling.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do ye s&#8217;pose God heard ye?&#8221; she queried with
+evident candor, when Angie ceased.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, certainly,&#8221; came the earnest answer;
+&#8220;God hears all prayers.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And do the spites hear &#8217;em?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There are no such creatures as &#8216;spites,&#8217;&#8221; answered
+Angie, severely; &#8220;you only imagine them,
+and what this Indian has told you is superstition.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But I&#8217;ve seen &#8217;em, hundreds on &#8217;em, big and
+little,&#8221; returned the girl, stoutly.</p>
+
+<p>Angie looked at her with pity.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Put that notion out of your head, once for
+all,&#8221; she said, almost sternly. &#8220;It is only a delusion,
+and no doubt told to scare you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And poor Chip, conscious that perhaps she had
+sinned in speech, said no more.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_31'></a>31</span>For a long time Angie lay sleepless upon her
+fragrant bed, recalling the waif&#8217;s strange story
+and trying to grasp the depth and breadth of her
+life at Tim&#8217;s Place; also to surmise, if possible,
+how serious a taint of evil she had inherited. That
+her father was vile beyond compare seemed positive;
+that her mother might have been scarce better
+was probable. No mention, thus far, had
+been made of her; and so Angie reflected upon
+this pitiful child&#8217;s ancestry and what manner of
+heritage she had been blessed or cursed with.
+Some of her attributes awoke Angie&#8217;s admiration.
+She had shown utter abhorrence of this brutal
+sale of herself, a marvellous courage in endeavoring
+to escape it. She seemed grateful for what
+had been done for her, and a partial realization of
+her own unfitness for association with refined
+people. Her speech was no worse than might be
+expected from her life at Tim&#8217;s Place. Doubtless,
+she was unable to read or write. And so Angie
+lay, considering all the pros and cons of the situation
+and of this girl&#8217;s life.</p>
+
+<p>There was also another side to it all, the humane
+one. They were on their way out of the wilderness,
+for a business visit to the nearest settlement,
+intending to return to the woods in a few days&#8211;and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_32'></a>32</span>
+what was to be done with this child of misfortune?</p>
+
+<p>Most assuredly they must protect her for the
+present. But was there any one to whom she
+could be turned over and cared for? It seemed
+possible this brutal buyer of her would follow her
+out of the woods, to abduct her if found, and
+then the moral side of this episode with all its
+abominable possibilities occurred to Angie, who
+was, above all, unselfish and noble-hearted. Vice,
+crime, and immorality were horrible to her.</p>
+
+<p>Here was a self-evident duty thrusting itself
+upon her, and how to meet it with justice to herself,
+her husband, and her own conscience, was a
+problem. Thus dwelling upon this complex situation,
+she fell asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The first faint light of morning was stealing into
+the tent when Angie felt her companion stir. She
+had, exhausted as she doubtless was, fallen asleep
+almost the moment she lay down; but now she was
+evidently awake.</p>
+
+<p>Curious to note what she would do, Angie remained
+with closed eyes and motionless. From the corner
+of the tent where she had curled up the night before,
+the girl now cautiously crept toward the elder
+woman. Inch by inch, upon the bed of boughs,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_33'></a>33</span>
+she moved nearer, until Angie, watching with half-open
+eyes, saw her head lowered, and felt two soft
+warm lips touch her hand.</p>
+
+<p>It was a trifle. It was no more than the act of
+a cat who rubs herself against her mistress or a dog
+who licks his master&#8217;s hand, and yet it settled once
+for all that waif&#8217;s fate and Angie&#8217;s indecision.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_34'></a>34</span><a id='link_3'></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;Women are like grasshoppers&#8211;ye kin never tell which
+way they&#8217;re goin&#8217; to jump.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Levi</span> was starting a fire, Ray washing potatoes,
+and Martin, in his shirt-sleeves, using a towel
+vigorously near the canoes, when Angie and Chip
+emerged that morning; and now while breakfast
+is under way, a moment may be seized to explain
+who these people were and their mission in this
+wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>Many years before, in a distant village called
+Greenvale, two brothers, David and Amzi Curtis,
+had quarrelled over an unfortunate division of inherited
+land. The outcome was that Amzi, somewhat
+misanthropic over the death of his wife, and
+of peculiar make-up, deserted his home and little
+daughter Angeline, and vanished. For many years
+no one knew of his whereabouts, and he was given
+up as dead.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime his child, cared for by a kindly
+woman known as Aunt Comfort, had grown to
+womanhood. About this time a boyhood sweetheart
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_35'></a>35</span>
+of Angeline&#8217;s, named Martin Frisbie, who had
+been gathering wealth in a distant city, invited a
+former schoolmate, now the village doctor in Greenvale,
+to join him on an outing trip into the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>Here something of the history of a notorious outlaw
+named McGuire became known to Martin, and
+more important than that, a queer old hermit was
+discovered, dwelling in solitude on the shore of a
+small lake. Who he was, and why this strange
+manner of life, Martin could not learn, and not
+until later, when he returned to Greenvale to woo
+his former sweetheart once more, did he even guess.
+Here, however, from a description furnished by a
+village nondescript,&#8211;a sort of Natty Bumpo and
+philosopher combined, known as Old Cy Walker,
+who had been Martin&#8217;s youthful companion,&#8211;he
+was led to believe that the queer hermit and the
+long-missing Amzi were one and the same.</p>
+
+<p>Another trip into this wilderness with Old Cy,
+taken to identify the hermit, resulted in proving the
+correctness of the surmise. Then Martin set about
+making this misanthropic recluse more comfortable in
+all ways possible; and then, leaving Old Cy to keep
+him company, he returned to Greenvale and Angie.</p>
+
+<p>A marriage was the outcome of his return to his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_36'></a>36</span>
+native village, and then, with his nephew, Ray, and
+long-tried guide, Levi, as helpers on this unique
+wedding trip, the hermit was visited.</p>
+
+<p>It was hoped that meeting his child once more
+would result in inducing him to abandon his wildwood
+existence and to return to civilization; and
+it did&#8211;partially. He seemed happy to meet his
+daughter again, consented to return with them
+when ready, and after a couple of weeks&#8217; sojourn
+here, the canoes were packed and all set out for
+civilization and Greenvale once more.</p>
+
+<p>But &#8220;home, sweet home,&#8221; albeit it was, as in
+this case, a lonely log cabin in a vast wilderness,
+proved stronger than parental love or aught else;
+and sometime during first night&#8217;s camp on the way
+out, this strange recluse stole away in his canoe
+and returned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s natur,&#8221; Old Cy observed when morning
+came, &#8220;an&#8217; home is the hardest spot in the world
+to fergit. Amzi&#8217;s lived in that old shack all &#8217;lone
+for twenty years. He&#8217;s got wonted to it like a dog
+to his kennel, an&#8217; all the powers o&#8217; the univarse can&#8217;t
+break up the feelin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It seemed an indisputable, if disappointing, fact,
+and Martin led his party back to the hermit&#8217;s home
+once more.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_37'></a>37</span>Another plan was now considered by Martin&#8211;to
+buy the township, or at least a large tract enclosing
+this lake, build a more commodious log cabin for
+the use of himself and his wife, and spend a portion
+of each summer there. There were several reasons
+other than those of affection for this decision.</p>
+
+<p>This lake, perhaps half a mile in diameter, teemed
+with trout. The low mountains enclosing it were
+thickly covered with fine spruce and fir, groves of
+pine with some beech and birch grew in the valleys;
+deer, moose, and feathered game abounded here,
+and best of all, no vandal lumbermen ever encroached
+upon this region.</p>
+
+<p>It was, all considered, a veritable sportsman&#8217;s
+paradise. Most likely a few thousand dollars
+would purchase it, and so, for these collective
+reasons, Martin decided to buy it.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy was left to keep the hermit company;
+Martin, his wife, and Ray, with Levi, started for
+civilization to obtain needed supplies, and had
+been four days upon the way when this much-abused
+waif appeared on the scene. The party
+were journeying in two canoes, one manned by
+Ray, who had already learned to wield a paddle,
+which carried the tents and luggage; while the
+other was occupied by Martin, his wife, and Levi.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_38'></a>38</span>
+The only available seat for the new arrival was in
+Ray&#8217;s canoe, and when breakfast was disposed of
+and the voyagers ready to start, she was given a
+place therein.</p>
+
+<p>The river at this point was broad and of slow
+current, only two days&#8217; journey was needful to reach
+the settlement, and no cause for worry appeared&#8211;but
+Levi felt otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;d best hug the futher shore,&#8221; he observed
+to Ray quietly when the boy pushed off, &#8220;an&#8217;
+don&#8217;t git out o&#8217; sight o&#8217; us.&#8221; &#8220;I ain&#8217;t sartin &#8217;bout
+the outcome o&#8217; this matter,&#8221; he said to Martin later.
+&#8220;I know that half-breed, Bolduc, and he&#8217;s a bad
+&#8217;un. From the gal&#8217;s story he paid big money fer
+her. He don&#8217;t know the meanin&#8217; o&#8217; law, and if
+he follers down the tote road, as I callate he will,
+&#8217;n&#8217; ketches sight o&#8217; her, the first we&#8217;ll know on&#8217;t &#8217;ll
+be the crack o&#8217; a rifle. The wonder to me is he
+didn&#8217;t ketch her &#8217;fore she got to us. He could track
+her faster&#8217;n she could run. I don&#8217;t want to &#8217;larm
+you folks, but I shan&#8217;t feel easy till we&#8217;re out o&#8217; the
+woods.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It wasn&#8217;t reassuring.</p>
+
+<p>But no thought of this came to Ray, at least,
+and these two young people, yielding to the magic
+of the morning, the rippled river that bore them
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_39'></a>39</span>
+onward, the birds singing along the fir-clad banks,
+and all the exhilaration of the wilderness, soon
+reached the care-free converse of youthful friends.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never had nothin&#8217; but work &#8217;n&#8217; cussin&#8217;,&#8221; Chip
+responded, when Ray asked if she never had any
+time she could call her own. &#8220;Tim thinked I
+couldn&#8217;t get tired, I guess. He&#8217;d roust me up fust
+of all &#8217;n&#8217; larrup me if he caught me shirkin&#8217;. Once
+I had a little posey bed back o&#8217; the pig-pen. I fixed
+it after dark an&#8217; mornin&#8217;s when I ketched the
+chance. He ketched me thar one mornin&#8217; a-weedin&#8217;
+it &#8217;n&#8217; knocked me sprawlin&#8217; an&#8217; then stomped all over
+the posies. That night I went out into the woods
+&#8217;n&#8217; begged the spites to git him killed somehow.
+&#8217;Nother time I forgot to put up the bars, an&#8217; the
+cows got into the taters. That night he tied me
+to a stump clus to the bars, an&#8217; left me thar all
+night. I used to be more skeered o&#8217; my dad &#8217;n
+I was o&#8217; Tim, tho&#8217;. He&#8217;d look at me like he hated
+me, an&#8217; say, &#8216;Shut up,&#8217; if I said a word, an&#8217; I &#8217;most
+believed he&#8217;d kill me, just fer nothin&#8217;. Once he
+said he&#8217;d take me out into the woods at night &#8217;n&#8217;
+bait a bear trap with me if he heerd I didn&#8217;t mind
+Tim. I told Old Tomah that, an&#8217; he said if he did,
+he&#8217;d shoot him; but Old Tomah wasn&#8217;t round only
+winters. I hated dad so I&#8217;d &#8217;a&#8217; shot him myself,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_40'></a>40</span>
+I guess, if I cud &#8217;a&#8217; got hold o&#8217; a gun when he wa&#8217;n&#8217;t
+watchin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s awful to have to feel that way toward your own
+father,&#8221; interrupted Ray, &#8220;for he was your father.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I s&#8217;pose &#8217;twas,&#8221; admitted Chip, candidly,
+&#8220;but I never felt much different. I&#8217;ve seen him
+slap mother when she was on her knees a-bawlin&#8217;,
+an&#8217; the way he would cuss her was awful.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you had some friendship from this old
+Indian,&#8221; queried Ray, who began to realize what
+a pitiful life the girl had led; &#8220;he was good to you,
+wasn&#8217;t he?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He was, sartin,&#8221; returned Chip, eagerly; &#8220;he
+used to tell me the spites &#8217;ud fix dad &#8217;fore long, so
+he&#8217;d never show up agin, &#8217;n&#8217; when I got big &#8217;nuff he&#8217;d
+sneak me off some night &#8217;n&#8217; take me to the settlement,
+whar I could arn a livin&#8217;. Old Tomah was
+the only one who cared a cuss fer me. I used to
+bawl when he went away every spring, an&#8217; beg him
+to take me &#8217;long &#8217;n&#8217; help him camp &#8217;n&#8217; cook. I&#8217;d
+&#8217;a&#8217; done &#8217;most anything fer Old Tomah. I didn&#8217;t
+mind havin&#8217; to work all the time fer Tim. I didn&#8217;t
+mind wearin&#8217; clothes made out o&#8217; old duds &#8217;n&#8217;
+bein&#8217; cussed fer not workin&#8217; hard &#8217;nuff. What I
+did mind was not havin&#8217; nobody who cared whether
+I lived or died, or said a good word to me. Sometimes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_41'></a>41</span>
+I got so lonesome, I used to go out in the woods
+nights when &#8217;twas moonlight &#8217;n&#8217; beg the spites to
+help me. I used to think mother might be one on
+&#8217;em &#8217;n&#8217; she&#8217;d keer fer me. I think she was, an&#8217;
+&#8217;twas her as kept me goin&#8217; till I found you folks&#8217;s
+camp. I got awful skeered them nights I was
+runnin&#8217; away, an&#8217; when &#8217;twas so dark I couldn&#8217;t
+see no more, an&#8217; I heerd wildcats yowlin&#8217;, I&#8217;d git
+on my knees &#8217;n&#8217; beg mother to keep &#8217;em away. I
+think she did, an&#8217; allus shall.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Much more in connection with the wild, harsh
+life Chip had led for eight years was now told by
+her. Old Tomah&#8217;s superstition and belief in hobgoblins
+were enlarged upon. Life at Tim&#8217;s Place,
+with all its filth, brutality, and nearly animal existence,
+was described in full; for Chip&#8217;s tongue, once
+loosened, ran on and on, while Ray, spellbound by
+this description, was scarce conscious he was wielding
+a paddle. Never before had he heard such a
+tale, so unusual and so pathetic. Naturally of
+chivalrous and manly nature, it appealed to him as
+naught else could. Then the girl herself, with her
+big, pleading eyes, her queer belief in those woodsy,
+spectral forms she called spites, and her free
+and easy confidence in him, and his sympathy also,
+surprised Ray. Her speech was coarse and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_42'></a>42</span>
+crude&#8211;the vernacular of Tim&#8217;s Place. Now and then
+a profane word crept in; yet it was absolute truth,
+and forceful from its very simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>But another influence, more potent than her
+wrongs, was now appealing to Chip&#8211;her sense of
+joy at her rescue, and with it a positive faith that
+the spites had been the means of her escape.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know they did it,&#8221; she said time and again,
+&#8220;an&#8217; I know mother was one on &#8217;em. I wished I
+cud do suthin&#8217; to show &#8217;em how thankful I am &#8217;n&#8217;
+how happy I am now.&#8221; And Ray, astonished that
+so keen-witted and courageous a girl should have
+such a fantastic belief, made no comment.</p>
+
+<p>A more serious subject was under discussion in
+the other canoe, meantime, as to the future disposition
+of Chip herself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I feel it my duty to take care of her,&#8221; Angie
+said, after relating her conversation with Chip and
+that morning&#8217;s incident. &#8220;She is a homeless, outcast
+waif, needing education and everything else
+to Christianize her. We must bring her to the settlement,
+but to turn her adrift might mean leaving her
+to a life of vice, even if she escapes her brutal father
+and this worse half-breed. Then, again, I am not
+sure that her parentage will bear inspection. She
+has told me something about her earlier life, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_43'></a>43</span>
+about her mother, who evidently loved her. One
+course only seems plain to me,&#8211;to take care of
+and educate this unfortunate.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am willing, my dear,&#8221; responded Martin, who,
+like all new husbands, was ready to concede anything,
+&#8220;only I suggest that you go a little slow.
+You can&#8217;t tell yet what this girl will develop into.
+She has had the worst possible parentage, without
+doubt. Her life at Tim&#8217;s Place, and contact with
+lumbermen or worse, has been no benefit. She is
+grossly ignorant, and may be ill-tempered, and once
+given to understand that you have practically
+adopted her, you can&#8217;t&#8211;or won&#8217;t&#8211;have the
+heart to turn her off. Now we are to return
+to the lake and remain a month, as you know,
+and in the meantime, what will you do with this
+girl?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This was reducing Angie&#8217;s philanthropic impulses
+to a focus, as it were, and it set her thinking. Something
+more of this discussion followed, and finally
+Angie announced her decision.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We must take the girl back with us,&#8221; she said,
+&#8220;and begin her reformation at the camp. If she
+shows any aptitude and willingness to obey, we will
+take her to Greenvale. If not, you must arrange
+to get her into some institution.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_44'></a>44</span>&#8220;And suppose the half-breed finds where she is,
+what then?&#8221; inquired Martin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you say, Levi?&#8221; he added, turning to
+his guide, &#8220;you know this fellow; what will he be
+apt to do?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I s&#8217;pose you know what a panther&#8217;ll do, robbed
+of her cub,&#8221; Levi answered, &#8220;an&#8217; how a bull moose
+acts in runnin&#8217; time, mebbe. Wal, this Pete is
+worse&#8217;n both on &#8217;em biled into one, I callate. If
+you&#8217;re goin&#8217; ter take the gal back, you&#8217;ve got to keep
+her shady, or some day you&#8217;ll find her missin&#8217;.
+Besides, Pete, ez I told ye, don&#8217;t know the meanin&#8217;
+o&#8217; law and is handy with a gun.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Martin did not quite share Levi&#8217;s fears, and
+so Angie&#8217;s decision was agreed to. Levi&#8217;s advice
+to &#8220;keep shady&#8221; was accepted, however, and all
+through that summer&#8217;s somewhat thrilling experiences
+it was the rule of conduct.</p>
+
+<p>When noon came, Levi led the way into a lagoon;
+in a secluded spot at its head dinner was cooked,
+and when the sun was well down and a tributary
+stream was reached, he turned into it, and halted not
+for the night camp until a full half-mile separated
+them from the river.</p>
+
+<p>A certain vague sense of impending danger began
+to impress both Martin and his wife, and the woods
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_45'></a>45</span>
+seemed to hold a one-eyed, malicious villain who
+might appear at any moment. A danger which we
+know actually exists, we can avoid or meet squarely;
+but one merely imaginary becomes irksome and
+really more annoying.</p>
+
+<p>No hint of this was dropped by the three older
+ones, and when the tents were pitched, long before
+twilight, and Martin and Ray had captured a goodly
+string of trout and the camp-fire was alight, this
+wildwood life seemed absolutely perfect, to the
+young folks at least.</p>
+
+<p>Chip also showed one of the best features of her
+training. She wanted to help everybody and do
+everything, and Levi, who always did the cooking,
+was importuned to let her help. Strong as a young
+Amazon, she fetched and carried like a man, and
+the one thing that gladdened her most was permission
+to work.</p>
+
+<p>When supper was over came the lounging beside
+the cheerful fire, and as the shadows thickened,
+forth came Ray&#8217;s banjo once more, and with it the
+light of admiration in Chip&#8217;s eyes.</p>
+
+<p>All that day he had been her charming companion;
+his open, manly face, his bright brown
+eyes, had been ever before her. His well-bred
+ways, so unlike all the men at Tim&#8217;s Place, had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_46'></a>46</span>
+impressed her as those of a youth of eighteen will
+a maid of sixteen; and now, with his voice appealing
+to the best in her, he seemed like Pan of old,
+once more wooing a nymph with his pipes.</p>
+
+<p>No knowledge of this was hers, no consciousness
+of why she was happy came to her. She knew
+what spites were; but the god Pan and Apollo with
+his harp were unknown forms.</p>
+
+<p>Neither did she realize that born in her soul that
+day, on the broad shining river, was a magic impulse
+woven out of heart throbs, and destined to mete out
+to her more sorrow than all else in her life combined.</p>
+
+<p>She had entered the wondrous vale of love whose
+paths are flower-strewn, whose shores are rippled
+with laughter, and whose borders, alas! are ever
+hid in the midst of tears.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_47'></a>47</span><a id='link_4'></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The wilderness allus seems full o&#8217; spectres &#8217;n&#8217; creepin&#8217;
+crawlin&#8217; panthers. Sometimes I think it&#8217;s God, an&#8217; then
+agin, the devil.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Tim&#8217;s Place</span>, this refuge in the wilderness, cleared
+and colonized by Tim Connor, was neither better
+nor worse than such pioneer openings in Nature&#8217;s
+domain are apt to be. Tim, a hardy Irishman of
+sod-hovel and potato-diet ancestors, had been
+blacksmith for a lumber camp on this broad river
+and at its junction with a tributary called the Fox
+Hole years before Chip was born.</p>
+
+<p>When all the adjacent lumber was cut and sent
+down this river, the camp was abandoned, and then
+Tim saw his opening. With his precious winter&#8217;s
+wages he purchased a large tract of this now worthless
+land, induced a robust Bridget, his brother
+Mike, and his consort to join fortunes with him,
+brought in cows, horses, pigs, and poultry, and
+began farming with the lumber camp as domicile.</p>
+
+<p>Another log cabin was soon added, the first crop
+of potatoes sold readily to other lumbermen farther
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_48'></a>48</span>
+in the wilderness, the pigs in a sty adjacent to his
+own throve, the poultry multiplied, children came,
+and the red-shirted men coming into the wilderness
+or going out found Tim&#8217;s Place convenient.</p>
+
+<p>With this added business came an enlargement
+in Tim&#8217;s ideas, the outcome of which was a framed
+house containing a kitchen and dining room and
+half a dozen others of closet-like proportions, furnished
+with box-on-legs beds. It was not a pretentious
+hostelry. Paint, shutters, and carpets were
+absent, benches served for chairs, the only mirror in
+it was eight by twelve inches, and used in common
+by Bridget and Mary. The toilet conveniences
+consisted of a wash-basin in the kitchen sink and
+a &#8220;last year&#8217;s&#8221; towel, used semi-occasionally. A
+long table bare of cloth and set with tinware served
+in the dining room, warmed in winter by a round
+sheet-iron stove; above it usually hung an array
+of socks and mittens, and a capacious cook stove
+half filled the kitchen. It was the crudest possible
+backwoods abode, and yet compared to the log
+cabin first occupied by Tim, it was a palace, and he
+was proud of it.</p>
+
+<p>In autumn swarms of lumbermen halted there,
+content to sleep on the floor if need be. In spring
+they came again, log-driving down stream; later
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_49'></a>49</span>
+a few sportsmen occasionally tried it, and all fared
+alike.</p>
+
+<p>There was no sentiment about Tim. If the
+citified fishermen objected to what they found,
+&#8220;Be gob, you kin kape away,&#8221; he readily told them.
+A quarter for each meal, or a night&#8217;s lodging, was
+the price, whether a bed or the floor was provided,
+and from early spring until frost came, all the occupants
+went barefoot.</p>
+
+<p>When snow had made the sixty miles of log road
+to the nearest settlement passable, Tim invariably
+journeyed hither with horse and bob-sled for clothing
+and supplies.</p>
+
+<p>No knowledge or news from the world reached
+here, unless brought by chance visitors. Sundays
+were an unknown factor, the work of clearing land
+and potato-raising became a continuous performance
+from spring until autumn; and the change
+of seasons, the rise and fall of the river, were the
+only measure of time.</p>
+
+<p>An addition to Tim&#8217;s Place, other than babies
+and pigs, came one fall in an old Indian who, by
+ample presents of game, soon won Tim&#8217;s good-will
+and help in the erection of a log wigwam; but this
+relic of a vanishing race&#8211;reckoned by Tim as partially
+insane&#8211;remained there only winters, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_50'></a>50</span>
+when spring returned, disappeared into the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>There were also two other occasional visitors both
+meriting description. First, a beetle-browed, keen-eyed,
+red-haired man garbed as a hunter, whose
+speech disclosed something of the Scotch dialect,
+and who, presenting Tim with a deer and two
+bottles of whiskey as a peace-offering on his first
+arrival, soon obtained a welcome. He told a plausible
+tale of having been pursued for years by enemies
+seeking his life; how he had been robbed and
+driven away from the settlements; and how two of
+these enemies had even followed him into the woods.
+He had been shot at by them, had killed one in
+self-defence, a price had been set upon his capture,
+dead or alive, and, all in all, he was a sorely abused
+man.</p>
+
+<p>How much of this lurid and fantastic tale Tim
+believed, is not pertinent to this narrative. The
+stranger, calling himself McGuire, was evidently a
+good fellow, since he brought good whiskey, and
+Tim made him welcome.</p>
+
+<p>The facts as to McGuire, however, were somewhat
+at variance with his assertions. He had originally
+been a dive-keeper in a focal city for the lumbering
+interests of this wilderness, had entertained swarms
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_51'></a>51</span>
+of log-drivers just paid off and anxious to spend
+money, and when the law interfered, he retreated
+to a smaller town.</p>
+
+<p>In the interval, strange to say, his moral nature&#8211;or rather immoral&#8211;suffered a brief relapse,
+during which he persuaded an excellent if confiding
+young woman to share his name and infamy.</p>
+
+<p>His second business venture came to grief, however,
+and his wife deserted him and met with a fatal
+accident a few years after. In the meantime he
+had kept busy, exercising his peculiar talents and
+tastes in an individual manner, and evading officers,
+and his ways of money-getting were peculiar and
+diverse.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese Exclusion Act had just become operative,
+and the admission of Celestials into the land
+of the free, and of good wages, became a valuable
+matter. McGuire conceived the brilliant, if grewsome,
+idea of passing &#8220;Chinks&#8221; over the border
+line concealed in coffins. It worked admirably, and
+with accomplices on both sides to obtain certificates
+and permits, and take charge of the &#8220;corpses,&#8221;
+a few dozen almond-eyed immigrants at two hundred
+dollars each obtained admission.</p>
+
+<p>In time, this budding industry met an official
+quietus, and McGuire, with several warrants out
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_52'></a>52</span>
+against him, took to the woods. He still continued
+business, however, in various ways. He smuggled
+liquor over the border by canoe loads, hiding it
+at convenient points, to exchange for log-drivers&#8217;
+wages. He killed game out of season, and dynamited
+trout and salmon on spawning beds for the
+same purpose; and, handy with cards, did not
+disdain their use in lumbering camps.</p>
+
+<p>In all and through all his various ways of money-getting,
+one purpose had governed him&#8211;that of
+money-saving. Trusting no one, as he had reason
+to feel no one trusted him, he continually emulated
+the squirrels and hid his savings in the woods. A
+trapper and hunter by instinct, as well as thief,
+dive-keeper, smuggler, poacher, and gambler, he
+had in his wanderings discovered a cave in a slate
+ledge upon the shores of a small lake far into the
+wilderness. It was while trapping here that he
+found this by the aid of a fox which, while dragging
+a trap, became caught and held in a crevasse while
+attempting to enter it.</p>
+
+<p>The fox thus secured, McGuire made further
+investigation, and by removing a loose slab of slate,
+he was enabled to enter a roomy cavern, or rather
+two small ones partially separated by slate walls.
+A little light entered the larger one, through a seam
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_53'></a>53</span>
+crossing it lengthwise. They were free from moisture
+at this time&#8211;early autumn&#8211;and so secluded
+was the spot that McGuire decided at once to use
+this place as a hiding-spot for his money. The
+entrance could be kept concealed, its location served
+his purpose, and, fox-like himself, he decided to
+occupy what he would never have found without
+the aid of a fox, believing no one else would find it.
+It could also be used as a domicile for himself as
+well. A fireplace of slate could be built in it, an
+escape for smoke might be formed through the crack,
+if enlarged, and so this cave&#8217;s possibilities increased.</p>
+
+<p>There were still several other advantages. This
+lake was surrounded by precipitous mountains; no
+lumbermen, even, were likely to operate there; the
+stream flowing out of it soon crossed the border line,
+finding escape into the St. Lawrence valley at a point
+some twenty miles distant; a short carry enabled
+him to reach the Fox Hole which flowed by Tim&#8217;s
+Place, and so this served as an excellent whip road
+in case of pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>His transient asylum at Tim&#8217;s Place also served
+as a vantage point in another way.</p>
+
+<p>Here all who entered this portion of the wilderness
+invariably halted,&#8211;officers and wardens as well,&#8211;and
+as by this time McGuire had become an outlaw
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_54'></a>54</span>
+murderer, with a reward offered for his capture,
+this outpost was of double advantage.</p>
+
+<p>Caution was a strong point in his make-up, yet
+he was daring as well. He still visited the settlements
+occasionally, to sell furs and obtain ammunition
+and whiskey; and when he, as ill luck would have
+it, happened there at the time his child was left
+motherless, some malign impulse led him to take
+her to Tim&#8217;s Place and leave her in servitude there.</p>
+
+<p>There was also another chance caller at this outpost&#8211;a half-breed trapper and hunter named Bolduc,
+who had established himself in a lone cabin on the
+Fox Hole, some ten miles up from Tim&#8217;s Place. He
+was a repulsive minor edition of McGuire. A
+wildcat, with laudable intentions, had essayed
+putting an end to his career, and succeeded to the
+extent of one eye and some blood. He had been
+the accomplice and partner of McGuire in many
+a whiskey-smuggling trip. He also dealt in this
+pernicious, but valuable, fluid, was a poacher ever
+ready to pot-hunt for a lumbering camp in winter,
+or find a moose yard on snow-shoes, after slaughtering
+the helpless inmates of which, he would sell them
+to the busy wood-choppers.</p>
+
+<p>He, too, could be classed as brigand of the wilderness,
+and while no warrants or charges against him
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_55'></a>55</span>
+were rife, he felt it wise to avoid meeting minions
+of the law. Tim&#8217;s Place was a convenient point
+to obtain information as to location of new lumber
+camps or possible visits of officers. An occasional
+bottle of whiskey secured Tim&#8217;s favor. The evenings
+and meals there impressed Pete with the advantages
+of owning a woman&#8217;s services, and as Chip
+matured in domestic and other possibilities, a desire
+to possess her began to increase his visits.</p>
+
+<p>His wooing met no response, however, and when
+persisted in always awoke on her part the same
+instinct once displayed toward him by a wildcat.</p>
+
+<p>Then recourse to her father&#8217;s greed for money
+was taken, with results as described.</p>
+
+<p>The only thing that saved poor Chip from pursuit
+and capture, however, was his wholesome fear
+of her finger-nails, and the belief that it was best
+to let her father earn the balance of her price and
+fetch her, as agreed. Acting upon this theory,
+Pete had departed from Tim&#8217;s Place at dawn, to
+await her arrival at his cabin, quite oblivious of the
+fact that his bird had flown.</p>
+
+<p>All that long day he waited in great expectancy.
+Toward evening he returned to Tim&#8217;s Place to learn
+that Chip had not been seen since the previous
+night; that her father had also vanished without
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_56'></a>56</span>
+comment. That he was a party to this trick and
+deception, and, after securing his three hundred
+dollars, had taken her away, was Pete&#8217;s conclusion,
+and he vowed a murderous revenge. He returned
+to his cabin, little realizing that twenty miles away
+poor Chip, faint with hunger and the terror of a
+vast wilderness, was fighting her way through bush,
+bramble, and swamp in a mad attempt to escape.</p>
+
+<p>Neither did Tim, while regretting the loss of his
+slave, know or care that one of his occasional visitors
+was now a mortal enemy of the other, and that
+a tragedy, dark and grewsome, would be its outcome.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_57'></a>57</span><a id='link_5'></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The size o&#8217; a toad is allus reg&#8217;lated by the size o&#8217; the
+puddle.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>A week</span> was spent by Martin and his party at the
+settlement, during which he acquired the title to
+township forty-four, range ten, which included the
+little lake near the hermit&#8217;s hut, and made a foursquare-mile
+tract about it.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, thanks to Angie, secured a simple outfit of
+apparel and&#8211;surprising fact&#8211;evinced excellent
+taste in its selection, thereby proving that eight years
+of isolation and a gunny-sack and red-shirt garb
+had not obliterated the deepest instinct of woman.</p>
+
+<p>To Levi, Martin&#8217;s woodwise helper, was left the
+selection of fittings for the new camp. A couple of
+husky Canucks were engaged to bring them in in
+a bateau, and then the party started on its return.</p>
+
+<p>Only one incident of importance occurred during
+the wait at this village known as Grindstone. Angie
+and Chip had just left the only store there, in front
+of which a group of log-drivers had congregated,
+when Angie, glancing back, saw that one of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_58'></a>58</span>
+group was following them. She quickened her
+pace, and so did he, until just as they turned into a
+side street, he passed them, halted, and turned about.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, I&#8217;m damned if &#8217;tain&#8217;t Chip, an&#8217; dressed
+like a leddy,&#8221; he exclaimed, as they drew near.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hullo, Chip,&#8221; he added, as they passed, &#8220;when
+did you strike luck?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Chip made no response and he muttered again,
+&#8220;Wal, I&#8217;m damned, jest like a leddy!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was annoying, especially to Angie, and neither
+of the two realized how soon this blunt log-driver&#8217;s
+discovery would reach Tim&#8217;s Place.</p>
+
+<p>And now, leaving the bateau to follow, the party
+started once more on their journey into the wilderness.
+No sight or sign of pursuit from the half-breed
+had been thus far observed. A few idle
+lumbermen in the village&#8211;the only visible connection
+between the vast forest and a busy world&#8211;were little thought of, as their canoes crept
+slowly up the narrowing river and gave no hint of
+interference from this low brute to any one except
+Levi.</p>
+
+<p>He, however, seldom speaking, but ever acting,
+kept watch and ward continually. At every bend
+of the stream his eyes were alert to catch the first
+sight of a down-coming canoe in time to conceal
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_59'></a>59</span>
+Chip, as he decided must be done. When night
+camps were made, a site at the head of the lagoon
+or up some tributary stream was selected, and while
+not even hinting his reason for this, he felt it wise.
+As they drew near to Tim&#8217;s Place, it began to occur
+to Martin that Chip&#8217;s presence had best be concealed
+until that point was passed. He also desired to
+learn the situation there. He had always halted
+at this clearing in all his up-river journeys, so far,
+usually to buy pork and potatoes, and he now intended
+to do so again. He also felt it imperative
+to conceal Chip in Ray&#8217;s canoe, before they reached
+Tim&#8217;s Place, and let Ray paddle slowly on while
+the halt was made. But Levi dissented.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tain&#8217;t best,&#8221; he said, &#8220;to let Tim know there&#8217;s
+two canoes of us and one not stoppin&#8217;. It&#8217;ll make
+him s&#8217;picious o&#8217; suthin, &#8217;n&#8217; what he &#8217;spects, Pete&#8217;ll
+find out. I callate we&#8217;d best pass thar in the night,
+leave the wimmen above, &#8217;n&#8217; you &#8217;n&#8217; I go back &#8217;n&#8217; git
+what we want.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what about the Canucks following us with
+the bateau?&#8221; returned Martin. &#8220;They&#8217;ll tell who
+is with us, won&#8217;t they?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They didn&#8217;t see us start,&#8221; answered Levi, &#8220;&#8217;n&#8217;
+can&#8217;t swear wimmen came. We&#8217;ll say we&#8217;re alone, &#8217;n&#8217;
+bein&#8217; so&#8217;ll make it plausible, &#8217;n&#8217; you might say we&#8217;re
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_60'></a>60</span>
+goin&#8217; to build a camp &#8217;n&#8217; &#8217;nother season fetch our
+wimmen in.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But how about our men, on the return trip, after
+finding we have women at the camp?&#8221; rejoined
+Martin. &#8220;They will be sure to tell all they know
+on the way back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve got to keep the wimmen shady, an&#8217; fool
+&#8217;em,&#8221; answered Levi. And so his plan was adopted.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the early hours of morning when the
+two canoes crept noiselessly past Tim&#8217;s Place. The
+stars barely outlined the river&#8217;s course, the frame
+dwelling, log cabin, and stump-dotted slope back
+of them. All the untidiness existent about this
+dwelling was hid in darkness, and only the faint
+sounds and odors betrayed these conditions. But
+every eye and ear in the two canoes was alert, paddles
+were dipped without sound, and Chip&#8217;s heart
+was beating so loudly that it seemed to her Tim and
+all his family must be awakened. Her recent escape
+from this spot and all the reasons forcing it, the
+fear that both her father and the half-breed might
+even now be there, added dread; and not until a
+bend hid even the shadowy view of this plague spot
+did she breathe easier.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was nigh skeered to death,&#8221; she whispered
+to Ray when safety seemed assured, &#8220;an&#8217; if ever
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_61'></a>61</span>
+Pete finds I&#8217;m up whar the folks is goin&#8217;, I&#8217;m a
+goner.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, we&#8217;ll take care of you,&#8221; returned that boy,
+with the boundless confidence of youth; &#8220;my uncle
+can shoot as well as any one, and then Old Cy is up
+at the camp, and he&#8217;s a wonder with a rifle. Why,
+I&#8217;ve seen him hit a crow a half-mile off!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Smoke was ascending from the chimney, and the
+rising sun was just visible when Martin and Levi
+returned to Tim&#8217;s. Mike was out in an enclosure,
+milking; Tim was back of the house, preparing the
+pigs&#8217; breakfast. The pigs were squealing, and a
+group of unwashed children were watching operations,
+when Martin appeared. A pleasant &#8220;Good
+morning&#8221; from him and a gruff one from Tim was
+the introduction, and then that stolid pioneer started
+for the sty. Not even the unusual event of a caller
+could hinder him from the one duty he most enjoyed,&#8211;the care of his beloved swine.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have some nice thrifty pigs,&#8221; began Martin,
+when the pen was reached, desiring to placate Tim.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They are thot,&#8221; he returned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My guide and I are on our way into the woods,
+to build a camp,&#8221; continued Martin, anxious to
+have his errand over with, &#8220;and we halted to buy a
+few potatoes of you and some pork. I have a couple
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_62'></a>62</span>
+of men following with a bateau,&#8221; he continued,
+after pausing for a reply which did not come; &#8220;they
+will be along in a day or two with most of our supplies;
+but I felt sure I could get some extra good
+pork of you and some choice potatoes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You kin thot same,&#8221; replied Tim, his demeanor
+obviously softening under this flattery, and so business
+relations were established.</p>
+
+<p>Martin had intended asking some cautious question
+regarding Chip or her father; but Tim&#8217;s surly
+face, his unresponsive manner, and a mistrust of
+its wisdom prevented. He was blunt of speech,
+almost to the verge of insolence, and the arrival of
+Martin with all his polite words evoked not a vestige
+of welcome; and yet back of those keen gray
+eyes of his a deal of cunning might lurk, thought
+Martin.</p>
+
+<p>Two slovenly women peered out of back door and
+window while the interview was in progress. Mike
+came and looked on in silence; two of the oldest
+children were down by the canoe where Levi waited;
+the rest, open-eyed and astonished, seemed likely
+to be trodden on by some one each moment. When
+the stores were secured and paid for, and Martin
+had pushed off with Levi, he realized something of
+the life Chip must have led there.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_63'></a>63</span>He had intended not only to obtain potatoes,
+but some information of value. He obtained the
+goods, paying a thrifty price, also a good bit of
+cold shoulder, and that was all.</p>
+
+<p>But Levi, shrewd woodsman that he was, fared
+better.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I larned Chip&#8217;s gone off with old McGuire,&#8221;
+he asserted with a quiet smile when they were well
+away, &#8220;an&#8217; that Pete&#8217;s swearin&#8217; murder agin him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And how?&#8221; responded Martin, in astonishment.
+&#8220;I felt that silence was golden with that
+surly chap, and didn&#8217;t ask a question.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad,&#8221; rejoined Levi. &#8220;I wanted to tell you
+not to, and I&#8217;ve larned all we want. Children
+are easy to pump, an&#8217; I did it &#8217;thout wakin&#8217; a hint
+o&#8217; &#8217;spicion. Tim&#8217;s folks all believe Chip&#8217;s gone
+with her dad. Pete thinks so, an&#8217; is watchin&#8217;
+for him with a gun, I &#8217;spect, an&#8217; if so, the sooner
+they meet, the better.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was gratifying news to Martin, and when the
+other canoe was reached, the two again pushed on,
+with Martin, at least, feeling that the ways of Fate
+might prove acceptable.</p>
+
+<p>Three days more were consumed in reaching
+the lake now owned by him, for the river was low,
+carries had to be made around two rapids, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_64'></a>64</span>
+when at last the sequestered, forest-bordered sheet
+of water was being crossed, Martin wished some
+titanic hand might raise an impassable barrier
+about his possessions.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy&#8217;s joy at their return was almost hilarious.
+To a man long past the spasmodic exuberance
+of youth, loving nature and the wild as few do,
+the six months here with the misanthropic old
+hermit, then a month of more cheerful companionship,
+followed by the departure of Martin and Angie,
+made this forest home-coming doubly welcome.</p>
+
+<p>But Chip&#8217;s appearance, and the somewhat thrilling
+episode of her escape from Tim&#8217;s Place and
+her rescue, astonished him. Like all old men
+who are childless, a young girl and her troubles
+touched a responsive chord in his heart, and on
+the instant Chip&#8217;s unfortunate condition found
+sympathy. Her bluntly told story, with all its
+details, held him spellbound. He laughed over
+her description of spites, and when she seemed
+hurt at this seeming levity, he assured her that
+spites were a reality in the woods&#8211;he had seen
+hundreds of them. It was not long ere he had
+won her confidence and good-will, as he had Ray&#8217;s,
+and then he took Martin aside.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That gal&#8217;s chaser&#8217;s bin here &#8217;bout a week ago,&#8221;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_65'></a>65</span>
+he said, &#8220;an&#8217; the worst-lookin&#8217; cuss I ever seen.
+I know from his description &#8217;twas him. He kept
+quizzin&#8217; me ez to how long we&#8217;d been here, if I knew
+McGuire, or had seen him lately, until I got sorter
+riled &#8217;n&#8217; began to string him. I told him finally
+that I&#8217;d been foolin&#8217; all &#8217;long; that McGuire was a
+friend o&#8217; mine; that he&#8217;d been here a day or two
+afore, borrowed some money &#8217;n&#8217; lit out fer Canada,
+knowin&#8217; there was a bad man arter him. Then
+this one-eyed gazoo got mad, real mad, &#8217;n&#8217; said
+things, an&#8217; then he cleared out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>When Martin explained the situation, as he
+now did, Old Cy chuckled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tain&#8217;t often one shoots in the dark &#8217;n&#8217; makes
+a bull&#8217;s eye,&#8221; he said.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think you and I had better keep mum about
+this half-breed&#8217;s call,&#8221; Martin added quietly,
+&#8220;and if Angie mentions it, you needn&#8217;t say that
+you know who he was. It will only make my
+wife and the girl nervous.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The two tents were now pitched at the head of
+a cove, some rods away from the hermit&#8217;s hut,
+and well out of sight from the landing, and to
+these both Angie and Chip were assured they
+must flee as soon as the expected bateau entered
+the lake, and remain secluded until it had departed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_66'></a>66</span>In a way, it was a ticklish situation. All knowledge
+that this waif was with Martin&#8217;s party must
+be kept from Tim&#8217;s Place and this half-breed,
+or she wouldn&#8217;t be safe an hour; and until the
+Canucks had come and gone, she must be kept
+hidden. Another and quite a serious annoyance
+to Martin was the fact that he had counted on
+these two men as helpers in cutting and hauling
+logs for this new camp. Only man-power was
+available, and to move logs a foot in diameter and
+twenty feet long, in midsummer, was no easy
+task; but Levi, more experienced in camp-building,
+made light of it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ll cut the logs we need, clus to the lake,&#8221;
+he said, &#8220;float &#8217;em &#8217;round, &#8217;n&#8217; roll &#8217;em up on skids.
+It&#8217;s easy &#8217;nough, &#8217;n&#8217; we don&#8217;t need them Canuckers
+round a minit.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was four days of keen suspense to Chip before
+they appeared. Neither she nor Angie left the
+closed tent while they remained over night, or
+until they had been gone many hours, and then
+every one felt easier.</p>
+
+<p>The ringing sound of axes now began to echo over
+the rippled lake, logs were towed across with canoes,
+a cellar under the new cabin site was excavated, and
+home-building in the wilderness went merrily on.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_67'></a>67</span>While the men worked, Angie and Chip were
+not idle. Not only did they have meals to prepare
+over a rude outdoor fireplace, but they gathered
+grass and moss for beds, wove a hammock and
+rustic chair seats out of sedge grass, and countless
+other useful aids.</p>
+
+<p>Chip was especially helpful and more grateful
+than a dog for any and all consideration. Not
+a step that she could take or a bit of work that she
+could do was left to Angie; her interest and do-all-she-could
+desire never flagged, and from early
+morn until the supper dishes were washed and
+wiped, Chip was busy.</p>
+
+<p>But Martin, and especially Levi, had other
+causes for worry than those which camp-building
+entailed. The fact that this &#8220;Pernicious
+Pete,&#8221; as Angie had once called him, would
+soon learn of their presence here, and hating
+all law-abiding people, as such forest brigands
+always do, would naturally seek to injure them,
+was one cause. Then, there were so many ways
+by which he could do harm. A fire started at
+one corner of the hut at midnight, the same Indian-like
+malice applied to their two tents, the stealing
+of their canoes or the gashing of them with
+a hunting-knife, and countless other methods of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_68'></a>68</span>
+venting spite, presented themselves. In a way,
+they were helpless against such a night-prowling
+enemy. Over one hundred miles separated them
+from civilization and all assistance; an impassable
+wilderness lay between. The stream and
+their canoes were the only means of egress. These
+valuable craft were left out of sight and sound
+each night, on the lake shore, and so their vulnerability
+on all sides was manifest.</p>
+
+<p>Then, Chip&#8217;s presence was an added danger.
+If once this brute found that she was here, there
+was no limit to what he would do to secure her
+and take revenge. They had smuggled her past
+Tim&#8217;s Place, but concealment here was impossible;
+if ever this half-breed returned, she would
+be discovered, and then what?</p>
+
+<p>And so by day, while Martin and Levi were
+busy with hut-building, or beside the evening
+camp-fire when Ray picked his banjo and Chip
+watched him with admiring glances, these two
+guardians had eyes and ears ever alert for this
+expected enemy.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_69'></a>69</span><a id='link_6'></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;It allus makes me coltish to see two young folks a-weavin&#8217;
+the thread o&#8217; affection.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>There</span> were three people at Birch Camp,&#8211;as
+Angie had christened it,&#8211;namely, herself, Ray,
+and Chip, who did not share Martin&#8217;s suspicion
+of danger. A firm belief that a woman&#8217;s aid in
+such a complication was of no value, coupled with
+a desire to save her anxiety, had kept his lips closed
+as to the situation.</p>
+
+<p>Life here at all hours soon settled itself into a
+certain daily routine of work, amusement, and,
+on Chip&#8217;s part, of study. True to her philanthropic
+sense of duty toward this waif, Angie had
+at once set about her much-needed education.
+A reading and spelling book suitable for a child
+of eight had been secured at the settlement, and
+now &#8220;lessons&#8221; occupied a few hours of each day.</p>
+
+<p>It was only a beginning, of course, and yet with
+constant reminders as to pronunciation, this was
+all that Angie could do. The idioms of Tim&#8217;s
+Place, with all its profanity, still adhered to Chip&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_70'></a>70</span>
+speech. This latter, especially, would now and
+then crop out in spite of all admonitions; and so
+Angie found that her pupil made slow progress.</p>
+
+<p>There was also another reason for this. Chip
+was afraid of her, and oft reproved for her lapses
+in speech, soon ceased all unnecessary talk when
+with Angie.</p>
+
+<p>But with Ray it was different. He was near
+her own age, the companionship of youth was
+theirs, and with him Chip&#8217;s speech was ready
+enough. This, of course, answered all the purposes
+of benefit by assimilation, and so Angie was
+well satisfied that they should be together. Beyond
+that she had no thought that love might
+accrue from this association.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, while fair of face and form, and at a sentimental
+age, was so crude of speech, so grossly
+ignorant, and so allied to the ways and manners
+of Tim&#8217;s Place, that, according to Angie&#8217;s reasoning,
+Ray&#8217;s feelings were safe enough. He was
+well bred and refined, a happy, natural boy now
+verging upon manhood. In Greenvale he had
+never shown much interest in girls&#8217; society, and
+while he now showed a playmate enjoyment of
+Chip&#8217;s company, that was all that was likely to
+happen.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_71'></a>71</span>But the winged god wots not of speech or manners.
+A youth of eighteen and a maid of sixteen
+are the same the world over, and so out of sight
+of Angie, and unsuspected by her, the by-play of
+heart-interest went on.</p>
+
+<p>And what a glorious golden summer opportunity
+these two had!</p>
+
+<p>Back of the camp and tending northwest to
+southeast was a low ridge of outcropping slate,
+bare in spots&#8211;a hog-back, in wilderness phrase.
+Beyond this lay a mile-long &#8220;blow-down,&#8221; where
+a tornado had levelled the tall timber. A fire,
+sweeping this when dry, left a criss-cross confusion
+of charred logs, blueberry bushes had followed
+fast, and now those luscious berries were
+ripening in limitless profusion. Every fair day
+Ray and Chip came here to pick, to eat, to hear
+the birds sing, to gather flowers and be happy.</p>
+
+<p>They watched the rippled lake with now and
+then a deer upon its shores, from this ridge; they
+climbed up or down it, hand in hand; they
+fished in the lake or canoed about it, time and
+again; and many a summer evening, when the
+moon served, Chip handled the paddle, while Ray
+picked his banjo and sang his darky songs all
+around this placid sheet of water.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_72'></a>72</span>And what a wondrous charm this combination
+of moonlight on the lake and love songs softened
+and made tender by the still water held for Chip!
+As those melodies had done on that first evening
+beside the camp-fire, so now they filled her soul
+with a strange, new-born, and wonderful sense of
+joy and gladness.</p>
+
+<p>The black forest enclosing them now was sombre
+and silent. Spites still lurked in its depths and
+doubtless were watching; but a protector was
+near, his arm was strong; back at the landing
+were kind friends, and the undulating path of
+silvered light, the round, smiling orb above, the
+twinkling stars, and this matchless music became
+a new wonder-world to her.</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes glistened and grew tender with pathos.
+She had no more idea than a child why she was
+happy. Each day sped by on wings of wind,
+each hour, with her one best companion, the most
+joyful, and so, day by day, poor Chip learned the
+sad lesson of loving.</p>
+
+<p>But never a word or hint of this fell from her
+lips. Ray was so far above her and such a young
+hero, that she, a homeless outcast, tainted by the
+filth and service of Tim&#8217;s Place, could only look
+to him as she did to the moon.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_73'></a>73</span>They laughed and exchanged histories. Ofttimes
+he reproved her speech. They fished, picked
+berries, and worked together like two big children,
+and only her wistful eyes told the other why they
+were wistful.</p>
+
+<p>Martin, busy at camp-building and watching
+ever for an enemy&#8217;s coming, saw it not. Angie
+was as obtuse; the old hermit, misanthropic and
+verging into dotage, was certainly oblivious, and
+so no ripples of interest disturbed these workers.</p>
+
+<p>Such conditions were as sunshine to flowers in
+aiding the two young lovers, so this forest idyl
+matured rapidly. Chip, perhaps more imaginative
+than Ray, since most of her education had
+been the weird superstition of Old Tomah, felt
+most of its emotional force, though unconscious
+of the reason.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I dunno why I feel so upset all the time lately,&#8221;
+she said one afternoon to Ray as, returning from
+the berry field, they halted on top of the ridge to
+scan the lake below. &#8220;Some o&#8217; the time I feel
+so happy I want to sing, &#8217;n&#8217; then I feel jes&#8217; t&#8217;other
+way, &#8217;n&#8217; like cryin&#8217;. When the good spell is on,
+everything looks so purty, &#8217;n&#8217; when I come on to
+a bunch o&#8217; posies, then I feel I must go right down
+on my knees &#8217;n&#8217; kiss &#8217;em. When I was at Tim&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_74'></a>74</span>
+Place, I never thought about anything &#8217;cept to
+get my work done &#8217;n&#8217; keep from gettin&#8217; cussed &#8217;n&#8217;
+licked. I was scart, too, most o&#8217; the time, &#8217;n&#8217; kept
+feelin&#8217; suthin awful was goin&#8217; to happen to me.
+Now that&#8217;s &#8217;most gone, but I feel a heartache in
+place on&#8217;t. I allus hev a spell o&#8217; feelin&#8217; so every
+mornin&#8217; when I wake up &#8217;n&#8217; hear the birds singin&#8217;.
+They &#8217;fect me so that I&#8217;m near cryin&#8217; &#8217;fore I git up.
+You &#8217;n&#8217; Mis&#8217; Frisbie &#8217;n&#8217; everybody&#8217;s been so good
+to me, I guess it&#8217;s made me silly. Then thar&#8217;s
+&#8217;nother thing worries me, an&#8217; that&#8217;s goin&#8217; to the
+settlement whar you folks is from. I feel I kin
+sorter earn my keepin&#8217; here, but I s&#8217;pose I can&#8217;t
+thar, &#8217;n&#8217; that bothers me. If only you &#8217;n&#8217; all the
+rest was goin&#8217; to stay here all the time &#8217;n&#8217; I could
+work some, same as I do now, an&#8217; be with you odd
+spells &#8217;n&#8217; evenin&#8217;s, I&#8217;d be so happy. It &#8217;ud be
+jest like the spot Old Tomah said we&#8217;re goin&#8217; to
+when we die. He used to tell how &#8217;twas summer
+thar all the time, with game plenty, berries ripe,
+flowers growin&#8217;, too, all the year &#8217;round, &#8217;n&#8217; birds
+singin&#8217;. He believed thar was two places somewhar:
+one for white folks and one fer Injuns; that
+when we died we turned into spites, stayed &#8217;round
+till we got revenge for everything bad done us, or
+got a chance to pay up what good we owed for.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_75'></a>75</span>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know where we go to when we quit
+this world, and neither does anybody else, I believe,&#8221;
+Ray answered philosophically, and scarce
+understanding Chip&#8217;s mood. &#8220;I believe, as Old
+Cy does, that the time to be happy is when we are
+young and can be; that when we are ready to leave
+this world is time enough for another one. As
+to your worrying about your going to Greenvale,&#8221;
+he added confidently, and encircling Chip&#8217;s waist
+with one arm, &#8220;why, you&#8217;ve got me to look out
+for you, and then Angie won&#8217;t begrudge you your
+keep, so don&#8217;t think about that.&#8221; And then this
+young optimist, quite content with what the gods
+had provided in this maid of sweet lip and appealing
+eye, assured her she had everything to make
+her happy, including himself for companion; that
+all her moody spells were merely memories of Tim&#8217;s
+Place, best forgotten, and much more of equally
+tender and silly import.</p>
+
+<p>Not for one instant did he realize the growing
+independence and self-reliance of this wilderness
+waif, or how the first feeling that she was a burden
+upon these kind people would chafe and vex her
+defiant nature, until she would scorn even love,
+to escape it.</p>
+
+<p>Just now the tender impulse of first love was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_76'></a>76</span>
+all Ray felt or considered. This girl of sweet
+sixteen and utter confidence in him was so enthralling
+in spite of her crude speech and lack of education,
+her kisses were so much his to take whenever
+chance offered, and himself such a young hero in
+her sight, that he thought of naught else.</p>
+
+<p>In this, or at least so far as his reasoning went,
+they were like two grown-up children entering a
+new world&#8211;the enchanted garden of love. Or
+like two souls merged into one in impulse, yet
+in no wise conscious why or for what all-wise
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>For them alone the sun shone, birds sang, leaves
+rustled, flowers bloomed, and the blue lake rippled.
+For them alone was all this charming chance
+given, with all that made it entrancing. For
+them alone was life, love, and lips that met in
+ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>Oh, wondrous beatitude! Oh, heaven-born
+joy! Oh, divine illusion that builds the world
+anew, and building thus, believes its secret safe!</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy, wise old observer of all things
+human, from the natural attraction of two children
+to the philosophy of content, saw and understood.</p>
+
+<p>Not for worlds would he hint this to Angie or
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_77'></a>77</span>
+Martin. Full well he knew how soon this &#8220;weavin&#8217;
+o&#8217; the threads o&#8217; affection,&#8221; would be frowned
+upon by them; but he loved children as few men
+do.</p>
+
+<p>This summer-day budding of romance would
+end in a few weeks, these two were happy now&#8211;let
+them remain so, and perhaps in Chip&#8217;s case it
+might prove the one best incentive to her own
+improvement.</p>
+
+<p>And now as he watched them day by day, came
+another feeling. Homeless all his life so far, and
+for many years a wanderer, these two had awakened
+the home-building impulse in his. He could
+not have a home himself, he could only help them
+to one in the future, and to that end and purpose
+he now bent his thought.</p>
+
+<p>The weeks there with Ray had opened Old
+Cy&#8217;s heart to him. Even sooner, and with greater
+force, had Chip&#8217;s helpless condition made the
+same appeal, and as he watched her wistful eyes
+and willing ways, in spite of her speech and in
+spite of her origin, he saw in her the making of a
+good wife and mother. Her heritage, as he now
+guessed, was of the worst, her education was yet
+to be obtained; but for all that, a girl&#8211;no, a
+child&#8211;of sixteen who would dare sixty miles of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_78'></a>78</span>
+wilderness alone to save herself from a shameful
+fate, was of the metal and fibre to win, and more
+than that, deserved the best that life afforded.</p>
+
+<p>How he could at present aid her, he saw not.
+A few years of help and time to study must be
+given her, and as Old Cy realized how much must
+be done for her and how uncertain it was whether
+Angie would find time, or be willing to do it, then
+and there he determined to share that duty with
+her.</p>
+
+<p>It was midsummer when Martin and his party
+returned to the lake with Chip. In two weeks
+the new log cabin&#8211;a large one, divided into three
+compartments&#8211;was erected and ready for occupation,
+and so convenient and picturesque a wildwood
+dwelling was it that a brief description may
+be tolerated.</p>
+
+<p>All log cabins are much alike&#8211;a square enclosure
+of unhewn logs thatched with saplings and
+chinked with mud and moss. A low door of
+boards or split poles is the usual entrance, with
+one small window for light; its floor may be of
+small split logs or mother earth, and at best it is
+a cramped, cheerless hovel.</p>
+
+<p>But Martin&#8217;s was a more pretentious creation.
+Its location, well out on the birch-clad point, back
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_79'></a>79</span>
+of which stood the hermit&#8217;s hut, commanded a
+view of the lake. A group of tall-stemmed spruce,
+amid which it stood, gave shade, yet allowed observation.
+It was of oblong shape, with a wide piazza
+of white birch poles and roof of same; two four-pane
+windows to each room gave ample light;
+a small Franklin stove had been brought for the
+sitting room, and a cook stove occupied the &#8220;lean-to&#8221;
+cook room back of the main cabin. Beds,
+chairs, and benches were fashioned from the plentiful
+white birch stems, and floor and doors were
+of planed boards.</p>
+
+<p>It was but a crude structure, compared to even
+the humblest of civilized dwellings; and yet with
+all its fittings conveyed into this wilderness in one
+bateau, and with only axes, a saw, and hammer
+for tools, as was the case, it was a marvel.</p>
+
+<p>Working as all the men had done from dawn
+until dark to complete this cabin, no recreation
+had been taken by any one except Ray and Chip;
+and now Martin, a keen sportsman, felt that his
+turn had come. The trout were rising night and
+morn all over the lake, partridges so tame that
+they would scarce fly were as plenty as sparrows,
+a half-dozen deer could be seen any time along
+the lake shore&#8211;in fact, one had already furnished
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_80'></a>80</span>
+them venison&#8211;and so Martin now anticipated
+some relaxation and sport.</p>
+
+<p>But Fate willed otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>One of Old Cy&#8217;s first and most far-sighted bits
+of work, after being left with the hermit the previous
+autumn, had been the erection of an ice-house
+out of large saplings. It stood at the foot of a
+high bank on the north of the knoll and close to
+the lake, and here, out of the sunshine, yet handy
+to fill, stood his creation. Its double walls of
+poles were stuffed with moss, its roof chinked with
+blue clay, a sliding door gave ingress, and even
+now, with summer almost gone, an ample supply
+of ice remained in it.</p>
+
+<p>In the division of duties among these campers,
+Levi usually started the morning fire while Old
+Cy visited the ice-house for anything needed. One
+morning after the new cabin was completed, he
+came here as usual.</p>
+
+<p>A fine string of trout caught by Martin and
+Ray the day before were hanging in this ice-house,
+and securing what was needed, Old Cy
+closed the door and turned away. As usual
+with him, he glanced up and down the narrow
+beach to see if a deer had wandered along there
+that morning, and in doing so he now saw, close to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_81'></a>81</span>
+the water&#8217;s edge and distinctly outlined in the damp
+sand, the print of a moccasined foot.</p>
+
+<p>It was of extra large size, and as Old Cy bent
+over it, he saw it had recently been made. Glancing
+along toward the head of this cove, he saw
+more tracks, and two rods away, the sharp furrow
+of a canoe prow in the sand.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s that pesky half-breed, sure&#8217;s a gun,&#8221; he
+muttered, stooping over the track, &#8220;fer a good
+bit o&#8217; his legs was turned up to walk on, and he
+wore moccasins t&#8217;other day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Curious now, and somewhat startled, he looked
+along where the narrow beach curved out and
+around to the landing, and saw the tracks led
+that way. Then picking his way so as not to
+obscure them, he followed until not three rods
+from the new cabin they left the beach and were
+plainly visible behind a couple of spruces, in the
+soft carpet of needles, which was crushed for a
+small space, where some one had stood.</p>
+
+<p>Returning to camp, Old Cy motioned to Levi
+and Martin. All three returned to the ice-house,
+looked where the canoe had cut its furrow, took
+up the trail to its ending beside the two trees, and
+then glanced into one another&#8217;s eyes with serious,
+sobered, troubled faces.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_82'></a>82</span>And well they might; for the evening previous
+they had all been grouped upon the piazza of this
+new cabin until late, while scarce three rods away
+a spying enemy, presumably this half-breed, had
+stood and watched them.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_83'></a>83</span><a id='link_7'></a>CHAPTER VII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;Blessed be them that &#8217;spects nothin&#8217;, they won&#8217;t git
+fooled.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Christmas Cove</span> was never disturbed by aught
+except small boats, and few of them. It was a
+long, crescent-shaped arm of the sea, parallel to
+the ocean, and separated from it by a spruce-clad
+cliff; its placid surface scarcely more than rippled
+or undulated outside, and so shallow was it that
+each ebb tide left its sandy bottom bare.</p>
+
+<p>A stream found devious way along this crescent
+when the outflow left it bare. Mottled minnows,
+schools of white and green smelts, crabs of all
+sorts and sizes, swam and sported up and down
+this broad, shallow brook while the tide was
+away, and few of human kind ever watched
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Alongside this cove and inward a dozen or more
+brown houses and a few white ones faced its curving
+shore, a broad street with many elms and ruts
+between which the grass grew separated the houses
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_84'></a>84</span>
+and cove, and a small white church with a gilt
+fish for weather-vane on its steeple stood midway
+of these dwellings.</p>
+
+<p>A low range of green hills to the northward of
+this village shut off the wintry winds, at the upper
+end of the street a stream from a cleft in the hills
+crossed it, and here stood a mill, its roof green
+with moss, its clapboards brown and whitened
+with mill dust, the log dam above it half obscured
+by willows. To the right of this a short flume
+was entirely hidden by alders, and above the dam
+lay a pond, entirely covered with green lily-pads,
+and dotted by white blossoms all summer.</p>
+
+<p>Beside the mill and nearer the roadway stood
+an ancient dwelling, also moss-coated; two giant
+elms shaded it, and the entire impression conveyed
+by the mill&#8217;s drowsy rumble and splashing
+wheel on a hot August afternoon was&#8211;find a
+shady spot and take a nap.</p>
+
+<p>These were the summer conditions existent at
+Christmas Cove. The winter ones may be left
+undescribed.</p>
+
+<p>Just beyond where the mill stream crossed the
+road the highway divided, one fork following the
+trend of these hills to where a railroad crossed
+them, ten miles away; the other, running close
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_85'></a>85</span>
+to the upper and marshy end of Christmas Cove
+to where a spile bridge connected the two uplands
+and thence over to another village called Bayport.
+This, the larger of the two, had once contained a
+shipyard, now idle, a score of its dwellings were
+vacant, and the two hundred or more of its population
+existed by farming, fishing, lobster-catching,
+and a small factory devoted to the production of
+sardines duly labelled with a French name.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas Cove, however, was more respectable,
+with its hundred residents, mostly retired sea captains
+with an income, and no litter of lobster pots
+or nets to obstruct its one long, narrow wharf
+which reached out to deep water at the mouth of
+the cove. A few small pleasure craft were tethered
+to the wharf, and gardens, cows, and poultry
+were merely diversions here.</p>
+
+<p>One other income it had, however, which was considered
+less plebeian than Bayport&#8217;s&#8211;the money a
+score of city-bred people left each summer.</p>
+
+<p>Keeping boarders was all right at Christmas Cove.
+It did not smack of trade and commerce. No
+smoke of engines, no dust of coal, no noise of hammer
+and saw, were parts of it. No odor from a canning
+factory, no wrack of dismantled boats, tarred nets,
+and broken traps, was connected with it. The
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_86'></a>86</span>
+dwellings at Christmas Cove were roomy, few children
+were now a part of its population&#8211;scarce
+enough to fill the one schoolhouse presided over by
+Mr. Bell, and so each season a few dozen of the
+uneasy horde, always anxious to leave home and
+board somewhere, came here.</p>
+
+<p>A daily stage line&#8211;an ancient carryall drawn by
+one sleepy horse&#8211;connected this village with the
+railroad. Its church bell called the faithful to
+Thursday evening prayer-meeting and Sunday service
+with unfailing regularity. Its one general store
+and post-office combined, was the evening rendezvous
+for a score of sea captains&#8211;grizzled hulks
+who had sailed into safe harbor here at last, and who
+watched the weather, discussed the visitors, and
+swapped yarns year in and year out.</p>
+
+<p>Here also, many years before, when Bayport was
+more prosperous, the threads of a romance had been
+woven, and two brothers, Judson and Cyrus Walker,
+born at Bayport, and sailing out of it, had paid court
+to two sisters, Abigail and Amanda Grey, here at
+Christmas Cove.</p>
+
+<p>It was, as such sailors&#8217; courtships ever are, intermittent.
+Six, eight, and sometimes twelve months
+marked its interims, until finally only one brother,
+Judson, returned to announce a shipwreck in mid-ocean,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_87'></a>87</span>
+a separation of their crew in two boats, and
+Abbie Grey, whom Cyrus had smiled upon, was left
+to wait and watch and hope.</p>
+
+<p>In time, also, Judson and &#8220;Mandy&#8221; joined fortunes.
+In time, and after many voyages, during
+which he vainly tried to find some tidings of his
+brother, Judson, now Captain Walker, gave up the
+sea, and with wife and two young sons retired
+inland, purchased an abandoned farm in a sequestered
+valley, and began another life.</p>
+
+<p>Another mating had also occurred at Christmas
+Cove, for Abbie, the other sister and the sweetheart
+of Cyrus, giving him up for lost, finally consented to
+share the ancestral home of Captain Bemis&#8211;once
+a sailor and now the miller, who had exchanged the
+sea&#8217;s perils for that peaceful vocation.</p>
+
+<p>His father had ground grist here for a lifetime, and
+passed on. His mother still survived when Abbie
+Grey, once the belle of the village and a boarding-school
+graduate, married Captain Bemis, twice her
+age, and her old-time romance became only a
+memory.</p>
+
+<p>No children came to fill this great, cheerless house
+with laughter. The old mother was laid away in
+due time, Abbie, once a handsome girl, grew portly
+and became Aunt Abbie to neighboring children,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_88'></a>88</span>
+and finally all the village; and disappointed as she
+had cause to be, she turned her thoughts to good
+works and religion.</p>
+
+<p>But Cyrus, adrift in an open boat with half the
+crew, was finally rescued by a whaler, after starvation
+had left him almost an imbecile. A four-year,
+compulsory voyage to southern seas followed; then
+another wreck and a year on an island, and then a
+chance meeting with another sailor from Bayport,
+and from whom he learned two unpleasant facts,&#8211;first
+that his sweetheart, Abbie Grey, was married;
+and secondly that his brother had been lost at sea.</p>
+
+<p>One was true, of course, and somewhat disheartening
+to Cyrus; the other, as discomforting, but not
+true. It was simply a case of mistaken identity,
+his own disappearance being confounded with that
+of his brother.</p>
+
+<p>This story served the purpose of so affecting
+Cyrus that he resolved never to set foot in either
+Christmas Cove or Bayport, and also never to allow
+any one there to know that he was alive.</p>
+
+<p>From now on, also, he deserted the sea and became
+a wanderer. He first lived in the wilderness, where
+as trapper and hunter and lumberman he learned
+the woodsman&#8217;s habits; and when mid-life was
+reached, having become sceptical of all things, he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_89'></a>89</span>
+finally settled down at Greenvale. Here, loving
+children and the woods, fields, brooks, and Nature
+more than raiment, religion, and respectability, he
+became a village nondescript, a social outcast, and&#8211;Old Cy Walker.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_90'></a>90</span><a id='link_8'></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The poor &#8217;n&#8217; pious kin callate the crumbs fallin&#8217; from the
+rich man&#8217;s table&#8217;ll be few &#8217;n&#8217; skimpy.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>An</span> enemy we can meet in the open need not appall
+us; but an enemy who creeps up to us by day, or
+still worse by night, in a vast wilderness, becomes a
+panther and an Indian combined.</p>
+
+<p>Such a one had spied upon Martin&#8217;s camp that
+night, and all the tales of this half-breed&#8217;s cunning
+and fierce nature, told by Levi, were now recalled.
+Like a human brute whose fangs were tobacco-stained,
+whose one evil eye glared at them out of
+darkness, the half-breed had now become a creeping,
+crawling beast, impossible to trail, yet certain
+to bide his time, seize Chip, or avenge her loss upon
+her protectors.</p>
+
+<p>Now another complication arose as Martin, Old
+Cy, and Levi left the spot where this enemy had
+watched them&#8211;what to do about Angie and the
+girl? From the first warning from Levi that they
+were in danger from the half-breed, Martin had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_91'></a>91</span>
+avoided all hint of it to them. Now they must be
+told, and all peace of mind at once destroyed.
+Concealment was no longer possible, however, and
+when Angie was told, her face paled. Her first
+intuition, and as the sequel proved, a wise one, was
+for them to at once pack up and quit the woods as
+speedily as possible.</p>
+
+<p>But Martin was of different fibre. To run away
+like this was cowardly, and besides he cherished
+only contempt for a wretch who had played the rôle
+of this fellow, and was so vile of instinct. With
+no desire to do wrong, he yet felt that if sufficient
+provocation and the need of self-defence arose, the
+earth, and especially this wilderness, would be well
+rid of such a despicable creature.</p>
+
+<p>Then Levi&#8217;s advice carried weight.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to &#8217;scape him,&#8221; he said, &#8220;by
+startin&#8217; out o&#8217; the woods now. Most likely he&#8217;s
+got his eye on us this minute. He knows every
+rod o&#8217; the way out whar we&#8217;d be likely to camp.
+He&#8217;d sure follow, an&#8217; if he didn&#8217;t cut our canoes to
+pieces some night, he&#8217;d watch his chance &#8217;n&#8217; grab
+the gal &#8217;n&#8217; make off under cover o&#8217; darkness. We&#8217;ve
+got a sort o&#8217; human panther to figger on, an&#8217; shootin&#8217;
+under such conditions might mean killin&#8217; the gal.
+We&#8217;ve got to go out sometime, but I don&#8217;t believe
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_92'></a>92</span>
+in turnin&#8217; tail fust go-off, &#8217;n&#8217; we may get a chance to
+wing the cuss, like ez not,&#8221; and the glitter in Levi&#8217;s
+eyes showed he would not hesitate to shoot this
+half-breed if the chance presented itself.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy&#8217;s opinion is also worth quoting:&#8211;&#8220;My
+notion is this hyena&#8217;s a coward, &#8217;n&#8217; like all
+sich&#8217;ll never show himself by daylight. He knows
+we&#8217;ve got guns &#8217;n&#8217; know how to use &#8217;em. The
+camp&#8217;s as good as a fort. One on us kin allus be
+on guard daytimes, an&#8217; when it&#8217;s time to go out&#8211;wal,
+I think we ought to hev cunnin&#8217; &#8217;nuff &#8217;mongst
+us to gin one hyena the slip. Thar&#8217;s one thing
+must be done, though, &#8217;n&#8217; that is, keep the gal
+clus. &#8217;Twon&#8217;t do to let her go over the hog-back
+arter berries, or canoein&#8217; round the lake no
+more.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now began a state of semi-siege at Birch
+Camp.</p>
+
+<p>Chip was kept an almost prisoner, hardly ever
+permitted out of Angie&#8217;s sight. One of the men,
+always with rifle handy, remained on guard&#8211;usually
+Old Cy, and for a few nights he lay in ambush
+near the shore, to see if perchance this enemy would
+steal up again.</p>
+
+<p>With all these precautions against surprise, came
+a certain feeling of defiance in Martin. With Ray
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_93'></a>93</span>
+for companion he went fishing once more, and with
+Levi as pilot he cruised about for game.</p>
+
+<p>Only a few more weeks of his outing remained,
+and on sober second thought, he didn&#8217;t mean to let
+this sneaking enemy spoil those.</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy never relaxed his vigil. This waif of
+the wilderness and her pitiful position appealed to
+him even more than to Angie, and true to the nature
+that had made all Greenvale&#8217;s children love him, so
+now did Chip find him a kind and protecting father.</p>
+
+<p>With rifle always with him, he took her canoeing
+and fishing; sometimes Angie joined them, and so
+life at Birch Camp became pleasant once more.</p>
+
+<p>A week or more of happiness was passed, with no
+sight or sign of their enemy, and then one morning
+when Old Cy had journeyed over to the ice-house,
+he glanced across the lake to a narrow valley through
+which a stream known as Beaver Brook reached the
+lake, and far up this vale, rising above the dense
+woods, was a faint column of smoke.</p>
+
+<p>The morning was damp, cloudy, and still&#8211;conditions
+suitable for smoke-rising, and yet so faint
+and distant was this that none but the keen, observant
+eyes of a woodsman would have noticed it.
+Yet there it was, a thin white pillar, clearly outlined
+against the dark green of the foliage.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_94'></a>94</span>Old Cy hurried back, motioned to Levi, and the
+two watched it from the front of the camp. Martin
+soon joined them, then Angie and Chip, and all
+stood and studied this smoke sign. It was almost
+ludicrous, and yet not; for at its foot must be a fire,
+and beside it, doubtless, the half-breed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Can you locate it?&#8221; queried Martin of his
+guide, as the delicate column of white slowly
+faded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s purty well up the brook,&#8221; Levi answered;
+&#8220;thar&#8217;s a sort of Rocky Dundar thar, &#8217;n&#8217; probably
+a cave. I callate if it&#8217;s him, he&#8217;s s&#8217;pected a storm,
+&#8217;n&#8217; so sneaked to cover.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now, as if to prove this, a few drops of rain
+began to patter on the motionless lake; thicker,
+faster they came, and as the little group hurried to
+shelter, a torrent, almost, descended. For weeks
+not a drop of rain had fallen here. Each morn the
+sun had risen in undimmed splendor, to vanish at
+night, a ball of glorious red.</p>
+
+<p>But now a change had come. Wind followed
+the rain, and all that day the storm raged and roared
+through the dense forest about. The lake was
+white with driving scud, the cabin rocked, trees
+creaked, and outdoor life was impossible. When
+night came, it seemed a thousand demons were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_95'></a>95</span>
+wailing, moaning, and screeching in the forest, and
+as the little party now grouped around the open
+stove in the new cabin watched it, the fire rose and
+fell in unison with the blasts.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s the spites,&#8221; whispered Chip to Ray. &#8220;They
+allus act that way when it&#8217;s stormin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The next day the gale began to lessen, and by
+night the moon, now half full, peeped out of the
+scurrying clouds. At bedtime it was smiling serenely,
+well down toward the tree-tops, and Chip&#8217;s
+spites had ceased their wailing.</p>
+
+<p>Fortunately, however, Martin&#8217;s quest for game
+had been successful. A saddle of venison, a dozen
+or more partridges, and two goodly strings of trout
+hung in cold storage.</p>
+
+<p>But utter and almost speechless astonishment
+awaited Old Cy at the ice-house when he visited it
+the next morning, for the venison was gone, not a
+bird remained, and one of the two strings of trout
+had vanished.</p>
+
+<p>In front, on the sand, was the same tell-tale moccasin
+tracks.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, by the Great Horn Spoon! if that cuss
+hain&#8217;t swiped the hull business,&#8221; Old Cy ejaculated,
+as he looked in and then at the tracks. &#8220;Crossed
+over last night,&#8221; he added, noting where a canoe had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_96'></a>96</span>
+cut its furrow, &#8220;an&#8217; steered plumb for my ice-house!
+The varmint!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Martin was angry, thoroughly angry, at the
+audacious insolence of the theft, and the thought
+that just now this sneaking half-breed was doubtless
+enjoying grilled venison and roast partridge in some
+secure shelter. It also opened his eyes to the fact
+that this chap would hang about, watching his
+chance, until they started out of the wilderness, and
+then capture the girl if he could. For a little while
+Martin pondered over the situation and then announced
+his plans.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s law, and officers to execute it,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;if a sufficient reward be offered; and to-morrow you
+and I, Levi, will start for the settlement and fetch
+a couple in. I&#8217;ll gladly give five hundred dollars
+to land this sneak behind the bars. If he can&#8217;t be
+caught, we can at least have two officers to guard us
+going out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>All that day he and Levi spent in hunting. Another
+deer was captured, more birds secured, and
+when evening came plans to meet the situation were
+discussed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You or Ray must remain on guard daytimes
+near the cabin,&#8221; Martin said to Old Cy. &#8220;My
+wife and Chip had better keep in it, or near it most
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_97'></a>97</span>
+of the time; and both of you must sleep there nights.
+One or the other can fish or hunt, as needed. We
+must be gone a week or more, even if we have good
+luck; but fetching the officers here is the best plan
+now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Levi was up early the next morning, and had the
+best canoe packed for a hurry trip ere breakfast was
+ready. No tent was to be taken, only blankets, a
+rifle, a bag of the simplest cooking utensils, pork,
+bread, and coffee. A modest outfit&#8211;barely enough
+to sustain life, yet all a woodsman carries when a
+long canoe journey with many carries must be taken.</p>
+
+<p>There were sober faces at the landing when Martin
+was ready to start,&#8211;Chip most sober of all,&#8211;for
+now she realized as never before how serious a
+burden she had become.</p>
+
+<p>No time was wasted in good-bys. Martin
+grasped the bow paddle, and with &#8220;Old Faithful&#8221;
+Levi wielding the stern one, they soon crossed the
+lake and vanished at its outlet.</p>
+
+<p>And now, also, for the first time, Angie realized
+how much the presence of these two strong and
+resourceful men meant to her. All that day she and
+Chip clung to the cabin, while Old Cy, a long, lanky
+Leatherstocking, patrolled the premises, rifle in hand.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We hain&#8217;t a mite o&#8217; cause to worry,&#8221; he said,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_98'></a>98</span>
+when nightfall drew near. &#8220;That pesky varmint&#8217;s
+a coward, &#8217;n&#8217; knows guns are plenty here, an&#8217; we
+folks handy in usin&#8217; &#8217;em. I&#8217;ve rigged a fish line to
+the ice-house door, so it&#8217;ll rattle some tinware in the
+cabin if he meddles it again. I sleep with one eye
+&#8217;n&#8217; both ears open, an&#8217; if he comes prowlin&#8217; round
+night-times, he&#8217;ll hear bullets whizzin&#8217; an&#8217; think
+Fourth o&#8217; July&#8217;s opened up arly.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But for all his cheerful assurance, time passed
+slowly, and a sense of real danger oppressed Angie
+and Chip as well. Ray shared it also. He was not
+as yet hardened to the wilderness, and like all who
+are thus tender, its vast sombre solitude seemed
+ominous.</p>
+
+<p>Only the hermit, with his moonlike eyes and impassive
+ways, showed no sign of trouble. What
+this half-breed wanted, other than food, he seemed
+not to understand; and while he helped about the
+camp work and followed Old Cy like a dog, he was
+of no other aid.</p>
+
+<p>One, two, three days of watchful guard and
+evenings when even Old Cy&#8217;s cheerful philosophy
+or Ray&#8217;s banjo failed to dispel the gloom, and then,
+just as the sun was setting once again, a canoe with
+one occupant was seen to enter the lake and head
+for the landing.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_99'></a>99</span><a id='link_9'></a>CHAPTER IX</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The more I see o&#8217; the world, the better I like the
+woods.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Martin&#8217;s</span> journey to the settlement was a rushing
+one. The first day they wielded paddles without
+rest, and aided by the current made rapid progress.
+Both carries were passed before sunset, a halt made
+for a supper of frizzled pork, coffee, and hard tack;
+then on again by moonlight, and not until wearied
+to the limit at almost midnight did they pause, and
+hiding themselves in the entrance to an old tote
+road, they slept the sleep of weariness.</p>
+
+<p>Tim&#8217;s Place was sighted the next day, and now,
+at Levi&#8217;s suggestion, Martin lay down in the canoe
+as they passed it, concealed beneath a blanket.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s best to be keerful,&#8221; Levi said, when proposing
+this; &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t trust Tim a minute. Most
+likely he&#8217;s found out whar the gal is, an&#8217; knows what
+Pete&#8217;s up to. The two are cahoots together, &#8217;n&#8217; if
+Tim saw you an&#8217; I both leavin&#8217;, no tellin&#8217; what&#8217;d
+happen.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The journey from here on was slower, as no current
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_100'></a>100</span>
+aided, and yet in three days and nights of
+paddling, Martin and Levi covered that hundred-mile
+journey and reached the settlement.</p>
+
+<p>A stage and rail journey, consuming one day and
+night more, enabled Martin to reach the man he
+wanted&#8211;a well-informed and fearless officer named
+Hersey, and then, securing an assistant and a warrant
+for one Pete Bolduc, on the charge of theft,
+the three returned to the settlement where Levi had
+waited.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad to get track of this half-breed,&#8221; Hersey
+said on the way. &#8220;He has been the pal of the notorious
+McGuire for many years, and besides has been
+smuggling whiskey into lumber camps and slaughtering
+game out of season all the time. Like
+McGuire, he is hard to locate. No guide or lumberman
+dare betray him, and so it&#8217;s a fruitless task
+to try to catch either. We have been after this
+McGuire for years. He killed one deputy and
+wounded another, as you may have heard. This
+Bolduc is a cat of the same color, but less courageous,
+I fancy, and yet as hard to catch. I think, for
+the sake of your guide,&#8221; he added, &#8220;we&#8217;d better not
+enter the woods together. You two go on, saying
+nothing. My mate and I will say we are on a pleasure
+trip, and follow and overtake you in a few hours.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_101'></a>101</span>
+This will protect your man, and evade suspicion.
+Even these people at the settlement are half-hearted
+in aiding an officer. Most of them are fearful of
+house or barn burning if they give any information
+to us, a few are in secret league with these outlaws;
+and so you see our position.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Martin saw, and marvelled that any of the simple,
+honest dwellers at this small settlement, law-abiding
+as they seemed, would either aid or warn so red-handed
+a criminal as McGuire.</p>
+
+<p>That fear of consequences might influence them,
+was possible, and yet all the more reason for
+assisting the law in ridding the forest of two such
+criminals.</p>
+
+<p>But Martin, thorough sportsman that he was, and
+keen to all the world&#8217;s affairs, understood but little
+of the conditions existent in the wilderness, or about
+the lives and morals of those who find a living
+thus.</p>
+
+<p>He knew, as all do, that a few thousand lumbermen
+entered each autumn, and, much to his regret,
+made steady inroads toward its despoilment. He
+knew, also, that these men included many of excellent
+habits&#8211;sober, industrious workers with families
+which they cheerfully supported, and that there
+were also many among them whose sole ambition
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_102'></a>102</span>
+was to earn a few hundred dollars in a season of
+hard work, that they might spend it in a few weeks,
+or even days, of drunken debauchery.</p>
+
+<p>He was well aware that a few wandering hunters
+and trappers plied their calling here, and many of
+a mixed occupation, guiding sportsmen like himself
+in season, were engaged in lumbering or farming
+between times. This mixed and transient population,
+he knew, were neither better nor worse than
+the average of such pioneers&#8211;good-natured and
+good-hearted, though somewhat lax in speech and
+morals.</p>
+
+<p>What he did not know, however, was that a few
+unscrupulous and disreputable men, half gamblers,
+half dive-keepers, followed these lumbermen into
+camp as ostensible hunters and trappers, but really
+gamblers, ready to turn a trick at cards, convoy a
+keg of whiskey in, or follow a moose on snow-shoes,
+kill and sell him, as occasion offered. Or that,
+when spring opened the streams, these same itinerant
+purveyors of vice spotted their possible victims,
+as a bunco man does a rural &#8220;good thing&#8221; visiting
+the metropolis, and when they reached town or
+city, steered them where harpies waited to share
+the spoil. A brief explanation of these facts were
+furnished to Martin by Warden Hersey, when,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_103'></a>103</span>
+after overhauling him, the parties joined about one
+camp-fire.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We have,&#8221; Hersey said, &#8220;in the case of this
+McGuire, a fair sample of the outcome liable to
+follow or attach to a man who makes a business of
+preying upon the vices and follies of the lumbering
+class. It is a sort of evolution in law-evasion and
+opportunity, encouraged and aided by the animosity
+which is sure to arise between the lumberman and us,
+whose duty it is to enforce the fish and game laws.
+These lumbermen, or a majority of them, feel and
+believe that the forest and all it contains is theirs by
+natural right; that no law forbidding them to obtain
+all the fish and game they can, is just; that such laws
+are enacted and accrue for the sole benefit of city
+sportsmen who, like yourself, come here for rest and
+recreation. It is all a wrong conclusion, as we know,
+and yet it exists. Now come these leeches like
+McGuire, who prey upon this hard-working class.
+Such as McGuire foster the prejudice and antagonism
+of the lumbermen in all ways possible, arguing
+that moose and deer are the natural perquisites of
+those who go into the woods for a livelihood, and
+belong to them as much as the trees which they have
+paid stumpage to cut. Also that we who come in
+to execute the laws are interlopers, who draw pay
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_104'></a>104</span>
+for the sole purpose of robbing them of their rights.
+Of course, we receive no welcome at a lumbering
+camp, and not one iota of information as to what is
+going on or where a law-breaker may be found.
+More than that, they will protect the leeches who
+fatten on them in every way possible, even after, as
+in McGuire&#8217;s case, they become murderers and outlaws,
+with a price set upon their capture. And here
+comes in the factor of terrorism. A few of these
+lumbermen might give information from a desire
+to aid the law, or to obtain a reward, did they not
+know that to do so would expose them to the inevitable
+fate of all betrayers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It is a community of interest, a sort of freemasonry
+that exists between these lumbermen and
+all who thrive upon their labors and hardships.
+Now this McGuire has preyed upon them for years,
+a notorious example of dive-keeper, gambler,
+smuggler, and pot-hunter. He is now in hiding
+somewhere in this wilderness, or, maybe, creeping
+up some stream with a canoe load of liquor bought
+in some Canadian town. He will meet and be welcomed
+by any lumber-cutting party just making
+camp next fall, sell them liquor at exorbitant prices,
+shoot and sell them venison, and when the snow is
+deep enough, he will follow and find moose yards,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_105'></a>105</span>
+and do a wholesale slaughter act, and not satisfied
+with this, will absorb any and all money these lumbermen
+have left by card games. And yet the
+moment I enter the woods to arrest him, their
+camps are closed to me, and word of my coming is
+passed along to others. The guides even, who are
+at the beck and call of you sportsmen, are, many
+of them, in secret sympathy with such as McGuire;
+or if not, dare not give any clews, and many a wild-goose
+chase has resulted from following their supposed
+information. Some of the wisest among
+them are beginning to realize that they must cooperate
+with us in the protection of fish and game,
+or their occupation will be gone. But even those
+sensible fellows&#8211;and they are increasing&#8211;hate
+to become informer, fearing consequences.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There is still another side to this game situation,&#8221;
+continued Hersey, filling and lighting his pipe, &#8220;and
+this is our laws, or rather, the selfishness of our lawmakers.
+We have plenty of laws&#8211;and good
+ones. We impose a license tax upon all non-residents
+for the privilege of shooting or fishing. We
+limit the season and number of moose, deer, or trout
+which may be taken. This license, which is all
+right, produces an annual fund sufficient to employ
+ten wardens, where the State only employs one.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_106'></a>106</span>
+The result is that this vast wilderness is so poorly
+patrolled that a game warden is as much of a rarity
+as a white deer. Now and then one may be seen
+canoeing up or down some main stream, or loafing
+a week or two at some backwoods farm and having
+a good time. One may certainly be found at all
+points of egress; but a portion of the wilderness&#8211;the
+greater way-back region&#8211;is rarely visited by
+wardens.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There is still one more point, and that is the pay
+which wardens receive. It is so small that capable,
+honest men cannot be obtained for what the State
+allows; and considering the large sums raised from
+this license tax, it is a mere pittance. The result
+is, we have to employ a class of men, many of whom
+are no respecters of the law themselves, or who may
+be bribed.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was a full and complete explanation of the conditions
+then existing in the wilderness, and as Martin
+glanced at &#8220;Old Faithful&#8221; Levi lounging on his
+elbow, he understood why that astute guide had
+always avoided all possible reference to McGuire.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This half-breed, Bolduc, is another sample of
+his class,&#8221; continued Hersey, &#8220;and while we have
+no criminal charge, we can prove we know he is
+a pot-hunter, and I&#8217;ll be glad to nab him, for an
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_107'></a>107</span>
+example. I judge he is lurking about your camp,
+watching a chance to abduct this girl, and while it&#8217;s
+an unusual case, it may serve our purpose nicely&#8211;a
+sort of bait, useful in alluring him into our hands.
+How we can catch him, however, is not an easy
+problem. He knows the forest far better than we
+do; every stream, lake, defile, or cave is familiar to
+him, and, cunning as a fox, all pursuit would be
+useless. Our only hope is to patrol the woods
+about your camp as hunters, or watch for another
+night visit, and halt him, at the muzzle of a rifle.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now Martin turned the conversation to a more
+interesting subject&#8211;Chip herself.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I saw the girl at Tim&#8217;s Place,&#8221; Hersey said,
+&#8220;and knowing her ancestry, felt curious to observe
+her. She appeared bright as a new dollar and a
+willing worker for Tim. Of course, it seemed unfortunate
+that she should be left to grow up there
+without education; and while her natural guardian
+being an outlaw gave the State an ample right to
+interfere, the proper officer has never seen fit to do
+so. It has been a case of &#8216;out of sight, out of mind,&#8217;
+I presume, and while we have a law obliging parents
+to send their children to public schools so many
+months a year until a certain age, this is a case where
+no one has seen fit to enforce it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_108'></a>108</span>&#8220;But what about her parents?&#8221; queried Martin,
+curious on this point. &#8220;Do you know whether they
+were legally married?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, no-o, only by hearsay,&#8221; Hersey responded.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve been told her mother was a Nova Scotia girl,
+a mill worker in one of our larger cities, and as no
+one ever hinted otherwise, I think it safe to assume
+that they were married. If not, there would surely
+have been some one to spread the sinister fact. It&#8217;s
+the way of the world. I presume Tim knows the
+girl&#8217;s history, but he is such a surly Irishman that I
+never questioned him. In fact, his surroundings,
+as you may have noticed, do not invite long visits.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But no visit or even halt at Tim&#8217;s Place was now
+considered advisable. In fact, as Levi said, it was
+best to pass that spot at midnight. This suggestion
+was carried out, and in five days from leaving the
+settlement, Martin and the officers made their last
+camp at the lake where he had once seen a spectral
+canoeist.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_109'></a>109</span><a id='link_10'></a>CHAPTER X</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;A swelled heart may cost ye money, but a swelled head&#8217;ll
+cost ye ten times more.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>An</span> unexpected canoe entering a lake so secluded
+and so seldom visited as this lake must needs awaken
+the keenest surprise, and especially in the case of a
+party situated as this one was. Ray, who had just
+returned from a berry-picking trip over at the &#8220;blow
+down,&#8221; and Old Cy, carrying his suggestive rifle, were
+at the landing some time before this canoe reached
+it, while Angie and Chip waited almost breathlessly
+on the cabin piazza. A stout, bare-headed Indian,
+clad in white man&#8217;s raiment, was paddling. He
+glanced at the two awaiting him at the landing, with
+big black, emotionless eyes, and then up to the
+cabin.</p>
+
+<p>As his canoe now grated on the sandy beach close
+by, he laid aside his paddle, stepped forward and
+out, drew his craft well up, and folding his arms
+glanced at Old Cy again, as if waiting for a welcome.
+None was needed, however, for on the instant,
+almost, came an exclamation of joy from Chip, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_110'></a>110</span>
+with a &#8220;Hullo, Poppy Tomah,&#8221; she was down the
+bank, with both her hands in his.</p>
+
+<p>A faint smile of welcome spread over his austere
+face as he looked down at the girl, but not a word,
+as yet, came.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy, quick to see that he was a friend, now
+advanced.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re glad to see ye,&#8221; he said, &#8220;an&#8217; as ye seem
+to be a friend o&#8217; the gal&#8217;s, we&#8217;ll make ye welcome.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The Indian bowed low, and a &#8220;How do,&#8221; like
+a grunt, was his answer. A calm, slow, motionless
+type of a now almost extinct race, as he seemed to be,
+he would utter no word or move a step farther until
+invited. But now, led by Chip, he advanced up the
+path.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s Tomah, old Poppy Tomah,&#8221; she said with
+pride, as Angie rose to meet them, &#8220;and he&#8217;s the
+only body who was ever good to me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am glad to see you, sir,&#8221; Angie said, with a
+gracious bow and smile, &#8220;and you are welcome here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I thank the white lady&#8211;I not forget,&#8221; came the
+Indian&#8217;s dignified answer with a stately bow.</p>
+
+<p>Not a word of greeting for Chip or of surprise
+at finding her here&#8211;only the eagle glance, accustomed
+to bright sunlight or to following the flight
+of a bird far out of white man&#8217;s vision.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_111'></a>111</span>&#8220;We shall have supper soon,&#8221; Angie added,
+uncertain what to say to this impassive man, &#8220;and
+some for you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was a deft speech, for Angie, accustomed to take
+in every detail of a man from the condition of his
+nails to the cut of his clothing, as all women will, had
+ere now absorbed the appearance of this swarthy
+redskin, and was not quite sure whether to invite
+him to share their table or say nothing.</p>
+
+<p>But the Indian solved his own problem, for spying
+the outdoor fire to which Old Cy now retreated,
+he bowed again and strode away toward it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Me cook here?&#8221; he said to Old Cy. With an
+&#8220;Of course, an&#8217; you&#8217;re welcome to,&#8221; the question
+was settled.</p>
+
+<p>Chip soon drew near, and now for the first time
+the Indian&#8217;s speech seemed to return, and while Old
+Cy busied himself about the cooking, these two began
+to visit.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, as might be expected, did most of the talking,
+asked questions as to Tim&#8217;s Place, when he was
+there, and what they said about her running
+away, in rapid succession. Her own adventures
+and how she came here soon followed, and it was
+not long before he knew all that was to be known
+about her.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_112'></a>112</span>His replies were blunt and brief, after the manner
+of such. Now and then an expressive nod or grunt
+filled in the place of an ordinary answer. He knew
+but little about the recent happenings at Tim&#8217;s
+Place, as he had stayed there only one night since
+Chip departed with her father&#8211;as he was told.
+He had been away in the woods, looking for
+places to set traps later, and had no idea Chip
+was here.</p>
+
+<p>As to Pete&#8217;s movements, he was equally in the
+dark, and when Chip told him what her friends here
+suspected, he merely grunted. As he seemed to wish
+to do his own cooking, Old Cy, having completed his
+task, offered him a partridge and a couple of trout
+fresh from the ice-house, also pork and potatoes,
+and left him to care for himself.</p>
+
+<p>He became more sociable later, and when supper
+was over and the rest had, as usual, gathered on the
+piazza of the new cabin, he joined them.</p>
+
+<p>And now came a recital from Ray of far more
+interest to these people than they suspected.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I saw a bear over back of the ridge this afternoon,&#8221;
+he said, &#8220;or I don&#8217;t know but it was a wildcat.
+I&#8217;d just filled my pail with berries, when way
+up, close to the rocks, I saw something moving. I
+crouched down back of a bush, thinking it might be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_113'></a>113</span>
+a bear, and if it was, I&#8217;d get a chance to see it nearer.
+I could only see the top of its back above the bushes,
+and once I saw its head, as if it was standing up.
+Then I didn&#8217;t see it for quite a spell, and then I
+caught sight of its back again, a good deal nearer, and
+then it went into one of the gullies in the hog-back.
+I didn&#8217;t wait to see if it came out, but cut for
+home.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Did this critter sorter wobble like a woodchuck
+runnin&#8217;?&#8221; put in Old Cy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, it just crept along evenly,&#8221; answered Ray,
+&#8220;I&#8217;d see it when it would come out between the
+bushes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;&#8217;Twa&#8217;n&#8217;t a b&#8217;ar,&#8221; muttered Old Cy, and then,
+as if the unwisdom of waking suspicion in Angie&#8217;s
+mind occurred, he added hastily, &#8220;but mebbe &#8217;twas
+a doe, walkin&#8217; head down &#8217;n&#8217; feedin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>No further notice was taken of Ray&#8217;s adventure.
+The sight of deer everywhere about was a ten-times-daily
+occurrence, and Old Cy&#8217;s dismissal of the
+matter ended it.</p>
+
+<p>His thoughts, however, were a different matter.
+Full well he knew it was no bear thus moving. A
+deer would never enter a crevasse, nor a wildcat or
+lynx ever leave the shelter of woods to wander in
+open sunlight.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_114'></a>114</span>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go over thar in the mornin&#8217;,&#8221; he said to himself;
+&#8220;I may git a chance to wing that varmint &#8217;n&#8217;
+end our worryin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now Angie, more interested in spites and the
+weird belief which she heard that this Indian held
+than in the sight of a doe, began to ply Old Tomah
+with questions, and bit by bit she led him on toward
+that subject.</p>
+
+<p>It was not an easy task. His speech came slowly.
+Deeds, not words, are an Indian&#8217;s form of expression,
+and this fair white lady, serene as the moon
+and as suave and smiling as culture could make her,
+was one to awe him.</p>
+
+<p>With Chip he had been fluent enough. She had
+been almost a protégée of his, a big pappoose whom
+he had taught to manage a canoe, for whom he had
+made moccasins, a fur cap and cape, who had listened
+to all his strange theories with wide-open,
+believing eyes, and, best of all, a helpless waif whom
+he had learned to love.</p>
+
+<p>But this white lady, awe-inspiring as she was, now
+failed to induce him to talk.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, however, keen to catch the drift of Angie&#8217;s
+wishes and anxious to have her own faith defended,
+soon came to the rescue and induced Old Tomah to
+speak&#8211;not fluently at first, the &#8220;me&#8221; in place of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_115'></a>115</span>
+&#8220;I&#8221; always occurring, adjectives following nouns,
+prepositions left out in many cases; and yet, as he
+warmed up to his subject, his coal-black eyes were
+fierce or tender, and the inborn eloquence of his
+race glowed in face and speech.</p>
+
+<p>And what a wild tale he told! Some of it was
+the history of his own race, beginning long before
+white men came. He related the contests of his
+people with wild animals, their deeds of valor, their
+torturing of prisoners, their own scorn of death and
+stoical endurance of pain. His own ancestors had
+been mighty chieftains. They had led the tribe
+through many battles, swept down upon their white
+enemies, an avenging horde, and were now roaming
+the happy hunting-grounds where he would soon
+join them. Mingled with this tale of warfare and
+conquest, and always an unseen force for good or
+evil, were the spites&#8211;the souls of all brute creation.
+How they followed or led the hunter! How
+they warned their own kind of his coming! How
+they lured him into unseen danger, and how they continually
+sought to avenge their own deaths! There
+were also two kinds of them,&#8211;some evil and the
+others good. The evil ones predominated, the
+good ones feared them, yet sought to interfere in all
+evil effort. These two hosts also had their own
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_116'></a>116</span>
+warfares. They fought oftenest when storms raged
+in the forest. Then they swept the tree-tops and
+scurried over the hills in vast numbers, shrieking
+and screaming defiance.</p>
+
+<p>Another apparition was oft referred to in this
+weird talk. A great white spectre and chieftain of
+all spites, who sprang from his abode in the north,
+whose breath was a blast of snow, howling as it
+swept over the wilderness&#8211;this ghost, so vast that
+it covered miles and miles of wilderness, was altogether
+evil. It spared neither man nor beast.
+The hunter trailing his game met death on the instant
+and was left rigid and upright in his tracks.
+Squaws and children huddled in wigwams shared
+the same speedy fate. Lynxes and panthers, deer
+and moose by the score, were touched by the same
+mystic and awful wand of death.</p>
+
+<p>It was all an uncanny, eerie, ghostly recital; yet
+all real and true to Chip, whose eyes never once left
+the Indian&#8217;s face while he was speaking. Angie,
+too, was spellbound. Never had she heard anything
+like it; and while believing it was all a mere
+myth and legend, a superstitious fancy, maybe, of
+this strange Indian, its telling was none the less
+interesting.</p>
+
+<p>Ray was also enthralled, and he was half convinced
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_117'></a>117</span>
+that the forest might, after all, contain spooks and
+goblins.</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy was only a curious listener. He, too,
+had woven many a fantastic tale of the sea, its storms
+and monsters leaping from the crests of waves, and
+all such figments of the imagination, and this fable
+was but the same. The only feature of passing
+interest to him was the fact that any Indian had
+such a vivid imagination and could relate such a
+mingled ghost story so coherently.</p>
+
+<p>Old Tomah ceased speaking even more abruptly
+than he began, then looked from one to another of
+the group, perhaps to see if they all believed him,
+and then without a word or even &#8220;good night,&#8221; he
+rose and stalked out of the cabin.</p>
+
+<p>For a few moments Chip watched Angie and the
+rest, anxious to see how this explanation of her own
+belief affected them, and then Old Cy spoke.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;d hate to be campin&#8217; with that Injun,&#8221; he
+said, &#8220;or sharin&#8217; a wigwam with him night-times.
+It &#8217;ud be worse&#8217;n a man I sot up with once that had
+the jim-jams, &#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;d see spites and spooks for a week
+arter.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Angie&#8217;s sleep was troubled that night, and in her
+dreams she saw white spectres and a man with a
+hideously scarred face and one eye watching her.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_118'></a>118</span>Ray also felt the uncanny influence of such a
+tale and &#8220;saw things&#8221; in his sleep. But Old Cy,
+who had securely barred the doors and then had
+rolled himself in a blanket with rifle handy, thought
+only of what Ray had seen that day and who it
+might be.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_119'></a>119</span><a id='link_11'></a>CHAPTER XI</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;An honest man&#8217;s the best critter God ever made, an&#8217; the
+skeercest.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Old Cy&#8217;s</span> suspicions were correct. It was neither
+bear, deer, nor wildcat that Ray saw skulking along
+the ridge, but the half-breed.</p>
+
+<p>Believing Chip&#8217;s father had taken her out of the
+wilderness, or more likely up-stream to find a place
+with these campers, he had come here to seek her.
+To find her here, as he of course did, only convinced
+him that his suspicions were true and that her father
+had thus meant to rob him.</p>
+
+<p>Two determined impulses now followed this discovery:
+first, to make the girl he had bought a
+prisoner, carry her into the woods, and then, when
+the chance came, revenge himself on McGuire. No
+sense of law, or decency even, entered his calculation.
+He was beyond such scruples, and what he
+wanted was his only law.</p>
+
+<p>The fear of rifles, which he knew were plenty
+enough at this camp, was the only factor to be considered.
+For days he watched the camp from across
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_120'></a>120</span>
+the lake, hoping that the girl he saw canoeing with
+a boy so often might come near enough for him
+to make a capture. Many times, when darkness
+served, he paddled close to where the cabin stood,
+and once landed and watched it for hours.</p>
+
+<p>Growing bolder, as the days wore on, he hid his
+canoe below the outlet of the lake and taking advantage
+of this outcropping slate ledge with its many
+fissures, secreted himself and watched.</p>
+
+<p>But some shelter, at least to cook and eat in, he
+must have, and this he found in a distant crevasse
+of this same ledge, and from this he sneaked along
+back of it until he could hide and watch the camp
+below. From this vantage-point, he saw that the
+girl no longer went out upon the lake, but remained
+near the cabin; then later, he noticed the two men
+leave the lake one morning. This encouraged him,
+and now he grew still bolder, even descending the
+ridge and watching those remaining at the cabin,
+from a dense thicket.</p>
+
+<p>From this new post he saw that but one man seemed
+on guard, and almost was he tempted to shoot him
+from ambush and make a dash to capture his victim.
+Cautious and cunning, he still waited a chance
+involving less risk.</p>
+
+<p>And now he saw that certain duties were performed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_121'></a>121</span>
+by these people; that one man and the boy always
+started the morning fire; that the girl invariably
+went to the landing alone for water, at about the
+same time. Here for the moment she was out of
+sight from either cabin, and now in this act of hers,
+he saw his opportunity to land from his canoe near
+this spot before daylight, and hide in the bushes
+fringing the shore here and below the bank, watch
+his chance and seize and gag her before an outcry
+could be made. To tie her hands and feet and to
+push the other canoe out into the lake, thus avoiding
+pursuit until they could get a good start, was an
+easy matter.</p>
+
+<p>It was risky, of course. She might hear or see
+him in time to give one scream. The old man who
+had said foolish things to him, and now seemed to
+be on guard, would surely send bullets after him as
+he sped away; but once out of the lake, he would be
+safe. It was a dangerous act; yet the other two
+men might return any day, and with this in prospect,
+this wily half-breed now resolved to act.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy was up early that fatal morning. Somehow
+a sense of impending danger haunted him, and
+calling Ray, he unlocked the cabin door and began
+starting the morning fire. He wanted to get breakfast
+out of the way as speedily as possible, and then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_122'></a>122</span>
+visit this ridge, feeling almost sure that he would
+find where this half-breed had been watching
+them.</p>
+
+<p>When Ray came out, and before the hermit or
+Chip appeared, Old Cy hurried over to the ice-house,
+and now Chip came forth as usual, and without a
+word to any one, she took the two pails and started
+for the landing. It was, perhaps, ten rods to this,
+down a narrow path winding through the scrub
+spruce. The morning was fair, the lake without a
+ripple.</p>
+
+<p>Above the ridge, and peeping through its topping
+of stunted fir, came the first glance of the sun, and
+Chip was happy.</p>
+
+<p>Old Tomah, her one and only friend for many
+years, was here. A something Ray had whispered
+the night before, now returned like a sweet note of
+music vibrating in her heart, and as if to add their
+cheer, the birds were piping all about.</p>
+
+<p>For weeks the cheerful words of one of Ray&#8217;s
+songs had haunted her with its catchy rhythm:&#8211;</p>
+
+<div class='poetry'>
+<p>&#8220;Dar was an old nigger and his name was Uncle Ned,</p>
+<p>He died long &#8217;go, long &#8217;go.&#8221;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>They now rose to her lips, as she neared the lake.
+Here she halted, filled a pail, and set it on the
+log landing.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i3'></a><img src='images/illus-123.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+Nearer and nearer that unconscious girl it crept!
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_123'></a>123</span>From behind a low spruce one evil, sinister eye
+watched her.</p>
+
+<p>And now Chip, still humming this ditty, glanced
+up at the rising sun and out over the lake.</p>
+
+<p>A crouching form with hideous face now emerged
+from behind the bush; step by step, this human
+panther advanced. A slow, cautious, catlike movement,
+without sound, as each moccasined foot
+touched the sand. Nearer and nearer that unconscious
+girl it crept! Now twenty feet away, now
+ten, now five!</p>
+
+<p>And now came a swift rush, two fierce hands enclosed
+the girl&#8217;s face and drew her backward on to
+the sand.</p>
+
+<p>Ray and the hermit were beside the fire, and the
+Indian just emerging from the hut where he had
+slept, when Old Cy returned from the ice-house.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Where&#8217;s Chip?&#8221; he questioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gone after water,&#8221; answered Ray. And the
+two glanced down the path.</p>
+
+<p>One, two, five minutes elapsed, and then a sudden
+suspicion of something wrong came to Old Cy, and,
+followed by Ray, he hurried to the landing.</p>
+
+<p>One pail of water stood on the float, both their
+canoes were adrift on the lake, and as Old Cy looked
+out, there, heading for the outlet, was a canoe!</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_124'></a>124</span>One swift glance and, &#8220;My God, he&#8217;s got Chip!&#8221;
+told the story, and with face fierce in anger, he
+darted back, grasped his rifle, and returned.</p>
+
+<p>The canoe, its paddler bending low as he forced
+it into almost leaps, was scarce two lengths from the
+outlet.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy raised his rifle, then lowered it.</p>
+
+<p>Chip was in that canoe!</p>
+
+<p>His avenging shot was stayed.</p>
+
+<p>And now Old Tomah leaped down the path, rifle
+in hand.</p>
+
+<p>One look at the vanishing canoe, and his own,
+floating out upon the lake, told him the tale, and
+without a word he turned and, plunging into the
+undergrowth, leaping like a deer over rock and
+chasm, vanished at the top of the ridge.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_125'></a>125</span><a id='link_12'></a>CHAPTER XII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The man that won&#8217;t bear watchin&#8217; needs it.&#8221;
+&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>While</span> Chip, bound, gagged, and helpless in the
+half-breed&#8217;s canoe, was just entering the alder-choked
+outlet of this lake, twenty miles below and
+close to where the stream entered another lake, four
+men were launching their canoes.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was here,&#8221; Martin was saying to Hersey,
+&#8220;one moonlight night a year ago, that a friend of
+mine and myself saw a spectral man astride a log,
+just entering that bed of reeds, as I told you. Who
+or what it was, we could not guess; but as that
+spook canoeman went up this stream, we followed
+and discovered our hermit&#8217;s home.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Night-time and moonshine play queer pranks
+with our imagination,&#8221; Hersey responded. &#8220;I&#8217;m
+not a whit superstitious, and yet I&#8217;ve many a time
+seen what I thought to be a hunter creeping along
+the lake shore at night, and I once came near plugging
+a fat man in a shadowy glen. I was up on a
+cliff watching down into it, the day was cloudy, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_126'></a>126</span>
+&#8217;way below I saw what I was sure was a bear crawling
+along the bank of the stream. I had my rifle
+raised and was only waiting for a better sight, when
+up rose the bear and I saw a human face. For a
+moment it made me faint, and since then I make
+doubly sure before shooting at any object in the
+woods.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now these four men, Levi wielding the stern
+paddle of Martin&#8217;s canoe, and Hersey&#8217;s deputy that
+of his, entered the broad, winding stream. The
+tall spruce-tops meeting darkened its currentless
+course, long filaments of white moss depended from
+every limb, and as they twisted and turned up this
+sombre highway, the air grew stifling. Not a breeze,
+not a sound, disturbed the solemn silence, and except
+for the swish of paddles and faint thud as they
+touched gunwales, the fall of a leaf might have been
+heard. So dense was this dark, silent forest, and
+so forbidding its effect, that for an hour no one scarce
+spoke, and even when the two canoes finally drew
+together, converse came in whispers. Another
+hour of steady progress, and then the banks began
+to outline themselves ahead, the trees opened more,
+a sign of current was met, and the sun lit up their
+pathway.</p>
+
+<p>By now the spectral beard had vanished from the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_127'></a>127</span>
+trees, white clouds were reflected from the still
+waters, and the gleam of sandy bottom was seen
+below. The birds, inspired perhaps by the absence
+of gloom, also added their cheering notes,
+Nature was smiling once more, and not a hint or
+even intuition of the fast-nearing tragedy met those
+men.</p>
+
+<p>And then, as a broad, eddying bend in the stream
+held their canoes, by tacit consent a halt was made.</p>
+
+<p>Martin, his paddle crossed on the thwarts in front,
+dipped a cup of the cool, sweet water and drank.
+Levi wiped the sweat from his face, and Hersey also
+quenched his thirst. The day was hot. They had
+paddled ten miles. There was no hurry, and as
+pipes were drawn forth and filled, conversation
+began. But just at this moment Levi&#8217;s ears, ever
+alert, caught the faint sound of a paddle striking a
+canoe gunwale. Not as usual, in an intermittent
+fashion, as would be the case with a skilled canoeist,
+but a steady, rhythmic thud.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hist,&#8221; he said, and silence fell upon the group.</p>
+
+<p>In the wilderness all sounds are noticed and noted,
+by night especially, because then they may mean a
+bear crawling softly through the undergrowth, or a
+wildcat, yellow-eyed and vicious, creeping near. But
+by day as well they are always heeded, and the crackle
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_128'></a>128</span>
+of a twig, or the sound of a deer&#8217;s foot striking a
+stone, or any slight noise, becomes of keen interest.</p>
+
+<p>And now, from far ahead, came the steady tap,
+tap, tap. It soon increased, and then it assured
+those waiting, listening men that some canoe was
+being urged down-stream.</p>
+
+<p>Without a word they glanced at one another, and
+then, as if an intuition came to both at the same
+time, Martin and Hersey reached for their rifles.</p>
+
+<p>On and on came the steady thump, thump.</p>
+
+<p>Just ahead the stream narrowed and curved out
+of sight. A few foam flecks from an unseen rill
+above floated down. The white sandy bottom
+showed in the clear water.</p>
+
+<p>And then, as those stern-faced, watching, listening
+men, rifles in hand, almost side by side, waited
+there, out from behind this bend shot a canoe.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My God, it&#8217;s Pete Bolduc! Look out!&#8221; almost
+yelled Levi, and &#8220;Halt! Surrender!&#8221; from
+Hersey, as two rifles were levelled at the oncomer.
+Then one instant&#8217;s sight of a red and scarred face,
+a quick reach for a rifle, a splash of water, an overturned
+canoe, and with a curse the astonished half-breed
+dived into the undergrowth.</p>
+
+<p>Two rifles spoke almost at the same instant from
+the waiting canoes, one answered from out the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_129'></a>129</span>
+thicket. A thrashing, struggling something in the
+filled canoe next caught all eyes, and Levi, leaping
+into the waist-deep stream, grasped and lifted a
+dripping form.</p>
+
+<p>It was Chip!</p>
+
+<p>A brief yet bloodless tragedy, all over in less
+time than the telling; yet a lifetime of horror had
+been endured by that waif, for as Levi bore her to
+the bank, cut the thongs that bound her, and freed
+her mouth from a pad of deerskin, she grasped his
+hand and kissed it.</p>
+
+<p>And then came another surprise; for down a
+sloping, thick-grown hillside, something was heard
+thrashing, and soon Old Tomah, his clothing in
+shreds, his face bleeding, appeared to view.</p>
+
+<p>Calculating to a nicety where he could best intercept
+and head off the escaping half-breed, he had
+crossed four miles of pathless undergrowth in less
+than an hour, and reached the stream at the nearest
+point after it left the lake.</p>
+
+<p>How Chip, still sobbing from the awful agony
+of mind, and dripping water as well, greeted Old
+Tomah; how Hersey, chagrined at the escape of
+the half-breed, gave vent to muttered curses; how
+Martin joined them in thought; and how they all
+gathered around Chip and listened to her tale of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_130'></a>130</span>
+horror, are but minor features of the episode, and
+not worth the telling.</p>
+
+<p>When all was said and done, Old Tomah, grim
+and silent as ever, although he had done what no
+white man could do or would try to do, washed his
+bloody face in the stream, drank his fill of the cool
+water, and lifting Pete&#8217;s half-filled canoe as easily as
+if it were a shingle, tipped it, turned the water out,
+and set it on the sloping bank.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Me take you back and watch you now,&#8221; he said
+to Chip. &#8220;You no get caught again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And thus convoyed, poor Chip, willing to clasp
+and caress the feet or legs of any or all of those men,
+and more grateful than any dog ever was for a caress,
+was escorted back to the lake.</p>
+
+<p>All those waiting at the cabin were at the landing
+when the rescuers arrived. Angie, her eyes brimming,
+first embraced and then kissed the girl. Ray
+would have felt it a proud privilege to have carried
+her to the cabin, and Old Cy&#8217;s wrinkled face showed
+more joy than ever gladdened it in all his life before.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow this hapless waif had grown dearer to
+them all than she or they understood.</p>
+
+<p>There was also feasting and rejoicing that night
+at Martin&#8217;s wildwood home, and mingled with it all
+an oft-repeated tale.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_131'></a>131</span>Old Cy told one end of it in his droll way, Martin
+related the other, and Chip filled up the interim.
+Levi had his say, and Hersey supplied more or less&#8211;mostly more&#8211;of this half-breed&#8217;s history.</p>
+
+<p>Old Tomah, however, said nothing. To him,
+who lived in the past of a bygone race which looked
+upon lumbermen as devastating vandals ever eating
+into its kingdom, and whose thoughts were upon the
+happy hunting-grounds soon to be entered, this
+half-breed&#8217;s lust and cunning were as the fall of the
+leaf. Were it needful he would, as he had, plunge
+through bramble and brier and leap over rock and
+chasm to rescue his big pappoose, but now that she
+was safe again, he lapsed into his stoical reserve
+once more. Shadowy forms and the mysticism of
+the wilderness were more to his taste than all the
+pathos of human life; and while his eyes kindled
+at Chip&#8217;s smile, his thoughts were following some
+storm or tempest sweeping over a vast wilderness,
+or the rush and roar of the great white spectre.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Chip is good girl,&#8221; he said to Angie the next
+morning, &#8220;and white lady love her. Tomah&#8217;s
+heart is like squaw heart, too; but he go away and
+forget. White lady must not forget,&#8221; and with
+that mixture of tenderness and stoicism he strode
+away, and the last seen of him was when he entered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_132'></a>132</span>
+the outlet without once looking back at the cabin
+where his &#8220;big pappoose&#8221; was kept.</p>
+
+<p>More serious, however, were the facts Martin
+and Hersey now had to consider, and a council of
+war, as it were, was now held with Levi, Old Cy, and
+the deputy as advisers.</p>
+
+<p>What the half-breed would now do, and in what
+way they could now capture him were, of course,
+discussed, and as usual in such cases, it was of no
+avail, because they were dealing with absolutely
+unknown quantities. The facts were these: Bolduc,
+a cunning criminal, fearless of all law, had set his
+heart upon the possession of this girl. Her story,
+unquestionably true, that he had paid a large sum
+for this right and title, must inevitably make
+him feel that he would have what was his at any
+cost. His first attempt at securing her had been
+thwarted. He had been shot at by minions of the
+law,&#8211;an act sure to make him more vengeful,&#8211;his
+canoe had been taken, and what with the loss
+of the girl, money, and canoe also, one of his stamp
+would surely be driven to extreme revenge.</p>
+
+<p>He was now at large in this wilderness, knew
+where the girl and his enemies were, and as Hersey
+said, &#8220;He had the drop on them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I believe in standing by our guns,&#8221; that officer
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_133'></a>133</span>
+continued, after all these conclusions had been admitted.
+&#8220;We are here to rid the woods of this
+scoundrel. We have five good rifles and know how
+to use them. The law is on our side, for he refused
+to surrender, and returned our shots; and if I
+catch sight of him, I shall shoot to cripple,
+anyway.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy&#8217;s advice, however, was more pacific.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My notion is this feller&#8217;s a cowardly cuss,&#8221; he
+said, &#8220;a sort o&#8217; human hyena. He&#8217;ll never show
+himself in the open, but come prowlin&#8217; &#8217;round
+nights, stealin&#8217; anything he can. He may take a
+pop at some on us from a-top o&#8217; the ridge; but I
+callate he&#8217;ll never venture within gunshot daytimes.
+His sort is allus more skeered o&#8217; us&#8217;n we need be
+o&#8217; him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>In spite of Old Cy&#8217;s conclusions, however, the camp
+remained in a state of siege that day and many
+days following.</p>
+
+<p>Angie and Chip seldom strayed far from the
+cabin. Ray assumed the water-bringing, night
+and morning. Old Cy and Levi patrolled the
+premises, while Martin, Hersey, and his deputy
+hunted a little for game and a good deal for
+moccasined footprints or a sight or a sign of this
+half-breed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_134'></a>134</span>Hersey, more especially, made him his object of
+pursuit. He had come here for that purpose, his
+pride and reputation were at stake, and the thousand
+dollars Martin had agreed to pay was a minor
+factor. He and his mate passed hours in the mornings
+and late in the afternoon watching from wide
+apart outlooks on the ridge. They made long
+jaunts up the brook valley to where the smoke sign
+had been seen, they found where this half-breed
+had built a fire here, and later another lair, a mile
+from the cabins and in this ridge. Long detours
+they made in other directions. Old Tomah&#8217;s trail
+through the forest was crossed; but neither in forest
+nor on lake shore were any recent footprints of
+the half-breed found. Old ones were discovered in
+plenty. An almost beaten trail led from his lair in
+the ridge to a crevasse back of the cabins, but to one
+well versed in wood tracks, it was easy to tell how
+old these tracks were.</p>
+
+<p>A freshly made trail in the forest bears unmistakable
+evidence of its date, and no woodwise man ever
+confounds a two or three days&#8217; old one with it. One
+footprint may not determine this occult fact; but
+followed to where the moss is spongy or the earth
+moist, a matter of hours, even, can be decided.</p>
+
+<p>A week of this watchfulness, with no sign of their
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_135'></a>135</span>
+enemy&#8217;s return, not even to within the circuit patrolled
+time and again, began to relieve suspense and
+awaken curiosity. They had been so sure, especially
+Martin, that he would come back for revenge,
+that now it was hard to account for his not doing so.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My idee is he got so skeered at them two shots,&#8221;
+Old Cy asserted, &#8220;he hain&#8217;t stopped runnin&#8217; yit.&#8221;
+And then the old man chuckled at the ludicrous
+picture of this pernicious &#8220;varmint&#8221; scampering
+through a wilderness from fright.</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy was wrong. It was not fear that
+saved them from a prompt visitation from this
+half-breed, but lack of means of defence. The one
+shot remaining in his rifle at the moment of meeting
+had been sent on its vengeful errand, all the rest of
+his ammunition was in his canoe, and now on the
+bottom of the stream. Being thus crippled for
+means to act, the only course left to him was a return
+to his cabin seventy-five miles away, with only a
+hunting-knife to sustain life with.</p>
+
+<p>Even to a skilled hunter and trapper like him,
+this was no easy task. It meant at least a week&#8217;s
+journey through almost impassable swamps and
+undergrowth, with frogs, raw fish, roots, and berries
+for food.</p>
+
+<p>How that half-breed, unconscious that the mills
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_136'></a>136</span>
+of God had ground him the grist he deserved,
+fought his way through this pathless wilderness;
+how he ate mice and frogs to sustain his worthless
+life; how he cursed McGuire as the original cause
+of his wretched plight and Martin&#8217;s party as aids;
+and how many times he swore he would kill every
+one of them, needs no description.</p>
+
+<p>He lived to reach his hut on the Fox Hole, and
+from that moment on, this wilderness held an implacable
+enemy of McGuire&#8217;s, sworn to kill him,
+first of all.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_137'></a>137</span><a id='link_13'></a>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The biggest fool is the man that thinks he knows it all.&#8221;
+&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>For</span> two weeks the little party at Birch Camp
+first watched and then began to enjoy themselves
+once more. September had come, the first tint
+of autumn colored every patch of hardwood, a mellow
+haze softened the outline of each green-clad
+hill and mountain, the sun rose red and sailed an
+unclouded course each day, and gentle breezes
+rippled the lake. The forest, the sky, the air and
+earth, all seemed in harmonious mood, and the one
+discordant note, fear of this half-breed, slowly
+vanished.</p>
+
+<p>Chip resumed her hour of study each day; a little
+fishing and hunting was indulged in by Martin and
+the two officers; wild ducks, partridges, deer, and
+trout supplied their table; each evening all gathered
+about the open fire in Martin&#8217;s new cabin, and while
+the older people chatted, Ray took his banjo or
+whispered with Chip.</p>
+
+<p>These two, quite unguessed by Angie, had become
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_138'></a>138</span>
+almost lovers, and as it was understood Chip was
+to be taken to Greenvale, all that wonder-world, to
+her, had been described by Ray many times. He
+also outlined many little plans for sleigh-rides, skating
+on the mill-pond, and dances which he and she
+were to enjoy together.</p>
+
+<p>His own future and livelihood were a little hazy
+to him. These matters do not impress a youth of
+eighteen; but of one thing he felt sure,&#8211;that Chip
+with her rosy face and black eyes, always tender to
+him, was to be his future companion in all pleasures.
+It was love among the spruce trees, a summer idyl
+made tender by the dangers interrupting it, and
+hidden from all eyes except Old Cy&#8217;s, who was these
+young friends&#8217; favorite.</p>
+
+<p>How many times he had taken these two over the
+ridge during the first two weeks, and picked berries
+while they played at it, or crossed the lake in his
+canoe to leave them on the shore while he cast for
+trout, no one but himself knew, and he wasn&#8217;t
+telling.</p>
+
+<p>Even now, with these two strangers about, Old
+Cy, Chip, and Ray somehow seemed to &#8220;flock by
+themselves.&#8221; Old Cy took them canoeing. They
+paddled up streams entering the lake. He showed
+them where muskrats were house-building, where
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_139'></a>139</span>
+mink had runways, and otter had sliding spots; and
+to forestall a plan of his own, he enlarged upon the
+fun and profit of trapping here when the time came.
+If these two young doves cooed a little meantime,
+he never heard it; if they held hands unduly long,
+he never saw it; and if they exchanged kisses behind
+his back&#8211;well, it was their own loss if they didn&#8217;t.</p>
+
+<p>But these days of mingled romance and tragic
+happenings, of shooting, fishing, story-telling, and
+wildwood life, were nearing their end, and one evening
+Martin announced that on the morrow they
+would pack their belongings and, escorted by the
+officers, leave the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning Old Cy took Ray aside.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I want a good square talk with ye, my boy,&#8221; he
+said, &#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to do ye a good turn if I kin.
+Now to begin, I s&#8217;pose ye know yer aunt&#8217;s goin&#8217; to
+take Chip to Greenvale &#8217;n&#8217; gin her a chance at the
+schoolin&#8217; she sartinly needs. Now you&#8217;re callatin&#8217;
+to go &#8217;long &#8217;n&#8217; have a heap o&#8217; fun this winter. I&#8217;m
+goin&#8217; to stay here &#8217;n&#8217; keer for Amzi. This is the situation
+&#8217;bout as it is. Now you hev got yer eddication,
+&#8217;n&#8217; the next move is to make yer way in the world &#8217;n&#8217;
+arn suthin&#8217;, an&#8217; ez a starter, I want ye to stay here
+this winter with me &#8217;n&#8217; trap. The woods round here
+is jist bristlin&#8217; with spruce gum that is worth a dollar-fifty
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_140'></a>140</span>
+a pound, easy. We&#8217;ve got two months now,
+&#8217;fore snow gits deep. We kin live on the top shelf
+in the way o&#8217; fish &#8217;n&#8217; game. We&#8217;ll ketch a b&#8217;ar
+and pickle his meat &#8217;n&#8217; smoke his hams, and when
+spring comes, I&#8217;ll take ye out with mebbe five hundred
+dollars&#8217; worth of furs &#8217;n&#8217; gum ez a beginnin&#8217;.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thar&#8217;s also &#8217;nother side to consider. Chip
+wants schoolin&#8217;, &#8217;n&#8217; she&#8217;s got to study night &#8217;n&#8217;
+day fer the next eight months. If you go back with
+&#8217;em, an&#8217; go gallivantin&#8217; &#8217;round with her, ez you&#8217;re
+sure to, it won&#8217;t be no help to her. I&#8217;ve given you
+two all the chances fer weavin&#8217; the threads o&#8217; &#8217;fect-shun
+I could this summer, an&#8217; now let&#8217;s you &#8217;n&#8217; I turn
+to and make some money. I&#8217;ve asked your uncle
+&#8217;n&#8217; aunt. They&#8217;re willin&#8217;, &#8217;n&#8217; now, what do ye
+say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Few country boys with a love for trapping, such
+as Ray had, ever had a more alluring prospect
+spread before them. He knew Old Cy was right
+in all his conclusions, and almost without hesitation
+he agreed to the plan.</p>
+
+<p>It was far-sighted wisdom on Old Cy&#8217;s part,
+however, in not giving Ray time to reflect, else the
+magnet of Chip&#8217;s eyes on the one hand, and eight
+months of separation on the other, would have proved
+too strong, and trap-setting and gum-gathering,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_141'></a>141</span>
+with five hundred dollars as reward, would have
+failed.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, he came near weakening at the last
+moment when the canoes were packed and Angie
+and Chip came to take their seats in them.</p>
+
+<p>He and his crude, rude, yet winsome little sweetheart
+had suffered a brief preliminary parting the
+evening previous. A good many sweet and silly
+nothings had been exchanged, also promises, and
+now the boy&#8217;s heart was very sore.</p>
+
+<p>Chip was more stoical. Her life at Tim&#8217;s Place
+and contact with Old Tomah had taught her reserve,
+and yet when she turned for the last possible look at
+Old Cy and Ray, waving good-bye at the landing,
+a mist of tears hid them.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy&#8217;s face was also a study. To him these
+parting clouds were as the white ones hiding the sun;
+yet he felt their chill. His own life shadow was
+lengthening. He had now but a brief renewal of
+youth in the lives of these two, and then forgetfulness,
+as he knew full well, and yet he pitied them.</p>
+
+<p>More than that, he had set his hand to guiding
+the bark of their young lives into the safe harbor of
+a home, and all feelings of his own subserved to that.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come, come, my boy,&#8221; he said to Ray as the
+two turned away, and he noted the lad&#8217;s sad face,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_142'></a>142</span>
+&#8220;she&#8217;s gone now, an&#8217; ye&#8217;d best ferget her fer a spell.
+Ye won&#8217;t, I know, &#8217;n&#8217; she won&#8217;t; but ye&#8217;d best make
+believe ye do. This ain&#8217;t no spot fer love-sick spells.
+We&#8217;ve got work to do, &#8217;n&#8217; money to arn; ye&#8217;ve got
+the chance o&#8217; yer life now, an&#8217; me to help ye to it, so
+brace up &#8217;n&#8217; look cheerful.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Think o&#8217; what we got to do to git ready fer
+winter &#8217;n&#8217; six foot o&#8217; snow. Think o&#8217; the traps we&#8217;re
+goin&#8217; to set, an&#8217; the fun o&#8217; tendin&#8217; &#8217;em. Why, girls
+ain&#8217;t in it a minnit with ketchin&#8217; mink, marten, otter,
+an&#8217; now &#8217;n&#8217; then a lynx or bobcat. Then when ye
+go back with a new suit &#8217;n&#8217; money in yer pocket,
+ye&#8217;ll feel prouder&#8217;n a peacock, &#8217;n&#8217; Chip a-smilin&#8217; at
+ye sweeter&#8217;n new maple syrup.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Verily Old Cy had the wisdom of age and the cheerfulness
+of morning sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>All that day these wilderness-marooned friends
+worked hard. An ample stock of birch wood must
+be cut and split, a shed of poles to cover it must be
+erected alongside of the cabin, the hermit&#8217;s log hut
+was to be divested of its fittings, which were to be
+removed to the new cabin which all were now to
+occupy.</p>
+
+<p>Realizing how vital to their existence the canoes
+were, Old Cy had also planned a shelter of small
+logs for them on one side of the log cabin, that could
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_143'></a>143</span>
+be locked. Here the canoes not in use must be
+stored at once to guard against a night call from the
+malignant half-breed. His canoe had been taken
+along by Martin&#8217;s party, to be left at Tim&#8217;s Place,
+for even Hersey would have scorned to appropriate
+it.</p>
+
+<p>There were dozens of other needs to prepare for
+during the next two months, all of which were important.
+An ample supply of deer meat must be secured,
+to be pickled and smoked. All the partridges
+they could shoot would be needed, and later, when
+south-bound ducks halted at the lake, a few of these
+would add to their larder.</p>
+
+<p>In this connection, also, another need occurred to
+Old Cy. Trout could be caught all winter in the
+lake, but live bait must be had, and so a slat car to
+be sunk in some swift-running stream, which would
+hold them, must be constructed, also a scoop of
+mosquito net to catch them. These minnows were
+to be found now by the million in every brook, and
+forethought was Old Cy&#8217;s watchword.</p>
+
+<p>All these duties and details he discussed that
+first day with Ray, while they worked, for a purpose.</p>
+
+<p>But the first evening here, with its open fire, yet
+empty seats, was the hardest to pass. In vain Old
+Cy enlarged upon the joys of trap-setting once more,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_144'></a>144</span>
+and how and where they were to secure gum. In
+vain he described how deadfalls were built and
+where they must be placed, how many signs of lynx
+and wildcat he had seen that summer, and how sure
+they were to secure some of these valuable furs.</p>
+
+<p>Ray&#8217;s heart was not here. Far away in some
+night camp, Chip was thinking of him. He knew
+each day would bear her farther away. No word
+of her safe arrival could reach them now. Long
+months must elapse ere he and she could meet again,
+and in prospect they seemed an eternity.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Come, git yer banjo, my boy,&#8221; Old Cy ejaculated
+at last, seeing Ray&#8217;s face grow gloomy. &#8220;Tune
+&#8217;er up, an&#8217; play us suthin&#8217; lively. None o&#8217; them
+goody-goody weepin&#8217; sort o&#8217; tunes; but give us
+&#8216;Money Musk&#8217; &#8217;n&#8217; a few jigs. I&#8217;m feelin&#8217; our prospects
+are so cheerful, I&#8217;d like to cut a few pigeon-wings
+out o&#8217; compliment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy&#8217;s hilarity was nearly all put on. He,
+too, felt the effect of the empty seats and missed
+every one that had gone, and Ray&#8217;s jig tunes lacked
+their spirit. He essayed a few, and then quite unconsciously
+his fingers strayed to &#8220;My Old Kentucky
+Home,&#8221; and Old Cy&#8217;s feelings responded.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_145'></a>145</span><a id='link_14'></a>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;I jist nachly hate a person that talks as tho&#8217; he&#8217;d bin
+measured fer a harp.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Chip&#8217;s</span> arrival in Greenvale produced astonishment
+and gossip galore. It began when the
+stage that &#8220;Uncle Joe&#8221; Barnes had driven for
+twenty years started for that village. There
+were other passengers besides Martin, his wife,
+and Chip. The seats inside were soon filled, and
+Chip, seeing a coveted chance, climbed nimbly
+to a position beside the driver.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Gee Whittaker,&#8221; observed one bystander to
+another, as Chip&#8217;s black-stockinged legs flashed
+into view, &#8220;but that gal&#8217;s nimbler&#8217;n a squirrel
+&#8217;n&#8217; don&#8217;t mind showin&#8217; underpinnin&#8217;. I wished I
+was drivin&#8217; that stage. I&#8217;ll bet she&#8217;s a circus.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Joe soon found her a live companion at
+least, for he had scarce left the village ere she
+began.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Your hosses are fatter&#8217;n Tim&#8217;s hosses used to
+be,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Do ye feed &#8217;em on hay and
+taters?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_146'></a>146</span>Uncle Joe gave her a sideways glance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hay and taters,&#8221; he exclaimed; &#8220;we don&#8217;t
+feed hosses on taters down here. Where&#8217;d you
+come from?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I used to live at Tim&#8217;s Place, up in the woods,
+&#8217;n&#8217; we fed our hosses on taters, &#8217;n&#8217; they had backs
+sharp &#8217;nuff to split ye.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This time Uncle Joe faced squarely around.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know all about hosses,&#8221; she continued glibly,
+&#8220;I used to take keer on &#8217;em &#8217;n&#8217; ride one ploughin&#8217;,
+an&#8217; I&#8217;ve been throwed more&#8217;n a hundred times
+when we struck roots, an&#8217; ye ought to &#8217;a&#8217; heerd
+Tim cuss. I used to cuss just the same, but Mrs.
+Frisbie says I mustn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, I swow,&#8221; ejaculated Uncle Joe, realizing
+that he had a &#8220;case.&#8221; &#8220;What&#8217;s your name, &#8217;n&#8217;
+whar&#8217;s Tim&#8217;s Place?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My name&#8217;s Chip, Chip McGuire, only &#8217;tain&#8217;t,
+it&#8217;s Vera; but they allus called me Chip, an&#8217; Tim&#8217;s
+Place is ever so far up in the woods. I runned
+away &#8217;cause dad sold me, an&#8217; fetched up at Mrs.
+Frisbie&#8217;s camp, &#8217;n&#8217; she&#8217;s goin&#8217; to eddicate me. My
+mother got killed when I was a kid, &#8217;n&#8217; my dad
+killed &#8217;nother one, too; he&#8217;s a bad &#8217;un.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Joe gasped at this gory tale of double
+murder, not being quite sure that the girl was sane.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_147'></a>147</span>&#8220;Hain&#8217;t they ketched yer dad yit?&#8221; he queried.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, nor they won&#8217;t,&#8221; Chip rattled on, as if
+such killing were a daily occurrence in the woods.
+&#8220;He&#8217;s a slick &#8217;un, they say, an&#8217; now he&#8217;s got Pete&#8217;s
+money, he&#8217;ll lay low.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Worse and worse, and more of it,&#8221; Uncle Joe
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You must &#8217;a&#8217; had middlin&#8217; lively times up in
+the woods,&#8221; he said. &#8220;Did yer dad kill anybody
+else &#8217;sides yer mother &#8217;n&#8217; this man?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He didn&#8217;t kill mother,&#8221; Chip returned promptly;
+&#8220;he used to lick her, though, but she got killed in
+a mill, &#8217;n&#8217; I wisht it &#8217;ud bin him. I wouldn&#8217;t &#8217;a&#8217;
+bin an orfin then. Say,&#8221; she added, as they entered
+a woods-bordered stretch of road, &#8220;did ye ever
+see spites here?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Spites,&#8221; he responded, now more than ever
+in doubt as to her sanity, &#8220;what&#8217;s them?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, they&#8217;s just spites&#8211;things ye can&#8217;t see
+much of &#8217;ceptin&#8217; it&#8217;s dark. Then they come crawlin&#8217;
+round. They&#8217;s souls o&#8217; animals mostly, Old
+Tomah says. I&#8217;ve seen thousands on &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Joe shifted his quid, turned and eyed the
+girl once more. First, a wild and wofully mixed tale
+of murder, and then spookish things! Beyond question
+she had wheels, and he resolved to humor her.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_148'></a>148</span>&#8220;Oh, yes, we see them things here now &#8217;n&#8217; then,&#8221;
+he said, &#8220;but it takes considerable licker to do it.
+We hain&#8217;t had a murder, though, for quite a spell.
+This is a sorter peaceful neck o&#8217; woods ye&#8217;re comin&#8217;
+to.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Chip failed to grasp his quiet humor, and
+all through that twenty-mile autumn day stage
+ride she chattered on like a magpie.</p>
+
+<p>He soon concluded she was sane enough, however,
+but the most voluble talker who ever shared
+his seat.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never seen the beat o&#8217; her,&#8221; he said that night
+at Phinney&#8217;s store,&#8211;the village news agency,&#8211;&#8220;she
+clacked every minit from the time we started
+till we fetched in, an&#8217; I never callated sich goin&#8217;s
+on ez she told about cud ever happen. Thar
+was murder &#8217;n&#8217; runnin&#8217; away, &#8217;n&#8217; she got ketched
+&#8217;n&#8217; carried off &#8217;n&#8217; fetched back, &#8217;n&#8217; a whole lot o&#8217;
+resky business. She believes in ghosts, too, sorter
+Injun sperits, &#8217;n&#8217; she kin swear jist ez easy ez I kin.
+It seems the Frisbies hev kinder &#8217;dopted her, &#8217;n&#8217;
+I guess they&#8217;ll hev their hands full. She&#8217;s a bright
+&#8217;un, though, but sich a talker!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At Aunt Comfort&#8217;s spacious, old-fashioned
+home, where Chip was now installed, she soon
+began to create the same impression. This had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_149'></a>149</span>
+been Angie&#8217;s former home, and her Aunt Comfort
+Day had been her foster-mother.</p>
+
+<p>This family, in addition to the new arrival, consisted
+of Aunt Comfort, rotund and warm-hearted;
+Hannah Pettibone, a well-along spinster of angular
+form and temper, thin to an almost painful
+degree, with a well-defined mustache; and a
+general helper on the farm, and a chore boy about
+Chip&#8217;s age named Nezer, completed the list.</p>
+
+<p>Once included in this somewhat diverse group,
+Chip became an immediate bone of contention.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Comfort, of course, opened her heart to
+her at once; but Hannah closed hers, almost from
+the first day, and in addition she began to nurse
+malice as well. There was some reason for this,
+mainly due to Chip&#8217;s startling freshness of speech.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I thought ye must be a man wearin&#8217; wimmin&#8217;s
+clothes, the first time I see ye,&#8221; she said to Hannah
+the next day after her arrival, and without meaning
+offence. &#8220;It was all on account o&#8217; yer little
+whiskers, I guess. I never see a woman with &#8217;em
+afore. Why don&#8217;t ye shave?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This was enough; for if there was any one thing
+more mortifying than all else to Hannah, it was
+her facial blemish, and a mention of it she considered
+an intentional insult.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_150'></a>150</span>From this moment onward she hated Chip.</p>
+
+<p>Nezer, however, took to her as a duck to water,
+and her story, which he soon heard, became a real
+dime novel to him, and not content with one telling,
+he insisted on repetition. This was also unfortunate
+for&#8211;blessed with a vivid imagination and
+sure to enlarge upon all facts&#8211;he soon spread
+the story with many blood-curdling additions.</p>
+
+<p>These stories, with Uncle Joe&#8217;s corroboration,
+resulted in a direful tale believed by all. Neighbors
+flocked in to see this heroine of many escapades,
+villagers halted in front of Aunt Comfort&#8217;s
+to catch a sight of this marvel, and so the wonder
+spread.</p>
+
+<p>Angie was, of course, to blame. More impressed
+with the seriousness of the task she had undertaken
+than the need of caution, she had failed to
+tell Chip she must not talk about herself, and so
+a wofully distorted history became current gossip.</p>
+
+<p>When Sunday came, the village church was
+packed, and Parson Jones marvelled much at the
+unexpected increase of religious interest. He had
+heard of this new arrival, but when the Frisbie
+family with Chip, in suitable clothing, entered
+their pew, the cynosure of all eyes, this unusual
+attendance was accounted for.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_151'></a>151</span>And what a staring-at Chip received!</p>
+
+<p>On the church steps a group of both young and
+old men had awaited her arrival and gazed at her
+in open-eyed astonishment. All through service
+she was watched, and not content with this, a dozen
+or so, men and women, formed a double line outside,
+awaiting the Frisbies&#8217; exit.</p>
+
+<p>Angie also failed to understand the principal
+cause of this interest. Her last appearance at
+this church had been as a bride. Naturally that
+fact would produce some staring, and so the curious
+and almost rude scrutiny the family received, was
+less noticed by her.</p>
+
+<p>But Chip&#8217;s eyes were observant.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like goin&#8217; to meetin&#8217;,&#8221; she said, &#8220;an&#8217;
+bein&#8217; stared at like I was a wildcat. I seen &#8217;em
+grinnin&#8217;, too, some on &#8217;em, when we went in,
+an&#8217; one feller winked to another. What ailed
+&#8217;em?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her vexations, however, had only just begun,
+for Angie had seen and made arrangements with
+Miss Phinney, one of the village school-teachers,
+and the next morning Chip was sent to school.
+And now real trouble commenced.</p>
+
+<p>Not knowing more than how to read and spell
+short words, and unable to write, she, a fairly well-developed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_152'></a>152</span>
+young lady, presented a problem which
+was hard for a teacher to solve. To put her in
+the class where she belonged was absurd. She
+must sit with older girls, or look ridiculous. If
+she recited with the eight-year-old children, the
+result would be the same, and so a species of private
+tuition with recitations at noon or after school
+became the only possible course and the one her
+teacher adopted.</p>
+
+<p>This also carried its vexations, for Chip was as
+tall as Miss Phinney and a little larger. Not one
+of that band of pupils was over twelve. To join
+in their games was no sport for Chip, while they,
+having heard about her thrilling experiences, with
+a hint that she wasn&#8217;t quite right in her head, felt
+afraid of her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I feel so sorry for her,&#8221; Miss Phinney explained
+to Angie, a week later, &#8220;and yet, I don&#8217;t know
+what to do. She is so big the children won&#8217;t play
+with her, or she with them. I am the only one
+with whom she will talk, and she seems so humble
+and so grateful for every word. I can&#8217;t be as stern
+with her or govern her as I should, on account of
+her temper and size.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Only yesterday I heard screaming at recess,
+and going out, I found that Chip had one of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_153'></a>153</span>
+girls by the hair and was cuffing her. It transpired
+that this girl had called her an Indian and asked
+if she had ever scalped anybody. I can&#8217;t punish
+such a pupil, and I can&#8217;t help loving her, so you
+see she is a sore trial.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>She also became a trial to Angie in countless
+ways.</p>
+
+<p>Of a deep religious conviction, and believing
+this waif needed to be brought into the fold, Angie
+set about that task at once. But Chip was impervious
+to such instruction. By no argument or persuasion
+could Angie force her protégée to renounce
+her belief in the heathenism of Old Tomah, or
+convince her that God and the angels were any
+different from his collection of spirit forms, or
+that heaven was anything more than another
+name for his happy hunting-grounds. Old Tomah
+had been her wise and only friend, so far. She had
+seen all the ghostly forms he had described, had
+felt all the occult influences which he said existed,
+and neither coaxing nor derision served to make her
+disown them.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, Angie took her to church regularly.
+She sat through services and bowed as all did.
+Sabbath-school instruction would have been forced
+upon her but for the reason that made her a class
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_154'></a>154</span>
+of one under Miss Phinney, and Parson Jones&#8217;s
+attention was finally enlisted.</p>
+
+<p>He spent an hour in pointing out her heathenish
+sins, assured her that Old Tomah was a wicked
+reprobate and an ignorant savage combined, that
+all influences so far surrounding her had been
+the worst possible,&#8211;a self-evident fact,&#8211;and
+unless she confessed a change of heart, and soon,
+too, all her friends here would desert her and the
+devil would overtake her by and by, and then
+closed this well-intended effort with a prayer.</p>
+
+<p>Chip sat through it all, mute and cowering.
+The parson&#8217;s white hair, sharp eyes, and solemn
+voice awed her, and when he had departed, she
+began to cry.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t see the need o&#8217; makin&#8217; me say I don&#8217;t
+believe suthin&#8217; when I do,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I&#8217;ve seen
+spites &#8217;n&#8217; I know I&#8217;ve seen &#8217;em, an&#8217; nobody can
+make me believe Old Tomah a bad man, if he is
+an Injun. He runned after me when I got ketched,
+&#8217;n&#8217; near got his eyes scratched out&#8221;&#8211;a logic it
+was useless to contend with.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re jest a little spunky devil,&#8221; Hannah
+said to her later on with a vicious accent, &#8220;an&#8217; if
+I was Mrs. Frisbie I&#8217;d larrup ye till ye confessed
+penitence, I would. The idee o&#8217; you settin&#8217; thar
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_155'></a>155</span>
+a-mullin&#8217; all the time the minister was tryin&#8217; to
+save ye! It&#8217;s scand&#8217;lus!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And that night Chip was back in the wilderness
+with Old Cy and Ray in thought, and so homesick
+for them that she cried herself to sleep.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_156'></a>156</span><a id='link_15'></a>CHAPTER XV</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;While yer argufyin&#8217; with a fool, jes&#8217; figger thar&#8217;s two on
+&#8217;em.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>The</span> streams and swamps contiguous to this lake
+were well adapted for the habitat of mink, muskrat,
+otter, fisher, and those large fur-bearing animals,
+the lynx and lucivee, and here a brief description of
+where such animals exist, and how they are caught,
+may be of interest.</p>
+
+<p>The habits of the muskrat, the least cunning of
+these, are so well known that they merit only a few
+words. They are amphibious animals, their food
+is succulent roots, bulbs, and bark, and they frequent
+small, marshy ponds, sluggish streams, and swamps.
+In summer they conceal themselves by burrowing
+into soft banks; in winter they erect houses of sedge-grass,
+roots, and mud, and are caught in small steel
+traps set in shallow water at the entrance of their
+paths out of lake or stream.</p>
+
+<p>Mink, marten, otter, and fisher are much alike in
+shape and habit. All belong to the same family, but
+vary in size, also slightly in the matter of food.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_157'></a>157</span>
+Mink and marten live on fish, frogs, birds, mice, etc.;
+otter on fish and roots; and fishers, as their name
+implies, subsist largely on fish. All these are more
+valuable fur-bearing animals than muskrats. Their
+abiding places are swamps and shallow streams, in
+the banks of which they burrow, and they are usually
+caught in steel traps baited with fish or meat.</p>
+
+<p>The lucivee, or lynx, and bobcat, more ferocious
+and cunning than their smaller cousins, roam the
+woods and swamps, live on smaller animals, hide in
+caves, crevices, and hollow trees, and they as well as
+otter occasionally are caught in deadfalls.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy, familiar as he was with the homes, habits,
+and the manner of catching these cunning animals,
+soon began his trap-setting campaign. A few dozen
+steel traps were first set along the stream and lagoons
+entering the lake, and then he and Ray pushed up
+Beaver Brook, and leaving their canoe, followed its
+narrow valley in search of suitable spots to set the
+more elaborated deadfalls, which also merit description.</p>
+
+<p>A deadfall is made by placing one end of a suitably
+sized log&#8211;one perhaps fifteen feet long and a foot
+in diameter&#8211;on a figure four trap, so adjusted that
+its spindle end, to which the bait is secured, shall
+be poised beneath the upraised end of the log.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_158'></a>158</span>
+Alongside of this log a double row of stakes is
+driven to form a pen with entrance leading to the
+bait. When this deadly contrivance is properly
+adjusted, the log and its pen of stakes is concealed
+with green boughs piled lightly over it, and all the
+hungry lynx sees is a narrow opening under green
+boughs, and in it a tempting morsel awaiting him.
+As those creatures, as well as now and then an otter,
+are sure to roam up and down all small streams,
+a spot where one emerges from a narrow defile,
+or joins a larger one, is usually selected for a
+deadfall.</p>
+
+<p>It is also quite a task to clear a suitable space, fell
+a right-sized tree, and construct one of these penlike
+traps; and although Old Cy and Ray started early,
+it was mid-afternoon that day ere they had the third
+one ready and awaiting its possible victim.</p>
+
+<p>As gum-gathering was also a part of their season&#8217;s
+plan, they now left the swamp valley, and, ascending
+the spruce-clad upland, began this work, which is
+also worthy of description.</p>
+
+<p>The chewing gum of commerce, so delightful to
+schoolgirls and small boys, is the refined, diluted,
+and sweetened product of gum nuts, or the small
+excrescences of spruce sap that exudes and hardens
+around knot-holes and cracks in the bark of those
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_159'></a>159</span>
+trees. These form into hardened nuts or knobs of
+gum, from the size of a hazelnut to that of butternut,
+and are worth from a dollar to a dollar and fifty
+cents a pound. A long pole with a sharpened knife
+or chisel fastened to its tip is used by gum seekers.
+It can be gathered from the time frost first hardens
+it until spring, and to gather three to five pounds is
+considered a good day&#8217;s work.</p>
+
+<p>Ray&#8217;s first attempt at this labor seemed like nut-gathering
+at home, only more romantic, and when
+they were well into the vast spruce growth bordering
+one side of the Beaver Brook valley, he became so
+interested in hunting for the brown knobs, loosening
+them, and picking them up that he would
+have soon lost all points of the compass, except for
+Old Cy.</p>
+
+<p>There is also a spice of danger seasoning this pursuit.
+A wildcat might at any moment be seen
+watching from the crotch of a tree, or a bear might
+suddenly emerge from the thicket. It was hard
+work also, for while some parts of a spruce forest
+may be free from undergrowth, not all portions are,
+and this tangle is one not easy to move about in.</p>
+
+<p>There was also another element that entered into
+the trapping and gum-gathering life,&#8211;the possible
+return of the half-breed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_160'></a>160</span>&#8220;He hain&#8217;t nothin&#8217; agin us,&#8221; Old Cy asserted,
+when the question came up. &#8220;We didn&#8217;t chase
+him the day he stole Chip, &#8217;n&#8217; yet I s&#8217;pose he&#8217;ll show
+up some day, &#8217;n&#8217; mebbe do us harm.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was this fear that had led Old Cy to leave one
+of their canoes in a log locker, securely barred, and
+also to caution the hermit to remain on guard at the
+cabin while he and Ray were away.</p>
+
+<p>A canoe is the one most vital need of a wildwood
+life, for the reason that the streams are the only
+avenues of escape and afford the only opportunities
+for travel.</p>
+
+<p>The wilderness, of course, can be traversed, but
+not easily. Swamps will be met and must be avoided,
+for a wilderness swamp is practically impassable.
+Streams can be forded, but lakes must be encompassed,
+and even an upland forest is but a tangled
+jungle of fallen trees and undergrowth.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy knew, or at least he felt almost sure, that
+the half-breed would return in good time. He had
+also reasoned out his failure to do so at once, and
+knew that left canoeless, as he had been that tragic
+day, his only course must be the one he actually
+followed. A month had elapsed since then, with no
+sign of this &#8220;varmint&#8217;s&#8221; return, and now Old Cy
+was on the watch for it.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_161'></a>161</span>Each morning, when he traversed the lake shore
+from ice-house to landing, he looked for tell-tale footprints.
+He watched for them wherever he went,
+and the distant report of a rifle would have been
+accepted as a sure harbinger of this enemy.</p>
+
+<p>It became their custom now each day, first to visit
+all small traps in the near-by streams, then pushing
+their canoe as far as possible up the Beaver Brook,
+to leave it, continue up the valley, and after inspecting
+their deadfalls, turn to the right out of this swale,
+and begin the gathering of gum.</p>
+
+<p>And now, one day, in carrying out this programme,
+a discovery was made.</p>
+
+<p>They had first visited the small traps near the lake,
+securing a couple of mink and three muskrats, which
+were left in the canoe. An otter was found in one
+of the deadfalls, and taking this with them, they entered
+the spruce timber and hung it on a conspicuous
+limb. Then the search for gum began.</p>
+
+<p>As usual, they worked hard. The days were
+short, the best of sunlight was needful to see the
+brown nuts in the sombre forest, and so they paid
+no heed to aught except what was overhead. When
+time to return arrived, Old Cy picked up his rifle
+and led the way back to where the otter had been
+left, but it had vanished. Glancing about to make
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_162'></a>162</span>
+sure that he was right, he advanced to the tree, looked
+down, and saw two footprints. Stooping over to
+examine them better in the uncertain light, he noted
+also that they were not his own, but larger, and made
+by some one wearing boots.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tain&#8217;t the half-breed,&#8221; he muttered, with an
+accent of relief, and looking about, he saw a well-defined
+trail leading down the slope and thence
+onward toward the swamp.</p>
+
+<p>Some one had crossed this broad, oval, spruce-covered
+upland while they were not two hundred
+rods away from this tree, had stolen their otter, and
+gone on into the swamp.</p>
+
+<p>Any freshly made human footprint found in a
+vast wilderness awakens curiosity; these seemed
+ominous.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He must &#8217;a&#8217; seen us &#8217;fore he did the otter,&#8221; Old
+Cy ejaculated, &#8220;an&#8217; it&#8217;s curis he didn&#8217;t make himself
+known. Neighbors ain&#8217;t over plenty, hereabout.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the sun was nearing the tree-tops, the canoe
+was a mile away, and after one more look around,
+Old Cy started for it. There was no use in following
+this trail now, for it led into the tangled swamp, and
+so, skirting this until a point opposite the canoe was
+reached, Old Cy and Ray then plunged into it.</p>
+
+<p>Twilight had begun to shadow this vale ere the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_163'></a>163</span>
+canoe was reached. And here was another surprise,
+for the canoe was found turned half over, and on
+its broad oval bottom was a curious outline of black
+mud. The light was not good here. A fir-grown
+ledge shadowed the spot; but as Old Cy stooped to
+examine this mud-made emblem, it gradually took
+shape, and he saw&#8211;a skull and cross bones!</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, by the Great Horn Spoon!&#8221; he exclaimed,
+&#8220;I never s&#8217;posed a pirate &#8217;ud fetch in here! An&#8217;
+he&#8217;s swiped our muskrats and mink,&#8221; he added, as
+he looked under the canoe, &#8220;durn him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then the bold bravado of it all occurred to Old
+Cy. The theft was doubtless made by whosoever
+had taken their otter, and not content with robbing
+them, he had added insult.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I s&#8217;pose we&#8217;d orter be grateful he left the paddles
+&#8217;n&#8217; didn&#8217;t smash the canoe,&#8221; Old Cy continued,
+turning it over. &#8220;I wonder who&#8217;t can be?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>One hasty look around revealed the same boot-marks
+in the soft earth near the stream, and then he
+and Ray launched their craft and started for home.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to foller them tracks to-morrer,&#8221; Old
+Cy said, when they were entering the lake and a light
+in the cabin just across reassured him. &#8220;It may be
+a little resky, but I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to find out what sorter a
+neighbor we&#8217;ve got.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_164'></a>164</span><a id='link_16'></a>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;When a man begins talkin&#8217; &#8217;bout himself, it seems as tho&#8217;
+he&#8217;d never run down.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>All</span> fellow-sojourners in the wilderness awaken
+keen interest, and the unbroken silence and solitude
+of a boundless forest make a fellow human being
+one we are glad to accost.</p>
+
+<p>A party of lumbermen wielding axes causes one
+to turn aside and call on them. A sportsman&#8217;s camp
+seen on a lake shore or near a stream&#8217;s bank always
+invites a landing to interview whoever may be there.</p>
+
+<p>All this interest was now felt by Old Cy and Ray,
+and with it an added sense of danger. No friendly
+hunter or trapper would thus ignore them in the
+woods. This piratically minded thief must have
+seen them, for the spruce-clad oval, perhaps half a
+mile in width, was comparatively free from undergrowth
+where they had been working. He had
+crossed it within fairly open sight of them, had found
+the otter hanging from a limb, had taken it, and
+thence on to rob their canoe, daub it with that hideous
+emblem, world-wide in meaning, and then had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_165'></a>165</span>
+gone on his way. Almost could Old Cy see him
+watching them from behind trees, skulking along
+when their backs were turned, a low, contemptible
+thief.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy knew that bordering this oval ridge on its
+farther side was a swamp, that a stream flowed
+through it, and surmising that this fellow might have
+come up or down this stream, he left their cabin prepared
+for a two or three days&#8217; sojourn away from it,
+which meant that food, blankets, and simple cooking
+utensils must be taken along.</p>
+
+<p>No halt was made to visit traps. Old Cy was
+trailing bigger game now; and when the point
+where they had left the canoe the day previous was
+reached, the canoe was pulled out on the stream&#8217;s
+bank, the rifles only taken, and the trailing began.
+He followed up the brook valley a little way, to find
+that only one track came down; he then circled
+about the canoe, until, like a hound, he found
+where the clearly defined trail left the swamp again.</p>
+
+<p>Here in the soft carpet under the spruce trees one
+could follow this trail on the run, and here also Old
+Cy found where this enemy had halted beside trees
+evidently while watching them, as the tracks indicated.
+When the bordering swamp was reached,
+the trail turned in a westerly direction, skirting thus
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_166'></a>166</span>
+for half a mile, and here, also, evidences of skulking
+along were visible.</p>
+
+<p>Another trail was now come upon, but leading
+directly over the ridge, and just beyond this juncture
+both the trails now joined, entered the swamp, and
+ended at a lagoon opening out from the stream.
+Here, also, evidences of a canoe having been hauled
+up into the bog were visible.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That sneakin&#8217; pirate come up this stream,&#8221; Old
+Cy observed to Ray, as the two stood looking at these
+unmistakable signs. &#8220;He left his canoe here &#8217;n&#8217;
+crossed the ridge above us &#8217;n&#8217; down to whar we left
+the otter &#8217;n&#8217; on to our canoe. Then he come back
+the way we follered, &#8217;n&#8217; my idee is he had his eye
+on us most o&#8217; the time. I callate he has been
+laughin&#8217; ever since at what we&#8217;d say when we found
+that mud daub on our canoe, durn him!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But their canoe was now a half-mile away, and
+for a little time Old Cy looked at the black, currentless
+stream and considered. Then he glanced up
+at the sun.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve a notion we&#8217;d best fetch our canoe over
+here,&#8221; he said at last, &#8220;an&#8217; follow this thief a spell
+farther. We may come on to suthin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Won&#8217;t he shoot at us?&#8221; returned Ray, more impressed
+by this possible danger than was Old Cy.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_167'></a>167</span>&#8220;Wal, mebbe and mebbe not,&#8221; answered the
+old man. &#8220;Shootin&#8217;s a game two kin play at,
+an&#8217; we&#8217;ve jist ez good a right to foller the stream ez
+he has.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But when their canoe had been carried over and
+launched in this lagoon, Ray&#8217;s spirits rose. It was
+an expedition into new waters, somewhat venturesome,
+and for that reason it appealed to him.</p>
+
+<p>Then they had two rifles, Old Cy had taught him
+to shoot, he had already killed one deer and some
+smaller game, and the go-west-and-kill-Indian impulse
+latent in all boys was a part of Ray&#8217;s nature.
+Besides, he had an unbounded faith in Old Cy&#8217;s
+skill with the rifle.</p>
+
+<p>And now began a canoe journey into and through
+a vast swamp, the upland border of which could
+scarce be seen. The stream they followed was black,
+and so absolutely motionless that it was a guess
+which way they were going. The mingled hack-matack
+and alder growth along each bank was so
+dense that no view ahead could be seen, and they
+must merely follow the winding pathway of dark
+waters and hope to come out somewhere.</p>
+
+<p>For two hours they paddled along this serpentine
+highway, and then the vastness of this morass began
+to impress them. No sign of current had been met.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_168'></a>168</span>
+All view of the spruce-grown upland they had left
+was obscured by distance. Now and then a dead
+tree, bleached and spectral, marked a turn in the
+stream, and hundreds of them, rising all about above
+the low green tangle, added a ghostly haze. It was
+as if they were venturing into a new world&#8211;a
+boundless morass, covered by an impenetrable tangle,
+and made grewsome by the bleaching trunks
+of dead trees.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m goin&#8217; to find which way we&#8217;re goin&#8217;,&#8221; Old
+Cy exclaimed at last, as they neared a small dead
+cedar that pointed out over the stream, and seizing
+a projecting limb of this, he broke off bits of dry
+twigs, and tossed them into the stream. For a
+long moment not one stirred, and then at last a
+movement backward could be discovered.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re goin&#8217; up-stream, anyhow,&#8221; he added,
+glancing at the sun, now marking mid-afternoon;
+&#8220;but we&#8217;ve got to git out o&#8217; this &#8217;fore dark, or we&#8217;ll
+be in a bad fix, an&#8217; hev to sleep in the canoe.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>No halt for dinner had yet been made. They
+were both faint from need of food, and so Old Cy
+reached for a small wooden pail containing their
+sole supply of provisions. Neither was it a luxurious
+repast which was now eaten. A couple of hard-tacks
+munched by each and moistened with a cup
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_169'></a>169</span>
+of this swamp water and a bit of dried deer meat
+was all, and then Old Cy lit his pipe, dipped his
+paddle handle in the stream, and once more they
+pushed on. Soon a low mound of hard soil rose out
+of the tangle just ahead, an oasis in this unvarying
+mud swamp, and gaping at them from amid its cover
+of scrub birch and cedar stood a deadfall. It faced
+them as they neared this small island, and with log
+upraised between a pen of stakes it much resembled
+the open mouth of a huge alligator.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hain&#8217;t been built long,&#8221; Old Cy exclaimed, after
+they had landed to examine it. &#8220;I&#8217;ve a notion it&#8217;s
+the doin&#8217;s of our pirate friend, an&#8217; he&#8217;s trappin&#8217;
+round about this swamp. He&#8217;s had good luck
+lately, anyhow, for he&#8217;s got six o&#8217; our pelts to add to
+his string.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>From here onward signs of human presence in
+this swamp became more visible. Now and then
+an opening cut through the limbs of a lopped-over
+spruce was met; a spot where drift had been pushed
+aside to clear the stream was found at one place;
+signs of a canoe having been nosed into the bog
+grass were seen; and here were also the same footprints
+they had followed.</p>
+
+<p>Another bit of hard bottom was reached, and here
+again was another deadfall. Tracks evidently made
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_170'></a>170</span>
+within a few days were about here, and tied to
+its figure-four spindle was a freshly caught brook
+sucker.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The scent&#8217;s gettin&#8217; warm,&#8221; Old Cy muttered, as
+he examined these signs of a trapper&#8217;s presence, and
+then, mindful of the sun, he paddled on again.</p>
+
+<p>And now an upland growth of tall spruce was seen
+ahead, the banks became in evidence, and a slight
+current was met. One more long bend in the stream
+was followed, then came curving banks and large-bodied
+spruce. They were out of the swamp.</p>
+
+<p>Soon a more distinctive current opposed them, a
+low murmur of running water came from ahead,
+and then a pass between two abutting ledges was
+entered. Here the stream eddied over sunken
+rocks, and pushing on, the forest seemed suddenly
+to vanish as they emerged from the gloom of this
+short cañon, and the next moment they caught
+sight of a long, narrow lakelet.</p>
+
+<p>The sun, now almost to the tree-tops, cast a reddish
+glow upon its placid surface, and so welcome a
+change was it from the ghostly, forbidding swamp
+just left, that Old Cy halted their canoe at once to
+look out upon it. It was seemingly a mile long, but
+quite a narrow lake. A bold, rocky shore rising in
+ledges faced them just across, and extended along
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_171'></a>171</span>
+that side, back of these a low, green-clad mountain,
+to the right, and at the end of this lanelike lake
+a bolder, bare-topped cliff was outlined clear and
+distinct.</p>
+
+<p>This strip of water, for it was not much more,
+seemingly filled an oblong gorge in these mountains,
+only one break in them, to the left of this bare peak;
+and as Old Cy urged their canoe out of the alder-choked
+stream, now currentless once more, a margin
+line of rushes and reeds was seen to form that shore.
+Back of these, also, rose the low ledge they had
+passed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Looks like a good hidin&#8217; spot fer a pirate,&#8221; he
+exclaimed, glancing up and down the smiling lakelet.
+&#8220;Thar ain&#8217;t many folks likely to tackle that
+swamp&#8211;it took us &#8217;most all day to cross it. I&#8217;ll
+bet no lumberman ever tried it twice, &#8217;n&#8217; if I wanted
+to git absolutely &#8217;way from bein&#8217; molested, I&#8217;d locate
+here. I dunno whether we&#8217;d best cross &#8217;n&#8217; make
+camp &#8217;mong them ledges, or go back into the woods.
+Guess we&#8217;d best go back &#8217;n&#8217; take a sneak round behind
+the ledge. I noticed a loggin<a id='FNanchor_1'></a><a href='#Footnote_1' class='fnanchor'><sup>[1]</sup></a> leadin&#8217; up that
+way &#8217;fore we left the swamp.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But now something was discovered that proved
+Old Cy&#8217;s wisdom, for as they, charmed somewhat by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_172'></a>172</span>
+the spot, yet feeling it forbidding, still glanced up and
+down the bold shore just across, suddenly a thin
+column of smoke rose from away to the right, amid
+the bare ledges.</p>
+
+<p>First a faint haze, rising in the still air, then a
+burst of white, until the fleecy pillar was plainly outlined
+as it ascended and drifted backward into the
+green forest.</p>
+
+<hr class='footnote_sep' />
+
+<div class='footnote'><a id='Footnote_1'></a><a href='#FNanchor_1'><span class='label'>[1]</span></a>
+<p>Lagoon.</p>
+</div> <!-- footnote -->
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_173'></a>173</span><a id='link_17'></a>CHAPTER XVII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;Licker allus lets the cat out.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>When</span> the half-breed, Pete Bolduc, reached Tim&#8217;s
+Place, he was more dead than alive. A week of
+crawling through swamps, wading or swimming
+streams, sleeping under fallen trees, while sustaining
+life on frogs, raw fish, and one muskrat, had eliminated
+about all desire to obtain Chip, and left a murderous
+hate instead. And McGuire was its object.</p>
+
+<p>Pete reasoned that he had bought the girl and paid
+for her. Her father, never intending to keep faith,
+had connived at her escape, and knowing of these
+campers, had hired her for a serving maid, and they
+would inevitably take her out when they left. It
+was all a part of McGuire&#8217;s plot and plan, and no
+doubt this stranger had also paid him for her possession.</p>
+
+<p>Two other facts also seemed proof positive that
+these conclusions were correct. First, McGuire
+had never been seen at Tim&#8217;s Place since the girl&#8217;s
+escape; second, it would have been impossible for
+her to reach these campers without aid. But she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_174'></a>174</span>
+was lost to him for all time, as Pete now realized.
+The stern faces and ready rifles of her protectors
+had convinced him of that, and all that remained
+was to find McGuire, force him to give back the
+money, then obtain revenge.</p>
+
+<p>Neither was this an easy task, for McGuire was a
+dangerous man, as Pete well knew, and the more he
+considered the matter, sojourning at Tim&#8217;s Place
+and nursing his hate meanwhile, the more he realized
+that the killing of McGuire must precede the obtaining
+of his money. And now, where to find McGuire
+became a question.</p>
+
+<p>Pete knew that at this season he usually devoted a
+month or more to a trapping trip, that in starting
+out he always ascended the Fox Hole, and that his
+location for this purpose was the head waters of
+another stream, reached by a carry from the Fox
+Hole.</p>
+
+<p>For a week Pete remained at Tim&#8217;s Place, and
+then, obtaining a canoe, returned to his hut on this
+stream.</p>
+
+<p>And now, in the seclusion of his own domicile,
+certain other facts and conclusions bearing upon the
+present whereabouts of McGuire occurred to him.</p>
+
+<p>For many years they had been friends in a way,
+or at least as much so as two such scamps ever are.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_175'></a>175</span>
+Together they had made many canoe trips to the
+Provinces to obtain liquor. In these expeditions,
+McGuire had furnished the means; but outlawed
+as he was, had remained in hiding while Pete transacted
+the business and later shared the profits.
+Pete&#8217;s hut had also been used as headquarters, and
+near by it the smuggled liquor had been secreted.</p>
+
+<p>On rare occasions, also, McGuire had broken
+away from his usual abstemiousness, and here, with
+Pete for companion, had indulged in an orgie. At
+these times he invariably boasted how cunning he
+had been in eluding all hated officers of the law,
+how much money he was worth, and how securely
+he had it hidden. The one most pertinent fact,
+the location of this hiding spot, he never betrayed.
+But now Pete&#8211;almost as shrewd as he&#8211;reasoned
+that it would most likely be somewhere in this region
+annually visited by him.</p>
+
+<p>To find this was a hard problem; to find McGuire&#8217;s
+hiding spot for his money more so. It meant
+trailing a human being of greater cunning than any
+animal that roamed this wilderness; and yet with
+the double incentive of robbing and revenge now
+decided upon by this half-breed, he set about solving
+it.</p>
+
+<p>A day&#8217;s journey up the Fox Hole brought him to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_176'></a>176</span>
+the carry over into another stream, and here a probably
+month-old trail, crossing and recrossing it, was
+found. Whoever left the tell-tale footprints wore
+boots, and as McGuire was the only hunter or
+trapper in this region known to wear them, this
+seemed evidence that it was he. Then as two trails
+led over, with only one returning, that proved he
+had made two trips across to carry his canoe and
+belongings and had not returned. This was plain
+enough, but when once over, the question of whether
+he went up or down stream was another matter.
+It was an even chance, however, and Pete decided
+to go up, and keep sharp watch for any signs which
+would indicate that he was on the right track. To
+trail any animal in this wilderness was child&#8217;s play
+to Pete; but to follow another trapper journeying
+by canoe was not so easy. Halts for night camps
+he must of course make, collections of drift in some
+narrow part of the stream he would inevitably disturb,
+and where a carry around a rapid came, a trail
+would be left. These were the only signs possible
+to discover, and for these Pete now watched.</p>
+
+<p>The slow-running waterway he ascended the first
+day wound through a stately forest of spruce. Its
+banks were low and well defined, yet always covered
+by undergrowth. No breaks in them, no openings
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_177'></a>177</span>
+where a night halt would naturally be made; but
+ever of the same unvarying character, and shadowed
+by the overhang of interlaced boughs. With one
+eye keen to any even the slightest signs of human
+progress up this stream, and ears ever alert, Pete
+paddled on. Wildwood sights and sounds, however,
+were met in plenty. Once a lordly moose, seeing
+or smelling him, snorted and plunged away, crashing
+through the undergrowth. Deer were seen or heard
+at every turn of the stream, and dozens of muskrats
+were noticed swimming or diving off the bank,
+with now and then an otter or a mink, to vary this
+monotony.</p>
+
+<p>But these were of no interest to Pete. He was
+trailing other game, and like an avenging Nemesis,
+slowly crept through this vast, sombre, and forbidding
+forest. When nightfall neared, he hauled
+his canoe out where a stretch of hard bank favored,
+and camped for the night, and when daylight came
+again, he pushed on. For three days this watchful,
+up-stream journey was continued, and then a range
+of low mountains began to close in, short rapids
+needing the use of a setting-pole were met, and at
+last a series of stair-like falls was sighted ahead.
+The sun was well down when these were reached.
+How long the necessary carry might be, he could not
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_178'></a>178</span>
+tell, and hauling out below the rapids, Pete took his
+rifle and crept up along the bank. So far not a sign
+indicating whether or not McGuire had gone up this
+stream had been found, but here, if anywhere, they
+must be met, and Pete watched eagerly for them.</p>
+
+<p>Every rock where a human foot might scrape away
+the moss was scanned. Each bending bough and
+bush was observed, and when, perforce, he had to
+leave the rock-lined bank and make a detour, he still
+watched for signs.</p>
+
+<p>At the top of this long pitch, the tall trees also
+ended, and here the stream issued from a vast bush-grown
+swamp devoid of timber. A few dead trees
+rose from it, and climbing a low spruce, Pete saw
+this whitened expanse of spectral cones extended for
+miles. It was a forbidding prospect. The stream&#8217;s
+course appeared visible only a few rods. It seemed
+hardly probable the man he was trailing would cross
+this swamp. No signs of his ascending this waterway
+had so far been met, and Pete, now discouraged,
+was about to return to his canoe and on the morn go
+back, when, glancing across the stream, he saw a
+tiny opening in the bushes, as if they had been pushed
+aside.</p>
+
+<p>To cross, leaping from rock to rock in the rapids
+below, was his next move, and returning to where
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_179'></a>179</span>
+the fall began, there, just back from this point, and
+beside a ledge, were the charred embers of a camp-fire.</p>
+
+<p>Weeks old, without doubt, for rain had fallen on
+them, and all about were the footprints of some one
+wearing boots.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_180'></a>180</span><a id='link_18'></a>CHAPTER XVIII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;&#8217;Tain&#8217;t allus the bell cow that gives the most milk.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Old Cy</span> was, above all, a peaceable man, and
+while curiosity had led him to follow the trail of this
+robber and to cross this vast swamp, now that he
+saw the suggestive smoke sign, he hesitated about
+venturing nearer.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess we&#8217;d best be keerful,&#8221; he whispered to
+Ray, &#8220;or we may wish we had been. I callate our
+pirate friend&#8217;s got a hidin&#8217; spot over thar, &#8217;n&#8217; most
+likely don&#8217;t want callers. He may be only a queer
+old trapper a little short o&#8217; scruples ag&#8217;in&#8217; takin&#8217;
+what he finds, &#8217;n&#8217; then ag&#8217;in he may be worse&#8217;n that.
+His campin&#8217; spot&#8217;s ag&#8217;in&#8217; him, anyhow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the sun was now very low; a camp site must
+soon be found, and scarce two minutes from the time
+he saw this rising column of smoke, Old Cy dipped
+his paddle and slowly drew back into the protecting
+forest. Once well out of sight, the canoe was turned
+and they sped back down-stream and into the swamp
+once more. Here he turned aside into a lagoon they
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_181'></a>181</span>
+had passed, and at its head they pulled their canoe
+out into the bog.</p>
+
+<p>The two gathered up their belongings, and picking
+their way out of the morass, reached the belt of
+hard bottom skirting the ridge. They were now out
+of sight from the lake, but still too near the stream to
+risk a camp-fire, and so Old Cy led the way along this
+belt until a more secluded niche in the ridge was
+reached, and here they began camp-making. It
+was a simple process. A level spot was cleared
+from brush, two convenient saplings denuded of
+their lower limbs, a cross pole was placed in suitable
+crotches, near-by spruces were attacked with the
+axe, and a bark wigwam soon resulted, and just
+as the darkness began to gather, a fire was started.</p>
+
+<p>Both Old Cy and Ray had worked with a will, and
+none too soon was so much accomplished, for night
+was upon them, and only by the firelight could they
+see to complete the needful preparations.</p>
+
+<p>A peculiar effect of the time, place, and their
+position was also noticeable; for although at least
+a mile away from where this smoke sign had warned
+them, and screened from it by a high ridge, both
+spoke only in whispers. More than that, the camp-fire
+was kept low, barely enough to cook a modest
+meal, and when the flame chanced to flare up, Old
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_182'></a>182</span>
+Cy glanced aloft into the tree-tops to see if they were
+illumed. Not much was said, for Old Cy&#8217;s thoughts
+were far away, and when supper was eaten he lit
+his pipe and sat watching the embers while Ray
+studied him. Ray, too, spoke scarcely a word. All
+that day he had felt much the same, and while he had
+the most implicit confidence in Old Cy&#8217;s wisdom,
+now that he had advised retreat, the reasons for it
+became ten times more ominous to Ray.</p>
+
+<p>Then again, the sombre nook in which they had
+camped and the vast swamp that lay between them
+and the protecting cabin, all had an effect. This
+weird feeling was also added to by the occasional
+cry of some night prowler far away in the forest or
+out in the swamp. Chip&#8217;s spites, those uncanny
+creatures of the imagination, also began to gather,
+and Ray fancied he could hear them crawling
+cautiously about.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like this,&#8221; he whispered at last, &#8220;and
+I wish we hadn&#8217;t come. Don&#8217;t you think we had
+better go back soon as it&#8217;s daylight?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, mebbe,&#8221; answered Old Cy, smiling at
+Ray&#8217;s nervousness. &#8220;I&#8217;ve kinder figgered we might
+watch out from a-top o&#8217; the ridge when mornin&#8217;
+came &#8217;n&#8217; see what we kin see. We might ketch
+sight o&#8217; the pirate chap &#8217;cross the lake.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_183'></a>183</span>&#8220;But suppose he catches sight of us,&#8221; returned
+Ray, &#8220;what then?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t mean he shall,&#8221; answered Old Cy, &#8220;so
+don&#8217;t git skeered. I&#8217;ll take keer on ye.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That night, however, was the longest ever passed
+by Ray, for not until near morning did he fall into
+a fitful slumber, and scarcely had he lost himself
+before Old Cy was up and watching for the
+dawn.</p>
+
+<p>Its first faint glow was visible when Ray&#8217;s eyes
+opened, and without waiting for fire or breakfast,
+they started for the top of the ridge. From here a
+curious sight met their eyes, for the lake and also
+the ridges out of which the smoke had risen were
+hidden beneath a white pall of fog. Back of them
+also, and completely coating the immense swamp,
+was the same sea of vapor. It soon vanished with
+the rising sun, and just as the ledges across the lake
+outlined themselves, once more that smoke sign
+rose aloft.</p>
+
+<p>And now the two watchers could better see whence
+it came. Old Cy had expected to obtain sight of
+some hut or bark shack nestling among these rocks;
+but none was visible. Instead, the smoke rose out
+of a jagged rock, and there was not a cabin roof
+or sign of one anywhere.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_184'></a>184</span>&#8220;That feller&#8217;s in a cave,&#8221; he whispered to Ray,
+&#8220;an&#8217; the smoke&#8217;s comin&#8217; out o&#8217; a crack, sure&#8217;s a gun!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It seemed so, and for a half-hour the two watched
+it in silent amazement.</p>
+
+<p>Then came another surprise, for suddenly Old
+Cy caught sight of a man just emerging from behind
+a rock fully ten rods from the rising smoke; he
+stooped, lifted a canoe into view, advanced to the
+shore, slid it halfway into the water, returned to
+the rock, picked up a rifle, then pushed the canoe
+off, and, crossing the lake, vanished into the outlet.</p>
+
+<p>The two watchers on the ridge exchanged glances.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s goin&#8217; to tend his traps, an&#8217; mebbe ourn,&#8221;
+Old Cy said at last, and then led the way back to
+their bark shack. Here he halted, and placing one
+hand scoop-fashion over his ear, listened intently
+until he caught the faint sound of a paddle touching
+a canoe gunwale. First slightly, then a more distinctive
+thud, and then less and less until the sound
+ceased.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The coast&#8217;s clear,&#8221; he added, now in an exultant
+whisper, &#8220;an&#8217; while the old cat&#8217;s away we&#8217;ll
+take a peek at his den.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A hurried gathering of their few belongings was
+made, the canoe was shoved into the lagoon, and no
+time was lost until the lake was crossed and they drew
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_185'></a>185</span>
+alongside of where the smoke was still rising in a
+thin film. No landing was possible here, for the
+shore was a sheer face of upright slate, and only
+where this lone trapper had launched his canoe
+could they make one.</p>
+
+<p>From here a series of outcropping slate ledges
+rose one above another, and between them and
+parallel to the shore, narrow, irregular passages
+partially closed by broken rock. It was all of slaty
+formation, jagged, serrated, and gray with moss.</p>
+
+<p>Following one of these passages, Old Cy and Ray
+came to the ledge out of which the smoke was rising
+from a crevasse. It was a little lower than one in
+front, perhaps forty feet in breadth, double that in
+length, and of a more even surface. At each end
+was a short transverse passage hardly wide enough
+to walk in, and a few feet deep.</p>
+
+<p>And now, after a more careful examination of
+the crevasse out of which the thin film of smoke
+rose, Old Cy began a search. Up and down each
+narrow passway he peeped and peered, but nowhere
+was a crack or cranny to be found in their walls.
+In places they were as high as his head, sheer faces
+of slate, then broken, serrated, moss-coated, or of
+yellow, rusty color. Here and there a stunted
+spruce had taken root in some crack, and over,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_186'></a>186</span>
+back from the topmost ledge, this green enclosure
+began and continued up the low mountain. Here,
+also, in a sunny nook below this belting tangle of
+scrub spruce, were ample signs of a trapper&#8217;s occupation
+in the way of pelts stretched upon forked
+sticks and hanging from a cord crossing this niche.
+They were of the usual species found in this wilderness,&#8211;a
+dozen muskrat, with a few mink and otter
+skins and one lynx.</p>
+
+<p>Another sign of human presence was also noted,
+for here a log showing axe-marks, with split wood
+and chips all about, was seen.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Some o&#8217; them pelts is ourn,&#8221; Old Cy ejaculated,
+glancing at the array, &#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;ve a notion we&#8217;d
+best hook on to &#8217;em. Mebbe not, though,&#8221; he
+added a moment later, &#8220;it might git us into more
+trouble.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Ray was getting more and more uneasy each
+moment since they had landed there. It seemed
+to him a most dangerous exploit, and while Old
+Cy had hunted over this curious confusion of slate
+ledges and stared at the rising film of smoke, Ray
+had covertly watched the lake&#8217;s outlet.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think we&#8217;d better stay here much longer,&#8221;
+he said at last. &#8220;We can&#8217;t tell how soon that man
+may come back and catch us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_187'></a>187</span>&#8220;Guess you&#8217;re right,&#8221; Old Cy asserted tersely,
+and after one more look at the inch-wide crack out
+of which the smoke rose, he led the way to their
+canoe.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thar&#8217;s a cave thar, sure&#8217;s a gun,&#8221; he muttered,
+as they skirted the bold shore once more, &#8220;an&#8217; that
+smoke&#8217;s comin&#8217; out on&#8217;t. I wish I dared stay here
+a little longer &#8217;n&#8217; hunt fer it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy was right, there was a cave there beneath
+the slate ledge&#8211;in fact, two caves; and in one,
+safe and secure, as its owner the notorious McGuire
+believed, were concealed the savings of his lifetime.</p>
+
+<p>More than that, so near do we often come to an
+important discovery and miss it, Old Cy had twice
+leaned against a slab of slate closing the entrance to
+this cave and access to a fortune, the heritage of
+Chip McGuire.</p>
+
+<p>Ray&#8217;s fears, while well founded, were needless,
+however. McGuire&#8211;for it was this outlaw whom
+they had ample reason to avoid&#8211;was many miles
+away. And yet so potent was the sense of danger,
+that neither Old Cy nor Ray thought of food, or
+ceased paddling one moment, until they had crossed
+the vast swamp and once more pulled their canoe
+out at the point where they had entered it the day
+before.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_188'></a>188</span>Here a brief halt for food and rest was taken;
+then they shouldered their light craft and started for
+Birch Camp.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime another canoe was ascending
+this winding stream, and long before nightfall, Pete
+Bolduc, sure that he was on the trail of McGuire,
+entered the ledge-bordered lake.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_189'></a>189</span><a id='link_19'></a>CHAPTER XIX</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;If most on us cud see ourselves as the rest see us, we&#8217;d
+want to be hermits.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>To</span> trail an enemy who is never without a rifle and
+the will to use it, requires courage and Indian cunning
+as well. Pete Bolduc had both, and after observing
+the many signs of a trapper&#8217;s presence in the swamp,
+he knew, after he crossed it and reached this lake,
+that somewhere on its shores, his enemy, McGuire,
+had his lair.</p>
+
+<p>He paused at the outlet, as did Old Cy, to scan
+every rod of its rocky shores, not once, but a dozen
+times.</p>
+
+<p>The sun was now halfway down. A mellow
+autumn haze softened the encircling mountains and
+the broad, frowning peak to the right. A gentle
+breeze rippled the upper end of the lake, and here,
+in the wild rice growing along its borders, stood a
+deer, belly-deep in the green growth.</p>
+
+<p>No thought of the blessed harmony of lake, sky,
+and forest, or the sequestered beauty of this spot,
+came to the half-breed. Revenge and murder&#8211;twin
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_190'></a>190</span>
+demons of his nature&#8211;were in his heart, and
+the Indian cunning that made him hide while he
+watched for signs of his enemy. The bare peak
+overlooking the lake soon impressed him as a vantage
+point, and after a half-hour of watchful listening
+he laid his rifle across the thwart, handy to grasp
+on the instant, and, seizing his paddle once more,
+crossed the lake to the foot of the peak.</p>
+
+<p>To hide his canoe here, ascend this with pack and
+rifle, was the next move of this human panther, and
+here in a sheltering crevasse he lay and watched for
+his enemy.</p>
+
+<p>Two hours later, and just at sunset, McGuire
+returned to the lake.</p>
+
+<p>As usual, he, too, paused at the outlet to scan its
+shores. He believed himself utterly secure here, and
+thought no human being was likely to find this
+lakelet. But for all that, he was watchful. Some
+exploring lumberman or some pioneer trapper
+might cross this vast swamp and find this lake
+during his absence.</p>
+
+<p>A brief scrutiny assured him that he was still safe
+from human eyes, and he crossed the lake.</p>
+
+<p>From the bare cliff a single keen and vengeful
+eye watched him.</p>
+
+<p>As usual, also, McGuire made his landing at a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_191'></a>191</span>
+convenient point, some fifty rods from his cave, and
+carried his canoe up and turned it over, back of
+a low-jutting ridge of slate. He skinned the half-dozen
+prizes his traps had secured that day and
+followed a shallow defile to his lair. Here his pelts
+were stretched, a slab of slate was lifted from its
+position in a deep, wide crevasse between two of these
+ledges, and McGuire crawled into his den.</p>
+
+<p>Most of these movements were observed by the
+half-breed, who, watching ever while he plotted and
+planned how best to catch his enemy unawares, saw
+him emerge from amid the ledges again, go down
+to the lake, return with a pail of water, and vanish
+once more.</p>
+
+<p>All this was a curious proceeding, for he, like Old
+Cy, had expected to find McGuire occupying some
+bark shelter, and even now he supposed there was
+one among this confusion of bare rocks.</p>
+
+<p>Another surprise soon came to this distant watcher,
+for he now saw a thin column of smoke rise from a
+ledge and continue in varying volume until hidden
+by twilight.</p>
+
+<p>And now, secure in his cave and quite unconscious
+of the watcher with murderous intent who had observed
+his actions, McGuire was enjoying himself.
+He had built a little slate fireplace within his cave.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_192'></a>192</span>
+A funnel of the same easily fitted material carried the
+smoke up to a long, inch-wide fissure in the roof. He
+had a table of slate to eat from, handy by a bed
+filled with moss and dry grass, also pine knots for
+needed light.</p>
+
+<p>Opening into this small cave was a lesser one,
+always cool and dry, for no rain nor melting snow
+could enter it, and here was McGuire&#8217;s pantry, and
+here also a half-dozen tin cans, safely hidden
+under a slab of slate, stuffed with gold and banknotes.</p>
+
+<p>To still further protect this inner cave, he had fitted
+a section of slate to entirely fill its entrance.</p>
+
+<p>When the last vestige of sunset had vanished and
+twinkling stars were reflected from the placid lake,
+the half-breed descended from his lookout point, and,
+launching his canoe, followed close to the shadowed
+shore and landed just above where McGuire disembarked.
+Indian that he was, he chose the hours
+of night and darkness to crawl up to the bark shelter
+which he expected to find, his intention being to
+thrust a rifle muzzle close to his enemy&#8217;s head and
+then pull the trigger.</p>
+
+<p>But to do this required a long wait and extreme
+caution. His enemy surely had a camp-fire behind a
+ledge, and shelter as well. The smoke had seemed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_193'></a>193</span>
+to rise out of a ledge, but certainly could not, and so&#8211;still unaware of McGuire&#8217;s position, yet sure
+that he was amid these ledges, and near a shelter&#8211;Pete grasped his rifle and crept ashore.</p>
+
+<p>It was too early to surprise his enemy&#8211;time to
+fall asleep must be allowed. Yet so eager was the
+half-breed to deal death to him, that he must needs
+come here to wait. No chances must be taken
+when he did crawl up to his victim, for a false
+step or the rattle of a loose stone, or his form
+outlined against the starlit sky as he crawled over
+a ledge, might mean death to him instead of
+McGuire. And so, crouching safely in a dark
+nook above the landing, Pete waited, watched, and
+listened.</p>
+
+<p>One hour passed&#8211;it seemed two&#8211;and then the
+half-breed crept stealthily up to where the smoke
+had been seen. Not by strides, or even steps, but
+as a panther would, lifting one foot and feeling
+where it would rest and then another, and all the
+while listening and advancing again.</p>
+
+<p>It was McGuire&#8217;s habit, while staying here, to
+look at the weather prospects each night, and also
+to obtain a drink of cool lake water before going to
+sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Often when the evenings were not too cold, he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_194'></a>194</span>
+would sit by the lake shore for a half-hour, smoking
+and watching its starlit or moon-glittering surface,
+and listening to the calls of night prowlers.</p>
+
+<p>In spite of being an outlaw, devoid of moral nature,
+and one who preyed upon his fellow-man, he was not
+without sentiment, and the wild grandeur of these
+enclosing mountains, and the sense of security they
+gave, were pleasant to him. His life had been a harsh
+and brutal one. He had dealt in man&#8217;s lust and
+love of liquor. He measured all humankind by
+his own standard of right and wrong, and believed
+that he must rob others or they would rob him. He
+had followed that belief implicitly from the start,
+and would so long as he lived. He felt that every
+man&#8217;s hand was against him, and no reproaches of
+conscience had resulted from his cold-blooded killing
+of an officer. Never once did the thought return
+of the few years when a woman&#8217;s hand sought his in
+tenderness, nor any sense of the unspeakable horror
+he had decreed for his own child.</p>
+
+<p>So vile a wretch seemed unfit for God&#8217;s green earth;
+and yet the silence of night beside this lake, and the
+stars mirrored on its motionless surface, soothed and
+satisfied him.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i4'></a><img src='images/illus-195.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+He grasped and struck at this enemy in a blind instinct of self-preservation.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_195'></a>195</span>He had now and then another impulse&#8211;to
+some day take his savings of many years, secreted
+here, and go to some other country, assume another
+name, and lead a different life.</p>
+
+<p>And now, while an unsuspected enemy was waiting
+for him to enter a sleep that should know no
+waking, he left his cave and seated himself on a
+shelf-like projection close to the lake, which was
+deep here, and the ledge shore a sheer face rising
+some ten feet above the water.</p>
+
+<p>One hour or more this strange compound of brute
+and man sat there contemplating the stars, and then
+he suddenly detected a sound&#8211;only a faint one, the
+mere click of one pebble striking another.</p>
+
+<p>He arose and listened.</p>
+
+<p>Soon another soft, crushing sound reached him.
+Some animal creeping along in the passage between
+the ledges, he thought.</p>
+
+<p>He stepped quickly to the end of the shelf. On
+that instant a crouching form rose upward and confronted
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He had one moment only, but enough to see a tall
+man a step below him, the next a flash of spitting fire,
+a stinging pain in one shoulder, and this human
+panther leaped upon McGuire!</p>
+
+<p>But life was sweet, even to McGuire, and as he
+grasped and struck at this enemy in a blind instinct
+of self-preservation as both closed in a death-grapple,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_196'></a>196</span>
+one instant of awful agony came to him as a knife
+entered his heart&#8211;a yell of mingled hate and
+deadly fear, as two bodies writhed on the narrow
+shelf, a plunging sound, as both struck the water
+below&#8211;and then silence.</p>
+
+<p>Death and vengeance were clasped in one eternal
+embrace.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_197'></a>197</span><a id='link_20'></a>CHAPTER XX</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;Thar&#8217;s two things it don&#8217;t pay to worry &#8217;bout,&#8211;those ye
+can help &#8217;n&#8217; and those ye can&#8217;t.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>When</span> Old Cy and Ray once more made their
+way up the Beaver Brook valley, it was with the
+feeling that this lone and sinister trapper might be
+met at any moment. They dared not leave their
+canoe where it might be easily found, but adopting
+Indian tactics, Old Cy cunningly hid it in a rank
+growth of swamp grass, and oft doubling on their
+own tracks and wading the shallow stream, left only
+a confusing trail.</p>
+
+<p>When the deadfalls had been visited and they
+began gum-gathering again, they watched constantly
+for an enemy.</p>
+
+<p>A dense forest of tall spruces is at best a weird and
+ill-omened spot. Its vastness appalls, its shadows
+seem spectral, and every natural object becomes
+grotesque and distorted. An overturned stump
+with bleaching roots appears like a hideous devilfish
+with arms ready to entwine and crush. A
+twisted tree trunk, prone, rotting, and coated with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_198'></a>198</span>
+moss, looks like a huge green serpent, and even a
+knot in the side of a big spruce will resemble a grinning
+gnome. Even the sunlight flitting through the
+dense canopy plays fantastic tricks, and every breath
+of wind becomes the moan of troubled spirits.</p>
+
+<p>Something of this weird impress now assailed Old
+Cy and more especially Ray, and after two days of
+unpleasant work in this part of the wilderness, they
+gave it up.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like feelin&#8217; I&#8217;m bein&#8217; watched,&#8221; Old Cy
+observed when they once more started for home,
+&#8220;an&#8217; to-morrer I guess we&#8217;d best go &#8217;nother way.
+Thar&#8217;s a good spruce growth over beyond the hog-back,
+&#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;d feel safer leavin&#8217; the canoe whar Amzi
+kin keep an eye on&#8217;t. We kin come up now once
+a week &#8217;n&#8217; tend the deadfalls &#8217;n&#8217; not leave the canoe
+more&#8217;n an hour.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Little did Old Cy realize how groundless his fears
+now were, or that fathoms deep, in a cold, mountain-hid
+lake, the thieving McGuire and the implacable
+half-breed were now locked in the clasp of
+death.</p>
+
+<p>A change of location, however, banished somewhat
+of this spectral presence, and although Old Cy was
+ever alert and watchful, he showed no sign of it.</p>
+
+<p>Ray, more volatile and with implicit faith in his
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_199'></a>199</span>
+protector, soon returned to normal condition of mind
+and once more entered into the spirit of their work
+and sport with a keen zest.</p>
+
+<p>The traps gave increased returns, the little bin where
+they stored their gum was filling slowly but surely, and
+their life at this wildwood home became enjoyable.</p>
+
+<p>Neither was it all labor, for the ducks now migrating
+southward were alighting in the lake by thousands,
+a few hours&#8217; shooting at them from ambush
+made glorious sport, and what with all the partridges
+they had secured and these additions, their ice-house
+was soon unable to hold another bird.</p>
+
+<p>But the halcyon days of autumn were fast passing
+and signs of nearing winter were now visible. Ice
+began to form in little coves, the ducks ceased
+coming, soon the last of them had departed, the leaves
+of all hardwood trees were now joining in a hurry-scurry
+dance with every passing breeze, the days
+were of a suggestive shortness, and soon the grim
+and merciless snow&#8211;the White Spirit of Old Tomah&#8211;would be sweeping over the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>And then one night the Frost King silently touched
+that rippled lake with his wand and the next morning
+Old Cy and Ray looked out upon its motionless
+expanse of black ice. The sky was also leaden, an
+ominous stillness brooded over forest, lake, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_200'></a>200</span>
+mountain, and midway of that day, the first snowfall
+came.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy and Ray were a mile away from the cabin,
+busy at gum-gathering, when the first flakes sifted
+down through the canopied spruce tops. Soon the
+carpet of needles began to whiten, and by mid-afternoon
+they had to abandon work and return.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess we come pretty clus to bein&#8217; prisoners
+now,&#8221; Old Cy ejaculated when he shook himself
+free from the white coating on the cabin porch, &#8220;but
+we&#8217;ve got to make the best on&#8217;t. We&#8217;ll git warm
+fust &#8217;n&#8217; then go &#8217;n&#8217; fetch our canoe up &#8217;n&#8217; stow it in
+the shed. We ain&#8217;t like to want it ag&#8217;in &#8217;fore spring.
+One thing is sartin,&#8221; he added, when the fire began
+to blaze in the open fireplace, &#8220;we are sure o&#8217; keepin&#8217;
+warm &#8217;n&#8217; &#8217;nuff to eat this winter, &#8217;n&#8217; that&#8217;s all we really
+need in life, anyway. The rest on&#8217;t is mostly imagination.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But in spite of his serene philosophy, Old Cy had
+dreaded the coming of winter more than Ray could
+guess, and all on account of that lad. He himself
+knew what a winter meant in this wilderness cabin,
+while Ray did not. Separated as they were from
+civilization by a full hundred miles, and from Tim&#8217;s
+place by forty, they were, as he stated, practically
+prisoners for the next five months.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_201'></a>201</span>To escape on snow-shoes was possible, of course,
+if the need arose, and yet it would be a pretty serious
+venture, after all.</p>
+
+<p>They were in no particular danger, however.
+With plenty of food and fuel, they need not suffer.
+If the cabin burned, they could erect another shelter
+or use the old one. Something of diversion could
+be obtained from ice-fishing or gum-gathering on
+warm days; but not enough, as Old Cy feared, to
+keep Ray content and free from the megrims.</p>
+
+<p>None of these fears escaped Old Cy, however. He
+was too wise for that; and moreover, in order to
+inspire Ray, he now began to affect an almost boyish
+interest in the snow coming and its enjoyments.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We can&#8217;t do much more trappin&#8217;,&#8221; he said that
+first winter evening beside the fire while the snow
+beat against the windows, &#8220;but we kin hev some
+fun keepin&#8217; warm an&#8217; cookin&#8217;, &#8217;n&#8217; when the snow
+hardens a bit we kin go fer gum again, or set tip-ups.
+We&#8217;ve got more&#8217;n a million shiners in the cage up
+the brook, &#8217;n&#8217; &#8217;fore it gits too cold, we&#8217;ll ketch a lot
+o&#8217; trout.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was this faculty for adaptation to the situation,
+this making the best of all circumstances and seizing
+all opportunities for pleasure or profit, that was
+Old Cy&#8217;s woodwise characteristic. No matter if it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_202'></a>202</span>
+stormed, he knew that the sun shone behind the
+clouds. No matter if they were utterly isolated in
+this wilderness, he still saw ways of enjoyment, and
+even when snowbound, or shut in by zero weather,
+he would still find interest in cooking, keeping warm,
+or getting ready to fish, or in gathering gum, when
+the chance came.</p>
+
+<p>But winter had now come upon them with a sudden
+swoop. The next day snow fell incessantly, and
+when the sun shone again, a two-foot level of it hid
+the lake.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as if to test Ray&#8217;s spirits, the temperature
+kept well below freezing for the next week, the wind
+blew continuously, sweeping the snow into drifts,
+and all the three could do, as Old Cy said, was to
+&#8220;cook vittles and keep warm.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now for the first time, Ray began to show
+homesickness. From the day Chip had left, not
+once had he mentioned her or his aunt or uncle in
+any way. He had kept step, as it were, with Old Cy
+in all things adventurous as well as labor and sport.</p>
+
+<p>The possible, even certain gain in the money
+value of the furs and gum which they had secured,
+coupled with their adventurous life, had occupied
+his every thought; but now that he could only help
+Old Cy indoors, he began to mope.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_203'></a>203</span>&#8220;I wonder what they are doing now down in
+Greenvale,&#8221; he said one evening after they had
+gathered about the fire. &#8220;I wish we could hear
+from &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was the first sign of homesickness which Old Cy
+had so long dreaded to see in him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, they ain&#8217;t havin&#8217; half the fun we are,&#8221; Old
+Cy answered cheerfully. &#8220;Jest now I callate Chip&#8217;s
+studyin&#8217; &#8217;longside o&#8217; Aunt Comfort&#8217;s fire; mebbe
+Angie &#8217;n&#8217; Martin&#8217;s over to Dr. Sol&#8217;s, swappin&#8217; yarns.
+To-morrer Chip&#8217;ll go ter school, ez usual, &#8217;n&#8217; when
+Sunday comes they&#8217;ll all dress up &#8217;n&#8217; go ter meetin&#8217;.
+One thing is sartin, they ain&#8217;t takin&#8217; any more comfort&#8217;n
+we are, or gittin&#8217; better things to eat. If the
+weather warms up, ez I callate it will in a day or two,
+we&#8217;ll pull some trout out o&#8217; the lake that &#8217;ud make
+all Greenvale stare. They allus bite sharp arter
+a cold spell. Ez fer Chip,&#8221; he continued, eying
+Ray&#8217;s sober face, &#8220;she ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to fergit ye, never
+fear, an&#8217; when I take ye out o&#8217; the woods in the
+spring &#8217;n&#8217; start ye fer Greenvale with five hundred
+dollars in yer inside pocket, ez I callate, ye&#8217;ll feel&#8217;s
+though ye owned the hull town when ye git thar,
+an&#8217; Chip&#8217;ll feel ez tho&#8217; she owned ye.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wish I could hear how they are once in a
+while,&#8221; Ray rejoined. &#8220;They may be sick.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_204'></a>204</span>That &#8220;they&#8221; meant Chip was self-evident.</p>
+
+<p>Once a mood comes upon a person, it is hard
+to change it, and of all the moods that torture
+poor human beings, the love mood is the most
+implacable. While the zest of trapping was upon
+Ray, he was himself and a cheerful enough lad.
+There had also been the spice of danger from
+this unknown, thieving trapper; but when both
+had vanished, and all that was left for excitement
+was the monotony of indoor life, with occasional
+half-days when fishing through the ice was permissible,
+his spirits fell to low tide.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy had feared this from the outset, but
+believing that the experience here was the best
+possible for the boy, to say nothing of the financial
+side, he had brought it about. And now he had
+his hands full.</p>
+
+<p>But he was equal to it. Next to sport, work,
+he knew, was the best panacea for any mental
+disorder, and work a-plenty he now found for Ray.
+First, it had been the making of tip-ups for use
+on the lake, then snow-shoes for both of them,
+and then cutting and splitting more wood. They
+had an ample supply already, piled high in a lean-to
+alongside the big cabin, but Old Cy asserted
+that it was not enough, and so more was added.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_205'></a>205</span>The paths, one to the lake to obtain water and
+one to the ice-house, were allotted to Ray to keep
+open.</p>
+
+<p>A few days were consumed in filling the ice-house
+once more, and when a warm day came,
+Old Cy led the way to the sheltered side of the
+lake, as enthusiastic as a boy, to begin cutting
+holes and setting lines for fishing.</p>
+
+<p>This especially interested Ray, and one good day
+with a fine catch of trout would revive his spirits
+for some time.</p>
+
+<p>Each and every evening, also, when the social
+side came, Old Cy, always a prolific story-teller,
+would engage in his favorite pastime for a purpose.</p>
+
+<p>And what a marvellous fund he had to draw
+from! All the years when he, a sailor boy, had
+sailed afar, all the strange countries and people
+he had visited, and all the mishaps he had met
+were now levied upon.</p>
+
+<p>When these failed&#8211;and it was not soon&#8211;his
+wilderness wanderings before he settled down
+at Greenvale furnished tales, and when facts
+became scarce, his fancies came into play, and
+many a thrilling shipwreck and hair-breadth
+escape that never happened, held Ray&#8217;s attention
+for a long evening.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_206'></a>206</span>The banjo also helped out for many an hour.
+The old hermit with his jews&#8217;-harp joined in,
+and although Ray&#8217;s fingers were prone to stray
+to &#8220;solemn&#8221; tunes, Old Cy persisted in his calls
+for livelier songs, even to the extent of adding his
+voice; and so the first few weeks of winter wore
+away.</p>
+
+<p>When Christmas neared, however, Ray had a
+&#8220;spell.&#8221; It had been a calendar day in his memory,
+and he had been one of the crowd of young folks
+who made merry in the usual ways; but now no
+cheer was possible, he believed, and once more
+he began to look glum.</p>
+
+<p>It may seem rank foolishness and doubtless
+was, yet Ray, like all humanity, must be measured
+by his years and judged by his surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>In Greenvale he had been one of fifty schoolmates
+whose lives and moods were akin, and
+whose enjoyments must be much the same. Here
+he was, in a way, utterly alone so far as age means
+companionship, and worse than that, one of his
+two companions was morose and misanthropic.
+True, he twanged his jews&#8217;-harp in tune with
+Ray&#8217;s plantation melodies, but when that bond
+of feeling ceased, he lapsed into chill silence once
+more.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_207'></a>207</span>But Old Cy, wise philosopher that he was, saw
+and felt every mood and tense that came to Ray,
+and, seeing thus, forestalled each and every one.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Christmas is &#8217;most here,&#8221; he said to Ray, a
+few days before, &#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;ve been figgerin&#8217; we three
+ought to celebrate it &#8217;cordin&#8217; to the best o&#8217; our
+means. We can&#8217;t do much in the way o&#8217; gifts,
+but we kin bust ourselves with vittles &#8217;n&#8217; have
+some fun, just the same. I&#8217;ve kinder mapped
+out the day sorter this way, if it&#8217;s pleasant. Fust,
+we&#8217;ll hev an arly breakfast, then pack a lot o&#8217;
+things on the hand-sled, go &#8217;cross the lake &#8217;n&#8217; round
+to the cove facin&#8217; the south. Here we&#8217;ll cut a
+few holes, set some lines, &#8217;n&#8217; while you&#8217;re tendin&#8217;
+&#8217;em, Amzi &#8217;n&#8217; me&#8217;ll clear a spot under the bank,
+build a bough lean-to facin&#8217; the sun, spread blankets
+in it, &#8217;n&#8217; when noon comes, cook a meal fit
+fer the gods. We kin hev briled venison, fried
+trout jist out o&#8217; the water, boiled taters, hot coffee,
+&#8217;n&#8217; an appetite that&#8217;ll make ye lick yer fingers &#8217;n&#8217;
+holler fer more. If only the sun shines, we kin
+hev a heap o&#8217; fun.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was all a boyish diversion as planned by Old
+Cy, and the sole object was to tide Ray over a day
+that might add to his homesickness. The weather
+favored this kindly interest.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_208'></a>208</span>Christmas morn opened warm, and but for the
+deep snow it might have been an October day.
+Old Cy&#8217;s romantic plan also materialized to the
+fullest, and when his green bough shed, with carpet
+of the same, was completed, the fire in front
+blazing cheerfully and dinner cooking, it was all
+a picture well worth a study.</p>
+
+<p>Then as if to prove that good luck trots in double
+harness, about this time the trout began to bite,
+and the line of tip-ups across the cove were flagging
+exciting signals that kept Ray and the old
+hermit on the jump. Even when their picturesque
+Christmas dinner was spread upon an improvised
+table in front of the bough shelter, Ray could
+hardly leave the sport to eat, and Old Cy had to
+interfere.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We ain&#8217;t ketchin&#8217; fish to sell,&#8221; he said to Ray,
+&#8220;but jist fer fun. You&#8217;ve got more&#8217;n we kin eat
+in two weeks, so give &#8217;em a rest.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>When dinner was over there came a lazy lounging
+hour on the fir boughs in the warm sun, while
+Old Cy smoked his pipe of content.</p>
+
+<p>Ray, however, could not resist the signal flags
+any longer, and as soon as the meal was eaten he
+was out tending them again.</p>
+
+<p>When the sun was halfway down, again the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_209'></a>209</span>
+happy trio broke camp and returned to the cabin,
+carrying fish enough to feed a multitude. That
+evening Old Cy told stories as usual, Ray picked
+his banjo and sang lively songs, and so ended
+Christmas in the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>Our lives are but a succession of moods, varying
+ever as our surroundings change; and so it
+was with Ray, isolated as he was with two old
+men for companions. With work or sport to
+interest him, he was cheerful and content. But
+when, as now happened, another long and heavy
+snowfall succeeded that mellow Christmas Day,
+he grew morose. It was selfish, perhaps, and
+thoughtless, as youth ever is, and yet not surprising;
+for when the sun shone again, they were practically
+buried under snow. It took an entire day,
+with all three working, to shovel paths to the lake
+and ice-house, and when that was done there was
+naught else except to cook and keep the fire going.
+A few days of this bore heavily on Ray&#8217;s spirits,
+and he became so glum that Old Cy took him to
+task.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve got to brace up, my boy,&#8221; he said one
+evening, &#8220;an&#8217; likewise count yer blessin&#8217;s. We
+are shut up fer a spell, but think how much worse
+off ye might be. We&#8217;ve got plenty to eat &#8217;n&#8217; keep
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_210'></a>210</span>
+warm with, thar&#8217;s a good three hundred pounds
+o&#8217; gum we got, an&#8217; it&#8217;s worth over four hundred
+dollars, say nothin&#8217; o&#8217; the furs, &#8217;n&#8217; all yourn. Then,
+&#8217;nother thing, ye mustn&#8217;t keep broodin&#8217; over yer
+own lonesomeness so much. I&#8217;ll &#8217;low ye&#8217;re kind
+o&#8217; anxious to see the little gal ag&#8217;in, as is nat&#8217;ral;
+but s&#8217;pose it was two years ye hed to look forrard
+to, a-waitin&#8217;, an&#8217; then on top o&#8217; that, arter waitin&#8217;
+so long, ye hed to face three more, with never a
+chance to larn whether she was dead or alive!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now Old Cy paused, and watched the low-burning
+fire as if living once more in bygone days.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It seems a long time, these months,&#8221; he continued
+at last, glancing at Ray, &#8220;an&#8217; so &#8217;tis; but I
+had a longer spell on&#8217;t once, an&#8217; it ended the way
+I hope your waitin&#8217; won&#8217;t. It all happened more&#8217;n
+forty years ago, &#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;ve never told nobody &#8217;bout
+it since.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was born in Bayport, that&#8217;s a seaport town,
+an&#8217; me &#8217;n&#8217; my only brother took to the sea at an
+arly age. We had sweethearts, too, and, curislike,
+they was sisters. Mine was Abbie Grey&#8211;sweet
+Abbie Grey they used to call her, an&#8217; she well
+desarved it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, I used to see her &#8217;tween viages, mebbe
+a week or two, onct in six or twelve months o&#8217;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_211'></a>211</span>
+waitin&#8217;, an&#8217; them was spells I&#8217;ve lived over hundreds
+o&#8217; times, I kin tell ye. We &#8217;greed to hitch
+up finally arter I made one more viage, &#8217;n&#8217; I went
+off, feelin&#8217; life ahead was all apple orchards &#8217;n&#8217;
+sunshine.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He paused, looked long at the dying embers
+once more, and then continued: &#8220;Life is all a mix-up
+o&#8217; hopes &#8217;n&#8217; disapp&#8217;intments, tho&#8217;, an&#8217; the brighter
+the hopes the more sartin they are to be upset.
+I started on that viage feelin&#8217; heaven was waitin&#8217;
+fer me at shore, &#8217;n&#8217; I seemed to &#8217;a&#8217; sailed right into
+the other place, fer our ship sprung a leak &#8217;n&#8217;
+foundered. We took to the boats, ez I told ye
+onct. Most o&#8217; my crew died afore I was picked
+up, &#8217;n&#8217; then the whaler that took me aboard was
+bound on a four years&#8217; viage. That was bad
+enough, but worse was possible, fer she fetched
+up on a coral island one night toward the last on&#8217;t,
+and &#8217;twas plumb six years &#8217;fore I heard from home
+&#8217;n&#8217; Abbie. Things had happened thar in that
+time, too, an&#8217; I was told my brother had been
+given up ez lost, &#8217;n&#8217; Abbie, believin&#8217; we both was
+dead, had married &#8217;nother man. I was so upsot
+I never let her know I was alive, &#8217;n&#8217; she don&#8217;t know
+it to-day, if she&#8217;s still livin&#8217;, which I hope she is.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For a long time now Old Cy remained silent,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_212'></a>212</span>
+his head bowed, his eyes closed, as that long-ago
+page of memories returned, while Ray watched
+him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Life is a curis puzzle,&#8221; he added at last, &#8220;an&#8217;
+we all live in to-morrers. Fust we are like boys
+chasin&#8217; Jack-lanterns, rushin&#8217; on all the time,
+&#8217;spectin&#8217; most o&#8217; the trouble is past &#8217;n&#8217; the future
+is all rosy. We don&#8217;t figger much on to-day, but
+callate next week, next month, next year, is goin&#8217;
+to be more sunshiny, till we get old &#8217;n&#8217; gray &#8217;n&#8217;
+grumpy, &#8217;n&#8217; nobody wants us &#8217;round.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Once more he ceased speaking, and once more
+his eyes closed. Five, ten, twenty minutes passed
+while Ray watched Old Age in repose and the
+fire quite died away.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s gittin&#8217; chilly,&#8221; Old Cy said at last, suddenly
+rousing himself from his dream of the long
+ago and sweet Abbie Grey, &#8220;an&#8217; we&#8217;d best turn
+in.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_213'></a>213</span><a id='link_21'></a>CHAPTER XXI</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The biggest fool thing&#8211;an&#8217; we all do it&#8211;is shakin&#8217;
+hands with trouble &#8217;fore ye meet it.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>For</span> two months life at Birch Camp much
+resembled that of a woodchuck or a squirrel. Now
+and then a day came when the crusted snow permitted
+a gum-gathering trip into the forest, or a
+few midday hours at ice-fishing; and never were
+the first signs of spring more welcome than to
+those winter-bound prisoners. The wise counsel
+and patient example of Old Cy had not been lost
+upon Ray, either; and that winter&#8217;s experience
+had changed him to an almost marvellous degree.
+He was no longer a moody and selfish boy, thinking
+only of his own privations, but more of a man,
+who realized that he had duties and obligations
+toward others, as well as himself.</p>
+
+<p>With the returning sun and vanishing snow,
+animal life was once more astir, and a short season
+of trapping was again entered upon, and mingled
+with that a few days more of gum-gathering. It
+was brief and at a disadvantage, for ice still covered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_214'></a>214</span>
+the lake, and until that disappeared no use of the
+canoes could be made.</p>
+
+<p>Once well under way, however, spring returned
+with speed, the brooks began to overflow, the lake
+to rise, and one morning, instead of a white expanse
+of watery ice, it was a blue and rippled lake once
+more.</p>
+
+<p>And now plans for Ray&#8217;s return to Greenvale were
+in order, and the sole topic of discussion. He was
+as eager as a boy anxious for the close of school,
+and for a double reason, which is self-evident.</p>
+
+<p>It was agreed that Old Cy and himself should
+make the trip out together in two canoes, and
+convey their stores of gum and firs. At the settlement
+these were to be packed, to await later sale
+and shipment. Old Cy would then return to camp,
+and Ray would go on to Greenvale.</p>
+
+<p>A change in this plan came in an unexpected
+manner, however, for a few days before the one
+set for departure, Old Cy, always on watch, saw
+a canoe enter the lake, and who should appear but
+Levi, Martin&#8217;s old guide.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been cookin&#8217; up at a lumber camp on
+the Moosehorn,&#8221; he explained, after greetings
+had been exchanged, &#8220;an&#8217; I thought I would make
+a trip up here an&#8217; call on ye &#8217;fore I went out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_215'></a>215</span>How welcome he was, and how all, even Amzi,
+of those winter-bound prisoners vied with each
+other in making him the guest of honor, need not
+be asserted. He had been a part of their life here
+the previous summer, with all its joys and dangers,
+and now seemed one of them.</p>
+
+<p>When mutual experiences and their winter&#8217;s
+history had been exchanged, of course Chip&#8217;s
+rescue, the half-breed&#8217;s escape, and the whereabouts
+of her father came up for discussion that
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve heard from Tim&#8217;s Place two or three
+times this winter,&#8221; said Levi, &#8220;an&#8217; neither Pete
+nor old McGuire has been seen or heard on since
+early last fall. Pete got thar all safe, but vowed revenge
+on McGuire, as Martin and I found, when
+we went out. He stayed round a week or so, I
+heard later, and then started for his cabin on the
+Fox Hole, &#8217;n&#8217; since then hain&#8217;t never been seen
+or heard of by nobody. Tim an&#8217; Mike went over
+to his cabin &#8217;long in the winter, but no signs of him
+was found, or even of his bein&#8217; thar since snow
+came. McGuire also seems to hev dropped out
+o&#8217; business and ain&#8217;t been heard on since in the
+summer. We&#8217;ve expected him all winter at the
+lumber camp, but he didn&#8217;t show up.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_216'></a>216</span>&#8220;We&#8217;ve seen him,&#8221; put in Old Cy, flashing a
+smile at Ray, &#8220;leastwise I callated &#8217;twas him,
+though I never let on to that effect. He was trappin&#8217;
+over beyond a big swamp last fall, &#8217;n&#8217; he paid
+us a visit, stole a half-dozen o&#8217; our catches &#8217;n&#8217; left
+his trade-mark on our canoe.&#8221; And then Old
+Cy told the story of their adventure, omitting,
+however, any reference to the supposed cave.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s curis what has become o&#8217; him,&#8221; Levi said,
+when the tale was told, &#8220;and our camp crowd all
+believe that thar&#8217;s been foul play, with Pete at the
+bottom on&#8217;t. Nobody&#8217;s shed any tears, though,
+an&#8217; I&#8217;m thinkin&#8217; the woods is well rid o&#8217; him. He&#8217;s
+been a terror to everybody long enough.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Much more of this backwoods gossip and change
+of experience filled in the evening, and next morning
+Old Cy gave Ray a word of caution.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I kept whist &#8217;bout our findin&#8217; what we callated
+was a cave,&#8221; he said, &#8220;an&#8217; I want you to. This
+matter o&#8217; McGuire and the half-breed ain&#8217;t blowed
+over yit, an&#8217; we don&#8217;t want to git mixed up in it.
+Ez fer the cave, if we &#8217;lowed we found one, the
+folks at Tim&#8217;s Place &#8217;ud go huntin&#8217; fer it, sure, &#8217;n&#8217;
+I&#8217;ve my reasons for not wantin&#8217; they should go.
+So mum&#8217;s the word to Levi &#8217;bout it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Levi&#8217;s arrival, however, changed their plans,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_217'></a>217</span>
+for he at once offered to convoy Ray out of the
+woods, thus relieving Old Cy, and three days
+later these two, with well-laden canoes, started on
+the out-going journey.</p>
+
+<p>It was not without incident, for when the main
+stream was reached, it was dotted with floating
+logs and the red-shirted drivers with the bateaux
+and spike shoes were in evidence. A monster
+jam was met at the first rapid, the bags of gum
+nuts, bundles of firs, and canoes had to be carried
+around it, and when Tim&#8217;s Place was reached,
+a score of the good-natured woodsmen were in
+possession.</p>
+
+<p>Levi discreetly avoided all questions as to what
+Tim knew of Chip, her father, or the half-breed.
+Ray&#8217;s lips were also sealed, and so both escaped
+much questioning. Here, also, they learned what
+both had guessed&#8211;that McGuire and Pete had
+either left the wilderness or had perished that
+winter. Where and how, if such was the case,
+no one seemed to know or care, and a close observer
+would have said that every one at Tim&#8217;s Place
+hoped that these two outlaws had met their fate.</p>
+
+<p>Old Tomah was also found at Tim&#8217;s Place, and
+he was undeniably glad to see both Ray and Levi,
+and to learn that Chip was likely to be well cared for.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_218'></a>218</span>When these two voyagers were ready to start,
+he joined and kept with them until the settlement
+was reached. Knowing full well the value of gum
+and furs, he soon found a purchaser for Ray&#8217;s
+store and stock at its full value; and when that
+youth, now elated as never before, was ready to start
+for Greenvale, this fine old Indian showed almost
+a white man&#8217;s emotion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Take this to little girl,&#8221; he said, handing Ray
+a package, &#8220;and tell her Old Tomah not forget.
+He hope she come back to see him soon.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell Mr. Frisbie I shall be here, waitin&#8217; to meet
+him, when he sends word,&#8221; Levi said; and shaking
+hands with both of his good friends, Ray now
+bade them good-by with many thanks for all
+they had done.</p>
+
+<p>Of his homeward trip and all the charming
+anticipations now his, no mention need be made.
+They are but the flowers wisely strewn in the pathway
+of youth, and Ray&#8211;now more a man than
+when he entered the woods&#8211;full well deserved
+all that lay before him.</p>
+
+<p>But Old Tomah&#8217;s heart was sad, and far away
+beside a rippled lake was another who felt the
+same.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_219'></a>219</span><a id='link_22'></a>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;When ye see two hearts tryin&#8217; to beat ez one, gin &#8217;em the
+chance.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Chip&#8217;s</span> success and popularity in Greenvale
+was practically nullified by Hannah, who from
+wounded vanity and petty jealousy became her
+enemy from the outset.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Comfort did not know it. Angie was not
+conscious of the facts, or, busy with her own
+social duties and home-making, gave them no
+thought. And yet, inspired by Hannah&#8217;s malicious
+tongue, Greenvale looked upon poor Chip
+as one it was best to avoid.</p>
+
+<p>With Angie as sponsor, she had been made one
+of the Christmas church decorators, and had been
+twice invited to parties, only to exasperate Hannah
+all the more and cause an increase of sneers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s nobody an&#8217; an upstart,&#8221; Hannah said
+at the first meeting of the village sewing circle
+after Chip&#8217;s advent, &#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;ve my doubts about
+her father an&#8217; mother ever bein&#8217; married. Then
+she&#8217;s an infiddle an&#8217; believes in Injun sperrits an&#8217;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_220'></a>220</span>
+hobgoblin things she calls spites, an&#8217; is a reg&#8217;lar
+heathen. I don&#8217;t trust her a minit, an&#8217; never
+leave the house &#8217;thout I lock up my things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Much more of this sort fell from Hannah&#8217;s lips
+whenever occasion offered, though never within
+hearing of Aunt Comfort or Angie. Neither did
+the townspeople enlighten them, and so the undercurrent
+of innuendo and gossip, once started by
+Hannah, spread until all Greenvale looked askance
+at Chip.</p>
+
+<p>There was also some color for this ill repute,
+for Angie had concealed nothing, and Chip, foolishly
+perhaps, had asserted her belief when it
+would have been better to conceal it.</p>
+
+<p>The parson also, chagrined at his failure to make
+a convert of the girl, referred to her as &#8220;rebellious, obstinate
+in her ideas, and one who needed chastening.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Her teacher, however, was her stanch friend.
+Aunt Comfort beamed upon her morning and
+night, while Angie, having provided her with
+home, raiment, opportunity for schooling, escort
+to church, and much good advice, felt that she
+had fulfilled her duty. And in a way, she had.</p>
+
+<p>But social recognition in a country village can
+be made or marred by such a person as Hannah,
+and quite unknown to those most interested,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_221'></a>221</span>
+Chip&#8217;s popularity was not decreed. Neither was
+she conscious of this undercurrent. Each day
+she went to and returned from school in a sturdy
+sort of way. A most devoted pupil, she never
+failed to thank her teacher for every word of help,
+and if&#8211;thanks to Hannah&#8211;she failed to make
+friends about the village, she won a place near to
+Aunt Comfort&#8217;s heart.</p>
+
+<p>But somehow Aunt Comfort, who loved everybody
+alike, good or bad, or at least spoke no ill
+of the bad ones, didn&#8217;t count. That she must
+inevitably take Chip under her motherly wing,
+all recognized. She had taken Hannah, then Angie
+and Nezer, and now this waif who, as Hannah
+insisted, was all bad; and according to Greenvale&#8217;s
+belief, Aunt Comfort would keep on &#8220;taking in&#8221;
+homeless waifs and outcast mortals as long as she
+lived, or house room held out. And it was true.</p>
+
+<p>By midwinter Martin&#8217;s new house was all furnished,
+and social obligations began to interest
+Angie, which made matters all the worse for Chip,
+for now Hannah could persecute her with less
+danger of exposure.</p>
+
+<p>But Chip was hard to persecute. She had
+known adversity in its worst form. Her life at
+Tim&#8217;s Place had been practical slavery, and the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_222'></a>222</span>
+worst that Hannah could do was as pin pricks
+compared to it.</p>
+
+<p>It is certain, also, if Chip had &#8220;spunked up,&#8221;
+as Hannah would call it, now and then, it would
+have been better for her; but it wasn&#8217;t Chip&#8217;s
+way. To work and suffer in silence had been her
+lot at Tim&#8217;s Place. Angie had said, &#8220;You must
+obey everybody and make friends,&#8221; and impelled
+by experience, and this somewhat broad order,
+Chip was doing her best.</p>
+
+<p>One hope cheered her all that long, hard winter of
+monotonous study&#8211;the return of Ray, and possibly
+Old Cy, when summer came. Somehow these two
+had knit themselves into her life as no one else had
+or could. Then she wondered how Ray would seem
+to and feel toward her when he came, and if the
+little bond&#8211;a wondrous strong one, as far as her
+feelings went&#8211;would still call him to her side.</p>
+
+<p>Of love and its real meaning she was scarce
+conscious as yet. She simply felt that this youth
+with his sunny face and brown eyes was the one
+being on earth she wished to please. All the romance
+and pathos of that summer idyl, all the moonlight
+and canoeing, all the songs he had charmed
+her with, and every word and act of his from that
+first evening when, ragged and starving, she had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_223'></a>223</span>
+stumbled into the camp, until she had parted
+from him with misty eyes, had been lived over by
+her countless times.</p>
+
+<p>It had all been a beacon of hope to her in the
+uphill road toward the temple of learning; and
+how hard she had studied, and how patiently she
+had tried to correct her own speech, not even her
+teacher guessed.</p>
+
+<p>Few of us can see ourselves as others see us,
+and yet Chip, mature of mind as one just entering
+womanhood, realized somewhat her own condition.
+Perhaps, also, she was conscious in some
+degree as to why she was not more popular, but
+that was a matter of scant interest to her. All
+she wished and all she strove for was to learn what
+others knew, speak as others spoke, and act as
+they acted; and all for one end and purpose&#8211;to
+win favor in the eyes of Ray.</p>
+
+<p>And so no one, not even Hannah, whose prying
+eyes saw all things, guessed her secret.</p>
+
+<p>A little of gall and bitterness was now and then
+meted out to Hannah in return for all her sneers,
+for Chip&#8217;s teacher occasionally spent an evening
+at Aunt Comfort&#8217;s, and every word of praise she
+let fall for her pupil was a thorn to Hannah. But
+she revenged herself, as might be expected.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_224'></a>224</span>&#8220;I think that Injun gal&#8217;s a witch,&#8221; she said
+once to her bosom friend after one of these unpleasant
+evenings, &#8220;the way she pulls wool over Miss
+Phinney&#8217;s eyes by pretending she&#8217;s so anxious to
+learn. You&#8217;d think to hear her go on that learnin&#8217;
+was all she was livin&#8217; for, and her teacher almost
+an angel. I think Angie must &#8217;a&#8217; ben spellbound
+the same way when she fetched her here to crowd
+out her betters.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Chip, fortunately, was still unconscious of
+the extent and injury of Hannah&#8217;s malice.</p>
+
+<p>With the coming of springtime and green grass,
+life for Chip assumed a more smiling face, for now
+she could fly to the hillsides, and for the time being
+imagine herself at the lake once more. Somehow
+Greenvale as a whole had impressed her as
+cold and unloving, and to escape it was a relief.
+Her teacher was dear to her, Aunt Comfort a
+kindly mother, Angie a good friend; but none
+were kin to her and never could be, as she more
+and more realized.</p>
+
+<p>Then, too, poor Chip, in spite of Tim&#8217;s Place, was
+growing homesick for the wilderness again; or, to
+be more accurate, for the little lake where her heart
+had been touched by the wand of love.</p>
+
+<p>With some insight into books and a developing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_225'></a>225</span>
+mind came a keener sensitiveness, and what people
+thought of her and how they felt toward her became
+of more consequence. Her life was simple. She
+rose early, assisted as a housemaid in Aunt Comfort&#8217;s
+home, departed at a set time for school with its
+six hours of almost unbroken study, and, most prized
+of all, a few moments&#8217; companionship with her
+teacher. To her Chip had confided all her joys
+and sorrows and most of her history as well. And
+be it said to Miss Phinney&#8217;s credit, she had discretion
+and honor enough not to betray Chip&#8217;s confidence.</p>
+
+<p>It is also possible, in fact almost certain, that
+that unfortunate waif&#8217;s somewhat pitiful tale had
+won her teacher&#8217;s interest and affection as naught
+else could. Only one reservation was made by
+Chip&#8211;her own feelings toward Ray. All else became
+an open book to Miss Phinney.</p>
+
+<p>When school was out, the two walked homeward
+together as far as their ways permitted, and then
+Chip obtained the one hour of the day which she
+felt was quite her own. At first, during the autumn
+days, she had used it for a scamper through the nutbrown
+woods. When winter came and it was not
+too cold, she occasionally visited the mill pond above
+the village, where, if the conditions were right, all
+the skating and sliding youth were gathered; and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_226'></a>226</span>
+when blessed spring returned, it was away to the
+hills and fields once more.</p>
+
+<p>On Saturdays she seldom left the house, unless
+sent on an errand, and Sunday became a day of
+penance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t know why folks watch me so much when
+I go to meetin&#8217;,&#8221; Chip complained once to her teacher,
+&#8220;but they do, and I don&#8217;t like it. I can see now
+why they did when I first came. I guess they
+thought I was an Injun, maybe; but what do I do
+now to make &#8217;em so curious?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I wouldn&#8217;t mind them,&#8221; Miss Phinney
+answered soothingly, &#8220;no one intends to annoy you;
+but it takes a long time for people here to become
+accustomed to a stranger.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Miss Phinney dared not tell her pupil that her
+somewhat wild belief and unquestionably rude
+origin and early life formed the basis of this curiosity.</p>
+
+<p>And now, when the flowers and birds had once
+more returned to Greenvale, and Ray might return
+any day, a little plan that Chip had had in mind
+for many weeks took shape. She knew Ray must
+come on the stage, and eager for a sight of his face
+as only love can make one, she meant to be the first
+to meet and greet him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_227'></a>227</span>A mile down the village street and beyond the
+last house was a sharp hilltop. The stage usually
+reached here about an hour after the close of school,
+and to this vantage point, where she could hide
+behind a stone wall, Chip now betook herself each
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Her plans for meeting her young hero were well
+considered. She was sure he would, like herself,
+prefer a seat with Uncle Joe. That important
+person, whose heart she had won by her admiration
+of his horses on her arrival, would surely invite her
+to ride into the village, if he saw her. If he was
+alone, she would remain hid; but if <i>some one</i> was with
+him, she would then disclose herself and the coveted
+invitation and meeting with Ray would follow.</p>
+
+<p>It was a vague, uncertain plan. No one in Greenvale
+had the remotest idea when Ray would return.
+Chip only knew that he was expected in the spring.
+The day, or even week, was a long-range guess.
+But even that slim chance poor, lonesome, heart-longing
+Chip would not miss, and so each day at
+close of school she hurried to her lookout point to
+watch and wait.</p>
+
+<p>It was a silly, almost hopeless sentinelship, as she
+knew well enough; but with the dog&#8217;s heart that
+was hers, she would keep her vigil, and like one of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_228'></a>228</span>
+those dumb brutes, wait weeks, months, ay, years
+even, for a master coming.</p>
+
+<p>It was mid-April when Chip began her daily watch,
+and missed no day unless a pelting rain prevented.
+It was June ere she won her reward, and then one
+balmy afternoon when she saw the stage afar, there,
+perched beside Uncle Joe, was&#8211;a companion!</p>
+
+<p>How sure that weary, waiting waif was that her
+heart was not mistaken! How her pulses leaped
+and thrilled as the slow-moving stage crept up the
+hill; and how Ray, eager to catch the first glimpse
+of his native village, saw a winsome, smiling face
+shaded by a flower-decked hat, peeping at him over
+a wall, was but a minor episode in the lives of these
+two; yet one to be recalled many, many times afterward
+and always with a heartache.</p>
+
+<p>None came to them now, for on the instant Ray
+saw who was waiting for him he halted the stage,
+and the next moment he was beside his sweetheart.
+And Uncle Joe, with the wisdom and sympathy of
+old age, discreetly averted his face, and said &#8220;Go-lang&#8221;
+to his horses, and drove on alone.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_229'></a>229</span><a id='link_23'></a>CHAPTER XXIII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;There ain&#8217;t but few folks smell woollen quite quick enough.&#8221;
+&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>During</span> all the long weeks while Chip had awaited
+her lover&#8217;s coming, one hope had been hers&#8211;that
+his return would end all her loneliness and begin
+a season of the happy, care-free days like those by
+the lake once more.</p>
+
+<p>And there were many reasons for it.</p>
+
+<p>In this quiet, strictly religious, gossip-loving village,
+a dependant upon charity, as it were, and with
+Hannah&#8217;s sneers, Chip had slowly but surely learned
+how little akin she was to them all, and how distrustful
+they all were of her. This knowledge had come
+by degrees: first, from the way in which the older
+pupils at school regarded her, having always kept
+aloof; then the insistent staring she received each
+Sunday at church; the somewhat chilly reception
+she had met in a social way; and lastly, a seeming
+indifference on Angie&#8217;s part. There was no reason
+for it all, so far as Chip could understand. She
+walked in the straight and narrow path laid out for
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_230'></a>230</span>
+her each day, made herself useful between school
+hours at Aunt Comfort&#8217;s, studied hard, thanked
+Angie for every trifle, and after her first unfortunate
+experience in defending her belief in spites and Old
+Tomah&#8217;s hobgoblins, she had never referred to them
+again. But the seeming fact that she was disliked
+and unwelcome here had slowly forced itself upon
+her and added to her loneliness.</p>
+
+<p>It was all to end, however, when Ray came. In
+him or from him she would find a welcome. He
+knew her as she was, and what she was. He had
+not been distrustful, but tender and loving, and all
+clouds and sorrow and all humiliations would fade
+away when he came.</p>
+
+<p>She had pictured to herself, also, how much they
+would be together and where; how he would come
+to Aunt Comfort&#8217;s the first evening and tell all about
+his winter in the wilderness and Old Cy,&#8211;all about
+the trap-setting, gum-gathering, and the deep snows
+she knew so much about. Maybe he would bring
+his banjo now and then and play and sing the darky
+songs she had hummed so many times. Possibly
+he might come and meet her occasionally on the
+way home from school; and when vacation came,
+how many long rambles they would take in the dear
+old woods, with no such ogre as the half-breed to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_231'></a>231</span>
+spoil them. It had all been a rosy-hued dream
+with her, while she waited his coming. And now
+he was here!</p>
+
+<p>For the first few moments after he kissed her upraised
+lips, she could not speak for very joy; and
+then, as hand in hand they started toward the village,
+her speech came.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been so lonesome,&#8221; she said simply, &#8220;I&#8217;ve
+counted the days, and come down here to meet you
+daily, for over a month. I don&#8217;t like it here, and
+nobody likes me, I guess. I&#8217;m so glad you&#8217;ve come,
+though. Now I shan&#8217;t be lonesome no more. I&#8217;ve
+studied hard, too,&#8221; she added, with an accent of
+pride. &#8220;I can read and spell words of six syllables.
+I&#8217;ve ciphered up to decimal fractions, an&#8217;
+begun grammar.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad to get home, too,&#8221; answered Ray, as
+simply. &#8220;It was lonesome in the woods all winter,
+when we couldn&#8217;t tend the traps. But I&#8217;ve made
+a lot of money&#8211;&#8217;most five hundred dollars&#8211;all
+mine, too. How is everybody?&#8221; And so they
+dropped from sentiment into commonplace.</p>
+
+<p>At the tavern he secured his belongings. At the
+corner where their ways parted, he bade Chip a light
+good-by, and with an &#8220;I&#8217;ll see you soon,&#8221; left her.</p>
+
+<p>Her hero had arrived. They had met, kissed as
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_232'></a>232</span>
+lovers should, and the lonely waiting and watching
+days were at an end and a new life was to begin for
+Chip.</p>
+
+<p>Little did she realize what it would mean for her,
+or how utterly her hopes were to fail.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He will come to-night,&#8221; her heart assured her,
+and that evening, without a word to Aunt Comfort
+or Hannah as to whom she expected, she arrayed
+herself in her one best dress and awaited his expected
+visit.</p>
+
+<p>And what a propitious and all-favoring evening
+it was! The June night was balmy. Blooming
+lilacs and syringas half hid, as well as adorned, the
+porch of Aunt Comfort&#8217;s home. Aunt Comfort had
+just departed to make a call, Hannah was away at
+prayer meeting, and &#8220;no one nigh to hinder.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Chip waited in vain!</p>
+
+<p>The drowsy hum of the Mizzy Falls, up the village
+street, came to her; the fireflies twinkled amid
+the dense-growing maples and over the broad
+meadows; whippoorwills called across the valley;
+but no lover came to Chip. One, two, almost
+three hours she waited and watched. Then came
+Aunt Comfort and Hannah, and heavy-hearted and
+lonesome once more, poor Chip retired.</p>
+
+<p>At school next day her mind and heart were at
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_233'></a>233</span>
+war. The parts of speech and rules of subtraction
+and division seemed complete chaos, and when
+homeward bound, she loitered slowly along, hoping
+Ray would make amends and meet her on the way.
+But again he failed to appear.</p>
+
+<p>And that night, when alone with Hannah, a worse
+blow came.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I heerd young Stetson got back yesterday,&#8221; she
+said, fixing her steely blue eyes on Chip, &#8220;an&#8217; you
+went down the road to meet him. I should think
+you&#8217;d be &#8217;shamed o&#8217; yourself. If you&#8217;re callatin&#8217; on
+settin&#8217; your cap for him, &#8217;twon&#8217;t do a mite o&#8217; good.
+His aunt wouldn&#8217;t think o&#8217; havin&#8217; sich an outcast ez
+you for him&#8211;that I can tell ye.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But not a word of reply came from poor Chip.
+Such speeches were not new to her, and she had long
+before ceased to answer them. But this one, from
+its very truth, hurt more than all others had, and,
+crushed by it, she stole away out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>No thought that Ray might call came to her. She
+only wished to escape somewhere, that she might
+cry away her misery and shame in solitude.</p>
+
+<p>The evening was but a repetition of the previous
+one. The same sweet influence and silvered light
+was all about, but no heed of its beauty came to
+Chip. Instead, she felt herself a shameful thing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_234'></a>234</span>
+of no account. Her lover had failed her&#8211;now she
+knew why, and as she sped along the lonely way to
+the schoolhouse, scarce conscious of her steps, all
+hope and all joy left her. Why or for what purpose
+she was hurrying toward this deserted little building,
+she knew not. Hot tears filled her eyes. Shame
+surged in her heart. She was a nobody in the eyes of
+all her world, and once she had reached the worn
+sill, so often crossed by her, she threw herself upon
+it and sobbed in utter despair.</p>
+
+<p>For a long hour she sat there while the tide of
+feeling ebbed and tears came unchecked, and then
+the reaction came. With it, also, came something
+of the old courage and defiance that had once led
+her to face night, danger, and sixty miles of wilderness
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have made a mistake,&#8221; she said, sitting up,
+&#8220;and Hannah was right. I am a nobody here, and
+Ray has been told so and has kept away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now with returning calm, and soothed,
+maybe, by the still, ethereal night, she saw herself,
+her past and present, as it all was. Back in an
+instant she sped in thought to the moment when,
+kneeling to these people, she begged for food; back
+to that first prayer she ever heard in the tent, and
+the offer of rescue that followed.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_235'></a>235</span>And then her life here, with all its hopes and
+humiliation, rose before her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was all wrong, my coming here,&#8221; she said,
+looking away to the village where lights twinkled;
+&#8220;I am not their sort, nor they mine. I&#8217;d better go
+away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then, lifted a wee bit by this new resolve, she
+rose and returned to the house.</p>
+
+<p>The tall clock in the sitting room was just chiming
+ten when she entered, and Aunt Comfort was there
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Raymond was here this evening,&#8221; she said
+kindly, &#8220;and waited quite a spell. Where have you
+been?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, nowhere,&#8221; answered Chip, pleasantly, &#8220;only
+I was lonesome and went out for a walk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Little did good Aunt Comfort realize what a volcano
+of hope, despair, shame, and tender love was
+concealed beneath that calm answer, or the new
+resolve budding in Chip&#8217;s heart.</p>
+
+<p>No more did Ray suspect it when he met her
+coming home from school the next afternoon.</p>
+
+<p>For during those two wretched hours when she
+was alone on the worn schoolhouse step, poor Chip
+McGuire, the low-born, pitiful waif, had become a
+woman and put away girlish impulses.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_236'></a>236</span>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t come to see you that first evening,&#8221;
+he said at once, &#8220;for uncle and aunty kept me talking
+till bedtime. Where were you last night?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I didn&#8217;t much think you would come,&#8221; answered
+Chip, calmly, smiling at him in a far-off way.
+&#8220;I am a nobody here, as you will soon find out, and
+I don&#8217;t expect&#8211;anything. I got lonesome last
+night and went off for a walk.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ray looked at her in wide-eyed astonishment.
+And well he might, for only two short days since she
+had met him, an eager, simple girl, and now she
+spoke like a woman. No word, no hint of his
+neglect, escaped her; but a cool indifference was
+apparent.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell me about the woods and Old Cy,&#8221; she said,
+not waiting for him to speak again, &#8220;and how is the
+hermit? I want to know all about them.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, I left &#8217;em all right,&#8221; answered Ray, sullenly,
+for like a boy he wanted to be coaxed. And then,
+urged a little by Chip, he told his winter&#8217;s experience.</p>
+
+<p>One episode interested her most of all&#8211;the
+strange trapper&#8217;s doings, his theft of their game,
+their pursuit of him and discovery of his hiding spot.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know who that was,&#8221; she said, when it was all
+described. &#8220;It was my father, and if he had caught
+you spying upon him, I guess he&#8217;d shot you both.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_237'></a>237</span>
+He always used to go somewhere trapping every
+fall; but nobody could ever find where.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>This return to the memories of the wilderness
+wore away something of Chip&#8217;s cool reserve, and
+when the house was reached her eyes had grown
+tender.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall be glad to see you often&#8211;as&#8211;as your
+folks will let you come,&#8221; she said, somewhat timidly
+when they parted; and scarce understanding this
+speech, Ray left her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Chip has changed a whole lot,&#8221; he said to his aunt
+a little later, &#8220;and I wish she hadn&#8217;t; she don&#8217;t seem
+the same any more.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad of it if she has,&#8221; answered Angie, smiling
+at him. &#8220;There was need enough of it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_238'></a>238</span><a id='link_24'></a>CHAPTER XXIV</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Old Cy</span> had builded wiser than he realized when
+he coaxed Ray to spend a winter in the woods.</p>
+
+<p>The long tramps through the vast wilderness; the
+keen hunt for signs of mink, fisher, otter, and wildcat,
+with constant guard against danger; the unremitting
+though zestful labor of gum-gathering; the
+far-sighted need for winter preparation; and last
+but not least Old Cy&#8217;s cheerful philosophy, had
+broadened the lad and developed both muscle and
+mind.</p>
+
+<p>His success, too, had encouraged him. He was
+eager to try another season there, and planned for
+hiring men to gather gum, and saw in this vocation
+possible future.</p>
+
+<p>But the change in Chip puzzled him. He had
+returned, expecting to find her the same timid, yet
+courageous little girl, ready to be his companion
+at all times and to kiss him when he chose&#8211;a
+somewhat better-educated girl, of course, using more
+refined language, but otherwise the same confiding
+child, as it were.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_239'></a>239</span>She was all this the day of his return; and then,
+presto! like a sudden blast of cold air came a
+change. Too loyal to her to question any one, he
+could only wonder why this change.</p>
+
+<p>He called again soon after that first, unsatisfying
+walk home with her, to find her the same cool, collected
+young lady. She was nice to him, induced
+him to talk of the woods once more and his own
+plans; but it was not the Chip of old who listened,
+but quite another person.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am going back to the lake with uncle and aunt,&#8221;
+he said at last, &#8220;and I mean to coax them to take
+you along. You have been shut up in school so
+long, it will do you good.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Please don&#8217;t say a word to them about it,&#8221; she
+urged, in hurt tone, &#8220;for it will do no good. I
+wouldn&#8217;t go, anyway.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Not go to the woods if you could,&#8221; he exclaimed
+in astonishment; &#8220;why, what do you mean?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Just what I say,&#8221; she returned firmly, and then
+added wistfully, &#8220;I&#8217;d fly there, if I had wings. I&#8217;d
+give my life, almost, for one more summer like the
+last. But I shall not go again now, and maybe
+never.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was unaccountable and quite beyond Ray&#8217;s
+ken&#8211;this strange decision of hers&#8211;and her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_240'></a>240</span>
+&#8220;Please don&#8217;t say any more about it,&#8221; closed the
+subject.</p>
+
+<p>Another and even greater shock came to Ray when
+late that evening, on the porch, he essayed to kiss her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, no; please don&#8217;t,&#8221; she said with almost a
+sob, pushing him away. &#8220;It&#8217;s silly now, and&#8211;and&#8211;you
+mustn&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A week later school closed, and Chip&#8217;s conduct
+was then also a puzzle to Miss Phinney. As usual
+on these occasions, when the hour came, each pupil,
+young and old, filed past the teacher at her desk,
+the boys to shake hands, the girls to be kissed, and
+all bade good-by, after which they trooped away,
+glad to escape.</p>
+
+<p>This ceremony now took place as usual. All
+departed except Chip, and she remained at her
+desk. Some intuition of pity or sympathy drew
+Miss Phinney to her at once; and then, at the first
+word from her, Chip gave way to tears&#8211;not light
+ones, but sobs that shook her as a great grief.
+Vainly Miss Phinney tried to cheer and console her,
+stroking the bowed head until her own eyes grew
+misty.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t mean to give way,&#8221; Chip said at last,
+looking up and brushing away the tears, &#8220;but you&#8217;ve
+been so good and patient with me, I couldn&#8217;t help
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_241'></a>241</span>
+it. I hain&#8217;t many friends here, I guess, and&#8211;&#8221;
+choking back another sob&#8211;&#8220;I shall be more
+lonesome&#8217;n ever.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was true enough, as Miss Phinney well understood,
+and somehow her heart went out to this unfortunate
+girl now, as never before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You mustn&#8217;t think about that,&#8221; she said at last,
+in her most soothing voice, &#8220;but come and see me
+as often as you can&#8211;every day, if you like, for I
+shall always be glad to have you. I&#8217;d keep on
+studying, if I were you,&#8221; she added, as Chip brightened,
+&#8220;it will help you on, and I will gladly hear
+you recite every day.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then hand in hand, like two sisters, they left the
+dear old schoolhouse. Little did Miss Phinney,
+good soul that she was, realize how recently poor
+Chip had cried her heart almost out on its well-worn
+sill, or that never again would this strange,
+winsome, woman-grown pupil enter that temple.</p>
+
+<p>At the parting of their ways the two embraced,
+kissed, and with tear-dimmed eyes separated.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t account for it,&#8221; Miss Phinney said to
+herself when well away. &#8220;It may be a love-affair
+with young Stetson, or it may be something worse.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That evening she called on Angie. The result
+was fruitless, so far as obtaining any light upon this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_242'></a>242</span>
+puzzling matter was concerned, for Angie was
+either blind to the situation, or feigned ignorance.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They were together all last summer, of course,&#8221;
+she said, &#8220;in fact, they were forced to be like two
+children, you know. I was glad to have it so, feeling
+it would benefit the girl. If any love flame was
+started then, it has had ample time to die out since.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There is something else the matter with Chip,
+then,&#8221; Miss Phinney rejoined, &#8220;she has been moody
+and quite upset at times for the past few weeks, and
+to-day when school closed, she sobbed like a brokenhearted
+woman. It was quite pathetic, and I had
+to cry myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That night Angie took counsel of her husband.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, what if it is so,&#8221; he responded, to her suggestion
+that a love-affair might have started between
+them. &#8220;It won&#8217;t harm either. So far as I&#8217;ve observed,
+the girl couldn&#8217;t have been better behaved
+since she came here. She has never missed an hour
+at school all winter, no matter how cold it has been.
+Her teacher says she has made wonderful progress.
+She has attended church with you every Sunday,
+and as for Ray&#8211;well, if I were in his shoes, I&#8217;d
+be in love with her myself.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was clear enough that Angie&#8217;s fears were not
+shared by Martin.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_243'></a>243</span>&#8220;But think of her origin and parentage,&#8221; answered
+Angie, &#8220;and that outlaw father who might
+appear at any time! The very idea of Ray marrying
+her is preposterous. It would wreck his life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But what about Chip?&#8221; returned Martin, who
+had broader views of life. &#8220;You brought her here
+to Christianize and educate her; do you propose
+to turn her adrift because she has a pretty face and
+the boy sees it? She isn&#8217;t to blame for her origin.
+As for Ray, if he shows that he is able to support a
+wife and wants her, I honor him for it, and I&#8217;ll give
+him a house to start with.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>At Aunt Comfort&#8217;s, however, no signs of love
+troubles were visible; in fact, no signs of any sort,
+except the malicious &#8220;hanging around&#8221; interference
+of Hannah whenever Ray was there. She seemed
+to feel it her duty to remain on guard at such times,
+much to Ray&#8217;s disgust. No annoyance at this
+was apparent in Chip. She helped at housework,
+studied at odd hours, and when Ray came she met
+and talked with him as if he were a brother.</p>
+
+<p>The day he was to leave Greenvale was close at
+hand, however, and the evening before he came
+early, bringing his banjo, and by tacit consent, perhaps
+to escape Hannah, they both left the house at
+once.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_244'></a>244</span>Just above the village there was a long, narrow
+pond, wooded upon one side and around its upper
+end, with partially cleared land and scattered trees
+along the opposite bank. One of these trees was a
+monster beech near the water&#8217;s edge, the trunk of
+which was scarred by many entwined initials.</p>
+
+<p>To this lovers&#8217; trysting tree now came Ray and
+Chip.</p>
+
+<p>The evening was not one for romance, for no
+moon graced it&#8211;only stars were reflected from the
+pond&#8217;s motionless surface, while fireflies twinkled
+above it.</p>
+
+<p>The shadow of the near parting also hovered over
+these two as, hand in hand, they picked their way
+up and along the bank; and once seated beneath
+the tree, it seemed to forbid speech.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wish you&#8217;d play some of the songs you used to,&#8221;
+Chip said at last hurriedly, &#8220;I&#8217;d like to think I&#8217;m
+back at the lake again.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Glad to do so, Ray drew out his banjo and began
+to tune it. He started a song also&#8211;one of the
+&#8220;graveyardy&#8221; ones which Old Cy had interdicted,
+but choked at once and stopped abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t sing to-night,&#8221; he said, &#8220;I&#8217;m too blue
+about going away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There were two in this frame of mind, evidently,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_245'></a>245</span>
+for Chip made no protest, and for another long
+interval they watched the fireflies and listened to
+the whippoorwills.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wish you were going back with us,&#8221; Ray said
+at last. &#8220;It breaks my heart to go away so soon and
+leave you. Why won&#8217;t you let me ask my uncle to
+take you? He might be glad to do it, just for me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; answered Chip, firmly, &#8220;you mustn&#8217;t. It
+would shame me so that I couldn&#8217;t look them in
+the face.&#8221; Then, as if this subject and their own
+feelings must be avoided, she added hurriedly,
+&#8220;Tell me what you will do when the folks come
+back&#8211;whether you will come with them or stay
+at the lake?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Stay there, I suppose,&#8221; answered Ray, somewhat
+doggedly, for money-making and love were in conflict.
+&#8220;Old Cy says we can make a lot of money if
+I will. I wish I were rich,&#8221; he added with a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>He was not the first young man to whom that
+wish had come at such a moment. But converse
+between them was at ebb tide just now, and the
+parting moment, ever creeping nearer, overshadowed
+all else. To Chip&#8211;known only to herself&#8211;it
+meant forever. To Ray, another long isolation from
+all the world and young associates, and all for a few
+hundred dollars sorely needed by him, yet seeming
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_246'></a>246</span>
+of scant value compared to the sweet companionship
+of this maid.</p>
+
+<p>Then Chip&#8217;s feelings and the reason for them were
+quite beyond him. He could not see why she was
+unwilling to ask to be taken to the woods again, nor
+why she held herself aloof from him. She had not
+done so at the lake, or when they met again, and why
+should she now?</p>
+
+<p>Something of this might have been inferred by
+Chip, for she suddenly arose.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think we&#8217;d best go back,&#8221; she said. &#8220;It&#8217;s
+time, and Hannah will be watching for me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>What Ray might have said had he been a world-wise
+man, does not matter. What he did was to
+pick up his useless banjo, and clasping Chip&#8217;s arm,
+led her along the winding walk.</p>
+
+<p>Below the falls and near the house they paused,
+for now the last moment alone together had come,
+and with it the real parting.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Tell Old Cy I&#8211;I haven&#8217;t forgot him,&#8221; whispered
+Chip, her voice quivering, &#8220;and&#8211;and&#8211;you
+won&#8217;t forget me either, will you, Ray?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That little sob in her speech was all that was
+needed to break away the barrier between them,
+for the next instant Ray&#8217;s arms were about the girl.</p>
+
+<p>No words of love, no protestations, no promises.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_247'></a>247</span>
+Only one instant&#8217;s meeting of soul and impulse,
+fierce as love of life, sacred as the hand of death.</p>
+
+<p>Love consecrated it. The shadowing maples
+blessed it. The stars hallowed it.</p>
+
+<p>And yet it was a long, long parting.</p>
+
+<p>When Ray rode away next morning, he watched
+for her at the first sharp hilltop.</p>
+
+<p>It was in vain, for Chip&#8217;s resolve had been taken,
+and he never saw the forlorn figure crouching behind
+that bush-topped wall, or knew that two wistful,
+misty eyes had seen him depart.</p>
+
+<p>Few of us ever see even a faint image of ourselves
+as others see us; and yet, calm reflection spurred
+to self-analysis by a hungry heart occasionally
+effects that almost miracle.</p>
+
+<p>In Ray&#8217;s case it did; for after his eager eyes had
+scanned every rod of that roadside trysting-place in
+vain, a revelation came to him&#8211;not a wide open
+one, such as he deserved, but a glance at himself
+and his conduct as it had been. First he saw Chip
+just as she entered their camp that night in the wilderness,
+so pitiful in appearance, so pathetic in her
+abject gratitude. Once again he looked at her
+appealing eyes growing misty while he played and
+sang his old-time love songs. He remembered that
+during all the days, weeks, and months following,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_248'></a>248</span>
+he had never failed to find the love-light of admiration
+when his eyes met hers. It had all been a
+summer idyl, so sweet, so romantic, so tender, and
+so unexpected that he had scarce realized its value&#8211;not at all then, but faintly now.</p>
+
+<p>For all that up-hill, down-dale journey to Riverton,
+he lived over this moonlit lake and wilderness camp
+episode, and every hour and every thought shared
+with him by this girl&#8211;a playmate and lover combined&#8211;returned
+again like echoes of past and gone
+heart throbs, each time a little sweeter, each time
+a trifle more piercing, until his own self-complacency
+faded quite away and an abject penitence began to
+replace it. For the first time in his callow youth
+he began to reflect, and once started on this beneficial
+course, the barometer of his vanity fell rapidly.
+It was not long ere his own conduct since he returned
+to Greenvale also added an assault. He had utterly
+failed to realize the meaning of Chip&#8217;s abject devotion&#8211;her
+pitiful first-hour confessions of how hard
+she had studied, and all for his sake; how she had
+counted days and hours until he was likely to return;
+how many times she had gone to the hilltop to watch
+for him; and even the eagerness of her arms and
+the warmth of her lips at that first moment of meeting,
+now came back to him.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_249'></a>249</span>Another and even a more painful self-reproach followed
+this&#8211;his own neglect of opportunities and
+the result.</p>
+
+<p>He had returned to Greenvale feeling that Chip
+was his devoted slave and had found that she was.
+Like many another arrogant youth, he had plumed
+himself upon that fact, taking everything for granted.
+He had yielded to his aunt&#8217;s and other friends&#8217;
+coaxings to tell his past winter&#8217;s history of life in
+the woods, feeling that Chip could and would wait;
+and then, an unexpected and most vexatious frost
+had fallen upon his little love-garden, and presto!
+his confiding sweetheart, his almost abject slave,
+was one no longer.</p>
+
+<p>At the moment of starting, that wildwood camp
+and charming lake had seemed a Mecca which he
+must hasten to reach once more. When he again
+beheld it, it had lost its fairness, and to return to
+Greenvale and beg and implore Chip&#8217;s forgiveness&#8211;ay, even kneel to her, if need be&#8211;seemed the
+only duty life held.</p>
+
+<p>His punishment had only just begun.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<p class='fs16 c'>PART II<br />VERA RAYMOND</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_253'></a>253</span><a id='link_25'></a>CHAPTER XXV</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>For</span> a few more days, Chip lived the life that had
+now become unbearable, and then the end came.
+It was hastened, perhaps, by Hannah, for that ill-tempered
+spinster had been ever watchful, and with
+shrewd insight had seen or guessed all that had
+transpired.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I s&#8217;pose ye know why the Frisbies hurried away
+so soon after Ray got back,&#8221; she said to Chip that
+last day. &#8220;If you don&#8217;t, I can tell ye. It was &#8217;cos
+they noticed the goin&#8217;s on &#8217;tween you an&#8217; him, an&#8217;
+wanted to head it off.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Not a word of protest came from the poor child
+in response to this sneer, and that night she wrote
+two notes, one to Miss Phinney, the other to Aunt
+Comfort. Then, making a bundle of the few belongings
+she could call her own&#8211;the beaded
+moccasins, cap, and fur cape old Tomah had given
+her, and other trifles&#8211;she waited until almost midnight
+and stole out of the house.</p>
+
+<p>Once before she had left her only shelter, in
+a more desperate mood. Now the same impulse
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_254'></a>254</span>
+nerved her, and for ample reason. Dependent upon
+the bounty of those in no wise kin to her, tortured
+by the sarcastic tongue of Hannah, her heart hungering
+for a love she believed could never be hers, no
+other outcome seemed possible; and defiant still, yet
+saddened beyond all words, she set out to escape it all.</p>
+
+<p>Where to go, she knew not nor cared&#8211;only to
+leave Greenvale and all the shame, sorrow, and humiliation
+it held for her, and make her own way in
+the world as best she could.</p>
+
+<p>The village street was as silent as midnight always
+found it. The low murmur of the Mizzy Falls
+whispered down the valley. A half-moon was just
+rising, and as Chip reached the hilltop where she had
+waited for Ray, she halted. From here must be
+taken the last glance at Greenvale, and as she turned
+about a sob rose in her heart, in spite of her stern
+resolve, for ties cannot be sundered easily.</p>
+
+<p>And how vivid and life-lasting was that picture!
+The two long rows of white houses facing the broad
+street, the tall-spired church in the middle of them;
+scattered dwellings to the right and left; away to one
+side the little brown schoolhouse that had been her
+Mecca; the stream that wound through the broad
+meadows; and over all the faint sheen of the rising
+moon.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_255'></a>255</span>Only for a moment she paused for this good-bye
+look, then turned and ran. On and on she sped
+mile after mile, up hill, down hill, halting now and
+then for breath until a cross-road was reached, and
+here she stopped. Here also came the question of
+direction. To follow the main road was to reach
+Riverton, between which and Greenvale the stage
+journeyed. To go there meant being recognized
+perhaps. In her study of geography, she had found
+that the village which was her birthplace lay northeast
+from Greenvale. She meant sometime and
+somehow to reach that spot and visit her mother&#8217;s
+grave once more, and also, if possible, to send word
+to Old Tomah. And so guided by this vague plan,
+she turned to the left.</p>
+
+<p>From now on the road became narrow. Miles
+elapsed between houses, and Chip, wearied and
+heavy-eyed, could only creep along. The way
+became more devious now, bending around a wooded
+hill and then crossing a wide swamp to enter a stretch
+of forest. Direction became lost in these turnings,
+the road grew hilly and less travelled. The moon
+scarce showed it; and Chip, almost exhausted,
+stumbled over stones and felt that she was becoming
+lost in an unsettled country. And then, just as she
+emerged from a thicket and ascended a low hill, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_256'></a>256</span>
+light of coming dawn faced her, and with it the need
+of sleep and concealment.</p>
+
+<p>Full well she knew she must avoid all observing
+eyes and place many more miles between herself and
+Greenvale to be certain of escape. And then, as
+the daylight increased, she caught sight of an old,
+almost ruined dwelling half hid among bushes just
+ahead. Even if empty, as it appeared, it would
+serve for shelter, and finding it so, she crept in, so
+wearied that she fell asleep at once on the warped
+and mouldy floor.</p>
+
+<p>It was only a brief nap, for soon the rattle of a
+passing farm wagon woke her, but refreshed somewhat
+by it, she again pushed on.</p>
+
+<p>Soon a brook, singing cheerfully as it tumbled
+down a ledge, was reached, and here Chip bathed
+her face and hands and drank of the sweet, cool
+water.</p>
+
+<p>Hunger also asserted itself, but that did not daunt
+her. She had faced it once before.</p>
+
+<p>Then something of a plan as to her future movements
+began to shape itself in her mind, following
+which came an increased courage and self-reliance.
+Not a cent did she now possess. Food she could
+not have until she had made good her escape and
+could earn it somewhere.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_257'></a>257</span>But the sun was shining, the birds were singing,
+her young, supple body was strong, life and the
+world were ahead; and, best of all, never again
+would she have to feel herself a dependent upon
+any one.</p>
+
+<p>With these blessings, scant to most of us, hardened
+as she had been by servitude at Tim&#8217;s Place, came a
+certain buoyancy of spirit and defiance of all things
+human.</p>
+
+<p>No wild beasts were here to menace, no spites to
+creep and crawl along fence or hedgerow, no hideous
+half-breed to pursue, and as she counted her blessings,
+while her spirits rose, a new life and new hope
+came to her.</p>
+
+<p>And now another feeling came&#8211;the certainty
+that she had come so far that no one would recognize
+her. At first that morning, when she heard a team
+coming or overtaking her, she had hidden by the
+roadside until it passed. When a house was sighted
+ahead, she made a wide detour in the fields to avoid
+it. Now this sense of caution vanished, and she
+strode on fearless and confident.</p>
+
+<p>When night came again she crept into an unused
+sheep barn, and when daylight wakened her, she
+hurried on once more.</p>
+
+<p>During all that first day&#8217;s journey, her one fear
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_258'></a>258</span>
+had been that some one she would meet might recognize
+her and report the fact in Greenvale. To
+avoid that had been her sole thought. Now that
+feeling of danger was vanishing, and when people
+were met, she looked at them fearlessly and kept on.
+When cross-roads were reached and a choice in ways
+became necessary, she followed the one nearest to
+northeast, and for the reason that her school map
+had shown that her birthplace lay in this direction.
+How far away it was, she had not the faintest idea,
+or whether she could live to reach it. Her sole
+thought was to escape Greenvale and the humiliating
+life of dependence there, and when she was so
+far away that no one could find her, obtain work
+at some farm-house.</p>
+
+<p>All that second day she plodded on that same
+patient up-hill, down-dale journey, never halting
+except to pick a few berries, or where a brook crossed
+the road to obtain a handful of watercress or some
+sweet-flag buds.</p>
+
+<p>Now and then villages were passed, again it was
+country sparsely settled, where farm-houses were
+wide apart, and when this day was waning, even
+these had vanished and she found herself in almost
+a wilderness once more.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i5'></a><img src='images/illus-260.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+&#8220;Won&#8217;t you please give me a lift an&#8217; a chance to earn my vittles for a day or two?&#8221;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_259'></a>259</span>Hills now met her already weary feet; they seemed
+never ending, for as the crown of one was reached,
+another met her eyes. The roadway also became
+badly gullied, always stony, with grass growing in
+the hollows.</p>
+
+<p>By now she was faint and dizzy from two days&#8217;
+fasting, and so footsore that she could scarce limp
+along. So far her defiant pride had kept her from
+begging food, but now that was weakening, and at
+the next house she would have asked a morsel. But
+no next house came. Only the same scrub growth
+along the wayside with now and then a patch of
+forest, with never a fence, even, to indicate human
+ownership.</p>
+
+<p>The sun had now vanished. Already the stretches
+of forest were shadowy, and as Chip reached the
+apex of another long hill, beyond and far below she
+could see another darkened valley. Night seemed
+creeping up from it to meet her. Not a house, not
+even a fence or recent clearing&#8211;only the unending
+tangle of green growth and this dark vale beyond.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess I&#8217;ll starve &#8217;fore I find another house,&#8221;
+poor Chip muttered, and then as the utter desolation
+of her situation and surroundings were realized for
+a moment, her defiant courage gave way.</p>
+
+<p>For two days and half a night she had plodded on
+without food and with scarce a moment&#8217;s rest. Her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_260'></a>260</span>
+feet were blistered, her eyes smarted from sun and
+dust, her head swam. She was miles away from
+any human habitation, footsore, weary, and despondent,
+with night enclosing her&#8211;a homeless waif, still
+clinging to the small bundle that contained her all.</p>
+
+<p>But now as she crouched by the roadside, too
+exhausted to move on, the memory of those three
+days and nights of horror, one year ago, came to her.
+Her plight was bad enough now, but nothing to
+compare with what it was then, and as all the terror
+and desperation of that mad flight now returned, it
+renewed her courage.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t so bad off as I was then,&#8221; she said. &#8220;I&#8217;m
+sure of finding a house to-morrow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now, as if this moment marked the turning-point
+of her fortunes, from far down the hill she had
+climbed, came the faint creak, creak, and jolting
+sound of an ascending wagon. Slowly it neared,
+until just at the hilltop where Chip sat, the tired
+horse halted, and its driver saw her rise almost
+beside the wagon.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mister,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I&#8217;m nearly tuckered out and
+&#8217;bout starved. Won&#8217;t you please give me a lift an&#8217;
+a chance to earn my vittles for a day or two?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The man gave a low whistle.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why sartin, sartin,&#8221; he answered in a moment,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_261'></a>261</span>
+&#8220;but who be ye? I thought for a minute ye was a
+sperit. Git up here,&#8221; he added, without waiting for
+a reply and moving to make room. Then as Chip
+obeyed, he chirruped to his horse and down the hill
+they rattled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who might be ye, girlie, an&#8217; whar&#8217;d ye come
+from?&#8221; he asked again, as they came to another
+ascent and the horse walked.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My name&#8217;s Vera, Vera&#8211;Raymond,&#8221; answered
+Chip, &#8220;an&#8217; I run away from where I was livin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That&#8217;s curis,&#8221; answered the old man, glancing
+at her; &#8220;whar&#8217;d ye run away from, some poor farm?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, sir,&#8221; replied Chip, almost defiantly, &#8220;but I
+guess I was a sort o&#8217; pauper. I was livin&#8217; with
+folks that fetched me out o&#8217; the woods an&#8217; was
+schoolin&#8217; me, and I couldn&#8217;t stand it, so I run away.
+I don&#8217;t want to tell where they be, or where I came
+from either,&#8221; she added in a moment, &#8220;for I don&#8217;t
+want them ever to find me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, that&#8217;s a proper sort o&#8217; feelin&#8217;,&#8221; responded
+the man, still looking at his passenger, &#8220;an&#8217; I don&#8217;t
+mind. I live down beyond here in what&#8217;s called
+the Holler. Somebody called it Peaceful Valley
+once. We&#8217;ll take keer o&#8217; ye to-night &#8217;n&#8217; to-morrer
+we&#8217;ll see what&#8217;s best to be done. I guess ye need
+a hum &#8217;bout ez bad ez a body kin, anyway.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_262'></a>262</span>And so Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness and
+erstwhile protégée of a philanthropic woman, as Vera
+Raymond found another home, and began still
+another life with this old farmer, Judson Walker,
+and his wife Mandy.</p>
+
+<p>But a sorrow deeper far than Chip ever realized
+fell upon Aunt Comfort when her brimming eyes
+read her note the morning after her flight.</p>
+
+<div class='bquote'>
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Dear Aunt Comfort</span>,</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t stand Hannah or being a pauper any
+longer. She as good as told me I wanted your
+money and I never thought of it. She said I wasn&#8217;t
+good enough for Ray, either, and that was the reason
+Mrs. Frisbie took him away so soon. I know I
+ain&#8217;t good for nothin&#8217; nor nobody, but I didn&#8217;t ask
+to be fetched here and I am going away, never, never,
+never to come back. If ever I can, I will pay you
+and Mrs. Frisbie for all I&#8217;ve eat and had.</p>
+</div> <!-- block quote -->
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='tar mr30 mb00'>&#8220;Good-bye Forever,</p>
+<p class='tar mt00'>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Chip</span>.&#8221;</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_263'></a>263</span><a id='link_26'></a>CHAPTER XXVI</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;There&#8217;s a heap o&#8217; comfort in lookin&#8217; on the dark side o&#8217;
+life cheerfully.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Old Cy</span> especially found life dull after Ray had
+gone. The hermit also appeared to miss him and
+became more morose than ever. He never had been
+what might be termed social, speaking only when
+spoken to, and then only in the fewest possible
+words. Now Old Cy became almost a walking
+sphinx, and found that time passed slowly. His
+heartstrings had somehow become entwined with
+Ray&#8217;s hopes and plans. He had bent every energy
+and thought to secure for Ray a valuable stock of
+furs and gum, and, as was his nature, felt a keen
+satisfaction in helping that youth to a few hundred
+dollars.</p>
+
+<p>Now Ray had departed, furs, gum, and all. He
+had promised to return with Martin and Angie later
+on, but of that Old Cy felt somewhat dubious, and
+so the old man mourned.</p>
+
+<p>There was no real reason for it, for all Nature was
+now smiling. The lake was blue and rippled by
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_264'></a>264</span>
+the June breezes; trout leaped out of it night and
+morning; flowers were blooming, squirrels frisking,
+birds singing and nest-building; and what Old Cy
+most enjoyed, the vernal season was at hand.</p>
+
+<p>Another matter also disturbed him&#8211;the whereabouts
+of McGuire and the half-breed, Pete Bolduc.</p>
+
+<p>Levi had brought the information that neither had
+been seen nor heard of since the previous autumn;
+but that was not conclusive, and somehow Old Cy
+felt that a certain mystery had attached itself to them,
+and once we suspect a mystery, it pursues us like a
+phantom. He did not fear either of these renegades,
+however. He had never harmed them. But he
+felt that any day might bring a call from one or the
+other, or that some tragic outcome would be disclosed.</p>
+
+<p>Another problem also annoyed him&#8211;who this
+thief of their game could be, and whether his supposed
+cave lair was a permanent hiding-spot.</p>
+
+<p>Two reasons had kept Old Cy from another visit
+to that sequestered lake during the fall trapping
+season: first, its evident danger, and then lack of
+time. But now, with nothing to do except wait
+for the incoming ones, an impulse to visit again this
+mysterious spot came to him.</p>
+
+<p>He had, at the former excursion, felt almost certain
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_265'></a>265</span>
+that this unknown trapper was either McGuire
+or the half-breed. Some assertions made by Levi
+seemed to corroborate that theory, and impelled by
+it, Old Cy started alone, one morning, to visit this
+lake again. It took him until midday to carry his
+canoe, camp outfit, rifle, and all across from stream
+to stream, and twilight had come ere he reached the
+lagoon where he and Ray had left the main stream
+and camped. Up here Old Cy now turned his canoe,
+and repairing the bark shack they had built, which
+had been crushed by winter&#8217;s snow, he camped
+there again.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning, bright and early, he launched his
+canoe and once more followed the winding stream
+through the dark gorge and out into the rippled lake
+again.</p>
+
+<p>Here he halted and looked about.</p>
+
+<p>No signs of aught human could be seen. The long,
+narrow lakelet sparkled beneath the morning sun.
+The bald mountain frowned upon it, the jagged
+ledges just across faced him like serried ramparts,
+an eagle slowly circled overhead, and, best indication
+of primal solitude, an antlered deer stood looking at
+him from out an opening above the ledges.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Guess I&#8217;m alone here!&#8221; exclaimed Old Cy,
+glancing around; &#8220;but if this ain&#8217;t a pictur worth
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_266'></a>266</span>
+rememberin&#8217;, I never saw one. Wish I could take
+it with me into t&#8217;other world; an&#8217; if I was sure o&#8217;
+findin&#8217; a spot like it thar, I&#8217;d never worry &#8217;bout
+goin&#8217; when my time comes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>After a long wait, as if he wanted to observe
+every detail of this wondrous picture of wildwood
+beauty, he dipped his paddle, crossed the sheet of
+rippled water, and stepped ashore at the very spot
+where he and Ray had landed over eight months
+before.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Great Scott!&#8221; he exclaimed, glancing around,
+&#8220;if thar ain&#8217;t a canoe, bottom up! Two, by ginger!&#8221;
+he added, as he saw another drawn out and half hid
+by a low ledge.</p>
+
+<p>To this second one he hastened at once, and looked
+into it.</p>
+
+<p>It had evidently rested there all winter, for it was
+partially filled with water, and half afloat in it were
+two paddles and a setting pole. A gunny-cloth bag,
+evidently containing the usual cooking outfit of a
+woodsman, lay soaking in one end, a frying-pan
+and an axe were rusting in the other, and a coating
+of mould had browned each crossbar and thwart.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Been here quite a spell, all winter, I guess,&#8221;
+muttered Old Cy, looking it over, and then he
+advanced to the other canoe. That was, as he asserted,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_267'></a>267</span>
+bottom up, and also lay half hid back of a
+jutting ledge of slate. Two paddles leaned against
+this ledge, and near by was another setting pole. All
+three of these familiar objects were brown with damp
+mould and evidently had rested there many months.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Curis, curis,&#8221; muttered Old Cy again. &#8220;I
+callated I&#8217;d find nothin&#8217; here, &#8217;n&#8217; here&#8217;s two canoes
+left to rot, &#8217;n&#8217; been here all winter.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then with a vague sense of need, he returned to
+his canoe, seized his rifle, looked all around, over the
+lake, up into the green tangle above the ledges, and
+finally followed the narrow passage leading to where
+he had once watched smoke arise. Here on top of
+this ledge he again halted and looked about.</p>
+
+<p>Back of it was the same V-shaped cleft across
+which a cord had held drying pelts, the cord was
+still there, and below it he could see the dark skins
+amid the confusion of jagged stones.</p>
+
+<p>Turning, he stepped from this ledge to the lower
+one nearer the lake, walked down its slope, and
+looked about again. At its foot was a long, narrow,
+shelf-like projection, ending at the corner of the ledge.
+Old Cy followed this to its end and stepped down into
+a narrow crevasse.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Great Scott!&#8221; he exclaimed, taking a backward
+step as he did so.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_268'></a>268</span>And well he might, for there at his feet lay a rifle
+coated with rust beside a brown felt hat.</p>
+
+<p>Had a grinning skull met his eyes, he would not
+have been more astounded. In fact, that was the
+next object he expected to see, and he glanced up
+and down the crevasse for it. None leered at him,
+however, and picking up the rusted weapon, he
+continued his search.</p>
+
+<p>Two rods or so below where he had climbed the
+upper ledge, he was halted again, for there, at his
+hand almost, was a curious doorlike opening some
+three feet high and one foot wide, back of an outstanding
+slab of slate.</p>
+
+<p>The two abandoned canoes had surprised him, the
+rusty rifle astonished him, but this, a self-evident
+cave entrance, almost took his breath away.</p>
+
+<p>For one instant he glanced at it, stepped back a
+step, dropped the rusty rifle and cocked his own,
+as if expecting a ghost or panther to emerge. None
+came, however, and once more Old Cy advanced
+and peered into this opening. A faint light illumined
+its interior&#8211;a weird slant of sunlight, yet enough
+to show a roomy cavern.</p>
+
+<p>The mystery was solved. This surely was the
+hiding-spot of the strange trapper!</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Can&#8217;t see why I missed it afore,&#8221; Old Cy muttered,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_269'></a>269</span>
+kneeling that he might better look within, and sniffing
+at the peculiar odor. &#8220;Wonder if the cuss is
+dead in thar, or what smells so!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then he arose and grasped the slab of slate. One
+slight pull and it fell aside.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A nat&#8217;ral door, by hokey!&#8221; exclaimed Old Cy,
+and once more he knelt and looked in.</p>
+
+<p>The bravest man will hesitate a moment before
+entering such a cavern, prefaced, so to speak, by
+two abandoned canoes, a rusty rifle, human head
+covering, each and all bespeaking something tragic,
+and Old Cy was no exception. That he had come
+upon some grewsome mystery was apparent. Canoes
+were not left to rot in the wilderness or rifles dropped
+without cause.</p>
+
+<p>And then, that hat!</p>
+
+<p>Surely here, or hereabout, had been enacted a
+drama of murderous nature, and inside this cavern
+might repose its blood-stained sequel.</p>
+
+<p>But the filtering beams of light encouraged Old
+Cy, and he entered. No ghastly corpse confronted
+him, but instead a human, if cramped, abode. A
+fireplace deftly fashioned of slate occupied one side
+of this cave; in front a low table of the same flat
+stone, resting upon small ones; and upon the table
+were rusty tin dishes, a few mouldy hardtack, a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_270'></a>270</span>
+knife, fork, and scraps of meat, exhaling the odor of
+decay. A smell of smoke from the charred wood in
+the fireplace mingled with it all. In one corner was
+a bed of brown fir twigs, also mouldy, a blanket,
+and tanned deerskins.</p>
+
+<p>The cave was of oval, irregular shape, barely high
+enough for Old Cy to stand upright. Across its
+roof, on either side of the rude chimney, a narrow
+crack admitted light, and as he looked about, he
+saw in the dim light another doorlike opening into
+still another cave. Into this he peered, but could
+see nothing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A queer livin&#8217; spot,&#8221; he muttered at last, &#8220;a
+reg&#8217;lar human panther den. An&#8217; &#8217;twas out o&#8217; this
+I seen the smoke come. An&#8217; here&#8217;s his gun,&#8221; he
+added, as, more accustomed to the dim light, he saw
+one in a corner. &#8220;Two guns, two canoes, an&#8217;
+nobody to hum,&#8221; he continued. &#8220;I&#8217;m safe, anyhow.
+But I&#8217;ve got to peek into that other cave, sartin
+sure,&#8221; and he withdrew to the open air.</p>
+
+<p>A visit to a couple of birches soon provided means
+of light, and he again entered the cave. One moment
+more, and then a flaring torch of bark was
+thrust into the inner cave, a mere crevasse not four
+feet wide, and stooping, as he now had to, Old Cy
+entered and knelt while he looked about.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_271'></a>271</span>He saw nothing here of interest except the serried
+rows of jutting slate, across two of which lay a slab
+of the same&#8211;no vestige of aught human, and Old
+Cy was about to retreat when his flare burning close
+to his finger tips unnoticed, caused him to drop it on
+the instant, and drawing another from his pocket
+he lit it while the flame lasted in the first one.</p>
+
+<p>It is said that great discoveries are almost invariably
+made by some trifling accident&#8211;a gold mine
+found by stumbling over a stone, a valley prolific
+of diamonds disclosed by digging for water.</p>
+
+<p>In this case it was true, for as Old Cy bent to
+light his second torch ere he withdrew from the
+inner cave, a flash of reflected light came from
+beneath this slab&#8211;only for one second, but enough
+to attract his attention.</p>
+
+<p>He stooped again and lifted the slab. Six large
+tin cans had been hidden by it. He grasped one
+and could scarce lift it. Again his fingers closed
+over it. He crawled backward to the better-lighted
+cave and drew the cover off the can with eager motion,
+and poured a heap of shining, glittering coin out upon
+that food-littered table.</p>
+
+<p>Into that dark hole he dived again, as a starved
+dog leaps for food, seized the cans, two at a time,
+almost tumbled back, and emptied them. Four
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_272'></a>272</span>
+had been filled with gold coin and two stuffed with
+paper money.</p>
+
+<p>Folded with these bills of all denominations from
+one to fifty dollars was a legal paper yellowed by
+age, with a red seal still glowing like a spot of blood.</p>
+
+<p>It was an innholder&#8217;s license, authorizing one
+Thomas McGuire to furnish food, shelter, and entertainment
+for man and beast.</p>
+
+<p>With eyes almost tear-dimmed and heart throbbing
+at having found poor Chip&#8217;s splendid heritage,
+Old Cy now gazed at it.</p>
+
+<p>The sharp stones upon which he knelt nearly
+pierced his flesh, but he felt them not.</p>
+
+<p>The glint of sunlight from the crack above caressed
+his scant gray hairs and white fringing beard, forming
+almost a halo, yet he knew it not.</p>
+
+<p>He only knew that here, before him, on this rude
+stone table, lay thousands of dollars, all belonging
+to the child he loved.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thank God, little gal,&#8221; he said at last, &#8220;I&#8217;ve
+found what belongs to ye, &#8217;n&#8217; ye hain&#8217;t got to want
+for nothin&#8217; no more. I wish I could kiss ye now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Little did he realize that at this very moment of
+thankfulness for her sake, poor Chip was lost to all
+who knew her, and, half starved and almost hopeless,
+knew not where to find shelter.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i6'></a><img src='images/illus-272.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+&#8220;Thank God, little gal, I&#8217;ve found what belongs to ye.&#8221;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_273'></a>273</span><a id='link_27'></a>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;When life looks darkest to ye, count yer blessin&#8217;s, boy,
+count yer blessin&#8217;s.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>When</span> the sun rose again and Chip awoke, she
+scarce knew where she was. Outside, and almost
+reaching the one window of her little room, was the
+top of an apple tree in full bloom. Below she could
+hear ducks quacking, now and then a barnyard
+monarch&#8217;s defiant crow, from farther away came
+the rippling sound of running water, and as she
+lay and listened to the medley, a robin lit on the tree-top
+not ten feet away and chirped as he peered into
+her window. A scent of lavender mingled with
+apple blossoms became noticeable; then the few
+and very old-fashioned fittings of the room,&#8211;a chest
+of drawers with little brass handles, over it a narrow
+mirror with gilt frame, two wood-seated chairs
+painted blue, and white muslin curtains draped
+away from the window.</p>
+
+<p>And now, conscious that she was in some strange
+place, back in an instant came the three days of her
+long, weary tramp, the nights when she had slept
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_274'></a>274</span>
+in a sheep barn and in a deserted dwelling, and at
+last, faint, footsore, and almost hopeless, she had
+been rescued from another night with only the sky
+for a roof.</p>
+
+<p>Then the quaint old man, so much like Old Cy,
+whom she had accosted, the rattling, bumping ride
+down into this valley, and the halt where a cheery
+light beamed its welcome and a motherly woman
+made it real.</p>
+
+<p>It was all so unexpected, so satisfying, so protective
+of herself, that Chip could hardly realize how
+it had come about.</p>
+
+<p>No questions had been asked of her here. These
+two quaint old people had taken her as she was&#8211;dusty,
+dirty, and travel-worn. She had bathed
+and been helped to an ample meal and shown to
+this sweet-smelling room as if she had been their
+own daughter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They must be awful kind sort o&#8217; people,&#8221; Chip
+thought, and then creeping out of bed she dressed,
+and taking her stockings and sadly worn shoes in
+hand softly descended the stairs.</p>
+
+<p>No one seemed astir anywhere. The ticking of
+a tall clock in the sitting room was the only sound,
+the back door was wide open, and out of this
+Chip passed and, seating herself on a bench, began
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_275'></a>275</span>
+putting on stockings and shoes. This was scarce
+done ere she heard a step and saw the old man
+emerge from the same door.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, Pattycake, how air ye?&#8221; he asked, smiling.
+&#8220;I heerd ye creepin&#8217; downstairs like a mouse, but I
+was up, &#8217;n&#8217; &#8217;bout dressed. Hope ye slept well. It&#8217;s
+Sunday,&#8221; he added, without waiting for a reply, &#8220;an&#8217;
+we don&#8217;t git up quite so arly ez usual. Ye can help
+Mandy &#8217;bout breakfast now, if ye like, &#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;ll do the
+milkin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And this marked the entry of Chip into the new
+home, and outlined her duties. No more questions
+were asked of her. She was taken at her own valuation&#8211;a
+needy girl, willing to work for her board,
+insisting on it, and yet, in a few days, so hospitable
+were these people and so winsome was Chip, that
+she stepped into their affection, as it were, almost
+without effort.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think we best quiz her much,&#8221; Uncle
+Jud (as he was known) said to his wife that first
+night. &#8220;I found her on the top o&#8217; Bangall Hill,
+where she riz up like a ghost. She &#8217;lowed she run
+away from somewhar, but where &#8217;twas, she didn&#8217;t
+want to tell. My &#8217;pinion is thar&#8217;s a love &#8217;fair at the
+bottom on&#8217;t all; but whether it&#8217;s so or not, it ain&#8217;t
+none o&#8217; our business. She needs a home, sartin
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_276'></a>276</span>
+sure. She says she means to airn her keep, which
+is the right sperit, an&#8217; long as she minds us, she kin
+have it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That Chip &#8220;airned her keep&#8221; and something
+more was soon evinced, for in two weeks it was
+&#8220;Aunt Mandy&#8221; and &#8220;Uncle Jud&#8221; from her, and
+&#8220;Patty&#8221; or &#8220;Pattycake,&#8221; the nickname given her
+that first morning, from them. More than that,
+so rapidly had she won her way here that by now
+Uncle Jud had visited the Riggsville store, some
+four miles down this valley, and materials for two
+dresses, new shoes, a broad sun hat, and other
+much-needed clothing were bought for Chip.</p>
+
+<p>Neither was it all one-sided, for these people,
+well-to-do in their isolated home, were also quite
+alone. Their two boys had grown up, gone away
+and married, and had homes of their own, and the
+company of a bright and winsome girl like Chip
+was needed in this home.</p>
+
+<p>Her adoption and acceptance of it were like a
+small stream flowing into a larger one, for the reason
+that these people were almost primitive in location
+and custom.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We don&#8217;t go to meetin&#8217; Sundays,&#8221; Uncle Jud
+had explained that first day after breakfast. &#8220;We&#8217;re
+sorter heathen, I s&#8217;pose; but then ag&#8217;in, thar ain&#8217;t
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_277'></a>277</span>
+no chance. Thar used to be meetin&#8217;s down to the
+Corners, &#8217;n&#8217; a parson; but he only got four hundred a
+year, an&#8217; hard work to collect that, &#8217;n&#8217; so he gin the
+job up. Since then the meetin&#8217;-house has kinder
+gone to pieces, &#8217;n&#8217; the Corner folks use it now for
+storin&#8217; tools. We obsarve Sundays here by bein&#8217;
+sorter lazy, &#8217;n&#8217; I go fishin&#8217; some or pickin&#8217; berries.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>To Chip, reared at Tim&#8217;s Place, and whose knowledge
+of Sunday was its strict observance at Greenvale,
+this seemed a relief. Sundays there had never
+been pleasant days to her. She could not understand
+what the preaching and praying meant, or
+why people needed to look so solemn on that day.
+She had been stared at so much at church, also, that
+the ordeal had become painful. The parson had,
+on two occasions, glared and glowered at her while
+he assured her that her opinions and belief in spites
+were rank heresy and that she was a wicked heathen;
+and, all in all, religion was not to her taste. With
+these people she was to escape it, and instead of
+being imprisoned for long, weary hours while being
+stared at each Sunday, she was likely to have perfect
+freedom and a chance to go with this nice old
+man on a fishing or berry-picking jaunt.</p>
+
+<p>And then Uncle Jud was so much like Old Cy
+in ways and speech that her heart was won. And
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_278'></a>278</span>
+besides these blessings, the old farm-house, hidden
+away between two ranges of wooded hills, seemed
+so out of the world and so secure from observation
+that she felt that no one from Greenvale ever could
+or would discover her. She had meant to hide
+herself from all who knew her, had changed her
+name for that purpose, and here and now it was
+accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>That first Sunday, also, became a halcyon one for
+her, for after chores, in the performance of which
+Chip made herself useful, Uncle Jud took his fish-pole,
+and giving her the basket to carry, led the way
+to the brook, and for four bright sunny hours, Chip
+knew not the lapse of time while she watched the
+leaping, laughing stream, and her second Old Cy
+pulling trout from each pool and cascade.</p>
+
+<p>And so her new life began.</p>
+
+<p>But the change was not made without some cost
+to her feelings, for heartstrings reach far, and Miss
+Phinney and her months of patient teaching were
+not forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Comfort and her benign face oft returned
+to Chip, &#8220;and dear Old Cy,&#8221; as she always thought
+of him, still oftener. Ray&#8217;s face also lingered in her
+heart. Now and then she caught herself humming
+some darky song, and never once did the moon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_279'></a>279</span>
+smile into this quiet vale that her thoughts did not
+speed away to that wildwood lake, with its rippled
+path of silver, the dark bordering forest, and how
+she wielded a paddle while her young lover picked
+his banjo.</p>
+
+<p>No word or hint of all this bygone life and romance
+ever fell from her lips. It was a page in her memory
+that must never be turned,&#8211;an idyl to be forgotten,&#8211;and yet forget it she could not, in spite of will or
+wishes.</p>
+
+<p>And now as the summer days sped by, and Chip
+helping Uncle Jud in the meadows or Aunt Mandy
+about the house, and winning love from both, saw
+a new realm open before her. There was in the
+sitting room of this quaint home a tall bookcase,
+its shelves filled with a motley collection of books:
+works on science, astronomy, geology, botany, and
+the like; books of travel and adventure; stories of
+strange countries and people never heard of by Chip;
+and novels by Scott, Lever, Cooper, and Hardy.
+These last, especially Scott and Cooper, appealed
+most to Chip, and once she began them, every spare
+hour, and often until long past midnight, she became
+lost in this new world.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know all about how folks live in the woods,&#8221;
+she said one Sunday to Uncle Jud, when half through
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_280'></a>280</span>
+&#8220;The Deerslayer.&#8221; &#8220;I was brought up there. I
+know how Injuns live and what they believe. I
+had an old Injun friend once. I&#8217;ve got the moccasins
+and fur cape he gave me now. His name was
+Tomah, &#8217;n&#8217; he believed in queer things that sometimes
+creep an&#8217; sometimes run faster&#8217;n we can.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was her first reference to her old life, but once
+begun, she never paused until all her queer history
+had been related.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t mean to tell it,&#8221; she explained in conclusion,
+&#8220;for I don&#8217;t want nobody to know where I
+came from, an&#8217; I hope you won&#8217;t tell.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>How near she came to disclosing what was of far
+more importance to herself and these people than
+old Tomah&#8217;s superstition she never knew, or that
+all that saved her was her reference to Old Cy by
+that name only.</p>
+
+<p>More than that, and like Old Cy standing over
+the cave where her heritage lay hid, she had no suspicion
+that this kindly old man, so much like him
+in looks and speech, was his brother.</p>
+
+<p>With the coming of September, however, a visitor
+was announced. &#8220;Aunt Abby&#8217;s comin&#8217; to stay
+with us a spell,&#8221; Uncle Jud said that day; &#8220;she&#8217;s
+Mandy&#8217;s sister, Abigail Bemis, an&#8217; she lives at
+Christmas Cove. It&#8217;s a shore town, &#8217;bout a hundred
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_281'></a>281</span>
+miles from here. She ain&#8217;t much like Mandy,&#8221; he
+added confidentially to Chip; &#8220;she&#8217;s more book-larned,
+so you&#8217;ll have to mind your <i>p</i>&#8217;s and <i>q</i>&#8217;s. If
+ye like, ye can go with me to the station to meet her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And so it came to pass that a few days later, Chip,
+dressed in her best, rode to the station with Uncle
+Jud in the old carryall, and there met this visitor.</p>
+
+<p>She was not a welcome guest, so far as Chip was
+concerned, wonted as she had now become to Uncle
+Jud and Aunt Mandy, whose speech, like her own,
+was not &#8220;book-larned,&#8221; and for this reason, Chip
+felt afraid of her. So much so, in fact, that for a
+few days she scarce dared speak at all.</p>
+
+<p>Her timidity wore away in due time, for Aunt
+Abby&#8211;a counterpart of her sister&#8211;was in no
+wise awe-inspiring. She saw Chip as she was, and
+soon felt an interest in her and her peculiar history,
+or what was known of it. She also noted Chip&#8217;s
+interest in books, and guessing more than she had
+been told, was not long in forming correct conclusions.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do you intend to do with this runaway
+girl?&#8221; she said one day to her sister, &#8220;keep her here
+and let her grow up in ignorance, or what?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, we ain&#8217;t thought much about that,&#8221; responded
+Mandy, &#8220;at least not yet. She ain&#8217;t got
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_282'></a>282</span>
+no relations to look arter her, so far ez we kin larn.
+She&#8217;s company for us, &#8217;n&#8217; willin&#8217;. Uncle Jud sets
+lots of store by her. She is with him from morn till
+night, and handy at all sorts o&#8217; work. This is how
+&#8217;tis with us here, an&#8217; now what do you say?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For a moment Aunt Abby meditated. &#8220;You
+ought to do your duty by her,&#8221; she said at last, &#8220;and
+she certainly needs more schooling.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We can send her down to the Corners when school
+begins, if you think we orter,&#8221; returned her sister,
+timidly; &#8220;but we hate to lose her now. We&#8217;ve
+kinder took to her, you see.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hardly think that will do,&#8221; answered Aunt
+Abby, knowing as she did that the three <i>R</i>&#8217;s comprised
+the full extent of an education at the Corners.
+&#8220;What she needs is a chance to mingle with more
+people than she can here, and learn the ways of the
+world, as well as books. Her mind is bright. I
+notice she is reading every chance she can get, and
+you know my ideas about education. For her to
+stay here, even with schooling at the Corners, is to
+let her grow up like a hoyden. Now what would
+you think if I took her back to Christmas Cove?
+There is a better school there. She will meet and
+mingle with more people, and improve faster.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I dunno what Judson&#8217;ll say,&#8221; returned Aunt
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_283'></a>283</span>
+Mandy, somewhat sadly. &#8220;He&#8217;s got so wonted to
+her, he&#8217;ll be heart-broke, I&#8217;m afraid.&#8221; And so the
+consultation closed.</p>
+
+<p>The matter did not end here, for Aunt Abby,
+&#8220;sot in her way,&#8221; as Uncle Jud had often said, yet
+in reality only advocating what she felt was best for
+this homeless waif, now began a persuasive campaign.
+She enlarged on Christmas Cove, its excellent school
+and capable master, its social advantages and cultured
+people, who boasted a public library and debating
+society, and especially its summer attractions,
+when a few dozen city people sojourned there. Its
+opportunities for church-going also came in for
+praise, though if this worthy woman had known how
+Chip felt about that feature, it would have been left
+unmentioned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The girl needs religious influence and contact
+with believers, as well as schooling,&#8221; she said later
+on to Aunt Mandy, &#8220;and that must be considered.
+Here she can have none, and will grow up a heathen.
+I certainly think she ought to go back with me for a
+year or two, at least, and then we can decide what is
+best.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Thar&#8217;s one thing ye ain&#8217;t thought &#8217;bout,&#8221; Mandy
+answered, &#8220;an&#8217; that&#8217;s her sense o&#8217; obligation. From
+what she&#8217;s told me, &#8217;twas that that made her run
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_284'></a>284</span>
+away from whar she was, &#8217;n&#8217; she&#8217;d run away from
+here if she didn&#8217;t feel she was earnin&#8217; her keep.
+She&#8217;s peculiar in that way, &#8217;n&#8217; can&#8217;t stand feelin&#8217;
+she&#8217;s dependent. How you goin&#8217; to get round that?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Just as you do,&#8221; returned Aunt Abby, not at
+all discouraged. &#8220;We live about as you do, as you
+know, only Mr. Bemis has the mill; and she can
+help me about the house, as she does here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Chip&#8217;s own consent to this new plan was the
+hardest to obtain.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll do just as Uncle Jud wants me to,&#8221; she responded,
+when Aunt Abby proposed the change;
+&#8220;but I&#8217;d hate to go &#8217;way from here. It&#8217;s all the real
+sort o&#8217; home I&#8217;ve ever known, and they&#8217;ve been so
+good to me I&#8217;ll have to cry when I leave it. You&#8217;d
+let me come here once in a while, wouldn&#8217;t ye?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>As she seemed ready to cry at this moment, Aunt
+Abby wisely dropped the subject then and there;
+in fact, she did not allude to it again in Chip&#8217;s presence.</p>
+
+<p>But Aunt Abby carried her point with the others.
+Uncle Jud consented very reluctantly, Aunt Mandy
+also yielded after much more persuasion, and when
+Aunt Abby&#8217;s visit terminated, poor Chip&#8217;s few
+belongings were packed in a new telescope case;
+she kissed Aunt Mandy, unable to speak, and this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_285'></a>285</span>
+tearful parting was repeated at the station with
+Uncle Jud. When the train had vanished he wiped
+his eyes on his coat sleeves, climbed into his old
+carryall, and drove away disconsolate.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Curis, curis, how a gal like that &#8217;un&#8217;ll work her
+way into a man&#8217;s feelin&#8217;s,&#8221; he said to himself. &#8220;It
+ain&#8217;t been three months since I picked her up, &#8217;n&#8217;
+now her goin&#8217; away seems like pullin&#8217; my heart out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_286'></a>286</span><a id='link_28'></a>CHAPTER XXVIII</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Christmas Cove</span> had entered its autumn lethargy
+when Aunt Abby Bemis and her new protégée reached
+it. Captain Bemis, who &#8220;never had no say &#8217;bout
+nothin&#8217;,&#8221; but who had cooked his own meals uncomplainingly
+for three weeks, emerged, white-dusted,
+from the mill, to greet the arrivals, and Chip
+was soon installed in a somewhat bare room overlooking
+the cove. Everything seemed slightly chilly
+to her here. This room, with its four-poster bed,
+blue-painted chairs, light blue shades, and dark
+blue straw matting, the leafless elms in front, the
+breeze that swept in from the sea, and even her reception,
+seemed cool. Her heart was not in it.
+Try as she would, she could not yet feel one spark
+of affection for this &#8220;book-larned&#8221; Aunt Abby, who
+had already begun to reprove her for lapses of speech.
+It was all so different from the home life she had
+just left; and as Chip had now begun to notice and
+feel trifles, the relations of the people seemed as
+chilly as the room to which she was consigned.</p>
+
+<p>When Sunday came&#8211;a sunless one with leaden
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_287'></a>287</span>
+sky and cold wind bearing the ocean&#8217;s moaning&#8211;Chip
+felt herself back at Greenvale with its Sundays,
+for now she was stared at the moment she entered
+the church. The singing was, of course, of the same
+solemn character, the minister&#8217;s prayers even longer,
+and the preaching as incomprehensible as in Greenvale.</p>
+
+<p>To Chip, doubtless a heretic who needed regeneration,
+it seemed a melancholy and solemn performance.
+The sermon (on predestination, with a finale which
+was a description of the resurrection day) made her
+feel creepy, and when the white-robed procession
+rising from countless graves was touched upon,
+and a pause came when she could hear the ocean&#8217;s
+distant moan once more, it seemed that spites were
+creeping and crawling all about that dim room.</p>
+
+<p>With her advent at school Monday came something
+of the same trouble first met at Greenvale,
+for the master, a weazen, dried-up little old man,
+who wore a wig and seemed to exude rules and discipline,
+lacked the kindly interest of Miss Phinney.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, almost a mature young lady, was aligned
+with girls and boys of ten and twelve, and once more
+the same shame and humiliation had to be endured.
+It wore away in time, however, for she had made
+almost marvellous progress under Miss Phinney.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_288'></a>288</span>
+Her mind was keen and quick, and once at study
+again, she astonished Mr. Bell, the master.</p>
+
+<p>Something of her old fearless self-reliance now
+came to her aid, also. It had made her dare sixty
+miles of wilderness alone and helpless, it had
+spurred her to escape Greenvale and her sense of
+being a dependent pauper, and now that latent force
+for good or ill still nerved her.</p>
+
+<p>But Christmas Cove did not suit her. The sea
+that drew her eyes with its vastness seemed to awe
+her. The great house, brown and moss-coated,
+where she lived, was barnlike, and never quite
+warm enough. The long street she traversed four
+times daily was bleak and wind-swept. Aunt
+Abby was austere and lacking in cordiality; and
+Sundays&#8211;well, Sundays were Chip&#8217;s one chief
+abhorrence.</p>
+
+<p>She may be blamed for it,&#8211;doubtless will be,&#8211;and
+yet she never had been, and it seemed never
+would be, quite reconciled to Sundays. At Tim&#8217;s
+Place they were unknown. At Greenvale they had
+been dreaded, and now at Christmas Cove they
+were no less so.</p>
+
+<p>At Uncle Jud&#8217;s, in Peaceful Valley, where she had
+found an asylum, loving care, and companionship
+akin to her, Sundays were only half-Sundays&#8211;days
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_289'></a>289</span>
+of chore-doing, of reading, of rest, or long
+strolls along shady lanes with Uncle Jud, or following
+the brook and watching him fish. It was not
+right, maybe. It was somewhat of sacrilege, perhaps,
+this lazy, summer-day-strolling, flower-picking,
+berry-gathering way of passing them, and yet, as
+the months with Martin and his party in the wilderness
+where Sunday could not be observed, and those
+with Uncle Jud were all that Chip had really enjoyed,
+she must not be blamed.</p>
+
+<p>Another influence&#8211;an insidious heart-hunger she
+could not put away&#8211;now added to her loneliness
+in the new life. It carried her thoughts back to the
+rippled, moonlit lake, where Ray had picked his
+banjo and sung to her; even back to that first night
+by the camp-fire when she had watched and listened
+to him in rapt admiration. It thrilled her as naught
+else could when she recalled the few moments at the
+lake when, unconscious of the need of restraint, she
+had let him caress her.</p>
+
+<p>Then the long days of watching for his return
+were lived over, and the one almost ecstatic moment
+when he had leaped from the stage and over the wall,
+with no one in sight, while he held her in his
+arms.</p>
+
+<p>And then&#8211;and this hurt the most&#8211;that last
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_290'></a>290</span>
+evening before they were to part again, when beside
+the firefly-lit mill-pond he had the chance to say so
+much, and said&#8211;nothing!</p>
+
+<p>It was all a bitter-sweet memory, which she tried
+to put away forever the night she left Greenvale.
+She was now Vera Raymond. No one could trace
+her; and yet, so at odds were her will and heart,
+there still lingered the faint hope that Ray would
+sometime and somehow find her out.</p>
+
+<p>And so, studying faithfully, often lonesome, now
+and then longing for the bygone days with Ray and
+Old Cy, and always hoping that she might sometime
+return to Peaceful Valley, Chip passed the winter
+at Christmas Cove.</p>
+
+<p>Something of success came to her through it all.
+She reached and retained head positions in her
+classes. A word of praise came occasionally from
+Mr. Bell. Aunt Abby grew less austere and seemed
+to have a little pride in her. She became acquainted
+with other people and in touch with young folks, was
+invited to parties and sleigh-rides. The vernacular
+of Tim&#8217;s Place left her, and even Sundays were less
+a torture, in fact, almost pleasant, for then she saw
+most of the young folks she mingled with, and now
+and then exchanged a bit of gossip.</p>
+
+<p>Her own dress became of more interest to her.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_291'></a>291</span>
+Aunt Abby, fortunately for Chip, felt desirous that
+her ward should appear well, and Chip, thus educated
+and polished in village life, to a degree, at least,
+fulfilled Aunt Abby&#8217;s hopes.</p>
+
+<p>Another success also came to her, for handsome
+as she undeniably was, with her big, appealing
+eyes, her splendid black hair, and well-rounded
+form, the young men began to seek her. One
+became persistent, and when spring had unlocked
+the long, curved bay once more, Chip had become
+almost a leader in the little circle of young
+people.</p>
+
+<p>Her life with those who had taken her in charge
+also became more harmonious. In fact, something
+of affection began to leaven it, for the reason that
+never once had Aunt Abby questioned Chip as to
+her past. Aunt Mandy and Uncle Jud had both
+cautioned her as to its unwisdom, and she was broad
+and charitable enough to let it remain a closed book
+until such time as Chip was willing to open it; and
+for this, more than all else that she received, Chip
+felt grateful. But one day it came out&#8211;or at least
+a portion of it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you have often wondered where I was
+born, and who my parents were,&#8221; Chip said, one
+Sunday afternoon, when she and Aunt Abby were
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_292'></a>292</span>
+alone, &#8220;and I want to thank you for never, never
+asking.&#8221; And then, omitting much, she briefly outlined
+her history.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was born close to the wilderness,&#8221; she said,
+&#8220;and my mother died when I was about eight years
+old. Then my father took me into the woods, where
+I worked at a kind of a boarding house for lumbermen.
+I ran away from that when I was about sixteen.
+I had to; the reasons I don&#8217;t want to tell. I
+found some people camping in the woods when I&#8217;d
+been gone three days and &#8217;most starved. They felt
+pity for me, I guess, and took care of me. I stayed
+at their camp that summer, and then they fetched
+me home with them and I was sent to school. Somebody
+said something to me there, somebody who
+hated me. She had been pestering me all the time,
+and I ran away. Uncle Jud found me and took
+care of me until you came, and that&#8217;s all I want to
+tell. I could tell a lot more, but I don&#8217;t ever want
+these people to find me or take me back where they
+live, and that&#8217;s why I don&#8217;t tell where I came from.
+Then I felt I was so dependent on them&#8211;I was
+twitted of it&#8211;that it&#8217;s another reason why I ran
+away. I wouldn&#8217;t have stayed with Uncle Jud
+more than over night except I had a chance to
+work and earn my board.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_293'></a>293</span>&#8220;But wasn&#8217;t it unkind of you&#8211;isn&#8217;t it now&#8211;not
+to let these people know you are alive?&#8221; answered
+Aunt Abby. &#8220;They were certainly good
+to you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know that they were,&#8221; returned Chip, somewhat
+contritely; &#8220;but I couldn&#8217;t stand being dependent
+on them any longer. If they found where I
+was, they&#8217;d come and fetch me back; and I&#8217;d feel so
+ashamed I couldn&#8217;t look &#8217;em in the face. I&#8217;d rather
+they&#8217;d think I was dead.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Well, perhaps it is best you do not,&#8221; returned
+Aunt Abby, sighing; &#8220;but years of doubt, and not
+knowing whether some one we care for is dead or
+alive, are hard to bear. And now that you have
+told me some of your history, I will tell you a lifelong
+case of not knowing some one&#8217;s fate. Many
+years ago my sister and myself, who were born here,
+became acquainted with two young men, sailor boys
+from Bayport, named Cyrus and Judson Walker.
+Cyrus became attached to me and we were engaged
+to marry. It never came to pass, however, for the
+ship that Judson was captain of, with Cyrus as first
+mate, foundered at sea. All hands took to the two
+boats. The one Judson was in was picked up, but
+the other was never heard of afterward. In due
+time Judson and my sister Amanda married. He
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_294'></a>294</span>
+gave up a sailor&#8217;s life, and they settled down where
+they now live. I waited many years, vainly hoping
+for my sweetheart&#8217;s return, and finally, realizing that
+he must be dead, married Captain Bemis. That
+all happened so long ago that I do not care to count
+the years; and yet all through them has lingered
+that pitiful thread of doubt and uncertainty, that
+vain hope that somehow and someway Cyrus may
+have escaped death and may return. I know it will
+never happen. I know he is dead; and yet I cannot
+put away that faint hope and quite believe it is
+so, and never shall so long as I live. Now you have
+left those who must have cared something for you
+in much the same pitiful state of doubt, and it is not
+right.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For one moment something almost akin to horror
+flashed over Chip.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And was he called&#8211;was he never&#8211;I mean
+this brother, ever heard from?&#8221; she stammered,
+recovering herself in time.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, no,&#8221; answered Aunt Abby, looking at her
+curiously, &#8220;of course not. Why, what ails you?
+You look as if you&#8217;d seen a ghost.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, nothing,&#8221; returned Chip, now more composed;
+&#8220;only the story and how strange it was.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It ended the conversation, for Chip, so overwhelmed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295'></a>295</span>
+by the flood of possibilities contained in
+this story, dared not trust herself longer with Aunt
+Abby, and soon escaped to her room.</p>
+
+<p>And now circumstances came trooping upon her:
+the shipwreck, which she had heard Old Cy describe
+so often; the name she knew was really his; the
+almost startling resemblance to Uncle Jud in speech,
+ways, and opinions; and countless other proofs.
+Surely it must be so. Surely Old Cy, of charming
+memory, and Uncle Jud no less so, must be brothers,
+and now it was in her power to&#8211;and then she
+paused, shocked at the position she faced.</p>
+
+<p>She was now known as Vera Raymond, and respected;
+she had cut loose forever from the old
+shame of an outlaw&#8217;s child; of a wretched drudge
+at Tim&#8217;s Place; of being sold as a slave; and all
+that now made her blush.</p>
+
+<p>And then Ray!</p>
+
+<p>Full well she knew now what must have been in
+his heart that last evening and why he acted as
+he did. Hannah had told her the bitter truth, as
+she had since realized. Ray had been assured that
+she was an outcast, and despicable in the sight of
+Greenvale. He dared not say &#8220;I love you; be my
+wife.&#8221; Instead, he had been hurried away to keep
+them apart; and as all this dire flood of shame that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296'></a>296</span>
+had driven her from Greenvale surged in her heart,
+the bitter tears came.</p>
+
+<p>In calmer moments, and when the heart-hunger
+controlled, she had hoped he might some day find
+her and some day say, &#8220;I love you.&#8221; But now, so
+soon, to make herself known, to tell who she was, to
+admit to these new friends that she was Chip McGuire
+with all that went with it, to have to face and
+live down that shame, to admit that she had taken
+Ray&#8217;s first name for her own&#8211;no, no, a thousand
+times no!</p>
+
+<p>But what of Old Cy and Uncle Jud, and their lifelong
+separation?</p>
+
+<p>Truly her footsteps had led her to a parting of the
+ways, one sign-board lettered &#8220;Duty and Shame,&#8221;
+the other a blank.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297'></a>297</span><a id='link_29'></a>CHAPTER XXIX</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;Good luck comes now &#8217;n&#8217; then; bad luck drops &#8217;round
+frequently.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>When</span> Old Cy emerged from the cave, his face
+glorified and heart throbbing with the blessings now
+his to give Chip, he looked about with almost fear.
+The two abandoned canoes and the trusty rifle had
+seemed an assurance of tragic import, and yet no
+proof of this outlaw&#8217;s death. That this cave had
+been his lair, could not be doubted; and so momentous
+was this discovery, and so anxious was Old Cy
+to rescue this fortune, that he trembled with a sudden
+dread.</p>
+
+<p>But no sign of human presence met his sweeping
+look.</p>
+
+<p>The lake still rippled and smiled in the sunlight.
+Two deer, a buck and doe, were feeding on the rush-grown
+shore just across, while at his feet that rusty
+rifle still uttered its fatal message.</p>
+
+<p>Once more Old Cy glanced all about, and then
+entered the cave again. Here, in the dim light and
+with trembling hands, he filled the cans once more,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298'></a>298</span>
+and almost staggering, so faint was he from excitement,
+he hurried to the canoe, and packing them in
+its bow, covered the precious cargo with his blanket.</p>
+
+<p>Then he ran like a deer back to the cave, closed
+it with the slab, grasped his rifle, and not even looking
+at the rusty one, bounded down the path to his
+canoe again, launched it, and pushed off.</p>
+
+<p>Never before had it seemed so frail a craft. And
+now, as he swung its prow around toward the outlet,
+a curious object met his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Far up the lake, and where no ripple concealed it,
+lay what looked like a floating log, clasped by a
+human arm.</p>
+
+<p>What intuition led him hither, Old Cy never could
+explain, for escape from the lake was now his sole
+thought. And yet, with one sweep of his paddle, he
+turned his canoe and sped across the lake. And
+now, as he neared this object, it slowly outlined itself,
+and he saw a grewsome sight,&#8211;two bloated corpses
+grasping one another as if in a death grapple. One
+had hair of bronze red, the other a hideously scarred
+face with lips drawn and teeth exposed.</p>
+
+<p>Hate, Horror, and Death personified.</p>
+
+<p>Only for a moment did Old Cy glance at this
+ghastly sight, and then he turned again and sped
+back across the lake.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299'></a>299</span>The bright sun still smiled calm and serene, the
+morning breeze still kissed the blue water, the two
+deer still watched him with curious eyes; but he
+saw them not&#8211;only the winsome face and appealing
+eyes of Chip as he last beheld them.</p>
+
+<p>And now in the prow of his canoe lay her fortune,
+her heritage, which was, after all, but scant return
+for all the shame and stigma so far meted out
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost sunset ere Old Cy, his nerves still
+quivering and wearied as never before, crossed the
+little lake and breathed a sigh of heart-felt gratitude
+as he drew his canoe out on the sandy shore near the
+ice-house. No one was in sight, nor likely to be. A
+thin column of smoke rising from the cabin showed
+that the hermit was still on earth, and now for the
+first time, Old Cy sat down and considered his plans
+for the near future.</p>
+
+<p>First and foremost, not a soul, not even his old
+trusted companion here, not even Martin, or Angie,
+and certainly not Ray, must learn what had now
+come into his possession. Neither must his journey
+to this far-off lake or aught he had learned there be
+disclosed.</p>
+
+<p>But how was he to escape from the woods and
+these people, soon to arrive for their summer sojourn?
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300'></a>300</span>
+And what if Chip herself should come? Two conclusions
+forced themselves upon him now: first, he
+must so conceal the fortune that none of these friends
+even could suspect its presence; next, he must by
+some pretext leave here as soon as Martin and his
+party arrived, and cease not his watchful care until
+Chip&#8217;s heritage was safe in some bank in her
+name.</p>
+
+<p>And now, with so much of his future moves decided
+upon, he hurried to the cabin, greeted Amzi,
+urged him to hasten supper, and, securing a shovel,
+returned to his canoe.</p>
+
+<p>In five minutes the cans of gold were buried deep
+in the sand, not two feet from where the half-breed
+had once landed, and upon Old Cy&#8217;s person the bills
+found concealment. How much it all amounted to,
+he had not even guessed, nor scarce thought. To
+secure it and bear it safely away from this now
+almost accursed lake had been his sole thought,
+and must be until locks and bolts could guard
+it better. That night Old Cy hardly slept a
+moment.</p>
+
+<p>And now began days of waiting and watching, the
+slow course of which he had never before known.
+He dared not leave the cabin except to fish close by
+and within sight of the one focal point of his interest.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301'></a>301</span>
+Each midday, for not sooner would the expected
+ones be apt to arrive, he began to watch the lake&#8217;s
+outlet, and ceased not this vigil until darkness came.
+A dozen times a day he covertly visited the ice-house
+to be certain no alien footprints had been
+stamped upon the sand near his buried treasure,
+and had the hermit been an alert and normal man, he
+must have noticed Old Cy&#8217;s strange conduct.</p>
+
+<p>This burden of care also began to haunt his sleep,
+and in it he saw the open cave, and himself watched
+by vicious, leering faces. Once he saw those ghastly
+corpses still clasped together, but hovering over him,
+and then awoke with a sense of horror.</p>
+
+<p>A worse dream than this came later, for in it he
+saw the half-breed creeping along the lake&#8217;s shore,
+and then, stooping where the gold was buried, he
+began to dig, at which Old Cy sprang from his bed
+in sudden terror.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go crazy if I don&#8217;t git rid o&#8217; that money &#8217;fore
+long,&#8221; he said to himself; and the next day another
+place of concealment occurred to him.</p>
+
+<p>There was, beneath the new cabin, a small cellar
+entered through a trap-door. It was some ten feet
+square, and had been used to store potatoes, pork,
+and the like. To carry out his new plan, which was
+to hide the gold in this cellar, it became necessary to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_302'></a>302</span>
+keep Amzi out of sight until its transfer was made.
+That was an easy task, for Amzi, docile as a child,
+was sent out on the lake to fish, and then Old Cy,
+hastily constructing a bag of deerskin, hurried to
+the beach, dug up the treasure, poured the glittering
+coin into this bag, hid it in the cellar, nailed the trap-door
+down, and that night slept better.</p>
+
+<p>Two days after, just as the sun was nearing the
+mountain top, Martin, Angie, Levi, and Ray entered
+the lake.</p>
+
+<p>How grateful both Old Cy and Amzi were for their
+arrival, how eagerly they grasped hands with them at
+the landing, and how like two boys Martin and Ray
+behaved needs no description.</p>
+
+<p>All that had happened in Greenvale was soon
+told. Chip&#8217;s conduct and progress were related by
+Angie. Ray&#8217;s plans to remain here another winter
+were disclosed by him; and then, when the cheerful
+party had gathered about the evening fire, Martin
+touched upon another matter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I met Hersey as we were coming in,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;and he says that neither McGuire nor the half-breed
+has been seen or heard of since early last fall.
+Hersey came in early this spring with one of his
+deputies; they visited a half-dozen lumber camps,
+called twice at Tim&#8217;s Place, and even went over to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303'></a>303</span>
+Pete&#8217;s cabin on the Fox Hole, but nowhere could they
+learn anything of these two men. More than that, no
+canoe was found at Pete&#8217;s hut, and there was no sign
+of occupation at all this past winter. Nothing could
+be learned from Tim, either, although not much was
+expected from that source. It is all a most mysterious
+disappearance, and the last that we can learn
+of Pete was his arrival and departure from Tim&#8217;s
+Place after we rescued Chip.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think both on &#8217;em has concluded this section
+was gittin&#8217; too warm for &#8217;em,&#8221; remarked Levi, &#8220;an&#8217;
+they&#8217;ve lit out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s good riddance if they have,&#8221; answered Old
+Cy, &#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;m sartin none on us&#8217;ll ever set eyes on
+&#8217;em agin.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And Old Cy spoke the truth, for none of this party
+ever did. In fact, no human being, except himself
+and Martin, ever learned the secret that this mountain-hid
+lake could tell.</p>
+
+<p>But another matter now began to interest Old Cy&#8211;how Ray and Chip stood in their mutual feelings.
+That all was not as he wished, Old Cy soon guessed
+from Ray&#8217;s face and actions, and he was not long
+in verifying it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, how&#8217;d ye find the gal?&#8221; he said to Ray
+when the chance came. &#8220;Was she glad to see ye?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304'></a>304</span>&#8220;Why, yes,&#8221; answered Ray, looking away, &#8220;she
+appeared to be. I wasn&#8217;t in Greenvale but two
+weeks, you know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Saw her &#8217;most every evenin&#8217; durin&#8217; that time, I
+s&#8217;pose?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, not every one,&#8221; returned Ray, vaguely;
+&#8220;her school hadn&#8217;t closed when I got home, and she
+studied nights, you see.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy watched Ray&#8217;s face for a moment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I ain&#8217;t pryin&#8217; into yer love matters,&#8221; he said at
+last, &#8220;but as I&#8217;m on your side, I&#8217;d sorter like to know
+how it&#8217;s progressin&#8217;. Wa&#8217;n&#8217;t thar nothin&#8217; said &#8217;tween
+ye&#8211;no sort o&#8217; promise, &#8217;fore ye come &#8217;way?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, nothing of that sort,&#8221; answered Ray, looking
+confused, &#8220;though we parted good friends, and she
+sent her love to you. I&#8217;m afraid Chip don&#8217;t quite
+like Greenvale.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy made no answer, though a smothered
+&#8220;hum, ha&#8221; escaped him at the disclosure of what he
+feared.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wish ye&#8217;d sorter clinched matters &#8217;fore ye left,&#8221;
+he said, after a pause; &#8220;that is, if ye&#8217;re callatin&#8217; to
+be here &#8217;nother winter. It&#8217;s &#8217;most too long to keep
+a gal guessin&#8217;; &#8217;sides, &#8217;tain&#8217;t right.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Ray, however, made no defence, in fact, seemed
+guilty and confused, so Old Cy said no more.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305'></a>305</span>A few days later he made a proposal that astonished
+Martin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been here now &#8217;bout two years,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;an&#8217; I&#8217;m gittin&#8217; sorter oneasy. I callate ye kin
+spare me a couple o&#8217; weeks.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>No intimation of his real errand escaped him, and
+so adroitly had he laid his plans and timed his movements,
+that when his canoe was packed and he bade
+them good-bye, no one suspected how valuable a
+cargo it carried.</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy was more than &#8220;sorter oneasy,&#8221; for
+the only spot where he dared close his eyes in sleep
+during that three days&#8217; journey out of the wilderness
+was in his canoe, with his head pillowed on that
+precious gold.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306'></a>306</span><a id='link_30'></a>CHAPTER XXX</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+<p>&#8220;A miser was created to prove how little real comfort kin be got out o&#8217; money.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>When</span> Old Cy joined the little party at the lake
+again, he seemed to have aged years. His sunny
+smile was gone. He looked weary, worn, and
+disconsolate.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Chip&#8217;s run away from Greenvale,&#8221; he said
+simply, &#8220;an&#8217; nobody can find hide nor hair on her.
+They&#8217;ve follered the roads for miles in every direction.
+Nobody can be found that&#8217;s seen anybody
+like her &#8217;n&#8217; they&#8217;ve even dragged the mill-pond.
+She left a note chargin&#8217; it to that durn fool, Hannah,
+and things she said, which I guess was true. I&#8217;d
+like to duck her in the hoss-pond!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Such news was like a bombshell in the camp,
+or if not, what soon followed was, for after a few
+days Old Cy made another announcement which
+upset the entire party.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think I&#8217;d best go back to Greenvale,&#8221; he
+said, &#8220;an&#8217; begin a sarch for that gal. I ain&#8217;t got
+nobody in the world that needs me so much, or I
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307'></a>307</span>
+them. I&#8217;m a sorter outcast myself, ez you folks
+know. That little gal hez crept into my heart so,
+I can&#8217;t take no more comfort here. Amzi don&#8217;t
+need me so much as I need her, &#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;ve made up
+my mind I&#8217;ll start trampin&#8217; till I find her. I&#8217;ve
+a notion, too, she&#8217;ll head for the wilderness ag&#8217;in,
+&#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;m most sartin she&#8217;ll fetch up whar her mother
+was buried. I watched that gal middlin&#8217; clus all
+last summer. She&#8217;s true blue &#8217;n&#8217; good grit. She
+won&#8217;t do no fool thing, like makin&#8217; &#8217;way with herself,
+&#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;ll find her somewhar arnin&#8217; her own
+livin&#8217; if I live long &#8217;nuff. From the note she left,
+I know that was in her mind.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Martin realized that there was no use in trying
+to change Old Cy&#8217;s intent&#8211;in fact, had no heart
+to do so, for he too felt much the same toward
+Chip.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll give you all the funds you need, old
+friend,&#8221; he made answer, &#8220;and wish you Godspeed
+on your mission. I&#8217;ll do more than that
+even. I&#8217;ll pay some one to watch at Grindstone
+for the next year, so if Chip reaches there, we
+can learn it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That night he held a consultation with his
+wife.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suspect we are somewhat to blame for this
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308'></a>308</span>
+unfortunate happening,&#8221; he said to her, &#8220;or, at
+least, some thoughtless admissions you may have
+made led up to it. It&#8217;s a matter we are responsible
+for, or I feel so, anyway. I think as Old Cy does,
+that this girl must be found if money can do it,
+and I propose that we break camp and return to
+Greenvale. If Amzi can&#8217;t be coaxed to go along,
+I must leave Levi with him. No power on earth
+can keep Old Cy here any longer.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But the old hermit had changed somewhat
+since that night he broke away and returned to
+this camp, and when the alternative of remaining
+here alone, or going out with them all, was presented,
+he soon yielded.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If Cyrus is goin&#8217;, I&#8217;ll have to,&#8221; he said. &#8220;I&#8217;d
+be lonesome without him.&#8221; And to this assertion
+he adhered.</p>
+
+<p>Ray, however, was the most dejected and unhappy
+one now here, though fortunately Old Cy
+was the only one who understood why, and he
+kept silent.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy&#8217;s defection had influenced all alike, and
+wood life was no longer attractive. It was a pity,
+in a way, for no more charming spot than this
+sequestered lake could be found. The trout leaping
+or breaking its glassy surface night and morning
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_309'></a>309</span>
+seemed to almost urge an angler; not an
+hour in all the day but two to a dozen deer might
+be seen along its shore, and blueberries were ripening
+over in the &#8220;blow down.&#8221; Amzi&#8217;s garden,
+now doubled in size, was well along, and it seemed
+a sin to leave so many attractions.</p>
+
+<p>But Martin had lost heart for these allurements.
+The thought of poor, homeless Chip begging her
+way somewhere, spoiled it all. Conscious that
+her own neglect might have invited this calamity,
+Angie was almost heart-broken, and it was a saddened
+party that closed and barred the new cabin
+and left this rippled lake one morning.</p>
+
+<p>They were even more sad when Aunt Comfort
+showed them Chip&#8217;s message, and Angie read it
+with brimming eyes.</p>
+
+<p>And now came Old Cy&#8217;s departure, on a quest
+as hopeless as that of the Wandering Jew and as
+pathetic as the Ancient Mariner&#8217;s.</p>
+
+<p>But the climax was reached when Old Cy gave
+Martin his parting message and charge:&#8211;&#8220;Here&#8217;s
+a bank book,&#8221; he said, &#8220;that calls fer
+&#8217;bout sixty thousand dollars. It&#8217;s the savin&#8217;s o&#8217;
+McGuire, &#8217;n&#8217; belongs to Chip. I found the cave
+whar &#8217;twas hid. I found McGuire &#8217;n&#8217; the half-breed,
+both dead &#8217;n&#8217; floatin&#8217; in the lake clus by,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310'></a>310</span>
+an&#8217; &#8217;twas to keer fer this money I quit ye three
+weeks ago.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If I never come back here,&#8211;an&#8217; I never shall
+&#8217;thout I find Chip,&#8211;keep it fer her. Sometime she
+may show up. If ever she does, tell her Old Cy
+did all he could fer her.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311'></a>311</span><a id='link_31'></a>CHAPTER XXXI</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;Those who hev nothin&#8217; but a stiddy faith the Lord&#8217;ll provide,
+never git fat.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Life</span> at Peaceful Valley and the home of Judson
+Walker fell into its usual monotony after Chip&#8217;s
+departure.</p>
+
+<p>Each day Uncle Jud went about his chores and
+his crop-gathering and watched the leaves grow
+scarlet, then brown, and finally go eddying up and
+down the valley, or heap themselves into every
+nook and cranny for final sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Existence had become something like this to
+him, but he could no longer anticipate a vernal
+budding forth as the leaves came, but only the
+sear and autumn for himself, with the small and
+sadly neglected churchyard at the Corners for its
+ending.</p>
+
+<p>Snow came and piled itself into fantastic drifts.
+The stream&#8217;s summer chatter was hushed. The
+cows, chickens, and his horse, with wood-cutting,
+became his sole care. Once a week he journeyed
+to the Corners for his weekly paper and Mandy&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312'></a>312</span>
+errands, always hoping for a message from Chip.
+Now and then one came, a little missive in angular
+chirography, telling how she longed to return to
+them, which they read and re-read by candlelight.</p>
+
+<p>Somehow this strange wanderer, this unaccounted-for
+waif, had crept into his life and love
+as a flower would, and &#8220;Pattycake,&#8221; as he had
+named her, with her appealing eyes and odd ways,
+was never out of his thoughts.</p>
+
+<p>And so the winter dragged its slow, chill course.
+Spring finally unlocked the brook once more, the
+apple and cherry blossoms came, the robins began
+nest-building, and one day Uncle Jud returned
+from the corner with a glad smile on his face.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Pattycake&#8217;s school&#8217;s goin&#8217; to close in a couple
+o&#8217; weeks more, &#8217;n&#8217; then she&#8217;s comin&#8217; home,&#8221; he
+announced, and Aunt Mandy, her face beaming,
+made haste to wipe her &#8220;specs&#8221; and read the
+joyous tidings.</p>
+
+<p>For a few days Uncle Jud acted as if he had forgotten
+something and knew not where to look for
+it. He lingered about the house when he would
+naturally be at work. He peered into one room
+and then another, in an abstracted way, and finally
+Aunt Mandy caught him in the keeping room,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313'></a>313</span>
+with one curtain raised,&#8211;a thing unheard of,&#8211;seated
+in one of the haircloth chairs and looking
+around.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mandy,&#8221; he said, as she entered, &#8220;do you
+know, I think them picturs we&#8217;ve had hangin&#8217;
+here nigh on to forty year is homely &#8217;nuff to stop
+a horse, &#8217;n&#8217; they make me feel like I&#8217;d been to a
+funeral. Thar&#8217;s that &#8216;Death Bed o' Dan'l Webster,&#8217;
+an&#8217; &#8216;Death o' Montcalm,&#8217; &#8217;specially. I jest
+can&#8217;t stand &#8217;em no longer, an&#8217; &#8216;The Father o&#8217; his
+Country.&#8217; I&#8217;m gittin&#8217; tired o&#8217; that, &#8217;n&#8217; the smirk
+he&#8217;s got on his face. I feel jest as though I&#8217;d
+like to throw a stun at him this minute. You
+may feel sot on them picturs, but I&#8217;d like to chuck
+the hull kit &#8217;n&#8217; boodle into the cow shed. An&#8217;
+them winder curtains,&#8221; he continued, looking
+around, &#8220;things so blue they make me shiver,
+an&#8217; this carpet with the figgers o&#8217; green and yaller
+birds, it sorter stuns me.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Now Pattycake&#8217;s comin&#8217; purty soon. She
+must &#8217;a&#8217; seen more cheerful keepin&#8217; rooms&#8217;n ourn,
+&#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;m callatin&#8217; we&#8217;d best rip this &#8217;un all up an&#8217;
+fix it new. Then thar&#8217;s the front chamber&#8211;in
+fact, both on &#8217;em&#8211;with the yaller spindle beds
+&#8217;n&#8217; blue curtains, an&#8217; only a square of rag carpet
+front o&#8217; the dressers. Say, Mandy,&#8221; he continued,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314'></a>314</span>
+looking around once more, &#8220;how&#8217;d we ever happen
+to git so many blue curtains?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>His discontent with their home now took shape
+in vigorous action, and Aunt Mandy came to share
+it. Trip after trip to the Riggsville store was made.
+Two new chamber sets and rolls of carpeting
+arrived at the station six miles away, and came
+up the valley. A paper-hanger was engaged and
+kept busy for ten days. The death-bed pictures
+were literally kicked into the cow shed, and in
+three weeks four rooms had been so reconstructed
+and fitted anew that no one would recognize them.</p>
+
+<p>Meanwhile Uncle Jud had utterly neglected
+his &#8220;craps,&#8221; while he worked around the house.
+The wide lawn had been clipped close. A new
+picket fence, painted white, replaced the leaning,
+zigzag one around the garden. Weeds and brush
+disappeared, and only Aunt Mandy&#8217;s protest
+saved the picturesque brown house from a coat
+of paint.</p>
+
+<p>And then &#8220;Pattycake&#8221; arrived.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly a year before she had been brought here,
+a weary, bedraggled, dusty, half-starved waif.
+Now Uncle Jud met her at the station, his face
+shining; Aunt Mandy clasped her close to her
+portly person; and as Chip looked around and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315'></a>315</span>
+saw what had been done in her honor and to
+make her welcome, her eyes filled.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never thought anybody would care for me
+like this,&#8221; she exclaimed, and then glancing at
+Uncle Jud, her eyes alight, she threw her arms
+about his neck and, for the first time, kissed him.</p>
+
+<p>And never in all his life had he felt more amply
+paid for anything he had done.</p>
+
+<p>Then and there, Chip resolved to do something
+that now lay in her power&#8211;to face shame
+and humbled pride and all the sacrifice it meant
+to her in the end, and reunite these two long-separated
+brothers. But not now, no, not yet.</p>
+
+<p>Before her lay two golden joyous summer months.
+Aunt Abby was coming up later. She could
+not face her own humiliation now. She must
+wait until these happy days were past, then tell
+her wretched story, not sparing herself one iota,
+and then, if she must, go her way, an outcast into
+the world once more.</p>
+
+<p>How utterly wrong she was in this conclusion,
+and how little she understood the broad charity
+of Uncle Jud, need not be explained. She was
+only a child as yet in all but stature. The one
+most bitter sneer of malicious Hannah still rankled
+and poisoned her common sense. Its effect upon
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316'></a>316</span>
+Chip had been as usual on her nature and belief,
+and this waif of the wilderness, this gnome child,
+must not be judged by ordinary standards. Like
+reflections from grotesque mirrors, so had her
+ideas of right and duty been distorted by eerie
+influences and weird surroundings. There was
+first the unspeakable brutality of her father; then
+the menial years at Tim&#8217;s Place, with no more
+consideration than a horse or pig received, her
+only education being the uncanny teachings of
+Old Tomah. Under this baleful tuition, coupled
+with the ever present menace and mystery of a
+vast wilderness, she passed from childhood into
+womanhood, with the fixed belief that human
+kind were no better than brutes; that the forest
+was peopled by a nether world of spites, the shadowy
+forms of both man and beast; and worse than
+this, that all thought and action here must be the
+selfish ones of personal gain and personal protection.
+Like a dog forever expecting a blow, like
+any dumb brute ever on guard against superior
+force, so had Chip grown to maturity, a cringing,
+helpless, almost hopeless creature, and yet one
+whose inborn impulses and desires revolted at her
+surroundings.</p>
+
+<p>Once removed from these, however, and in a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_317'></a>317</span>
+purer atmosphere, she was like one born again.
+Her past impressions still remained, her queer
+belief of present and future conditions was still
+a motive force, and the cringing, blow-expecting
+nature was yet hers.</p>
+
+<p>For this reason, and because this new world and
+these new people were so unaccountable and quite
+beyond her ken in tender influence and loving
+care, what they had done and for what purpose
+seemed all the more impressive. But it was in
+no wise wasted; instead, it was like God-given sunshine
+to a flower that has never known aught
+except the chilling shadow of a dense forest.</p>
+
+<p>And now ensued an almost pathetic play of
+interest, for Chip set herself about the duty of
+giving instead of obtaining pleasure.</p>
+
+<p>She became what she was at Tim&#8217;s Place,&#8211;a
+menial, so far as they would let her,&#8211;and from
+early morning until bedtime, some step, some
+duty, some kindly care for her benefactors, was
+assumed by her. She worked and weeded in the
+garden, she drove and milked the cows, she followed
+Uncle Jud to the hay-field, insisting that
+she must help, until at last he protested.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I like ye &#8217;round me all the time, girlie,&#8221; he
+assured her, &#8220;for ye&#8217;re the best o&#8217; company, &#8217;n&#8217;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318'></a>318</span>
+I&#8217;d rather see yer face&#8217;n&#8217; any posy that ever grew.
+But you&#8217;ve got to quit workin&#8217; so much in the
+sun. &#8217;Twill get yer hands all calloused &#8217;n&#8217; face
+freckled, an&#8217; I won&#8217;t have it. I want ye to injie
+yourself, read books, pick flowers, &#8217;n&#8217; sit in the
+shade. I see ye&#8217;ve got into the habit o&#8217; workin&#8217;,
+which ain&#8217;t a bad &#8217;un, but thar ain&#8217;t no need on&#8217;t
+here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>One day a stranger happened up this valley,
+so seldom travelled that its roadway ruts were
+obscured by grass. Chip noticed him that morning
+where the brook curved almost to the garden,
+a fair-haired young man with jaunty straw hat,
+delicate, shining rod, and new fish basket. He
+was garbed in a spick-span brown linen suit. He
+saw her also, looking over the garden wall, and
+raising his hat gracefully, strode on.</p>
+
+<p>His appearance, so neat and dainty and so like
+pictures of fishermen in books, his courteous manner
+of touching his hat, without a rude stare or
+even a second glance at her, caught her attention,
+and she watched him a few moments.</p>
+
+<p>He did not look back until he had cast his line
+into a few eddies some twenty rods away; and then
+he turned, looked at her, the house, barns, garden, all
+as one picture, and then continued up the brook.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319'></a>319</span>He was not seen again until almost twilight
+by her, and then he and Uncle Jud entered the
+sitting room.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This is Mr. Goodnow, Mandy,&#8221; Uncle Jud
+explained, nodding to the newcomer and glancing
+at Aunt Mandy and Chip. &#8220;He says he follered
+the brook further up&#8217;n he figgered on. It&#8217;s four
+miles to the Corners, &#8217;n&#8217; he wants us to keep him
+over night. I &#8217;lowed we could, if you was willin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I shall be most grateful if you kind ladies will
+permit my intrusion,&#8221; the stranger added. &#8220;I
+have been so captivated by this delightful brook
+that I quite forgot where I was or the distance to
+the village until I saw that the sun was setting. If
+you can take care of me until morning, any payment
+you will accept shall be yours.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess we can &#8217;commodate ye,&#8221; responded
+Aunt Mandy, pleasantly. And so this modern Don
+Juan found lodgement in the home of these people.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am an enthusiast on trout-catching,&#8221; he
+explained, after all had gathered on the vine-enclosed
+porch and he had presented Uncle Jud with
+an excellent cigar. &#8220;About all I do summers
+is to hunt for brooks. I came to the village below
+here yesterday, having heard of this stream, and
+never before have I found one quite so attractive.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_320'></a>320</span>Then followed a more or less fictitious account
+of his own station and occupation in life, all very
+plausible, entirely frank, and quite convincing.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am unfortunate in one respect,&#8221; he said, &#8220;in
+that I have no fixed occupation. My father, now
+dead, was a prominent physician. I was educated
+for the same profession and had just begun its
+practice when he died. An uncle also left me a
+large bequest at about the same time. My mother
+insisted that I give up practice, and now I am an
+enforced idler.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He was such an entirely new specimen of manhood,
+so charming of manner, so smooth of speech,
+that Chip watched and listened while he talked
+on and on, quite enthralled. She had seen similar
+gentlemen pass and repass Tim&#8217;s Place, not quite
+so dainty and suave, perhaps, but dressed much
+the same. She had now and then noticed a pictured
+reproduction of one in some magazine.
+Insensibly, she compared this Mr. Goodnow with
+Ray, to the latter&#8217;s discredit, and when the evening
+was ended and she was alone in her room,
+this new arrival&#8217;s delicately chiselled face, smiling
+blue eyes, slightly curled mustache, and refined
+manners followed her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s a purty slick talker,&#8221; Uncle Jud admitted
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_321'></a>321</span>
+to his wife later on, &#8220;a sorter chinaware, pictur-book
+feller &#8217;thout much harm in him. I kinder
+felt sorry for him, so I &#8217;lowed we&#8217;d keep him over
+night. Guess he ain&#8217;t much use in the world.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>How little use and how much harm he was
+capable of may be gleaned from a brief résumé of
+this stranger&#8217;s history.</p>
+
+<p>He was, as he stated, without occupation and
+with plenty of money. He also, as stated, loved
+trout brooks and wildwood life&#8211;not wildwood
+life in its true sense, but the summer-day kind,
+where, clad as he was, he could follow some
+meadow brook or sit in the shade and watch it
+while indulging in day-dreams and smoking. He
+loved these things, but he loved fair ladies&#8211;collectively&#8211;still
+more. He had stumbled upon
+Peaceful Valley by accident, coming to it from a
+fashionable resort to escape an intrigue with a
+foolish <i>grande dame</i> and consequent irate husband.
+Chip&#8217;s face and form had caught his eyes as he
+strolled by that day, and admission to the home
+of Uncle Jud and opportunity to meet, and, if possible,
+impress this handsome country lass, had been
+a matter of shrewd calculation with him. He
+had purposely remained up the brook until nightfall.
+He watched for and intercepted Uncle Jud
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_322'></a>322</span>
+in the nick of time, persuaded that confiding man
+that he was too tired to reach the village, and with
+all the blandishments of speech at his command,
+had obtained entry to this home.</p>
+
+<p>But he failed to impress Chip as he had hoped.
+She was no fool, if she had been reared at Tim&#8217;s
+Place. A certain shiftiness in his eyes when he
+looked at her, a covert, sideways glance, never
+firm but ever elusive, was soon noted and awoke
+her suspicion. Then the glib story he had told
+of himself was soon contradicted by him in a few
+minor details. Like all liars, he lacked a perfect
+memory, and, talking freely, he occasionally crossed
+his own tracks.</p>
+
+<p>Unfortunately for him, he also showed more
+interest in her than in the brook the next day, and
+the following one he capped the climax by asking
+her to go fishing with him&#8211;an invitation which
+she promptly refused.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t like that Mr. Goodnow,&#8221; she asserted
+to Uncle Jud a little later. &#8220;I think he&#8217;s a deceitful
+man. He pesters me every chance he can,
+and I wish he&#8217;d go away.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That was enough for Uncle Jud, and after supper
+he harnessed his horse and politely but firmly
+requested Mr. Goodnow&#8217;s company to the village.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_323'></a>323</span><a id='link_32'></a>CHAPTER XXXII</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>For</span> many weeks now Chip had suffered from
+a troubled conscience, and, like most of us, was
+unable to face its consequences and admit her
+sin.</p>
+
+<p>Time and again she had planned how she could
+best evade it and yet bring those two brothers
+together without first confessing. Old Cy must
+be told, of course. She could explain her conduct
+to him. He would surely forgive her, she thought,
+and then, maybe, find another home for her somehow
+and somewhere. Oversensitive as she was,
+to now confess her cowardly concealment and
+her deception of those who had loved and trusted
+her, seemed horrible.</p>
+
+<p>But events were stronger than her will, for one
+day in the last of August, Uncle Jud returned
+from the village store, bringing dress materials
+and startling information. &#8220;Cap&#8217;n Bemis is failin&#8217;
+purty fast,&#8221; he said, &#8220;so Aunt Abby writes, an&#8217;
+she ain&#8217;t comin&#8217; up here. It won&#8217;t make no difference
+to you, girlie,&#8221; he continued, turning to Chip.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_324'></a>324</span>
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve brought home stuff to rig ye out fer school.
+Miss Solon the dressmaker&#8217;s comin&#8217; to-morrer,
+&#8217;n&#8217; we&#8217;ll take keer o&#8217; ye in good shape. We&#8217;ve
+made up our minds ye belong to us fer good, me
+&#8217;n&#8217; Mandy,&#8221; he added, smiling at Chip, &#8220;an&#8217; I
+shall go with ye to Christmas Cove, if Cap&#8217;n Bemis
+ain&#8217;t improvin&#8217;, &#8217;n&#8217; find ye a boardin&#8217; place.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m awful sorry to hear &#8217;bout the Cap&#8217;n,&#8221;
+interrupted Aunt Mandy, as if the other matter
+and Chip&#8217;s future were settled definitely; &#8220;but if
+he drops off, Aunt Abby must come here fer good.
+I dunno but it&#8217;ll be a relief,&#8221; she added, looking
+at Uncle Jud and sighing. &#8220;&#8217;Twa&#8217;n&#8217;t no love-match
+in the first place, &#8217;n&#8217; Abby&#8217;s mind&#8217;s always
+been sot on your brother Cyrus, &#8217;n&#8217; she never quite
+gin up the idee he was alive.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now a sudden faintness came to Chip as
+the chasm in her own life was thus opened. Only
+one instant she faltered, and then her defiant courage
+rose supreme and she took the plunge.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, your brother Cyrus isn&#8217;t dead, Uncle
+Jud,&#8221; she exclaimed, &#8220;he&#8217;s alive and I know him.
+I&#8217;ve known it all summer and dare not tell because
+I&#8217;m a miserable coward and couldn&#8217;t own up that
+I lied to you. My name isn&#8217;t Raymond, it&#8217;s
+McGuire; and my father was a murderer, and I&#8217;m
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_325'></a>325</span>
+nobody and fit for nobody. I know you&#8217;ll all
+despise me now and I deserve it. I&#8217;m willing
+to go away, though,&#8221; and the next instant she was
+kneeling before Uncle Jud and sobbing.</p>
+
+<p>It had all come in a brief torrent of pitiful confession
+which few would be brave enough to make.</p>
+
+<p>To Chip, seeing herself as she did, it meant
+loss of love, home, respect, and all else she now
+valued, and that she must become a homeless
+wanderer once more.</p>
+
+<p>But Uncle Jud thought otherwise, for now he
+drew the sobbing girl into his lap.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Quit takin&#8217; on so, girlie,&#8221; he said, choking
+back a lump; &#8220;why, we&#8217;ll all love ye ten times
+more fer all this, an&#8217; ez fer bein&#8217; a nobody, ye&#8217;re
+a blessed angel to us fer bringin&#8217; the news ye hev.&#8221;
+And then he kissed her, while Aunt Mandy wiped
+her eyes on her apron.</p>
+
+<p>The shower, violent for a moment, was soon
+over; for as Chip raised her wet eyes, a sunshiny
+smile illumined Uncle Jud&#8217;s face.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If Cyrus is alive,&#8221; he said, &#8220;as ye callate,
+I&#8217;ll thank God till I set eyes on him, and then I
+think I&#8217;ll lick him fer not huntin&#8217; me up all these
+years.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But mebbe he found Abby was married &#8217;n&#8217;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_326'></a>326</span>
+didn&#8217;t want to,&#8221; interposed Aunt Mandy. &#8220;We
+mustn&#8217;t judge him yet.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I won&#8217;t judge him,&#8221; asserted Uncle Jud; &#8220;I&#8217;ll
+jest cuff him, good &#8217;n&#8217; hard, an&#8217; let it go at that.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ez fer you, girlie, an&#8217; jest to set yer mind at
+rest, we found out what your right name was and
+where ye run away from last fall, but never let
+on to nobody. &#8217;Twas your business and nobody
+else&#8217;s, an&#8217; made no difference in our feelin&#8217;s, ez
+ye must see; an&#8217; now I&#8217;ll tell ye how I found out.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I was down to the Corners one day arter ye
+went to Christmas Cove, &#8217;n&#8217; a feller&#8211;nice-lookin&#8217;
+feller, too, with honest brown eyes&#8211;was askin&#8217;
+if anybody had seen or heard o&#8217; a runaway girl
+by the name o&#8217; McGuire. Said she&#8217;d run away
+from Greenvale&#8211;&#8217;That&#8217;s &#8217;bout a hundred miles
+from here,&#8217; he said&#8211;an&#8217; he was huntin&#8217; for her.
+Nobody at the Corners knew about ye &#8217;n&#8217; I kept
+still, believin&#8217; ye had reason fer not wantin&#8217; to be
+found out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now another tide&#8211;the thrill of love&#8211;surged
+in Chip&#8217;s heart, and her face became glorified.</p>
+
+<p>And so the clouds rolled away. That night
+Chip wrote a brief but curious letter, so odd, in
+fact, it must be quoted verbatim:&#8211;</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i7'></a><img src='images/illus-325.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+&#8220;Quit takin&#8217; on so, girlie,&#8221; he said.
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='sc'>Mr. Martin Frisbie,</p>
+
+&#8220;Please send word at once to Mr. Cyrus Walker
+that his brother Judson, who lives in Riggsville,
+wants to see him. No one else must be told of this,
+for it&#8217;s a secret.
+
+<p class='tar sc'>&#8220;One who Knows.&#8221;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_327'></a>327</span>But Chip&#8217;s secret was a most transparent one,
+for when this missive reached Martin three days
+later, he recognized its angular penmanship and
+similarity to the note Aunt Comfort still treasured,
+and knew that Chip wrote it.</p>
+
+<p>It startled him somewhat, however, for Old
+Cy&#8217;s youthful history was unknown to him, and
+suspecting that some mystery lay beneath this
+information, he told no one, but started for Riggsville
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>The tide of emotion that had upset the even
+tenor of Uncle Jud&#8217;s home life slowly ebbed away,
+and a keen sense of expectancy took its place.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, after giving him her letter, explained that
+Old Cy was most likely in the wilderness, and
+that the letter might not reach him for weeks.</p>
+
+<p>And then one day a broad-shouldered, rather
+commanding, and somewhat citified man drove up
+to the home of Uncle Jud.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_328'></a>328</span>&#8220;Does Mr. Judson Walker live here?&#8221; he inquired
+of Aunt Mandy, who met him at the door.</p>
+
+<p>Her admission of that fact was scarce uttered
+when there came a rustling of skirts, a &#8220;Why,
+Mr. Frisbie!&#8221; and Chip was beside her, at which
+Martin, collected man of the world that he was,
+felt an unusual heart-throb of thankfulness.</p>
+
+<p>A little later, when Uncle Jud had been summoned
+into their newly furnished &#8220;keeping room,&#8221;
+disclosures astonishing to all followed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We have been searching for you, Chip, far and
+near,&#8221; Martin assured them, &#8220;and Old Cy is still
+at it. He left us at the camp, almost a year ago,
+came to Greenvale, found you had run away, and
+came back to tell us. It upset us all so that we
+broke camp at once, taking Amzi with us, and
+returned to Greenvale. Old Cy there bade us
+good-bye and started to find you. Ray also began
+a search as well. I&#8217;ve advertised in dozens of
+papers, have kept Levi on watch for you at Grindstone
+ever since, and now I hope you will return
+with me to Greenvale.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I thank you all, oh, so much,&#8221; answered Chip,
+scared a little at this proposal, &#8220;but I don&#8217;t want
+to. I&#8217;m nobody there and never can be. I&#8217;d be
+ashamed to face folks there any more.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_329'></a>329</span>&#8220;I guess she best stay with us,&#8221; put in Uncle
+Jud, &#8220;fer we sorter &#8217;dopted her, &#8217;n&#8217; not meanin&#8217;
+no disrespect to you folks, I callate she&#8217;ll be more
+content here. I&#8217;d like ye to get word to Cyrus,
+though, soon&#8217;s possible. I hain&#8217;t sot eyes on him
+fer forty years, &#8217;n&#8217;,&#8221; his eyes twinkling, &#8220;I&#8217;m jest
+spilin&#8217; to pull his hair &#8217;n&#8217; cuff him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I will help out in that matter at once, and
+more than gladly,&#8221; replied Martin, again looking
+at Chip and noting how improved she was; &#8220;but
+I still think Miss Runaway had better return with
+me. We need you, Chip,&#8221; he continued earnestly,
+&#8220;and so does some else I can name, more than
+you imagine, I fancy, and my wife will welcome
+you with open arms, you may be sure. As for
+that foolish Hannah, she&#8217;s the most penitent person
+in Greenvale. There&#8217;s another reason still,&#8221;
+he added, glancing around with a smile, &#8220;and no
+one is more glad of it than we all are. It&#8217;s a sixty-thousand-dollar
+reason&#8211;your heritage, Miss Vera
+McGuire, for your father is dead, and that amount is
+now in the Riverton Savings Bank awaiting you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Martin had expected this news to be overpowering,
+and a &#8220;Good God!&#8221; from Uncle Jud, and
+a gasping &#8220;Land sakes!&#8221; from Aunt Mandy,
+proved that it was.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_330'></a>330</span>Chip&#8217;s face, however, was a study. First she
+grew pale, then flashed a scared glance from one
+to another of the three who watched her, and then
+almost did her shame and hatred of this vile parent
+find expression.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m glad he&#8211;no, I won&#8217;t say so, for he was
+my father,&#8221; she exclaimed; &#8220;but I want Old Cy
+to have some of the money, and Uncle Jud here,
+and you folks, all. I was a pauper long enough,&#8221;
+and then, true to her instinct of how to escape from
+trouble, she ran out of the room.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s a curis gal,&#8221; asserted Uncle Jud, looking
+after her as if feeling that she needed explanation,
+&#8220;the most curis gal I ever saw. But we can&#8217;t let
+her go, money or no money, Mr. Frisbie. I found
+her one night upon top o&#8217; Bangall Hill. She was so
+starved an&#8217; beat out from trampin&#8217; she couldn&#8217;t hardly
+crawl up on to the wagon, &#8217;n&#8217; yet she said she wouldn&#8217;t
+be helped &#8217;thout she could arn it. I think she&#8217;s
+like folks we read about, who starve ruther&#8217;n beg.
+But she kin have all we&#8217;ve got some day, an&#8217; we
+jest can&#8217;t let her go.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And Martin, realizing its futility, made no further
+protest.</p>
+
+<p>Something of chagrin also came to him, for,
+broad-minded as he was, he realized how partial
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_331'></a>331</span>
+neglect, the narrow religious prejudice of Greenvale,
+and unwise notice of her childish ideas about
+spites and Old Tomah&#8217;s superstitions had all conspired
+to drive her away. She was honest and self-respecting,
+&#8220;true blue,&#8221; as Old Cy had said, grateful
+as a fawning dog for all that had been done for her,
+and in spite of her origin, a circumstance that carried
+no weight with Martin, she was one, he believed,
+who would develop into splendid womanhood.
+That she was well on her way toward that goal, her
+improved speech and devotion to these new friends
+gave ample evidence.</p>
+
+<p>And now Ray&#8217;s position in this complex situation
+occurred to Martin; for this young man&#8217;s interest
+in Chip and almost heart-broken grief over her disappearance
+had long since betrayed his attachment.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I suppose you may have guessed that there was a
+love-affair mixed up with this episode,&#8221; he said to
+the two somewhat dazed people.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I callated thar was, that fust night,&#8221; Uncle Jud
+responded, his eyes twinkling again, &#8220;an&#8217; told
+Mandy so. &#8217;Twas that more&#8217;n anything else kept
+us from quizzin&#8217; the gal. I knowed by her face
+she had heart trouble, &#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;ve seen the cause on&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You have,&#8221; exclaimed Martin, astonished in
+turn, &#8220;for Heaven&#8217;s sake, where?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_332'></a>332</span>&#8220;Oh, down to the Corners, &#8217;most a year ago, &#8217;n&#8217;
+a likely boy he was, too.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And never told her?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, why should I, thinkin&#8217; she&#8217;d run away
+from him. We didn&#8217;t want to spile her plans. We
+found out, though, her name was McGuire, but
+never let on till she told us a spell ago.&#8221; And then
+Uncle Jud told the story of Ray&#8217;s arrival in Riggsville
+in search of Chip.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;That fellow is my nephew, Raymond Stetson,&#8221;
+rejoined Martin with pride, &#8220;he also is an orphan,
+and I have adopted him. Chip has no cause to be
+ashamed of his attachment.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t callate she is,&#8221; replied Uncle Jud.
+&#8220;&#8217;Tain&#8217;t that that jinerally makes a gal kick over
+the traces. Mebbe &#8217;twas suthin some o&#8217; you folks
+said.&#8221; And then a new light came to Martin.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Walker,&#8221; he answered impressively, &#8220;in
+every village there is always a meddlesome old
+maid who invariably says things she&#8217;d better not,
+and ours is no exception. In this case it was a
+dependent of our family who took a dislike to Chip,
+it seems, and her escapade was its outcome.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, ye&#8217;ve got to hev charity for &#8217;em,&#8221; replied
+Uncle Jud with a broad smile. &#8220;Never havin&#8217;
+suffered the joys &#8217;n&#8217; sorrows o&#8217; love, they look at it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_333'></a>333</span>
+sorter criss-cross, an&#8217; mebbe this &#8217;un did. Old maids
+are a good deal like cider&#8211;nat&#8217;raly turn into vinegar.
+What wimmin need more&#8217;n all the rest is bein&#8217;
+loved, &#8217;n&#8217; if they don&#8217;t get it, they sour up in time an&#8217;
+ain&#8217;t no comfort to themselves nor nobody else.
+Then ag&#8217;in, not havin&#8217; no man nor no babies to look
+arter, they take to coddlin&#8217; cats &#8217;n&#8217; dogs &#8217;n&#8217; parrots,
+which ain&#8217;t nat&#8217;ral.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think,&#8221; continued Uncle Jud, &#8220;now that we&#8217;ve
+turned another furrow, you&#8217;d best stop a day or
+two with us, &#8217;n&#8217; sorter git &#8217;quainted. We&#8217;ll be
+mighty glad to hev ye, me an&#8217; Mandy, an&#8217; then ag&#8217;in
+thar&#8217;s a lot o&#8217; good trout holes up the brook. We
+hev plenty to eat, &#8217;n&#8217; mebbe a few days here in
+Peaceful Valley&#8217;ll sorter reconcile ye to leavin&#8217; the gal
+with us.&#8221; And nothing loath, Martin accepted.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Mandy and Chip now bestirred themselves
+as never before. The dressmaker was left to her
+own resources, Martin and Uncle Jud rigged fish-poles
+and started for the brook. Chip, with pail
+in hand, hurried away to the fields, and when teatime
+arrived, the big platter of crisp fried trout,
+saucers filled with luscious blackberries, and ample
+shortcake of the same with cream that poured in
+clots, assured Martin that these people did indeed
+have plenty to eat.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_334'></a>334</span>&#8220;How did this come to be named Peaceful Valley?&#8221;
+he queried, when they had all gathered around
+the table. &#8220;It&#8217;s very appropriate.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal,&#8221; answered Uncle Jud, &#8220;we got it from a
+feller that come up here paintin&#8217; picturs one summer,
+an&#8217;,&#8221; chuckling, &#8220;&#8217;twas all we got for a month&#8217;s
+board, at that. He was a sort o&#8217; skimpy critter,
+with long hair, kinder pale, and chawed tobacco
+stiddy. He &#8217;lowed his name was Grahame, that
+he was in the show business &#8217;n&#8217; gittin&#8217; backgrounds,
+as he called &#8217;em, fer show picturs. He roved up &#8217;n&#8217;
+down the brook, puttin&#8217; rocks &#8217;n&#8217; trees &#8217;n&#8217; waterfalls
+on paper, allus gittin&#8217; &#8217;round reg&#8217;lar &#8217;bout meal-time&#8211;must &#8217;a&#8217; gained twenty pounds while here. An&#8217;
+then one mornin&#8217; he was missin&#8217;, &#8217;n&#8217; so was Aunt
+Mandy&#8217;s gold thimble &#8217;n&#8217; all her silver spoons. She&#8217;d
+sorter took to him, too, he was that palaverin&#8217; in his
+way.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>There now ensued a series a questions from Uncle
+Jud in regard to Old Cy&#8211;how long Martin had
+known him, and all that pertained to his history.</p>
+
+<p>It was gladly recited by Martin, together with all
+the strange happenings in the wilderness, the finding
+of Chip, the half-breed&#8217;s pursuit and abduction of
+her, and much else that has been told.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost midnight ere Martin was shown to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_335'></a>335</span>
+the best front chamber, and even then he lay awake
+an hour, listening to the steady prattle of a near-by
+brook and thinking of all that had happened.</p>
+
+<hr class='tb' />
+
+<p>A tone of regret crept into his voice, however,
+when, after thanking Uncle Jud and Aunt Mandy,
+and bidding them good-bye, he addressed Chip.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wish I could take you back with me,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;your return would be such a blessing to Aunt
+Comfort and my wife. You may not believe it,
+but you are dear to them both. I must insist that you
+at least pay us a visit soon. Here is your bank book,&#8221;
+he added, presenting it. &#8220;You are rich now, or at
+least need never want, for which we are all grateful.
+And what about Ray?&#8221; he added, pausing to watch
+her. &#8220;What shall I say to him? Shall I tell him
+to come and see you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Chip shook her head firmly. &#8220;No, no,&#8221; she answered,
+&#8220;please don&#8217;t do that. Some day I may
+feel different, but not now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_336'></a>336</span><a id='link_33'></a>CHAPTER XXXIII</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Sad</span> news arrived in Peaceful Valley a week later,
+for Captain Bemis had passed on, Aunt Abby was
+in lonely sorrow, and wrote for Chip to come at once.</p>
+
+<p>Her fate was now linked with these people. Aunt
+Abby had been kind and helpful, and Chip, more
+than glad to return a little of the obligation, hurried
+to Christmas Cove.</p>
+
+<p>It was a solemn and silent house she now entered.
+Aunt Abby, despite the fact that it was not a love-match,
+mourned her departed companion. The
+mill&#8217;s pertinent silence added gloom, and Chip&#8217;s
+smiling face and affectionate interest was more than
+welcome to Aunt Abby.</p>
+
+<p>And now that concealment was no longer needed,
+Chip hastened to tell her story in full.</p>
+
+<p>How utterly Aunt Abby was astonished, how
+breathlessly she listened to Chip&#8217;s recital, and how,
+when the climax came and Chip assured her that
+good Old Cy Walker was still alive, Aunt Abby collapsed
+entirely, sobbing and thanking God all at
+once, is but a sidelight on this tale.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_337'></a>337</span>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t tell you before,&#8221; Chip assured her,
+while her own tears still flowed. &#8220;I was so ashamed
+and guilty all in one, I couldn&#8217;t bear to. I never
+did so mean a thing in all my life, and never will
+again. But when Uncle Jud told me what you
+didn&#8217;t, and how much he cared for me, and how
+you once cared for Uncle Cy, I went all to pieces and
+told the whole story and sent word to Uncle Cy that
+day. I feel so guilty now, and so mean, I don&#8217;t
+see how you can forgive me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Aunt Abby&#8217;s forgiveness was not slow in
+coming. The past ten days of sorrow had left her
+heart very tender. In spite of being &#8220;book-larned,&#8221;
+she was very humane. Chip&#8217;s sad life and misfortunes
+appealed to her, as they had to Uncle Jud,
+and true Christian woman that she was, her heart
+opened to Chip.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope we shall never be parted while I live,&#8221;
+she said, as the tears came again. &#8220;I have no children,
+and no one to live for but my sister. I am so
+wonted to Christmas Cove, I could not feel at home
+anywhere else. If Uncle Jud will consent, I will
+adopt you legally, and when I am laid away, all I
+have shall be yours.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And so Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness,
+child of an outlaw, once sold to a human brute, yet
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_338'></a>338</span>
+fighting her way upward and onward to a better life,
+despite every drawback, now found a home and
+mother.</p>
+
+<p>No light of education had illumined her pathway,
+no Christian teaching and no home example, only
+the inborn and God-given impulse of purity, self-respect,
+and gratitude; and yet, like a bud forcing
+its way up out of a muck heap and into the sunshine,
+so Chip had emerged to win respect and love.</p>
+
+<p>But all her history is not told yet. She still
+lacked even a common education. There was still
+an old man seeking to find her, who was yet wandering
+afar. A homeless, almost friendless old man
+was he, whose life had gone amiss, and whose sole
+ambition was to do for her and find content in her
+happiness. A wanderer and recluse for many years,
+he was still more so now, and out of place as well
+among the busy haunts of men. More than that,
+he was an object of curiosity to all grown people
+and the jest of the young, as he tramped up and down
+the land in search of Chip.</p>
+
+<p>And what a pitiful quest it was,&#8211;this asking the
+same question thousands of times, this lingering in
+towns to watch mill operatives file out, this peering
+into stores and marts, to go on again, and repeat
+it for months and months.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_339'></a>339</span>There was still another link in this chain,&#8211;a
+boy, so far as experience goes, who was only
+deterred from unwise haste by a cool-headed
+man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You had better not go to Chip now,&#8221; Martin
+said to him on his return from Peaceful Valley.
+&#8220;She is an odd child of nature, and you won&#8217;t lose
+by waiting. My advice to you is to forget her for
+the present, find some profitable occupation, and then,
+when you have made a little advancement in life,
+go and woo her if you can. To try it now is foolish.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was cold comfort for Ray.</p>
+
+<p>One of Chip&#8217;s first acts of emancipation was to
+write to Aunt Comfort and Angie, assuring both of
+her love and best wishes, and thanking them for all
+they had done. Both letters were cramped in
+chirography but correct in spelling, and in Angie&#8217;s
+was a note for Martin, asking that he draw one
+hundred dollars of her money and send it to her, and
+as much more to pay some one to follow Old Cy.
+The latter request Martin ignored, however, for he
+had already set the machinery of newspaperdom at
+work, and an advertisement for information of that
+wanderer was flying far and wide.</p>
+
+<p>Of the money sent her, Chip made odd and quite
+characteristic uses, only one of which needs mention,&#8211;the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_340'></a>340</span>
+purchase of a banjo. Had Ray known this,
+and that the tender memory it invoked was the reason
+for this investment, he would have had less cause for
+grief. But Ray did not, which was all the better
+for him.</p>
+
+<p>And now, while she is in good company at Christmas
+Cove, with Mr. Bell, syntax, decimal fractions,
+the planetary system, and divisions of the earth
+six hours of each school day, or with Aunt Abby
+sewing, or picking at the banjo, or attending church,
+we must leave Chip and follow Old Cy.</p>
+
+<p>With a hunter&#8217;s instinct he had calculated that
+Chip would head for the place of her birth, and then,
+if possible, send word to either himself or the Indian.
+That she had made way with herself he did not
+consider probable. She was not of that fibre, he
+felt positive; but instead, would make her own way
+across country, working, if need be, to obtain food
+and shelter until she at last reached the one spot
+nearest her heart,&#8211;her mother&#8217;s grave.</p>
+
+<p>Believing this of her, and judging rightly, he left
+Greenvale, and, as it happened, twice crossed and
+once followed the very route she had taken for miles.
+That he failed to hear of her from the many he asked
+was solely due to accident, added to her own caution
+in avoiding all observant eyes.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_341'></a>341</span>And what an almost hopeless and interminable
+tramp he took! Back and forth across the section
+of country she was likely to follow for weeks and
+weeks, halting a day in every village and two or three
+in each city, asking the same question over and over
+again, until his indomitable courage and almost
+deathless faith slowly ebbed away.</p>
+
+<p>Autumn came, the leaves grew scarlet and brown,
+snow followed, and winter locked all streams, and
+still Old Cy journeyed on. Spring and sunshine
+once more warmed the earth into life, the fields grew
+green, and yet he paused not.</p>
+
+<p>With June and the real beginning of summer,
+however, came a new inspiration, which was to go
+at once by rail and stage to Chip&#8217;s native town and
+learn if, perchance, she, or any news of her, had
+reached this village.</p>
+
+<p>Another thought also came with this,&#8211;that Martin
+might soon again visit the woods and perhaps he
+could intercept him.</p>
+
+<p>A little satisfaction was obtained by this advance
+move, for when this village was reached, Levi was
+found waiting.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve been watchin&#8217; for the gal over eight months
+now, under pay from Mr. Frisbie,&#8221; he assured Old
+Cy when they met. &#8220;I also sent word to Old Tomah
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_342'></a>342</span>
+late last fall, &#8217;n&#8217; he came out o&#8217; the woods &#8217;n&#8217; stayed
+here two months, but nothin&#8217;s been heard o&#8217; poor
+Chip by any one, &#8217;n&#8217; I doubt ever will be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mebbe not yet,&#8221; answered Old Cy, &#8220;but thar
+will be some day, an&#8217; here, too. She hadn&#8217;t a cent
+when she left Greenvale&#8211;only grit, &#8217;n&#8217; it&#8217;s a long
+ways here fer a gal what&#8217;s got to arn her vittles
+while she&#8217;s trampin&#8217;. It may be one year, it may be
+two, but some day Chip&#8217;ll show up here, if she lives
+to do it. I callate I&#8217;d best wait here a few weeks
+tho&#8217;, an&#8217; then, if nothin&#8217; turns up, I&#8217;ll start ag&#8217;in.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Nothing did, however; but during his stay, Old
+Cy learned that Chip&#8217;s entire history, from the night
+she left Tim&#8217;s Place until she ran away from Greenvale,
+was known at this village. This fact was of no
+value whatever, except to prove the universal interest
+all humanity has in the fate and fortune of one
+another.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never told what happened in the woods,&#8221;
+Levi responded when Old Cy questioned him, &#8220;an&#8217;
+didn&#8217;t need to, for it got here &#8217;fore I did. I jest
+&#8217;lowed it was true, &#8217;n&#8217; that I was hired to wait and
+watch here for Chip. It&#8217;s curis, too, how everybody
+here feels &#8217;bout it. They&#8217;re a poorish sort here,
+families o&#8217; lumbermen, men that work in the sawmills,
+some farmin&#8217;, an&#8217; all findin&#8217; it hard work to git
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_343'></a>343</span>
+a livin&#8217;. An&#8217; yet they&#8217;re so interested in Chip &#8217;n&#8217;
+so sorry for her, if she shows up now she&#8217;d be carried
+&#8217;round the village like some queen &#8217;ud be, with everybody
+follerin&#8217;. Thar&#8217;s &#8217;nother curis thing happened
+since I&#8217;ve been here that I&#8217;d never believed o&#8217; these
+people neither. I told them, of course, who I was,
+&#8217;n&#8217; what I was here for, &#8217;n&#8217; who was payin&#8217; me,
+when I come, an&#8217; then as time kinder went slow, I
+began huntin&#8217; some &#8217;round here. Wal, thar&#8217;s a
+little graveyard up back o&#8217; the village &#8217;n&#8217; all growed
+up to weeds &#8217;n&#8217; bushes, an&#8217; one day last fall I happened
+to be lookin&#8217; it over &#8217;n&#8217; somebody come &#8217;long.
+It was a man that keeps store here, an&#8217; I asked him
+if &#8217;twas here Chip&#8217;s mother was buried. He said
+&#8217;twas, an&#8217; pointed out the spot &#8217;way up in one corner,
+&#8217;thout any stone, &#8217;n&#8217; the mound most hid in a tangle.
+I didn&#8217;t say nothin&#8217;&#8211;jest looked, an&#8217; went on, &#8217;n&#8217; that
+was all. Wal, the curis part is last spring they sot
+a couple o&#8217; men to work cleanin&#8217; up the graveyard
+o&#8217; bushes an&#8217; laid out walks &#8217;n&#8217; built a new fence
+&#8217;round it. That one unmarked grave got the most
+attention o&#8217; all, for they turfed it over nice and built
+a little fence &#8217;round it. I kinder callated how &#8217;n&#8217; why
+it all come &#8217;bout, &#8217;n&#8217; feelin&#8217; I oughter do suthin, I
+had a little stun sot up with Chip&#8217;s mother&#8217;s name
+on it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_344'></a>344</span>But time also went &#8220;kinder slow&#8221; for Old Cy, and
+as the date for Martin&#8217;s probable coming had now
+passed, he finally yielded to Levi&#8217;s suggestion and
+the call of the wilderness as well, and the two started
+for Martin&#8217;s camp.</p>
+
+<p>It was almost like a pilgrimage to one&#8217;s boyhood
+home; for while scarce a year had elapsed since Old
+Cy and Martin&#8217;s party left it, Nature, always seeking
+to hide human handiwork, had been busy, and
+the garden was a tangle of weeds. Amzi&#8217;s old cabin
+was almost hid by bushes, the walks were choked
+with them, and a colony of squirrels frisked about,
+and now, alarmed at human presence, added a
+touch of pathos.</p>
+
+<p>One act of vandalism was in evidence, for some
+wandering trappers had apparently used the larger
+cabin the previous season. Its floor was littered
+with all manner of débris, the bones of a deer mouldered
+in the woodshed, and a family of porcupines
+had also found the premises available. The impression
+conveyed by the entire spot and its surroundings
+made even Levi gloomy, while Old Cy scarce spoke
+the entire first day there, except to exclaim at &#8220;varmints&#8221;
+who would break locks, use the cabin for
+months, and then leave a litter of garbage to draw
+vermin.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_345'></a>345</span>&#8220;It&#8217;s curis how near to hogs &#8217;n&#8217; hyenas a few
+humans are,&#8221; he said as he looked around and saw
+how these vandals had behaved. &#8220;They wa&#8217;n&#8217;t
+satisfied with burglin&#8217; the cabin, turnin&#8217; it into a pig-pen,
+stealin&#8217; all they could carry off, but they was
+so durned lazy, they smashed up the furniture to
+burn.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>For a few days only these two fine old backwoodsmen
+tarried here, and then Old Cy proposed departure.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I can&#8217;t take no comfort here, nohow,&#8221; he said,
+&#8220;for the premises seem ha&#8217;nted. Whichever way
+I turn I &#8217;spect to meet Amzi with his moon eyes, or
+see Chip watchin&#8217; me, or Angie steppin&#8217; out o&#8217; the
+cabin. If I stayed here long, I&#8217;d see Chip&#8217;s spites
+crawlin&#8217; out o&#8217; the bushes soon ez it got dusky. I&#8217;m
+used to the woods, but this spot seems like a graveyard.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never done no prayin&#8217;,&#8221; he added sadly. &#8220;I
+don&#8217;t b&#8217;lieve in&#8217;t. But if I could set eyes on Chip
+this minit, I&#8217;d go right down on my knees &#8217;n&#8217; say,
+&#8217;Thank God for this blessin&#8217;.&#8217; I&#8217;m &#8217;fraid I never
+will, though.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The next morning these two friends left this abode
+of unseen forms, more disconsolate than ever. They
+halted at Tim&#8217;s Place long enough to learn that no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_346'></a>346</span>
+tidings of McGuire or the half-breed had even
+reached that filthy station, and then returned to the
+settlement once more. Here Old Cy waited until
+the summer waned, vainly hoping each day would
+at least bring some word from Martin or Chip, and
+then bade Levi good-bye, and departed.</p>
+
+<p>He had been gone a week, a wandering tramp
+once more, when Ray appeared, bearing the glad
+news that Chip had been found. And also another
+and a more astounding fact.</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy was not there.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_347'></a>347</span><a id='link_34'></a>CHAPTER XXXIV</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Life</span>, always colorless at Christmas Cove, except
+in midsummer, now became changed for Aunt
+Abby. For all the years since her one girlish romance
+had ended, she had been a patient helpmate
+to a man she merely respected. Religion had been
+her chief solace. The annual visit to her sister&#8217;s
+gave the only relief to this motionless life, monotonous
+as the tides sweeping in and out of the cove;
+but now a counter-current slowly flowed into it.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, of course, with her winsome eyes and grateful
+ways, was its mainspring, and so checkered had
+been her career and so humiliating all her past experiences,
+that now, escaped from dependence and
+feeling herself a valued companion, she tasted a new
+and joyous life. So true was this, that hard lessons
+at school, the regularity of church-going, and the
+unvarying tenor of it all seemed less by comparison.</p>
+
+<p>Another undercurrent, aside from Chip&#8217;s devotion,
+also swept into Aunt Abby&#8217;s feelings,&#8211;the
+strange emotions following the knowledge that her
+former lover was still alive. For many years she
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_348'></a>348</span>
+had waited and hoped for this sailor boy&#8217;s return;
+then her heart had grown silent, as hope slowly
+ebbed, and then, almost forgetfulness&#8211;but not
+quite, however, for the long, lily-dotted mill-pond
+just above had now and then been visited by them.
+A certain curiously grown oak which was secluded
+near its upper end was once a trysting-place, and
+even the old mill with its plashing wheel held
+memories.</p>
+
+<p>And now after forty years, during which she had
+become gray-haired and slightly wrinkled, all these
+memories returned like ghosts of long ago. No
+word or hint of them fell from her lips, not even to
+Chip, who was now nearest to her; and yet had that
+girl been a mind-reader, she would have seen that
+Aunt Abby&#8217;s persistent interest in all she had to tell
+about Old Cy meant something. Where he was
+now, how soon he would learn that his brother was
+still alive after all these years, was the one most
+pertinent subject oft discussed.</p>
+
+<p>How Chip felt toward him, not alone for the
+heritage he had secured for her, but for other and
+more valued heart interests, need not be specified.
+He had seemed almost a father to her at the lake.
+He was the first of her new-found friends whose
+feelings had warmed toward her, and Chip was now
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_349'></a>349</span>
+mature enough to value these blessings at their true
+worth.</p>
+
+<p>A certain mutual expectancy now entered the
+lives of Chip and Aunt Abby. Nothing could be
+done, however. Old Cy had gone out into the wide,
+wide world, as it were, searching for the little girl
+he loved. No manner of reaching him seemed possible;
+and yet, some day, he must learn what would
+bring him to them as fast as steam could fetch him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know that he loved me as his own child there
+at the lake,&#8221; Chip said once in an exultant tone.
+&#8220;His going after me proves it; and once he hears
+where I am, he will hurry here, I know.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Whether Aunt Abby&#8217;s heart responded to that
+wish or not, she never disclosed.</p>
+
+<p>But the days, weeks, and months swept by, and
+Old Cy came not. Neither did any message come
+to Chip from Greenvale. At first, rebelling at Ray&#8217;s
+treatment of her, Chip felt that she never wanted
+to see him again. She had been so tender and
+loving toward him at the lake, had striven so hard
+to learn and to be more like him, had waited and
+watched, counting the days until his return, only
+to be told what she could not forget and to find him
+so neglectful, so cool to her, when her girlish heart
+was so full of love, that her feelings had changed
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_350'></a>350</span>
+almost in one instant, and pride had made her
+bitter.</p>
+
+<p>Hannah had told an unpleasant truth, as Chip
+knew well enough; but truth and confiding love
+mixed illy, and Ray&#8217;s conduct, leaving her as he did
+with scarce a word or promise, was an episode that
+had chilled and almost killed Chip&#8217;s budding affection.
+As is always the case, such a feeling fades
+and flares like all others. There would now be a
+brief space when Chip hoped and longed for Ray&#8217;s
+coming, and then days when no thought of him
+came.</p>
+
+<p>It was perhaps fortunate for him that Christmas
+Cove contained no serious admirer of Chip the
+while, else his cause and all memory of him would
+have been swept away. But that quaint village was
+peopled chiefly by old folk, those of the male persuasion
+being quite young, with a few girls of Chip&#8217;s
+age. Few young men remained there to make their
+way, and so no added interest came to vary Chip&#8217;s
+life.</p>
+
+<p>The coming of summer, however, brought the
+annual influx of city boarders once more. First
+came elderly ladies, more anxious about suitable
+rooms and food than aught else, and then came the
+younger ones, whose gowns and their display appeared
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_351'></a>351</span>
+the only motive for existence. A few young
+men followed in their wake. Now and then a small
+yacht anchored in the mouth of the cove. The long
+wharf became a rendezvous for promenaders, tennis
+courts were established, and gay costumes, bright
+parasols, and astounding hats were in evidence.</p>
+
+<p>It was all a new and fascinating panorama for
+Chip. Never before had she seen such butterflies
+of fashion, who glanced at her and her more modest
+raiment almost with scorn, and scarce conscious of
+them, she looked on with awe and admiration.</p>
+
+<p>The old mill, the quaint house where she dwelt,
+and especially the long pond, now sprinkled thickly
+with lilies, became a Mecca for these newcomers,
+and not a pleasant day passed but from two to a
+dozen of them came trooping about and around it.
+They peered into the mill, exclaimed over the great
+dripping wheel, and almost shouted at the sight of
+the white blossoms on the pond.</p>
+
+<p>One day a bevy of laughing and chattering girls
+with one gallant in white flannels approached the
+mill while Chip in calico was kneeling beside a
+flower-bed. She looked up at once and saw her
+erstwhile admirer at Peaceful Valley, Mr. Goodnow.
+One instant only their eyes met, his to turn quickly
+away, and then Chip, coloring at the slight, rose
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_352'></a>352</span>
+and entered the house. Once safe in this asylum,
+womanlike, she hastened to peep out at the arrivals.
+They halted for only a glance about and then, their
+protector (?) still in the lead, vanished behind the
+mill.</p>
+
+<p>The next afternoon, just as Chip was returning
+from the village store, she met Mr. Goodnow again,
+this time alone.</p>
+
+<p>With a bow and smile he raised his hat and halted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, Miss Raymond,&#8221; he exclaimed eagerly,
+&#8220;I am so glad to meet you again. Are you visiting
+here, and when did you leave Peaceful Valley?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am living here now,&#8221; returned Chip, coolly,
+continuing on her way, &#8220;where you saw me yesterday.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, yes,&#8221; he answered, not the least abashed,
+&#8220;and you must pardon me for not recognizing you
+then. It&#8217;s been a year, you know, since I saw you,
+and you have changed so in that time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course,&#8221; responded Chip, her eyes snapping,
+&#8220;you couldn&#8217;t remember me so long. Why don&#8217;t
+you tell the truth and say you didn&#8217;t dare know me
+before those ladies?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, Miss Raymond, you wrong me; but I
+admire your frankness&#8211;it is so unusual among
+your charming sex!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_353'></a>353</span>&#8220;Then you did know me,&#8221; she returned sarcastically,
+&#8220;I knew well enough, and if they were with
+you now, you wouldn&#8217;t know me. I&#8217;m no fool, if I
+do wear calico.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was blunt. It was truthful. It was Chip all
+over; but this polished rake never winced.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I never dispute a lady,&#8221; he answered suavely;
+&#8220;it doesn&#8217;t pay. Besides, I have found they all
+prefer sweet lies instead of truth. And now I will
+admit you looked so charming as you raised your
+face from among the flowers that I was dazed and
+didn&#8217;t think to bow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You weren&#8217;t so dazed but that you managed to
+get away in a hurry.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, of course, I was piloting my friends up to
+the lily pond,&#8221; he returned, still unruffled, &#8220;and
+much as I desired, I couldn&#8217;t pause to visit with
+you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>They had now reached Chip&#8217;s home. She halted
+at the gate, turned, and looked at him.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope we may be friends, now that you have
+scolded me enough,&#8221; he added. &#8220;I had a delightful
+week with you last summer. I&#8217;ve lived it over
+many times. May I not call here to-morrow, and
+you and I will gather some of the lilies?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>A droll smile crept over Chip&#8217;s face at this.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_354'></a>354</span>&#8220;Yes, if you will bring your lady friends also,&#8221;
+she answered. And with a &#8220;Thank you,&#8221; and
+raising his hat once more, this smooth-spoken fellow,
+impervious to sarcasm, turned away.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Who was the young man?&#8221; Aunt Abby queried,
+when Chip entered the house.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s a Mr. Goodnow, who spent a week with
+Uncle Jud,&#8221; she answered, smiling. &#8220;He came by
+here yesterday with three ladies and was close to me
+when I was working in my posy bed. He made out
+he didn&#8217;t remember me then, when I met him this
+afternoon. I guess I was saucy to him. I meant
+to be. He wouldn&#8217;t take it, and walked home with
+me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Abby looked surprised.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I hope you weren&#8217;t really saucy,&#8221; she answered,
+&#8220;that wouldn&#8217;t have been becoming.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Goodnow appeared next day, not at all disturbed,
+and Chip, a little more gracious, consented
+to gather lilies with him. The leaky punt that had
+served for that purpose many years was bailed out.
+He manned the oars. Chip bared one rounded arm,
+and, thus equipped, two really enjoyable hours were
+passed.</p>
+
+<p>As Uncle Jud had said, he was a &#8220;slick talker.&#8221;
+Truth was not considered by him; instead, subtile
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_355'></a>355</span>
+flatteries were his stock in trade, and Chip, for the
+first time in her life, felt their insidious influence.
+She was in no wise deceived. Her woman&#8217;s wit and
+good sense detected the sham, and caring not one
+whit for him, she responded as saucily as she chose.
+It was not, perhaps, quite ladylike, but Chip was
+not as yet a polished lady; instead, she was a decidedly
+blunt-spoken girl who enjoyed exasperating
+this fashionable Lothario.</p>
+
+<p>And never before had he met her like or one so
+fearless of speech.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You are the sauciest girl I have ever had the
+pleasure of meeting,&#8221; he said, as they drew up to
+the landing and began sorting the lilies. &#8220;I didn&#8217;t
+notice it so much last summer; and yet you are no
+less charming, mainly because you are so frank.
+Most ladies whom I know are not so. They are
+arrant hypocrites and not one assertion in ten can
+be taken at its face value.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You seem to have been an apt scholar,&#8221; Chip
+responded, smiling. &#8220;If you like my blunt speech,
+as you say, why don&#8217;t you imitate it and be truthful
+for once in your life?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I dare not. No man ever yet won a woman&#8217;s
+favor by plain speech.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And so you want my favor. What for? I am
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_356'></a>356</span>
+not of your sort. I do not spend my life playing
+golf and tennis and wearing fine clothes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you ought to. You have the face and form
+required, and once you got into the swim of society,
+you would become a leader.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Chip greeted this with a laugh. &#8220;Do you plaster
+it on as thick as that with every one,&#8221; she queried,
+&#8220;and will they stand it?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, yes,&#8221; he chuckled, &#8220;and almost beg for
+more. My ladies thrive on flattery, and unless a
+man doles it out to them, they think him stupid.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>When he had helped her out of the boat, holding
+and pressing her hand unduly long she thought, he
+gathered up the lilies and, with a graceful bow and
+&#8220;Sweets to the sweet,&#8221; offered them to her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t want them,&#8221; she answered bluntly.
+&#8220;Take them to your arrant hypocrites and tell them
+a girl you couldn&#8217;t fool sent &#8217;em.&#8221; And nonplussed
+a little at this speech, but still smiling, he followed
+Chip to the house. At the gate he halted and their
+eyes met.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve had a most charming morning, for which
+I thank you,&#8221; he said. And drawing two of the
+largest blooms from the bunch of lilies, he laid the
+rest on the gate-post. &#8220;You will have to take them,&#8221;
+he added. &#8220;And now I have something else to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_357'></a>357</span>
+propose. I own a small yacht. It is anchored
+down near the wharf. How would you like a sail
+to-morrow? I shall be highly pleased to have you
+for my guest. Will you go?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Chip was not caught so easily.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll go if you will ask Aunt Abby also,&#8221; she answered,
+&#8220;not otherwise.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, of course,&#8221; he responded graciously,
+&#8220;that is understood.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And still unruffled by this parting evidence of
+distrust, he bowed himself away.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_358'></a>358</span><a id='link_35'></a>CHAPTER XXXV</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;A girl with a new ring allus hez trouble with her hair.&#8221;
+&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><i>As</i> might be expected, Chip gave Aunt Abby a full
+recital of her morning&#8217;s episode as soon as she entered
+the house, and with it her comments upon this
+smooth-spoken young man.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He reeled off flattery by the yard,&#8221; she said,
+&#8220;and no matter how I took it, or how sharply I set
+him back, he kept at it. The way he piled it on
+was almost funny, just as though he thought I believed
+it. Of course I didn&#8217;t, not a word, and what&#8217;s
+more I wouldn&#8217;t trust him farther than I could see
+him. He&#8217;s got shifty eyes, and Cy once told me
+never to believe a man with such eyes. He wants me
+to go sailing with him to-morrow, and I said I would
+go if you were asked. I knew you wouldn&#8217;t go,
+however.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Of course not,&#8221; answered Aunt Abby, severely,
+&#8220;and his asking you in such a way was almost an
+insult. If he had meant well, he would have said
+he was taking other friends out and would have
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_359'></a>359</span>
+asked us both to join them. I should not have consented
+to that even, however. These summer
+people are not our sort, and to accept such favors
+from them is to put ourselves in a fair way of being
+laughed at. I would advise, also, that you have no
+more to say to this young man. It will not reflect
+credit upon you if you do.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon, while Chip practised upon her
+banjo, it being vacation time, Aunt Abby called upon
+several neighbors with news-gathering intent. She
+succeeded to the fullest, and that evening related it
+to Chip.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This Mr. Goodnow has been here about two
+weeks,&#8221; she said, &#8220;and is boarding at Captain
+Perkins&#8217;s. He came in a small steam yacht he
+claims he owns, and has been going about with three
+ladies who are stopping at the Mix House. Two of
+them are sisters, the Misses Wilson, and a Mrs.
+Simpson, a widow. He seems the most devoted to
+the widow. They have been out driving quite often,
+and once or twice she has been sailing with him alone.
+It&#8217;s all right, of course, only she being a good deal
+older than he is, makes it seem curious. When he
+calls here to-morrow, as I suppose he will, I&#8217;d better
+see him.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He called quite early the next morning, as may be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_360'></a>360</span>
+guessed, and a more picture-book yachtsman Aunt
+Abby never set eyes upon. His white duck shoes,
+trousers, and cap, white flannel coat, dark blue silk
+shirt, jaunty sailor tie and russet belt, all completed
+an attire so spick and span that it seemed that he
+must have just emerged from a tailor shop.</p>
+
+<p>But Aunt Abby was not awed overmuch. She
+had seen his like before, and met him at her door
+with serene self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am Mr. Goodnow,&#8221; he explained with easy
+assurance, &#8220;and Miss Raymond has kindly consented
+to accept a few hours&#8217; enjoyment in my yacht if you
+will also honor me.&#8221; And he bowed again.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We thank you very much, sir,&#8221; Aunt Abby responded
+stiffly, &#8220;but I must decline for us both. We
+should hardly care to accept hospitalities which we
+could not return.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I regret it very much,&#8221; he answered in a hurt
+tone, &#8220;and assure you I am the one to feel obligated.&#8221;
+And then, as Aunt Abby drew back, and the door
+began to close very slowly, he bowed and retreated
+in good order.</p>
+
+<p>But he was not to be thus checkmated, and from
+now on he began to watch for chances to intercept
+and accost Chip.</p>
+
+<p>It was, and always had been, a part of her nature
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_361'></a>361</span>
+to be out of doors as much as possible, and since the
+close of school she was out more than ever. Somewhat
+akin to Old Cy in love of Nature, the fields,
+woods, and streams had always attracted her, and
+at Christmas Cove the sea added a new charm to
+which she yielded nearly every pleasant day. And
+her steps led her far and wide.</p>
+
+<p>Down to the seldom-used wharf to watch the tide
+ebb and flow between its mussel-coated piles, over
+the broad-rippled sands of the cove when the tide
+left them bare, around to the long, rocky barrier
+beyond the cove where the sea waves dashed, were
+her favorite strolls.</p>
+
+<p>The next afternoon she strayed to where the ocean
+spray was leaping. She had scarce reached her
+favorite lookout spot, a shaded cliff, when she saw
+Goodnow approaching.</p>
+
+<p>Her first impulse was to return home at once, the
+next to remain.</p>
+
+<p>She did not fear him, he seemed such an effeminate,
+foppish sort of man, that lithe and strong as
+she was, she felt she could outrun him, or, if need
+be, throw him into the sea. And so she waited, cool
+and indifferent. Although conscious that he was
+nearing her, she never turned her head until he was
+beside her. Then she looked up.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_362'></a>362</span>&#8220;I beg your pardon,&#8221; he said, raising his hat,
+&#8220;but may I share this cliff with you?&#8221; And he
+seated himself near.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It isn&#8217;t mine,&#8221; answered Chip, rather ungraciously,
+&#8220;so there&#8217;s no need to ask.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But every lady has a right to decline a gentleman&#8217;s
+company wherever she is,&#8221; he responded in
+his usual suave tone. &#8220;I saw you coming here,
+and I&#8217;ll admit I was bold enough to follow.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And what for?&#8221; she answered, in her blunt way,
+&#8220;I never invited you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you didn&#8217;t, and I never expect you will.
+But you are such a saucy, fascinating little wood-nymph
+that I couldn&#8217;t help it. I am sorry, though,
+that you and your worthy aunt refused my yacht
+yesterday. I wanted an opportunity to get better
+acquainted with her and yourself as well, and thought
+that a good way.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Do you love the ocean,&#8221; he continued, as Chip
+made no response, &#8220;and is this village your real home,
+or do you reside at Peaceful Valley?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I live here now,&#8221; returned Chip, resolving to be
+brief in all her answers and hoping he would betake
+himself away.</p>
+
+<p>She did not like him, nor his smooth, polished
+speech. She felt that it was all affected, and that
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_363'></a>363</span>
+at heart he meant no good toward her. Then his
+failure to recognize her when with his lady friends
+still rankled. She knew well enough that he dared
+not admit acquaintance with a calico-clad country
+girl at that moment. And what the gossips of
+Christmas Cove insinuated about him and this
+widow awoke her contempt.</p>
+
+<p>Totally unused to the ways of fashionable society
+as she was, for him to play court to a widow evidently
+ten or fifteen years his senior seemed unnatural.</p>
+
+<p>His almost nauseating and persistent flattery of
+herself was equally objectionable. All this flashed
+over her now while he was talking.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You must find it lonesome here,&#8221; he said, in
+response to her admission; &#8220;but perhaps you have
+a beau, a sweetheart, somewhere, whom you care
+for.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Chip colored slightly, but made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;m sure you haven&#8217;t here,&#8221; he went on, &#8220;for
+I&#8217;ve not seen an eligible fellow native to this village
+since I came.&#8221; He paused a moment, awaiting
+an admission, and then continued: &#8220;How do you
+pass the time, anyway, and isn&#8217;t life here monotonous?
+Don&#8217;t you long for some excitement, some
+fun, some color to it all? I&#8217;ve watched these villagers
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_364'></a>364</span>
+now for three weeks and their lives seem so
+prosy, so dead slow, it is painful. They get up, eat,
+chase the cows and chickens, hoe in the gardens,
+mow hay, and every blessed woman wears the same
+calico gown six days in the week. Sundays they
+all spruce up, go to meeting, and the next week
+repeat the programme. Isn&#8217;t it so?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I presume it is,&#8221; answered Chip, with rising ire;
+&#8220;but if folks here weren&#8217;t satisfied, they could move
+away, couldn&#8217;t they? And if it&#8217;s all so dull, what
+did you come here for? Nobody asked you, did
+they?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; he responded, laughing, &#8220;no one did, and
+no one will miss me when I go&#8211;not even you. The
+only redeeming feature is that they all seem willing
+to take my money.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Would you stay if they weren&#8217;t,&#8221; she returned,
+still more hotly, &#8220;would you sponge on us folks and
+sneer at us as well?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Keep cool, my dear girl,&#8221; he answered unruffled,
+&#8220;keep cool, and let your lovely hair grow. I&#8217;m not
+sneering at you or any one. I am merely stating
+facts. To us who live in the whirl of city life, a few
+weeks here is a delightful change, and we are glad to
+pay well for it. I am only speaking of how it must
+seem to live this way all the time.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_365'></a>365</span>He paused a moment, watching Chip&#8217;s face turned
+half away, and then continued persuasively: &#8220;I
+am sorry you are so ready to believe ill of me or to
+think I am sneering at all things. In that you have
+changed very much since last summer. Then you
+seemed to enjoy talking with me; now you blaze up
+into wrath at my pleasantry. I am very sorry you
+feel as you do. I&#8217;d like to be better friends with
+you if possible, otherwise I wouldn&#8217;t have risked
+the rebuff I received from your excellent aunt yesterday.
+I&#8217;d like very much to call on you, and
+nothing would give me greater pleasure than to
+entertain you and your aunt on my boat. I am an
+idle fellow, I&#8217;ll admit, with nothing to do but spend
+my time and money, but that is my misfortune,
+and you ought to have pity on me.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And so this smooth-tongued, persuasive talker
+ran on and on while Chip, fascinated, in spite of her
+dislike of him, listened.</p>
+
+<p>More than that, he grew eloquent and even pathetic
+at times in describing his hopes and ambitions
+in life. He even asserted that he longed to live
+differently and to become a useful man, instead of
+an idle one. It was all hypocrisy, of course, but
+Chip was scarce able to detect it, and lulled by his
+specious, pleading voice, she admitted that she had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_366'></a>366</span>
+no real reason for distrusting or disliking him. Also,
+that she would enjoy a sail on his boat, and would
+try to persuade her aunt to accept another invitation.</p>
+
+<p>This especially was what he most wanted, for
+shrewd schemer that he was, he knew that if he could
+ingratiate himself with this guardian aunt, permission
+to call must follow, and with that, some opportunity
+to make a conquest of this simple country
+girl.</p>
+
+<p>Sated as he was with the society of more polished
+and therefore artificial womanhood, <i>blasé</i> to all the
+purities of life and refined society, a roué and rake
+conversant with all vice, this fearless, wholesome,
+yet unsophisticated girl who seemed like a breath
+from the pine woods, attracted him as no other
+could.</p>
+
+<p>And now he had her almost spellbound on this
+lonely shore, with the sea murmuring at their feet
+and the cool winds whispering in the pine trees
+shading them.</p>
+
+<p>It was Don Juan and Haidee over again, only
+this Juan was a more selfish and heartless one, calculating
+on the ruin of this wood-born flower without
+thought of consequences.</p>
+
+<p>He made one mistake, however, after he had lulled
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_367'></a>367</span>
+her into almost believing him to be both honest and
+worthy,&#8211;he sneered at religion.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;All that people go to church for is to see and be
+seen, ladies especially,&#8221; he said. &#8220;They live to
+dress and show off their new gowns and hats, and
+were it not for the chance church-going gives them,
+not one parson in a hundred would have a
+corporal&#8217;s guard for audience. As for the preaching,
+not one in ten understands a word of it, and
+most of those who understand fail to believe it. I
+don&#8217;t, I am sure. I consider a minister is a man
+who talks to earn his money. A few old tabbies,
+of course, are sincere and believe in prayer and all
+that sort of foolishness, but the rest only make
+believe they do. There may be a God and maybe
+there isn&#8217;t&#8211;I don&#8217;t know. I doubt it, however.
+As for the hereafter, that is all moonshine. When
+we go, that is the end of us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And so you don&#8217;t believe in spirits and a future
+life,&#8221; answered Chip, with sudden defiance. &#8220;Well,
+I do, and I know that people have souls that live
+again, for I&#8217;ve seen them, hundreds of times. As
+for all church-going people being hypocrites, that&#8217;s
+a lie, and I know better. The best woman I ever
+knew believed in praying, and so did my mother,
+and I won&#8217;t hear them called such a name.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_368'></a>368</span>It was Chip, blazing up again, in defence of her
+own opinions, and this smooth-spoken fellow saw
+his mistake on the instant.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Oh, well, you may be right,&#8221; he admitted at
+once. &#8220;I wasn&#8217;t speaking of all womankind&#8211;only
+the fashionable ones whom I know. As for soul life,
+I want to believe as you do, of course, and wish you
+would convince me that it is true.&#8221; And so peace
+was restored, and once more the lullaby of his wooing
+talk began.</p>
+
+<p>For two hours he spun to Chip the web of his
+blandishments, and then the sun warned her, and
+she rose to go.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It would be delightful to escort you home,&#8221; he
+said, &#8220;but I fear I&#8217;d better not. Your aunt might
+see us returning, and scold you. Now if you will
+meet me here again to-morrow afternoon, and try to
+convince me that there is a future life, I shall be most
+happy. Will you?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>But Chip was alert.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, I don&#8217;t think I shall,&#8221; she responded bluntly;
+&#8220;I am not running after you&#8211;not a step. As for
+what you believe or don&#8217;t believe, that isn&#8217;t my lookout,&#8221;
+and with an almost uncivil &#8220;Good day, sir,&#8221;
+she left him.</p>
+
+<p>The farther away she got from this snakelike
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_369'></a>369</span>
+charmer, the more an intuitive belief in his real
+intentions possessed her. She was unskilled in the
+fine art of conversation, had only the inborn purity of
+her thoughts to protect her; and yet she half read
+this specious flatterer, and felt, rather than realized,
+his baseness.</p>
+
+<p>A change in her own convictions that now served
+as a mantle of protection against his persuasions had
+come to her during these dreamy hours by the sea.
+Accepting at first Old Tomah&#8217;s superstitions, she
+had been led to contemplate the great question of
+future life and the existence of God. Aunt Comfort&#8217;s
+unselfish character, combined with perfect
+faith in the Supreme Power, had had its influence.
+Angie&#8217;s kindness and that first prayer Chip had
+heard in the tent were not lost. Aunt Abby&#8217;s consistent
+belief and devotion to duty also had had its
+effect; and all these pertinent examples, combined
+with the impress of the vast ocean, the solitude
+of this lonely shore, and the echo of its ceaseless
+billows, had awakened true veneration in Chip&#8217;s
+heart, and convinced her that some Unseen Power
+moved all human impulse and controlled all human
+destiny.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_370'></a>370</span><a id='link_36'></a>CHAPTER XXXVI</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>After</span> Chip had run away from Greenvale, concealment
+of her name and all else had forced itself
+upon her. It was not natural for her to deceive.
+She had kept it up for one unhappy year only under
+inward protest, which ended in abject confession and
+tears. Now recalling that unpleasant episode, she
+made haste to confess her long conversation with
+this fluent fellow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Mr. Goodnow followed me over to the point this
+afternoon,&#8221; she explained that evening to Aunt Abby,
+&#8220;and talked for two hours. He was nice enough, but
+he made me sick of him, he flattered me so much.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Abby looked at her with a slight sense of
+alarm.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;He certainly has the gift of impudence, at least,&#8221;
+she said, &#8220;in view of the way I declined his invitation
+yesterday. I think you&#8217;d best discontinue your
+long rambles for the present, or until he leaves here.
+He is not our sort. He is not even a friend of ours,
+and if people see you together, they will say unkind
+things.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_371'></a>371</span>That was warning enough for Chip, and from that
+time on she never even walked down to the village
+store except with Aunt Abby.</p>
+
+<p>A curious and almost ridiculous espionage followed,
+however, for a week, and not a pleasant afternoon
+passed but this fellow was noticed strolling
+somewhere near the old mill or past the house.</p>
+
+<p>Another amazing evidence of his intent was received
+a few days later, in the shape of a five-pound
+box of choicest candies, that came by express with
+his card. Aunt Abby opened this and saw the card,
+and the next day she commissioned the stage driver
+to deliver the box, card and all, to Mr. Goodnow at
+his boarding house.</p>
+
+<p>A long and adroitly worded letter to Chip came a
+day later, so humble, so flattering, and so importuning
+that it made her laugh.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think that fellow must have gone crazy,&#8221; she
+said, handing the letter to Aunt Abby, &#8220;he runs on
+so about how he can&#8217;t sleep nights from thinking
+about me. He says that he must go away next week,
+and shall die if he can&#8217;t see me once more. What
+ails him, anyway?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Nothing, except evil intentions,&#8221; responded Aunt
+Abby, perusing the missive. &#8220;He must think you
+a fool to believe such bosh,&#8221; she added severely, after
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_372'></a>372</span>
+finishing it. &#8220;Honest love doesn&#8217;t grow like a
+mushroom in one night, and the difference between
+his position and yours gives the lie to all he says. I
+hope he will go away next week, and never come
+back.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Whether Chip&#8217;s studied avoidance of him, combined
+with the snubbing, served its purpose, or he
+decided his quest was hopeless, could only be guessed,
+for he was seen no more near the mill, and the next
+week his yacht left Christmas Cove, and Chip felt
+relieved.</p>
+
+<p>It had been an experience quite new to her, and,
+in spite of its annoyance, somewhat exciting. It
+also served another purpose of more value,&#8211;it recalled
+Ray to her by sheer force of contrast. She
+had felt hurt ever since the night she left Greenvale.
+She had meant to put him out of her thoughts and
+forget all the silly hours and promises at the lake;
+and yet she never had succeeded. Instead, her
+thoughts turned to him in spite of her pride.</p>
+
+<p>And now, contrasting and comparing that honest,
+manly lad, a playmate only, and yet a lover as well,
+with this polished, fulsome, flattering, shifty-eyed
+fop, who sneered at everything good, only made Ray,
+with his far different ways, seem the more attractive.</p>
+
+<p>Then conscience began to smite her. She had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_373'></a>373</span>
+yielded to pride and put him away from her thoughts.
+His uncle had almost pleaded for her to return to
+Greenvale, if only for a visit. She knew Ray had
+spent weeks in searching for her; yet not once in all
+the two years since they parted had she sent him a
+line of remembrance.</p>
+
+<p>More mature now, Chip began to see her own
+conduct as it was, and to realize that she had been
+both ungrateful and heartless; but she could not
+confess it to any one, not even Aunt Abby.</p>
+
+<p>Chip&#8217;s life had been a strange, complex series of
+moods of peculiar effect, and her conduct must be
+judged accordingly.</p>
+
+<p>First, the dense ignorance of years at Tim&#8217;s Place,
+with its saving grace of disgust at such surroundings
+and such a life. Then a few months with people so
+different and so kind that it seemed an entrance into
+heaven, to be followed by weeks of a growing realization
+that she was a nobody, and an outcast unfit for
+Greenvale.</p>
+
+<p>And then came the climax of all this: the bitter
+sneers of Hannah, Ray&#8217;s cool neglect, the consciousness
+that she was only a dependent pauper, and then
+her flight into the world and away from all that stung
+her like so many whips.</p>
+
+<p>But a revulsion of feeling was coming. Chip, no
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_374'></a>374</span>
+longer a simple child of the wilderness, was realizing
+her own needs and her own nature. Something
+broader and more satisfying than school life and the
+companionship of Aunt Abby was needed; yet how
+to find it never occurred to her.</p>
+
+<p>With September came Aunt Abby&#8217;s annual visit
+to Peaceful Valley. A few days before their departure,
+Chip received a letter which was so unexpected
+and so vital to her feelings that it must be
+quoted.</p>
+
+<p>It was dated at the little village of Grindstone,
+directed to Vera McGuire, care of Judson Walker,
+by whom it was forwarded to Christmas Cove.</p>
+
+<div class='bquote'>
+<p>&#8220;<span class='sc'>My dear Chip,</span>&#8221; it began.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I feel that you will not care to hear from me, and
+yet I must write. I know I am more to blame than
+any one for the way you left Greenvale, and that you
+must consider me a foolish boy, without much courage,
+which I have been, and I realize it only too well
+now, when it is too late. But I am more of a man
+to-day, I hope, and sometime I shall come and try to
+obtain your forgiveness for being so blind. No one
+ever has been, and I know no one ever will be, what
+you are to me. As Old Cy says, &#8216;Blessings brighten as
+they vanish,&#8217; and now, after this long separation, one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_375'></a>375</span>word and one smile from dear little Chip would seem
+priceless to me, and I shall come and try to win it
+before many months.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I am here with Uncle Martin&#8217;s old guide, Levi.
+We are going into the woods to-morrow to gather
+gum and trap until spring. I have hired two other
+men to help, and hope to do well and make some
+money. I think you will be glad to know that Old
+Cy was here this summer and was well. He does not
+know that you have been found, and is still hunting
+for you. Levi told me that the people here are much
+interested in you, that they have fixed up the yard
+where your mother is buried, and he put up a small
+stone.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wish I could hear from you, but there is no
+chance now. Please try to forgive a foolish boy for
+being stupid, and think of me as you did during
+those happy days by the lake.</p>
+</div> <!-- block quote -->
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='tar mr30 mb00'>&#8220;Good-bye,</p>
+<p class='tar mt00'>&#8220;<span class='sc'>Ray</span>.&#8221;</p>
+</div>
+
+<p>How every word of this half-boyish, half-manly
+letter was read and re-read by Chip; how it woke
+the old memories of the wilderness and of herself, a
+ragged waif there; and how, somehow, in spite of
+pride and anger, a little thrill of happiness crept into
+her heart, needs no explanation.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_376'></a>376</span>But she was not quite ready yet to forgive him,
+and what he failed to say when he might, still rankled
+in her feelings.</p>
+
+<p>But Old Cy, that kindly soul, so like a father!
+Almost did she feel that to meet him would be worth
+more than to see any one else in the world. And
+to think he was still hunting for her, far and near!</p>
+
+<p>And now, quite unlike most young ladies, who
+deem their love missives sacred, Chip showed hers
+to Aunt Abby.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s from Raymond Stetson,&#8221; she said, rather
+bashfully, &#8220;a boy who was in the woods with those
+people who were kind to me, and we became very
+good friends.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Abby smiled as she perused its contents.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;And so he was the cause of your running away
+from Greenvale,&#8221; she said. &#8220;Why didn&#8217;t you write
+him a note of thanks after you learned he had been
+searching for you? I think he deserved that much,
+at least.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t humble myself,&#8221; Chip answered
+spiritedly, &#8220;and then I was ashamed to let any one
+know I had used his name. I hadn&#8217;t time to think
+what name to give when Uncle Jud asked me, and
+his was the first that came to mind,&#8221; she added
+naïvely.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_377'></a>377</span>Aunt Abby laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I guess Master Stetson won&#8217;t find forgiveness
+hard to earn,&#8221; she said, and then her face beamed at
+the disclosure of a romance while she read the letter
+a second time.</p>
+
+<p>But there was more to tell, as Aunt Abby knew
+full well, and now, bit by bit, she drew the story from
+Chip, even to the admission of the tender scenes
+between these two lovers, in which they promised to
+love each other and be married.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It was silly, I suppose,&#8221; Chip continued blushingly,
+&#8220;but I didn&#8217;t know any better then, and I was
+so happy that I didn&#8217;t think about it at all. I never
+had a beau before, you see, and I guess I acted
+foolishly. Old Cy used to help us, too, and took us
+away so we could have a chance to hold hands and
+act silly. I was so lonesome, too, for Ray all that
+winter in Greenvale, and nobody knew it. I walked
+a mile to meet the stage every night for a month, to
+be the first to see him when he came. I guess he
+must have thought he owned me. I wouldn&#8217;t do it
+now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Once more Aunt Abby laughed, a good, hearty
+laugh, and then, much to Chip&#8217;s astonishment, she
+took her face in her hands and kissed it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;You dear little goose,&#8221; she said, &#8220;and to think
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_378'></a>378</span>
+you ran away from a boy you cared for like that! I
+only hope he is good enough for you, for I can see
+what the outcome will be.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That night when the tea-table had been cleared
+and the lamp lit, Aunt Abby once more began her
+adroit questioning of Chip; but this time it was of
+Old Cy, and all about him. For an hour, Chip,
+nothing loath, recited his praises, repeated his odd sayings,
+described his looks and ways and portrayed
+him as best she could, while Aunt Abby smiled
+content.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It makes me feel young again to hear your story
+and about Cyrus,&#8221; she said when all was told. &#8220;I
+was just sixteen when he first came to see me. He
+was also my first beau, you know. I should judge
+he must have changed so I would never know him,
+and maybe he wouldn&#8217;t recognize me. Forty years
+is a long time!&#8221; And she sighed.</p>
+
+<p>And now Aunt Abby closed her eyes, let fall her
+knitting, and lapsed into bygones.</p>
+
+<p>No longer was she a staid and matronly widow&#8211;not
+young, it is true, yet not old, but with rounded
+face, few wrinkles, and slightly gray hair. Instead
+was she sweet Abby Grey of the long ago, and once
+more the belle of this quiet village and Bayport, and
+the leader at every dance, every husking, and every
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_379'></a>379</span>
+party. Once more she primped and curled her hair,
+and donned her best, and waited her sailor boy&#8217;s
+coming. Once more she heard the bells jingle and
+saw the stars twinkle as they sped away to a winter
+night&#8217;s dance&#8211;and once more she felt the sorrow
+of parting, the long years of waiting, waiting, waiting,
+and at last the numb despair and final conviction
+that never would her lover return.</p>
+
+<p>And now he was still alive, though a wanderer,
+and some day he might&#8211;surely would come to see
+her, just once, if no more.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ah, me,&#8221; she said, rousing herself at last and
+looking at Chip&#8217;s smiling, sunny face, &#8220;life is a queer
+riddle, and we never know how to guess it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then she sighed again.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_380'></a>380</span><a id='link_37'></a>CHAPTER XXXVII</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;The milk o&#8217; human kindness &#8217;most allus turns out old
+cheese, &#8217;n&#8217; all rind at that.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Some</span> sneering critic once said that few young men
+ever start out in the world until they are kicked out,
+and there is a grain of truth in that assertion. It is
+seldom an actual kick, however, but some motive
+force quite as compelling.</p>
+
+<p>In Ray&#8217;s case it was his uncle&#8217;s assertion that if
+he hoped to win Chip he must first show the ability
+to provide a home for her, which is excellent advice
+for any young man to follow.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It won&#8217;t be a pleasure trip,&#8221; Martin said when
+Ray proposed to go to the wilderness and, with Levi
+and a couple of other assistants, make a business of
+gum-gathering and trap-setting, &#8220;but you can&#8217;t lose
+much by it. You are welcome to the camp; Levi
+will see that you have game enough to eat, and boss
+the expedition. I will loan you five hundred, and
+with what you have, that is capital enough and you
+ought to do well. It would be better if Old Cy could
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_381'></a>381</span>
+take charge, but as it is, you must go it alone.&#8221; And
+go it alone Ray did.</p>
+
+<p>Levi&#8217;s services were easily secured. Two young
+fellows whom he knew were hired at Greenvale.
+A bateau was purchased, together with more traps
+and supplies, and after Ray had written Chip his
+plan, the party started for Martin&#8217;s camp. They
+had been established there a month and were doing
+well. The first ice had begun forming in shallow
+coves when one afternoon, who should enter the lake
+and paddle rapidly across but Old Cy.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ye can&#8217;t git rid o&#8217; me when trappin&#8217;s goin&#8217; on,&#8221;
+he said cheerily, as Ray and Levi met him at the
+landing. &#8220;I fetched into the settlement kinder
+homesick fer the woods last week. I heard the good
+news &#8217;bout Chip&#8217;s bein&#8217; found &#8217;n&#8217; you&#8217;d come here
+fer the winter, &#8217;n&#8217; I didn&#8217;t wait a minute &#8217;fore I hired
+a canoe &#8217;n&#8217; started.&#8221; And then, in the exuberance
+of his joy, he shook hands with Ray and Levi once
+more.</p>
+
+<p>That evening, Ray, who had hard work to keep
+the secret so long, told Old Cy who lived in Peaceful
+Valley.</p>
+
+<p>It was like a thunderbolt out of a clear sky, a shock
+of joyful news that made Old Cy gasp.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, I feel jest like a colt once more,&#8221; he said
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_382'></a>382</span>
+after the exclamation stage had passed. &#8220;An&#8217;, do
+ye know, boys, I felt all the way comin&#8217; in ez though
+good news was waitin&#8217; fer me. I &#8217;spose &#8217;twas from
+hearin&#8217; Chip was all right ag&#8217;in.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That evening was one that none who were in that
+wildwood camp ever forgot, for Old Cy was the central
+figure, and told as only he could the story of his
+year&#8217;s wandering in search of Chip.</p>
+
+<p>It was humorous, pathetic, and tragic all in one,
+and a tale that held its listeners spellbound for three
+delightful hours.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I had dogs set on me, hundreds on &#8217;em,&#8221; Old
+Cy said, in conclusion, &#8220;an&#8217; I never knew afore how
+many kinds &#8217;n&#8217; sizes o&#8217; dogs thar was in this world.
+I uster think thar warn&#8217;t more&#8217;n two dozen or so
+kinds. I know now thar&#8217;s two million &#8217;n&#8217; a few
+more I didn&#8217;t wait to count. I got &#8217;rested a few
+times on account o&#8217; not havin&#8217; visible means o&#8217; support.
+I&#8217;ve been hauled over the coals by doctors
+tryin&#8217; to make me out a lunatic, &#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;d &#8217;a&#8217; done time
+in jail if I hadn&#8217;t had money to show. I tell ye, boys,
+this is an awful &#8217;spicious world fer strangers, &#8217;n&#8217; the
+milk o&#8217; human kindness is mostly old cheese, &#8217;n&#8217; all
+rind at that. I had a little fun, too, mixed in with
+all the trouble, &#8217;n&#8217; one woman who owned a place
+where I &#8217;plied for lodgin&#8217; jest &#8217;bout told me she&#8217;d be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_383'></a>383</span>
+willin&#8217; to marry me if I&#8217;d stay &#8217;n&#8217; work the farm. She
+had red hair, hard eyes, &#8217;n&#8217; bossy sort o&#8217; ways, an&#8217;
+that&#8217;s a dangerous combination. I watched my
+chance when she wa&#8217;n&#8217;t lookin&#8217;, &#8217;n&#8217; lit out middlin&#8217;
+lively.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And now life at this wilderness camp, less restrained
+than when womankind were here, became
+one of work, and persistent, steady, no-time-wasted
+work at that. Martin had said that Levi could boss
+matters, but it was Ray who assumed management
+instead. Two years had changed him almost from
+boy to man. His new ambition was the controlling
+power. He was here to make his mark, as it were,
+and the half-hearted, boyish interest in work had
+changed into a tireless leadership. Then, too, an
+unspoken, tacit interest in his ambition was felt by
+those who helped. They knew what he was striving
+for, and that Chip was the ultimate object. Her
+history, known as it now was to all who came into
+the wilderness, influenced these woodsmen. She
+had been of them and from them, and as an entire
+village will gather to help at a house-raising, so these
+three, Levi and the two helpers, now felt the same
+incentive.</p>
+
+<p>Success usually comes to all who strive for it, and
+now, with four willing workers to aid him, Ray was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_384'></a>384</span>
+rapidly making a success of this venture. Old Cy,
+the most valuable assistant, was indefatigable. He
+not only kept the larder well supplied with game,
+but tended and set traps, worked in the woods with
+the rest between times, and his cheerful optimism
+and droll humor bridged many a stormy day and
+shortened many a weary tramp. And he seemed to
+grow younger in this new, helpful life for others.
+His eyes were bright, his step elastic, his spirits
+buoyant, his strength tireless.</p>
+
+<p>With Chip safe and provided for, with Ray succeeding
+in manhood&#8217;s natural ambition, Old Cy
+saw his heart&#8217;s best hopes nearing fruition, and for
+these two and in these two all his interest centred.</p>
+
+<p>Only once was the bond of feeling between Ray
+and Chip referred to by Old Cy, and then in response
+to a wish of Ray&#8217;s that he might hear from her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t think ye&#8217;ve cause to worry now, arter
+ye&#8217;ve sent her word what ye&#8217;re doin&#8217; &#8217;n&#8217; who for,&#8221;
+he answered. &#8220;Chip&#8217;s true blue, not one o&#8217; the
+fickle sort, &#8217;n&#8217; once she keers fer a man, she won&#8217;t
+give him up till he&#8217;s married or dead. I think ye&#8217;d
+orter sent her word sooner,&#8211;ye know she run &#8217;way
+out o&#8217; spunk,&#8211;but when ye go to her like a man &#8217;n&#8217;
+say, &#8216;I've been workin' 'n' waitin' fer ye all the time,&#8217;
+thar won&#8217;t be no quarrellin&#8217;.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_385'></a>385</span>&#8220;I&#8217;m not so sure about that,&#8221; responded Ray,
+soberly. &#8220;From what Uncle Martin said, my
+chance is gone with Miss Chip, and I don&#8217;t blame
+her for feeling so. Like every young fellow, I
+took it for granted that she was in love with me
+and ready to fall into my arms on call. Then I
+hadn&#8217;t any plans in life, anyway, and, like a fool,
+believed it made no difference to her. To mix
+matters up still more, Hannah crowded herself
+into our affairs and said things to Chip, with the
+result that Chip got mad, ran away, and you know
+the rest.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal,&#8221; asserted Old Cy, his eyes twinkling,
+&#8220;the time to hug a gal is when she&#8217;s willin&#8217;, &#8217;n&#8217; ye
+orter spunked up that night &#8217;fore ye come away
+&#8217;n&#8217; told her ye was callatin&#8217; to make yer fortin in
+the woods, an&#8217; that ye wanted her to wait &#8217;n&#8217; share
+it&#8211;then hugged &#8217;n&#8217; kissed her a little more by
+way o&#8217; bindin&#8217; the bargain, an&#8217;&#8211;knowin&#8217; that gal
+ez I do, she&#8217;d fought Hannah, tooth &#8217;n&#8217; nail, &#8217;n&#8217;
+walked through fire &#8217;n&#8217; brimstun fer ye. I
+think, &#8217;stead o&#8217; hidin&#8217; herself fer two years, an&#8217;
+changin&#8217; her name, she&#8217;d &#8217;a&#8217; tramped clear to Grindstun
+jest to tell ye her troubles, &#8217;n&#8217;, if need be, she&#8217;d
+&#8217;a&#8217; starved fer ye. I tell ye, boy, wimmin like
+her is scarce in this world, &#8217;n&#8217; when ye find one
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_386'></a>386</span>
+young &#8217;n&#8217; pretty ez she is, hang on to her an&#8217; hang
+hard.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I know it now well enough,&#8221; returned Ray,
+ruefully; &#8220;but that don&#8217;t help matters. Then that
+fortune you found for her makes my case all the
+worse, and Chip quite independent.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It do, it do,&#8221; chuckled Old Cy, as if glad of
+it, &#8220;an&#8217; all the more need o&#8217; you hustlin&#8217;. It&#8217;s a
+case o&#8217; woodchuck with ye now. But don&#8217;t git
+discouraged. Jest dig. Chip&#8217;s worth it, ten times
+over, &#8217;n&#8217; no man ever worked to win a woman &#8217;thout
+bein&#8217; bettered by it.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was terse and homely advice, and not only
+convinced Ray that he had neglected one whom he
+now felt meant home, wife, happiness, and all
+that life might mean for him, but made him realize
+that all possible striving and self-denial must
+be made in atonement. With whom and what
+sort of people Chip had found asylum, he knew
+not. What influence they would have upon her
+feelings was an equally unknown matter; and
+worse than that, the ogre of another suitor for
+Chip&#8217;s favor now entered Ray&#8217;s calculations, and
+the slang truism, &#8220;There are others,&#8221; was with
+him every waking moment&#8211;a much-deserved
+punishment, all womankind will say.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_387'></a>387</span><a id='link_38'></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>One</span> day while Aunt Abby and Chip were enjoying
+the newly furnished home of Uncle Jud, a capacious
+carriage drawn by a handsome pair of horses
+halted there and Martin and Angie alighted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We are taking a cross-country drive for an
+outing,&#8221; he explained, after Angie had kissed
+Chip tenderly and greetings had been exchanged.
+&#8220;We have waited for you, Miss Runaway, to
+come and visit us,&#8221; he added, turning to Chip,
+&#8220;until we couldn&#8217;t wait any longer and so came to
+look for you. We have also some news that may
+interest you. Old Cy has been heard from at
+last. He spent a year looking for you. He has
+now gone into the woods, to my camp, where Ray
+located for the winter, and when spring comes, I
+can guess where they will head for.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>How welcome this news was to Chip, her face
+fully indicated; but neither Martin nor Angie
+realized how much or for what reason it interested
+this soft-voiced, gracious lady whom Chip called
+Aunt Abby. They knew Uncle Jud was Old Cy&#8217;s
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_388'></a>388</span>
+brother and that they had once been sailors from
+Bayport, but the long-ago romance of Aunt Abby&#8217;s
+life was unknown to them.</p>
+
+<p>And now ensued a welcome to the callers such
+as only Uncle Jud and Aunt Mandy could offer.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;We sorter feel we robbed ye o&#8217; Vera,&#8221; Uncle
+Jud explained, &#8220;though &#8217;twa&#8217;n&#8217;t any intention on
+our part, an&#8217; so ye must gin us some chance to
+make amends. We callate &#8217;twa&#8217;n&#8217;t no fault of
+yourn, either, only one o&#8217; them happenin&#8217;s that
+was luck for us.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That evening was one long to be remembered
+by all who were present, for Chip&#8217;s history, as
+told by Martin and Angie, was the entertaining
+topic, and its humorous side was made the most
+of by Martin. Chip was in no wise annoyed by
+Martin&#8217;s fun-making, either. Instead, conscious
+of the good-will and affection of the friends who
+had rescued her from the wilderness, she rather
+enjoyed it and laughed heartily at Martin&#8217;s description
+of various incidents, especially her first
+appearance in their camp, and the language she
+used.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I couldn&#8217;t help swearing,&#8221; she explained. &#8220;I
+never had heard much except &#8217;cuss&#8217; words. I
+think also now, as I recall my life at Tim&#8217;s Place,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_389'></a>389</span>
+I would never have dared that desperate mode of
+escape had I not been hardened by such a life.
+I wish I could see Old Tomah once more,&#8221; she
+added musingly, &#8220;and I&#8217;d like to send him some
+gift. He was the best-hearted Indian I ever saw
+or heard of, and his queer teachings about spites
+and how they rewarded us for good deeds and
+punished us for evil ones was no harm, for it set
+me thinking. The one thought that encouraged
+me most during those awful days and nights alone
+in the woods was the belief that among the spites
+which I was sure followed me was my mother&#8217;s
+soul. I&#8217;ve never changed in my belief, either,
+and shall always feel that she guided me to your
+camp.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Uncle Jud also obtained his share of fun at
+Chip&#8217;s expense, describing his finding of her with
+humorous additions.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She was all beat out that night I found her
+on top o&#8217; Bangall Hill, &#8217;n&#8217; yet when I asked her if
+she&#8217;d run away from some poor farm, she was
+ready to claw my eyes out, an&#8217; dunno&#8217;s I blame
+her. I was innocent, too, fer I really s&#8217;posed she
+had.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Martin&#8217;s visit at this hospitable home was not
+allowed to terminate for a week, for visitors seldom
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_390'></a>390</span>
+came here, and Uncle Jud, as big a boy as
+his brother when the chance came, planned all
+sorts of trips and outings to entertain them, and
+quite characteristic affairs they were, too.</p>
+
+<p>One day they drove to a wood-bordered pond
+far up the valley, fished a few hours for pickerel
+and perch, and had a fish fry and picnic dinner.</p>
+
+<p>The next day they visited a strange, romantic
+grotto up in the mountains, known as the Wolf&#8217;s
+Den, and here a table was set, broiled chicken,
+sweet corn, and such toothsome fare formed the
+meal, with nut-gathering for amusement.</p>
+
+<p>Squirrel and partridge shooting also furnished
+Martin a little excitement. When he and Angie
+insisted that they must leave, both host and hostess
+showed genuine regret. A few remarks made by
+Angie to her former protégée, in private, the last
+evening of this visit, may be quoted.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I must insist, my dear child,&#8221; she said, &#8220;that
+you make us a visit in the near future. You left
+us under an entirely false impression and it has
+grieved me more than you can imagine. There
+was never a word of truth in anything that Hannah
+said. She was spiteful and malicious and desired
+to get even with you for a hurt to her pride. We
+had no thought of hurrying away to the woods
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_391'></a>391</span>
+to separate you and Ray for any reason whatever.
+Of course, as you must know, I had no suspicion
+of any attachment between you, and if I had, I
+certainly should not have tried to break it off in
+that way. That is a matter that concerns only
+you and him. My own life experience shows that
+first love is the wisest and best, and while you were
+both too young then for an engagement, you must
+believe me when I tell you that I had no wish to
+interfere.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And so the breach was healed.</p>
+
+<p>This visit of the Frisbies to Peaceful Valley
+also awakened something of repentance in Chip&#8217;s
+mind, and more mature now, it occurred to her
+that leaving Greenvale as she did, was, after all,
+childish.</p>
+
+<p>Then Angie&#8217;s part in this drama of her life now
+returned to Chip in a new light. Once she began
+to reflect, her self-accusation grew apace and her
+repentance as well. Now she began to see herself
+as she was at Tim&#8217;s Place.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think I treated my Greenvale friends very
+ungratefully,&#8221; she said to Aunt Abby one evening
+after they had returned to Christmas Cove once
+more, &#8220;and what Mrs. Frisbie said to me has
+made me realize it. I know now that few would
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_392'></a>392</span>
+have done what she did for me. I was an ignorant,
+dirty, homeless creature and no relation of
+hers, and yet she took charge of me, bought me
+clothes, paid all my expenses going to Greenvale,
+clothed me there, and always treated me nicely
+without my even asking for it.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;The Frisbies certainly ran some risk by keeping
+me at their cabin when they knew that half-breed
+was after me. I don&#8217;t know why they should
+have done all this. I was nothing to them. And
+yet when I recall the night I stumbled into their
+camp, how Mrs. Frisbie dressed me in her own
+clothes, shared her tent with me, and even prayed
+for me, I feel ashamed to think of what I have
+done. I did think that Mrs. Frisbie despised me
+from what Hannah said. I know now that I was
+wrong, and running away as I did, was very ungrateful.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I think it was, myself,&#8221; responded Aunt Abby,
+&#8220;and yet believing as you did, Mrs. Frisbie ought
+not to blame you. I don&#8217;t think she does, either.
+She seems a very sensible woman, and I like her.
+You made your mistake in not confiding in her
+more. You should have gone to her as you would
+to a mother, in the first place, and told her just
+what Hannah had said to you and how you felt
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_393'></a>393</span>
+about it. To brood over such matters and imagine
+the worst possible, is unwise in any one. I
+think from what you have told me, that this person
+who sneered against you so much must have had
+a spite against you.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Hannah was jealous, I know,&#8221; Chip interrupted,
+smiling at the recollection, &#8220;and I hurt
+her feelings because I asked her why she didn&#8217;t
+shave.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Didn&#8217;t shave!&#8221; exclaimed Aunt Abby, wide-eyed,
+&#8220;what do you mean?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, she has whiskers, you see,&#8221; laughed
+Chip, &#8220;almost as much as some men&#8211;a nice
+little mustache and some on her chin. I told
+her the next day after I got there I thought she
+was a man dressed as a woman. I snickered, too,
+I remember, when I said it, for she looked so comical&#8211;like
+a goat, almost&#8211;and then I asked her
+why she didn&#8217;t shave. I guess she laid it up against
+me ever after.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She revenged herself amply, it seems,&#8221; answered
+Aunt Abby.</p>
+
+<p>When Christmas neared, and with it a vacation
+for Chip, new impulses came to her: a desire to
+visit Greenvale once more and make amends as
+best she could to her friends there; and her gift-giving
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_394'></a>394</span>
+desire was quickened by the coming holidays.
+She now felt that she had ample means to
+gratify this latter wish. Day by day, since meeting
+Angie again, her sense of obligation had increased,
+and now it was in her power at Christmas-tide
+to repay at least a little of the debt.</p>
+
+<p>Others were also included in this generous project:
+Uncle Jud, Aunt Mandy, her foster-mother,
+Aunt Abby, as well; and then there was Old Cy,
+whom most of all she now desired to make glad.
+That was impossible, however. He was still an
+absent wanderer, and so, as it ever is and ever
+will be, some thread of regret, some note of sorrow,
+must be woven into all joys.</p>
+
+<p>A rapid and almost wonderful growth of this
+yule-tide impulse now swept over Chip, so much
+so that it must be told. At first it took shape in
+the intended purchase of comparative trifles,&#8211;a
+fishing-rod for Uncle Jud, a pipe for Martin, gloves
+for Aunt Abby, and so on. Then as that seemingly
+vast fortune, now hers to spend, occurred to
+Chip, and her sense of obligation as well, the
+intended gifts increased in proportion until a
+costly picture of some camp or wildwood scene
+for Angie and a valuable watch for Miss Phinney
+were decided upon.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_395'></a>395</span>Her plans as to how to obtain these presents
+also took shape. Riverton was the only place
+where they could be obtained. To that village
+she would go first, obtain the money needed, devote
+one entire day to making her purchases, and
+then go on to Greenvale and astonish these good
+friends from whom she was once so eager to escape.</p>
+
+<p>It was all a most delightful episode which was
+now anticipated by Chip. Again and again she
+lived it over, especially her arrival in Greenvale,
+and how like a Lady Bountiful she would present
+her gifts to her friends.</p>
+
+<p>So eager was she thus to make some compensation
+to them that lessons became irksome, the day
+seemed weeks in length, and she could scarce sleep
+when bedtime came.</p>
+
+<p>But the slow days dragged by at last, and then
+Chip, happier than ever before in her life, dressed
+in her best, bade Aunt Abby good-bye and started
+on her journey alone.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_396'></a>396</span><a id='link_39'></a>CHAPTER XXXIX</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;A man braggin&#8217; gits riled if ye try &#8217;n&#8217; choke him off.&#8221;
+&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Riverton</span>, less provincial than Greenvale, was
+a village of some two thousand inhabitants. A
+few brick blocks, with less pretentious wooden
+buildings, formed a nucleus of stores. A brownstone
+bank, four churches, two hotels, the
+Quaboag House and the Astor House were intermingled
+among these, and a railroad with two
+trains in each direction a day added life and interest
+to the place. Each of the hotels sent a conveyance
+to meet every train, with a loud-voiced
+emissary to announce the fact of free transportation.
+In each hostelry a bar flourished, and like
+rival clubs, each had its afternoon and evening
+gathering of loafers who swapped yarns and gossip,
+smoked and chewed incessantly, and contributed
+little else to support the establishments. Three
+times daily, at meal hours, each of the rival landlords
+banged a discordant gong in his front doorway,
+without apparent result.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_397'></a>397</span>At about eleven in the forenoon each weekday
+in summer, Uncle Joe Barnes on his lumbering
+two-horse stage, arrived from Greenvale,
+paused at the post-office, threw off a mail-pouch,
+thence around to the Quaboag House stable, and
+cared for his horses. At two he was ready for the
+return trip and mounting his lofty seat, he again
+drove to the front of the hotel, shouting &#8220;All
+aboard!&#8221; dismounted to assist lady passengers,
+but let masculine ones do their own climbing, and
+after halting to receive a mail-bag, again departed
+on his return trip.</p>
+
+<p>A certain monotonous regularity was apparent
+in every move and every act and function of village
+life in Riverton. At precisely seven o&#8217;clock
+each morning the two landlords appeared simultaneously
+and banged their gongs. At twelve
+and six, this was repeated. At eight o&#8217;clock the
+three principal storekeepers usually entered their
+places of business; at nine, and while the academy
+bell was ringing near by, every village doctor might
+be seen starting out. At ten exactly, Dwight
+Bennett, the cashier of the bank, unlocked its
+front door, and the two hotel &#8217;buses invariably
+started so nearly together that they met at the first
+turn going stationward. Even the four church
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_398'></a>398</span>
+clocks had the same habit, and it was often related
+that a stranger there, a travelling man, on his first,
+visit, made an amusing discovery.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What kind of a fool clock have you got in this
+town?&#8221; he said to Sam Gates, the landlord of the
+Quaboag, next morning after his arrival. &#8220;I
+went to bed in good season last night an&#8217; just got
+asleep when I heard it strike thirty-two. I dozed
+off an&#8217; the next I knew it began clanging again,
+and I counted forty-four. What sort of time do
+you keep here, anyway? Do you run your town
+by the multiplication table?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The half-dozen chronic loafers who met every
+afternoon in the Quaboag House office arrived
+in about the same order, smoked, drank, told
+their yarns, gathered all the gossip, and departed
+at nearly the same moment. Their evening visits
+partook of the same clocklike regularity.</p>
+
+<p>These of the old guard were also dressed much
+the same, and &#8220;slouchy&#8221; best describes it. Gray
+flannel shirts in winter or summer alike. Collars,
+cuffs, and ties were never seen on them, though
+patches were, and as for shaving or hair-cutting,
+a few shaved once a week, some never did, and
+semi-annual hair-cuts were a fair average.</p>
+
+<p>The worst sinner in this respect, Luke Atwater,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_399'></a>399</span>
+occasionally called &#8220;Lazy Luke,&#8221; never had his
+beard shortened but once, and that was due to its
+being burnt off while he was fighting a brush
+fire in spring.</p>
+
+<p>It was related of him, and believed by many,
+that once upon a time many years previous he
+had had his hair cut, and on that occasion the barber
+had found a whetstone concealed in Luke&#8217;s
+shock of tangled hair. It was also asserted that
+he admitted always carrying his whetstone back
+of his ear while mowing, and so losing it that way.</p>
+
+<p>All the news and every happening in Riverton,
+from the catching of an extra big trout to twins,
+was duly commented upon and discussed by this
+coterie. Village politics, how much money each
+storekeeper was making, crop prospects, the run
+of sap every spring, drouth, weather indications,
+rain or snow falls, each and all formed rotating
+subjects upon which every one of this faithful-to-the-post
+clique expressed opinions.</p>
+
+<p>Chip&#8217;s arrival there with the Frisbie family,
+and her later history, learned from Uncle Joe,
+furnished a fertile topic, her escapade in running
+away from Greenvale a more exciting one, while
+Old Cy&#8217;s visit and deposit of a fabulous sum in
+the bank in her name had been a nine days&#8217;
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_400'></a>400</span>
+wonder. That amount, hinted at only by the
+cashier as a comfortable fortune, soon grew in
+size until it was generally believed to be almost a
+million.</p>
+
+<p>This was Riverton and its decidedly rural status
+when late one December afternoon the Quaboag
+free &#8217;bus (a two-seated pung, this time) swept up
+to that hotel&#8217;s front door, where the porter assisted
+a stylish young lady to alight, and he, stepping
+like a drum major, led the way into the Quaboag&#8217;s
+unwarmed parlor.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Young lady, sir, a stunner, wants room over
+night, sir,&#8221; he announced to the landlord in the
+office a moment later. &#8220;Goin&#8217; to Greenvale
+to-morrer, she says.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>On the instant all converse in the office ceased,
+and the six constant callers hardly breathed until
+Sam Gates hastened to the parlor and returned.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;It&#8217;s that McGuire gal&#8211;lady, I mean,&#8221; he
+asserted pompously; then to the porter, &#8220;Git a
+move on, Jim, &#8217;n&#8217; start a fire in Number 6, an&#8217;
+quick, too!&#8221; And hastily brushing his untidy
+hair before the office mirror, he left the room again,
+followed by six envious glances. Then those astonished
+loafers grouped themselves, the better
+to observe the passage between parlor and office.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_401'></a>401</span>Only one instant sight of this important guest
+was obtained by them as Chip emerged from the
+parlor and followed the landlord upstairs, and
+then the hushed spell was broken.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;By gosh, it&#8217;s her!&#8221; exclaimed one in an awed
+whisper, &#8220;an&#8217; Jim was right, she&#8217;s a stunner!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I &#8217;member jest how she looked that fust day
+she came,&#8221; asserted another. &#8220;Saw her legs, too,
+when she shinned up top o&#8217; the stage.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Ye won&#8217;t git &#8217;nother chance, I&#8217;ll bet!&#8221; declared
+a third.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;What do ye s&#8217;pose she&#8217;s here for,&#8221; queried a
+fourth, &#8220;to draw the int&#8217;rest on her money, or
+what?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>It was precisely four-forty-five when Chip appeared
+before this judge and jury of all Riverton&#8217;s
+happenings. At five-forty-five they had agreed
+that she was the handsomest young lady who had
+ever set foot in the town, that she must be going
+to get married soon, and that her mission there
+was to draw out a few thousand dollars for wedding
+finery. Then they dispersed, and at six-forty-five,
+when they assembled at the Quaboag again, half
+of Riverton knew their conclusions, and by bedtime
+all knew them.</p>
+
+<p>By eight-thirty next morning, this all-observant
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_402'></a>402</span>
+and all-wise clique had gathered in the hotel office
+once more, an unusual proceeding, and when
+Chip tripped out, eight pairs of eyes watched her
+depart. Then they dispersed.</p>
+
+<p>At nine o&#8217;clock Chip walked up the stone steps
+to the bank door, read the legend, &#8220;Open from
+10 <span class='sc'>a.m.</span> until 2 <span class='sc'>p.m.</span>,&#8221; turned away, and once more
+resumed her leisurely stroll up and down the
+street while she peered into store windows. At
+ten precisely by the four church clocks she was
+back at the bank again, and the cashier lost count
+of the column he was adding when he saw her enter.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I would like three hundred dollars, if you
+please, sir,&#8221; she said, presenting her little book,
+and he had to count it over four times, to make
+sure the amount was right. Then he passed the
+thick bundle of currency out under his latticed
+window, seeing only the two wide-open, fathomless
+eyes and dimpled face that had watched him,
+and feeling, as he afterward admitted, like fifty
+cents.</p>
+
+<p>And now ensued an experience the like of which
+poor Chip had never even dreamed,&#8211;the supreme
+joy of spending money without stint for those near
+and dear to her. And what a medley of gifts she
+bought! Two silk dress patterns, two warm
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_403'></a>403</span>
+wraps, three winter hats, a gold watch for Miss
+Phinney, an easy-chair, two of the finest pipes
+she could find, a trout rod, four pairs of gloves,
+and finally a gun for Nezer. Then as her roll
+of money grew less, she began to pick up smaller
+articles,&#8211;handkerchiefs, slippers, and the like.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Send them to the hotel, please,&#8221; she said to
+one and all of whom she purchased articles of any
+size, &#8220;marked for Vera McGuire.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>That was enough!</p>
+
+<p>Riverton had sensations, mild ones, of course.
+Now and then a fire had occurred, once an elopement.
+Occasionally a horse ran away, causing
+damage to some one. But nothing had occurred to
+compare with the arrival of a supposed fabulously
+rich young lady who came without escort, who
+walked into and out of stores like a young goddess,
+noticing no one, and who spent money as if it were
+autumn leaves.</p>
+
+<p>A few of the Quaboag retinue followed her about
+in a not-to-be-observed manner. Women by the
+dozen hastily donned outdoor raiment, and visited
+stores, just to observe her. They crossed and recrossed
+the street to meet her, and a battery of
+curious eyes was focussed on her for two hours.</p>
+
+<p>When she returned to the hotel, the old guard,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_404'></a>404</span>
+recruited by every idle man in town, filled the office,
+awaiting her. Uncle Joe, who had heard of her
+arrival the moment he came, was among them, recounting
+her history once more, and when she neared
+the hotel, he emerged to meet her.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, bless yer eyes, Chip,&#8221; he said, extending a
+calloused hand, &#8220;but I&#8217;m powerful glad to see ye
+once more. Whatever made ye run away the way
+ye did, &#8217;n&#8217; what be ye doin&#8217; here? Buyin&#8217; out the
+hull town? I&#8217;ve got the pung filled wi&#8217; bundles
+a&#8217;ready wi&#8217; yer name on &#8217;em.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He beaued her into the parlor, like the ancient
+gallant he was. He washed, brushed his hair and
+clothing, and awaited her readiness to dine, without
+holding further converse with the curious crowd.
+He ushered her into the dining room and made bold
+to sit and eat with her unasked, and when he assisted
+her to the front seat in his long box sleigh, crowded
+with her purchases, and drove away, he was envied
+by two dozen observers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why didn&#8217;t ye send us word o&#8217; yer comin&#8217;,&#8221; he
+said as they left Riverton, &#8220;so I cud &#8217;a&#8217; spruced up
+some an&#8217; come down with a better rig, bells on the
+hosses and new buffler robes?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;There was no need of that,&#8221; answered Chip,
+pleased, as well she might be. &#8220;I am just the same
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_405'></a>405</span>
+girl that I always was, only happier now that I have
+more friends. How is dear old Aunt Comfort, and
+every one in Greenvale? I am anticipating seeing
+them so much.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And never during all the twenty years in which
+Uncle Joe had journeyed twice each day over this
+road had the way seemed shorter, or had he been
+blessed with a more interesting companion.</p>
+
+<p>The only regret Chip had, was that she had forgotten
+to buy Uncle Joe a present. She made up for
+it later, however.</p>
+
+<p>At Greenvale, Chip met almost an ovation. Aunt
+Comfort kissed her and cried over her. Nezer ran
+for Angie, who soon appeared on the scene, and
+Hannah was so &#8220;flustered&#8221; she was unable to speak
+after the first greeting. Martin, who had heard of
+Chip&#8217;s arrival from Uncle Joe, hastened to Aunt
+Comfort&#8217;s, and had Chip been a real &#8220;millionnairess&#8221;
+or some titled lady, she could not have awakened
+more interest or received half so cordial a welcome.</p>
+
+<p>Hannah was the one who felt the most embarrassed,
+however, and guilty as well. For half an
+hour, while Chip was the centre of interest, she
+could only stare at her in dumb amazement. Then
+she stole out of the room, and later Chip found her
+in the kitchen, shedding copious tears.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_406'></a>406</span>&#8220;I&#8217;m a miserable sinner &#8217;n&#8217; the Lord&#8217;ll never
+forgive me,&#8221; she half moaned, when Chip tried to
+console her. &#8220;An&#8217; to think ye feel the way ye say,
+&#8217;n&#8217; to bring me a present, arter all the mean things
+I said. It&#8217;s a-heapin&#8217; coals o&#8217; fire on my head, that
+it is.&#8221; And the shower increased.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I have forgotten all about them, Hannah, truly
+I have,&#8221; Chip assured her, &#8220;and I wish you would.
+You didn&#8217;t understand me then, perhaps, or I you,
+so let us be friends now.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>The next afternoon Chip, who had learned that
+Miss Phinney&#8217;s school was to close the day following,
+set out to call on her in time to arrive at its adjournment.</p>
+
+<p>No hint of her return had reached Miss Phinney,
+no letters had been exchanged, and not since that
+tearful separation had they met.</p>
+
+<p>And now as Chip followed the lonely by-road so
+often traversed by her, what a flood of bitter-sweet
+memories returned,&#8211;each bend, each tree, each
+rock, and the bridge over the Mizzy held a different
+recollection. Here at this turn she had first met
+Ray, after her resolve to leave Greenvale. At the
+next landmark, a lane crossing the meadows, she
+had always parted from her teacher, the last time in
+tears. And how long, long ago it all seemed!</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_407'></a>407</span>Then beyond, and barely visible, was the dear
+old schoolhouse. She could see it now, half hid in
+the bushes, a lone and lowly little brown building
+outlined on the winter landscape and apparently
+dwarfed in size. Once it had awed her; now it
+seemed pathetic.</p>
+
+<p>The last of its pupils were vanishing as Chip drew
+near, and inside, and as lonely as that lone temple,
+Miss Phinney still lingered.</p>
+
+<p>That day had not gone well with her. A note of
+complaint had come from one parent that morning,
+and news that a dearly loved scholar was ill as well,
+and Miss Phinney&#8217;s own life seemed like the fields
+just now&#8211;cold, desolate, and snow-covered.</p>
+
+<p>And then while she, thus lone and lonesome, was
+putting away books, slates, ink-bottles, and all the
+badges of her servitude, Chip, without knocking,
+walked in.</p>
+
+<p>How they first exclaimed, then embraced, then
+kissed, and then repeated it while each tried to wink
+the tears away, and failed; how they sat hand in
+hand in that dingy, smoke-browned room with its
+knife-hacked benches, unconscious of the chill,
+while Chip told her story; and how, just as the
+last rays of the setting sun flashed from the icicles
+along its eaves, they left it, still hand in hand,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_408'></a>408</span>
+was but an episode such as many a schoolgirl can
+recall.</p>
+
+<p>Of the few friends Greenvale held for Chip, none
+seemed quite so near and dear as Miss Phinney,
+and none lived longer in her memory. They had
+been for many months not teacher and pupil, but
+rather two sisters, confiding, patient, and tender.
+Life swept them apart. They might never meet
+again, and yet, so long as both lived, never would
+those school days be forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>With Sunday came Chip&#8217;s most gratifying experience,
+perhaps, for her arrival was now known
+by the entire village and the fact that she was an
+heiress as well. Her fortune (also known) was
+considered almost fabulous according to Greenvale
+standards, and when Chip with Angie entered
+the church porch, it was crowded with people
+waiting to receive them. Chip, of course, now well
+clad and well poised, was once more the cynosure
+of all eyes except when the pastor prayed. At the
+close of service a score, most of whom she knew by
+sight only, waited to greet her and shake hands with
+her in the porch. The parson hurried down the
+aisle to add his smile and hand clasp, and, all in all,
+it was a most gratifying reception.</p>
+
+<p>And here and now, let no carping critic say it was
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_409'></a>409</span>
+all due to that bank account, but rather a country
+town&#8217;s expression of respect and good-will toward
+one whom they felt deserved it.</p>
+
+<p>That it all pleased Angie, goes without saying.
+That Chip well deserved this vindication, no one
+will question; and when her visit ended and she departed,
+no one, not even Miss Phinney, missed her
+more than Angie.</p>
+
+<p>Only one thread of regret wove itself into Chip&#8217;s
+feelings as she rode away with Uncle Joe, whose
+horses were now decked properly for this important
+event. She had received a most cordial reception
+on all sides&#8211;almost a triumph of good-will. Her
+gifts had brought an oft-repeated chorus of thanks
+and a few tears. On all sides and among all she
+had been welcome, even receiving a call and words
+of praise from Parson Jones. She was a <i>nobody</i> no
+longer; instead, a <i>somebody</i> whom all delighted to
+honor and commend.</p>
+
+<p>But the one whose motherly pride would have been
+most gratified, she for whom Chip&#8217;s heart yearned
+for oftenest, would never know it.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_410'></a>410</span><a id='link_40'></a>CHAPTER XL</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>With</span> the birds and flowers once more returning
+to Christmas Cove, came outdoor freedom for Chip
+again. Like the wood-nymph she was in character
+and taste, the wild, rock-bound coast outside and the
+low, wooded mountain enclosing this village were
+her playgrounds where she found companionship.
+Other associates she cared but little for, and a few
+hours alone on a wave-washed shore, watching the
+wild ocean billows tossing spray aloft, or a long
+ramble in a deep, silent forest, appealed to her far
+more than parties and girlish enjoyments.</p>
+
+<p>The wood-bordered road, leading from the village
+to the railroad ten miles away, was now a favorite
+walk of hers. It was suited to her in many ways,
+for it was seldom travelled; it followed the sunny
+side of the low mountain range back of Christmas
+Cove, not a house stood along its entire way, and to
+add charm, a brook kept it company, crossing and
+recrossing it for two miles. That feature was the
+most especial attraction, for beds of watercress
+waved beneath the limpid waters in deep pools,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_411'></a>411</span>
+bunches of flag grew along its banks, their blue
+flowers bending to kiss the current; its ripples
+danced in the sunlight; its music was a tinkling
+melody, and these simple attractions appealed to
+Chip.</p>
+
+<p>There was also another reason for now choosing
+this byway walk. She knew, or felt sure, that Ray
+would visit Christmas Cove on his return from the
+woods. He must come in the old carryall,&#8211;about
+the only vehicle ever journeying along this road,&#8211;and
+now, like a brownie of the forest, she watched
+until she spied it afar and then hid in the bushes
+and peeped out until it passed each day.</p>
+
+<p>A curious and somewhat complex feeling toward
+this young man had also come to her. At first,
+like a child, she had loved him unasked. She had
+known no different. He had seemed like a young
+god to her, and to cling to him was supreme happiness.
+Then had come an awakening, a consciousness
+that this freedom was not right and must be
+checked. Following that also&#8211;a bitter lesson&#8211;it
+had come to her that she was a kind of outcast,
+a child of shame, as it were, whose origin was despicable,
+and who was dependent upon the charity
+of others. This awakening, this new consciousness,
+was like a black chasm in front of her, a horror and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_412'></a>412</span>
+shame combined, and true to her nature, she fled
+from it like one pursued.</p>
+
+<p>But two years had changed her views of humanity.
+She had learned that money and social position did
+not always win friends and respect. That birth and
+ancestry were of less consideration than a pure mind
+and honest intentions, and that fine raiment sometimes
+covered a base heart and vile nature.</p>
+
+<p>Toward this boyish lover, also, her feelings had
+been altered. A little of the old-time fondness
+remained, however. She could not put that away.
+She had tried and tried earnestly, yet the wildwood
+illusion still lingered. She had meant, also, to put
+him and herself quite apart&#8211;so far, and in such a
+way, that she would never be found by him. That
+had failed, however; he knew where she was. He
+had said that he was coming here. Most likely he
+would expect to renew the old tender relations; but in
+that he would be disappointed. She was sure she
+would be glad to see him for old times&#8217; sake, however.
+She would be gracious and dignified, as Aunt Abby
+was. She wanted to hear all about the woods and
+Old Cy again, but caresses must be forbidden.
+More than that, every time she recalled how freely
+she had permitted them once, she blushed and felt
+that it would be an effort to look him in the face again.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_413'></a>413</span>But she was anxious to see how he would appear
+now: whether the same boy, with frank, open face,
+or a commanding, self-possessed man.</p>
+
+<p>And so each pleasant afternoon she strolled up
+this byway road. When the ancient carryall was
+sighted, she hid and watched until it passed.</p>
+
+<p>But Captain Mix, its driver, also had observing
+eyes. He knew her now as far as he could see her,
+as every one in the village did, and he soon noticed
+her unusual conduct. He also watched along the
+wayside where she left it, and slyly observed her
+peeping out from some thicket. Just why this odd
+proceeding happened time and again, he could not
+guess, and not until a strange young man alighted
+from the train one day and asked to be left at the
+home of Mrs. Abby Bemis, did it dawn on him.</p>
+
+<p>Then he laughed. &#8220;Friend o&#8217; Aunt Abby, I
+&#8217;spose?&#8221; he inquired in his Yankee fashion, after
+they had started.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No,&#8221; answered Ray, frankly, &#8220;I have never seen
+the lady. I know some one who is living with her,
+however. A Miss Mc&#8211;Raymond, I mean.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Captain Mix glanced at him, his eyes twinkling.
+&#8220;So ye&#8217;re &#8217;quainted with Vera, be ye,&#8221; he responded.
+&#8220;Wal, ye&#8217;re lucky.&#8221; Then as curiosity grew he
+added, &#8220;Known her quite a spell, hev ye?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_414'></a>414</span>But Ray was discreet. &#8220;Oh, three or four years,&#8221;
+he answered nonchalantly. &#8220;I knew her when she
+lived in Greenvale.&#8221; Then to check the stage-driver&#8217;s
+curiosity, he added, &#8220;She was only a little
+girl, then. I presume she has changed since.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;She&#8217;s a purty good-lookin&#8217; gal now,&#8221; asserted
+Captain Mix, &#8220;but middlin&#8217; odd in her ways. Not
+much on gallivantin&#8217; round wi&#8217; young folks, but
+goin&#8217; to school stiddy &#8217;n&#8217; roamin&#8217; round the woods
+when she ain&#8217;t. Purty big gal to be goin&#8217; to school
+she is. I callate her arly eddication must &#8217;a&#8217; been
+sorter neglected. Mebbe ye know &#8217;bout it,&#8221; and
+once more this persistent Yankee glanced at his
+companion.</p>
+
+<p>But Ray was too loyal to the little girl he loved to
+discuss her further, and made no answer. Instead,
+he began inquiries about Christmas Cove, and as
+they jogged on mile after mile, he learned all that
+was to be known of that quiet village. When they
+had reached a point some three miles from it, a
+kindly thought came to the driver.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;If Vera ain&#8217;t &#8217;spectin&#8217; ye,&#8221; he said, &#8220;mebbe ye&#8217;d
+like to s&#8217;prise her. If so be it, ye kin. She&#8217;s &#8217;most
+allus out this way &#8217;n&#8217;, curislike, hides &#8217;fore I get
+&#8217;long whar she is. If I see her to-day, &#8217;n&#8217; ye want to,
+I&#8217;ll drop ye clus by &#8217;n&#8217; let ye.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_415'></a>415</span>And so it came to pass.</p>
+
+<p>Chip, as usual, had followed her oft-taken walk
+on this pleasant May afternoon. When the carryall
+was sighted also, as usual, she had hidden herself.
+With beating heart she saw two occupants this time,
+and looking out of her laurel screen, she saw that
+one was Ray.</p>
+
+<p>Then she crouched lower. The moment she had
+waited for had come.</p>
+
+<p>But now something unexpected happened, for after
+the carryall passed her hiding spot, Ray, brown and
+stalwart, leaped out. The carryall drove on, and
+she saw him returning and scanning the bushes.</p>
+
+<p>She was caught, fairly and squarely. One instant
+she hesitated, then, blushing rose-red, emerged
+from the undergrowth.</p>
+
+<p>And now came another capture, for with a &#8220;Chip,
+my darling,&#8221; Ray sprang forward, and although
+she turned away, the next moment she was clasped
+in his arms.</p>
+
+<p>In vain she struggled. In vain she writhed and
+twisted. In vain she pushed him away and then
+covered her blushing face.</p>
+
+<p>Love, fierce and eager, could not be thus opposed.
+All her pride, anger, resentment, shame, and intended
+coldness were as so many straws, for despite her
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_416'></a>416</span>
+struggles, he pulled her hands aside and kissed her
+again and again.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My darling,&#8221; he exclaimed at last, &#8220;say you
+forgive me; say you love me; say it now!&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Then, as she drew away, he saw her eyes were
+brimming with tears.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I won&#8217;t,&#8221; she said, &#8220;I hate&#8211;&#8221; but his lips cut
+the sentence in two, and it was never finished.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I did mean to hate you,&#8221; she declared once more,
+covering her face, &#8220;but I&#8211;I can&#8217;t.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No, you can&#8217;t,&#8221; he asserted eagerly, &#8220;for I won&#8217;t
+let you. You promised to love me once, and now
+you&#8217;ve got to, for life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And she did.</p>
+
+<p>When the outburst of emotion had subsided and
+they strolled homeward, Chip glanced shyly up at
+her lover.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why did you pounce on me so?&#8221; she queried;
+&#8220;why didn&#8217;t you ask me, first?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;My dear,&#8221; he answered, &#8220;a wise man kisses the
+girl first, and asks her afterwards.&#8221; Then he repeated
+the offence.</p>
+
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<a id='link_i8'></a><img src='images/illus-416.jpg' alt='' />
+<p class='center caption'>
+&#8220;I did mean to hate you, but I&#8211;I can&#8217;t.&#8221;
+</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_417'></a>417</span>And now what a charming summer of sweet illusion
+and castle-building followed for the lovers!
+How Aunt Abby smiled benignly upon them, quite
+content to accord ample chance for wooing! How
+many blissful, dreamy hours they passed on lonely
+wave-washed cliffs, while the marvel of love was discussed!
+How its wondrous magic opened a new
+world whose walks were flower-decked, whose sky
+was ever serene, where lilies bloomed, birds sang,
+sea winds whispered of time and eternity, and where
+Chip was an adored queen! How all the shame and
+humiliation of her past life faded away and joy
+supreme entered on the azure and golden wings of
+this new morning! Even Old Cy was almost forgotten;
+the spites, Old Tomah, and Tim&#8217;s Place
+quite so; and all hope, all joy, all protection, and all
+her future centred in the will and wishes of this
+Prince Perfect.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Blind and foolish,&#8221; I hear some fair critic say.
+Yes, more than that, almost idiotic; for selfish man
+never pursues unless forced to do so, and an object
+of worship once possessed, is but a summer flower.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_418'></a>418</span><a id='link_41'></a>CHAPTER XLI</h2>
+
+<div class='cyquote'>
+&#8220;A man&#8217;ll hev all the friends he kin keer for if he tends to
+his own knittin&#8217; work.&#8221;&#8211;<span class='sc'>Old Cy Walker</span>.
+</div>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>Quite</span> different from the meeting of the lovers was
+that which occurred when Old Cy reached Peaceful
+Valley. There were no heroics, no falling upon one
+another&#8217;s necks, no tears. Just a &#8220;Hullo, Cyrus!&#8221;
+&#8220;Hullo, Judson!&#8221; as these two brothers clasped
+hands, and forty years were bridged.</p>
+
+<p>Aunt Mandy, however, showed more emotion, for
+when Old Cy rather awkwardly stooped to kiss her,
+the long ago of Sister Abby&#8217;s sorrow welled up in her
+heart, and the tears came.</p>
+
+<p>That evening&#8217;s reunion, with its two life histories
+to be exchanged, did not close until the
+tall clock had ticked time into the wee, small hours.</p>
+
+<p>All of Old Cy&#8217;s almost marvellous adventures had
+to be told by him, and not the least interesting were
+the last few years at the wilderness home of the
+hermit. Chip&#8217;s entry into it and her history formed
+another chapter fully as thrilling, with Uncle Jud&#8217;s
+rescue of her for a <i>dénouement</i>.</p>
+
+<p><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_419'></a>419</span>The most pathetic feature of this intermingled
+history&#8211;the years while sweet Abby Grey waited
+and watched for her lover&#8211;was left untold. Only
+once was it referred to by Aunt Mandy, in an indirect
+way; but the quick lowering of Old Cy&#8217;s eyes and the
+shadow that overspread his face, checked her at
+once. Almost intuitively she realized its unwisdom,
+and that it was a sorrow best not referred to.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cy evidently felt it a subject to avoid, and not
+until the next day did he even ask how Aunt Abby
+looked or what had been her life experiences. A
+little of this reticence wore away in due time, however,
+and then Aunt Mandy once more referred to
+her sister.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I kinder feel you blame Abby somehow, Cyrus,
+the way you act,&#8221; she said, &#8220;and yet thar ain&#8217;t no
+cause for it. She&#8217;d waited &#8217;most seven years. We&#8217;d
+all given you up for dead, and life in Christmas Cove
+wa&#8217;n&#8217;t promisin&#8217; much for Abby.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t blame her a mite,&#8221; Old Cy answered
+quickly, &#8220;an&#8217; no need o&#8217; yer thinkin&#8217; so. I don&#8217;t
+blame no woman fer makin&#8217; the best shift they kin.
+They&#8217;ve got to hev a home &#8217;n&#8217; pertecter, bless &#8217;em,
+or be nobody in this world. Comin&#8217; here and findin&#8217;
+how things are, sorter makes me realize how much
+I&#8217;ve missed in life, though, an&#8217; how much sorrer I&#8217;ve
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_420'></a>420</span>
+had to outgrow. I don&#8217;t lay up nothin&#8217; &#8217;gainst
+Abby, not fer a minit. Only I hated to hev ye tell
+me what I knew ye&#8217;d hev to, that fust night.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But you&#8217;re goin&#8217; to see her, ain&#8217;t ye, Cyrus?&#8221;
+Aunt Mandy asked anxiously. &#8220;Ye won&#8217;t shame
+her by not goin&#8217;, will ye?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, mebbe,&#8221; he answered slowly, and after a
+long pause. &#8220;I wouldn&#8217;t want to hurt her knowin&#8217;ly.
+I callate I&#8217;ve done more grievin&#8217;n she has, though,
+ten times over, an&#8217; seein&#8217; her now&#8217;s a good deal like
+openin&#8217; an old tomb&#8211;a sorter invitin&#8217; ghosts o&#8217;
+old heartaches to step out. Abby&#8217;s outgrowed the
+old times, &#8217;n&#8217; I&#8217;m sartin, too, won&#8217;t be the happier
+by seein&#8217; me ag&#8217;in. I may be wrong, but I&#8217;ve a notion
+she&#8217;ll sorter hate to see me. &#8217;Twas to keep her from
+feelin&#8217; &#8217;shamed &#8217;n&#8217; miserable &#8217;n&#8217; spoilin&#8217; her life, I&#8217;ve
+never let her nor nobody that knew her find out I
+was alive. I&#8217;m doubtin&#8217; I would now if she hadn&#8217;t
+larned it from Chip.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He relented a little from this strange and almost
+cruel whim a week later, and after visiting the Riggsville
+store and obtaining what really amounted to a
+disguise in new garments, he announced his plans.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve got to see Chip,&#8221; he said, &#8220;an&#8217; see how she
+&#8217;n&#8217; Ray&#8217;s gittin&#8217; on. I&#8217;ve got to see Abby, I s&#8217;pose.
+I want to, an&#8217; I don&#8217;t want to, both in one. Then
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_421'></a>421</span>
+ag&#8217;in, these two young folks&#8211;Chip &#8217;n&#8217; the boy&#8211;hev
+sorter got tangled up in my feelin&#8217;s, &#8217;n&#8217; I can&#8217;t
+rest content till I&#8217;ve seen &#8217;em settled in life. I&#8217;m
+goin&#8217; to Christmas Cove fer a day. Then back here
+till they hitch up, &#8217;n&#8217; then&#8211;wal, then mebbe I&#8217;d
+better go to the woods ag&#8217;in. I ain&#8217;t fitted by natur
+fer dressed-up folks.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>No opposition to this unseemly outcome was
+made by Uncle Jud or Aunt Mandy. They knew,
+or hoped, the leaven of bygone memories and association
+would change the hermit-like impulse of Old
+Cy, and all in good time a better ending of his life
+would seem possible to him. To argue it now was
+apparently useless. A man so set in his ideas as to
+remain a homeless wanderer for almost a lifetime, was
+not to be changed in a month, or perhaps in a year.</p>
+
+<p>Neither did Old Cy seem in a hurry to visit Christmas
+Cove.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I don&#8217;t look nat&#8217;ral or feel nat&#8217;ral in them new
+clothes,&#8221; he said to Aunt Mandy one day, &#8220;an&#8217;
+while I want to see Abby, I&#8217;ve lived in the woods so
+long I&#8217;m sorter &#8217;shamed to go &#8217;mongst respectable
+people. Then I look like one o&#8217; them wooden men
+dressed up in a store winder with that new rig on, an&#8217;
+jest know folks&#8217;ll all be laughin&#8217; at me. I&#8217;ve got to
+go, I callate, but I&#8217;d like to make the trip in a cage.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_422'></a>422</span>
+I&#8217;m sartin sure Abby&#8217;ll laugh at me arterwards.&#8221;
+From which it may be seen how hard it was for
+Old Cy to fit himself into civilized life once more.</p>
+
+<p>He nerved himself for the trip to Christmas Cove
+in a few days, however, and how he met and renewed
+acquaintance with his old-time sweetheart shall be
+told in his own words.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Abby hain&#8217;t changed near so much as I callated,&#8221;
+he said on his return; &#8220;a leetle fuller in figger, but
+jest the same easy-spoken, sweet sorter woman I
+always knew she&#8217;d be. She was &#8217;lone when I called,
+an&#8217; fer a minit arter we shook hands neither on us
+could speak ag&#8217;in. Then she kinder bit her lip &#8217;n&#8217;
+swallered her feelin&#8217;s, keepin&#8217; her face turned away,
+an&#8217; then we sot down &#8217;n&#8217; begun talkin&#8217;. It was
+techin&#8217;, too, the way she acted, fer she kept tryin&#8217; to
+smile, &#8217;n&#8217; all the while the tears kept startin&#8217;. It
+was like one o&#8217; them summer days when the rain
+patters while the sun is shinin&#8217;. I don&#8217;t think she
+noticed my clothes much, either, an&#8217; we sot up till
+&#8217;most midnight talkin&#8217; over old times. It all turned
+out &#8217;bout the way I &#8217;spected&#8211;a sorter funeral o&#8217;
+old hopes with us two fer mourners. She&#8217;s powerful
+considerate, too, Abby is, for all the time we was
+talkin&#8217; she never once spoke o&#8217; Cap&#8217;n Bemis, &#8217;n&#8217; I
+didn&#8217;t. It was jest ez if we started in whar we left
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_423'></a>423</span>
+off, &#8217;n&#8217; skippin&#8217; the gap between. She &#8217;lowed she
+hoped she&#8217;d see me soon ag&#8217;in, that she felt like a
+mother to Chip; an&#8217; when I bid her good-bye, she
+kinder choked once more.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I didn&#8217;t see much o&#8217; Chip, either, which sorter
+hurt me. Take it all in all, my visit thar upsot me
+more&#8217;n I callated, &#8217;n&#8217; I guess when Chip&#8217;s settled,
+I&#8217;d best go to the woods &#8217;n&#8217; forgit all that&#8217;s past.
+My life&#8217;s been a failure, anyway.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>And Old Cy was right; but it was grim and merciless
+Fate that made it so, and for that he was not
+responsible.</p>
+
+<p>Love in youth is a sweet song of joy and hope and
+promise. But love that spans a lifetime, that
+reaches and caresses our heartstrings once again as
+we enter the final shadows, has only the pathos of
+parting and the tender chords of almost forgotten
+melodies in it. Vainly do we strive to enter the enchanted
+garden once more. Vainly do our heart
+throbs beat against its adamant walls. Vainly do
+we hope to catch just one more of the old bygone
+thrills. It is useless, for none can live life over, and
+once age has locked the portals of youth and fervor,
+they are never opened again.</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+<h2><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_424'></a>424</span><a id='link_42'></a>CHAPTER XLII</h2>
+
+<p><span class='sc'>With</span> September came a supreme event in the
+lives of Chip and Ray, when Mr. and Mrs. Frisbie,
+Aunt Comfort, Miss Phinney and Hannah, Uncle
+Jud and Aunt Mandy, and Old Cy, all gathered in
+Aunt Abby&#8217;s quaint parlor to see her aged pastor
+join their hands and lives. Then came the kisses,
+the congratulations, the rice, and old-shoe throwing,
+and then solitude and tears for Aunt Abby. All
+the wedding guests except Old Cy hied themselves
+away with the new pair, and he left for
+Bayport.</p>
+
+<p>And thus closes the history of Chip McGuire, waif
+of the wilderness and slave of Tim&#8217;s Place.</p>
+
+<p>Bless her!</p>
+
+<p>Two days later Old Cy returned.</p>
+
+<p>No one was in the house when he knocked at Aunt
+Abby&#8217;s door, and then, led perhaps by the invisible
+chord that spanned forty years, he slowly strolled
+up the path beside the old mill-pond, which he and
+she had often followed in the old, old days.</p>
+
+<p>His heart had led him aright, for there, at the foot
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_425'></a>425</span>
+of the ancient oak that had once been their trysting-place,
+she sat.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I thought I&#8217;d come over &#8217;n&#8217; bid ye good-bye,
+Abby,&#8221; he said gently, as she arose to meet him.
+&#8220;I&#8217;ve been doin&#8217; a good deal o&#8217; biddin&#8217; good-bye
+to-day. I bid good-bye to the old graveyard whar
+my folks is; it&#8217;s all growed up to weeds &#8217;n&#8217; bushes,
+I&#8217;m sorry to say. But that can&#8217;t be helped. It&#8217;s
+the way o&#8217; natur. I&#8217;ve been down to the p&#8217;int whar
+you &#8217;n&#8217; I used to go, an&#8217; I bid that good-bye,&#8221; he
+added, seating himself near her. &#8220;Ye &#8217;member it,
+don&#8217;t ye, Abby, &#8217;n&#8217; them days when we went thar to
+watch the waves?&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I do, Cyrus,&#8221; she answered, her voice trembling.
+&#8220;I remember all the old days only too well.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;They all come back to me, too,&#8221; he continued in
+a lower tone, &#8220;an&#8217; I wish I could skip back to &#8217;em,
+but I can&#8217;t. I&#8217;m an old man now, an&#8217; no use to
+nobody, &#8217;n&#8217; not much to myself. I&#8217;ve been a wanderer
+many years&#8211;ye know why, Abby. I&#8217;ve had
+a short spell o&#8217; joy, kinder helpin&#8217; this boy &#8217;n&#8217; gal
+into sunshine &#8217;n&#8217; a home. They&#8217;ve gone their way
+now &#8217;n&#8217; sure to forgit me an&#8217; you. It&#8217;s nat&#8217;ral they
+should, &#8217;n&#8217; all that&#8217;s left me is to go back to the
+woods &#8217;n&#8217; stay.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>He paused a moment, glancing up the narrow
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_426'></a>426</span>
+pond to where it ended in shadow, and then continued:
+&#8220;It&#8217;s curis, Abby, how life begins with
+how-de-do&#8217;s &#8217;n&#8217; smilin&#8217; friends &#8217;n&#8217; cheerin&#8217; prospects,
+&#8217;n&#8217; then ends with good-byes &#8217;n&#8217; bein&#8217; forgot.
+It&#8217;s what we must callate on, though, an&#8217; a good deal
+like a graveyard is left to weeds and bushes.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Once more he paused, closed his eyes, and remained
+silent for a time.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, I might as well be goin&#8217;,&#8221; he said finally,
+rising and extending his hand, &#8220;so good-bye, Abby.
+I wish ye well in life.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But is there any need of it?&#8221; she answered,
+turning her face to hide the tears as his hand clasped
+hers.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Why, no, only to fergit my sorrer,&#8221; he answered;
+&#8220;I can&#8217;t do it here.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;But who will care for you there&#8211;at last&#8211;and&#8211;must you go?&#8221; Then she turned to him again.</p>
+
+<p>And then he saw, not the gentle, saddened face
+upraised to his, but the tender face of sweet Abby
+Grey of the long, long ago.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Must you leave us&#8211;me?&#8221; she whispered once
+again.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Wal, mebbe not,&#8221; he answered.</p>
+
+<p class='c mt20'>THE END</p>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='fs10 c'><i>NEW POPULAR EDITIONS OF</i><br /><span class='fs12'>MARY JOHNSTON&#8217;S<br />NOVELS</span></p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>TO HAVE AND TO HOLD</p>
+
+<p>It was something new and startling to see an author&#8217;s
+first novel sell up into the hundreds of thousands,
+as did this one. The ablest critics spoke of
+it in such terms as &#8220;Breathless interest,&#8221; &#8220;The high
+water mark of American fiction since Uncle Tom&#8217;s
+Cabin,&#8221; &#8220;Surpasses all,&#8221; &#8220;Without a rival,&#8221; &#8220;Tender
+and delicate,&#8221; &#8220;As good a story of adventure as
+one can find,&#8221; &#8220;The best style of love story, clean,
+pure and wholesome.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>AUDREY</p>
+
+<p>With the brilliant imagination and the splendid
+courage of youth, she has stormed the very citadel
+of adventure. Indeed it would be impossible to
+carry the romantic spirit any deeper into fiction.&#8211;<i>Agnes
+Repplier.</i></p>
+
+<p>PRISONERS OF HOPE</p>
+
+<p>Pronounced by the critics classical, accurate, interesting,
+American, original, vigorous, full of movement
+and life, dramatic and fascinating, instinct with
+life and passion, and preserving throughout a singularly
+even level of excellence.</p>
+
+<p>Each volume handsomely bound in cloth. Large
+12 mo. size. Price, 75 cents per volume, postpaid.</p>
+
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+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'><i>GET THE BEST OUTDOOR STORIES</i></p>
+<p class='c fs12'>Steward Edward White&#8217;s Great Novels of Western Life.</p>
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP EDITIONS</p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>THE BLAZED TRAIL</p>
+
+<p>Mingles the romance of the forest with the romance of
+man&#8217;s heart, making a story that is big and elemental, while
+not lacking in sweetness and tenderness. It is an epic of the
+life of the lumbermen of the great forest of the Northwest,
+permeated by out of door freshness, and the glory of the
+struggle with nature.</p>
+
+<p>THE SILENT PLACES</p>
+
+<p>A powerful story of strenuous endeavor and fateful privation
+in the frozen North, embodying also a detective story of
+much strength and skill. The author brings out with sure
+touch and deep understanding the mystery and poetry of the
+still, frost-bound forest.</p>
+
+<p>THE CLAIM JUMPERS</p>
+
+<p>A tale of a Western mining camp and the making of a man,
+with which a charming young lady has much to do. The
+tenderfoot has a hard time of it, but meets the situation,
+shows the stuff he is made of, and &#8220;wins out.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>THE WESTERNERS</p>
+
+<p>A tale of the mining camp and the Indian country, full of
+color and thrilling incident.</p>
+
+<p>THE MAGIC FOREST: A Modern Fairy Story.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;No better book could be put in a young boy&#8217;s hands,&#8221;
+says the New York <i>Sun</i>. It is a happy blend of knowledge
+of wood life with an understanding of Indian character, as
+well as that of small boys.</p>
+
+<p>Each volume handsomely bound in cloth. Price, seventy-five
+cents per volume, postpaid.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
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+</div>
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+<hr class='pb' />
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+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'><i>THE GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP EDITIONS OF STANDARD WORKS</i></p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>A FULL AND COMPLETE EDITION OF TENNYSON&#8217;S POEMS.</p>
+
+<p>Containing all the Poems issued under the protection
+of copyright. Cloth bound, small 8 vo. 882 pages,
+with index to first lines. Price, postpaid, seventy-five
+cents. The same, bound in three-quarter morocco, gilt
+top, $2.50, postpaid.</p>
+
+<p>THE MOTHER OF WASHINGTON AND HER TIMES, by Mrs. Roger A. Pryor.</p>
+
+<p>The brilliant social life of the time passes before
+the reader, packed full of curious and delightful information.
+More kinds of interest enter into it than
+into any other volume on Colonial Virginia. Sixty
+illustrations. Price, seventy-five cents, postpaid.</p>
+
+<p>SHAKESPEARE&#8217;S ENGLAND, by William Winter.</p>
+
+<p>A record of rambles in England, relating largely
+to Warwickshire and depicting not so much the England
+of fact, as the England created and hallowed
+by the spirit of her poetry, of which Shakespeare is
+the soul. Profusely illustrated. Price, seventy-five
+cents, postpaid.</p>
+
+<p>THEODORE ROOSEVELT THE CITIZEN, by Jacob A. Riis.</p>
+
+<p>Should be read by every man and boy in America.
+Because it sets forth an ideal of American Citizenship.
+An Inspired Biography by one who knows
+him best. A large, handsomely illustrated cloth
+bound book. Price, postpaid, seventy-five cents.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'><i>THE GROSSET AND DUNLAP SPECIAL EDITIONS OF<br />POPULAR NOVELS THAT HAVE BEEN DRAMATIZED.</i></p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>BREWSTER&#8217;S MILLIONS: By George Barr McCutcheon.</p>
+
+<p>A clever, fascinating tale, with a striking and unusual
+plot. With illustrations from the original New
+York production of the play.</p>
+
+<p>THE LITTLE MINISTER: By J. M. Barrie.</p>
+
+<p>With illustrations from the play as presented by
+Maude Adams, and a vignette in gold of Miss Adams
+on the cover.</p>
+
+<p>CHECKERS: By Henry M. Blossom, Jr.</p>
+
+<p>A story of the Race Track. Illustrated with scenes
+from the play as originally presented in New York
+by Thomas W. Ross who created the stage character.</p>
+
+<p>THE CHRISTIAN: By Hall Caine.</p>
+
+<p>THE ETERNAL CITY: By Hall Caine.</p>
+
+<p>Each has been elaborately and successfully staged.</p>
+
+<p>IN THE PALACE OF THE KING: By F. Marion Crawford.</p>
+
+<p>A love story of Old Madrid, with full page illustrations.
+Originally played with great success by Viola
+Allen.</p>
+
+<p>JANICE MEREDITH: By Paul Leicester Ford.</p>
+
+<p>New edition with an especially attractive cover,
+a really handsome book. Originally played by Mary
+Mannering, who created the title role.</p>
+
+<p>These books are handsomely bound in cloth, are
+well-made in every respect, and aside from their unusual
+merit as stories, are particularly interesting to
+those who like things theatrical. Price, postpaid,
+seventy-five cents each.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'><i>THE GROSSET AND DUNLAP SPECIAL EDITIONS OF<br />POPULAR NOVELS THAT HAVE BEEN DRAMATIZED.</i></p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>MISTRESS NELL, A Merry Tale of a Merry Time. (Twixt Fact and Fancy.) By George Hazelton.</p>
+
+<p>A dainty, handsome volume, beautifully printed
+on fine laid paper and bound in extra vellum
+cloth. A charming story, the dramatic version
+of which, as produced by Henrietta Crosman,
+was one of the conspicuous stage successes of
+recent years. With a rare portrait of Nell Gwyn
+in duotone, from an engraving of the painting by
+Sir Peter Lely, as a frontispiece.</p>
+
+<p>BY RIGHT OF SWORD, By Arthur W. Marchmont.</p>
+
+<p>With full page illustrations, by Powell Chase.
+This clever and fascinating tale has had a large
+sale and seems as popular to-day as when first
+published. It is full of action and incident and
+will arouse the keen interest of the reader at the
+very start. The dramatic version was very successfully
+produced during several seasons by
+Ralph Stuart.</p>
+
+<p>These books are handsomely bound in cloth,
+are well made in every respect, and aside from
+their unusual merit as stories, are particularly interesting
+to those who like things theatrical.
+Price, postpaid, seventy-five cents each.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'><i>THE GROSSET AND DUNLAP SPECIAL EDITIONS OF<br />POPULAR NOVELS THAT HAVE BEEN DRAMATIZED.</i></p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>CAPE COD FOLKS: By Sarah P. McLean Greene.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrated with scenes from the play, as originally
+produced at the Boston Theatre.</p>
+
+<p>IF I WERE KING: By Justin Huntly McCarthy.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrations from the play, as produced by E. H.
+Sothern.</p>
+
+<p>DOROTHY VERNON OF HADDON HALL: By Charles Major.</p>
+
+<p>The Bertha Galland Edition, with illustrations from
+the play.</p>
+
+<p>WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER: By Charles Major.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrated with scenes from the remarkably successful
+play, as presented by Julia Marlowe.</p>
+
+<p>THE VIRGINIAN: By Owen Wister.</p>
+
+<p>With full page illustrations by A. I. Keller.
+Dustin Farnum has made the play famous by his
+creation of the title role.</p>
+
+<p>THE MAN ON THE BOX: By Harold MacGrath.</p>
+
+<p>Illustrated with scenes from the play, as originally
+produced in New York, by Henry E. Dixey. A piquant,
+charming story, and the author&#8217;s greatest success.</p>
+
+<p>These books are handsomely bound in cloth, are
+well-made in every respect, and aside from their unusual
+merit as stories, are particularly interesting to
+those who like things theatrical. Price, postpaid,
+seventy-five cents each.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'>HERETOFORE PUBLISHED AT $1.50</p>
+<p class='c fs12'>BOOKS BY JACK LONDON</p>
+<p class='c sc'>12 mo., Cloth, 75 Cents Each, Postpaid</p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>THE CALL OF THE WILD:</p>
+
+<p>With illustrations by Philip R. Goodwin and Charles Livingston
+Bull. Decorated by Charles Edward Hooper.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;A big story in sober English, and with thorough art in the
+construction ... a wonderfully perfect bit of work. The dog
+adventures are as exciting as any man&#8217;s exploits could be, and
+Mr. London&#8217;s workmanship is wholly satisfying.&#8221;&#8211;<i>The New
+York Sun.</i></p>
+
+<p>THE SEA WOLF: Illustrated by W. J. Aylward.</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;This story surely has the pure Stevenson ring, the adventurous
+glamour, the vertebrate stoicism. &#8217;Tis surely the story
+of the making of a man, the sculptor being Captain Larsen,
+and the clay, the ease-loving, well-to-do, half-drowned man,
+to all appearances his helpless prey.&#8221;&#8211;<i>Critic.</i></p>
+
+<p>THE PEOPLE OF THE ABYSS:</p>
+
+<p>A vivid and intensely interesting picture of life, as the author
+found it, in the slums of London. Not a survey of impressions
+formed on a slumming tour, but a most graphic account
+of real life from one who succeeded in getting on the
+&#8220;inside.&#8221; More absorbing than a novel. A great and vital
+book. Profusely illustrated from photographs.</p>
+
+<p>THE SON OF THE WOLF:</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Even the most listless reader will be stirred by the virile
+force, the strong, sweeping strokes with which the pictures of
+the northern wilds and the life therein are painted, and the insight
+given into the soul of the primitive of nature.&#8221;&#8211;<i>Plain,
+Dealer, Cleveland.</i></p>
+
+<p>A DAUGHTER OF THE SNOWS:</p>
+
+<p>It is a book about a woman, whose personality and plan in
+the story are likely to win for her a host of admirers. The
+story has the rapid movement, incident and romantic flavor
+which have interested so many in his tales. The illustrations
+are by F. C. Yohn.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
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+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p>JUNGLE, By Upton Sinclair:</p>
+
+<p>A book that startled the world and caused two hemispheres
+to sit up and think. Intense in interest, the
+dramatic situations portrayed enthrall the reader, while
+its evident realism and truth to life and conditions have
+gained for it the title of &#8220;The &#8216;Uncle Tom's Cabin&#8217; of
+the Twentieth Century.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;I should be afraid to trust myself to tell how it affects
+me. It is a great work; so simple, so true, so tragic, so
+human.&#8221;&#8211;<i> David Graham Phillips.</i></p>
+
+<p>Cloth, 12 mo. Price, seventy-five cents, postpaid.</p>
+
+<p class='c'>NEW POPULAR PRICED EDITIONS OF<br />IMPORTANT BOOKS ON SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ECONOMY.</p>
+
+<p>BENJAMIN KIDD,</p>
+
+<p>SOCIAL EVOLUTION,</p>
+
+<p>PRINCIPLES OF WESTERN CIVILISATION.</p>
+
+<p>Two volumes of special interest and importance,
+view of the social unrest of the present time.</p>
+
+<p>HENRY GEORGE, Jr.</p>
+
+<p>THE MENACE OF PRIVILEGE.</p>
+
+<p>A study of the dangers to the Republic from the existence
+of a favored class.</p>
+
+<p>ROBERT HUNTER,</p>
+
+<p>POVERTY.</p>
+
+<p>An exhaustive study of present day conditions among
+the poorer classes.</p>
+
+<p>JAMES BRYCE,</p>
+
+<p>SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS OF THE UNITED STATES.</p>
+
+<p>The author&#8217;s recent appointment as the representative
+of the British Empire at Washington will lend additional
+interest to this timely and important work.</p>
+
+<p>RICHARD T. ELY,</p>
+
+<p>MONOPOLIES AND TRUSTS.</p>
+
+<p>A masterly presentation of the Trust Problem, by a
+most eminent authority.</p>
+
+<p>Price, seventy-five cents each, postpaid.</p>
+
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+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'>THE GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP EDITIONS OF GARDEN BOOKS.</p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>Each volume in cloth binding. Price, postpaid, 75c. each.</p>
+
+<p>GARDEN MAKING, by Professor L. H. Bailey,
+Professor of Horticulture, Cornell University.</p>
+
+<p>Suggestions for the Utilizing of Home
+Grounds. 12 mo., cloth, 350 illustrations.</p>
+
+<p>Here is a book literally &#8220;for the million&#8221; who in broad
+America have some love for growing things. It is useful alike
+to the owner of a suburban garden plot and to the owner of a
+&#8220;little place&#8221; in the country. Written by the Professor of
+Horticulture at Cornell University it tells of ornamental gardening
+of any range, treats of fruits and vegetables for home
+use, and cannot fail to instruct, inspire and educate the reader.</p>
+
+<p>THE PRACTICAL GARDEN BOOK, by C. E.
+Hunn and L. H. Bailey.</p>
+
+<p>Containing the simplest directions for growing the commonest
+things about the house and garden. Profusely illustrated.
+12 mo., cloth. Just the book for the busy man or woman who
+wants the most direct practical information as to just how to
+plant, prune, train and to care for all the common fruits, flowers,
+vegetables, or ornamental bushes and trees. Arranged alphabetically,
+like a minature encyclopedia, it has articles on the
+making of lawns, borders, hot-beds, window gardening, lists of
+plants for particular purposes, etc.</p>
+
+<p>A WOMAN&#8217;S HARDY GARDEN, by Helena
+Rutherfurd Ely. With forty-nine illustrations
+from photographs taken in the author&#8217;s
+garden by Prof. C. F. Chandler. 12 mo., cloth.</p>
+
+<p>A superbly illustrated volume, appealing especially to the
+many men and women whose love of flowers and all things
+green is a passion so strong that it often seems to be a sort of
+primal instinct, coming down through generation after generation
+from the first man who was put into a garden &#8220;to dress it
+and keep it.&#8221; The instructions as to planting, maintenance,
+etc., are clear and comprehensive, and can be read and practiced
+with profit by both amateur and professional.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c fs12'>PRINCESS MARITZA</p>
+<p class='c'>A NOVEL OF RAPID ROMANCE.<br />BY PERCY BREBNER</p>
+<p class='c'>With Harrison Fisher Illustrations in Color.</p>
+
+<p>Offers more real entertainment and keen enjoyment than
+any book since &#8220;Graustark.&#8221; Full of picturesque life and
+color and a delightful love-story. The scene of the story is
+Wallaria, one of those mythical kingdoms in Southern Europe.
+Maritza is the rightful heir to the throne, but is kept away from
+her own country. The hero is a young Englishman of noble
+family. It is a pleasing book of fiction. Large 12 mo. size.
+Handsomely bound in cloth. White coated wrapper, with,
+Harrison Fisher portrait in colors. Price 75 cents, postpaid.</p>
+
+<p class='fs12 c'>Books by George Barr McCutcheon</p>
+
+<p>BREWSTER&#8217;S MILLIONS</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Montgomery Brewster is required to spend a million
+dollars in one year in order to inherit seven millions. He must
+be absolutely penniless at that time, and yet have spent the
+million in a way that will commend him as fit to inherit the
+larger sum. How he does it forms the basis for one of the
+most crisp and breezy romances of recent years.</p>
+
+<p>CASTLE CRANEYCROW</p>
+
+<p>The story revolves around the abduction of a young American
+woman and the adventures created through her rescue.
+The title is taken from the name of an old castle on the Continent,
+the scene of her imprisonment.</p>
+
+<p>GRAUSTARK: A Story of a Love Behind a Throne.</p>
+
+<p>This work has been and is to-day one of the most popular
+works of fiction of this decade. The meeting of the Princess
+of Graustark with the hero, while travelling incognito in this
+country, his efforts to find her, his success, the defeat of conspiracies
+to dethrone her, and their happy marriage, provide
+entertainment which every type of reader will enjoy.</p>
+
+<p>THE SHERRODS. With illustrations by C. D. Williams</p>
+
+<p>A novel quite unlike Mr. McCutcheon&#8217;s previous works in
+the field of romantic fiction and yet possessing the charm inseparable
+from anything he writes. The scene is laid in Indiana
+and the theme is best described in the words, &#8220;Whom
+God hath joined, let no man put asunder.&#8221;</p>
+
+<p>Each volume handsomely bound in cloth. Large 12 mo. size.</p>
+
+<p>Price 75 cents per volume, postpaid.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c fs12'>THE GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP<br />ILLUSTRATED EDITIONS<br />OF FAMOUS BOOKS
+<img src='images/illus-dec.jpg' alt='emblem' /></p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>The following books are large 12mo volumes 5¾ x 8¼ inches in
+size, are printed on laid paper of the highest grade, and bound in cloth,
+with elaborate decorative covers. They are in every respect beautiful
+books.</p>
+
+<p>UNCLE TOM&#8217;S CABIN&#8211;By Harriet Beecher Stowe.</p>
+
+<p>A new edition, printed from entirely new plates, on fine laid paper
+of extra quality, with half-tone illustrations by Louis Betts.</p>
+
+<p>PILGRIM&#8217;S PROGRESS&#8211;By John Bunyan.</p>
+
+<p>A new edition of Bunyan&#8217;s immortal allegory, printed from new
+plates on fine laid paper, with illustrations by H. M. Brock.</p>
+
+<p>THE WIDE, WIDE WORLD&#8211;By Susan Warner.</p>
+
+<p>Printed from entirely new plates, on fine laid paper of superior
+quality, and illustrated with numerous drawings by Fred Pegram.</p>
+
+<p>THE LITTLE MINISTER (Maude Adams Edition)&#8211;By J. M. Barrie.</p>
+
+<p>Printed on fine laid paper, large 12mo in size, with new cover design
+in gold, and eight full-page half tone illustrations from the play.</p>
+
+<p>PROSE TALES&#8211;By Edgar Allan Poe.</p>
+
+<p>A large 12mo volume, bound in cloth, with decorative cover.
+Containing eleven striking drawings by Alice B. Woodward, a biography
+of the author, a bibliography of the Tales, and comprehensive
+notes. The best edition ever published in a single volume.</p>
+
+<p>ISHMAEL and SELF-RAISED&#8211;By Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth.</p>
+
+<p>The two vols. in a flat box, or boxed separately.</p>
+
+<p>Handsome new editions of these two old favorites, with illustrations
+by Clare Angell.</p>
+
+<p>THE FIRST VIOLIN&#8211;By Jessie Fothergill.</p>
+
+<p>A fine edition of this popular musical novel, with illustrations by
+Clare Angell.</p>
+
+<p class='c fs08'>EACH VOLUME IN A BOX. PRICE ONE DOLLAR EACH</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;<span class='sc'>New York</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'>A BEAUTIFUL BOOK</p>
+<p class='c fs14'>LORNA DOONE</p>
+<p class='c'>EXMOOR EDITION.&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;By R. D. BLACKMORE</p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>A large 12mo volume, about 5 3/4 x 8 1/4 inches in size,
+bound in cloth, with decorative cover of floral design,
+and colored tops. Printed on fine smooth wove paper of
+excellent quality, and embellished with over two hundred
+and fifty drawings, initial letters, head and tail pieces, etc.,
+by some of the best American Artists, among whom are
+Henry Sandham, George Wharton Edwards, W. H.
+Drake, Harry Fenn, and Wm. Hamilton Gibson. Undoubtedly
+the most elaborate and expensively printed
+edition of this greatest novel of modern times yet offered
+at a moderate price.</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>Price, Boxed, One Dollar.</p>
+
+<p><i>THE SAME</i>, in three quarter Crushed Morocco, gold
+tops and silk head bands.</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>Price, Boxed, Two dollars and fifty cents.</p>
+
+<p><i>THE SAME</i>, Two Volume Edition, beautifully bound
+in crimson cloth, with colored tops, and a fac-simile of
+John Ridd&#8217;s coat of arms in ink and gold on the covers.
+Enclosed in a flat box.</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>Price Two Dollars Per Set.</p>
+
+<p><i>THE SAME</i>, Two Volume Edition, in three-quarter
+Crushed Morocco, with gold tops and silk head bands.
+Encased in a flat box.</p>
+
+<p class='tar'>Price Five Dollars Per Set.</p>
+
+<p class='c fs08'><i>Sent postpaid, on receipt of price by the Publishers.</i></p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c fs12'>THE POPULAR NOVELS OF<br /><span class='fs14'>A. W. Marchmont</span></p>
+<p class='c'>NOW OFFERED IN HANDSOMELY MADE<br />CLOTH BOUND EDITIONS AT LOW PRICES</p>
+
+<p>Few writers of recent years have achieved such a wide
+popularity in this particular field as has Mr. Marchmont.
+For rattling good stcries of love, intrigue, adventure,
+plots and counter-plots, we know of nothing better, and
+to the reader who has become surfeited with the analytical
+and so-called historical novels of the day, we heartily
+commend them. There is life, movement, animation,
+on every page, and for a tedious railway journey or a
+dull rainy afternoon, nothing could be better. They will
+make you forget your troubles.</p>
+
+<p>The following five volumes are now ready in our
+popular copyright series:</p>
+
+<div style='width:30em; margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto;'>
+<p>A DASH FOR A THRONE</p>
+<p class='mt00 tar'>With illustrations by D. Murray Smith.</p>
+
+<p>MISER HOADLEY&#8217;S SECRET</p>
+<p class='mt00 tar'>With illustrations by Clare Angell.</p>
+
+<p>THE PRICE OF FREEDOM</p>
+<p class='mt00 tar'>With illustrations by Clare Angell.</p>
+
+<p>THE HERITAGE OF PERIL</p>
+<p class='mt00 tar'>With illustrations by Edith Leslie Lang.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p class='c'>Large 12mo in size, handsomely bound in cloth,<br />
+uniform in style.<br />
+<i>Price 75 cents per volume, postpaid.</i></p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c fs08'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c u i fs12'>No Field Collection is Complete<br />Without this Book</p>
+<p class='c fs14'>A LITTLE BOOK <i>of</i><br />TRIBUNE VERSE</p>
+<p class='c'><i>By</i> EUGENE FIELD</p>
+
+<p>Compiled and edited by Joseph G. Brown, formerly
+city editor of the Denver Tribune, and an intimate friend
+and associate of the poet during the several years in which
+he was on the staff of that paper.</p>
+
+<p>This volume resurrects a literary treasure which has
+been buried for many years in the forgotten files of a
+newspaper, and it is, as nearly as it has been possible to
+make, an absolutely complete collection of the hitherto
+unpublished poems of the gifted author.</p>
+
+<p>These poems are the early product of Field&#8217;s genius.
+They breathe the spirit of Western life of twenty years ago.
+The reckless cowhoy, the bucking broncho, the hardy
+miner, the English tenderfoot, the coquettish belle, and all
+the foibles and extravagance of Western social life, are depicted
+with a naivete and satire, tempered with sympathy
+and pathos, which no other writer could imitate.</p>
+
+<p>The book contains nearly three hundred pages, including
+an interesting and valuable introduction by the
+editor, and is printed from new type on fine deckle edge
+paper, and hand omely bound in cloth, with gilt tops.</p>
+
+<p class='c i'>Retail price, 75 cents</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c fs12'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c'><i>NEW EDITIONS IN UNIFORM BINDING</i></p>
+<hr class='ad20' />
+<p class='c fs12'>WORKS OF<br /><span class='sc fs14'>F. Marion Crawford</span></p>
+<p class='c'>12mo, Cloth, each 75 cents, postpaid</p>
+<hr class='ad100' />
+
+<p>VIA CRUCIS: A Romance of the Second Crusade. Illustrated by Louis Loeb.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Crawford has manifestly brought his best qualities
+as a student of history, and his finest resources as a master
+of an original and picturesque style, to bear upon this story.</p>
+
+<p>MR. ISAACS: A Tale of Modern India.</p>
+
+<p>Under an unpretentious title we have here one of the
+most brilliant novels that has been given to the world.</p>
+
+<p>THE HEART OF ROME.</p>
+
+<p>The legend of a buried treasure under the walls of the
+palace of Conti, known to but few, provides the framework
+for many exciting incidents.</p>
+
+<p>SARACINESCA</p>
+
+<p>A graphic picture of Roman society in the last days of
+the Pope&#8217;s temporal power.</p>
+
+<p>SANT&#8217; ILARIO; A Sequel to Saracinesca.</p>
+
+<p>A singularly powerful and beautiful story, fulfilling every
+requirement of artistic fiction.</p>
+
+<p>IN THE PALACE OF THE KING: A Love Story of Old Madrid. Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p>The imaginative richness, the marvellous ingenuity of
+plot, and the charm of romantic environment, rank this
+novel among the great creations.</p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c fs12'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='fss'>NEW YORK</span></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr class='pb' />
+
+<div class='bq'>
+<p class='c i fs12'>POPULAR PRICED EDITIONS OF BOOKS<br />BY</p>
+<p class='c fs14 mt00'>LOUIS TRACY</p>
+
+<p class='c'>12mo, cloth, 75 cents each, postpaid</p>
+
+<p>Books that make the nerves tingle&#8211;romance and adventure
+of the best type&#8211;wholesome for family reading</p>
+
+<p>THE PILLAR OF LIGHT</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Breathless interest&#8221; is a hackneyed phrase, but every
+reader of &#8220;The Pillar of Light&#8221; who has red blood in
+his or her veins, will agree that the trite saying applies to
+the attention which this story commands.&#8211;<i>New York Sun.</i></p>
+
+<p>THE WINGS OF THE MORNING</p>
+
+<p>&#8220;Here is a story filled with the swing of adventure.
+There are no dragging intervals in this volume: from the
+moment of their landing on the island until the rescuing
+crew find them there, there is not a dull moment for the
+young people&#8211;nor for the reader either.&#8221;&#8211;<i> New York
+Times.</i></p>
+
+<p>THE KING OF DIAMONDS</p>
+
+<p>Verily, Mr. Tracy is a prince of story-tellers. His
+charm it a little hard to describe, but it is as definite as
+that of a rainbow. The reader is carried along by the
+robust imagination of the author.&#8211;<i>San Francisco Examiner.</i></p>
+
+<hr class='ad100' />
+<p class='c fs12'>GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP, <span class='sc'>Publishers</span></p>
+<p class='c'>52 DUANE STREET&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;::&#160;&#160;&#160;&#160;NEW YORK</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Girl From Tim's Place, by Charles Clark Munn
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+Project Gutenberg's The Girl From Tim's Place, by Charles Clark Munn
+
+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 Girl From Tim's Place
+
+Author: Charles Clark Munn
+
+Illustrator: Frank T. Merrill
+
+Release Date: November 3, 2010 [EBook #34202]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.fadedpage.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: "For God's sake give me suthin' to eat."]
+
+
+
+
+THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE
+
+
+
+
+THE GIRL FROM TIM'S PLACE
+
+BY CHARLES CLARK MUNN
+
+Author of "Pocket Island," "Uncle Terry,"
+"The Hermit," "Rockhaven."
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY FRANK T. MERRILL
+
+New York
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP
+
+PUBLISHERS
+
+
+
+
+Published, March, 1906.
+
+Copyright, 1906, by LOTHROP, LEE & SHEPARD CO.
+
+All rights reserved.
+
+The Girl from Tim's Place.
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+When we leave the world's busy haunts and penetrate the primal solitude
+of a vast wilderness, a new realm peopled by mystic genii opens to
+us. Each sombre gorge, where twisted roots clasp the moss-coated walls,
+discloses fabled gnomes and dryads. Nymphs and naiads outline their
+shadowy forms in the mist of every cascade. Elfin sprites dance in
+the ripples of a laughing brook, and brownies scamper away over the
+leaf-swept hilltops.
+
+A wondrous Presence, multiform, omnipresent, and ever fascinating, meets
+us on every hand, and there in those magic aisles and sombre glades,
+where man seems far away and God very near, Nature sits enthroned.
+
+It is with the hope that a few of my readers may feel this forest-born
+mood, and in its poetic spirit forget worldly cares, that I have written
+the story of "The Girl from Tim's Place."
+
+ THE AUTHOR.
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+ "For God's sake give me suthin' to eat"
+ (_Frontispiece_) 23
+ All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old
+ Tomah's fancy were rushing and leaping about 21
+ Nearer and nearer that unconscious girl it crept! 123
+ He grasped and struck at this enemy in a blind
+ instinct of self-preservation 195
+ "Won't you please give me a lift an' a chance
+ to earn my vittles for a day or two?" 260
+ "Thank God, little gal, I've found what belongs
+ to ye" 272
+ "Quit takin' on so, girlie," he said 325
+ "I did mean to hate you, but I--I can't" 416
+
+
+
+
+PART I
+
+CHIP MCGUIRE
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Chip was very tired. All that long June day, since Tim's harsh, "Come,
+out wid ye," had roused her to daily toil, until now, wearied and
+disconsolate, she had crept, barefoot, up the back stairs to her room,
+not one moment's rest or one kindly word had been hers.
+
+Below, in the one living room of Tim's Place, the men were grouped
+playing cards, and the medley of their oaths, their laughter, the thump
+of knuckles on the bare table, and the pungent odor of pipes, reached
+her through the floor cracks. Outside the fireflies twinkled above the
+slow-running river and along the stump-dotted hillside. Close by, a
+few pigs dozed contentedly in their rudely constructed sty.
+
+A servant to those scarce fit for servants, a menial at the beck and call
+of all Tim's Place, and laboring with the men in the fields, Chip, a
+girl of almost sixteen, felt her soul revolt at the filth, the brutality,
+the coarse existence of those whose slave she was.
+
+And what a group they were!
+
+First, Tim Connor, the owner and master of this oasis in the wilderness,
+sixty miles from the nearest settlement; his brother Mike, as coarse;
+their wives and a half a dozen children who played with the pigs,
+squealed as often for food, and were left to grow up the same way;
+and Pierre Lubec, the hired man, completed the score.
+
+There was another transient resident here, an old Indian named Tomah,
+who came with the snow, and deserted his hut below on the river bank when
+spring unlocked that stream.
+
+Two occasional visitors also came here, both even more objectionable
+to Chip than Tim and his family. One was her father, known to her to be
+an outlaw and escaped murderer in hiding; the other a half-breed named
+Bolduc, but known as One-eyed Pete, a trapper and hunter whose abode
+was a log cabin on the Fox Hole, ten miles away. His face was horribly
+scarred by a wildcat's claws; one eye-socket was empty; his lips,
+chin, and protruding teeth were always tobacco-stained. For three months
+now, he had made weekly calls at Tim's Place, in pursuit of Chip. His
+wooing, as might be expected, had been a persistent leering at her with
+his one sinister eye, oft-repeated innuendoes and insinuations of
+lascivious nature, scarce understood by her, with now and then attempted
+familiarity. These advances had met with much the same reception once
+accorded him by the wildcat.
+
+Both these visitors were now with the group below. That fact was of
+no interest to Chip, except in connection with a more pertinent one--a
+long conference she had observed between them that day. What it was
+about, she could not guess, and yet some queer intuition told her that it
+concerned her. Ordinarily, she would have sought sleep in her box-on-legs
+bed; now she crouched on the floor, listening.
+
+For an hour the game and its medley of sounds continued; then
+cessation, the tramp of heavily shod feet, the light extinguished,
+and finally--silence. A few minutes of this, and then the sound of
+whispered converse, low yet distinct, reached Chip from outside.
+Cautiously she crept to her window.
+
+"I gif you one hunerd dollars now, for ze gal," Pete was saying, "an'
+one hunerd more when you fotch her."
+
+"It's three hundred down, I've told ye, or we don't do business,"
+was her father's answer, in almost a hiss.
+
+A pain like a knife piercing her heart came to Chip.
+
+"But s'pose she run away?" came in Pete's voice.
+
+"What, sixty miles to a settlement? You must be a damn fool!"
+
+"An' if she no mind me?"
+
+"Wal, thrash her then; she's yours."
+
+"But I no gif so much," parleyed Pete; "I gif you one-feefty now, an'
+one hunerd when she come."
+
+"You'll give what I say, and be quick about it, or I'll take her out
+to-morrow, and you'll never see her again; so fork over."
+
+"And you fotch her to-morrow?"
+
+"Yes, I told you." And so the bargain was concluded.
+
+Only a moment more, while Chip sat numb and dazed, then came the sound of
+footsteps, as the two men separated, and then silence over Tim's Place.
+
+And yet, what a horror for Chip! Sold like a horse or a pig to this
+worse than disgusting half-breed, and on the morrow to be taken--no,
+dragged--to the half-breed's hut by her hated father.
+
+Hardly conscious of the real intent and object of this purchase, she yet
+understood it dimly. Life here was bad enough--it was coarse, unloved,
+even filthy, and yet, hard as it was, it was a thousand times better
+than slavery with such an owner.
+
+And now, still weak and trembling from the shock, she raised her head
+cautiously and peeped out of the window. A faint spectral light from
+the rising moon outlined the log barn, the two log cabins, and pigsty,
+which, with the frame house she was in, comprised Tim's Place. Above
+and beyond where the forest enclosed the hillside, it shone brighter,
+and as Chip looked out upon the ethereal silvered view, away to the
+right she saw the dark opening into the old tote road. Up this they
+had brought her, eight years before. Never since had she traversed it;
+and yet, as she looked at it now, an inspiration born of her father's
+sneer came to her.
+
+It was a desperate chance, a foolhardy step--a journey so appalling,
+so almost hopeless, she might well hesitate; and yet, escape that way was
+her one chance. Only a moment longer she waited, then gathering her few
+belongings--a pair of old shoes, the moccasins Old Tomah had given her, a
+skirt and jacket fashioned from Tim's cast-off garments, a fur cap,
+and soft felt hat--she thrust them into a soiled pillow-case and crept
+down the stairs.
+
+Once out, she looked about, listened, then darted up the hillside,
+straight for the tote road entrance. Here she paused, put on her
+moccasins, and looked back.
+
+The moon, now above the tree-tops, shone full upon Tim's Place,
+softening and silvering all its ugliness and all its squalor. Away to
+the left stood Tomah's hut, across the river, a shining path bright
+and rippled.
+
+In spite of the awful dread of her situation and the years of her hard,
+unpaid, and ofttimes cursed toil, a pang of regret now came to her. This
+was her home, wretched as it was. Here she had at least been fed and
+warmed in winters, and here Old Tomah had shown her kindness. Oh, if
+he were only in his hut now, that she might go and waken him softly,
+and beg him to take her in his canoe and speed down the river!
+
+But no! only her own desperate courage would now avail, and realizing
+that this look upon Tim's Place was the last one, she turned and fled
+down the path. Sixty miles of stony, bush-encumbered, brier-grown,
+seldom-travelled road lay ahead of her! Sixty miles of mingled swamp,
+morass, and rock-ribbed hill! Sixty miles through the sombre silence
+and persistent menace of a wilderness, peopled only by death-intending
+creatures, yellow-eyed and sharp-fanged!
+
+With only a sickening, soul-nauseating fate awaiting her at Tim's
+Place, and her sole escape this almost insane flight, she sped on. The
+faint, spectral rifts of moonlight through interlaced fir and spruce
+as often deceived as aided her; bending boughs whipped her, bushes
+and logs tripped her, sharp stones and pointed sticks bit her; she
+hurried over hillocks, wallowed through sloughs and dashed into tangles
+of briers, heedless of all except her one mad impulse to escape.
+
+Soon the ever present menace of a wilderness assailed her,--the yowl
+of a wildcat close at hand; in a swamp, the sharp bark of a wolf; on a
+hillside above her, the hoot of an owl; and when after two hours of this
+desperate flight had exhausted her and she was forced to halt, strange
+creeping, crawling things seemed all about.
+
+And now the erratic, fantastic belief of Old Tomah returned to her. With
+him the forest was peopled by a weird, uncanny race, sometimes visible
+and sometimes not--"spites," he called them, and they were the souls
+of both man and beast; sometimes good, sometimes evil, according as
+they had been in life, and all good or ill luck was due to their ghostly
+influences. They followed the hunter and trapper day and night, luring
+him into safety or danger, as they chose. They were everywhere, and in
+countless numbers, ready and sure to avenge all wrongs and reward all
+virtues. They had a Chieftain also, a great white spectre who came forth
+from the north in winter, and swept across the wilderness, spreading
+death and terror.
+
+Many times at Tim's Place, Chip had sat enthralled on winter evenings,
+while Old Tomah described these mystic genii. They were so real to him
+that he made them real to her, and now, alone in this vast wilderness,
+spectral in the faint moonlight and filled with countless terrors, they
+returned in full force. On every side she could see them, creeping,
+crawling, through the undergrowth or along the interlaced boughs above
+her. She could hear the faint hiss of their breath in the night wind,
+see the gleam of their little eyes in dark places--they were crossing
+the path in front of her, following close behind, and gathering about
+her from every direction.
+
+Beneath bright sunlight, a vast wilderness is at best a place peopled
+by many terrors. Its solitude seems uncanny, its shadow fearsome, its
+silence ominous. The creaking of limbs moving in the breeze sounds like
+the shriek of demons; the rush of winds becomes the hiss of serpents.
+Vague terrors assail one on every hand, and the rustle of each dry
+leaf, or breaking of every twig, becomes the footfall of a savage
+beast. We advance only with caution, oft halting to look and listen. A
+stern, defiant _Presence_ seems everywhere confronting us, and the weird
+mysticism of Nature bids us beware. By night this invisible Something
+becomes of monstrous proportions. Ghosts fashion themselves out of each
+rift of light, and every rock, thick-grown tree-top, or dark shadow
+becomes a goblin.
+
+To Chip, educated only in the fantastic lore of Old Tomah, these terrors
+now became insanity-breeding. She could not turn back--better death
+among the spites than slaving to the half-breed; and so, faint from
+awful fear, gasping from miles of running, she stumbled on. And now a
+little hope came, for the road bent down beside the river, and its low
+voice seemed a word of cheer. Into its cool depths she could at least
+plunge and die, as a last resort.
+
+Soon an opening showed ahead, and a bridge appeared. Here, for the first
+time, on this vantage point, she halted. How thrice blessed those knotted
+logs now seemed! She hugged and patted them in abject gratitude. She
+crawled to the edge and looked over into the dark, gurgling water. Up
+above lay a faint ripple of silver. Here, also, she could see the
+moon almost at the zenith, and a few flickering stars.
+
+A trifle of courage and renewal of hope now came. Her face and hands were
+scratched and bleeding, clothing torn, feet and legs black with mud. But
+these things she neither noticed nor felt--only that blessed bridge of
+logs that gave her safety, and the moon that bade her hope.
+
+Then she began to count her chances. This landmark told her that five
+miles of her desperate journey had been covered and she was still alive.
+She began to calculate. How soon would her escape be discovered, and
+who would pursue her? Only Pete, her purchaser, she felt sure, and
+there was a possible chance that he might return to his cabin before
+doing so. Or perhaps he might sleep late, and thus give her one or two
+hours more of time.
+
+[Illustration: All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old Tomah's
+fancy were rushing and leaping about.]
+
+And now she began to review the usual morning movements at Tim's
+Place--Tim the first one up, calling her, then going out to milking; the
+others, slower to arise, getting out and about their special duties.
+Pete, she knew, always slept in one of the two empty log cabins which
+were first built there. Her father slept in the other or in the barn.
+Neither would be called, she knew--it was get around in time for
+breakfast at Tim's Place or go hungry. And so she speculated on her
+chances of early pursuit. Here on this bridge she now meant to remain
+until the first sign of dawn, then push on again with all speed. She
+already had a five-mile start, she was weary, footsore, and still faint
+from the awful terrors of her flight; to go on meant to rush into the
+swarm of spites once more, and so she lay inert on the hard logs
+watching, listening, calculating.
+
+And now cheered by this trifling hope and lessening sense of danger,
+her past life came back. Her childhood in a far-off settlement; the
+home always in a turmoil from the strange men and women ever coming and
+going; the drinking, swearing, singing, at all hours of the night, her
+constant fear of them and wonder who they were and why they came. There
+were other features of this disturbed life: frequent quarrels between
+her father and mother; curses, tears, and sometimes blows, until at
+last after a night more hideous than any other her mother had taken her
+and fled. Then came a long journey to another village and a new life
+of peace and quietness. Here it was all so different--no red-shirted men
+to be afraid of, no loud-voiced women drinking with them. She became
+acquainted with other children of her own age, was sent to school and
+taken to church. Here, also, her mother began to smile once more, and
+look content. For two years, and the only ones Chip cared to recall,
+she had been a happy schoolgirl, and then came a sudden, tragic end to
+it all. Of that she never wished to think. It was all so horrible, and
+yet so mercifully brief.
+
+The one friend life held, her mother, had been brought home, wounded
+to death amid the whirring wheels of the mill where she worked; there
+were a few hours of agonized dread as her life ebbed away, a whisper or
+two of love and longing, and then the sad farewell made doubly awful by
+her father's frowning face and harsh voice. At its ending, and in spite
+of her fears and tears, she was now borne away by him. For days they
+journeyed deeper and deeper into a vast wilderness, to halt at last at
+Tim's Place.
+
+Like a dread dream it all came back now, as she lay there on this one
+flat spot of security--the bridge--and listened to the river's low
+murmur.
+
+The moon was lowering now. Already the shadow of the stream's bordering
+trees had reached her. First the stars vanished, then the moon faded
+into a dim patch of light, finally that disappeared, a chill breeze
+swept down from a neighboring mountain, and the trees began to moan
+and creak. Then a fiercer blast swept through the forest, the great
+firs and spruces bent and groaned and screamed. Surely the spites were
+gathering in force again, and this was their doing.
+
+Once more she began to hear them creeping, crawling, over the bridge.
+They spit, they snarled, they growled. The darkness grew more intense,
+no longer could the river's course be seen, but only a black chasm.
+
+All through her mad flight the wilderness had been ghostly and spectral
+in the moonlight; now it had become lost in inky blackness, yet alive
+with demoniac voices. All the goblin forms and hideous shapes of Old
+Tomah's fancy were rushing and leaping about. Now high up in the
+tree-tops, now deep in the hollows, they screamed and shrieked and moaned.
+
+And now, just as this fierce battle of sound and spectral shape was at
+its worst, and Chip, a hopeless, helpless mite of humanity, crouched low
+upon the bridge, suddenly a vicious growl reached her, and raising her
+head she saw at the bridge's end two gleaming eyes!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+
+Martin Frisbie and his nephew Raymond Stetson, or Ray, were cutting
+boughs and carrying them to two tents standing in the mouth of a
+bush-choked opening into the forest. In front of this Angie, Martin's
+wife, was placing tin dishes, knives, and forks, upon a low table of
+boards. Upon the bank of a broad, slow-running stream, two canoes were
+drawn out, and halfway between these and the table a camp-fire burnt.
+
+Here Levi, Martin's guide for many trips into this wilderness, was also
+occupied, intently watching two pails depending from bending wambecks,
+a coffee-pot hanging from another, and two frying-pans, whose sputtering
+contents gave forth an enticing odor.
+
+Twilight was just falling, the river murmured in low melody, and a few
+rods above a small rill entered it, adding a more musical tinkle.
+
+Soon Levi deftly swung one of the pails away from the flame with a
+hook-stick and speared a potato with a fork.
+
+"Supper ready," he called; and then as the rest seated themselves at
+the table, he advanced, carrying the pail of steaming potatoes on the
+hooked stick and the frying-pan in his other hand.
+
+The meal had scarce begun when a crackling in the undergrowth back of
+the tent was heard, and on the instant there emerged a girl. Her clothing
+was in shreds, her face and hands were black with mud, streaks of blood
+showed across cheek and chin, and her eyes were fierce and sunken.
+
+"For God's sake give me suthin' to eat," she said, looking from one
+to another of the astonished group. "I'm damn near starved--only a
+bite," she added, sinking to her knees and extending her hands. "I
+hain't eat nothin' but roots 'n' berries for three days."
+
+Angie was the first to recover. "Here," she said, hastily extending
+her plate, "take this."
+
+Without a word the starved creature grasped it and began eating as only a
+desperate, hungry animal would, while the group watched her.
+
+"Don't hurry so," exclaimed Martin, whose wits had now returned.
+"Here, take this cup of coffee."
+
+Soon the food vanished and then the girl arose. "Sit down again, my poor
+child," entreated Angie, who had observed the strange scene with moist
+eyes, "and tell us who you are and where you came from."
+
+"My name's Chip," answered the girl, bluntly, "an' I'm runnin'
+away from Tim's Place, 'cause dad sold me to Pete Bolduc."
+
+"Sold--you--to--Pete--Bolduc," exclaimed Angie, looking at her
+wide-eyed. "What do you mean?"
+
+"He did, sartin," answered the girl, laconically. "I heerd 'em
+makin' the bargain, 'n' I fetched three hundred dollars."
+
+Martin and his wife exchanged glances.
+
+"Well, and then what?" continued Angie.
+
+"Wal, then I waited a spell, till they'd turned in," explained
+the girl, "and then I lit out. I knowed 'twas sixty miles to the
+settlement, but 'twas moonlight 'n' I chanced it. I've had an awful
+time, though, the spites hev chased me all the way. I was jist makin' a
+nestle when I seed yer light, an' I crept through the brush 'n'
+peeked. I seen ye wa'n't nobody from Tim's Place, 'n' then I cum
+out. I guess you've saved my life. I was gittin' dizzy."
+
+It was a brief, blunt story whose directness bespoke truth; but it
+revealed such a pigsty state of morality at this Tim's Place that the
+little group of astonished listeners could scarce finish supper or
+cease watching this much-soiled girl.
+
+"And so your name is Chip," queried Angie at last. "Chip what?"
+
+"Chip McGuire," answered the waif, quickly; "only my real name ain't
+Chip, it's Vera; but they've allus called me Chip at Tim's Place."
+
+"And your father sold you to this man?"
+
+"He did, 'n' he's a damn bad man," replied Chip, readily. "He
+killed somebody once, an' he don't show up often. I hate him!"
+
+"You mustn't use swear words," returned Angie, "it's not nice."
+
+The girl looked abashed. "I guess you'd cuss if you'd been sold to
+such a nasty-looking man as Pete," she responded. "He chaws terbaccer
+'n' lets it drizzle on his chin, 'n' he hain't but one eye."
+
+Angie smiled, while Martin stared at the girl with increased
+astonishment. He knew who this McGuire was, and something of his
+history, and that Tim's Place was a hillside clearing far up the
+river, inhabited by an Irish family devoted to the raising of
+potatoes. He had halted there once, long enough to observe its somewhat
+slothful condition, and to buy pork and potatoes; but this tale was a
+revelation, and the girl herself a greater one.
+
+This oasis in the wilderness was fully forty miles above here, its only
+connection with civilization was a seldom-used log road which only an
+experienced woodsman could follow, and how this mere child had dared it,
+was a marvel.
+
+But there she was, squat on the ground and watching them with big black,
+pleading eyes. There was but one thing to do, to care for her now,
+as humanity insisted, and Angie made the first move. It was in the
+direction of cleanliness; for entering the tent, she soon appeared with
+some of her own extra clothing, soap, and towels, and bade the girl
+follow her up the river a few rods.
+
+The moon was shining clearly above the tree-tops, the camp-fire burned
+brightly, and Martin, Ray, and Levi were lounging near it when the two
+returned, and in one an astonishing transformation had taken place.
+
+Angie had gone away with a girl of ten in respect to clothing, her skirt
+evidently made of gunny cloth and reaching but little below her knees,
+and for a waist, what was once a man's red flannel shirt, and both in
+rags. Soiled with black mud, and bleeding, she was an object pitiable
+beyond words; she returned a young lady, almost, in stature, her face
+shining and rosy, and her eyes so tender with gratitude that they were
+pathetic.
+
+Another change had also come with cleanliness and clothing--a sudden
+bashfulness. It was some time ere she could be made to talk again,
+but finally that wore away and then her story came. What a tale it
+was--scarce credible.
+
+At first were growing terrors as she plunged deeper and deeper into
+the shadowy forest, the brush and logs that tripped her, the mud holes
+she wallowed through, the ever increasing horrors of this flight, the
+blood-chilling cries of night prowlers, the gathering darkness while
+she waited on the bridge, the awful moment when she saw two yellow eyes
+watching her, not twenty feet away, her screams of agonized fear, and
+then time that seemed eternity, while she expected the next moment to
+feel the fangs of a hungry panther.
+
+How blessed the first dawn of morning had seemed, how she ran on and
+on, until faint with hunger she halted to eat roots, leaves,
+berries--anything to sustain life! The river had been her one boon
+of hope and consolation, and even beyond the fear of wild beast had
+been the dread of pursuit and capture by this half-breed. When night
+came, she had crept into a thicket, covering herself with boughs;
+when daylight dawned, she had pushed on again, ever growing weaker and
+oft stumbling from faintness.
+
+Hope had almost vanished, her strength had quite left her, the last day
+had been a partial blank so far as knowledge of her progress went, but
+filled with eerie sights and sounds. From first to last the spites of
+Old Tomah had kept her company--by day she heard them, swifter-footed
+than she, in the undergrowth; by night they were all about, dodging
+behind trees, hopping from limb to limb, and sometimes snapping and
+snarling. The one supreme moment of joy, oft referred to, was when she
+had seen her rescuers' camp-fire, with human, and possibly friendly,
+faces about it.
+
+It was a fantastic, weird, almost spookish tale,--the spectres she had
+seen were so real to her that the telling made them seem almost so to
+the rest, and beyond that, the girl herself, so like a young witch, with
+her shadowy eyes and furtive glances, added to the illusion.
+
+But now came a diversion, for Levi freshened the fire, and at a nod
+from Angie, Ray brought forth his banjo. It was his one pet foible, and
+it went with him everywhere, and now, with time and place so in accord,
+he was glad to exhibit his talent. He was not an expert,--a few jigs and
+plantation melodies composed his repertory,--but with the moonlight
+glinting through the spruce boughs, the river murmuring near, somehow one
+could not fail to catch the quaint humor of "Old Uncle Ned," "Jim
+Crack Corn," and the like, and see the two dusky lovers as they floated
+down the "Tombigbee River," and feel the pathos of "Nellie Grey"
+and "Old Kentucky Home."
+
+Ray sang fairly well and in sympathy with each theme. To Angie and the
+rest it was but ordinary; but to this waif, who never before had heard
+a banjo or a darky song, it was marvellous. Her face lit up with keen
+interest, her eyes grew misty at times, and once two tears stole down
+her cheeks.
+
+For an hour Ray was the centre of interest, and then Angie arose.
+
+"Come, Chip," she said pleasantly, "it's time to go to bed, and you
+are to share my tent."
+
+"I'd rather not," the girl replied bluntly. "I ain't fit. I kin jist
+ez well curl 'longside o' the fire."
+
+But Angie insisted and the girl followed her into the tent.
+
+Here occurred another incident that must be related. Angie, always
+devout, and somewhat puritanical, was one who never forgot her nightly
+prayer, and now, when ready for slumber, she knelt on the bed of fir
+twigs, and by the light of one small candle offered her usual petition,
+while Chip watched her with wide and wondering eyes. As might be
+expected, that waif was mentioned, and with deep feeling.
+
+"Do ye s'pose God heard ye?" she queried with evident candor, when
+Angie ceased.
+
+"Why, certainly," came the earnest answer; "God hears all prayers."
+
+"And do the spites hear 'em?"
+
+"There are no such creatures as 'spites,'" answered Angie,
+severely; "you only imagine them, and what this Indian has told you is
+superstition."
+
+"But I've seen 'em, hundreds on 'em, big and little," returned the
+girl, stoutly.
+
+Angie looked at her with pity.
+
+"Put that notion out of your head, once for all," she said, almost
+sternly. "It is only a delusion, and no doubt told to scare you."
+
+And poor Chip, conscious that perhaps she had sinned in speech, said no
+more.
+
+For a long time Angie lay sleepless upon her fragrant bed, recalling the
+waif's strange story and trying to grasp the depth and breadth of her
+life at Tim's Place; also to surmise, if possible, how serious a taint
+of evil she had inherited. That her father was vile beyond compare seemed
+positive; that her mother might have been scarce better was probable.
+No mention, thus far, had been made of her; and so Angie reflected
+upon this pitiful child's ancestry and what manner of heritage she had
+been blessed or cursed with. Some of her attributes awoke Angie's
+admiration. She had shown utter abhorrence of this brutal sale of
+herself, a marvellous courage in endeavoring to escape it. She seemed
+grateful for what had been done for her, and a partial realization of
+her own unfitness for association with refined people. Her speech was no
+worse than might be expected from her life at Tim's Place. Doubtless,
+she was unable to read or write. And so Angie lay, considering all the
+pros and cons of the situation and of this girl's life.
+
+There was also another side to it all, the humane one. They were on
+their way out of the wilderness, for a business visit to the nearest
+settlement, intending to return to the woods in a few days--and what
+was to be done with this child of misfortune?
+
+Most assuredly they must protect her for the present. But was there any
+one to whom she could be turned over and cared for? It seemed possible
+this brutal buyer of her would follow her out of the woods, to abduct her
+if found, and then the moral side of this episode with all its abominable
+possibilities occurred to Angie, who was, above all, unselfish and
+noble-hearted. Vice, crime, and immorality were horrible to her.
+
+Here was a self-evident duty thrusting itself upon her, and how to meet
+it with justice to herself, her husband, and her own conscience, was a
+problem. Thus dwelling upon this complex situation, she fell asleep.
+
+The first faint light of morning was stealing into the tent when Angie
+felt her companion stir. She had, exhausted as she doubtless was, fallen
+asleep almost the moment she lay down; but now she was evidently awake.
+
+Curious to note what she would do, Angie remained with closed eyes and
+motionless. From the corner of the tent where she had curled up the night
+before, the girl now cautiously crept toward the elder woman. Inch by
+inch, upon the bed of boughs, she moved nearer, until Angie, watching
+with half-open eyes, saw her head lowered, and felt two soft warm lips
+touch her hand.
+
+It was a trifle. It was no more than the act of a cat who rubs herself
+against her mistress or a dog who licks his master's hand, and yet it
+settled once for all that waif's fate and Angie's indecision.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+
+ Women are like grasshoppers--ye kin never tell which
+ way they're goin' to jump.--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Levi was starting a fire, Ray washing potatoes, and Martin, in his
+shirt-sleeves, using a towel vigorously near the canoes, when Angie and
+Chip emerged that morning; and now while breakfast is under way, a
+moment may be seized to explain who these people were and their mission
+in this wilderness.
+
+Many years before, in a distant village called Greenvale, two brothers,
+David and Amzi Curtis, had quarrelled over an unfortunate division of
+inherited land. The outcome was that Amzi, somewhat misanthropic over
+the death of his wife, and of peculiar make-up, deserted his home and
+little daughter Angeline, and vanished. For many years no one knew of
+his whereabouts, and he was given up as dead.
+
+In the meantime his child, cared for by a kindly woman known as Aunt
+Comfort, had grown to womanhood. About this time a boyhood sweetheart of
+Angeline's, named Martin Frisbie, who had been gathering wealth in a
+distant city, invited a former schoolmate, now the village doctor in
+Greenvale, to join him on an outing trip into the wilderness.
+
+Here something of the history of a notorious outlaw named McGuire
+became known to Martin, and more important than that, a queer old
+hermit was discovered, dwelling in solitude on the shore of a small
+lake. Who he was, and why this strange manner of life, Martin could not
+learn, and not until later, when he returned to Greenvale to woo his
+former sweetheart once more, did he even guess. Here, however, from a
+description furnished by a village nondescript,--a sort of Natty Bumpo
+and philosopher combined, known as Old Cy Walker, who had been Martin's
+youthful companion,--he was led to believe that the queer hermit and
+the long-missing Amzi were one and the same.
+
+Another trip into this wilderness with Old Cy, taken to identify the
+hermit, resulted in proving the correctness of the surmise. Then Martin
+set about making this misanthropic recluse more comfortable in all ways
+possible; and then, leaving Old Cy to keep him company, he returned to
+Greenvale and Angie.
+
+A marriage was the outcome of his return to his native village, and then,
+with his nephew, Ray, and long-tried guide, Levi, as helpers on this
+unique wedding trip, the hermit was visited.
+
+It was hoped that meeting his child once more would result in inducing
+him to abandon his wildwood existence and to return to civilization;
+and it did--partially. He seemed happy to meet his daughter again,
+consented to return with them when ready, and after a couple of weeks'
+sojourn here, the canoes were packed and all set out for civilization and
+Greenvale once more.
+
+But "home, sweet home," albeit it was, as in this case, a lonely
+log cabin in a vast wilderness, proved stronger than parental love or
+aught else; and sometime during first night's camp on the way out,
+this strange recluse stole away in his canoe and returned.
+
+"It's natur," Old Cy observed when morning came, "an' home is the
+hardest spot in the world to fergit. Amzi's lived in that old shack all
+'lone for twenty years. He's got wonted to it like a dog to his kennel,
+an' all the powers o' the univarse can't break up the feelin'."
+
+It seemed an indisputable, if disappointing, fact, and Martin led his
+party back to the hermit's home once more.
+
+Another plan was now considered by Martin--to buy the township, or at
+least a large tract enclosing this lake, build a more commodious log
+cabin for the use of himself and his wife, and spend a portion of each
+summer there. There were several reasons other than those of affection
+for this decision.
+
+This lake, perhaps half a mile in diameter, teemed with trout. The low
+mountains enclosing it were thickly covered with fine spruce and fir,
+groves of pine with some beech and birch grew in the valleys; deer,
+moose, and feathered game abounded here, and best of all, no vandal
+lumbermen ever encroached upon this region.
+
+It was, all considered, a veritable sportsman's paradise. Most likely
+a few thousand dollars would purchase it, and so, for these collective
+reasons, Martin decided to buy it.
+
+Old Cy was left to keep the hermit company; Martin, his wife, and Ray,
+with Levi, started for civilization to obtain needed supplies, and had
+been four days upon the way when this much-abused waif appeared on
+the scene. The party were journeying in two canoes, one manned by Ray,
+who had already learned to wield a paddle, which carried the tents and
+luggage; while the other was occupied by Martin, his wife, and Levi. The
+only available seat for the new arrival was in Ray's canoe, and when
+breakfast was disposed of and the voyagers ready to start, she was given
+a place therein.
+
+The river at this point was broad and of slow current, only two days'
+journey was needful to reach the settlement, and no cause for worry
+appeared--but Levi felt otherwise.
+
+"You'd best hug the futher shore," he observed to Ray quietly when
+the boy pushed off, "an' don't git out o' sight o' us." "I ain't
+sartin 'bout the outcome o' this matter," he said to Martin later. "I
+know that half-breed, Bolduc, and he's a bad 'un. From the gal's
+story he paid big money fer her. He don't know the meanin' o' law,
+and if he follers down the tote road, as I callate he will, 'n' ketches
+sight o' her, the first we'll know on't 'll be the crack o' a rifle.
+The wonder to me is he didn't ketch her 'fore she got to us. He could
+track her faster'n she could run. I don't want to 'larm you folks,
+but I shan't feel easy till we're out o' the woods."
+
+It wasn't reassuring.
+
+But no thought of this came to Ray, at least, and these two young
+people, yielding to the magic of the morning, the rippled river that
+bore them onward, the birds singing along the fir-clad banks, and all the
+exhilaration of the wilderness, soon reached the care-free converse
+of youthful friends.
+
+"I never had nothin' but work 'n' cussin'," Chip responded, when
+Ray asked if she never had any time she could call her own. "Tim
+thinked I couldn't get tired, I guess. He'd roust me up fust of all
+'n' larrup me if he caught me shirkin'. Once I had a little posey
+bed back o' the pig-pen. I fixed it after dark an' mornin's when I
+ketched the chance. He ketched me thar one mornin' a-weedin' it
+'n' knocked me sprawlin' an' then stomped all over the posies.
+That night I went out into the woods 'n' begged the spites to git him
+killed somehow. 'Nother time I forgot to put up the bars, an' the cows
+got into the taters. That night he tied me to a stump clus to the bars,
+an' left me thar all night. I used to be more skeered o' my dad 'n
+I was o' Tim, tho'. He'd look at me like he hated me, an' say,
+'Shut up,' if I said a word, an' I 'most believed he'd kill me,
+just fer nothin'. Once he said he'd take me out into the woods at
+night 'n' bait a bear trap with me if he heerd I didn't mind Tim. I
+told Old Tomah that, an' he said if he did, he'd shoot him; but Old
+Tomah wasn't round only winters. I hated dad so I'd 'a' shot him
+myself, I guess, if I cud 'a' got hold o' a gun when he wa'n't
+watchin'."
+
+"It's awful to have to feel that way toward your own father,"
+interrupted Ray, "for he was your father."
+
+"I s'pose 'twas," admitted Chip, candidly, "but I never felt
+much different. I've seen him slap mother when she was on her knees
+a-bawlin', an' the way he would cuss her was awful."
+
+"But you had some friendship from this old Indian," queried Ray, who
+began to realize what a pitiful life the girl had led; "he was good to
+you, wasn't he?"
+
+"He was, sartin," returned Chip, eagerly; "he used to tell me the
+spites 'ud fix dad 'fore long, so he'd never show up agin, 'n'
+when I got big 'nuff he'd sneak me off some night 'n' take me to
+the settlement, whar I could arn a livin'. Old Tomah was the only
+one who cared a cuss fer me. I used to bawl when he went away every
+spring, an' beg him to take me 'long 'n' help him camp 'n' cook.
+I'd 'a' done 'most anything fer Old Tomah. I didn't mind havin'
+to work all the time fer Tim. I didn't mind wearin' clothes made
+out o' old duds 'n' bein' cussed fer not workin' hard 'nuff.
+What I did mind was not havin' nobody who cared whether I lived or
+died, or said a good word to me. Sometimes I got so lonesome, I used
+to go out in the woods nights when 'twas moonlight 'n' beg the spites
+to help me. I used to think mother might be one on 'em 'n' she'd
+keer fer me. I think she was, an' 'twas her as kept me goin' till I
+found you folks's camp. I got awful skeered them nights I was runnin'
+away, an' when 'twas so dark I couldn't see no more, an' I heerd
+wildcats yowlin', I'd git on my knees 'n' beg mother to keep 'em
+away. I think she did, an' allus shall."
+
+Much more in connection with the wild, harsh life Chip had led for
+eight years was now told by her. Old Tomah's superstition and belief
+in hobgoblins were enlarged upon. Life at Tim's Place, with all its
+filth, brutality, and nearly animal existence, was described in full;
+for Chip's tongue, once loosened, ran on and on, while Ray, spellbound
+by this description, was scarce conscious he was wielding a paddle.
+Never before had he heard such a tale, so unusual and so pathetic.
+Naturally of chivalrous and manly nature, it appealed to him as naught
+else could. Then the girl herself, with her big, pleading eyes, her
+queer belief in those woodsy, spectral forms she called spites, and her
+free and easy confidence in him, and his sympathy also, surprised Ray.
+Her speech was coarse and crude--the vernacular of Tim's Place. Now and
+then a profane word crept in; yet it was absolute truth, and forceful
+from its very simplicity.
+
+But another influence, more potent than her wrongs, was now appealing
+to Chip--her sense of joy at her rescue, and with it a positive faith
+that the spites had been the means of her escape.
+
+"I know they did it," she said time and again, "an' I know mother was
+one on 'em. I wished I cud do suthin' to show 'em how thankful I am
+'n' how happy I am now." And Ray, astonished that so keen-witted and
+courageous a girl should have such a fantastic belief, made no comment.
+
+A more serious subject was under discussion in the other canoe, meantime,
+as to the future disposition of Chip herself.
+
+"I feel it my duty to take care of her," Angie said, after relating
+her conversation with Chip and that morning's incident. "She is a
+homeless, outcast waif, needing education and everything else to
+Christianize her. We must bring her to the settlement, but to turn
+her adrift might mean leaving her to a life of vice, even if she
+escapes her brutal father and this worse half-breed. Then, again, I am
+not sure that her parentage will bear inspection. She has told me
+something about her earlier life, and about her mother, who evidently
+loved her. One course only seems plain to me,--to take care of and
+educate this unfortunate."
+
+"I am willing, my dear," responded Martin, who, like all new husbands,
+was ready to concede anything, "only I suggest that you go a little
+slow. You can't tell yet what this girl will develop into. She has had
+the worst possible parentage, without doubt. Her life at Tim's Place,
+and contact with lumbermen or worse, has been no benefit. She is grossly
+ignorant, and may be ill-tempered, and once given to understand that
+you have practically adopted her, you can't--or won't--have the heart
+to turn her off. Now we are to return to the lake and remain a month, as
+you know, and in the meantime, what will you do with this girl?"
+
+This was reducing Angie's philanthropic impulses to a focus, as it were,
+and it set her thinking. Something more of this discussion followed,
+and finally Angie announced her decision.
+
+"We must take the girl back with us," she said, "and begin her
+reformation at the camp. If she shows any aptitude and willingness to
+obey, we will take her to Greenvale. If not, you must arrange to get
+her into some institution."
+
+"And suppose the half-breed finds where she is, what then?" inquired
+Martin.
+
+"What do you say, Levi?" he added, turning to his guide, "you know
+this fellow; what will he be apt to do?"
+
+"I s'pose you know what a panther'll do, robbed of her cub," Levi
+answered, "an' how a bull moose acts in runnin' time, mebbe. Wal,
+this Pete is worse'n both on 'em biled into one, I callate. If you're
+goin' ter take the gal back, you've got to keep her shady, or some day
+you'll find her missin'. Besides, Pete, ez I told ye, don't know the
+meanin' o' law and is handy with a gun."
+
+But Martin did not quite share Levi's fears, and so Angie's decision
+was agreed to. Levi's advice to "keep shady" was accepted, however,
+and all through that summer's somewhat thrilling experiences it was the
+rule of conduct.
+
+When noon came, Levi led the way into a lagoon; in a secluded spot at its
+head dinner was cooked, and when the sun was well down and a tributary
+stream was reached, he turned into it, and halted not for the night camp
+until a full half-mile separated them from the river.
+
+A certain vague sense of impending danger began to impress both Martin
+and his wife, and the woods seemed to hold a one-eyed, malicious villain
+who might appear at any moment. A danger which we know actually exists,
+we can avoid or meet squarely; but one merely imaginary becomes irksome
+and really more annoying.
+
+No hint of this was dropped by the three older ones, and when the tents
+were pitched, long before twilight, and Martin and Ray had captured a
+goodly string of trout and the camp-fire was alight, this wildwood life
+seemed absolutely perfect, to the young folks at least.
+
+Chip also showed one of the best features of her training. She wanted to
+help everybody and do everything, and Levi, who always did the cooking,
+was importuned to let her help. Strong as a young Amazon, she fetched
+and carried like a man, and the one thing that gladdened her most was
+permission to work.
+
+When supper was over came the lounging beside the cheerful fire, and as
+the shadows thickened, forth came Ray's banjo once more, and with it the
+light of admiration in Chip's eyes.
+
+All that day he had been her charming companion; his open, manly face,
+his bright brown eyes, had been ever before her. His well-bred ways, so
+unlike all the men at Tim's Place, had impressed her as those of a youth
+of eighteen will a maid of sixteen; and now, with his voice appealing
+to the best in her, he seemed like Pan of old, once more wooing a nymph
+with his pipes.
+
+No knowledge of this was hers, no consciousness of why she was happy came
+to her. She knew what spites were; but the god Pan and Apollo with his
+harp were unknown forms.
+
+Neither did she realize that born in her soul that day, on the broad
+shining river, was a magic impulse woven out of heart throbs, and
+destined to mete out to her more sorrow than all else in her life
+combined.
+
+She had entered the wondrous vale of love whose paths are flower-strewn,
+whose shores are rippled with laughter, and whose borders, alas! are ever
+hid in the midst of tears.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+
+ "The wilderness allus seems full o' spectres 'n' creepin'
+ crawlin' panthers. Sometimes I think it's God, an' then
+ agin, the devil."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Tim's Place, this refuge in the wilderness, cleared and colonized by
+Tim Connor, was neither better nor worse than such pioneer openings in
+Nature's domain are apt to be. Tim, a hardy Irishman of sod-hovel and
+potato-diet ancestors, had been blacksmith for a lumber camp on this
+broad river and at its junction with a tributary called the Fox Hole
+years before Chip was born.
+
+When all the adjacent lumber was cut and sent down this river, the camp
+was abandoned, and then Tim saw his opening. With his precious winter's
+wages he purchased a large tract of this now worthless land, induced a
+robust Bridget, his brother Mike, and his consort to join fortunes with
+him, brought in cows, horses, pigs, and poultry, and began farming with
+the lumber camp as domicile.
+
+Another log cabin was soon added, the first crop of potatoes sold
+readily to other lumbermen farther in the wilderness, the pigs in a
+sty adjacent to his own throve, the poultry multiplied, children came,
+and the red-shirted men coming into the wilderness or going out found
+Tim's Place convenient.
+
+With this added business came an enlargement in Tim's ideas, the
+outcome of which was a framed house containing a kitchen and dining room
+and half a dozen others of closet-like proportions, furnished with
+box-on-legs beds. It was not a pretentious hostelry. Paint, shutters,
+and carpets were absent, benches served for chairs, the only mirror in
+it was eight by twelve inches, and used in common by Bridget and Mary.
+The toilet conveniences consisted of a wash-basin in the kitchen sink and
+a "last year's" towel, used semi-occasionally. A long table bare of
+cloth and set with tinware served in the dining room, warmed in winter by
+a round sheet-iron stove; above it usually hung an array of socks and
+mittens, and a capacious cook stove half filled the kitchen. It was the
+crudest possible backwoods abode, and yet compared to the log cabin
+first occupied by Tim, it was a palace, and he was proud of it.
+
+In autumn swarms of lumbermen halted there, content to sleep on the floor
+if need be. In spring they came again, log-driving down stream; later
+a few sportsmen occasionally tried it, and all fared alike.
+
+There was no sentiment about Tim. If the citified fishermen objected to
+what they found, "Be gob, you kin kape away," he readily told them. A
+quarter for each meal, or a night's lodging, was the price, whether a
+bed or the floor was provided, and from early spring until frost came,
+all the occupants went barefoot.
+
+When snow had made the sixty miles of log road to the nearest settlement
+passable, Tim invariably journeyed hither with horse and bob-sled for
+clothing and supplies.
+
+No knowledge or news from the world reached here, unless brought by
+chance visitors. Sundays were an unknown factor, the work of clearing
+land and potato-raising became a continuous performance from spring
+until autumn; and the change of seasons, the rise and fall of the river,
+were the only measure of time.
+
+An addition to Tim's Place, other than babies and pigs, came one fall in
+an old Indian who, by ample presents of game, soon won Tim's good-will
+and help in the erection of a log wigwam; but this relic of a vanishing
+race--reckoned by Tim as partially insane--remained there only winters,
+and when spring returned, disappeared into the wilderness.
+
+There were also two other occasional visitors both meriting description.
+First, a beetle-browed, keen-eyed, red-haired man garbed as a hunter,
+whose speech disclosed something of the Scotch dialect, and who,
+presenting Tim with a deer and two bottles of whiskey as a peace-offering
+on his first arrival, soon obtained a welcome. He told a plausible
+tale of having been pursued for years by enemies seeking his life;
+how he had been robbed and driven away from the settlements; and how
+two of these enemies had even followed him into the woods. He had
+been shot at by them, had killed one in self-defence, a price had been
+set upon his capture, dead or alive, and, all in all, he was a sorely
+abused man.
+
+How much of this lurid and fantastic tale Tim believed, is not pertinent
+to this narrative. The stranger, calling himself McGuire, was evidently
+a good fellow, since he brought good whiskey, and Tim made him welcome.
+
+The facts as to McGuire, however, were somewhat at variance with his
+assertions. He had originally been a dive-keeper in a focal city for
+the lumbering interests of this wilderness, had entertained swarms of
+log-drivers just paid off and anxious to spend money, and when the law
+interfered, he retreated to a smaller town.
+
+In the interval, strange to say, his moral nature--or rather
+immoral--suffered a brief relapse, during which he persuaded an
+excellent if confiding young woman to share his name and infamy.
+
+His second business venture came to grief, however, and his wife deserted
+him and met with a fatal accident a few years after. In the meantime
+he had kept busy, exercising his peculiar talents and tastes in an
+individual manner, and evading officers, and his ways of money-getting
+were peculiar and diverse.
+
+The Chinese Exclusion Act had just become operative, and the admission
+of Celestials into the land of the free, and of good wages, became a
+valuable matter. McGuire conceived the brilliant, if grewsome, idea of
+passing "Chinks" over the border line concealed in coffins. It worked
+admirably, and with accomplices on both sides to obtain certificates
+and permits, and take charge of the "corpses," a few dozen almond-eyed
+immigrants at two hundred dollars each obtained admission.
+
+In time, this budding industry met an official quietus, and McGuire,
+with several warrants out against him, took to the woods. He still
+continued business, however, in various ways. He smuggled liquor over
+the border by canoe loads, hiding it at convenient points, to exchange
+for log-drivers' wages. He killed game out of season, and dynamited
+trout and salmon on spawning beds for the same purpose; and, handy
+with cards, did not disdain their use in lumbering camps.
+
+In all and through all his various ways of money-getting, one purpose
+had governed him--that of money-saving. Trusting no one, as he had reason
+to feel no one trusted him, he continually emulated the squirrels and
+hid his savings in the woods. A trapper and hunter by instinct, as well
+as thief, dive-keeper, smuggler, poacher, and gambler, he had in his
+wanderings discovered a cave in a slate ledge upon the shores of a small
+lake far into the wilderness. It was while trapping here that he found
+this by the aid of a fox which, while dragging a trap, became caught
+and held in a crevasse while attempting to enter it.
+
+The fox thus secured, McGuire made further investigation, and by removing
+a loose slab of slate, he was enabled to enter a roomy cavern, or rather
+two small ones partially separated by slate walls. A little light
+entered the larger one, through a seam crossing it lengthwise. They were
+free from moisture at this time--early autumn--and so secluded was the
+spot that McGuire decided at once to use this place as a hiding-spot
+for his money. The entrance could be kept concealed, its location served
+his purpose, and, fox-like himself, he decided to occupy what he
+would never have found without the aid of a fox, believing no one
+else would find it. It could also be used as a domicile for himself as
+well. A fireplace of slate could be built in it, an escape for smoke
+might be formed through the crack, if enlarged, and so this cave's
+possibilities increased.
+
+There were still several other advantages. This lake was surrounded by
+precipitous mountains; no lumbermen, even, were likely to operate there;
+the stream flowing out of it soon crossed the border line, finding escape
+into the St. Lawrence valley at a point some twenty miles distant; a
+short carry enabled him to reach the Fox Hole which flowed by Tim's
+Place, and so this served as an excellent whip road in case of pursuit.
+
+His transient asylum at Tim's Place also served as a vantage point in
+another way.
+
+Here all who entered this portion of the wilderness invariably
+halted,--officers and wardens as well,--and as by this time McGuire
+had become an outlaw murderer, with a reward offered for his capture,
+this outpost was of double advantage.
+
+Caution was a strong point in his make-up, yet he was daring as well.
+He still visited the settlements occasionally, to sell furs and obtain
+ammunition and whiskey; and when he, as ill luck would have it, happened
+there at the time his child was left motherless, some malign impulse led
+him to take her to Tim's Place and leave her in servitude there.
+
+There was also another chance caller at this outpost--a half-breed
+trapper and hunter named Bolduc, who had established himself in a
+lone cabin on the Fox Hole, some ten miles up from Tim's Place. He
+was a repulsive minor edition of McGuire. A wildcat, with laudable
+intentions, had essayed putting an end to his career, and succeeded to
+the extent of one eye and some blood. He had been the accomplice and
+partner of McGuire in many a whiskey-smuggling trip. He also dealt in
+this pernicious, but valuable, fluid, was a poacher ever ready to
+pot-hunt for a lumbering camp in winter, or find a moose yard on
+snow-shoes, after slaughtering the helpless inmates of which, he
+would sell them to the busy wood-choppers.
+
+He, too, could be classed as brigand of the wilderness, and while no
+warrants or charges against him were rife, he felt it wise to avoid
+meeting minions of the law. Tim's Place was a convenient point to
+obtain information as to location of new lumber camps or possible visits
+of officers. An occasional bottle of whiskey secured Tim's favor.
+The evenings and meals there impressed Pete with the advantages of
+owning a woman's services, and as Chip matured in domestic and other
+possibilities, a desire to possess her began to increase his visits.
+
+His wooing met no response, however, and when persisted in always awoke
+on her part the same instinct once displayed toward him by a wildcat.
+
+Then recourse to her father's greed for money was taken, with results as
+described.
+
+The only thing that saved poor Chip from pursuit and capture, however,
+was his wholesome fear of her finger-nails, and the belief that it was
+best to let her father earn the balance of her price and fetch her, as
+agreed. Acting upon this theory, Pete had departed from Tim's Place at
+dawn, to await her arrival at his cabin, quite oblivious of the fact that
+his bird had flown.
+
+All that long day he waited in great expectancy. Toward evening he
+returned to Tim's Place to learn that Chip had not been seen since
+the previous night; that her father had also vanished without comment.
+That he was a party to this trick and deception, and, after securing his
+three hundred dollars, had taken her away, was Pete's conclusion,
+and he vowed a murderous revenge. He returned to his cabin, little
+realizing that twenty miles away poor Chip, faint with hunger and the
+terror of a vast wilderness, was fighting her way through bush, bramble,
+and swamp in a mad attempt to escape.
+
+Neither did Tim, while regretting the loss of his slave, know or care
+that one of his occasional visitors was now a mortal enemy of the other,
+and that a tragedy, dark and grewsome, would be its outcome.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+
+ "The size o' a toad is allus reg'lated by the size o' the
+ puddle."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+A week was spent by Martin and his party at the settlement, during which
+he acquired the title to township forty-four, range ten, which included
+the little lake near the hermit's hut, and made a foursquare-mile tract
+about it.
+
+Chip, thanks to Angie, secured a simple outfit of apparel and--surprising
+fact--evinced excellent taste in its selection, thereby proving that
+eight years of isolation and a gunny-sack and red-shirt garb had not
+obliterated the deepest instinct of woman.
+
+To Levi, Martin's woodwise helper, was left the selection of fittings
+for the new camp. A couple of husky Canucks were engaged to bring them in
+in a bateau, and then the party started on its return.
+
+Only one incident of importance occurred during the wait at this
+village known as Grindstone. Angie and Chip had just left the only
+store there, in front of which a group of log-drivers had congregated,
+when Angie, glancing back, saw that one of the group was following
+them. She quickened her pace, and so did he, until just as they turned
+into a side street, he passed them, halted, and turned about.
+
+"Wal, I'm damned if 'tain't Chip, an' dressed like a leddy," he
+exclaimed, as they drew near.
+
+"Hullo, Chip," he added, as they passed, "when did you strike luck?"
+
+Chip made no response and he muttered again, "Wal, I'm damned, jest
+like a leddy!"
+
+It was annoying, especially to Angie, and neither of the two realized
+how soon this blunt log-driver's discovery would reach Tim's Place.
+
+And now, leaving the bateau to follow, the party started once more on
+their journey into the wilderness. No sight or sign of pursuit from the
+half-breed had been thus far observed. A few idle lumbermen in the
+village--the only visible connection between the vast forest and a
+busy world--were little thought of, as their canoes crept slowly up
+the narrowing river and gave no hint of interference from this low
+brute to any one except Levi.
+
+He, however, seldom speaking, but ever acting, kept watch and ward
+continually. At every bend of the stream his eyes were alert to catch
+the first sight of a down-coming canoe in time to conceal Chip, as
+he decided must be done. When night camps were made, a site at the
+head of the lagoon or up some tributary stream was selected, and while
+not even hinting his reason for this, he felt it wise. As they drew
+near to Tim's Place, it began to occur to Martin that Chip's presence
+had best be concealed until that point was passed. He also desired
+to learn the situation there. He had always halted at this clearing in
+all his up-river journeys, so far, usually to buy pork and potatoes, and
+he now intended to do so again. He also felt it imperative to conceal
+Chip in Ray's canoe, before they reached Tim's Place, and let Ray
+paddle slowly on while the halt was made. But Levi dissented.
+
+"'Tain't best," he said, "to let Tim know there's two canoes of
+us and one not stoppin'. It'll make him s'picious o' suthin, 'n'
+what he 'spects, Pete'll find out. I callate we'd best pass thar in
+the night, leave the wimmen above, 'n' you 'n' I go back 'n' git
+what we want."
+
+"But what about the Canucks following us with the bateau?" returned
+Martin. "They'll tell who is with us, won't they?"
+
+"They didn't see us start," answered Levi, "'n' can't swear wimmen
+came. We'll say we're alone, 'n' bein' so'll make it plausible,
+'n' you might say we're goin' to build a camp 'n' 'nother season
+fetch our wimmen in."
+
+"But how about our men, on the return trip, after finding we have women
+at the camp?" rejoined Martin. "They will be sure to tell all they know
+on the way back."
+
+"We've got to keep the wimmen shady, an' fool 'em," answered Levi.
+And so his plan was adopted.
+
+It was in the early hours of morning when the two canoes crept
+noiselessly past Tim's Place. The stars barely outlined the river's
+course, the frame dwelling, log cabin, and stump-dotted slope back of
+them. All the untidiness existent about this dwelling was hid in
+darkness, and only the faint sounds and odors betrayed these conditions.
+But every eye and ear in the two canoes was alert, paddles were dipped
+without sound, and Chip's heart was beating so loudly that it seemed
+to her Tim and all his family must be awakened. Her recent escape
+from this spot and all the reasons forcing it, the fear that both her
+father and the half-breed might even now be there, added dread; and
+not until a bend hid even the shadowy view of this plague spot did she
+breathe easier.
+
+"I was nigh skeered to death," she whispered to Ray when safety seemed
+assured, "an' if ever Pete finds I'm up whar the folks is goin',
+I'm a goner."
+
+"Oh, we'll take care of you," returned that boy, with the boundless
+confidence of youth; "my uncle can shoot as well as any one, and then
+Old Cy is up at the camp, and he's a wonder with a rifle. Why, I've
+seen him hit a crow a half-mile off!"
+
+Smoke was ascending from the chimney, and the rising sun was just visible
+when Martin and Levi returned to Tim's. Mike was out in an enclosure,
+milking; Tim was back of the house, preparing the pigs' breakfast. The
+pigs were squealing, and a group of unwashed children were watching
+operations, when Martin appeared. A pleasant "Good morning" from him
+and a gruff one from Tim was the introduction, and then that stolid
+pioneer started for the sty. Not even the unusual event of a caller
+could hinder him from the one duty he most enjoyed,--the care of his
+beloved swine.
+
+"You have some nice thrifty pigs," began Martin, when the pen was
+reached, desiring to placate Tim.
+
+"They are thot," he returned.
+
+"My guide and I are on our way into the woods, to build a camp,"
+continued Martin, anxious to have his errand over with, "and we halted
+to buy a few potatoes of you and some pork. I have a couple of men
+following with a bateau," he continued, after pausing for a reply
+which did not come; "they will be along in a day or two with most of
+our supplies; but I felt sure I could get some extra good pork of you
+and some choice potatoes."
+
+"You kin thot same," replied Tim, his demeanor obviously softening
+under this flattery, and so business relations were established.
+
+Martin had intended asking some cautious question regarding Chip or her
+father; but Tim's surly face, his unresponsive manner, and a mistrust
+of its wisdom prevented. He was blunt of speech, almost to the verge of
+insolence, and the arrival of Martin with all his polite words evoked
+not a vestige of welcome; and yet back of those keen gray eyes of his a
+deal of cunning might lurk, thought Martin.
+
+Two slovenly women peered out of back door and window while the interview
+was in progress. Mike came and looked on in silence; two of the
+oldest children were down by the canoe where Levi waited; the rest,
+open-eyed and astonished, seemed likely to be trodden on by some one
+each moment. When the stores were secured and paid for, and Martin
+had pushed off with Levi, he realized something of the life Chip must
+have led there.
+
+He had intended not only to obtain potatoes, but some information of
+value. He obtained the goods, paying a thrifty price, also a good bit
+of cold shoulder, and that was all.
+
+But Levi, shrewd woodsman that he was, fared better.
+
+"I larned Chip's gone off with old McGuire," he asserted with a quiet
+smile when they were well away, "an' that Pete's swearin' murder agin
+him."
+
+"And how?" responded Martin, in astonishment. "I felt that silence
+was golden with that surly chap, and didn't ask a question."
+
+"I'm glad," rejoined Levi. "I wanted to tell you not to, and I've
+larned all we want. Children are easy to pump, an' I did it 'thout
+wakin' a hint o' 'spicion. Tim's folks all believe Chip's gone
+with her dad. Pete thinks so, an' is watchin' for him with a gun, I
+'spect, an' if so, the sooner they meet, the better."
+
+It was gratifying news to Martin, and when the other canoe was reached,
+the two again pushed on, with Martin, at least, feeling that the ways
+of Fate might prove acceptable.
+
+Three days more were consumed in reaching the lake now owned by him, for
+the river was low, carries had to be made around two rapids, and when at
+last the sequestered, forest-bordered sheet of water was being crossed,
+Martin wished some titanic hand might raise an impassable barrier about
+his possessions.
+
+Old Cy's joy at their return was almost hilarious. To a man long past
+the spasmodic exuberance of youth, loving nature and the wild as few do,
+the six months here with the misanthropic old hermit, then a month of
+more cheerful companionship, followed by the departure of Martin and
+Angie, made this forest home-coming doubly welcome.
+
+But Chip's appearance, and the somewhat thrilling episode of her escape
+from Tim's Place and her rescue, astonished him. Like all old men
+who are childless, a young girl and her troubles touched a responsive
+chord in his heart, and on the instant Chip's unfortunate condition
+found sympathy. Her bluntly told story, with all its details, held him
+spellbound. He laughed over her description of spites, and when she
+seemed hurt at this seeming levity, he assured her that spites were a
+reality in the woods--he had seen hundreds of them. It was not long ere
+he had won her confidence and good-will, as he had Ray's, and then he
+took Martin aside.
+
+"That gal's chaser's bin here 'bout a week ago," he said, "an' the
+worst-lookin' cuss I ever seen. I know from his description 'twas
+him. He kept quizzin' me ez to how long we'd been here, if I knew
+McGuire, or had seen him lately, until I got sorter riled 'n' began
+to string him. I told him finally that I'd been foolin' all 'long;
+that McGuire was a friend o' mine; that he'd been here a day or two
+afore, borrowed some money 'n' lit out fer Canada, knowin' there
+was a bad man arter him. Then this one-eyed gazoo got mad, real mad,
+'n' said things, an' then he cleared out."
+
+When Martin explained the situation, as he now did, Old Cy chuckled.
+
+"'Tain't often one shoots in the dark 'n' makes a bull's eye," he
+said.
+
+"I think you and I had better keep mum about this half-breed's call,"
+Martin added quietly, "and if Angie mentions it, you needn't say that
+you know who he was. It will only make my wife and the girl nervous."
+
+The two tents were now pitched at the head of a cove, some rods away from
+the hermit's hut, and well out of sight from the landing, and to these
+both Angie and Chip were assured they must flee as soon as the expected
+bateau entered the lake, and remain secluded until it had departed.
+
+In a way, it was a ticklish situation. All knowledge that this waif
+was with Martin's party must be kept from Tim's Place and this
+half-breed, or she wouldn't be safe an hour; and until the Canucks
+had come and gone, she must be kept hidden. Another and quite a serious
+annoyance to Martin was the fact that he had counted on these two men
+as helpers in cutting and hauling logs for this new camp. Only man-power
+was available, and to move logs a foot in diameter and twenty feet
+long, in midsummer, was no easy task; but Levi, more experienced in
+camp-building, made light of it.
+
+"We'll cut the logs we need, clus to the lake," he said, "float 'em
+'round, 'n' roll 'em up on skids. It's easy 'nough, 'n' we don't
+need them Canuckers round a minit."
+
+It was four days of keen suspense to Chip before they appeared. Neither
+she nor Angie left the closed tent while they remained over night, or
+until they had been gone many hours, and then every one felt easier.
+
+The ringing sound of axes now began to echo over the rippled lake, logs
+were towed across with canoes, a cellar under the new cabin site was
+excavated, and home-building in the wilderness went merrily on.
+
+While the men worked, Angie and Chip were not idle. Not only did they
+have meals to prepare over a rude outdoor fireplace, but they gathered
+grass and moss for beds, wove a hammock and rustic chair seats out of
+sedge grass, and countless other useful aids.
+
+Chip was especially helpful and more grateful than a dog for any and all
+consideration. Not a step that she could take or a bit of work that she
+could do was left to Angie; her interest and do-all-she-could desire
+never flagged, and from early morn until the supper dishes were washed
+and wiped, Chip was busy.
+
+But Martin, and especially Levi, had other causes for worry than those
+which camp-building entailed. The fact that this "Pernicious Pete," as
+Angie had once called him, would soon learn of their presence here,
+and hating all law-abiding people, as such forest brigands always do,
+would naturally seek to injure them, was one cause. Then, there were
+so many ways by which he could do harm. A fire started at one corner
+of the hut at midnight, the same Indian-like malice applied to their
+two tents, the stealing of their canoes or the gashing of them with a
+hunting-knife, and countless other methods of venting spite, presented
+themselves. In a way, they were helpless against such a night-prowling
+enemy. Over one hundred miles separated them from civilization and all
+assistance; an impassable wilderness lay between. The stream and their
+canoes were the only means of egress. These valuable craft were left
+out of sight and sound each night, on the lake shore, and so their
+vulnerability on all sides was manifest.
+
+Then, Chip's presence was an added danger. If once this brute found that
+she was here, there was no limit to what he would do to secure her and
+take revenge. They had smuggled her past Tim's Place, but concealment
+here was impossible; if ever this half-breed returned, she would be
+discovered, and then what?
+
+And so by day, while Martin and Levi were busy with hut-building, or
+beside the evening camp-fire when Ray picked his banjo and Chip watched
+him with admiring glances, these two guardians had eyes and ears ever
+alert for this expected enemy.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+
+ "It allus makes me coltish to see two young folks a-weavin'
+ the thread o' affection."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+There were three people at Birch Camp,--as Angie had christened
+it,--namely, herself, Ray, and Chip, who did not share Martin's
+suspicion of danger. A firm belief that a woman's aid in such a
+complication was of no value, coupled with a desire to save her
+anxiety, had kept his lips closed as to the situation.
+
+Life here at all hours soon settled itself into a certain daily
+routine of work, amusement, and, on Chip's part, of study. True to
+her philanthropic sense of duty toward this waif, Angie had at once
+set about her much-needed education. A reading and spelling book
+suitable for a child of eight had been secured at the settlement, and
+now "lessons" occupied a few hours of each day.
+
+It was only a beginning, of course, and yet with constant reminders
+as to pronunciation, this was all that Angie could do. The idioms of
+Tim's Place, with all its profanity, still adhered to Chip's speech.
+This latter, especially, would now and then crop out in spite of all
+admonitions; and so Angie found that her pupil made slow progress.
+
+There was also another reason for this. Chip was afraid of her, and oft
+reproved for her lapses in speech, soon ceased all unnecessary talk when
+with Angie.
+
+But with Ray it was different. He was near her own age, the companionship
+of youth was theirs, and with him Chip's speech was ready enough. This,
+of course, answered all the purposes of benefit by assimilation, and
+so Angie was well satisfied that they should be together. Beyond that
+she had no thought that love might accrue from this association.
+
+Chip, while fair of face and form, and at a sentimental age, was so crude
+of speech, so grossly ignorant, and so allied to the ways and manners of
+Tim's Place, that, according to Angie's reasoning, Ray's feelings
+were safe enough. He was well bred and refined, a happy, natural boy now
+verging upon manhood. In Greenvale he had never shown much interest in
+girls' society, and while he now showed a playmate enjoyment of Chip's
+company, that was all that was likely to happen.
+
+But the winged god wots not of speech or manners. A youth of eighteen and
+a maid of sixteen are the same the world over, and so out of sight of
+Angie, and unsuspected by her, the by-play of heart-interest went on.
+
+And what a glorious golden summer opportunity these two had!
+
+Back of the camp and tending northwest to southeast was a low ridge of
+outcropping slate, bare in spots--a hog-back, in wilderness phrase.
+Beyond this lay a mile-long "blow-down," where a tornado had levelled
+the tall timber. A fire, sweeping this when dry, left a criss-cross
+confusion of charred logs, blueberry bushes had followed fast, and now
+those luscious berries were ripening in limitless profusion. Every fair
+day Ray and Chip came here to pick, to eat, to hear the birds sing, to
+gather flowers and be happy.
+
+They watched the rippled lake with now and then a deer upon its shores,
+from this ridge; they climbed up or down it, hand in hand; they fished in
+the lake or canoed about it, time and again; and many a summer evening,
+when the moon served, Chip handled the paddle, while Ray picked his
+banjo and sang his darky songs all around this placid sheet of water.
+
+And what a wondrous charm this combination of moonlight on the lake and
+love songs softened and made tender by the still water held for Chip! As
+those melodies had done on that first evening beside the camp-fire, so
+now they filled her soul with a strange, new-born, and wonderful sense of
+joy and gladness.
+
+The black forest enclosing them now was sombre and silent. Spites still
+lurked in its depths and doubtless were watching; but a protector was
+near, his arm was strong; back at the landing were kind friends, and the
+undulating path of silvered light, the round, smiling orb above, the
+twinkling stars, and this matchless music became a new wonder-world to
+her.
+
+Her eyes glistened and grew tender with pathos. She had no more idea than
+a child why she was happy. Each day sped by on wings of wind, each hour,
+with her one best companion, the most joyful, and so, day by day, poor
+Chip learned the sad lesson of loving.
+
+But never a word or hint of this fell from her lips. Ray was so far above
+her and such a young hero, that she, a homeless outcast, tainted by the
+filth and service of Tim's Place, could only look to him as she did
+to the moon.
+
+They laughed and exchanged histories. Ofttimes he reproved her speech.
+They fished, picked berries, and worked together like two big children,
+and only her wistful eyes told the other why they were wistful.
+
+Martin, busy at camp-building and watching ever for an enemy's coming,
+saw it not. Angie was as obtuse; the old hermit, misanthropic and verging
+into dotage, was certainly oblivious, and so no ripples of interest
+disturbed these workers.
+
+Such conditions were as sunshine to flowers in aiding the two young
+lovers, so this forest idyl matured rapidly. Chip, perhaps more
+imaginative than Ray, since most of her education had been the weird
+superstition of Old Tomah, felt most of its emotional force, though
+unconscious of the reason.
+
+"I dunno why I feel so upset all the time lately," she said one
+afternoon to Ray as, returning from the berry field, they halted on
+top of the ridge to scan the lake below. "Some o' the time I feel so
+happy I want to sing, 'n' then I feel jes' t'other way, 'n'
+like cryin'. When the good spell is on, everything looks so purty,
+'n' when I come on to a bunch o' posies, then I feel I must go right
+down on my knees 'n' kiss 'em. When I was at Tim's Place, I never
+thought about anything 'cept to get my work done 'n' keep from
+gettin' cussed 'n' licked. I was scart, too, most o' the time,
+'n' kept feelin' suthin awful was goin' to happen to me. Now that's
+'most gone, but I feel a heartache in place on't. I allus hev a spell
+o' feelin' so every mornin' when I wake up 'n' hear the birds
+singin'. They 'fect me so that I'm near cryin' 'fore I git up. You
+'n' Mis' Frisbie 'n' everybody's been so good to me, I guess it's
+made me silly. Then thar's 'nother thing worries me, an' that's
+goin' to the settlement whar you folks is from. I feel I kin sorter earn
+my keepin' here, but I s'pose I can't thar, 'n' that bothers me.
+If only you 'n' all the rest was goin' to stay here all the time
+'n' I could work some, same as I do now, an' be with you odd spells
+'n' evenin's, I'd be so happy. It 'ud be jest like the spot Old
+Tomah said we're goin' to when we die. He used to tell how 'twas
+summer thar all the time, with game plenty, berries ripe, flowers
+growin', too, all the year 'round, 'n' birds singin'. He believed
+thar was two places somewhar: one for white folks and one fer Injuns;
+that when we died we turned into spites, stayed 'round till we got
+revenge for everything bad done us, or got a chance to pay up what good
+we owed for."
+
+"I don't know where we go to when we quit this world, and neither
+does anybody else, I believe," Ray answered philosophically, and
+scarce understanding Chip's mood. "I believe, as Old Cy does, that
+the time to be happy is when we are young and can be; that when we
+are ready to leave this world is time enough for another one. As to your
+worrying about your going to Greenvale," he added confidently, and
+encircling Chip's waist with one arm, "why, you've got me to look
+out for you, and then Angie won't begrudge you your keep, so don't
+think about that." And then this young optimist, quite content with
+what the gods had provided in this maid of sweet lip and appealing eye,
+assured her she had everything to make her happy, including himself for
+companion; that all her moody spells were merely memories of Tim's
+Place, best forgotten, and much more of equally tender and silly import.
+
+Not for one instant did he realize the growing independence and
+self-reliance of this wilderness waif, or how the first feeling that
+she was a burden upon these kind people would chafe and vex her defiant
+nature, until she would scorn even love, to escape it.
+
+Just now the tender impulse of first love was all Ray felt or
+considered. This girl of sweet sixteen and utter confidence in him was
+so enthralling in spite of her crude speech and lack of education, her
+kisses were so much his to take whenever chance offered, and himself
+such a young hero in her sight, that he thought of naught else.
+
+In this, or at least so far as his reasoning went, they were like two
+grown-up children entering a new world--the enchanted garden of love. Or
+like two souls merged into one in impulse, yet in no wise conscious why
+or for what all-wise purpose.
+
+For them alone the sun shone, birds sang, leaves rustled, flowers
+bloomed, and the blue lake rippled. For them alone was all this charming
+chance given, with all that made it entrancing. For them alone was life,
+love, and lips that met in ecstasy.
+
+Oh, wondrous beatitude! Oh, heaven-born joy! Oh, divine illusion that
+builds the world anew, and building thus, believes its secret safe!
+
+But Old Cy, wise old observer of all things human, from the natural
+attraction of two children to the philosophy of content, saw and
+understood.
+
+Not for worlds would he hint this to Angie or Martin. Full well he knew
+how soon this "weavin' o' the threads o' affection," would be
+frowned upon by them; but he loved children as few men do.
+
+This summer-day budding of romance would end in a few weeks, these two
+were happy now--let them remain so, and perhaps in Chip's case it might
+prove the one best incentive to her own improvement.
+
+And now as he watched them day by day, came another feeling. Homeless all
+his life so far, and for many years a wanderer, these two had awakened
+the home-building impulse in his. He could not have a home himself, he
+could only help them to one in the future, and to that end and purpose
+he now bent his thought.
+
+The weeks there with Ray had opened Old Cy's heart to him. Even sooner,
+and with greater force, had Chip's helpless condition made the same
+appeal, and as he watched her wistful eyes and willing ways, in spite
+of her speech and in spite of her origin, he saw in her the making of a
+good wife and mother. Her heritage, as he now guessed, was of the worst,
+her education was yet to be obtained; but for all that, a girl--no, a
+child--of sixteen who would dare sixty miles of wilderness alone to save
+herself from a shameful fate, was of the metal and fibre to win, and
+more than that, deserved the best that life afforded.
+
+How he could at present aid her, he saw not. A few years of help and time
+to study must be given her, and as Old Cy realized how much must be done
+for her and how uncertain it was whether Angie would find time, or be
+willing to do it, then and there he determined to share that duty with
+her.
+
+It was midsummer when Martin and his party returned to the lake with
+Chip. In two weeks the new log cabin--a large one, divided into three
+compartments--was erected and ready for occupation, and so convenient
+and picturesque a wildwood dwelling was it that a brief description may
+be tolerated.
+
+All log cabins are much alike--a square enclosure of unhewn logs thatched
+with saplings and chinked with mud and moss. A low door of boards or
+split poles is the usual entrance, with one small window for light; its
+floor may be of small split logs or mother earth, and at best it is a
+cramped, cheerless hovel.
+
+But Martin's was a more pretentious creation. Its location, well out on
+the birch-clad point, back of which stood the hermit's hut, commanded a
+view of the lake. A group of tall-stemmed spruce, amid which it stood,
+gave shade, yet allowed observation. It was of oblong shape, with a
+wide piazza of white birch poles and roof of same; two four-pane windows
+to each room gave ample light; a small Franklin stove had been brought
+for the sitting room, and a cook stove occupied the "lean-to" cook
+room back of the main cabin. Beds, chairs, and benches were fashioned
+from the plentiful white birch stems, and floor and doors were of planed
+boards.
+
+It was but a crude structure, compared to even the humblest of civilized
+dwellings; and yet with all its fittings conveyed into this wilderness in
+one bateau, and with only axes, a saw, and hammer for tools, as was
+the case, it was a marvel.
+
+Working as all the men had done from dawn until dark to complete this
+cabin, no recreation had been taken by any one except Ray and Chip; and
+now Martin, a keen sportsman, felt that his turn had come. The trout were
+rising night and morn all over the lake, partridges so tame that they
+would scarce fly were as plenty as sparrows, a half-dozen deer could be
+seen any time along the lake shore--in fact, one had already furnished
+them venison--and so Martin now anticipated some relaxation and sport.
+
+But Fate willed otherwise.
+
+One of Old Cy's first and most far-sighted bits of work, after being
+left with the hermit the previous autumn, had been the erection of an
+ice-house out of large saplings. It stood at the foot of a high bank
+on the north of the knoll and close to the lake, and here, out of the
+sunshine, yet handy to fill, stood his creation. Its double walls of
+poles were stuffed with moss, its roof chinked with blue clay, a sliding
+door gave ingress, and even now, with summer almost gone, an ample supply
+of ice remained in it.
+
+In the division of duties among these campers, Levi usually started the
+morning fire while Old Cy visited the ice-house for anything needed. One
+morning after the new cabin was completed, he came here as usual.
+
+A fine string of trout caught by Martin and Ray the day before were
+hanging in this ice-house, and securing what was needed, Old Cy closed
+the door and turned away. As usual with him, he glanced up and down
+the narrow beach to see if a deer had wandered along there that morning,
+and in doing so he now saw, close to the water's edge and distinctly
+outlined in the damp sand, the print of a moccasined foot.
+
+It was of extra large size, and as Old Cy bent over it, he saw it had
+recently been made. Glancing along toward the head of this cove, he saw
+more tracks, and two rods away, the sharp furrow of a canoe prow in the
+sand.
+
+"It's that pesky half-breed, sure's a gun," he muttered, stooping
+over the track, "fer a good bit o' his legs was turned up to walk on,
+and he wore moccasins t'other day."
+
+Curious now, and somewhat startled, he looked along where the narrow
+beach curved out and around to the landing, and saw the tracks led that
+way. Then picking his way so as not to obscure them, he followed until
+not three rods from the new cabin they left the beach and were plainly
+visible behind a couple of spruces, in the soft carpet of needles, which
+was crushed for a small space, where some one had stood.
+
+Returning to camp, Old Cy motioned to Levi and Martin. All three returned
+to the ice-house, looked where the canoe had cut its furrow, took up
+the trail to its ending beside the two trees, and then glanced into one
+another's eyes with serious, sobered, troubled faces.
+
+And well they might; for the evening previous they had all been grouped
+upon the piazza of this new cabin until late, while scarce three rods
+away a spying enemy, presumably this half-breed, had stood and watched
+them.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+
+ "Blessed be them that 'spects nothin', they won't git
+ fooled."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Christmas Cove was never disturbed by aught except small boats, and few
+of them. It was a long, crescent-shaped arm of the sea, parallel to the
+ocean, and separated from it by a spruce-clad cliff; its placid surface
+scarcely more than rippled or undulated outside, and so shallow was it
+that each ebb tide left its sandy bottom bare.
+
+A stream found devious way along this crescent when the outflow left it
+bare. Mottled minnows, schools of white and green smelts, crabs of all
+sorts and sizes, swam and sported up and down this broad, shallow brook
+while the tide was away, and few of human kind ever watched them.
+
+Alongside this cove and inward a dozen or more brown houses and a few
+white ones faced its curving shore, a broad street with many elms and
+ruts between which the grass grew separated the houses and cove, and a
+small white church with a gilt fish for weather-vane on its steeple stood
+midway of these dwellings.
+
+A low range of green hills to the northward of this village shut off
+the wintry winds, at the upper end of the street a stream from a cleft
+in the hills crossed it, and here stood a mill, its roof green with
+moss, its clapboards brown and whitened with mill dust, the log dam
+above it half obscured by willows. To the right of this a short flume
+was entirely hidden by alders, and above the dam lay a pond, entirely
+covered with green lily-pads, and dotted by white blossoms all summer.
+
+Beside the mill and nearer the roadway stood an ancient dwelling,
+also moss-coated; two giant elms shaded it, and the entire impression
+conveyed by the mill's drowsy rumble and splashing wheel on a hot
+August afternoon was--find a shady spot and take a nap.
+
+These were the summer conditions existent at Christmas Cove. The winter
+ones may be left undescribed.
+
+Just beyond where the mill stream crossed the road the highway divided,
+one fork following the trend of these hills to where a railroad crossed
+them, ten miles away; the other, running close to the upper and marshy
+end of Christmas Cove to where a spile bridge connected the two uplands
+and thence over to another village called Bayport. This, the larger
+of the two, had once contained a shipyard, now idle, a score of its
+dwellings were vacant, and the two hundred or more of its population
+existed by farming, fishing, lobster-catching, and a small factory
+devoted to the production of sardines duly labelled with a French name.
+
+Christmas Cove, however, was more respectable, with its hundred
+residents, mostly retired sea captains with an income, and no litter of
+lobster pots or nets to obstruct its one long, narrow wharf which
+reached out to deep water at the mouth of the cove. A few small pleasure
+craft were tethered to the wharf, and gardens, cows, and poultry were
+merely diversions here.
+
+One other income it had, however, which was considered less plebeian than
+Bayport's--the money a score of city-bred people left each summer.
+
+Keeping boarders was all right at Christmas Cove. It did not smack of
+trade and commerce. No smoke of engines, no dust of coal, no noise of
+hammer and saw, were parts of it. No odor from a canning factory, no
+wrack of dismantled boats, tarred nets, and broken traps, was connected
+with it. The dwellings at Christmas Cove were roomy, few children were
+now a part of its population--scarce enough to fill the one schoolhouse
+presided over by Mr. Bell, and so each season a few dozen of the uneasy
+horde, always anxious to leave home and board somewhere, came here.
+
+A daily stage line--an ancient carryall drawn by one sleepy
+horse--connected this village with the railroad. Its church bell called
+the faithful to Thursday evening prayer-meeting and Sunday service with
+unfailing regularity. Its one general store and post-office combined, was
+the evening rendezvous for a score of sea captains--grizzled hulks who
+had sailed into safe harbor here at last, and who watched the
+weather, discussed the visitors, and swapped yarns year in and year out.
+
+Here also, many years before, when Bayport was more prosperous, the
+threads of a romance had been woven, and two brothers, Judson and Cyrus
+Walker, born at Bayport, and sailing out of it, had paid court to two
+sisters, Abigail and Amanda Grey, here at Christmas Cove.
+
+It was, as such sailors' courtships ever are, intermittent. Six, eight,
+and sometimes twelve months marked its interims, until finally only
+one brother, Judson, returned to announce a shipwreck in mid-ocean,
+a separation of their crew in two boats, and Abbie Grey, whom Cyrus
+had smiled upon, was left to wait and watch and hope.
+
+In time, also, Judson and "Mandy" joined fortunes. In time, and after
+many voyages, during which he vainly tried to find some tidings of his
+brother, Judson, now Captain Walker, gave up the sea, and with wife
+and two young sons retired inland, purchased an abandoned farm in a
+sequestered valley, and began another life.
+
+Another mating had also occurred at Christmas Cove, for Abbie, the other
+sister and the sweetheart of Cyrus, giving him up for lost, finally
+consented to share the ancestral home of Captain Bemis--once a sailor and
+now the miller, who had exchanged the sea's perils for that peaceful
+vocation.
+
+His father had ground grist here for a lifetime, and passed on. His
+mother still survived when Abbie Grey, once the belle of the village and
+a boarding-school graduate, married Captain Bemis, twice her age, and
+her old-time romance became only a memory.
+
+No children came to fill this great, cheerless house with laughter. The
+old mother was laid away in due time, Abbie, once a handsome girl, grew
+portly and became Aunt Abbie to neighboring children, and finally all
+the village; and disappointed as she had cause to be, she turned her
+thoughts to good works and religion.
+
+But Cyrus, adrift in an open boat with half the crew, was finally
+rescued by a whaler, after starvation had left him almost an imbecile.
+A four-year, compulsory voyage to southern seas followed; then
+another wreck and a year on an island, and then a chance meeting with
+another sailor from Bayport, and from whom he learned two unpleasant
+facts,--first that his sweetheart, Abbie Grey, was married; and secondly
+that his brother had been lost at sea.
+
+One was true, of course, and somewhat disheartening to Cyrus; the
+other, as discomforting, but not true. It was simply a case of mistaken
+identity, his own disappearance being confounded with that of his brother.
+
+This story served the purpose of so affecting Cyrus that he resolved
+never to set foot in either Christmas Cove or Bayport, and also never
+to allow any one there to know that he was alive.
+
+From now on, also, he deserted the sea and became a wanderer. He first
+lived in the wilderness, where as trapper and hunter and lumberman he
+learned the woodsman's habits; and when mid-life was reached, having
+become sceptical of all things, he finally settled down at Greenvale.
+Here, loving children and the woods, fields, brooks, and Nature more than
+raiment, religion, and respectability, he became a village nondescript,
+a social outcast, and--Old Cy Walker.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+
+ "The poor 'n' pious kin callate the crumbs fallin' from the
+ rich man's table'll be few 'n' skimpy."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+An enemy we can meet in the open need not appall us; but an enemy who
+creeps up to us by day, or still worse by night, in a vast wilderness,
+becomes a panther and an Indian combined.
+
+Such a one had spied upon Martin's camp that night, and all the tales
+of this half-breed's cunning and fierce nature, told by Levi, were now
+recalled. Like a human brute whose fangs were tobacco-stained, whose one
+evil eye glared at them out of darkness, the half-breed had now become a
+creeping, crawling beast, impossible to trail, yet certain to bide his
+time, seize Chip, or avenge her loss upon her protectors.
+
+Now another complication arose as Martin, Old Cy, and Levi left the
+spot where this enemy had watched them--what to do about Angie and the
+girl? From the first warning from Levi that they were in danger from
+the half-breed, Martin had avoided all hint of it to them. Now they
+must be told, and all peace of mind at once destroyed. Concealment was
+no longer possible, however, and when Angie was told, her face paled. Her
+first intuition, and as the sequel proved, a wise one, was for them
+to at once pack up and quit the woods as speedily as possible.
+
+But Martin was of different fibre. To run away like this was cowardly,
+and besides he cherished only contempt for a wretch who had played the
+role of this fellow, and was so vile of instinct. With no desire to
+do wrong, he yet felt that if sufficient provocation and the need of
+self-defence arose, the earth, and especially this wilderness, would be
+well rid of such a despicable creature.
+
+Then Levi's advice carried weight.
+
+"We ain't goin' to 'scape him," he said, "by startin' out o'
+the woods now. Most likely he's got his eye on us this minute. He
+knows every rod o' the way out whar we'd be likely to camp. He'd
+sure follow, an' if he didn't cut our canoes to pieces some night,
+he'd watch his chance 'n' grab the gal 'n' make off under cover
+o' darkness. We've got a sort o' human panther to figger on, an'
+shootin' under such conditions might mean killin' the gal. We've got
+to go out sometime, but I don't believe in turnin' tail fust go-off,
+'n' we may get a chance to wing the cuss, like ez not," and the
+glitter in Levi's eyes showed he would not hesitate to shoot this
+half-breed if the chance presented itself.
+
+Old Cy's opinion is also worth quoting:--"My notion is this hyena's a
+coward, 'n' like all sich'll never show himself by daylight. He knows
+we've got guns 'n' know how to use 'em. The camp's as good as a
+fort. One on us kin allus be on guard daytimes, an' when it's time
+to go out--wal, I think we ought to hev cunnin' 'nuff 'mongst us to
+gin one hyena the slip. Thar's one thing must be done, though, 'n'
+that is, keep the gal clus. 'Twon't do to let her go over the hog-back
+arter berries, or canoein' round the lake no more."
+
+And now began a state of semi-siege at Birch Camp.
+
+Chip was kept an almost prisoner, hardly ever permitted out of
+Angie's sight. One of the men, always with rifle handy, remained on
+guard--usually Old Cy, and for a few nights he lay in ambush near the
+shore, to see if perchance this enemy would steal up again.
+
+With all these precautions against surprise, came a certain feeling of
+defiance in Martin. With Ray for companion he went fishing once more,
+and with Levi as pilot he cruised about for game.
+
+Only a few more weeks of his outing remained, and on sober second
+thought, he didn't mean to let this sneaking enemy spoil those.
+
+But Old Cy never relaxed his vigil. This waif of the wilderness and her
+pitiful position appealed to him even more than to Angie, and true to
+the nature that had made all Greenvale's children love him, so now did
+Chip find him a kind and protecting father.
+
+With rifle always with him, he took her canoeing and fishing; sometimes
+Angie joined them, and so life at Birch Camp became pleasant once more.
+
+A week or more of happiness was passed, with no sight or sign of their
+enemy, and then one morning when Old Cy had journeyed over to the
+ice-house, he glanced across the lake to a narrow valley through which a
+stream known as Beaver Brook reached the lake, and far up this vale,
+rising above the dense woods, was a faint column of smoke.
+
+The morning was damp, cloudy, and still--conditions suitable for
+smoke-rising, and yet so faint and distant was this that none but
+the keen, observant eyes of a woodsman would have noticed it. Yet there
+it was, a thin white pillar, clearly outlined against the dark green
+of the foliage.
+
+Old Cy hurried back, motioned to Levi, and the two watched it from the
+front of the camp. Martin soon joined them, then Angie and Chip, and all
+stood and studied this smoke sign. It was almost ludicrous, and yet not;
+for at its foot must be a fire, and beside it, doubtless, the half-breed.
+
+"Can you locate it?" queried Martin of his guide, as the delicate
+column of white slowly faded.
+
+"It's purty well up the brook," Levi answered; "thar's a sort of
+Rocky Dundar thar, 'n' probably a cave. I callate if it's him, he's
+s'pected a storm, 'n' so sneaked to cover."
+
+And now, as if to prove this, a few drops of rain began to patter on
+the motionless lake; thicker, faster they came, and as the little group
+hurried to shelter, a torrent, almost, descended. For weeks not a drop of
+rain had fallen here. Each morn the sun had risen in undimmed splendor,
+to vanish at night, a ball of glorious red.
+
+But now a change had come. Wind followed the rain, and all that day the
+storm raged and roared through the dense forest about. The lake was
+white with driving scud, the cabin rocked, trees creaked, and outdoor
+life was impossible. When night came, it seemed a thousand demons were
+wailing, moaning, and screeching in the forest, and as the little party
+now grouped around the open stove in the new cabin watched it, the fire
+rose and fell in unison with the blasts.
+
+"It's the spites," whispered Chip to Ray. "They allus act that way
+when it's stormin'."
+
+The next day the gale began to lessen, and by night the moon, now half
+full, peeped out of the scurrying clouds. At bedtime it was smiling
+serenely, well down toward the tree-tops, and Chip's spites had ceased
+their wailing.
+
+Fortunately, however, Martin's quest for game had been successful. A
+saddle of venison, a dozen or more partridges, and two goodly strings of
+trout hung in cold storage.
+
+But utter and almost speechless astonishment awaited Old Cy at the
+ice-house when he visited it the next morning, for the venison was
+gone, not a bird remained, and one of the two strings of trout had
+vanished.
+
+In front, on the sand, was the same tell-tale moccasin tracks.
+
+"Wal, by the Great Horn Spoon! if that cuss hain't swiped the hull
+business," Old Cy ejaculated, as he looked in and then at the tracks.
+"Crossed over last night," he added, noting where a canoe had cut its
+furrow, "an' steered plumb for my ice-house! The varmint!"
+
+But Martin was angry, thoroughly angry, at the audacious insolence of
+the theft, and the thought that just now this sneaking half-breed was
+doubtless enjoying grilled venison and roast partridge in some secure
+shelter. It also opened his eyes to the fact that this chap would hang
+about, watching his chance, until they started out of the wilderness, and
+then capture the girl if he could. For a little while Martin pondered
+over the situation and then announced his plans.
+
+"There's law, and officers to execute it," he said, "if a sufficient
+reward be offered; and to-morrow you and I, Levi, will start for the
+settlement and fetch a couple in. I'll gladly give five hundred dollars
+to land this sneak behind the bars. If he can't be caught, we can at
+least have two officers to guard us going out."
+
+All that day he and Levi spent in hunting. Another deer was captured,
+more birds secured, and when evening came plans to meet the situation
+were discussed.
+
+"You or Ray must remain on guard daytimes near the cabin," Martin said
+to Old Cy. "My wife and Chip had better keep in it, or near it most of
+the time; and both of you must sleep there nights. One or the other can
+fish or hunt, as needed. We must be gone a week or more, even if we have
+good luck; but fetching the officers here is the best plan now."
+
+Levi was up early the next morning, and had the best canoe packed for
+a hurry trip ere breakfast was ready. No tent was to be taken, only
+blankets, a rifle, a bag of the simplest cooking utensils, pork, bread,
+and coffee. A modest outfit--barely enough to sustain life, yet all a
+woodsman carries when a long canoe journey with many carries must be
+taken.
+
+There were sober faces at the landing when Martin was ready to
+start,--Chip most sober of all,--for now she realized as never before
+how serious a burden she had become.
+
+No time was wasted in good-bys. Martin grasped the bow paddle, and with
+"Old Faithful" Levi wielding the stern one, they soon crossed the lake
+and vanished at its outlet.
+
+And now, also, for the first time, Angie realized how much the
+presence of these two strong and resourceful men meant to her. All
+that day she and Chip clung to the cabin, while Old Cy, a long, lanky
+Leatherstocking, patrolled the premises, rifle in hand.
+
+"We hain't a mite o' cause to worry," he said, when nightfall drew
+near. "That pesky varmint's a coward, 'n' knows guns are plenty
+here, an' we folks handy in usin' 'em. I've rigged a fish line to
+the ice-house door, so it'll rattle some tinware in the cabin if he
+meddles it again. I sleep with one eye 'n' both ears open, an' if he
+comes prowlin' round night-times, he'll hear bullets whizzin' an'
+think Fourth o' July's opened up arly."
+
+But for all his cheerful assurance, time passed slowly, and a sense of
+real danger oppressed Angie and Chip as well. Ray shared it also. He was
+not as yet hardened to the wilderness, and like all who are thus tender,
+its vast sombre solitude seemed ominous.
+
+Only the hermit, with his moonlike eyes and impassive ways, showed no
+sign of trouble. What this half-breed wanted, other than food, he seemed
+not to understand; and while he helped about the camp work and followed
+Old Cy like a dog, he was of no other aid.
+
+One, two, three days of watchful guard and evenings when even Old Cy's
+cheerful philosophy or Ray's banjo failed to dispel the gloom, and then,
+just as the sun was setting once again, a canoe with one occupant was
+seen to enter the lake and head for the landing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+
+ "The more I see o' the world, the better I like the
+ woods."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Martin's journey to the settlement was a rushing one. The first day
+they wielded paddles without rest, and aided by the current made
+rapid progress. Both carries were passed before sunset, a halt made
+for a supper of frizzled pork, coffee, and hard tack; then on again
+by moonlight, and not until wearied to the limit at almost midnight did
+they pause, and hiding themselves in the entrance to an old tote road,
+they slept the sleep of weariness.
+
+Tim's Place was sighted the next day, and now, at Levi's suggestion,
+Martin lay down in the canoe as they passed it, concealed beneath a
+blanket.
+
+"It's best to be keerful," Levi said, when proposing this; "I
+wouldn't trust Tim a minute. Most likely he's found out whar the
+gal is, an' knows what Pete's up to. The two are cahoots together,
+'n' if Tim saw you an' I both leavin', no tellin' what'd happen."
+
+The journey from here on was slower, as no current aided, and yet in
+three days and nights of paddling, Martin and Levi covered that
+hundred-mile journey and reached the settlement.
+
+A stage and rail journey, consuming one day and night more, enabled
+Martin to reach the man he wanted--a well-informed and fearless officer
+named Hersey, and then, securing an assistant and a warrant for one Pete
+Bolduc, on the charge of theft, the three returned to the settlement
+where Levi had waited.
+
+"I'm glad to get track of this half-breed," Hersey said on the way.
+"He has been the pal of the notorious McGuire for many years, and
+besides has been smuggling whiskey into lumber camps and slaughtering
+game out of season all the time. Like McGuire, he is hard to locate.
+No guide or lumberman dare betray him, and so it's a fruitless task to
+try to catch either. We have been after this McGuire for years. He
+killed one deputy and wounded another, as you may have heard. This
+Bolduc is a cat of the same color, but less courageous, I fancy, and
+yet as hard to catch. I think, for the sake of your guide," he added,
+"we'd better not enter the woods together. You two go on, saying
+nothing. My mate and I will say we are on a pleasure trip, and follow
+and overtake you in a few hours. This will protect your man, and evade
+suspicion. Even these people at the settlement are half-hearted in
+aiding an officer. Most of them are fearful of house or barn burning if
+they give any information to us, a few are in secret league with these
+outlaws; and so you see our position."
+
+Martin saw, and marvelled that any of the simple, honest dwellers at this
+small settlement, law-abiding as they seemed, would either aid or warn so
+red-handed a criminal as McGuire.
+
+That fear of consequences might influence them, was possible, and yet all
+the more reason for assisting the law in ridding the forest of two such
+criminals.
+
+But Martin, thorough sportsman that he was, and keen to all the world's
+affairs, understood but little of the conditions existent in the
+wilderness, or about the lives and morals of those who find a living thus.
+
+He knew, as all do, that a few thousand lumbermen entered each autumn,
+and, much to his regret, made steady inroads toward its despoilment. He
+knew, also, that these men included many of excellent habits--sober,
+industrious workers with families which they cheerfully supported, and
+that there were also many among them whose sole ambition was to earn a
+few hundred dollars in a season of hard work, that they might spend it
+in a few weeks, or even days, of drunken debauchery.
+
+He was well aware that a few wandering hunters and trappers plied their
+calling here, and many of a mixed occupation, guiding sportsmen like
+himself in season, were engaged in lumbering or farming between times.
+This mixed and transient population, he knew, were neither better nor
+worse than the average of such pioneers--good-natured and good-hearted,
+though somewhat lax in speech and morals.
+
+What he did not know, however, was that a few unscrupulous and
+disreputable men, half gamblers, half dive-keepers, followed these
+lumbermen into camp as ostensible hunters and trappers, but really
+gamblers, ready to turn a trick at cards, convoy a keg of whiskey in,
+or follow a moose on snow-shoes, kill and sell him, as occasion
+offered. Or that, when spring opened the streams, these same itinerant
+purveyors of vice spotted their possible victims, as a bunco man does a
+rural "good thing" visiting the metropolis, and when they reached town
+or city, steered them where harpies waited to share the spoil. A
+brief explanation of these facts were furnished to Martin by Warden
+Hersey, when, after overhauling him, the parties joined about one
+camp-fire.
+
+"We have," Hersey said, "in the case of this McGuire, a fair
+sample of the outcome liable to follow or attach to a man who makes a
+business of preying upon the vices and follies of the lumbering
+class. It is a sort of evolution in law-evasion and opportunity,
+encouraged and aided by the animosity which is sure to arise between the
+lumberman and us, whose duty it is to enforce the fish and game laws.
+These lumbermen, or a majority of them, feel and believe that the forest
+and all it contains is theirs by natural right; that no law forbidding
+them to obtain all the fish and game they can, is just; that such laws
+are enacted and accrue for the sole benefit of city sportsmen who,
+like yourself, come here for rest and recreation. It is all a wrong
+conclusion, as we know, and yet it exists. Now come these leeches
+like McGuire, who prey upon this hard-working class. Such as McGuire
+foster the prejudice and antagonism of the lumbermen in all ways
+possible, arguing that moose and deer are the natural perquisites of
+those who go into the woods for a livelihood, and belong to them as much
+as the trees which they have paid stumpage to cut. Also that we who come
+in to execute the laws are interlopers, who draw pay for the sole
+purpose of robbing them of their rights. Of course, we receive no welcome
+at a lumbering camp, and not one iota of information as to what is
+going on or where a law-breaker may be found. More than that, they will
+protect the leeches who fatten on them in every way possible, even
+after, as in McGuire's case, they become murderers and outlaws, with a
+price set upon their capture. And here comes in the factor of terrorism.
+A few of these lumbermen might give information from a desire to aid the
+law, or to obtain a reward, did they not know that to do so would expose
+them to the inevitable fate of all betrayers.
+
+"It is a community of interest, a sort of freemasonry that exists
+between these lumbermen and all who thrive upon their labors and
+hardships. Now this McGuire has preyed upon them for years, a notorious
+example of dive-keeper, gambler, smuggler, and pot-hunter. He is now in
+hiding somewhere in this wilderness, or, maybe, creeping up some
+stream with a canoe load of liquor bought in some Canadian town. He
+will meet and be welcomed by any lumber-cutting party just making camp
+next fall, sell them liquor at exorbitant prices, shoot and sell them
+venison, and when the snow is deep enough, he will follow and find
+moose yards, and do a wholesale slaughter act, and not satisfied with
+this, will absorb any and all money these lumbermen have left by card
+games. And yet the moment I enter the woods to arrest him, their camps
+are closed to me, and word of my coming is passed along to others. The
+guides even, who are at the beck and call of you sportsmen, are,
+many of them, in secret sympathy with such as McGuire; or if not, dare
+not give any clews, and many a wild-goose chase has resulted from
+following their supposed information. Some of the wisest among them are
+beginning to realize that they must cooperate with us in the protection
+of fish and game, or their occupation will be gone. But even those
+sensible fellows--and they are increasing--hate to become informer,
+fearing consequences.
+
+"There is still another side to this game situation," continued Hersey,
+filling and lighting his pipe, "and this is our laws, or rather, the
+selfishness of our lawmakers. We have plenty of laws--and good ones.
+We impose a license tax upon all non-residents for the privilege of
+shooting or fishing. We limit the season and number of moose, deer,
+or trout which may be taken. This license, which is all right, produces
+an annual fund sufficient to employ ten wardens, where the State only
+employs one. The result is that this vast wilderness is so poorly
+patrolled that a game warden is as much of a rarity as a white deer.
+Now and then one may be seen canoeing up or down some main stream,
+or loafing a week or two at some backwoods farm and having a good time.
+One may certainly be found at all points of egress; but a portion of the
+wilderness--the greater way-back region--is rarely visited by wardens.
+
+"There is still one more point, and that is the pay which wardens
+receive. It is so small that capable, honest men cannot be obtained
+for what the State allows; and considering the large sums raised from
+this license tax, it is a mere pittance. The result is, we have to employ
+a class of men, many of whom are no respecters of the law themselves,
+or who may be bribed."
+
+It was a full and complete explanation of the conditions then existing in
+the wilderness, and as Martin glanced at "Old Faithful" Levi lounging
+on his elbow, he understood why that astute guide had always avoided all
+possible reference to McGuire.
+
+"This half-breed, Bolduc, is another sample of his class," continued
+Hersey, "and while we have no criminal charge, we can prove we know he
+is a pot-hunter, and I'll be glad to nab him, for an example. I judge
+he is lurking about your camp, watching a chance to abduct this girl,
+and while it's an unusual case, it may serve our purpose nicely--a sort
+of bait, useful in alluring him into our hands. How we can catch him,
+however, is not an easy problem. He knows the forest far better than
+we do; every stream, lake, defile, or cave is familiar to him, and,
+cunning as a fox, all pursuit would be useless. Our only hope is to
+patrol the woods about your camp as hunters, or watch for another night
+visit, and halt him, at the muzzle of a rifle."
+
+And now Martin turned the conversation to a more interesting
+subject--Chip herself.
+
+"I saw the girl at Tim's Place," Hersey said, "and knowing her
+ancestry, felt curious to observe her. She appeared bright as a new
+dollar and a willing worker for Tim. Of course, it seemed unfortunate
+that she should be left to grow up there without education; and while
+her natural guardian being an outlaw gave the State an ample right to
+interfere, the proper officer has never seen fit to do so. It has been a
+case of 'out of sight, out of mind,' I presume, and while we have
+a law obliging parents to send their children to public schools so
+many months a year until a certain age, this is a case where no one has
+seen fit to enforce it."
+
+"But what about her parents?" queried Martin, curious on this point.
+"Do you know whether they were legally married?"
+
+"Why, no-o, only by hearsay," Hersey responded. "I've been told
+her mother was a Nova Scotia girl, a mill worker in one of our larger
+cities, and as no one ever hinted otherwise, I think it safe to assume
+that they were married. If not, there would surely have been some one to
+spread the sinister fact. It's the way of the world. I presume Tim
+knows the girl's history, but he is such a surly Irishman that I never
+questioned him. In fact, his surroundings, as you may have noticed, do
+not invite long visits."
+
+But no visit or even halt at Tim's Place was now considered advisable.
+In fact, as Levi said, it was best to pass that spot at midnight. This
+suggestion was carried out, and in five days from leaving the settlement,
+Martin and the officers made their last camp at the lake where he had
+once seen a spectral canoeist.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+
+ "A swelled heart may cost ye money, but a swelled head'll
+ cost ye ten times more."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+An unexpected canoe entering a lake so secluded and so seldom visited as
+this lake must needs awaken the keenest surprise, and especially in the
+case of a party situated as this one was. Ray, who had just returned
+from a berry-picking trip over at the "blow down," and Old Cy, carrying
+his suggestive rifle, were at the landing some time before this canoe
+reached it, while Angie and Chip waited almost breathlessly on the cabin
+piazza. A stout, bare-headed Indian, clad in white man's raiment, was
+paddling. He glanced at the two awaiting him at the landing, with big
+black, emotionless eyes, and then up to the cabin.
+
+As his canoe now grated on the sandy beach close by, he laid aside his
+paddle, stepped forward and out, drew his craft well up, and folding
+his arms glanced at Old Cy again, as if waiting for a welcome. None was
+needed, however, for on the instant, almost, came an exclamation of joy
+from Chip, and with a "Hullo, Poppy Tomah," she was down the bank,
+with both her hands in his.
+
+A faint smile of welcome spread over his austere face as he looked down
+at the girl, but not a word, as yet, came.
+
+Old Cy, quick to see that he was a friend, now advanced.
+
+"We're glad to see ye," he said, "an' as ye seem to be a friend o'
+the gal's, we'll make ye welcome."
+
+The Indian bowed low, and a "How do," like a grunt, was his answer. A
+calm, slow, motionless type of a now almost extinct race, as he seemed
+to be, he would utter no word or move a step farther until invited. But
+now, led by Chip, he advanced up the path.
+
+"It's Tomah, old Poppy Tomah," she said with pride, as Angie rose to
+meet them, "and he's the only body who was ever good to me."
+
+"I am glad to see you, sir," Angie said, with a gracious bow and smile,
+"and you are welcome here."
+
+"I thank the white lady--I not forget," came the Indian's dignified
+answer with a stately bow.
+
+Not a word of greeting for Chip or of surprise at finding her here--only
+the eagle glance, accustomed to bright sunlight or to following the
+flight of a bird far out of white man's vision.
+
+"We shall have supper soon," Angie added, uncertain what to say to this
+impassive man, "and some for you."
+
+It was a deft speech, for Angie, accustomed to take in every detail of a
+man from the condition of his nails to the cut of his clothing, as all
+women will, had ere now absorbed the appearance of this swarthy redskin,
+and was not quite sure whether to invite him to share their table or say
+nothing.
+
+But the Indian solved his own problem, for spying the outdoor fire to
+which Old Cy now retreated, he bowed again and strode away toward it.
+
+"Me cook here?" he said to Old Cy. With an "Of course, an' you're
+welcome to," the question was settled.
+
+Chip soon drew near, and now for the first time the Indian's speech
+seemed to return, and while Old Cy busied himself about the cooking,
+these two began to visit.
+
+Chip, as might be expected, did most of the talking, asked questions as
+to Tim's Place, when he was there, and what they said about her running
+away, in rapid succession. Her own adventures and how she came here soon
+followed, and it was not long before he knew all that was to be known
+about her.
+
+His replies were blunt and brief, after the manner of such. Now and then
+an expressive nod or grunt filled in the place of an ordinary answer.
+He knew but little about the recent happenings at Tim's Place, as he
+had stayed there only one night since Chip departed with her father--as
+he was told. He had been away in the woods, looking for places to set
+traps later, and had no idea Chip was here.
+
+As to Pete's movements, he was equally in the dark, and when Chip told
+him what her friends here suspected, he merely grunted. As he seemed to
+wish to do his own cooking, Old Cy, having completed his task, offered
+him a partridge and a couple of trout fresh from the ice-house, also pork
+and potatoes, and left him to care for himself.
+
+He became more sociable later, and when supper was over and the rest had,
+as usual, gathered on the piazza of the new cabin, he joined them.
+
+And now came a recital from Ray of far more interest to these people than
+they suspected.
+
+"I saw a bear over back of the ridge this afternoon," he said, "or I
+don't know but it was a wildcat. I'd just filled my pail with berries,
+when way up, close to the rocks, I saw something moving. I crouched down
+back of a bush, thinking it might be a bear, and if it was, I'd get
+a chance to see it nearer. I could only see the top of its back above
+the bushes, and once I saw its head, as if it was standing up. Then I
+didn't see it for quite a spell, and then I caught sight of its back
+again, a good deal nearer, and then it went into one of the gullies in
+the hog-back. I didn't wait to see if it came out, but cut for home."
+
+"Did this critter sorter wobble like a woodchuck runnin'?" put in Old
+Cy.
+
+"No, it just crept along evenly," answered Ray, "I'd see it when it
+would come out between the bushes."
+
+"'Twa'n't a b'ar," muttered Old Cy, and then, as if the unwisdom of
+waking suspicion in Angie's mind occurred, he added hastily, "but mebbe
+'twas a doe, walkin' head down 'n' feedin'."
+
+No further notice was taken of Ray's adventure. The sight of deer
+everywhere about was a ten-times-daily occurrence, and Old Cy's
+dismissal of the matter ended it.
+
+His thoughts, however, were a different matter. Full well he knew it was
+no bear thus moving. A deer would never enter a crevasse, nor a wildcat
+or lynx ever leave the shelter of woods to wander in open sunlight.
+
+"I'll go over thar in the mornin'," he said to himself; "I may git a
+chance to wing that varmint 'n' end our worryin'."
+
+And now Angie, more interested in spites and the weird belief which she
+heard that this Indian held than in the sight of a doe, began to ply Old
+Tomah with questions, and bit by bit she led him on toward that subject.
+
+It was not an easy task. His speech came slowly. Deeds, not words, are an
+Indian's form of expression, and this fair white lady, serene as the
+moon and as suave and smiling as culture could make her, was one to awe
+him.
+
+With Chip he had been fluent enough. She had been almost a protegee of
+his, a big pappoose whom he had taught to manage a canoe, for whom he had
+made moccasins, a fur cap and cape, who had listened to all his strange
+theories with wide-open, believing eyes, and, best of all, a helpless
+waif whom he had learned to love.
+
+But this white lady, awe-inspiring as she was, now failed to induce him
+to talk.
+
+Chip, however, keen to catch the drift of Angie's wishes and anxious
+to have her own faith defended, soon came to the rescue and induced Old
+Tomah to speak--not fluently at first, the "me" in place of "I"
+always occurring, adjectives following nouns, prepositions left out in
+many cases; and yet, as he warmed up to his subject, his coal-black eyes
+were fierce or tender, and the inborn eloquence of his race glowed in
+face and speech.
+
+And what a wild tale he told! Some of it was the history of his own
+race, beginning long before white men came. He related the contests of
+his people with wild animals, their deeds of valor, their torturing
+of prisoners, their own scorn of death and stoical endurance of pain.
+His own ancestors had been mighty chieftains. They had led the tribe
+through many battles, swept down upon their white enemies, an avenging
+horde, and were now roaming the happy hunting-grounds where he would soon
+join them. Mingled with this tale of warfare and conquest, and always
+an unseen force for good or evil, were the spites--the souls of all
+brute creation. How they followed or led the hunter! How they warned
+their own kind of his coming! How they lured him into unseen danger,
+and how they continually sought to avenge their own deaths! There were
+also two kinds of them,--some evil and the others good. The evil ones
+predominated, the good ones feared them, yet sought to interfere in all
+evil effort. These two hosts also had their own warfares. They fought
+oftenest when storms raged in the forest. Then they swept the tree-tops
+and scurried over the hills in vast numbers, shrieking and screaming
+defiance.
+
+Another apparition was oft referred to in this weird talk. A great
+white spectre and chieftain of all spites, who sprang from his abode
+in the north, whose breath was a blast of snow, howling as it swept
+over the wilderness--this ghost, so vast that it covered miles and
+miles of wilderness, was altogether evil. It spared neither man nor
+beast. The hunter trailing his game met death on the instant and was
+left rigid and upright in his tracks. Squaws and children huddled in
+wigwams shared the same speedy fate. Lynxes and panthers, deer and
+moose by the score, were touched by the same mystic and awful wand of
+death.
+
+It was all an uncanny, eerie, ghostly recital; yet all real and true
+to Chip, whose eyes never once left the Indian's face while he was
+speaking. Angie, too, was spellbound. Never had she heard anything
+like it; and while believing it was all a mere myth and legend, a
+superstitious fancy, maybe, of this strange Indian, its telling was
+none the less interesting.
+
+Ray was also enthralled, and he was half convinced that the forest might,
+after all, contain spooks and goblins.
+
+But Old Cy was only a curious listener. He, too, had woven many a
+fantastic tale of the sea, its storms and monsters leaping from the
+crests of waves, and all such figments of the imagination, and this
+fable was but the same. The only feature of passing interest to him was
+the fact that any Indian had such a vivid imagination and could relate
+such a mingled ghost story so coherently.
+
+Old Tomah ceased speaking even more abruptly than he began, then looked
+from one to another of the group, perhaps to see if they all believed
+him, and then without a word or even "good night," he rose and stalked
+out of the cabin.
+
+For a few moments Chip watched Angie and the rest, anxious to see how
+this explanation of her own belief affected them, and then Old Cy spoke.
+
+"I'd hate to be campin' with that Injun," he said, "or sharin' a
+wigwam with him night-times. It 'ud be worse'n a man I sot up with
+once that had the jim-jams, 'n' I'd see spites and spooks for a week
+arter."
+
+Angie's sleep was troubled that night, and in her dreams she saw white
+spectres and a man with a hideously scarred face and one eye watching her.
+
+Ray also felt the uncanny influence of such a tale and "saw things"
+in his sleep. But Old Cy, who had securely barred the doors and then had
+rolled himself in a blanket with rifle handy, thought only of what Ray
+had seen that day and who it might be.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+
+ "An honest man's the best critter God ever made, an' the
+ skeercest."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Old Cy's suspicions were correct. It was neither bear, deer, nor wildcat
+that Ray saw skulking along the ridge, but the half-breed.
+
+Believing Chip's father had taken her out of the wilderness, or more
+likely up-stream to find a place with these campers, he had come here
+to seek her. To find her here, as he of course did, only convinced him
+that his suspicions were true and that her father had thus meant to rob
+him.
+
+Two determined impulses now followed this discovery: first, to make the
+girl he had bought a prisoner, carry her into the woods, and then, when
+the chance came, revenge himself on McGuire. No sense of law, or decency
+even, entered his calculation. He was beyond such scruples, and what he
+wanted was his only law.
+
+The fear of rifles, which he knew were plenty enough at this camp, was
+the only factor to be considered. For days he watched the camp from
+across the lake, hoping that the girl he saw canoeing with a boy so
+often might come near enough for him to make a capture. Many times,
+when darkness served, he paddled close to where the cabin stood, and
+once landed and watched it for hours.
+
+Growing bolder, as the days wore on, he hid his canoe below the outlet
+of the lake and taking advantage of this outcropping slate ledge with
+its many fissures, secreted himself and watched.
+
+But some shelter, at least to cook and eat in, he must have, and this he
+found in a distant crevasse of this same ledge, and from this he sneaked
+along back of it until he could hide and watch the camp below. From this
+vantage-point, he saw that the girl no longer went out upon the lake,
+but remained near the cabin; then later, he noticed the two men leave
+the lake one morning. This encouraged him, and now he grew still bolder,
+even descending the ridge and watching those remaining at the cabin,
+from a dense thicket.
+
+From this new post he saw that but one man seemed on guard, and almost
+was he tempted to shoot him from ambush and make a dash to capture his
+victim. Cautious and cunning, he still waited a chance involving less
+risk.
+
+And now he saw that certain duties were performed by these people;
+that one man and the boy always started the morning fire; that the girl
+invariably went to the landing alone for water, at about the same time.
+Here for the moment she was out of sight from either cabin, and now in
+this act of hers, he saw his opportunity to land from his canoe near
+this spot before daylight, and hide in the bushes fringing the shore here
+and below the bank, watch his chance and seize and gag her before an
+outcry could be made. To tie her hands and feet and to push the other
+canoe out into the lake, thus avoiding pursuit until they could get a
+good start, was an easy matter.
+
+It was risky, of course. She might hear or see him in time to give one
+scream. The old man who had said foolish things to him, and now seemed
+to be on guard, would surely send bullets after him as he sped away; but
+once out of the lake, he would be safe. It was a dangerous act; yet the
+other two men might return any day, and with this in prospect, this wily
+half-breed now resolved to act.
+
+Old Cy was up early that fatal morning. Somehow a sense of impending
+danger haunted him, and calling Ray, he unlocked the cabin door and began
+starting the morning fire. He wanted to get breakfast out of the way as
+speedily as possible, and then visit this ridge, feeling almost sure
+that he would find where this half-breed had been watching them.
+
+When Ray came out, and before the hermit or Chip appeared, Old Cy hurried
+over to the ice-house, and now Chip came forth as usual, and without a
+word to any one, she took the two pails and started for the landing. It
+was, perhaps, ten rods to this, down a narrow path winding through the
+scrub spruce. The morning was fair, the lake without a ripple.
+
+Above the ridge, and peeping through its topping of stunted fir, came
+the first glance of the sun, and Chip was happy.
+
+Old Tomah, her one and only friend for many years, was here. A something
+Ray had whispered the night before, now returned like a sweet note of
+music vibrating in her heart, and as if to add their cheer, the birds
+were piping all about.
+
+For weeks the cheerful words of one of Ray's songs had haunted her with
+its catchy rhythm:--
+
+ "Dar was an old nigger and his name was Uncle Ned,
+ He died long 'go, long 'go."
+
+They now rose to her lips, as she neared the lake. Here she halted,
+filled a pail, and set it on the log landing.
+
+[Illustration: Nearer and nearer that unconscious girl it crept!]
+
+From behind a low spruce one evil, sinister eye watched her.
+
+And now Chip, still humming this ditty, glanced up at the rising sun and
+out over the lake.
+
+A crouching form with hideous face now emerged from behind the bush;
+step by step, this human panther advanced. A slow, cautious, catlike
+movement, without sound, as each moccasined foot touched the sand. Nearer
+and nearer that unconscious girl it crept! Now twenty feet away, now
+ten, now five!
+
+And now came a swift rush, two fierce hands enclosed the girl's face
+and drew her backward on to the sand.
+
+Ray and the hermit were beside the fire, and the Indian just emerging
+from the hut where he had slept, when Old Cy returned from the ice-house.
+
+"Where's Chip?" he questioned.
+
+"Gone after water," answered Ray. And the two glanced down the path.
+
+One, two, five minutes elapsed, and then a sudden suspicion of something
+wrong came to Old Cy, and, followed by Ray, he hurried to the landing.
+
+One pail of water stood on the float, both their canoes were adrift on
+the lake, and as Old Cy looked out, there, heading for the outlet, was
+a canoe!
+
+One swift glance and, "My God, he's got Chip!" told the story,
+and with face fierce in anger, he darted back, grasped his rifle, and
+returned.
+
+The canoe, its paddler bending low as he forced it into almost leaps,
+was scarce two lengths from the outlet.
+
+Old Cy raised his rifle, then lowered it.
+
+Chip was in that canoe!
+
+His avenging shot was stayed.
+
+And now Old Tomah leaped down the path, rifle in hand.
+
+One look at the vanishing canoe, and his own, floating out upon the lake,
+told him the tale, and without a word he turned and, plunging into the
+undergrowth, leaping like a deer over rock and chasm, vanished at the
+top of the ridge.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+
+ "The man that won't bear watchin' needs it."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+While Chip, bound, gagged, and helpless in the half-breed's canoe,
+was just entering the alder-choked outlet of this lake, twenty miles
+below and close to where the stream entered another lake, four men were
+launching their canoes.
+
+"It was here," Martin was saying to Hersey, "one moonlight night a
+year ago, that a friend of mine and myself saw a spectral man astride
+a log, just entering that bed of reeds, as I told you. Who or what it
+was, we could not guess; but as that spook canoeman went up this stream,
+we followed and discovered our hermit's home."
+
+"Night-time and moonshine play queer pranks with our imagination,"
+Hersey responded. "I'm not a whit superstitious, and yet I've many
+a time seen what I thought to be a hunter creeping along the lake shore
+at night, and I once came near plugging a fat man in a shadowy glen. I
+was up on a cliff watching down into it, the day was cloudy, and 'way
+below I saw what I was sure was a bear crawling along the bank of the
+stream. I had my rifle raised and was only waiting for a better sight,
+when up rose the bear and I saw a human face. For a moment it made me
+faint, and since then I make doubly sure before shooting at any object
+in the woods."
+
+And now these four men, Levi wielding the stern paddle of Martin's
+canoe, and Hersey's deputy that of his, entered the broad, winding
+stream. The tall spruce-tops meeting darkened its currentless course,
+long filaments of white moss depended from every limb, and as they
+twisted and turned up this sombre highway, the air grew stifling. Not
+a breeze, not a sound, disturbed the solemn silence, and except for the
+swish of paddles and faint thud as they touched gunwales, the fall of a
+leaf might have been heard. So dense was this dark, silent forest,
+and so forbidding its effect, that for an hour no one scarce spoke,
+and even when the two canoes finally drew together, converse came in
+whispers. Another hour of steady progress, and then the banks began to
+outline themselves ahead, the trees opened more, a sign of current was
+met, and the sun lit up their pathway.
+
+By now the spectral beard had vanished from the trees, white clouds were
+reflected from the still waters, and the gleam of sandy bottom was seen
+below. The birds, inspired perhaps by the absence of gloom, also added
+their cheering notes, Nature was smiling once more, and not a hint or
+even intuition of the fast-nearing tragedy met those men.
+
+And then, as a broad, eddying bend in the stream held their canoes, by
+tacit consent a halt was made.
+
+Martin, his paddle crossed on the thwarts in front, dipped a cup of
+the cool, sweet water and drank. Levi wiped the sweat from his face, and
+Hersey also quenched his thirst. The day was hot. They had paddled ten
+miles. There was no hurry, and as pipes were drawn forth and filled,
+conversation began. But just at this moment Levi's ears, ever alert,
+caught the faint sound of a paddle striking a canoe gunwale. Not as
+usual, in an intermittent fashion, as would be the case with a skilled
+canoeist, but a steady, rhythmic thud.
+
+"Hist," he said, and silence fell upon the group.
+
+In the wilderness all sounds are noticed and noted, by night especially,
+because then they may mean a bear crawling softly through the
+undergrowth, or a wildcat, yellow-eyed and vicious, creeping near. But by
+day as well they are always heeded, and the crackle of a twig, or the
+sound of a deer's foot striking a stone, or any slight noise, becomes
+of keen interest.
+
+And now, from far ahead, came the steady tap, tap, tap. It soon
+increased, and then it assured those waiting, listening men that some
+canoe was being urged down-stream.
+
+Without a word they glanced at one another, and then, as if an intuition
+came to both at the same time, Martin and Hersey reached for their rifles.
+
+On and on came the steady thump, thump.
+
+Just ahead the stream narrowed and curved out of sight. A few foam flecks
+from an unseen rill above floated down. The white sandy bottom showed
+in the clear water.
+
+And then, as those stern-faced, watching, listening men, rifles in hand,
+almost side by side, waited there, out from behind this bend shot a canoe.
+
+"My God, it's Pete Bolduc! Look out!" almost yelled Levi, and "Halt!
+Surrender!" from Hersey, as two rifles were levelled at the oncomer.
+Then one instant's sight of a red and scarred face, a quick reach for
+a rifle, a splash of water, an overturned canoe, and with a curse the
+astonished half-breed dived into the undergrowth.
+
+Two rifles spoke almost at the same instant from the waiting canoes, one
+answered from out the thicket. A thrashing, struggling something in the
+filled canoe next caught all eyes, and Levi, leaping into the waist-deep
+stream, grasped and lifted a dripping form.
+
+It was Chip!
+
+A brief yet bloodless tragedy, all over in less time than the telling;
+yet a lifetime of horror had been endured by that waif, for as Levi bore
+her to the bank, cut the thongs that bound her, and freed her mouth from
+a pad of deerskin, she grasped his hand and kissed it.
+
+And then came another surprise; for down a sloping, thick-grown hillside,
+something was heard thrashing, and soon Old Tomah, his clothing in
+shreds, his face bleeding, appeared to view.
+
+Calculating to a nicety where he could best intercept and head off the
+escaping half-breed, he had crossed four miles of pathless undergrowth
+in less than an hour, and reached the stream at the nearest point after
+it left the lake.
+
+How Chip, still sobbing from the awful agony of mind, and dripping
+water as well, greeted Old Tomah; how Hersey, chagrined at the escape of
+the half-breed, gave vent to muttered curses; how Martin joined them
+in thought; and how they all gathered around Chip and listened to her
+tale of horror, are but minor features of the episode, and not worth
+the telling.
+
+When all was said and done, Old Tomah, grim and silent as ever, although
+he had done what no white man could do or would try to do, washed his
+bloody face in the stream, drank his fill of the cool water, and lifting
+Pete's half-filled canoe as easily as if it were a shingle, tipped
+it, turned the water out, and set it on the sloping bank.
+
+"Me take you back and watch you now," he said to Chip. "You no get
+caught again."
+
+And thus convoyed, poor Chip, willing to clasp and caress the feet or
+legs of any or all of those men, and more grateful than any dog ever was
+for a caress, was escorted back to the lake.
+
+All those waiting at the cabin were at the landing when the rescuers
+arrived. Angie, her eyes brimming, first embraced and then kissed the
+girl. Ray would have felt it a proud privilege to have carried her to the
+cabin, and Old Cy's wrinkled face showed more joy than ever gladdened
+it in all his life before.
+
+Somehow this hapless waif had grown dearer to them all than she or they
+understood.
+
+There was also feasting and rejoicing that night at Martin's wildwood
+home, and mingled with it all an oft-repeated tale.
+
+Old Cy told one end of it in his droll way, Martin related the other,
+and Chip filled up the interim. Levi had his say, and Hersey supplied
+more or less--mostly more--of this half-breed's history.
+
+Old Tomah, however, said nothing. To him, who lived in the past of a
+bygone race which looked upon lumbermen as devastating vandals ever
+eating into its kingdom, and whose thoughts were upon the happy
+hunting-grounds soon to be entered, this half-breed's lust and
+cunning were as the fall of the leaf. Were it needful he would, as he
+had, plunge through bramble and brier and leap over rock and chasm to
+rescue his big pappoose, but now that she was safe again, he lapsed into
+his stoical reserve once more. Shadowy forms and the mysticism of the
+wilderness were more to his taste than all the pathos of human life;
+and while his eyes kindled at Chip's smile, his thoughts were following
+some storm or tempest sweeping over a vast wilderness, or the rush and
+roar of the great white spectre.
+
+"Chip is good girl," he said to Angie the next morning, "and white
+lady love her. Tomah's heart is like squaw heart, too; but he go away
+and forget. White lady must not forget," and with that mixture of
+tenderness and stoicism he strode away, and the last seen of him was
+when he entered the outlet without once looking back at the cabin where
+his "big pappoose" was kept.
+
+More serious, however, were the facts Martin and Hersey now had to
+consider, and a council of war, as it were, was now held with Levi, Old
+Cy, and the deputy as advisers.
+
+What the half-breed would now do, and in what way they could now capture
+him were, of course, discussed, and as usual in such cases, it was of
+no avail, because they were dealing with absolutely unknown quantities.
+The facts were these: Bolduc, a cunning criminal, fearless of all
+law, had set his heart upon the possession of this girl. Her story,
+unquestionably true, that he had paid a large sum for this right and
+title, must inevitably make him feel that he would have what was his at
+any cost. His first attempt at securing her had been thwarted. He had
+been shot at by minions of the law,--an act sure to make him more
+vengeful,--his canoe had been taken, and what with the loss of the
+girl, money, and canoe also, one of his stamp would surely be driven to
+extreme revenge.
+
+He was now at large in this wilderness, knew where the girl and his
+enemies were, and as Hersey said, "He had the drop on them."
+
+"I believe in standing by our guns," that officer continued, after all
+these conclusions had been admitted. "We are here to rid the woods of
+this scoundrel. We have five good rifles and know how to use them. The
+law is on our side, for he refused to surrender, and returned our shots;
+and if I catch sight of him, I shall shoot to cripple, anyway."
+
+Old Cy's advice, however, was more pacific.
+
+"My notion is this feller's a cowardly cuss," he said, "a sort o'
+human hyena. He'll never show himself in the open, but come prowlin'
+'round nights, stealin' anything he can. He may take a pop at some on
+us from a-top o' the ridge; but I callate he'll never venture within
+gunshot daytimes. His sort is allus more skeered o' us'n we need be
+o' him."
+
+In spite of Old Cy's conclusions, however, the camp remained in a state
+of siege that day and many days following.
+
+Angie and Chip seldom strayed far from the cabin. Ray assumed the
+water-bringing, night and morning. Old Cy and Levi patrolled the
+premises, while Martin, Hersey, and his deputy hunted a little for game
+and a good deal for moccasined footprints or a sight or a sign of this
+half-breed.
+
+Hersey, more especially, made him his object of pursuit. He had come
+here for that purpose, his pride and reputation were at stake, and
+the thousand dollars Martin had agreed to pay was a minor factor. He
+and his mate passed hours in the mornings and late in the afternoon
+watching from wide apart outlooks on the ridge. They made long jaunts
+up the brook valley to where the smoke sign had been seen, they found
+where this half-breed had built a fire here, and later another lair,
+a mile from the cabins and in this ridge. Long detours they made in
+other directions. Old Tomah's trail through the forest was crossed;
+but neither in forest nor on lake shore were any recent footprints of
+the half-breed found. Old ones were discovered in plenty. An almost
+beaten trail led from his lair in the ridge to a crevasse back of the
+cabins, but to one well versed in wood tracks, it was easy to tell how
+old these tracks were.
+
+A freshly made trail in the forest bears unmistakable evidence of its
+date, and no woodwise man ever confounds a two or three days' old one
+with it. One footprint may not determine this occult fact; but followed
+to where the moss is spongy or the earth moist, a matter of hours, even,
+can be decided.
+
+A week of this watchfulness, with no sign of their enemy's return, not
+even to within the circuit patrolled time and again, began to relieve
+suspense and awaken curiosity. They had been so sure, especially Martin,
+that he would come back for revenge, that now it was hard to account for
+his not doing so.
+
+"My idee is he got so skeered at them two shots," Old Cy asserted,
+"he hain't stopped runnin' yit." And then the old man chuckled at
+the ludicrous picture of this pernicious "varmint" scampering through
+a wilderness from fright.
+
+But Old Cy was wrong. It was not fear that saved them from a prompt
+visitation from this half-breed, but lack of means of defence. The one
+shot remaining in his rifle at the moment of meeting had been sent on
+its vengeful errand, all the rest of his ammunition was in his canoe, and
+now on the bottom of the stream. Being thus crippled for means to act,
+the only course left to him was a return to his cabin seventy-five miles
+away, with only a hunting-knife to sustain life with.
+
+Even to a skilled hunter and trapper like him, this was no easy task. It
+meant at least a week's journey through almost impassable swamps and
+undergrowth, with frogs, raw fish, roots, and berries for food.
+
+How that half-breed, unconscious that the mills of God had ground him
+the grist he deserved, fought his way through this pathless wilderness;
+how he ate mice and frogs to sustain his worthless life; how he cursed
+McGuire as the original cause of his wretched plight and Martin's party
+as aids; and how many times he swore he would kill every one of them,
+needs no description.
+
+He lived to reach his hut on the Fox Hole, and from that moment on, this
+wilderness held an implacable enemy of McGuire's, sworn to kill him,
+first of all.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+
+ "The biggest fool is the man that thinks he knows it all."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+For two weeks the little party at Birch Camp first watched and then
+began to enjoy themselves once more. September had come, the first
+tint of autumn colored every patch of hardwood, a mellow haze softened
+the outline of each green-clad hill and mountain, the sun rose red and
+sailed an unclouded course each day, and gentle breezes rippled the
+lake. The forest, the sky, the air and earth, all seemed in harmonious
+mood, and the one discordant note, fear of this half-breed, slowly
+vanished.
+
+Chip resumed her hour of study each day; a little fishing and hunting
+was indulged in by Martin and the two officers; wild ducks, partridges,
+deer, and trout supplied their table; each evening all gathered about
+the open fire in Martin's new cabin, and while the older people chatted,
+Ray took his banjo or whispered with Chip.
+
+These two, quite unguessed by Angie, had become almost lovers, and as it
+was understood Chip was to be taken to Greenvale, all that wonder-world,
+to her, had been described by Ray many times. He also outlined many
+little plans for sleigh-rides, skating on the mill-pond, and dances
+which he and she were to enjoy together.
+
+His own future and livelihood were a little hazy to him. These matters do
+not impress a youth of eighteen; but of one thing he felt sure,--that
+Chip with her rosy face and black eyes, always tender to him, was to
+be his future companion in all pleasures. It was love among the spruce
+trees, a summer idyl made tender by the dangers interrupting it, and
+hidden from all eyes except Old Cy's, who was these young friends'
+favorite.
+
+How many times he had taken these two over the ridge during the first
+two weeks, and picked berries while they played at it, or crossed the
+lake in his canoe to leave them on the shore while he cast for trout,
+no one but himself knew, and he wasn't telling.
+
+Even now, with these two strangers about, Old Cy, Chip, and Ray somehow
+seemed to "flock by themselves." Old Cy took them canoeing. They
+paddled up streams entering the lake. He showed them where muskrats
+were house-building, where mink had runways, and otter had sliding
+spots; and to forestall a plan of his own, he enlarged upon the fun
+and profit of trapping here when the time came. If these two young
+doves cooed a little meantime, he never heard it; if they held hands
+unduly long, he never saw it; and if they exchanged kisses behind his
+back--well, it was their own loss if they didn't.
+
+But these days of mingled romance and tragic happenings, of shooting,
+fishing, story-telling, and wildwood life, were nearing their end, and
+one evening Martin announced that on the morrow they would pack their
+belongings and, escorted by the officers, leave the wilderness.
+
+The next morning Old Cy took Ray aside.
+
+"I want a good square talk with ye, my boy," he said, "an' I'm
+goin' to do ye a good turn if I kin. Now to begin, I s'pose ye know
+yer aunt's goin' to take Chip to Greenvale 'n' gin her a chance at
+the schoolin' she sartinly needs. Now you're callatin' to go 'long
+'n' have a heap o' fun this winter. I'm goin' to stay here 'n'
+keer for Amzi. This is the situation 'bout as it is. Now you hev got yer
+eddication, 'n' the next move is to make yer way in the world 'n'
+arn suthin', an' ez a starter, I want ye to stay here this winter
+with me 'n' trap. The woods round here is jist bristlin' with spruce
+gum that is worth a dollar-fifty a pound, easy. We've got two months
+now, 'fore snow gits deep. We kin live on the top shelf in the way
+o' fish 'n' game. We'll ketch a b'ar and pickle his meat 'n'
+smoke his hams, and when spring comes, I'll take ye out with mebbe
+five hundred dollars' worth of furs 'n' gum ez a beginnin'.
+
+"Thar's also 'nother side to consider. Chip wants schoolin', 'n'
+she's got to study night 'n' day fer the next eight months. If you
+go back with 'em, an' go gallivantin' 'round with her, ez you're
+sure to, it won't be no help to her. I've given you two all the chances
+fer weavin' the threads o' 'fect-shun I could this summer, an' now
+let's you 'n' I turn to and make some money. I've asked your uncle
+'n' aunt. They're willin', 'n' now, what do ye say?"
+
+Few country boys with a love for trapping, such as Ray had, ever had a
+more alluring prospect spread before them. He knew Old Cy was right in
+all his conclusions, and almost without hesitation he agreed to the plan.
+
+It was far-sighted wisdom on Old Cy's part, however, in not giving
+Ray time to reflect, else the magnet of Chip's eyes on the one hand,
+and eight months of separation on the other, would have proved too
+strong, and trap-setting and gum-gathering, with five hundred dollars as
+reward, would have failed.
+
+As it was, he came near weakening at the last moment when the canoes were
+packed and Angie and Chip came to take their seats in them.
+
+He and his crude, rude, yet winsome little sweetheart had suffered a
+brief preliminary parting the evening previous. A good many sweet and
+silly nothings had been exchanged, also promises, and now the boy's
+heart was very sore.
+
+Chip was more stoical. Her life at Tim's Place and contact with Old
+Tomah had taught her reserve, and yet when she turned for the last
+possible look at Old Cy and Ray, waving good-bye at the landing, a mist
+of tears hid them.
+
+Old Cy's face was also a study. To him these parting clouds were as the
+white ones hiding the sun; yet he felt their chill. His own life shadow
+was lengthening. He had now but a brief renewal of youth in the lives
+of these two, and then forgetfulness, as he knew full well, and yet he
+pitied them.
+
+More than that, he had set his hand to guiding the bark of their young
+lives into the safe harbor of a home, and all feelings of his own
+subserved to that.
+
+"Come, come, my boy," he said to Ray as the two turned away, and he
+noted the lad's sad face, "she's gone now, an' ye'd best ferget her
+fer a spell. Ye won't, I know, 'n' she won't; but ye'd best make
+believe ye do. This ain't no spot fer love-sick spells. We've got work
+to do, 'n' money to arn; ye've got the chance o' yer life now, an'
+me to help ye to it, so brace up 'n' look cheerful.
+
+"Think o' what we got to do to git ready fer winter 'n' six foot
+o' snow. Think o' the traps we're goin' to set, an' the fun o'
+tendin' 'em. Why, girls ain't in it a minnit with ketchin' mink,
+marten, otter, an' now 'n' then a lynx or bobcat. Then when ye go
+back with a new suit 'n' money in yer pocket, ye'll feel prouder'n a
+peacock, 'n' Chip a-smilin' at ye sweeter'n new maple syrup."
+
+Verily Old Cy had the wisdom of age and the cheerfulness of morning
+sunshine.
+
+All that day these wilderness-marooned friends worked hard. An ample
+stock of birch wood must be cut and split, a shed of poles to cover it
+must be erected alongside of the cabin, the hermit's log hut was to
+be divested of its fittings, which were to be removed to the new cabin
+which all were now to occupy.
+
+Realizing how vital to their existence the canoes were, Old Cy had also
+planned a shelter of small logs for them on one side of the log cabin,
+that could be locked. Here the canoes not in use must be stored at once
+to guard against a night call from the malignant half-breed. His canoe
+had been taken along by Martin's party, to be left at Tim's Place, for
+even Hersey would have scorned to appropriate it.
+
+There were dozens of other needs to prepare for during the next two
+months, all of which were important. An ample supply of deer meat must be
+secured, to be pickled and smoked. All the partridges they could shoot
+would be needed, and later, when south-bound ducks halted at the lake, a
+few of these would add to their larder.
+
+In this connection, also, another need occurred to Old Cy. Trout could be
+caught all winter in the lake, but live bait must be had, and so a
+slat car to be sunk in some swift-running stream, which would hold
+them, must be constructed, also a scoop of mosquito net to catch them.
+These minnows were to be found now by the million in every brook, and
+forethought was Old Cy's watchword.
+
+All these duties and details he discussed that first day with Ray, while
+they worked, for a purpose.
+
+But the first evening here, with its open fire, yet empty seats, was the
+hardest to pass. In vain Old Cy enlarged upon the joys of trap-setting
+once more, and how and where they were to secure gum. In vain he
+described how deadfalls were built and where they must be placed,
+how many signs of lynx and wildcat he had seen that summer, and how
+sure they were to secure some of these valuable furs.
+
+Ray's heart was not here. Far away in some night camp, Chip was thinking
+of him. He knew each day would bear her farther away. No word of her
+safe arrival could reach them now. Long months must elapse ere he and she
+could meet again, and in prospect they seemed an eternity.
+
+"Come, git yer banjo, my boy," Old Cy ejaculated at last, seeing Ray's
+face grow gloomy. "Tune 'er up, an' play us suthin' lively. None
+o' them goody-goody weepin' sort o' tunes; but give us 'Money Musk'
+'n' a few jigs. I'm feelin' our prospects are so cheerful, I'd
+like to cut a few pigeon-wings out o' compliment."
+
+But Old Cy's hilarity was nearly all put on. He, too, felt the effect
+of the empty seats and missed every one that had gone, and Ray's jig
+tunes lacked their spirit. He essayed a few, and then quite unconsciously
+his fingers strayed to "My Old Kentucky Home," and Old Cy's feelings
+responded.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+
+ "I jist nachly hate a person that talks as tho' he'd bin
+ measured fer a harp."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Chip's arrival in Greenvale produced astonishment and gossip galore. It
+began when the stage that "Uncle Joe" Barnes had driven for twenty
+years started for that village. There were other passengers besides
+Martin, his wife, and Chip. The seats inside were soon filled, and Chip,
+seeing a coveted chance, climbed nimbly to a position beside the driver.
+
+"Gee Whittaker," observed one bystander to another, as Chip's
+black-stockinged legs flashed into view, "but that gal's nimbler'n
+a squirrel 'n' don't mind showin' underpinnin'. I wished I was
+drivin' that stage. I'll bet she's a circus."
+
+Uncle Joe soon found her a live companion at least, for he had scarce
+left the village ere she began.
+
+"Your hosses are fatter'n Tim's hosses used to be," she said. "Do
+ye feed 'em on hay and taters?"
+
+Uncle Joe gave her a sideways glance.
+
+"Hay and taters," he exclaimed; "we don't feed hosses on taters down
+here. Where'd you come from?"
+
+"I used to live at Tim's Place, up in the woods, 'n' we fed our
+hosses on taters, 'n' they had backs sharp 'nuff to split ye."
+
+This time Uncle Joe faced squarely around.
+
+"I know all about hosses," she continued glibly, "I used to take keer
+on 'em 'n' ride one ploughin', an' I've been throwed more'n a
+hundred times when we struck roots, an' ye ought to 'a' heerd Tim
+cuss. I used to cuss just the same, but Mrs. Frisbie says I mustn't."
+
+"Wal, I swow," ejaculated Uncle Joe, realizing that he had a "case."
+"What's your name, 'n' whar's Tim's Place?"
+
+"My name's Chip, Chip McGuire, only 'tain't, it's Vera; but they
+allus called me Chip, an' Tim's Place is ever so far up in the woods.
+I runned away 'cause dad sold me, an' fetched up at Mrs. Frisbie's
+camp, 'n' she's goin' to eddicate me. My mother got killed when I
+was a kid, 'n' my dad killed 'nother one, too; he's a bad 'un."
+
+Uncle Joe gasped at this gory tale of double murder, not being quite sure
+that the girl was sane.
+
+"Hain't they ketched yer dad yit?" he queried.
+
+"No, nor they won't," Chip rattled on, as if such killing were a daily
+occurrence in the woods. "He's a slick 'un, they say, an' now he's
+got Pete's money, he'll lay low."
+
+"Worse and worse, and more of it," Uncle Joe thought.
+
+"You must 'a' had middlin' lively times up in the woods," he said.
+"Did yer dad kill anybody else 'sides yer mother 'n' this man?"
+
+"He didn't kill mother," Chip returned promptly; "he used to lick
+her, though, but she got killed in a mill, 'n' I wisht it 'ud bin him.
+I wouldn't 'a' bin an orfin then. Say," she added, as they entered
+a woods-bordered stretch of road, "did ye ever see spites here?"
+
+"Spites," he responded, now more than ever in doubt as to her sanity,
+"what's them?"
+
+"Why, they's just spites--things ye can't see much of 'ceptin' it's
+dark. Then they come crawlin' round. They's souls o' animals mostly,
+Old Tomah says. I've seen thousands on 'em."
+
+Uncle Joe shifted his quid, turned and eyed the girl once more. First,
+a wild and wofully mixed tale of murder, and then spookish things! Beyond
+question she had wheels, and he resolved to humor her.
+
+"Oh, yes, we see them things here now 'n' then," he said, "but it
+takes considerable licker to do it. We hain't had a murder, though, for
+quite a spell. This is a sorter peaceful neck o' woods ye're comin'
+to."
+
+But Chip failed to grasp his quiet humor, and all through that
+twenty-mile autumn day stage ride she chattered on like a magpie.
+
+He soon concluded she was sane enough, however, but the most voluble
+talker who ever shared his seat.
+
+"I never seen the beat o' her," he said that night at Phinney's
+store,--the village news agency,--"she clacked every minit from the
+time we started till we fetched in, an' I never callated sich goin's
+on ez she told about cud ever happen. Thar was murder 'n' runnin'
+away, 'n' she got ketched 'n' carried off 'n' fetched back, 'n'
+a whole lot o' resky business. She believes in ghosts, too, sorter
+Injun sperits, 'n' she kin swear jist ez easy ez I kin. It seems
+the Frisbies hev kinder 'dopted her, 'n' I guess they'll hev their
+hands full. She's a bright 'un, though, but sich a talker!"
+
+At Aunt Comfort's spacious, old-fashioned home, where Chip was now
+installed, she soon began to create the same impression. This had been
+Angie's former home, and her Aunt Comfort Day had been her foster-mother.
+
+This family, in addition to the new arrival, consisted of Aunt Comfort,
+rotund and warm-hearted; Hannah Pettibone, a well-along spinster of
+angular form and temper, thin to an almost painful degree, with a
+well-defined mustache; and a general helper on the farm, and a chore
+boy about Chip's age named Nezer, completed the list.
+
+Once included in this somewhat diverse group, Chip became an immediate
+bone of contention.
+
+Aunt Comfort, of course, opened her heart to her at once; but Hannah
+closed hers, almost from the first day, and in addition she began to
+nurse malice as well. There was some reason for this, mainly due to
+Chip's startling freshness of speech.
+
+"I thought ye must be a man wearin' wimmin's clothes, the first time I
+see ye," she said to Hannah the next day after her arrival, and without
+meaning offence. "It was all on account o' yer little whiskers, I
+guess. I never see a woman with 'em afore. Why don't ye shave?"
+
+This was enough; for if there was any one thing more mortifying than
+all else to Hannah, it was her facial blemish, and a mention of it she
+considered an intentional insult.
+
+From this moment onward she hated Chip.
+
+Nezer, however, took to her as a duck to water, and her story, which
+he soon heard, became a real dime novel to him, and not content with
+one telling, he insisted on repetition. This was also unfortunate
+for--blessed with a vivid imagination and sure to enlarge upon all
+facts--he soon spread the story with many blood-curdling additions.
+
+These stories, with Uncle Joe's corroboration, resulted in a direful
+tale believed by all. Neighbors flocked in to see this heroine of many
+escapades, villagers halted in front of Aunt Comfort's to catch a sight
+of this marvel, and so the wonder spread.
+
+Angie was, of course, to blame. More impressed with the seriousness of
+the task she had undertaken than the need of caution, she had failed to
+tell Chip she must not talk about herself, and so a wofully distorted
+history became current gossip.
+
+When Sunday came, the village church was packed, and Parson Jones
+marvelled much at the unexpected increase of religious interest. He
+had heard of this new arrival, but when the Frisbie family with Chip,
+in suitable clothing, entered their pew, the cynosure of all eyes,
+this unusual attendance was accounted for.
+
+And what a staring-at Chip received!
+
+On the church steps a group of both young and old men had awaited her
+arrival and gazed at her in open-eyed astonishment. All through service
+she was watched, and not content with this, a dozen or so, men and women,
+formed a double line outside, awaiting the Frisbies' exit.
+
+Angie also failed to understand the principal cause of this interest. Her
+last appearance at this church had been as a bride. Naturally that fact
+would produce some staring, and so the curious and almost rude scrutiny
+the family received, was less noticed by her.
+
+But Chip's eyes were observant.
+
+"I don't like goin' to meetin'," she said, "an' bein' stared at
+like I was a wildcat. I seen 'em grinnin', too, some on 'em, when we
+went in, an' one feller winked to another. What ailed 'em?"
+
+Her vexations, however, had only just begun, for Angie had seen and made
+arrangements with Miss Phinney, one of the village school-teachers, and
+the next morning Chip was sent to school. And now real trouble commenced.
+
+Not knowing more than how to read and spell short words, and unable to
+write, she, a fairly well-developed young lady, presented a problem
+which was hard for a teacher to solve. To put her in the class where she
+belonged was absurd. She must sit with older girls, or look ridiculous.
+If she recited with the eight-year-old children, the result would be
+the same, and so a species of private tuition with recitations at noon or
+after school became the only possible course and the one her teacher
+adopted.
+
+This also carried its vexations, for Chip was as tall as Miss Phinney
+and a little larger. Not one of that band of pupils was over twelve.
+To join in their games was no sport for Chip, while they, having heard
+about her thrilling experiences, with a hint that she wasn't quite right
+in her head, felt afraid of her.
+
+"I feel so sorry for her," Miss Phinney explained to Angie, a week
+later, "and yet, I don't know what to do. She is so big the children
+won't play with her, or she with them. I am the only one with whom she
+will talk, and she seems so humble and so grateful for every word. I
+can't be as stern with her or govern her as I should, on account of her
+temper and size.
+
+"Only yesterday I heard screaming at recess, and going out, I found
+that Chip had one of the girls by the hair and was cuffing her. It
+transpired that this girl had called her an Indian and asked if she had
+ever scalped anybody. I can't punish such a pupil, and I can't help
+loving her, so you see she is a sore trial."
+
+She also became a trial to Angie in countless ways.
+
+Of a deep religious conviction, and believing this waif needed to be
+brought into the fold, Angie set about that task at once. But Chip was
+impervious to such instruction. By no argument or persuasion could
+Angie force her protegee to renounce her belief in the heathenism of
+Old Tomah, or convince her that God and the angels were any different
+from his collection of spirit forms, or that heaven was anything more
+than another name for his happy hunting-grounds. Old Tomah had been her
+wise and only friend, so far. She had seen all the ghostly forms he had
+described, had felt all the occult influences which he said existed,
+and neither coaxing nor derision served to make her disown them.
+
+Of course, Angie took her to church regularly. She sat through services
+and bowed as all did. Sabbath-school instruction would have been forced
+upon her but for the reason that made her a class of one under Miss
+Phinney, and Parson Jones's attention was finally enlisted.
+
+He spent an hour in pointing out her heathenish sins, assured her that
+Old Tomah was a wicked reprobate and an ignorant savage combined, that
+all influences so far surrounding her had been the worst possible,--a
+self-evident fact,--and unless she confessed a change of heart, and
+soon, too, all her friends here would desert her and the devil would
+overtake her by and by, and then closed this well-intended effort with a
+prayer.
+
+Chip sat through it all, mute and cowering. The parson's white hair,
+sharp eyes, and solemn voice awed her, and when he had departed, she
+began to cry.
+
+"I don't see the need o' makin' me say I don't believe suthin' when
+I do," she said. "I've seen spites 'n' I know I've seen 'em, an'
+nobody can make me believe Old Tomah a bad man, if he is an Injun. He
+runned after me when I got ketched, 'n' near got his eyes scratched
+out"--a logic it was useless to contend with.
+
+"You're jest a little spunky devil," Hannah said to her later on with
+a vicious accent, "an' if I was Mrs. Frisbie I'd larrup ye till ye
+confessed penitence, I would. The idee o' you settin' thar a-mullin'
+all the time the minister was tryin' to save ye! It's scand'lus!"
+
+And that night Chip was back in the wilderness with Old Cy and Ray in
+thought, and so homesick for them that she cried herself to sleep.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+
+ "While yer argufyin' with a fool, jes' figger thar's two on
+ 'em."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+The streams and swamps contiguous to this lake were well adapted for the
+habitat of mink, muskrat, otter, fisher, and those large fur-bearing
+animals, the lynx and lucivee, and here a brief description of where
+such animals exist, and how they are caught, may be of interest.
+
+The habits of the muskrat, the least cunning of these, are so well
+known that they merit only a few words. They are amphibious animals,
+their food is succulent roots, bulbs, and bark, and they frequent small,
+marshy ponds, sluggish streams, and swamps. In summer they conceal
+themselves by burrowing into soft banks; in winter they erect houses
+of sedge-grass, roots, and mud, and are caught in small steel traps
+set in shallow water at the entrance of their paths out of lake or stream.
+
+Mink, marten, otter, and fisher are much alike in shape and habit. All
+belong to the same family, but vary in size, also slightly in the matter
+of food. Mink and marten live on fish, frogs, birds, mice, etc.; otter on
+fish and roots; and fishers, as their name implies, subsist largely on
+fish. All these are more valuable fur-bearing animals than muskrats.
+Their abiding places are swamps and shallow streams, in the banks of
+which they burrow, and they are usually caught in steel traps baited
+with fish or meat.
+
+The lucivee, or lynx, and bobcat, more ferocious and cunning than their
+smaller cousins, roam the woods and swamps, live on smaller animals,
+hide in caves, crevices, and hollow trees, and they as well as otter
+occasionally are caught in deadfalls.
+
+Old Cy, familiar as he was with the homes, habits, and the manner of
+catching these cunning animals, soon began his trap-setting campaign.
+A few dozen steel traps were first set along the stream and lagoons
+entering the lake, and then he and Ray pushed up Beaver Brook, and
+leaving their canoe, followed its narrow valley in search of suitable
+spots to set the more elaborated deadfalls, which also merit description.
+
+A deadfall is made by placing one end of a suitably sized log--one
+perhaps fifteen feet long and a foot in diameter--on a figure four trap,
+so adjusted that its spindle end, to which the bait is secured, shall
+be poised beneath the upraised end of the log. Alongside of this log
+a double row of stakes is driven to form a pen with entrance leading
+to the bait. When this deadly contrivance is properly adjusted, the
+log and its pen of stakes is concealed with green boughs piled lightly
+over it, and all the hungry lynx sees is a narrow opening under green
+boughs, and in it a tempting morsel awaiting him. As those creatures,
+as well as now and then an otter, are sure to roam up and down all
+small streams, a spot where one emerges from a narrow defile, or joins a
+larger one, is usually selected for a deadfall.
+
+It is also quite a task to clear a suitable space, fell a right-sized
+tree, and construct one of these penlike traps; and although Old Cy and
+Ray started early, it was mid-afternoon that day ere they had the third
+one ready and awaiting its possible victim.
+
+As gum-gathering was also a part of their season's plan, they now left
+the swamp valley, and, ascending the spruce-clad upland, began this work,
+which is also worthy of description.
+
+The chewing gum of commerce, so delightful to schoolgirls and small boys,
+is the refined, diluted, and sweetened product of gum nuts, or the small
+excrescences of spruce sap that exudes and hardens around knot-holes and
+cracks in the bark of those trees. These form into hardened nuts or
+knobs of gum, from the size of a hazelnut to that of butternut, and
+are worth from a dollar to a dollar and fifty cents a pound. A long pole
+with a sharpened knife or chisel fastened to its tip is used by gum
+seekers. It can be gathered from the time frost first hardens it until
+spring, and to gather three to five pounds is considered a good day's
+work.
+
+Ray's first attempt at this labor seemed like nut-gathering at home,
+only more romantic, and when they were well into the vast spruce growth
+bordering one side of the Beaver Brook valley, he became so interested in
+hunting for the brown knobs, loosening them, and picking them up that
+he would have soon lost all points of the compass, except for Old Cy.
+
+There is also a spice of danger seasoning this pursuit. A wildcat might
+at any moment be seen watching from the crotch of a tree, or a bear might
+suddenly emerge from the thicket. It was hard work also, for while some
+parts of a spruce forest may be free from undergrowth, not all portions
+are, and this tangle is one not easy to move about in.
+
+There was also another element that entered into the trapping and
+gum-gathering life,--the possible return of the half-breed.
+
+"He hain't nothin' agin us," Old Cy asserted, when the question came
+up. "We didn't chase him the day he stole Chip, 'n' yet I s'pose
+he'll show up some day, 'n' mebbe do us harm."
+
+It was this fear that had led Old Cy to leave one of their canoes in a
+log locker, securely barred, and also to caution the hermit to remain
+on guard at the cabin while he and Ray were away.
+
+A canoe is the one most vital need of a wildwood life, for the reason
+that the streams are the only avenues of escape and afford the only
+opportunities for travel.
+
+The wilderness, of course, can be traversed, but not easily. Swamps
+will be met and must be avoided, for a wilderness swamp is practically
+impassable. Streams can be forded, but lakes must be encompassed,
+and even an upland forest is but a tangled jungle of fallen trees and
+undergrowth.
+
+Old Cy knew, or at least he felt almost sure, that the half-breed would
+return in good time. He had also reasoned out his failure to do so at
+once, and knew that left canoeless, as he had been that tragic day, his
+only course must be the one he actually followed. A month had elapsed
+since then, with no sign of this "varmint's" return, and now Old Cy
+was on the watch for it.
+
+Each morning, when he traversed the lake shore from ice-house to landing,
+he looked for tell-tale footprints. He watched for them wherever he went,
+and the distant report of a rifle would have been accepted as a sure
+harbinger of this enemy.
+
+It became their custom now each day, first to visit all small traps
+in the near-by streams, then pushing their canoe as far as possible
+up the Beaver Brook, to leave it, continue up the valley, and after
+inspecting their deadfalls, turn to the right out of this swale, and
+begin the gathering of gum.
+
+And now, one day, in carrying out this programme, a discovery was made.
+
+They had first visited the small traps near the lake, securing a couple
+of mink and three muskrats, which were left in the canoe. An otter was
+found in one of the deadfalls, and taking this with them, they entered
+the spruce timber and hung it on a conspicuous limb. Then the search for
+gum began.
+
+As usual, they worked hard. The days were short, the best of sunlight
+was needful to see the brown nuts in the sombre forest, and so they
+paid no heed to aught except what was overhead. When time to return
+arrived, Old Cy picked up his rifle and led the way back to where the
+otter had been left, but it had vanished. Glancing about to make sure
+that he was right, he advanced to the tree, looked down, and saw two
+footprints. Stooping over to examine them better in the uncertain light,
+he noted also that they were not his own, but larger, and made by some
+one wearing boots.
+
+"Tain't the half-breed," he muttered, with an accent of relief, and
+looking about, he saw a well-defined trail leading down the slope and
+thence onward toward the swamp.
+
+Some one had crossed this broad, oval, spruce-covered upland while they
+were not two hundred rods away from this tree, had stolen their otter,
+and gone on into the swamp.
+
+Any freshly made human footprint found in a vast wilderness awakens
+curiosity; these seemed ominous.
+
+"He must 'a' seen us 'fore he did the otter," Old Cy ejaculated,
+"an' it's curis he didn't make himself known. Neighbors ain't over
+plenty, hereabout."
+
+But the sun was nearing the tree-tops, the canoe was a mile away, and
+after one more look around, Old Cy started for it. There was no use in
+following this trail now, for it led into the tangled swamp, and so,
+skirting this until a point opposite the canoe was reached, Old Cy and
+Ray then plunged into it.
+
+Twilight had begun to shadow this vale ere the canoe was reached. And
+here was another surprise, for the canoe was found turned half over, and
+on its broad oval bottom was a curious outline of black mud. The light
+was not good here. A fir-grown ledge shadowed the spot; but as Old Cy
+stooped to examine this mud-made emblem, it gradually took shape, and
+he saw--a skull and cross bones!
+
+"Wal, by the Great Horn Spoon!" he exclaimed, "I never s'posed a
+pirate 'ud fetch in here! An' he's swiped our muskrats and mink," he
+added, as he looked under the canoe, "durn him!"
+
+Then the bold bravado of it all occurred to Old Cy. The theft was
+doubtless made by whosoever had taken their otter, and not content
+with robbing them, he had added insult.
+
+"I s'pose we'd orter be grateful he left the paddles 'n' didn't
+smash the canoe," Old Cy continued, turning it over. "I wonder who't
+can be?"
+
+One hasty look around revealed the same boot-marks in the soft earth near
+the stream, and then he and Ray launched their craft and started for home.
+
+"I'm goin' to foller them tracks to-morrer," Old Cy said, when they
+were entering the lake and a light in the cabin just across reassured
+him. "It may be a little resky, but I'm goin' to find out what sorter
+a neighbor we've got."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+
+ "When a man begins talkin' 'bout himself, it seems as tho'
+ he'd never run down."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+All fellow-sojourners in the wilderness awaken keen interest, and the
+unbroken silence and solitude of a boundless forest make a fellow human
+being one we are glad to accost.
+
+A party of lumbermen wielding axes causes one to turn aside and call on
+them. A sportsman's camp seen on a lake shore or near a stream's bank
+always invites a landing to interview whoever may be there.
+
+All this interest was now felt by Old Cy and Ray, and with it an added
+sense of danger. No friendly hunter or trapper would thus ignore them
+in the woods. This piratically minded thief must have seen them, for
+the spruce-clad oval, perhaps half a mile in width, was comparatively
+free from undergrowth where they had been working. He had crossed it
+within fairly open sight of them, had found the otter hanging from a
+limb, had taken it, and thence on to rob their canoe, daub it with that
+hideous emblem, world-wide in meaning, and then had gone on his way.
+Almost could Old Cy see him watching them from behind trees, skulking
+along when their backs were turned, a low, contemptible thief.
+
+Old Cy knew that bordering this oval ridge on its farther side was a
+swamp, that a stream flowed through it, and surmising that this fellow
+might have come up or down this stream, he left their cabin prepared
+for a two or three days' sojourn away from it, which meant that food,
+blankets, and simple cooking utensils must be taken along.
+
+No halt was made to visit traps. Old Cy was trailing bigger game now;
+and when the point where they had left the canoe the day previous was
+reached, the canoe was pulled out on the stream's bank, the rifles only
+taken, and the trailing began. He followed up the brook valley a little
+way, to find that only one track came down; he then circled about the
+canoe, until, like a hound, he found where the clearly defined trail left
+the swamp again.
+
+Here in the soft carpet under the spruce trees one could follow this
+trail on the run, and here also Old Cy found where this enemy had halted
+beside trees evidently while watching them, as the tracks indicated.
+When the bordering swamp was reached, the trail turned in a westerly
+direction, skirting thus for half a mile, and here, also, evidences of
+skulking along were visible.
+
+Another trail was now come upon, but leading directly over the ridge,
+and just beyond this juncture both the trails now joined, entered the
+swamp, and ended at a lagoon opening out from the stream. Here, also,
+evidences of a canoe having been hauled up into the bog were visible.
+
+"That sneakin' pirate come up this stream," Old Cy observed to Ray, as
+the two stood looking at these unmistakable signs. "He left his canoe
+here 'n' crossed the ridge above us 'n' down to whar we left the
+otter 'n' on to our canoe. Then he come back the way we follered,
+'n' my idee is he had his eye on us most o' the time. I callate he
+has been laughin' ever since at what we'd say when we found that mud
+daub on our canoe, durn him!"
+
+But their canoe was now a half-mile away, and for a little time Old Cy
+looked at the black, currentless stream and considered. Then he glanced
+up at the sun.
+
+"I've a notion we'd best fetch our canoe over here," he said at last,
+"an' follow this thief a spell farther. We may come on to suthin'."
+
+"Won't he shoot at us?" returned Ray, more impressed by this possible
+danger than was Old Cy.
+
+"Wal, mebbe and mebbe not," answered the old man. "Shootin's a game
+two kin play at, an' we've jist ez good a right to foller the stream
+ez he has."
+
+But when their canoe had been carried over and launched in this lagoon,
+Ray's spirits rose. It was an expedition into new waters, somewhat
+venturesome, and for that reason it appealed to him.
+
+Then they had two rifles, Old Cy had taught him to shoot, he had already
+killed one deer and some smaller game, and the go-west-and-kill-Indian
+impulse latent in all boys was a part of Ray's nature. Besides, he had
+an unbounded faith in Old Cy's skill with the rifle.
+
+And now began a canoe journey into and through a vast swamp, the upland
+border of which could scarce be seen. The stream they followed was black,
+and so absolutely motionless that it was a guess which way they were
+going. The mingled hack-matack and alder growth along each bank was so
+dense that no view ahead could be seen, and they must merely follow the
+winding pathway of dark waters and hope to come out somewhere.
+
+For two hours they paddled along this serpentine highway, and then the
+vastness of this morass began to impress them. No sign of current had
+been met. All view of the spruce-grown upland they had left was obscured
+by distance. Now and then a dead tree, bleached and spectral, marked a
+turn in the stream, and hundreds of them, rising all about above the low
+green tangle, added a ghostly haze. It was as if they were venturing into
+a new world--a boundless morass, covered by an impenetrable tangle, and
+made grewsome by the bleaching trunks of dead trees.
+
+"I'm goin' to find which way we're goin'," Old Cy exclaimed at
+last, as they neared a small dead cedar that pointed out over the stream,
+and seizing a projecting limb of this, he broke off bits of dry twigs,
+and tossed them into the stream. For a long moment not one stirred, and
+then at last a movement backward could be discovered.
+
+"We're goin' up-stream, anyhow," he added, glancing at the sun, now
+marking mid-afternoon; "but we've got to git out o' this 'fore dark,
+or we'll be in a bad fix, an' hev to sleep in the canoe."
+
+No halt for dinner had yet been made. They were both faint from need of
+food, and so Old Cy reached for a small wooden pail containing their sole
+supply of provisions. Neither was it a luxurious repast which was now
+eaten. A couple of hard-tacks munched by each and moistened with a cup
+of this swamp water and a bit of dried deer meat was all, and then Old
+Cy lit his pipe, dipped his paddle handle in the stream, and once more
+they pushed on. Soon a low mound of hard soil rose out of the tangle
+just ahead, an oasis in this unvarying mud swamp, and gaping at them
+from amid its cover of scrub birch and cedar stood a deadfall. It faced
+them as they neared this small island, and with log upraised between
+a pen of stakes it much resembled the open mouth of a huge alligator.
+
+"Hain't been built long," Old Cy exclaimed, after they had landed to
+examine it. "I've a notion it's the doin's of our pirate friend,
+an' he's trappin' round about this swamp. He's had good luck lately,
+anyhow, for he's got six o' our pelts to add to his string."
+
+From here onward signs of human presence in this swamp became more
+visible. Now and then an opening cut through the limbs of a lopped-over
+spruce was met; a spot where drift had been pushed aside to clear the
+stream was found at one place; signs of a canoe having been nosed into
+the bog grass were seen; and here were also the same footprints they
+had followed.
+
+Another bit of hard bottom was reached, and here again was another
+deadfall. Tracks evidently made within a few days were about here,
+and tied to its figure-four spindle was a freshly caught brook sucker.
+
+"The scent's gettin' warm," Old Cy muttered, as he examined these
+signs of a trapper's presence, and then, mindful of the sun, he paddled
+on again.
+
+And now an upland growth of tall spruce was seen ahead, the banks became
+in evidence, and a slight current was met. One more long bend in the
+stream was followed, then came curving banks and large-bodied spruce.
+They were out of the swamp.
+
+Soon a more distinctive current opposed them, a low murmur of running
+water came from ahead, and then a pass between two abutting ledges was
+entered. Here the stream eddied over sunken rocks, and pushing on, the
+forest seemed suddenly to vanish as they emerged from the gloom of this
+short canyon, and the next moment they caught sight of a long, narrow
+lakelet.
+
+The sun, now almost to the tree-tops, cast a reddish glow upon its placid
+surface, and so welcome a change was it from the ghostly, forbidding
+swamp just left, that Old Cy halted their canoe at once to look out upon
+it. It was seemingly a mile long, but quite a narrow lake. A bold, rocky
+shore rising in ledges faced them just across, and extended along
+that side, back of these a low, green-clad mountain, to the right,
+and at the end of this lanelike lake a bolder, bare-topped cliff was
+outlined clear and distinct.
+
+This strip of water, for it was not much more, seemingly filled an oblong
+gorge in these mountains, only one break in them, to the left of this
+bare peak; and as Old Cy urged their canoe out of the alder-choked
+stream, now currentless once more, a margin line of rushes and reeds
+was seen to form that shore. Back of these, also, rose the low ledge
+they had passed.
+
+"Looks like a good hidin' spot fer a pirate," he exclaimed, glancing
+up and down the smiling lakelet. "Thar ain't many folks likely to
+tackle that swamp--it took us 'most all day to cross it. I'll bet
+no lumberman ever tried it twice, 'n' if I wanted to git absolutely
+'way from bein' molested, I'd locate here. I dunno whether we'd
+best cross 'n' make camp 'mong them ledges, or go back into the woods.
+Guess we'd best go back 'n' take a sneak round behind the ledge. I
+noticed a loggin[1] leadin' up that way 'fore we left the swamp."
+
+But now something was discovered that proved Old Cy's wisdom, for as
+they, charmed somewhat by the spot, yet feeling it forbidding, still
+glanced up and down the bold shore just across, suddenly a thin column
+of smoke rose from away to the right, amid the bare ledges.
+
+First a faint haze, rising in the still air, then a burst of white,
+until the fleecy pillar was plainly outlined as it ascended and drifted
+backward into the green forest.
+
+------
+
+[Footnote 1: Lagoon.]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+
+ "Licker allus lets the cat out."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When the half-breed, Pete Bolduc, reached Tim's Place, he was more
+dead than alive. A week of crawling through swamps, wading or swimming
+streams, sleeping under fallen trees, while sustaining life on frogs,
+raw fish, and one muskrat, had eliminated about all desire to obtain
+Chip, and left a murderous hate instead. And McGuire was its object.
+
+Pete reasoned that he had bought the girl and paid for her. Her father,
+never intending to keep faith, had connived at her escape, and knowing
+of these campers, had hired her for a serving maid, and they would
+inevitably take her out when they left. It was all a part of McGuire's
+plot and plan, and no doubt this stranger had also paid him for her
+possession.
+
+Two other facts also seemed proof positive that these conclusions were
+correct. First, McGuire had never been seen at Tim's Place since the
+girl's escape; second, it would have been impossible for her to reach
+these campers without aid. But she was lost to him for all time, as Pete
+now realized. The stern faces and ready rifles of her protectors had
+convinced him of that, and all that remained was to find McGuire, force
+him to give back the money, then obtain revenge.
+
+Neither was this an easy task, for McGuire was a dangerous man, as Pete
+well knew, and the more he considered the matter, sojourning at Tim's
+Place and nursing his hate meanwhile, the more he realized that the
+killing of McGuire must precede the obtaining of his money. And now,
+where to find McGuire became a question.
+
+Pete knew that at this season he usually devoted a month or more to a
+trapping trip, that in starting out he always ascended the Fox Hole, and
+that his location for this purpose was the head waters of another stream,
+reached by a carry from the Fox Hole.
+
+For a week Pete remained at Tim's Place, and then, obtaining a canoe,
+returned to his hut on this stream.
+
+And now, in the seclusion of his own domicile, certain other facts and
+conclusions bearing upon the present whereabouts of McGuire occurred to
+him.
+
+For many years they had been friends in a way, or at least as much so
+as two such scamps ever are. Together they had made many canoe trips
+to the Provinces to obtain liquor. In these expeditions, McGuire had
+furnished the means; but outlawed as he was, had remained in hiding while
+Pete transacted the business and later shared the profits. Pete's hut
+had also been used as headquarters, and near by it the smuggled liquor
+had been secreted.
+
+On rare occasions, also, McGuire had broken away from his usual
+abstemiousness, and here, with Pete for companion, had indulged in an
+orgie. At these times he invariably boasted how cunning he had been
+in eluding all hated officers of the law, how much money he was worth,
+and how securely he had it hidden. The one most pertinent fact, the
+location of this hiding spot, he never betrayed. But now Pete--almost as
+shrewd as he--reasoned that it would most likely be somewhere in this
+region annually visited by him.
+
+To find this was a hard problem; to find McGuire's hiding spot for
+his money more so. It meant trailing a human being of greater cunning
+than any animal that roamed this wilderness; and yet with the double
+incentive of robbing and revenge now decided upon by this half-breed,
+he set about solving it.
+
+A day's journey up the Fox Hole brought him to the carry over into
+another stream, and here a probably month-old trail, crossing and
+recrossing it, was found. Whoever left the tell-tale footprints wore
+boots, and as McGuire was the only hunter or trapper in this region
+known to wear them, this seemed evidence that it was he. Then as two
+trails led over, with only one returning, that proved he had made two
+trips across to carry his canoe and belongings and had not returned.
+This was plain enough, but when once over, the question of whether he
+went up or down stream was another matter. It was an even chance,
+however, and Pete decided to go up, and keep sharp watch for any signs
+which would indicate that he was on the right track. To trail any animal
+in this wilderness was child's play to Pete; but to follow another
+trapper journeying by canoe was not so easy. Halts for night camps he
+must of course make, collections of drift in some narrow part of the
+stream he would inevitably disturb, and where a carry around a rapid
+came, a trail would be left. These were the only signs possible to
+discover, and for these Pete now watched.
+
+The slow-running waterway he ascended the first day wound through a
+stately forest of spruce. Its banks were low and well defined, yet
+always covered by undergrowth. No breaks in them, no openings where a
+night halt would naturally be made; but ever of the same unvarying
+character, and shadowed by the overhang of interlaced boughs. With one
+eye keen to any even the slightest signs of human progress up this
+stream, and ears ever alert, Pete paddled on. Wildwood sights and
+sounds, however, were met in plenty. Once a lordly moose, seeing or
+smelling him, snorted and plunged away, crashing through the undergrowth.
+Deer were seen or heard at every turn of the stream, and dozens of
+muskrats were noticed swimming or diving off the bank, with now and then
+an otter or a mink, to vary this monotony.
+
+But these were of no interest to Pete. He was trailing other game,
+and like an avenging Nemesis, slowly crept through this vast, sombre,
+and forbidding forest. When nightfall neared, he hauled his canoe out
+where a stretch of hard bank favored, and camped for the night, and
+when daylight came again, he pushed on. For three days this watchful,
+up-stream journey was continued, and then a range of low mountains began
+to close in, short rapids needing the use of a setting-pole were met,
+and at last a series of stair-like falls was sighted ahead. The sun was
+well down when these were reached. How long the necessary carry might
+be, he could not tell, and hauling out below the rapids, Pete took
+his rifle and crept up along the bank. So far not a sign indicating
+whether or not McGuire had gone up this stream had been found, but here,
+if anywhere, they must be met, and Pete watched eagerly for them.
+
+Every rock where a human foot might scrape away the moss was scanned.
+Each bending bough and bush was observed, and when, perforce, he had to
+leave the rock-lined bank and make a detour, he still watched for signs.
+
+At the top of this long pitch, the tall trees also ended, and here the
+stream issued from a vast bush-grown swamp devoid of timber. A few dead
+trees rose from it, and climbing a low spruce, Pete saw this whitened
+expanse of spectral cones extended for miles. It was a forbidding
+prospect. The stream's course appeared visible only a few rods. It
+seemed hardly probable the man he was trailing would cross this swamp. No
+signs of his ascending this waterway had so far been met, and Pete,
+now discouraged, was about to return to his canoe and on the morn go
+back, when, glancing across the stream, he saw a tiny opening in the
+bushes, as if they had been pushed aside.
+
+To cross, leaping from rock to rock in the rapids below, was his next
+move, and returning to where the fall began, there, just back from this
+point, and beside a ledge, were the charred embers of a camp-fire.
+
+Weeks old, without doubt, for rain had fallen on them, and all about were
+the footprints of some one wearing boots.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+
+ "'Tain't allus the bell cow that gives the most milk."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+Old Cy was, above all, a peaceable man, and while curiosity had led him
+to follow the trail of this robber and to cross this vast swamp, now that
+he saw the suggestive smoke sign, he hesitated about venturing nearer.
+
+"I guess we'd best be keerful," he whispered to Ray, "or we may
+wish we had been. I callate our pirate friend's got a hidin' spot
+over thar, 'n' most likely don't want callers. He may be only a queer
+old trapper a little short o' scruples ag'in' takin' what he finds,
+'n' then ag'in he may be worse'n that. His campin' spot's ag'in'
+him, anyhow."
+
+But the sun was now very low; a camp site must soon be found, and scarce
+two minutes from the time he saw this rising column of smoke, Old Cy
+dipped his paddle and slowly drew back into the protecting forest. Once
+well out of sight, the canoe was turned and they sped back down-stream
+and into the swamp once more. Here he turned aside into a lagoon they
+had passed, and at its head they pulled their canoe out into the bog.
+
+The two gathered up their belongings, and picking their way out of
+the morass, reached the belt of hard bottom skirting the ridge. They
+were now out of sight from the lake, but still too near the stream
+to risk a camp-fire, and so Old Cy led the way along this belt until
+a more secluded niche in the ridge was reached, and here they began
+camp-making. It was a simple process. A level spot was cleared from
+brush, two convenient saplings denuded of their lower limbs, a cross
+pole was placed in suitable crotches, near-by spruces were attacked with
+the axe, and a bark wigwam soon resulted, and just as the darkness began
+to gather, a fire was started.
+
+Both Old Cy and Ray had worked with a will, and none too soon was so much
+accomplished, for night was upon them, and only by the firelight could
+they see to complete the needful preparations.
+
+A peculiar effect of the time, place, and their position was also
+noticeable; for although at least a mile away from where this smoke
+sign had warned them, and screened from it by a high ridge, both spoke
+only in whispers. More than that, the camp-fire was kept low, barely
+enough to cook a modest meal, and when the flame chanced to flare up,
+Old Cy glanced aloft into the tree-tops to see if they were illumed.
+Not much was said, for Old Cy's thoughts were far away, and when
+supper was eaten he lit his pipe and sat watching the embers while Ray
+studied him. Ray, too, spoke scarcely a word. All that day he had felt
+much the same, and while he had the most implicit confidence in Old
+Cy's wisdom, now that he had advised retreat, the reasons for it
+became ten times more ominous to Ray.
+
+Then again, the sombre nook in which they had camped and the vast swamp
+that lay between them and the protecting cabin, all had an effect. This
+weird feeling was also added to by the occasional cry of some night
+prowler far away in the forest or out in the swamp. Chip's spites,
+those uncanny creatures of the imagination, also began to gather, and
+Ray fancied he could hear them crawling cautiously about.
+
+"I don't like this," he whispered at last, "and I wish we hadn't
+come. Don't you think we had better go back soon as it's daylight?"
+
+"Wal, mebbe," answered Old Cy, smiling at Ray's nervousness. "I've
+kinder figgered we might watch out from a-top o' the ridge when mornin'
+came 'n' see what we kin see. We might ketch sight o' the pirate
+chap 'cross the lake."
+
+"But suppose he catches sight of us," returned Ray, "what then?"
+
+"I don't mean he shall," answered Old Cy, "so don't git skeered.
+I'll take keer on ye."
+
+That night, however, was the longest ever passed by Ray, for not until
+near morning did he fall into a fitful slumber, and scarcely had he lost
+himself before Old Cy was up and watching for the dawn.
+
+Its first faint glow was visible when Ray's eyes opened, and without
+waiting for fire or breakfast, they started for the top of the ridge.
+From here a curious sight met their eyes, for the lake and also the
+ridges out of which the smoke had risen were hidden beneath a white pall
+of fog. Back of them also, and completely coating the immense swamp, was
+the same sea of vapor. It soon vanished with the rising sun, and just as
+the ledges across the lake outlined themselves, once more that smoke
+sign rose aloft.
+
+And now the two watchers could better see whence it came. Old Cy had
+expected to obtain sight of some hut or bark shack nestling among these
+rocks; but none was visible. Instead, the smoke rose out of a jagged
+rock, and there was not a cabin roof or sign of one anywhere.
+
+"That feller's in a cave," he whispered to Ray, "an' the smoke's
+comin' out o' a crack, sure's a gun!"
+
+It seemed so, and for a half-hour the two watched it in silent amazement.
+
+Then came another surprise, for suddenly Old Cy caught sight of a man
+just emerging from behind a rock fully ten rods from the rising smoke; he
+stooped, lifted a canoe into view, advanced to the shore, slid it halfway
+into the water, returned to the rock, picked up a rifle, then pushed
+the canoe off, and, crossing the lake, vanished into the outlet.
+
+The two watchers on the ridge exchanged glances.
+
+"He's goin' to tend his traps, an' mebbe ourn," Old Cy said at
+last, and then led the way back to their bark shack. Here he halted,
+and placing one hand scoop-fashion over his ear, listened intently until
+he caught the faint sound of a paddle touching a canoe gunwale. First
+slightly, then a more distinctive thud, and then less and less until the
+sound ceased.
+
+"The coast's clear," he added, now in an exultant whisper, "an'
+while the old cat's away we'll take a peek at his den."
+
+A hurried gathering of their few belongings was made, the canoe was
+shoved into the lagoon, and no time was lost until the lake was crossed
+and they drew alongside of where the smoke was still rising in a thin
+film. No landing was possible here, for the shore was a sheer face of
+upright slate, and only where this lone trapper had launched his canoe
+could they make one.
+
+From here a series of outcropping slate ledges rose one above another,
+and between them and parallel to the shore, narrow, irregular passages
+partially closed by broken rock. It was all of slaty formation, jagged,
+serrated, and gray with moss.
+
+Following one of these passages, Old Cy and Ray came to the ledge out
+of which the smoke was rising from a crevasse. It was a little lower
+than one in front, perhaps forty feet in breadth, double that in length,
+and of a more even surface. At each end was a short transverse passage
+hardly wide enough to walk in, and a few feet deep.
+
+And now, after a more careful examination of the crevasse out of which
+the thin film of smoke rose, Old Cy began a search. Up and down each
+narrow passway he peeped and peered, but nowhere was a crack or cranny
+to be found in their walls. In places they were as high as his head,
+sheer faces of slate, then broken, serrated, moss-coated, or of yellow,
+rusty color. Here and there a stunted spruce had taken root in some
+crack, and over, back from the topmost ledge, this green enclosure began
+and continued up the low mountain. Here, also, in a sunny nook below
+this belting tangle of scrub spruce, were ample signs of a trapper's
+occupation in the way of pelts stretched upon forked sticks and hanging
+from a cord crossing this niche. They were of the usual species found
+in this wilderness,--a dozen muskrat, with a few mink and otter skins
+and one lynx.
+
+Another sign of human presence was also noted, for here a log showing
+axe-marks, with split wood and chips all about, was seen.
+
+"Some o' them pelts is ourn," Old Cy ejaculated, glancing at the
+array, "an' I've a notion we'd best hook on to 'em. Mebbe not,
+though," he added a moment later, "it might git us into more trouble."
+
+But Ray was getting more and more uneasy each moment since they had
+landed there. It seemed to him a most dangerous exploit, and while Old Cy
+had hunted over this curious confusion of slate ledges and stared at
+the rising film of smoke, Ray had covertly watched the lake's outlet.
+
+"I don't think we'd better stay here much longer," he said at last.
+"We can't tell how soon that man may come back and catch us."
+
+"Guess you're right," Old Cy asserted tersely, and after one more look
+at the inch-wide crack out of which the smoke rose, he led the way to
+their canoe.
+
+"Thar's a cave thar, sure's a gun," he muttered, as they skirted the
+bold shore once more, "an' that smoke's comin' out on't. I wish I
+dared stay here a little longer 'n' hunt fer it."
+
+Old Cy was right, there was a cave there beneath the slate ledge--in
+fact, two caves; and in one, safe and secure, as its owner the notorious
+McGuire believed, were concealed the savings of his lifetime.
+
+More than that, so near do we often come to an important discovery and
+miss it, Old Cy had twice leaned against a slab of slate closing the
+entrance to this cave and access to a fortune, the heritage of Chip
+McGuire.
+
+Ray's fears, while well founded, were needless, however. McGuire--for it
+was this outlaw whom they had ample reason to avoid--was many miles away.
+And yet so potent was the sense of danger, that neither Old Cy nor Ray
+thought of food, or ceased paddling one moment, until they had crossed
+the vast swamp and once more pulled their canoe out at the point where
+they had entered it the day before.
+
+Here a brief halt for food and rest was taken; then they shouldered their
+light craft and started for Birch Camp.
+
+In the meantime another canoe was ascending this winding stream, and long
+before nightfall, Pete Bolduc, sure that he was on the trail of McGuire,
+entered the ledge-bordered lake.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+
+ "If most on us cud see ourselves as the rest see us, we'd
+ want to be hermits."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+To trail an enemy who is never without a rifle and the will to use it,
+requires courage and Indian cunning as well. Pete Bolduc had both, and
+after observing the many signs of a trapper's presence in the swamp,
+he knew, after he crossed it and reached this lake, that somewhere on
+its shores, his enemy, McGuire, had his lair.
+
+He paused at the outlet, as did Old Cy, to scan every rod of its rocky
+shores, not once, but a dozen times.
+
+The sun was now halfway down. A mellow autumn haze softened the
+encircling mountains and the broad, frowning peak to the right. A
+gentle breeze rippled the upper end of the lake, and here, in the
+wild rice growing along its borders, stood a deer, belly-deep in the
+green growth.
+
+No thought of the blessed harmony of lake, sky, and forest, or the
+sequestered beauty of this spot, came to the half-breed. Revenge and
+murder--twin demons of his nature--were in his heart, and the Indian
+cunning that made him hide while he watched for signs of his enemy. The
+bare peak overlooking the lake soon impressed him as a vantage point, and
+after a half-hour of watchful listening he laid his rifle across the
+thwart, handy to grasp on the instant, and, seizing his paddle once
+more, crossed the lake to the foot of the peak.
+
+To hide his canoe here, ascend this with pack and rifle, was the next
+move of this human panther, and here in a sheltering crevasse he lay and
+watched for his enemy.
+
+Two hours later, and just at sunset, McGuire returned to the lake.
+
+As usual, he, too, paused at the outlet to scan its shores. He believed
+himself utterly secure here, and thought no human being was likely to
+find this lakelet. But for all that, he was watchful. Some exploring
+lumberman or some pioneer trapper might cross this vast swamp and find
+this lake during his absence.
+
+A brief scrutiny assured him that he was still safe from human eyes, and
+he crossed the lake.
+
+From the bare cliff a single keen and vengeful eye watched him.
+
+As usual, also, McGuire made his landing at a convenient point, some
+fifty rods from his cave, and carried his canoe up and turned it over,
+back of a low-jutting ridge of slate. He skinned the half-dozen prizes
+his traps had secured that day and followed a shallow defile to his
+lair. Here his pelts were stretched, a slab of slate was lifted from
+its position in a deep, wide crevasse between two of these ledges, and
+McGuire crawled into his den.
+
+Most of these movements were observed by the half-breed, who, watching
+ever while he plotted and planned how best to catch his enemy unawares,
+saw him emerge from amid the ledges again, go down to the lake, return
+with a pail of water, and vanish once more.
+
+All this was a curious proceeding, for he, like Old Cy, had expected to
+find McGuire occupying some bark shelter, and even now he supposed there
+was one among this confusion of bare rocks.
+
+Another surprise soon came to this distant watcher, for he now saw a thin
+column of smoke rise from a ledge and continue in varying volume until
+hidden by twilight.
+
+And now, secure in his cave and quite unconscious of the watcher with
+murderous intent who had observed his actions, McGuire was enjoying
+himself. He had built a little slate fireplace within his cave. A funnel
+of the same easily fitted material carried the smoke up to a long,
+inch-wide fissure in the roof. He had a table of slate to eat from,
+handy by a bed filled with moss and dry grass, also pine knots for
+needed light.
+
+Opening into this small cave was a lesser one, always cool and dry, for
+no rain nor melting snow could enter it, and here was McGuire's pantry,
+and here also a half-dozen tin cans, safely hidden under a slab of slate,
+stuffed with gold and banknotes.
+
+To still further protect this inner cave, he had fitted a section of
+slate to entirely fill its entrance.
+
+When the last vestige of sunset had vanished and twinkling stars were
+reflected from the placid lake, the half-breed descended from his lookout
+point, and, launching his canoe, followed close to the shadowed shore
+and landed just above where McGuire disembarked. Indian that he was, he
+chose the hours of night and darkness to crawl up to the bark shelter
+which he expected to find, his intention being to thrust a rifle muzzle
+close to his enemy's head and then pull the trigger.
+
+But to do this required a long wait and extreme caution. His enemy
+surely had a camp-fire behind a ledge, and shelter as well. The smoke
+had seemed to rise out of a ledge, but certainly could not, and so--still
+unaware of McGuire's position, yet sure that he was amid these ledges,
+and near a shelter--Pete grasped his rifle and crept ashore.
+
+It was too early to surprise his enemy--time to fall asleep must be
+allowed. Yet so eager was the half-breed to deal death to him, that he
+must needs come here to wait. No chances must be taken when he did crawl
+up to his victim, for a false step or the rattle of a loose stone, or
+his form outlined against the starlit sky as he crawled over a ledge,
+might mean death to him instead of McGuire. And so, crouching safely
+in a dark nook above the landing, Pete waited, watched, and listened.
+
+One hour passed--it seemed two--and then the half-breed crept stealthily
+up to where the smoke had been seen. Not by strides, or even steps, but
+as a panther would, lifting one foot and feeling where it would rest and
+then another, and all the while listening and advancing again.
+
+It was McGuire's habit, while staying here, to look at the weather
+prospects each night, and also to obtain a drink of cool lake water
+before going to sleep.
+
+Often when the evenings were not too cold, he would sit by the lake shore
+for a half-hour, smoking and watching its starlit or moon-glittering
+surface, and listening to the calls of night prowlers.
+
+In spite of being an outlaw, devoid of moral nature, and one who preyed
+upon his fellow-man, he was not without sentiment, and the wild grandeur
+of these enclosing mountains, and the sense of security they gave, were
+pleasant to him. His life had been a harsh and brutal one. He had dealt
+in man's lust and love of liquor. He measured all humankind by his own
+standard of right and wrong, and believed that he must rob others or
+they would rob him. He had followed that belief implicitly from the
+start, and would so long as he lived. He felt that every man's hand
+was against him, and no reproaches of conscience had resulted from his
+cold-blooded killing of an officer. Never once did the thought return
+of the few years when a woman's hand sought his in tenderness, nor any
+sense of the unspeakable horror he had decreed for his own child.
+
+So vile a wretch seemed unfit for God's green earth; and yet the silence
+of night beside this lake, and the stars mirrored on its motionless
+surface, soothed and satisfied him.
+
+[Illustration: He grasped and struck at this enemy in a blind instinct of
+self-preservation.]
+
+He had now and then another impulse--to some day take his savings of many
+years, secreted here, and go to some other country, assume another name,
+and lead a different life.
+
+And now, while an unsuspected enemy was waiting for him to enter a sleep
+that should know no waking, he left his cave and seated himself on a
+shelf-like projection close to the lake, which was deep here, and the
+ledge shore a sheer face rising some ten feet above the water.
+
+One hour or more this strange compound of brute and man sat there
+contemplating the stars, and then he suddenly detected a sound--only
+a faint one, the mere click of one pebble striking another.
+
+He arose and listened.
+
+Soon another soft, crushing sound reached him. Some animal creeping along
+in the passage between the ledges, he thought.
+
+He stepped quickly to the end of the shelf. On that instant a crouching
+form rose upward and confronted him.
+
+He had one moment only, but enough to see a tall man a step below him,
+the next a flash of spitting fire, a stinging pain in one shoulder, and
+this human panther leaped upon McGuire!
+
+But life was sweet, even to McGuire, and as he grasped and struck at
+this enemy in a blind instinct of self-preservation as both closed in
+a death-grapple, one instant of awful agony came to him as a knife
+entered his heart--a yell of mingled hate and deadly fear, as two
+bodies writhed on the narrow shelf, a plunging sound, as both struck
+the water below--and then silence.
+
+Death and vengeance were clasped in one eternal embrace.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+
+ "Thar's two things it don't pay to worry 'bout,--those ye
+ can help 'n' and those ye can't."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When Old Cy and Ray once more made their way up the Beaver Brook valley,
+it was with the feeling that this lone and sinister trapper might be
+met at any moment. They dared not leave their canoe where it might be
+easily found, but adopting Indian tactics, Old Cy cunningly hid it in a
+rank growth of swamp grass, and oft doubling on their own tracks and
+wading the shallow stream, left only a confusing trail.
+
+When the deadfalls had been visited and they began gum-gathering again,
+they watched constantly for an enemy.
+
+A dense forest of tall spruces is at best a weird and ill-omened spot.
+Its vastness appalls, its shadows seem spectral, and every natural object
+becomes grotesque and distorted. An overturned stump with bleaching
+roots appears like a hideous devilfish with arms ready to entwine and
+crush. A twisted tree trunk, prone, rotting, and coated with moss, looks
+like a huge green serpent, and even a knot in the side of a big spruce
+will resemble a grinning gnome. Even the sunlight flitting through the
+dense canopy plays fantastic tricks, and every breath of wind becomes
+the moan of troubled spirits.
+
+Something of this weird impress now assailed Old Cy and more especially
+Ray, and after two days of unpleasant work in this part of the
+wilderness, they gave it up.
+
+"I don't like feelin' I'm bein' watched," Old Cy observed when
+they once more started for home, "an' to-morrer I guess we'd best
+go 'nother way. Thar's a good spruce growth over beyond the hog-back,
+'n' I'd feel safer leavin' the canoe whar Amzi kin keep an eye on't.
+We kin come up now once a week 'n' tend the deadfalls 'n' not leave
+the canoe more'n an hour."
+
+Little did Old Cy realize how groundless his fears now were, or that
+fathoms deep, in a cold, mountain-hid lake, the thieving McGuire and
+the implacable half-breed were now locked in the clasp of death.
+
+A change of location, however, banished somewhat of this spectral
+presence, and although Old Cy was ever alert and watchful, he showed
+no sign of it.
+
+Ray, more volatile and with implicit faith in his protector, soon
+returned to normal condition of mind and once more entered into the
+spirit of their work and sport with a keen zest.
+
+The traps gave increased returns, the little bin where they stored their
+gum was filling slowly but surely, and their life at this wildwood home
+became enjoyable.
+
+Neither was it all labor, for the ducks now migrating southward were
+alighting in the lake by thousands, a few hours' shooting at them from
+ambush made glorious sport, and what with all the partridges they had
+secured and these additions, their ice-house was soon unable to hold
+another bird.
+
+But the halcyon days of autumn were fast passing and signs of nearing
+winter were now visible. Ice began to form in little coves, the ducks
+ceased coming, soon the last of them had departed, the leaves of all
+hardwood trees were now joining in a hurry-scurry dance with every
+passing breeze, the days were of a suggestive shortness, and soon the
+grim and merciless snow--the White Spirit of Old Tomah--would be sweeping
+over the wilderness.
+
+And then one night the Frost King silently touched that rippled lake
+with his wand and the next morning Old Cy and Ray looked out upon its
+motionless expanse of black ice. The sky was also leaden, an ominous
+stillness brooded over forest, lake, and mountain, and midway of that
+day, the first snowfall came.
+
+Old Cy and Ray were a mile away from the cabin, busy at gum-gathering,
+when the first flakes sifted down through the canopied spruce tops. Soon
+the carpet of needles began to whiten, and by mid-afternoon they had to
+abandon work and return.
+
+"I guess we come pretty clus to bein' prisoners now," Old Cy
+ejaculated when he shook himself free from the white coating on the
+cabin porch, "but we've got to make the best on't. We'll git warm
+fust 'n' then go 'n' fetch our canoe up 'n' stow it in the
+shed. We ain't like to want it ag'in 'fore spring. One thing is
+sartin," he added, when the fire began to blaze in the open fireplace,
+"we are sure o' keepin' warm 'n' 'nuff to eat this winter, 'n'
+that's all we really need in life, anyway. The rest on't is mostly
+imagination."
+
+But in spite of his serene philosophy, Old Cy had dreaded the coming
+of winter more than Ray could guess, and all on account of that lad. He
+himself knew what a winter meant in this wilderness cabin, while Ray did
+not. Separated as they were from civilization by a full hundred miles,
+and from Tim's place by forty, they were, as he stated, practically
+prisoners for the next five months.
+
+To escape on snow-shoes was possible, of course, if the need arose, and
+yet it would be a pretty serious venture, after all.
+
+They were in no particular danger, however. With plenty of food and
+fuel, they need not suffer. If the cabin burned, they could erect another
+shelter or use the old one. Something of diversion could be obtained
+from ice-fishing or gum-gathering on warm days; but not enough, as Old
+Cy feared, to keep Ray content and free from the megrims.
+
+None of these fears escaped Old Cy, however. He was too wise for that;
+and moreover, in order to inspire Ray, he now began to affect an almost
+boyish interest in the snow coming and its enjoyments.
+
+"We can't do much more trappin'," he said that first winter evening
+beside the fire while the snow beat against the windows, "but we kin
+hev some fun keepin' warm an' cookin', 'n' when the snow hardens a
+bit we kin go fer gum again, or set tip-ups. We've got more'n a million
+shiners in the cage up the brook, 'n' 'fore it gits too cold, we'll
+ketch a lot o' trout."
+
+It was this faculty for adaptation to the situation, this making the
+best of all circumstances and seizing all opportunities for pleasure
+or profit, that was Old Cy's woodwise characteristic. No matter if
+it stormed, he knew that the sun shone behind the clouds. No matter
+if they were utterly isolated in this wilderness, he still saw ways
+of enjoyment, and even when snowbound, or shut in by zero weather, he
+would still find interest in cooking, keeping warm, or getting ready
+to fish, or in gathering gum, when the chance came.
+
+But winter had now come upon them with a sudden swoop. The next day snow
+fell incessantly, and when the sun shone again, a two-foot level of it
+hid the lake.
+
+Then, as if to test Ray's spirits, the temperature kept well below
+freezing for the next week, the wind blew continuously, sweeping the
+snow into drifts, and all the three could do, as Old Cy said, was to
+"cook vittles and keep warm."
+
+And now for the first time, Ray began to show homesickness. From the day
+Chip had left, not once had he mentioned her or his aunt or uncle in any
+way. He had kept step, as it were, with Old Cy in all things adventurous
+as well as labor and sport.
+
+The possible, even certain gain in the money value of the furs and gum
+which they had secured, coupled with their adventurous life, had occupied
+his every thought; but now that he could only help Old Cy indoors, he
+began to mope.
+
+"I wonder what they are doing now down in Greenvale," he said one
+evening after they had gathered about the fire. "I wish we could hear
+from 'em."
+
+It was the first sign of homesickness which Old Cy had so long dreaded
+to see in him.
+
+"Oh, they ain't havin' half the fun we are," Old Cy answered
+cheerfully. "Jest now I callate Chip's studyin' 'longside o' Aunt
+Comfort's fire; mebbe Angie 'n' Martin's over to Dr. Sol's,
+swappin' yarns. To-morrer Chip'll go ter school, ez usual, 'n' when
+Sunday comes they'll all dress up 'n' go ter meetin'. One thing
+is sartin, they ain't takin' any more comfort'n we are, or gittin'
+better things to eat. If the weather warms up, ez I callate it will in a
+day or two, we'll pull some trout out o' the lake that 'ud make
+all Greenvale stare. They allus bite sharp arter a cold spell. Ez fer
+Chip," he continued, eying Ray's sober face, "she ain't goin'
+to fergit ye, never fear, an' when I take ye out o' the woods in the
+spring 'n' start ye fer Greenvale with five hundred dollars in yer
+inside pocket, ez I callate, ye'll feel's though ye owned the hull
+town when ye git thar, an' Chip'll feel ez tho' she owned ye."
+
+"I wish I could hear how they are once in a while," Ray rejoined.
+"They may be sick."
+
+That "they" meant Chip was self-evident.
+
+Once a mood comes upon a person, it is hard to change it, and of all
+the moods that torture poor human beings, the love mood is the most
+implacable. While the zest of trapping was upon Ray, he was himself and a
+cheerful enough lad. There had also been the spice of danger from this
+unknown, thieving trapper; but when both had vanished, and all that was
+left for excitement was the monotony of indoor life, with occasional
+half-days when fishing through the ice was permissible, his spirits
+fell to low tide.
+
+Old Cy had feared this from the outset, but believing that the
+experience here was the best possible for the boy, to say nothing of the
+financial side, he had brought it about. And now he had his hands full.
+
+But he was equal to it. Next to sport, work, he knew, was the best
+panacea for any mental disorder, and work a-plenty he now found for
+Ray. First, it had been the making of tip-ups for use on the lake, then
+snow-shoes for both of them, and then cutting and splitting more wood.
+They had an ample supply already, piled high in a lean-to alongside the
+big cabin, but Old Cy asserted that it was not enough, and so more was
+added.
+
+The paths, one to the lake to obtain water and one to the ice-house, were
+allotted to Ray to keep open.
+
+A few days were consumed in filling the ice-house once more, and when
+a warm day came, Old Cy led the way to the sheltered side of the lake,
+as enthusiastic as a boy, to begin cutting holes and setting lines for
+fishing.
+
+This especially interested Ray, and one good day with a fine catch of
+trout would revive his spirits for some time.
+
+Each and every evening, also, when the social side came, Old Cy, always a
+prolific story-teller, would engage in his favorite pastime for a purpose.
+
+And what a marvellous fund he had to draw from! All the years when he,
+a sailor boy, had sailed afar, all the strange countries and people he
+had visited, and all the mishaps he had met were now levied upon.
+
+When these failed--and it was not soon--his wilderness wanderings before
+he settled down at Greenvale furnished tales, and when facts became
+scarce, his fancies came into play, and many a thrilling shipwreck and
+hair-breadth escape that never happened, held Ray's attention for a
+long evening.
+
+The banjo also helped out for many an hour. The old hermit with his
+jews'-harp joined in, and although Ray's fingers were prone to stray
+to "solemn" tunes, Old Cy persisted in his calls for livelier songs,
+even to the extent of adding his voice; and so the first few weeks of
+winter wore away.
+
+When Christmas neared, however, Ray had a "spell." It had been a
+calendar day in his memory, and he had been one of the crowd of young
+folks who made merry in the usual ways; but now no cheer was possible,
+he believed, and once more he began to look glum.
+
+It may seem rank foolishness and doubtless was, yet Ray, like all
+humanity, must be measured by his years and judged by his surroundings.
+
+In Greenvale he had been one of fifty schoolmates whose lives and moods
+were akin, and whose enjoyments must be much the same. Here he was, in a
+way, utterly alone so far as age means companionship, and worse than
+that, one of his two companions was morose and misanthropic. True, he
+twanged his jews'-harp in tune with Ray's plantation melodies, but
+when that bond of feeling ceased, he lapsed into chill silence once more.
+
+But Old Cy, wise philosopher that he was, saw and felt every mood and
+tense that came to Ray, and, seeing thus, forestalled each and every one.
+
+"Christmas is 'most here," he said to Ray, a few days before, "an'
+I've been figgerin' we three ought to celebrate it 'cordin' to
+the best o' our means. We can't do much in the way o' gifts, but we
+kin bust ourselves with vittles 'n' have some fun, just the same.
+I've kinder mapped out the day sorter this way, if it's pleasant.
+Fust, we'll hev an arly breakfast, then pack a lot o' things on the
+hand-sled, go 'cross the lake 'n' round to the cove facin' the south.
+Here we'll cut a few holes, set some lines, 'n' while you're tendin'
+'em, Amzi 'n' me'll clear a spot under the bank, build a bough
+lean-to facin' the sun, spread blankets in it, 'n' when noon comes,
+cook a meal fit fer the gods. We kin hev briled venison, fried trout
+jist out o' the water, boiled taters, hot coffee, 'n' an appetite
+that'll make ye lick yer fingers 'n' holler fer more. If only the
+sun shines, we kin hev a heap o' fun."
+
+It was all a boyish diversion as planned by Old Cy, and the sole object
+was to tide Ray over a day that might add to his homesickness. The
+weather favored this kindly interest.
+
+Christmas morn opened warm, and but for the deep snow it might have
+been an October day. Old Cy's romantic plan also materialized to the
+fullest, and when his green bough shed, with carpet of the same, was
+completed, the fire in front blazing cheerfully and dinner cooking, it
+was all a picture well worth a study.
+
+Then as if to prove that good luck trots in double harness, about this
+time the trout began to bite, and the line of tip-ups across the cove
+were flagging exciting signals that kept Ray and the old hermit on the
+jump. Even when their picturesque Christmas dinner was spread upon an
+improvised table in front of the bough shelter, Ray could hardly leave
+the sport to eat, and Old Cy had to interfere.
+
+"We ain't ketchin' fish to sell," he said to Ray, "but jist fer fun.
+You've got more'n we kin eat in two weeks, so give 'em a rest."
+
+When dinner was over there came a lazy lounging hour on the fir boughs in
+the warm sun, while Old Cy smoked his pipe of content.
+
+Ray, however, could not resist the signal flags any longer, and as soon
+as the meal was eaten he was out tending them again.
+
+When the sun was halfway down, again the happy trio broke camp and
+returned to the cabin, carrying fish enough to feed a multitude. That
+evening Old Cy told stories as usual, Ray picked his banjo and sang
+lively songs, and so ended Christmas in the wilderness.
+
+Our lives are but a succession of moods, varying ever as our surroundings
+change; and so it was with Ray, isolated as he was with two old men for
+companions. With work or sport to interest him, he was cheerful and
+content. But when, as now happened, another long and heavy snowfall
+succeeded that mellow Christmas Day, he grew morose. It was selfish,
+perhaps, and thoughtless, as youth ever is, and yet not surprising; for
+when the sun shone again, they were practically buried under snow. It
+took an entire day, with all three working, to shovel paths to the lake
+and ice-house, and when that was done there was naught else except to
+cook and keep the fire going. A few days of this bore heavily on
+Ray's spirits, and he became so glum that Old Cy took him to task.
+
+"You've got to brace up, my boy," he said one evening, "an' likewise
+count yer blessin's. We are shut up fer a spell, but think how much
+worse off ye might be. We've got plenty to eat 'n' keep warm with,
+thar's a good three hundred pounds o' gum we got, an' it's worth over
+four hundred dollars, say nothin' o' the furs, 'n' all yourn. Then,
+'nother thing, ye mustn't keep broodin' over yer own lonesomeness
+so much. I'll 'low ye're kind o' anxious to see the little gal
+ag'in, as is nat'ral; but s'pose it was two years ye hed to look
+forrard to, a-waitin', an' then on top o' that, arter waitin' so
+long, ye hed to face three more, with never a chance to larn whether
+she was dead or alive!"
+
+And now Old Cy paused, and watched the low-burning fire as if living once
+more in bygone days.
+
+"It seems a long time, these months," he continued at last, glancing
+at Ray, "an' so 'tis; but I had a longer spell on't once, an' it
+ended the way I hope your waitin' won't. It all happened more'n forty
+years ago, 'n' I've never told nobody 'bout it since.
+
+"I was born in Bayport, that's a seaport town, an' me 'n' my only
+brother took to the sea at an arly age. We had sweethearts, too, and,
+curislike, they was sisters. Mine was Abbie Grey--sweet Abbie Grey they
+used to call her, an' she well desarved it.
+
+"Wal, I used to see her 'tween viages, mebbe a week or two, onct in
+six or twelve months o' waitin', an' them was spells I've lived over
+hundreds o' times, I kin tell ye. We 'greed to hitch up finally arter
+I made one more viage, 'n' I went off, feelin' life ahead was all
+apple orchards 'n' sunshine."
+
+He paused, looked long at the dying embers once more, and then continued:
+"Life is all a mix-up o' hopes 'n' disapp'intments, tho', an' the
+brighter the hopes the more sartin they are to be upset. I started on
+that viage feelin' heaven was waitin' fer me at shore, 'n' I seemed
+to 'a' sailed right into the other place, fer our ship sprung a
+leak 'n' foundered. We took to the boats, ez I told ye onct. Most
+o' my crew died afore I was picked up, 'n' then the whaler that
+took me aboard was bound on a four years' viage. That was bad enough,
+but worse was possible, fer she fetched up on a coral island one
+night toward the last on't, and 'twas plumb six years 'fore I heard
+from home 'n' Abbie. Things had happened thar in that time, too, an' I
+was told my brother had been given up ez lost, 'n' Abbie, believin'
+we both was dead, had married 'nother man. I was so upsot I never let
+her know I was alive, 'n' she don't know it to-day, if she's
+still livin', which I hope she is."
+
+For a long time now Old Cy remained silent, his head bowed, his eyes
+closed, as that long-ago page of memories returned, while Ray watched him.
+
+"Life is a curis puzzle," he added at last, "an' we all live in
+to-morrers. Fust we are like boys chasin' Jack-lanterns, rushin' on all
+the time, 'spectin' most o' the trouble is past 'n' the future
+is all rosy. We don't figger much on to-day, but callate next week, next
+month, next year, is goin' to be more sunshiny, till we get old 'n'
+gray 'n' grumpy, 'n' nobody wants us 'round."
+
+Once more he ceased speaking, and once more his eyes closed. Five, ten,
+twenty minutes passed while Ray watched Old Age in repose and the fire
+quite died away.
+
+"It's gittin' chilly," Old Cy said at last, suddenly rousing himself
+from his dream of the long ago and sweet Abbie Grey, "an' we'd best
+turn in."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+
+ "The biggest fool thing--an' we all do it--is shakin'
+ hands with trouble 'fore ye meet it."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+For two months life at Birch Camp much resembled that of a woodchuck or
+a squirrel. Now and then a day came when the crusted snow permitted a
+gum-gathering trip into the forest, or a few midday hours at ice-fishing;
+and never were the first signs of spring more welcome than to those
+winter-bound prisoners. The wise counsel and patient example of Old Cy
+had not been lost upon Ray, either; and that winter's experience had
+changed him to an almost marvellous degree. He was no longer a moody and
+selfish boy, thinking only of his own privations, but more of a man, who
+realized that he had duties and obligations toward others, as well as
+himself.
+
+With the returning sun and vanishing snow, animal life was once more
+astir, and a short season of trapping was again entered upon, and
+mingled with that a few days more of gum-gathering. It was brief and at a
+disadvantage, for ice still covered the lake, and until that disappeared
+no use of the canoes could be made.
+
+Once well under way, however, spring returned with speed, the brooks
+began to overflow, the lake to rise, and one morning, instead of a white
+expanse of watery ice, it was a blue and rippled lake once more.
+
+And now plans for Ray's return to Greenvale were in order, and the sole
+topic of discussion. He was as eager as a boy anxious for the close of
+school, and for a double reason, which is self-evident.
+
+It was agreed that Old Cy and himself should make the trip out together
+in two canoes, and convey their stores of gum and firs. At the settlement
+these were to be packed, to await later sale and shipment. Old Cy would
+then return to camp, and Ray would go on to Greenvale.
+
+A change in this plan came in an unexpected manner, however, for a few
+days before the one set for departure, Old Cy, always on watch, saw a
+canoe enter the lake, and who should appear but Levi, Martin's old guide.
+
+"I've been cookin' up at a lumber camp on the Moosehorn," he
+explained, after greetings had been exchanged, "an' I thought I
+would make a trip up here an' call on ye 'fore I went out."
+
+How welcome he was, and how all, even Amzi, of those winter-bound
+prisoners vied with each other in making him the guest of honor, need not
+be asserted. He had been a part of their life here the previous summer,
+with all its joys and dangers, and now seemed one of them.
+
+When mutual experiences and their winter's history had been exchanged,
+of course Chip's rescue, the half-breed's escape, and the whereabouts
+of her father came up for discussion that evening.
+
+"I've heard from Tim's Place two or three times this winter," said
+Levi, "an' neither Pete nor old McGuire has been seen or heard on
+since early last fall. Pete got thar all safe, but vowed revenge on
+McGuire, as Martin and I found, when we went out. He stayed round a week
+or so, I heard later, and then started for his cabin on the Fox Hole,
+'n' since then hain't never been seen or heard of by nobody. Tim
+an' Mike went over to his cabin 'long in the winter, but no signs of
+him was found, or even of his bein' thar since snow came. McGuire also
+seems to hev dropped out o' business and ain't been heard on since
+in the summer. We've expected him all winter at the lumber camp, but
+he didn't show up."
+
+"We've seen him," put in Old Cy, flashing a smile at Ray, "leastwise
+I callated 'twas him, though I never let on to that effect. He was
+trappin' over beyond a big swamp last fall, 'n' he paid us a visit,
+stole a half-dozen o' our catches 'n' left his trade-mark on our
+canoe." And then Old Cy told the story of their adventure, omitting,
+however, any reference to the supposed cave.
+
+"It's curis what has become o' him," Levi said, when the tale was
+told, "and our camp crowd all believe that thar's been foul play,
+with Pete at the bottom on't. Nobody's shed any tears, though, an'
+I'm thinkin' the woods is well rid o' him. He's been a terror to
+everybody long enough."
+
+Much more of this backwoods gossip and change of experience filled in
+the evening, and next morning Old Cy gave Ray a word of caution.
+
+"I kept whist 'bout our findin' what we callated was a cave," he
+said, "an' I want you to. This matter o' McGuire and the half-breed
+ain't blowed over yit, an' we don't want to git mixed up in it. Ez
+fer the cave, if we 'lowed we found one, the folks at Tim's Place 'ud
+go huntin' fer it, sure, 'n' I've my reasons for not wantin' they
+should go. So mum's the word to Levi 'bout it."
+
+Levi's arrival, however, changed their plans, for he at once offered to
+convoy Ray out of the woods, thus relieving Old Cy, and three days later
+these two, with well-laden canoes, started on the out-going journey.
+
+It was not without incident, for when the main stream was reached, it was
+dotted with floating logs and the red-shirted drivers with the bateaux
+and spike shoes were in evidence. A monster jam was met at the first
+rapid, the bags of gum nuts, bundles of firs, and canoes had to be
+carried around it, and when Tim's Place was reached, a score of the
+good-natured woodsmen were in possession.
+
+Levi discreetly avoided all questions as to what Tim knew of Chip,
+her father, or the half-breed. Ray's lips were also sealed, and so
+both escaped much questioning. Here, also, they learned what both had
+guessed--that McGuire and Pete had either left the wilderness or had
+perished that winter. Where and how, if such was the case, no one seemed
+to know or care, and a close observer would have said that every one at
+Tim's Place hoped that these two outlaws had met their fate.
+
+Old Tomah was also found at Tim's Place, and he was undeniably glad to
+see both Ray and Levi, and to learn that Chip was likely to be well cared
+for.
+
+When these two voyagers were ready to start, he joined and kept with
+them until the settlement was reached. Knowing full well the value of
+gum and furs, he soon found a purchaser for Ray's store and stock at
+its full value; and when that youth, now elated as never before, was
+ready to start for Greenvale, this fine old Indian showed almost a white
+man's emotion.
+
+"Take this to little girl," he said, handing Ray a package, "and tell
+her Old Tomah not forget. He hope she come back to see him soon."
+
+"Tell Mr. Frisbie I shall be here, waitin' to meet him, when he sends
+word," Levi said; and shaking hands with both of his good friends, Ray
+now bade them good-by with many thanks for all they had done.
+
+Of his homeward trip and all the charming anticipations now his, no
+mention need be made. They are but the flowers wisely strewn in the
+pathway of youth, and Ray--now more a man than when he entered the
+woods--full well deserved all that lay before him.
+
+But Old Tomah's heart was sad, and far away beside a rippled lake was
+another who felt the same.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+
+ "When ye see two hearts tryin' to beat ez one, gin 'em the
+ chance."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Chip's success and popularity in Greenvale was practically nullified
+by Hannah, who from wounded vanity and petty jealousy became her enemy
+from the outset.
+
+Aunt Comfort did not know it. Angie was not conscious of the facts, or,
+busy with her own social duties and home-making, gave them no thought.
+And yet, inspired by Hannah's malicious tongue, Greenvale looked upon
+poor Chip as one it was best to avoid.
+
+With Angie as sponsor, she had been made one of the Christmas church
+decorators, and had been twice invited to parties, only to exasperate
+Hannah all the more and cause an increase of sneers.
+
+"She's nobody an' an upstart," Hannah said at the first meeting of
+the village sewing circle after Chip's advent, "an' I've my doubts
+about her father an' mother ever bein' married. Then she's an infiddle
+an' believes in Injun sperrits an' hobgoblin things she calls spites,
+an' is a reg'lar heathen. I don't trust her a minit, an' never leave
+the house 'thout I lock up my things."
+
+Much more of this sort fell from Hannah's lips whenever occasion
+offered, though never within hearing of Aunt Comfort or Angie. Neither
+did the townspeople enlighten them, and so the undercurrent of innuendo
+and gossip, once started by Hannah, spread until all Greenvale looked
+askance at Chip.
+
+There was also some color for this ill repute, for Angie had concealed
+nothing, and Chip, foolishly perhaps, had asserted her belief when it
+would have been better to conceal it.
+
+The parson also, chagrined at his failure to make a convert of the girl,
+referred to her as "rebellious, obstinate in her ideas, and one who
+needed chastening."
+
+Her teacher, however, was her stanch friend. Aunt Comfort beamed upon her
+morning and night, while Angie, having provided her with home, raiment,
+opportunity for schooling, escort to church, and much good advice, felt
+that she had fulfilled her duty. And in a way, she had.
+
+But social recognition in a country village can be made or marred by
+such a person as Hannah, and quite unknown to those most interested,
+Chip's popularity was not decreed. Neither was she conscious of this
+undercurrent. Each day she went to and returned from school in a sturdy
+sort of way. A most devoted pupil, she never failed to thank her teacher
+for every word of help, and if--thanks to Hannah--she failed to make
+friends about the village, she won a place near to Aunt Comfort's heart.
+
+But somehow Aunt Comfort, who loved everybody alike, good or bad, or
+at least spoke no ill of the bad ones, didn't count. That she must
+inevitably take Chip under her motherly wing, all recognized. She had
+taken Hannah, then Angie and Nezer, and now this waif who, as Hannah
+insisted, was all bad; and according to Greenvale's belief, Aunt Comfort
+would keep on "taking in" homeless waifs and outcast mortals as long
+as she lived, or house room held out. And it was true.
+
+By midwinter Martin's new house was all furnished, and social
+obligations began to interest Angie, which made matters all the worse for
+Chip, for now Hannah could persecute her with less danger of exposure.
+
+But Chip was hard to persecute. She had known adversity in its worst
+form. Her life at Tim's Place had been practical slavery, and the worst
+that Hannah could do was as pin pricks compared to it.
+
+It is certain, also, if Chip had "spunked up," as Hannah would call
+it, now and then, it would have been better for her; but it wasn't
+Chip's way. To work and suffer in silence had been her lot at Tim's
+Place. Angie had said, "You must obey everybody and make friends," and
+impelled by experience, and this somewhat broad order, Chip was doing
+her best.
+
+One hope cheered her all that long, hard winter of monotonous study--the
+return of Ray, and possibly Old Cy, when summer came. Somehow these two
+had knit themselves into her life as no one else had or could. Then
+she wondered how Ray would seem to and feel toward her when he came,
+and if the little bond--a wondrous strong one, as far as her feelings
+went--would still call him to her side.
+
+Of love and its real meaning she was scarce conscious as yet. She simply
+felt that this youth with his sunny face and brown eyes was the one
+being on earth she wished to please. All the romance and pathos of
+that summer idyl, all the moonlight and canoeing, all the songs he had
+charmed her with, and every word and act of his from that first evening
+when, ragged and starving, she had stumbled into the camp, until she had
+parted from him with misty eyes, had been lived over by her countless
+times.
+
+It had all been a beacon of hope to her in the uphill road toward the
+temple of learning; and how hard she had studied, and how patiently she
+had tried to correct her own speech, not even her teacher guessed.
+
+Few of us can see ourselves as others see us, and yet Chip, mature
+of mind as one just entering womanhood, realized somewhat her own
+condition. Perhaps, also, she was conscious in some degree as to why
+she was not more popular, but that was a matter of scant interest to
+her. All she wished and all she strove for was to learn what others knew,
+speak as others spoke, and act as they acted; and all for one end and
+purpose--to win favor in the eyes of Ray.
+
+And so no one, not even Hannah, whose prying eyes saw all things, guessed
+her secret.
+
+A little of gall and bitterness was now and then meted out to Hannah
+in return for all her sneers, for Chip's teacher occasionally spent an
+evening at Aunt Comfort's, and every word of praise she let fall for
+her pupil was a thorn to Hannah. But she revenged herself, as might be
+expected.
+
+"I think that Injun gal's a witch," she said once to her bosom friend
+after one of these unpleasant evenings, "the way she pulls wool over
+Miss Phinney's eyes by pretending she's so anxious to learn. You'd
+think to hear her go on that learnin' was all she was livin' for, and
+her teacher almost an angel. I think Angie must 'a' ben spellbound
+the same way when she fetched her here to crowd out her betters."
+
+But Chip, fortunately, was still unconscious of the extent and injury
+of Hannah's malice.
+
+With the coming of springtime and green grass, life for Chip assumed
+a more smiling face, for now she could fly to the hillsides, and for
+the time being imagine herself at the lake once more. Somehow Greenvale
+as a whole had impressed her as cold and unloving, and to escape it was
+a relief. Her teacher was dear to her, Aunt Comfort a kindly mother,
+Angie a good friend; but none were kin to her and never could be, as
+she more and more realized.
+
+Then, too, poor Chip, in spite of Tim's Place, was growing homesick for
+the wilderness again; or, to be more accurate, for the little lake where
+her heart had been touched by the wand of love.
+
+With some insight into books and a developing mind came a keener
+sensitiveness, and what people thought of her and how they felt toward
+her became of more consequence. Her life was simple. She rose early,
+assisted as a housemaid in Aunt Comfort's home, departed at a set time
+for school with its six hours of almost unbroken study, and, most prized
+of all, a few moments' companionship with her teacher. To her Chip
+had confided all her joys and sorrows and most of her history as well.
+And be it said to Miss Phinney's credit, she had discretion and honor
+enough not to betray Chip's confidence.
+
+It is also possible, in fact almost certain, that that unfortunate
+waif's somewhat pitiful tale had won her teacher's interest and
+affection as naught else could. Only one reservation was made by
+Chip--her own feelings toward Ray. All else became an open book to
+Miss Phinney.
+
+When school was out, the two walked homeward together as far as their
+ways permitted, and then Chip obtained the one hour of the day which she
+felt was quite her own. At first, during the autumn days, she had used it
+for a scamper through the nutbrown woods. When winter came and it was
+not too cold, she occasionally visited the mill pond above the village,
+where, if the conditions were right, all the skating and sliding youth
+were gathered; and when blessed spring returned, it was away to the
+hills and fields once more.
+
+On Saturdays she seldom left the house, unless sent on an errand, and
+Sunday became a day of penance.
+
+"I don't know why folks watch me so much when I go to meetin'," Chip
+complained once to her teacher, "but they do, and I don't like it. I
+can see now why they did when I first came. I guess they thought I was
+an Injun, maybe; but what do I do now to make 'em so curious?"
+
+"Oh, I wouldn't mind them," Miss Phinney answered soothingly, "no
+one intends to annoy you; but it takes a long time for people here to
+become accustomed to a stranger."
+
+Miss Phinney dared not tell her pupil that her somewhat wild belief
+and unquestionably rude origin and early life formed the basis of this
+curiosity.
+
+And now, when the flowers and birds had once more returned to Greenvale,
+and Ray might return any day, a little plan that Chip had had in mind
+for many weeks took shape. She knew Ray must come on the stage, and eager
+for a sight of his face as only love can make one, she meant to be the
+first to meet and greet him.
+
+A mile down the village street and beyond the last house was a sharp
+hilltop. The stage usually reached here about an hour after the close of
+school, and to this vantage point, where she could hide behind a stone
+wall, Chip now betook herself each day.
+
+Her plans for meeting her young hero were well considered. She was sure
+he would, like herself, prefer a seat with Uncle Joe. That important
+person, whose heart she had won by her admiration of his horses on her
+arrival, would surely invite her to ride into the village, if he saw her.
+If he was alone, she would remain hid; but if _some one_ was with him,
+she would then disclose herself and the coveted invitation and meeting
+with Ray would follow.
+
+It was a vague, uncertain plan. No one in Greenvale had the remotest idea
+when Ray would return. Chip only knew that he was expected in the spring.
+The day, or even week, was a long-range guess. But even that slim chance
+poor, lonesome, heart-longing Chip would not miss, and so each day at
+close of school she hurried to her lookout point to watch and wait.
+
+It was a silly, almost hopeless sentinelship, as she knew well enough;
+but with the dog's heart that was hers, she would keep her vigil, and
+like one of those dumb brutes, wait weeks, months, ay, years even, for a
+master coming.
+
+It was mid-April when Chip began her daily watch, and missed no day
+unless a pelting rain prevented. It was June ere she won her reward, and
+then one balmy afternoon when she saw the stage afar, there, perched
+beside Uncle Joe, was--a companion!
+
+How sure that weary, waiting waif was that her heart was not mistaken!
+How her pulses leaped and thrilled as the slow-moving stage crept up
+the hill; and how Ray, eager to catch the first glimpse of his native
+village, saw a winsome, smiling face shaded by a flower-decked hat,
+peeping at him over a wall, was but a minor episode in the lives of
+these two; yet one to be recalled many, many times afterward and always
+with a heartache.
+
+None came to them now, for on the instant Ray saw who was waiting for him
+he halted the stage, and the next moment he was beside his sweetheart.
+And Uncle Joe, with the wisdom and sympathy of old age, discreetly
+averted his face, and said "Go-lang" to his horses, and drove on alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+
+ "There ain't but few folks smell woollen quite quick enough."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+During all the long weeks while Chip had awaited her lover's coming,
+one hope had been hers--that his return would end all her loneliness and
+begin a season of the happy, care-free days like those by the lake once
+more.
+
+And there were many reasons for it.
+
+In this quiet, strictly religious, gossip-loving village, a dependant
+upon charity, as it were, and with Hannah's sneers, Chip had slowly but
+surely learned how little akin she was to them all, and how distrustful
+they all were of her. This knowledge had come by degrees: first, from
+the way in which the older pupils at school regarded her, having
+always kept aloof; then the insistent staring she received each Sunday
+at church; the somewhat chilly reception she had met in a social
+way; and lastly, a seeming indifference on Angie's part. There was no
+reason for it all, so far as Chip could understand. She walked in
+the straight and narrow path laid out for her each day, made herself
+useful between school hours at Aunt Comfort's, studied hard, thanked
+Angie for every trifle, and after her first unfortunate experience in
+defending her belief in spites and Old Tomah's hobgoblins, she had
+never referred to them again. But the seeming fact that she was disliked
+and unwelcome here had slowly forced itself upon her and added to her
+loneliness.
+
+It was all to end, however, when Ray came. In him or from him she would
+find a welcome. He knew her as she was, and what she was. He had not been
+distrustful, but tender and loving, and all clouds and sorrow and all
+humiliations would fade away when he came.
+
+She had pictured to herself, also, how much they would be together
+and where; how he would come to Aunt Comfort's the first evening and
+tell all about his winter in the wilderness and Old Cy,--all about
+the trap-setting, gum-gathering, and the deep snows she knew so much
+about. Maybe he would bring his banjo now and then and play and sing the
+darky songs she had hummed so many times. Possibly he might come and
+meet her occasionally on the way home from school; and when vacation
+came, how many long rambles they would take in the dear old woods, with
+no such ogre as the half-breed to spoil them. It had all been a rosy-hued
+dream with her, while she waited his coming. And now he was here!
+
+For the first few moments after he kissed her upraised lips, she could
+not speak for very joy; and then, as hand in hand they started toward
+the village, her speech came.
+
+"I've been so lonesome," she said simply, "I've counted the days,
+and come down here to meet you daily, for over a month. I don't like
+it here, and nobody likes me, I guess. I'm so glad you've come, though.
+Now I shan't be lonesome no more. I've studied hard, too," she added,
+with an accent of pride. "I can read and spell words of six syllables.
+I've ciphered up to decimal fractions, an' begun grammar."
+
+"I'm glad to get home, too," answered Ray, as simply. "It was
+lonesome in the woods all winter, when we couldn't tend the traps. But
+I've made a lot of money--'most five hundred dollars--all mine, too.
+How is everybody?" And so they dropped from sentiment into commonplace.
+
+At the tavern he secured his belongings. At the corner where their ways
+parted, he bade Chip a light good-by, and with an "I'll see you soon,"
+left her.
+
+Her hero had arrived. They had met, kissed as lovers should, and the
+lonely waiting and watching days were at an end and a new life was to
+begin for Chip.
+
+Little did she realize what it would mean for her, or how utterly her
+hopes were to fail.
+
+"He will come to-night," her heart assured her, and that evening,
+without a word to Aunt Comfort or Hannah as to whom she expected, she
+arrayed herself in her one best dress and awaited his expected visit.
+
+And what a propitious and all-favoring evening it was! The June night
+was balmy. Blooming lilacs and syringas half hid, as well as adorned, the
+porch of Aunt Comfort's home. Aunt Comfort had just departed to make
+a call, Hannah was away at prayer meeting, and "no one nigh to hinder."
+
+But Chip waited in vain!
+
+The drowsy hum of the Mizzy Falls, up the village street, came to her;
+the fireflies twinkled amid the dense-growing maples and over the broad
+meadows; whippoorwills called across the valley; but no lover came to
+Chip. One, two, almost three hours she waited and watched. Then came
+Aunt Comfort and Hannah, and heavy-hearted and lonesome once more, poor
+Chip retired.
+
+At school next day her mind and heart were at war. The parts of speech
+and rules of subtraction and division seemed complete chaos, and when
+homeward bound, she loitered slowly along, hoping Ray would make amends
+and meet her on the way. But again he failed to appear.
+
+And that night, when alone with Hannah, a worse blow came.
+
+"I heerd young Stetson got back yesterday," she said, fixing her
+steely blue eyes on Chip, "an' you went down the road to meet him. I
+should think you'd be 'shamed o' yourself. If you're callatin'
+on settin' your cap for him, 'twon't do a mite o' good. His aunt
+wouldn't think o' havin' sich an outcast ez you for him--that I can
+tell ye."
+
+But not a word of reply came from poor Chip. Such speeches were not new
+to her, and she had long before ceased to answer them. But this one, from
+its very truth, hurt more than all others had, and, crushed by it, she
+stole away out of the house.
+
+No thought that Ray might call came to her. She only wished to escape
+somewhere, that she might cry away her misery and shame in solitude.
+
+The evening was but a repetition of the previous one. The same sweet
+influence and silvered light was all about, but no heed of its beauty
+came to Chip. Instead, she felt herself a shameful thing of no account.
+Her lover had failed her--now she knew why, and as she sped along the
+lonely way to the schoolhouse, scarce conscious of her steps, all hope
+and all joy left her. Why or for what purpose she was hurrying toward
+this deserted little building, she knew not. Hot tears filled her eyes.
+Shame surged in her heart. She was a nobody in the eyes of all her
+world, and once she had reached the worn sill, so often crossed by
+her, she threw herself upon it and sobbed in utter despair.
+
+For a long hour she sat there while the tide of feeling ebbed and tears
+came unchecked, and then the reaction came. With it, also, came something
+of the old courage and defiance that had once led her to face night,
+danger, and sixty miles of wilderness alone.
+
+"I have made a mistake," she said, sitting up, "and Hannah was right.
+I am a nobody here, and Ray has been told so and has kept away."
+
+And now with returning calm, and soothed, maybe, by the still, ethereal
+night, she saw herself, her past and present, as it all was. Back in
+an instant she sped in thought to the moment when, kneeling to these
+people, she begged for food; back to that first prayer she ever heard
+in the tent, and the offer of rescue that followed.
+
+And then her life here, with all its hopes and humiliation, rose before
+her.
+
+"It was all wrong, my coming here," she said, looking away to the
+village where lights twinkled; "I am not their sort, nor they mine.
+I'd better go away."
+
+Then, lifted a wee bit by this new resolve, she rose and returned to the
+house.
+
+The tall clock in the sitting room was just chiming ten when she entered,
+and Aunt Comfort was there alone.
+
+"Raymond was here this evening," she said kindly, "and waited quite
+a spell. Where have you been?"
+
+"Oh, nowhere," answered Chip, pleasantly, "only I was lonesome and
+went out for a walk."
+
+Little did good Aunt Comfort realize what a volcano of hope, despair,
+shame, and tender love was concealed beneath that calm answer, or the
+new resolve budding in Chip's heart.
+
+No more did Ray suspect it when he met her coming home from school the
+next afternoon.
+
+For during those two wretched hours when she was alone on the worn
+schoolhouse step, poor Chip McGuire, the low-born, pitiful waif, had
+become a woman and put away girlish impulses.
+
+"I couldn't come to see you that first evening," he said at once,
+"for uncle and aunty kept me talking till bedtime. Where were you last
+night?"
+
+"Oh, I didn't much think you would come," answered Chip, calmly,
+smiling at him in a far-off way. "I am a nobody here, as you will soon
+find out, and I don't expect--anything. I got lonesome last night and
+went off for a walk."
+
+Ray looked at her in wide-eyed astonishment. And well he might, for only
+two short days since she had met him, an eager, simple girl, and now she
+spoke like a woman. No word, no hint of his neglect, escaped her; but
+a cool indifference was apparent.
+
+"Tell me about the woods and Old Cy," she said, not waiting for him
+to speak again, "and how is the hermit? I want to know all about them."
+
+"Oh, I left 'em all right," answered Ray, sullenly, for like a boy
+he wanted to be coaxed. And then, urged a little by Chip, he told his
+winter's experience.
+
+One episode interested her most of all--the strange trapper's doings,
+his theft of their game, their pursuit of him and discovery of his hiding
+spot.
+
+"I know who that was," she said, when it was all described. "It was
+my father, and if he had caught you spying upon him, I guess he'd shot
+you both. He always used to go somewhere trapping every fall; but nobody
+could ever find where."
+
+This return to the memories of the wilderness wore away something of
+Chip's cool reserve, and when the house was reached her eyes had grown
+tender.
+
+"I shall be glad to see you often--as--as your folks will let you
+come," she said, somewhat timidly when they parted; and scarce
+understanding this speech, Ray left her.
+
+"Chip has changed a whole lot," he said to his aunt a little later,
+"and I wish she hadn't; she don't seem the same any more."
+
+"I'm glad of it if she has," answered Angie, smiling at him. "There
+was need enough of it."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+
+Old Cy had builded wiser than he realized when he coaxed Ray to spend
+a winter in the woods.
+
+The long tramps through the vast wilderness; the keen hunt for signs of
+mink, fisher, otter, and wildcat, with constant guard against danger;
+the unremitting though zestful labor of gum-gathering; the far-sighted
+need for winter preparation; and last but not least Old Cy's cheerful
+philosophy, had broadened the lad and developed both muscle and mind.
+
+His success, too, had encouraged him. He was eager to try another season
+there, and planned for hiring men to gather gum, and saw in this vocation
+possible future.
+
+But the change in Chip puzzled him. He had returned, expecting to find
+her the same timid, yet courageous little girl, ready to be his companion
+at all times and to kiss him when he chose--a somewhat better-educated
+girl, of course, using more refined language, but otherwise the same
+confiding child, as it were.
+
+She was all this the day of his return; and then, presto! like a sudden
+blast of cold air came a change. Too loyal to her to question any one,
+he could only wonder why this change.
+
+He called again soon after that first, unsatisfying walk home with her,
+to find her the same cool, collected young lady. She was nice to him,
+induced him to talk of the woods once more and his own plans; but it was
+not the Chip of old who listened, but quite another person.
+
+"I am going back to the lake with uncle and aunt," he said at last,
+"and I mean to coax them to take you along. You have been shut up in
+school so long, it will do you good."
+
+"Please don't say a word to them about it," she urged, in hurt tone,
+"for it will do no good. I wouldn't go, anyway."
+
+"Not go to the woods if you could," he exclaimed in astonishment;
+"why, what do you mean?"
+
+"Just what I say," she returned firmly, and then added wistfully,
+"I'd fly there, if I had wings. I'd give my life, almost, for one more
+summer like the last. But I shall not go again now, and maybe never."
+
+It was unaccountable and quite beyond Ray's ken--this strange decision
+of hers--and her "Please don't say any more about it," closed the
+subject.
+
+Another and even greater shock came to Ray when late that evening, on the
+porch, he essayed to kiss her.
+
+"No, no; please don't," she said with almost a sob, pushing him away.
+"It's silly now, and--and--you mustn't."
+
+A week later school closed, and Chip's conduct was then also a puzzle
+to Miss Phinney. As usual on these occasions, when the hour came, each
+pupil, young and old, filed past the teacher at her desk, the boys to
+shake hands, the girls to be kissed, and all bade good-by, after which
+they trooped away, glad to escape.
+
+This ceremony now took place as usual. All departed except Chip, and
+she remained at her desk. Some intuition of pity or sympathy drew Miss
+Phinney to her at once; and then, at the first word from her, Chip gave
+way to tears--not light ones, but sobs that shook her as a great grief.
+Vainly Miss Phinney tried to cheer and console her, stroking the bowed
+head until her own eyes grew misty.
+
+"I didn't mean to give way," Chip said at last, looking up and
+brushing away the tears, "but you've been so good and patient with
+me, I couldn't help it. I hain't many friends here, I guess, and--"
+choking back another sob--"I shall be more lonesome'n ever."
+
+It was true enough, as Miss Phinney well understood, and somehow her
+heart went out to this unfortunate girl now, as never before.
+
+"You mustn't think about that," she said at last, in her most soothing
+voice, "but come and see me as often as you can--every day, if you
+like, for I shall always be glad to have you. I'd keep on studying, if I
+were you," she added, as Chip brightened, "it will help you on, and I
+will gladly hear you recite every day."
+
+Then hand in hand, like two sisters, they left the dear old schoolhouse.
+Little did Miss Phinney, good soul that she was, realize how recently
+poor Chip had cried her heart almost out on its well-worn sill, or that
+never again would this strange, winsome, woman-grown pupil enter that
+temple.
+
+At the parting of their ways the two embraced, kissed, and with
+tear-dimmed eyes separated.
+
+"I can't account for it," Miss Phinney said to herself when well away.
+"It may be a love-affair with young Stetson, or it may be something
+worse."
+
+That evening she called on Angie. The result was fruitless, so far as
+obtaining any light upon this puzzling matter was concerned, for Angie
+was either blind to the situation, or feigned ignorance.
+
+"They were together all last summer, of course," she said, "in fact,
+they were forced to be like two children, you know. I was glad to have
+it so, feeling it would benefit the girl. If any love flame was started
+then, it has had ample time to die out since."
+
+"There is something else the matter with Chip, then," Miss Phinney
+rejoined, "she has been moody and quite upset at times for the past few
+weeks, and to-day when school closed, she sobbed like a brokenhearted
+woman. It was quite pathetic, and I had to cry myself."
+
+That night Angie took counsel of her husband.
+
+"Well, what if it is so," he responded, to her suggestion that a
+love-affair might have started between them. "It won't harm either.
+So far as I've observed, the girl couldn't have been better behaved
+since she came here. She has never missed an hour at school all winter,
+no matter how cold it has been. Her teacher says she has made wonderful
+progress. She has attended church with you every Sunday, and as for
+Ray--well, if I were in his shoes, I'd be in love with her myself."
+
+It was clear enough that Angie's fears were not shared by Martin.
+
+"But think of her origin and parentage," answered Angie, "and that
+outlaw father who might appear at any time! The very idea of Ray marrying
+her is preposterous. It would wreck his life."
+
+"But what about Chip?" returned Martin, who had broader views of life.
+"You brought her here to Christianize and educate her; do you propose
+to turn her adrift because she has a pretty face and the boy sees it? She
+isn't to blame for her origin. As for Ray, if he shows that he is able
+to support a wife and wants her, I honor him for it, and I'll give him
+a house to start with."
+
+At Aunt Comfort's, however, no signs of love troubles were visible;
+in fact, no signs of any sort, except the malicious "hanging around"
+interference of Hannah whenever Ray was there. She seemed to feel it
+her duty to remain on guard at such times, much to Ray's disgust. No
+annoyance at this was apparent in Chip. She helped at housework, studied
+at odd hours, and when Ray came she met and talked with him as if he were
+a brother.
+
+The day he was to leave Greenvale was close at hand, however, and the
+evening before he came early, bringing his banjo, and by tacit consent,
+perhaps to escape Hannah, they both left the house at once.
+
+Just above the village there was a long, narrow pond, wooded upon one
+side and around its upper end, with partially cleared land and scattered
+trees along the opposite bank. One of these trees was a monster beech
+near the water's edge, the trunk of which was scarred by many entwined
+initials.
+
+To this lovers' trysting tree now came Ray and Chip.
+
+The evening was not one for romance, for no moon graced it--only stars
+were reflected from the pond's motionless surface, while fireflies
+twinkled above it.
+
+The shadow of the near parting also hovered over these two as, hand
+in hand, they picked their way up and along the bank; and once seated
+beneath the tree, it seemed to forbid speech.
+
+"I wish you'd play some of the songs you used to," Chip said at last
+hurriedly, "I'd like to think I'm back at the lake again."
+
+Glad to do so, Ray drew out his banjo and began to tune it. He started
+a song also--one of the "graveyardy" ones which Old Cy had interdicted,
+but choked at once and stopped abruptly.
+
+"I can't sing to-night," he said, "I'm too blue about going away."
+
+There were two in this frame of mind, evidently, for Chip made no
+protest, and for another long interval they watched the fireflies
+and listened to the whippoorwills.
+
+"I wish you were going back with us," Ray said at last. "It breaks
+my heart to go away so soon and leave you. Why won't you let me ask my
+uncle to take you? He might be glad to do it, just for me."
+
+"No," answered Chip, firmly, "you mustn't. It would shame me so that
+I couldn't look them in the face." Then, as if this subject and their
+own feelings must be avoided, she added hurriedly, "Tell me what you
+will do when the folks come back--whether you will come with them or stay
+at the lake?"
+
+"Stay there, I suppose," answered Ray, somewhat doggedly, for
+money-making and love were in conflict. "Old Cy says we can make a
+lot of money if I will. I wish I were rich," he added with a sigh.
+
+He was not the first young man to whom that wish had come at such a
+moment. But converse between them was at ebb tide just now, and the
+parting moment, ever creeping nearer, overshadowed all else. To
+Chip--known only to herself--it meant forever. To Ray, another long
+isolation from all the world and young associates, and all for a few
+hundred dollars sorely needed by him, yet seeming of scant value
+compared to the sweet companionship of this maid.
+
+Then Chip's feelings and the reason for them were quite beyond him.
+He could not see why she was unwilling to ask to be taken to the woods
+again, nor why she held herself aloof from him. She had not done so at
+the lake, or when they met again, and why should she now?
+
+Something of this might have been inferred by Chip, for she suddenly
+arose.
+
+"I think we'd best go back," she said. "It's time, and Hannah will
+be watching for me."
+
+What Ray might have said had he been a world-wise man, does not matter.
+What he did was to pick up his useless banjo, and clasping Chip's arm,
+led her along the winding walk.
+
+Below the falls and near the house they paused, for now the last moment
+alone together had come, and with it the real parting.
+
+"Tell Old Cy I--I haven't forgot him," whispered Chip, her voice
+quivering, "and--and--you won't forget me either, will you, Ray?"
+
+That little sob in her speech was all that was needed to break away the
+barrier between them, for the next instant Ray's arms were about the
+girl.
+
+No words of love, no protestations, no promises. Only one instant's
+meeting of soul and impulse, fierce as love of life, sacred as the hand
+of death.
+
+Love consecrated it. The shadowing maples blessed it. The stars hallowed
+it.
+
+And yet it was a long, long parting.
+
+When Ray rode away next morning, he watched for her at the first sharp
+hilltop.
+
+It was in vain, for Chip's resolve had been taken, and he never saw the
+forlorn figure crouching behind that bush-topped wall, or knew that two
+wistful, misty eyes had seen him depart.
+
+Few of us ever see even a faint image of ourselves as others see us;
+and yet, calm reflection spurred to self-analysis by a hungry heart
+occasionally effects that almost miracle.
+
+In Ray's case it did; for after his eager eyes had scanned every rod
+of that roadside trysting-place in vain, a revelation came to him--not
+a wide open one, such as he deserved, but a glance at himself and his
+conduct as it had been. First he saw Chip just as she entered their camp
+that night in the wilderness, so pitiful in appearance, so pathetic in
+her abject gratitude. Once again he looked at her appealing eyes growing
+misty while he played and sang his old-time love songs. He remembered
+that during all the days, weeks, and months following, he had never
+failed to find the love-light of admiration when his eyes met hers.
+It had all been a summer idyl, so sweet, so romantic, so tender, and
+so unexpected that he had scarce realized its value--not at all then,
+but faintly now.
+
+For all that up-hill, down-dale journey to Riverton, he lived over
+this moonlit lake and wilderness camp episode, and every hour and
+every thought shared with him by this girl--a playmate and lover
+combined--returned again like echoes of past and gone heart throbs,
+each time a little sweeter, each time a trifle more piercing, until
+his own self-complacency faded quite away and an abject penitence
+began to replace it. For the first time in his callow youth he began to
+reflect, and once started on this beneficial course, the barometer of
+his vanity fell rapidly. It was not long ere his own conduct since he
+returned to Greenvale also added an assault. He had utterly failed to
+realize the meaning of Chip's abject devotion--her pitiful
+first-hour confessions of how hard she had studied, and all for his
+sake; how she had counted days and hours until he was likely to
+return; how many times she had gone to the hilltop to watch for him; and
+even the eagerness of her arms and the warmth of her lips at that first
+moment of meeting, now came back to him.
+
+Another and even a more painful self-reproach followed this--his own
+neglect of opportunities and the result.
+
+He had returned to Greenvale feeling that Chip was his devoted slave
+and had found that she was. Like many another arrogant youth, he had
+plumed himself upon that fact, taking everything for granted. He had
+yielded to his aunt's and other friends' coaxings to tell his past
+winter's history of life in the woods, feeling that Chip could and
+would wait; and then, an unexpected and most vexatious frost had fallen
+upon his little love-garden, and presto! his confiding sweetheart, his
+almost abject slave, was one no longer.
+
+At the moment of starting, that wildwood camp and charming lake had
+seemed a Mecca which he must hasten to reach once more. When he again
+beheld it, it had lost its fairness, and to return to Greenvale and
+beg and implore Chip's forgiveness--ay, even kneel to her, if need
+be--seemed the only duty life held.
+
+His punishment had only just begun.
+
+
+
+
+PART II
+
+VERA RAYMOND
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+
+For a few more days, Chip lived the life that had now become unbearable,
+and then the end came. It was hastened, perhaps, by Hannah, for that
+ill-tempered spinster had been ever watchful, and with shrewd insight
+had seen or guessed all that had transpired.
+
+"I s'pose ye know why the Frisbies hurried away so soon after Ray got
+back," she said to Chip that last day. "If you don't, I can tell ye.
+It was 'cos they noticed the goin's on 'tween you an' him, an'
+wanted to head it off."
+
+Not a word of protest came from the poor child in response to this sneer,
+and that night she wrote two notes, one to Miss Phinney, the other to
+Aunt Comfort. Then, making a bundle of the few belongings she could call
+her own--the beaded moccasins, cap, and fur cape old Tomah had given
+her, and other trifles--she waited until almost midnight and stole out
+of the house.
+
+Once before she had left her only shelter, in a more desperate mood.
+Now the same impulse nerved her, and for ample reason. Dependent upon
+the bounty of those in no wise kin to her, tortured by the sarcastic
+tongue of Hannah, her heart hungering for a love she believed could
+never be hers, no other outcome seemed possible; and defiant still,
+yet saddened beyond all words, she set out to escape it all.
+
+Where to go, she knew not nor cared--only to leave Greenvale and all the
+shame, sorrow, and humiliation it held for her, and make her own way in
+the world as best she could.
+
+The village street was as silent as midnight always found it. The low
+murmur of the Mizzy Falls whispered down the valley. A half-moon was
+just rising, and as Chip reached the hilltop where she had waited for
+Ray, she halted. From here must be taken the last glance at Greenvale,
+and as she turned about a sob rose in her heart, in spite of her stern
+resolve, for ties cannot be sundered easily.
+
+And how vivid and life-lasting was that picture! The two long rows of
+white houses facing the broad street, the tall-spired church in the
+middle of them; scattered dwellings to the right and left; away to one
+side the little brown schoolhouse that had been her Mecca; the stream
+that wound through the broad meadows; and over all the faint sheen of the
+rising moon.
+
+Only for a moment she paused for this good-bye look, then turned and
+ran. On and on she sped mile after mile, up hill, down hill, halting now
+and then for breath until a cross-road was reached, and here she stopped.
+Here also came the question of direction. To follow the main road was
+to reach Riverton, between which and Greenvale the stage journeyed. To
+go there meant being recognized perhaps. In her study of geography,
+she had found that the village which was her birthplace lay northeast
+from Greenvale. She meant sometime and somehow to reach that spot and
+visit her mother's grave once more, and also, if possible, to send
+word to Old Tomah. And so guided by this vague plan, she turned to the
+left.
+
+From now on the road became narrow. Miles elapsed between houses, and
+Chip, wearied and heavy-eyed, could only creep along. The way became
+more devious now, bending around a wooded hill and then crossing a
+wide swamp to enter a stretch of forest. Direction became lost in these
+turnings, the road grew hilly and less travelled. The moon scarce showed
+it; and Chip, almost exhausted, stumbled over stones and felt that
+she was becoming lost in an unsettled country. And then, just as she
+emerged from a thicket and ascended a low hill, the light of coming
+dawn faced her, and with it the need of sleep and concealment.
+
+Full well she knew she must avoid all observing eyes and place many
+more miles between herself and Greenvale to be certain of escape. And
+then, as the daylight increased, she caught sight of an old, almost
+ruined dwelling half hid among bushes just ahead. Even if empty, as it
+appeared, it would serve for shelter, and finding it so, she crept in,
+so wearied that she fell asleep at once on the warped and mouldy floor.
+
+It was only a brief nap, for soon the rattle of a passing farm wagon woke
+her, but refreshed somewhat by it, she again pushed on.
+
+Soon a brook, singing cheerfully as it tumbled down a ledge, was reached,
+and here Chip bathed her face and hands and drank of the sweet, cool
+water.
+
+Hunger also asserted itself, but that did not daunt her. She had faced
+it once before.
+
+Then something of a plan as to her future movements began to shape itself
+in her mind, following which came an increased courage and self-reliance.
+Not a cent did she now possess. Food she could not have until she had
+made good her escape and could earn it somewhere.
+
+But the sun was shining, the birds were singing, her young, supple body
+was strong, life and the world were ahead; and, best of all, never again
+would she have to feel herself a dependent upon any one.
+
+With these blessings, scant to most of us, hardened as she had been by
+servitude at Tim's Place, came a certain buoyancy of spirit and defiance
+of all things human.
+
+No wild beasts were here to menace, no spites to creep and crawl along
+fence or hedgerow, no hideous half-breed to pursue, and as she counted
+her blessings, while her spirits rose, a new life and new hope came to
+her.
+
+And now another feeling came--the certainty that she had come so far that
+no one would recognize her. At first that morning, when she heard a team
+coming or overtaking her, she had hidden by the roadside until it passed.
+When a house was sighted ahead, she made a wide detour in the fields to
+avoid it. Now this sense of caution vanished, and she strode on fearless
+and confident.
+
+When night came again she crept into an unused sheep barn, and when
+daylight wakened her, she hurried on once more.
+
+During all that first day's journey, her one fear had been that some one
+she would meet might recognize her and report the fact in Greenvale. To
+avoid that had been her sole thought. Now that feeling of danger was
+vanishing, and when people were met, she looked at them fearlessly and
+kept on. When cross-roads were reached and a choice in ways became
+necessary, she followed the one nearest to northeast, and for the reason
+that her school map had shown that her birthplace lay in this direction.
+How far away it was, she had not the faintest idea, or whether she
+could live to reach it. Her sole thought was to escape Greenvale and
+the humiliating life of dependence there, and when she was so far away
+that no one could find her, obtain work at some farm-house.
+
+All that second day she plodded on that same patient up-hill, down-dale
+journey, never halting except to pick a few berries, or where a brook
+crossed the road to obtain a handful of watercress or some sweet-flag
+buds.
+
+Now and then villages were passed, again it was country sparsely settled,
+where farm-houses were wide apart, and when this day was waning, even
+these had vanished and she found herself in almost a wilderness once more.
+
+[Illustration: "Won't you please give me a lift an' a chance to earn
+my vittles for a day or two?"]
+
+Hills now met her already weary feet; they seemed never ending, for as
+the crown of one was reached, another met her eyes. The roadway also
+became badly gullied, always stony, with grass growing in the hollows.
+
+By now she was faint and dizzy from two days' fasting, and so footsore
+that she could scarce limp along. So far her defiant pride had kept her
+from begging food, but now that was weakening, and at the next house she
+would have asked a morsel. But no next house came. Only the same scrub
+growth along the wayside with now and then a patch of forest, with never
+a fence, even, to indicate human ownership.
+
+The sun had now vanished. Already the stretches of forest were shadowy,
+and as Chip reached the apex of another long hill, beyond and far below
+she could see another darkened valley. Night seemed creeping up from it
+to meet her. Not a house, not even a fence or recent clearing--only the
+unending tangle of green growth and this dark vale beyond.
+
+"I guess I'll starve 'fore I find another house," poor Chip muttered,
+and then as the utter desolation of her situation and surroundings were
+realized for a moment, her defiant courage gave way.
+
+For two days and half a night she had plodded on without food and with
+scarce a moment's rest. Her feet were blistered, her eyes smarted
+from sun and dust, her head swam. She was miles away from any human
+habitation, footsore, weary, and despondent, with night enclosing her--a
+homeless waif, still clinging to the small bundle that contained her all.
+
+But now as she crouched by the roadside, too exhausted to move on, the
+memory of those three days and nights of horror, one year ago, came to
+her. Her plight was bad enough now, but nothing to compare with what it
+was then, and as all the terror and desperation of that mad flight now
+returned, it renewed her courage.
+
+"I ain't so bad off as I was then," she said. "I'm sure of finding
+a house to-morrow."
+
+And now, as if this moment marked the turning-point of her fortunes,
+from far down the hill she had climbed, came the faint creak, creak,
+and jolting sound of an ascending wagon. Slowly it neared, until just
+at the hilltop where Chip sat, the tired horse halted, and its driver saw
+her rise almost beside the wagon.
+
+"Mister," she said, "I'm nearly tuckered out and 'bout starved.
+Won't you please give me a lift an' a chance to earn my vittles for
+a day or two?"
+
+The man gave a low whistle.
+
+"Why sartin, sartin," he answered in a moment, "but who be ye? I
+thought for a minute ye was a sperit. Git up here," he added, without
+waiting for a reply and moving to make room. Then as Chip obeyed, he
+chirruped to his horse and down the hill they rattled.
+
+"Who might be ye, girlie, an' whar'd ye come from?" he asked again,
+as they came to another ascent and the horse walked.
+
+"My name's Vera, Vera--Raymond," answered Chip, "an' I run away from
+where I was livin'."
+
+"That's curis," answered the old man, glancing at her; "whar'd ye
+run away from, some poor farm?"
+
+"No, sir," replied Chip, almost defiantly, "but I guess I was a sort
+o' pauper. I was livin' with folks that fetched me out o' the woods
+an' was schoolin' me, and I couldn't stand it, so I run away. I don't
+want to tell where they be, or where I came from either," she added
+in a moment, "for I don't want them ever to find me."
+
+"Wal, that's a proper sort o' feelin'," responded the man, still
+looking at his passenger, "an' I don't mind. I live down beyond here
+in what's called the Holler. Somebody called it Peaceful Valley once.
+We'll take keer o' ye to-night 'n' to-morrer we'll see what's best
+to be done. I guess ye need a hum 'bout ez bad ez a body kin, anyway."
+
+And so Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness and erstwhile protegee of a
+philanthropic woman, as Vera Raymond found another home, and began still
+another life with this old farmer, Judson Walker, and his wife Mandy.
+
+But a sorrow deeper far than Chip ever realized fell upon Aunt Comfort
+when her brimming eyes read her note the morning after her flight.
+
+ "Dear Aunt Comfort,
+
+ "I can't stand Hannah or being a pauper any longer. She as
+ good as told me I wanted your money and I never thought of
+ it. She said I wasn't good enough for Ray, either, and that
+ was the reason Mrs. Frisbie took him away so soon. I know I
+ ain't good for nothin' nor nobody, but I didn't ask to
+ be fetched here and I am going away, never, never, never to
+ come back. If ever I can, I will pay you and Mrs. Frisbie for
+ all I've eat and had.
+
+ "Good-bye Forever,
+ "Chip."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+
+ "There's a heap o' comfort in lookin' on the dark side o'
+ life cheerfully."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Old Cy especially found life dull after Ray had gone. The hermit also
+appeared to miss him and became more morose than ever. He never had
+been what might be termed social, speaking only when spoken to, and then
+only in the fewest possible words. Now Old Cy became almost a walking
+sphinx, and found that time passed slowly. His heartstrings had somehow
+become entwined with Ray's hopes and plans. He had bent every energy
+and thought to secure for Ray a valuable stock of furs and gum, and,
+as was his nature, felt a keen satisfaction in helping that youth to
+a few hundred dollars.
+
+Now Ray had departed, furs, gum, and all. He had promised to return with
+Martin and Angie later on, but of that Old Cy felt somewhat dubious, and
+so the old man mourned.
+
+There was no real reason for it, for all Nature was now smiling. The lake
+was blue and rippled by the June breezes; trout leaped out of it night
+and morning; flowers were blooming, squirrels frisking, birds singing
+and nest-building; and what Old Cy most enjoyed, the vernal season was
+at hand.
+
+Another matter also disturbed him--the whereabouts of McGuire and the
+half-breed, Pete Bolduc.
+
+Levi had brought the information that neither had been seen nor heard
+of since the previous autumn; but that was not conclusive, and somehow
+Old Cy felt that a certain mystery had attached itself to them, and once
+we suspect a mystery, it pursues us like a phantom. He did not fear
+either of these renegades, however. He had never harmed them. But he
+felt that any day might bring a call from one or the other, or that some
+tragic outcome would be disclosed.
+
+Another problem also annoyed him--who this thief of their game could be,
+and whether his supposed cave lair was a permanent hiding-spot.
+
+Two reasons had kept Old Cy from another visit to that sequestered lake
+during the fall trapping season: first, its evident danger, and then lack
+of time. But now, with nothing to do except wait for the incoming ones,
+an impulse to visit again this mysterious spot came to him.
+
+He had, at the former excursion, felt almost certain that this unknown
+trapper was either McGuire or the half-breed. Some assertions made by
+Levi seemed to corroborate that theory, and impelled by it, Old Cy
+started alone, one morning, to visit this lake again. It took him until
+midday to carry his canoe, camp outfit, rifle, and all across from
+stream to stream, and twilight had come ere he reached the lagoon where
+he and Ray had left the main stream and camped. Up here Old Cy now
+turned his canoe, and repairing the bark shack they had built, which
+had been crushed by winter's snow, he camped there again.
+
+Next morning, bright and early, he launched his canoe and once more
+followed the winding stream through the dark gorge and out into the
+rippled lake again.
+
+Here he halted and looked about.
+
+No signs of aught human could be seen. The long, narrow lakelet sparkled
+beneath the morning sun. The bald mountain frowned upon it, the jagged
+ledges just across faced him like serried ramparts, an eagle slowly
+circled overhead, and, best indication of primal solitude, an antlered
+deer stood looking at him from out an opening above the ledges.
+
+"Guess I'm alone here!" exclaimed Old Cy, glancing around; "but if
+this ain't a pictur worth rememberin', I never saw one. Wish I could
+take it with me into t'other world; an' if I was sure o' findin' a
+spot like it thar, I'd never worry 'bout goin' when my time comes."
+
+After a long wait, as if he wanted to observe every detail of this
+wondrous picture of wildwood beauty, he dipped his paddle, crossed the
+sheet of rippled water, and stepped ashore at the very spot where he
+and Ray had landed over eight months before.
+
+"Great Scott!" he exclaimed, glancing around, "if thar ain't a canoe,
+bottom up! Two, by ginger!" he added, as he saw another drawn out and
+half hid by a low ledge.
+
+To this second one he hastened at once, and looked into it.
+
+It had evidently rested there all winter, for it was partially filled
+with water, and half afloat in it were two paddles and a setting pole.
+A gunny-cloth bag, evidently containing the usual cooking outfit of a
+woodsman, lay soaking in one end, a frying-pan and an axe were rusting
+in the other, and a coating of mould had browned each crossbar and thwart.
+
+"Been here quite a spell, all winter, I guess," muttered Old Cy,
+looking it over, and then he advanced to the other canoe. That was,
+as he asserted, bottom up, and also lay half hid back of a jutting
+ledge of slate. Two paddles leaned against this ledge, and near by was
+another setting pole. All three of these familiar objects were brown
+with damp mould and evidently had rested there many months.
+
+"Curis, curis," muttered Old Cy again. "I callated I'd find nothin'
+here, 'n' here's two canoes left to rot, 'n' been here all winter."
+
+Then with a vague sense of need, he returned to his canoe, seized his
+rifle, looked all around, over the lake, up into the green tangle above
+the ledges, and finally followed the narrow passage leading to where he
+had once watched smoke arise. Here on top of this ledge he again halted
+and looked about.
+
+Back of it was the same V-shaped cleft across which a cord had held
+drying pelts, the cord was still there, and below it he could see the
+dark skins amid the confusion of jagged stones.
+
+Turning, he stepped from this ledge to the lower one nearer the lake,
+walked down its slope, and looked about again. At its foot was a long,
+narrow, shelf-like projection, ending at the corner of the ledge. Old Cy
+followed this to its end and stepped down into a narrow crevasse.
+
+"Great Scott!" he exclaimed, taking a backward step as he did so.
+
+And well he might, for there at his feet lay a rifle coated with rust
+beside a brown felt hat.
+
+Had a grinning skull met his eyes, he would not have been more astounded.
+In fact, that was the next object he expected to see, and he glanced up
+and down the crevasse for it. None leered at him, however, and picking
+up the rusted weapon, he continued his search.
+
+Two rods or so below where he had climbed the upper ledge, he was halted
+again, for there, at his hand almost, was a curious doorlike opening some
+three feet high and one foot wide, back of an outstanding slab of slate.
+
+The two abandoned canoes had surprised him, the rusty rifle astonished
+him, but this, a self-evident cave entrance, almost took his breath away.
+
+For one instant he glanced at it, stepped back a step, dropped the rusty
+rifle and cocked his own, as if expecting a ghost or panther to emerge.
+None came, however, and once more Old Cy advanced and peered into this
+opening. A faint light illumined its interior--a weird slant of sunlight,
+yet enough to show a roomy cavern.
+
+The mystery was solved. This surely was the hiding-spot of the strange
+trapper!
+
+"Can't see why I missed it afore," Old Cy muttered, kneeling that he
+might better look within, and sniffing at the peculiar odor. "Wonder
+if the cuss is dead in thar, or what smells so!"
+
+Then he arose and grasped the slab of slate. One slight pull and it fell
+aside.
+
+"A nat'ral door, by hokey!" exclaimed Old Cy, and once more he knelt
+and looked in.
+
+The bravest man will hesitate a moment before entering such a cavern,
+prefaced, so to speak, by two abandoned canoes, a rusty rifle, human head
+covering, each and all bespeaking something tragic, and Old Cy was no
+exception. That he had come upon some grewsome mystery was apparent.
+Canoes were not left to rot in the wilderness or rifles dropped without
+cause.
+
+And then, that hat!
+
+Surely here, or hereabout, had been enacted a drama of murderous nature,
+and inside this cavern might repose its blood-stained sequel.
+
+But the filtering beams of light encouraged Old Cy, and he entered.
+No ghastly corpse confronted him, but instead a human, if cramped,
+abode. A fireplace deftly fashioned of slate occupied one side of this
+cave; in front a low table of the same flat stone, resting upon small
+ones; and upon the table were rusty tin dishes, a few mouldy hardtack, a
+knife, fork, and scraps of meat, exhaling the odor of decay. A smell of
+smoke from the charred wood in the fireplace mingled with it all. In
+one corner was a bed of brown fir twigs, also mouldy, a blanket, and
+tanned deerskins.
+
+The cave was of oval, irregular shape, barely high enough for Old Cy to
+stand upright. Across its roof, on either side of the rude chimney, a
+narrow crack admitted light, and as he looked about, he saw in the dim
+light another doorlike opening into still another cave. Into this he
+peered, but could see nothing.
+
+"A queer livin' spot," he muttered at last, "a reg'lar human panther
+den. An' 'twas out o' this I seen the smoke come. An' here's his
+gun," he added, as, more accustomed to the dim light, he saw one in
+a corner. "Two guns, two canoes, an' nobody to hum," he continued.
+"I'm safe, anyhow. But I've got to peek into that other cave, sartin
+sure," and he withdrew to the open air.
+
+A visit to a couple of birches soon provided means of light, and he
+again entered the cave. One moment more, and then a flaring torch of bark
+was thrust into the inner cave, a mere crevasse not four feet wide, and
+stooping, as he now had to, Old Cy entered and knelt while he looked
+about.
+
+He saw nothing here of interest except the serried rows of jutting slate,
+across two of which lay a slab of the same--no vestige of aught human,
+and Old Cy was about to retreat when his flare burning close to his
+finger tips unnoticed, caused him to drop it on the instant, and drawing
+another from his pocket he lit it while the flame lasted in the first one.
+
+It is said that great discoveries are almost invariably made by some
+trifling accident--a gold mine found by stumbling over a stone, a valley
+prolific of diamonds disclosed by digging for water.
+
+In this case it was true, for as Old Cy bent to light his second torch
+ere he withdrew from the inner cave, a flash of reflected light came
+from beneath this slab--only for one second, but enough to attract his
+attention.
+
+He stooped again and lifted the slab. Six large tin cans had been hidden
+by it. He grasped one and could scarce lift it. Again his fingers closed
+over it. He crawled backward to the better-lighted cave and drew the
+cover off the can with eager motion, and poured a heap of shining,
+glittering coin out upon that food-littered table.
+
+Into that dark hole he dived again, as a starved dog leaps for food,
+seized the cans, two at a time, almost tumbled back, and emptied them.
+Four had been filled with gold coin and two stuffed with paper money.
+
+Folded with these bills of all denominations from one to fifty dollars
+was a legal paper yellowed by age, with a red seal still glowing like a
+spot of blood.
+
+It was an innholder's license, authorizing one Thomas McGuire to furnish
+food, shelter, and entertainment for man and beast.
+
+With eyes almost tear-dimmed and heart throbbing at having found poor
+Chip's splendid heritage, Old Cy now gazed at it.
+
+The sharp stones upon which he knelt nearly pierced his flesh, but he
+felt them not.
+
+The glint of sunlight from the crack above caressed his scant gray hairs
+and white fringing beard, forming almost a halo, yet he knew it not.
+
+He only knew that here, before him, on this rude stone table, lay
+thousands of dollars, all belonging to the child he loved.
+
+"Thank God, little gal," he said at last, "I've found what belongs
+to ye, 'n' ye hain't got to want for nothin' no more. I wish I could
+kiss ye now."
+
+Little did he realize that at this very moment of thankfulness for her
+sake, poor Chip was lost to all who knew her, and, half starved and
+almost hopeless, knew not where to find shelter.
+
+[Illustration: "Thank God, little gal, I've found what belongs to ye."]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+
+ "When life looks darkest to ye, count yer blessin's, boy,
+ count yer blessin's."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When the sun rose again and Chip awoke, she scarce knew where she was.
+Outside, and almost reaching the one window of her little room, was the
+top of an apple tree in full bloom. Below she could hear ducks quacking,
+now and then a barnyard monarch's defiant crow, from farther away came
+the rippling sound of running water, and as she lay and listened to the
+medley, a robin lit on the tree-top not ten feet away and chirped as he
+peered into her window. A scent of lavender mingled with apple blossoms
+became noticeable; then the few and very old-fashioned fittings of the
+room,--a chest of drawers with little brass handles, over it a narrow
+mirror with gilt frame, two wood-seated chairs painted blue, and white
+muslin curtains draped away from the window.
+
+And now, conscious that she was in some strange place, back in an
+instant came the three days of her long, weary tramp, the nights when she
+had slept in a sheep barn and in a deserted dwelling, and at last,
+faint, footsore, and almost hopeless, she had been rescued from another
+night with only the sky for a roof.
+
+Then the quaint old man, so much like Old Cy, whom she had accosted, the
+rattling, bumping ride down into this valley, and the halt where a cheery
+light beamed its welcome and a motherly woman made it real.
+
+It was all so unexpected, so satisfying, so protective of herself, that
+Chip could hardly realize how it had come about.
+
+No questions had been asked of her here. These two quaint old people had
+taken her as she was--dusty, dirty, and travel-worn. She had bathed and
+been helped to an ample meal and shown to this sweet-smelling room as if
+she had been their own daughter.
+
+"They must be awful kind sort o' people," Chip thought, and then
+creeping out of bed she dressed, and taking her stockings and sadly
+worn shoes in hand softly descended the stairs.
+
+No one seemed astir anywhere. The ticking of a tall clock in the sitting
+room was the only sound, the back door was wide open, and out of this
+Chip passed and, seating herself on a bench, began putting on stockings
+and shoes. This was scarce done ere she heard a step and saw the old man
+emerge from the same door.
+
+"Wal, Pattycake, how air ye?" he asked, smiling. "I heerd ye creepin'
+downstairs like a mouse, but I was up, 'n' 'bout dressed. Hope ye
+slept well. It's Sunday," he added, without waiting for a reply,
+"an' we don't git up quite so arly ez usual. Ye can help Mandy 'bout
+breakfast now, if ye like, 'n' I'll do the milkin'."
+
+And this marked the entry of Chip into the new home, and outlined her
+duties. No more questions were asked of her. She was taken at her own
+valuation--a needy girl, willing to work for her board, insisting on it,
+and yet, in a few days, so hospitable were these people and so winsome
+was Chip, that she stepped into their affection, as it were, almost
+without effort.
+
+"I don't think we best quiz her much," Uncle Jud (as he was known)
+said to his wife that first night. "I found her on the top o' Bangall
+Hill, where she riz up like a ghost. She 'lowed she run away from
+somewhar, but where 'twas, she didn't want to tell. My 'pinion is
+thar's a love 'fair at the bottom on't all; but whether it's so or
+not, it ain't none o' our business. She needs a home, sartin sure.
+She says she means to airn her keep, which is the right sperit, an'
+long as she minds us, she kin have it."
+
+That Chip "airned her keep" and something more was soon evinced, for
+in two weeks it was "Aunt Mandy" and "Uncle Jud" from her, and
+"Patty" or "Pattycake," the nickname given her that first morning,
+from them. More than that, so rapidly had she won her way here that
+by now Uncle Jud had visited the Riggsville store, some four miles
+down this valley, and materials for two dresses, new shoes, a broad sun
+hat, and other much-needed clothing were bought for Chip.
+
+Neither was it all one-sided, for these people, well-to-do in their
+isolated home, were also quite alone. Their two boys had grown up, gone
+away and married, and had homes of their own, and the company of a
+bright and winsome girl like Chip was needed in this home.
+
+Her adoption and acceptance of it were like a small stream flowing into
+a larger one, for the reason that these people were almost primitive in
+location and custom.
+
+"We don't go to meetin' Sundays," Uncle Jud had explained that
+first day after breakfast. "We're sorter heathen, I s'pose; but then
+ag'in, thar ain't no chance. Thar used to be meetin's down to the
+Corners, 'n' a parson; but he only got four hundred a year, an'
+hard work to collect that, 'n' so he gin the job up. Since then the
+meetin'-house has kinder gone to pieces, 'n' the Corner folks use
+it now for storin' tools. We obsarve Sundays here by bein' sorter
+lazy, 'n' I go fishin' some or pickin' berries."
+
+To Chip, reared at Tim's Place, and whose knowledge of Sunday was its
+strict observance at Greenvale, this seemed a relief. Sundays there had
+never been pleasant days to her. She could not understand what the
+preaching and praying meant, or why people needed to look so solemn
+on that day. She had been stared at so much at church, also, that the
+ordeal had become painful. The parson had, on two occasions, glared and
+glowered at her while he assured her that her opinions and belief in
+spites were rank heresy and that she was a wicked heathen; and, all
+in all, religion was not to her taste. With these people she was to
+escape it, and instead of being imprisoned for long, weary hours while
+being stared at each Sunday, she was likely to have perfect freedom and
+a chance to go with this nice old man on a fishing or berry-picking jaunt.
+
+And then Uncle Jud was so much like Old Cy in ways and speech that her
+heart was won. And besides these blessings, the old farm-house, hidden
+away between two ranges of wooded hills, seemed so out of the world and
+so secure from observation that she felt that no one from Greenvale ever
+could or would discover her. She had meant to hide herself from all who
+knew her, had changed her name for that purpose, and here and now it
+was accomplished.
+
+That first Sunday, also, became a halcyon one for her, for after chores,
+in the performance of which Chip made herself useful, Uncle Jud took his
+fish-pole, and giving her the basket to carry, led the way to the brook,
+and for four bright sunny hours, Chip knew not the lapse of time while
+she watched the leaping, laughing stream, and her second Old Cy pulling
+trout from each pool and cascade.
+
+And so her new life began.
+
+But the change was not made without some cost to her feelings, for
+heartstrings reach far, and Miss Phinney and her months of patient
+teaching were not forgotten.
+
+Aunt Comfort and her benign face oft returned to Chip, "and dear Old
+Cy," as she always thought of him, still oftener. Ray's face also
+lingered in her heart. Now and then she caught herself humming some
+darky song, and never once did the moon smile into this quiet vale that
+her thoughts did not speed away to that wildwood lake, with its rippled
+path of silver, the dark bordering forest, and how she wielded a paddle
+while her young lover picked his banjo.
+
+No word or hint of all this bygone life and romance ever fell from her
+lips. It was a page in her memory that must never be turned,--an idyl
+to be forgotten,--and yet forget it she could not, in spite of will or
+wishes.
+
+And now as the summer days sped by, and Chip helping Uncle Jud in the
+meadows or Aunt Mandy about the house, and winning love from both, saw a
+new realm open before her. There was in the sitting room of this quaint
+home a tall bookcase, its shelves filled with a motley collection of
+books: works on science, astronomy, geology, botany, and the like; books
+of travel and adventure; stories of strange countries and people never
+heard of by Chip; and novels by Scott, Lever, Cooper, and Hardy. These
+last, especially Scott and Cooper, appealed most to Chip, and once she
+began them, every spare hour, and often until long past midnight, she
+became lost in this new world.
+
+"I know all about how folks live in the woods," she said one Sunday
+to Uncle Jud, when half through "The Deerslayer." "I was brought up
+there. I know how Injuns live and what they believe. I had an old Injun
+friend once. I've got the moccasins and fur cape he gave me now. His
+name was Tomah, 'n' he believed in queer things that sometimes creep
+an' sometimes run faster'n we can."
+
+It was her first reference to her old life, but once begun, she never
+paused until all her queer history had been related.
+
+"I didn't mean to tell it," she explained in conclusion, "for I
+don't want nobody to know where I came from, an' I hope you won't
+tell."
+
+How near she came to disclosing what was of far more importance to
+herself and these people than old Tomah's superstition she never knew,
+or that all that saved her was her reference to Old Cy by that name only.
+
+More than that, and like Old Cy standing over the cave where her heritage
+lay hid, she had no suspicion that this kindly old man, so much like him
+in looks and speech, was his brother.
+
+With the coming of September, however, a visitor was announced. "Aunt
+Abby's comin' to stay with us a spell," Uncle Jud said that day;
+"she's Mandy's sister, Abigail Bemis, an' she lives at Christmas
+Cove. It's a shore town, 'bout a hundred miles from here. She ain't
+much like Mandy," he added confidentially to Chip; "she's more
+book-larned, so you'll have to mind your _p_'s and _q_'s. If ye like,
+ye can go with me to the station to meet her."
+
+And so it came to pass that a few days later, Chip, dressed in her best,
+rode to the station with Uncle Jud in the old carryall, and there met
+this visitor.
+
+She was not a welcome guest, so far as Chip was concerned, wonted as she
+had now become to Uncle Jud and Aunt Mandy, whose speech, like her own,
+was not "book-larned," and for this reason, Chip felt afraid of her. So
+much so, in fact, that for a few days she scarce dared speak at all.
+
+Her timidity wore away in due time, for Aunt Abby--a counterpart of her
+sister--was in no wise awe-inspiring. She saw Chip as she was, and soon
+felt an interest in her and her peculiar history, or what was known of
+it. She also noted Chip's interest in books, and guessing more than she
+had been told, was not long in forming correct conclusions.
+
+"What do you intend to do with this runaway girl?" she said one day to
+her sister, "keep her here and let her grow up in ignorance, or what?"
+
+"Wal, we ain't thought much about that," responded Mandy, "at least
+not yet. She ain't got no relations to look arter her, so far ez we kin
+larn. She's company for us, 'n' willin'. Uncle Jud sets lots of store
+by her. She is with him from morn till night, and handy at all sorts o'
+work. This is how 'tis with us here, an' now what do you say?"
+
+For a moment Aunt Abby meditated. "You ought to do your duty by her,"
+she said at last, "and she certainly needs more schooling."
+
+"We can send her down to the Corners when school begins, if you think
+we orter," returned her sister, timidly; "but we hate to lose her now.
+We've kinder took to her, you see."
+
+"I hardly think that will do," answered Aunt Abby, knowing as she
+did that the three _R_'s comprised the full extent of an education at
+the Corners. "What she needs is a chance to mingle with more people
+than she can here, and learn the ways of the world, as well as books.
+Her mind is bright. I notice she is reading every chance she can get,
+and you know my ideas about education. For her to stay here, even with
+schooling at the Corners, is to let her grow up like a hoyden. Now what
+would you think if I took her back to Christmas Cove? There is a better
+school there. She will meet and mingle with more people, and improve
+faster."
+
+"I dunno what Judson'll say," returned Aunt Mandy, somewhat sadly.
+"He's got so wonted to her, he'll be heart-broke, I'm afraid." And
+so the consultation closed.
+
+The matter did not end here, for Aunt Abby, "sot in her way," as
+Uncle Jud had often said, yet in reality only advocating what she felt
+was best for this homeless waif, now began a persuasive campaign. She
+enlarged on Christmas Cove, its excellent school and capable master, its
+social advantages and cultured people, who boasted a public library and
+debating society, and especially its summer attractions, when a few
+dozen city people sojourned there. Its opportunities for church-going
+also came in for praise, though if this worthy woman had known how
+Chip felt about that feature, it would have been left unmentioned.
+
+"The girl needs religious influence and contact with believers, as
+well as schooling," she said later on to Aunt Mandy, "and that must
+be considered. Here she can have none, and will grow up a heathen. I
+certainly think she ought to go back with me for a year or two, at least,
+and then we can decide what is best."
+
+"Thar's one thing ye ain't thought 'bout," Mandy answered, "an'
+that's her sense o' obligation. From what she's told me, 'twas that
+that made her run away from whar she was, 'n' she'd run away from
+here if she didn't feel she was earnin' her keep. She's peculiar in
+that way, 'n' can't stand feelin' she's dependent. How you goin'
+to get round that?"
+
+"Just as you do," returned Aunt Abby, not at all discouraged. "We live
+about as you do, as you know, only Mr. Bemis has the mill; and she can
+help me about the house, as she does here."
+
+But Chip's own consent to this new plan was the hardest to obtain.
+
+"I'll do just as Uncle Jud wants me to," she responded, when Aunt
+Abby proposed the change; "but I'd hate to go 'way from here. It's
+all the real sort o' home I've ever known, and they've been so good
+to me I'll have to cry when I leave it. You'd let me come here once
+in a while, wouldn't ye?"
+
+As she seemed ready to cry at this moment, Aunt Abby wisely dropped
+the subject then and there; in fact, she did not allude to it again
+in Chip's presence.
+
+But Aunt Abby carried her point with the others. Uncle Jud consented
+very reluctantly, Aunt Mandy also yielded after much more persuasion,
+and when Aunt Abby's visit terminated, poor Chip's few belongings were
+packed in a new telescope case; she kissed Aunt Mandy, unable to speak,
+and this tearful parting was repeated at the station with Uncle Jud. When
+the train had vanished he wiped his eyes on his coat sleeves, climbed
+into his old carryall, and drove away disconsolate.
+
+"Curis, curis, how a gal like that 'un'll work her way into a man's
+feelin's," he said to himself. "It ain't been three months since I
+picked her up, 'n' now her goin' away seems like pullin' my heart
+out."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+
+Christmas Cove had entered its autumn lethargy when Aunt Abby Bemis and
+her new protegee reached it. Captain Bemis, who "never had no say 'bout
+nothin'," but who had cooked his own meals uncomplainingly for three
+weeks, emerged, white-dusted, from the mill, to greet the arrivals,
+and Chip was soon installed in a somewhat bare room overlooking the
+cove. Everything seemed slightly chilly to her here. This room, with
+its four-poster bed, blue-painted chairs, light blue shades, and dark
+blue straw matting, the leafless elms in front, the breeze that swept in
+from the sea, and even her reception, seemed cool. Her heart was not in
+it. Try as she would, she could not yet feel one spark of affection
+for this "book-larned" Aunt Abby, who had already begun to reprove her
+for lapses of speech. It was all so different from the home life she
+had just left; and as Chip had now begun to notice and feel trifles,
+the relations of the people seemed as chilly as the room to which she
+was consigned.
+
+When Sunday came--a sunless one with leaden sky and cold wind bearing the
+ocean's moaning--Chip felt herself back at Greenvale with its Sundays,
+for now she was stared at the moment she entered the church. The singing
+was, of course, of the same solemn character, the minister's prayers
+even longer, and the preaching as incomprehensible as in Greenvale.
+
+To Chip, doubtless a heretic who needed regeneration, it seemed a
+melancholy and solemn performance. The sermon (on predestination, with a
+finale which was a description of the resurrection day) made her feel
+creepy, and when the white-robed procession rising from countless
+graves was touched upon, and a pause came when she could hear the
+ocean's distant moan once more, it seemed that spites were creeping
+and crawling all about that dim room.
+
+With her advent at school Monday came something of the same trouble first
+met at Greenvale, for the master, a weazen, dried-up little old man, who
+wore a wig and seemed to exude rules and discipline, lacked the kindly
+interest of Miss Phinney.
+
+Chip, almost a mature young lady, was aligned with girls and boys of
+ten and twelve, and once more the same shame and humiliation had to
+be endured. It wore away in time, however, for she had made almost
+marvellous progress under Miss Phinney. Her mind was keen and quick, and
+once at study again, she astonished Mr. Bell, the master.
+
+Something of her old fearless self-reliance now came to her aid, also.
+It had made her dare sixty miles of wilderness alone and helpless, it
+had spurred her to escape Greenvale and her sense of being a dependent
+pauper, and now that latent force for good or ill still nerved her.
+
+But Christmas Cove did not suit her. The sea that drew her eyes with
+its vastness seemed to awe her. The great house, brown and moss-coated,
+where she lived, was barnlike, and never quite warm enough. The long
+street she traversed four times daily was bleak and wind-swept. Aunt
+Abby was austere and lacking in cordiality; and Sundays--well, Sundays
+were Chip's one chief abhorrence.
+
+She may be blamed for it,--doubtless will be,--and yet she never had
+been, and it seemed never would be, quite reconciled to Sundays. At
+Tim's Place they were unknown. At Greenvale they had been dreaded,
+and now at Christmas Cove they were no less so.
+
+At Uncle Jud's, in Peaceful Valley, where she had found an asylum,
+loving care, and companionship akin to her, Sundays were only
+half-Sundays--days of chore-doing, of reading, of rest, or long
+strolls along shady lanes with Uncle Jud, or following the brook and
+watching him fish. It was not right, maybe. It was somewhat of
+sacrilege, perhaps, this lazy, summer-day-strolling, flower-picking,
+berry-gathering way of passing them, and yet, as the months with Martin
+and his party in the wilderness where Sunday could not be observed, and
+those with Uncle Jud were all that Chip had really enjoyed, she must
+not be blamed.
+
+Another influence--an insidious heart-hunger she could not put away--now
+added to her loneliness in the new life. It carried her thoughts back
+to the rippled, moonlit lake, where Ray had picked his banjo and sung to
+her; even back to that first night by the camp-fire when she had watched
+and listened to him in rapt admiration. It thrilled her as naught else
+could when she recalled the few moments at the lake when, unconscious
+of the need of restraint, she had let him caress her.
+
+Then the long days of watching for his return were lived over, and the
+one almost ecstatic moment when he had leaped from the stage and over
+the wall, with no one in sight, while he held her in his arms.
+
+And then--and this hurt the most--that last evening before they were to
+part again, when beside the firefly-lit mill-pond he had the chance to
+say so much, and said--nothing!
+
+It was all a bitter-sweet memory, which she tried to put away forever the
+night she left Greenvale. She was now Vera Raymond. No one could trace
+her; and yet, so at odds were her will and heart, there still lingered
+the faint hope that Ray would sometime and somehow find her out.
+
+And so, studying faithfully, often lonesome, now and then longing for
+the bygone days with Ray and Old Cy, and always hoping that she might
+sometime return to Peaceful Valley, Chip passed the winter at Christmas
+Cove.
+
+Something of success came to her through it all. She reached and retained
+head positions in her classes. A word of praise came occasionally from
+Mr. Bell. Aunt Abby grew less austere and seemed to have a little pride
+in her. She became acquainted with other people and in touch with young
+folks, was invited to parties and sleigh-rides. The vernacular of
+Tim's Place left her, and even Sundays were less a torture, in fact,
+almost pleasant, for then she saw most of the young folks she mingled
+with, and now and then exchanged a bit of gossip.
+
+Her own dress became of more interest to her. Aunt Abby, fortunately
+for Chip, felt desirous that her ward should appear well, and Chip, thus
+educated and polished in village life, to a degree, at least, fulfilled
+Aunt Abby's hopes.
+
+Another success also came to her, for handsome as she undeniably was,
+with her big, appealing eyes, her splendid black hair, and well-rounded
+form, the young men began to seek her. One became persistent, and when
+spring had unlocked the long, curved bay once more, Chip had become
+almost a leader in the little circle of young people.
+
+Her life with those who had taken her in charge also became more
+harmonious. In fact, something of affection began to leaven it, for the
+reason that never once had Aunt Abby questioned Chip as to her past.
+Aunt Mandy and Uncle Jud had both cautioned her as to its unwisdom, and
+she was broad and charitable enough to let it remain a closed book until
+such time as Chip was willing to open it; and for this, more than
+all else that she received, Chip felt grateful. But one day it came
+out--or at least a portion of it.
+
+"I suppose you have often wondered where I was born, and who my parents
+were," Chip said, one Sunday afternoon, when she and Aunt Abby were
+alone, "and I want to thank you for never, never asking." And then,
+omitting much, she briefly outlined her history.
+
+"I was born close to the wilderness," she said, "and my mother died
+when I was about eight years old. Then my father took me into the
+woods, where I worked at a kind of a boarding house for lumbermen. I
+ran away from that when I was about sixteen. I had to; the reasons I
+don't want to tell. I found some people camping in the woods when I'd
+been gone three days and 'most starved. They felt pity for me, I
+guess, and took care of me. I stayed at their camp that summer, and then
+they fetched me home with them and I was sent to school. Somebody said
+something to me there, somebody who hated me. She had been pestering
+me all the time, and I ran away. Uncle Jud found me and took care of
+me until you came, and that's all I want to tell. I could tell a lot
+more, but I don't ever want these people to find me or take me back
+where they live, and that's why I don't tell where I came from. Then I
+felt I was so dependent on them--I was twitted of it--that it's another
+reason why I ran away. I wouldn't have stayed with Uncle Jud more than
+over night except I had a chance to work and earn my board."
+
+"But wasn't it unkind of you--isn't it now--not to let these people
+know you are alive?" answered Aunt Abby. "They were certainly good to
+you."
+
+"I know that they were," returned Chip, somewhat contritely; "but I
+couldn't stand being dependent on them any longer. If they found where I
+was, they'd come and fetch me back; and I'd feel so ashamed I couldn't
+look 'em in the face. I'd rather they'd think I was dead."
+
+"Well, perhaps it is best you do not," returned Aunt Abby, sighing;
+"but years of doubt, and not knowing whether some one we care for is
+dead or alive, are hard to bear. And now that you have told me some of
+your history, I will tell you a lifelong case of not knowing some
+one's fate. Many years ago my sister and myself, who were born here,
+became acquainted with two young men, sailor boys from Bayport, named
+Cyrus and Judson Walker. Cyrus became attached to me and we were engaged
+to marry. It never came to pass, however, for the ship that Judson was
+captain of, with Cyrus as first mate, foundered at sea. All hands took to
+the two boats. The one Judson was in was picked up, but the other
+was never heard of afterward. In due time Judson and my sister Amanda
+married. He gave up a sailor's life, and they settled down where they
+now live. I waited many years, vainly hoping for my sweetheart's
+return, and finally, realizing that he must be dead, married Captain
+Bemis. That all happened so long ago that I do not care to count the
+years; and yet all through them has lingered that pitiful thread of
+doubt and uncertainty, that vain hope that somehow and someway Cyrus
+may have escaped death and may return. I know it will never happen. I
+know he is dead; and yet I cannot put away that faint hope and quite
+believe it is so, and never shall so long as I live. Now you have
+left those who must have cared something for you in much the same
+pitiful state of doubt, and it is not right."
+
+For one moment something almost akin to horror flashed over Chip.
+
+"And was he called--was he never--I mean this brother, ever heard
+from?" she stammered, recovering herself in time.
+
+"Why, no," answered Aunt Abby, looking at her curiously, "of course
+not. Why, what ails you? You look as if you'd seen a ghost."
+
+"Oh, nothing," returned Chip, now more composed; "only the story and
+how strange it was."
+
+It ended the conversation, for Chip, so overwhelmed by the flood of
+possibilities contained in this story, dared not trust herself longer
+with Aunt Abby, and soon escaped to her room.
+
+And now circumstances came trooping upon her: the shipwreck, which
+she had heard Old Cy describe so often; the name she knew was really
+his; the almost startling resemblance to Uncle Jud in speech, ways, and
+opinions; and countless other proofs. Surely it must be so. Surely Old
+Cy, of charming memory, and Uncle Jud no less so, must be brothers,
+and now it was in her power to--and then she paused, shocked at the
+position she faced.
+
+She was now known as Vera Raymond, and respected; she had cut loose
+forever from the old shame of an outlaw's child; of a wretched drudge
+at Tim's Place; of being sold as a slave; and all that now made her
+blush.
+
+And then Ray!
+
+Full well she knew now what must have been in his heart that last evening
+and why he acted as he did. Hannah had told her the bitter truth, as
+she had since realized. Ray had been assured that she was an outcast, and
+despicable in the sight of Greenvale. He dared not say "I love you;
+be my wife." Instead, he had been hurried away to keep them apart;
+and as all this dire flood of shame that had driven her from Greenvale
+surged in her heart, the bitter tears came.
+
+In calmer moments, and when the heart-hunger controlled, she had hoped
+he might some day find her and some day say, "I love you." But now, so
+soon, to make herself known, to tell who she was, to admit to these new
+friends that she was Chip McGuire with all that went with it, to have to
+face and live down that shame, to admit that she had taken Ray's first
+name for her own--no, no, a thousand times no!
+
+But what of Old Cy and Uncle Jud, and their lifelong separation?
+
+Truly her footsteps had led her to a parting of the ways, one sign-board
+lettered "Duty and Shame," the other a blank.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+
+ "Good luck comes now 'n' then; bad luck drops 'round
+ frequently."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When Old Cy emerged from the cave, his face glorified and heart
+throbbing with the blessings now his to give Chip, he looked about with
+almost fear. The two abandoned canoes and the trusty rifle had seemed
+an assurance of tragic import, and yet no proof of this outlaw's
+death. That this cave had been his lair, could not be doubted; and so
+momentous was this discovery, and so anxious was Old Cy to rescue this
+fortune, that he trembled with a sudden dread.
+
+But no sign of human presence met his sweeping look.
+
+The lake still rippled and smiled in the sunlight. Two deer, a buck and
+doe, were feeding on the rush-grown shore just across, while at his feet
+that rusty rifle still uttered its fatal message.
+
+Once more Old Cy glanced all about, and then entered the cave again.
+Here, in the dim light and with trembling hands, he filled the cans once
+more, and almost staggering, so faint was he from excitement, he hurried
+to the canoe, and packing them in its bow, covered the precious cargo
+with his blanket.
+
+Then he ran like a deer back to the cave, closed it with the slab,
+grasped his rifle, and not even looking at the rusty one, bounded down
+the path to his canoe again, launched it, and pushed off.
+
+Never before had it seemed so frail a craft. And now, as he swung its
+prow around toward the outlet, a curious object met his eyes.
+
+Far up the lake, and where no ripple concealed it, lay what looked like a
+floating log, clasped by a human arm.
+
+What intuition led him hither, Old Cy never could explain, for escape
+from the lake was now his sole thought. And yet, with one sweep of his
+paddle, he turned his canoe and sped across the lake. And now, as he
+neared this object, it slowly outlined itself, and he saw a grewsome
+sight,--two bloated corpses grasping one another as if in a death
+grapple. One had hair of bronze red, the other a hideously scarred face
+with lips drawn and teeth exposed.
+
+Hate, Horror, and Death personified.
+
+Only for a moment did Old Cy glance at this ghastly sight, and then he
+turned again and sped back across the lake.
+
+The bright sun still smiled calm and serene, the morning breeze still
+kissed the blue water, the two deer still watched him with curious eyes;
+but he saw them not--only the winsome face and appealing eyes of Chip as
+he last beheld them.
+
+And now in the prow of his canoe lay her fortune, her heritage, which
+was, after all, but scant return for all the shame and stigma so far
+meted out to her.
+
+It was almost sunset ere Old Cy, his nerves still quivering and wearied
+as never before, crossed the little lake and breathed a sigh of
+heart-felt gratitude as he drew his canoe out on the sandy shore
+near the ice-house. No one was in sight, nor likely to be. A thin
+column of smoke rising from the cabin showed that the hermit was still on
+earth, and now for the first time, Old Cy sat down and considered his
+plans for the near future.
+
+First and foremost, not a soul, not even his old trusted companion here,
+not even Martin, or Angie, and certainly not Ray, must learn what had
+now come into his possession. Neither must his journey to this far-off
+lake or aught he had learned there be disclosed.
+
+But how was he to escape from the woods and these people, soon to arrive
+for their summer sojourn? And what if Chip herself should come? Two
+conclusions forced themselves upon him now: first, he must so conceal
+the fortune that none of these friends even could suspect its presence;
+next, he must by some pretext leave here as soon as Martin and his
+party arrived, and cease not his watchful care until Chip's heritage
+was safe in some bank in her name.
+
+And now, with so much of his future moves decided upon, he hurried to the
+cabin, greeted Amzi, urged him to hasten supper, and, securing a shovel,
+returned to his canoe.
+
+In five minutes the cans of gold were buried deep in the sand, not two
+feet from where the half-breed had once landed, and upon Old Cy's person
+the bills found concealment. How much it all amounted to, he had not
+even guessed, nor scarce thought. To secure it and bear it safely away
+from this now almost accursed lake had been his sole thought, and must be
+until locks and bolts could guard it better. That night Old Cy hardly
+slept a moment.
+
+And now began days of waiting and watching, the slow course of which
+he had never before known. He dared not leave the cabin except to fish
+close by and within sight of the one focal point of his interest. Each
+midday, for not sooner would the expected ones be apt to arrive, he
+began to watch the lake's outlet, and ceased not this vigil until
+darkness came. A dozen times a day he covertly visited the ice-house to
+be certain no alien footprints had been stamped upon the sand near his
+buried treasure, and had the hermit been an alert and normal man, he must
+have noticed Old Cy's strange conduct.
+
+This burden of care also began to haunt his sleep, and in it he saw the
+open cave, and himself watched by vicious, leering faces. Once he saw
+those ghastly corpses still clasped together, but hovering over him, and
+then awoke with a sense of horror.
+
+A worse dream than this came later, for in it he saw the half-breed
+creeping along the lake's shore, and then, stooping where the gold was
+buried, he began to dig, at which Old Cy sprang from his bed in sudden
+terror.
+
+"I'll go crazy if I don't git rid o' that money 'fore long," he
+said to himself; and the next day another place of concealment occurred
+to him.
+
+There was, beneath the new cabin, a small cellar entered through a
+trap-door. It was some ten feet square, and had been used to store
+potatoes, pork, and the like. To carry out his new plan, which was to
+hide the gold in this cellar, it became necessary to keep Amzi out of
+sight until its transfer was made. That was an easy task, for Amzi,
+docile as a child, was sent out on the lake to fish, and then Old Cy,
+hastily constructing a bag of deerskin, hurried to the beach, dug up
+the treasure, poured the glittering coin into this bag, hid it in the
+cellar, nailed the trap-door down, and that night slept better.
+
+Two days after, just as the sun was nearing the mountain top, Martin,
+Angie, Levi, and Ray entered the lake.
+
+How grateful both Old Cy and Amzi were for their arrival, how eagerly
+they grasped hands with them at the landing, and how like two boys Martin
+and Ray behaved needs no description.
+
+All that had happened in Greenvale was soon told. Chip's conduct and
+progress were related by Angie. Ray's plans to remain here another
+winter were disclosed by him; and then, when the cheerful party had
+gathered about the evening fire, Martin touched upon another matter.
+
+"I met Hersey as we were coming in," he said, "and he says that
+neither McGuire nor the half-breed has been seen or heard of since early
+last fall. Hersey came in early this spring with one of his deputies;
+they visited a half-dozen lumber camps, called twice at Tim's Place, and
+even went over to Pete's cabin on the Fox Hole, but nowhere could
+they learn anything of these two men. More than that, no canoe was found
+at Pete's hut, and there was no sign of occupation at all this past
+winter. Nothing could be learned from Tim, either, although not much was
+expected from that source. It is all a most mysterious disappearance,
+and the last that we can learn of Pete was his arrival and departure
+from Tim's Place after we rescued Chip."
+
+"I think both on 'em has concluded this section was gittin' too warm
+for 'em," remarked Levi, "an' they've lit out."
+
+"It's good riddance if they have," answered Old Cy, "an' I'm sartin
+none on us'll ever set eyes on 'em agin."
+
+And Old Cy spoke the truth, for none of this party ever did. In fact,
+no human being, except himself and Martin, ever learned the secret that
+this mountain-hid lake could tell.
+
+But another matter now began to interest Old Cy--how Ray and Chip stood
+in their mutual feelings. That all was not as he wished, Old Cy soon
+guessed from Ray's face and actions, and he was not long in verifying it.
+
+"Wal, how'd ye find the gal?" he said to Ray when the chance came.
+"Was she glad to see ye?"
+
+"Why, yes," answered Ray, looking away, "she appeared to be. I wasn't
+in Greenvale but two weeks, you know."
+
+"Saw her 'most every evenin' durin' that time, I s'pose?"
+
+"No, not every one," returned Ray, vaguely; "her school hadn't closed
+when I got home, and she studied nights, you see."
+
+Old Cy watched Ray's face for a moment.
+
+"I ain't pryin' into yer love matters," he said at last, "but as
+I'm on your side, I'd sorter like to know how it's progressin'.
+Wa'n't thar nothin' said 'tween ye--no sort o' promise, 'fore ye
+come 'way?"
+
+"No, nothing of that sort," answered Ray, looking confused, "though
+we parted good friends, and she sent her love to you. I'm afraid Chip
+don't quite like Greenvale."
+
+Old Cy made no answer, though a smothered "hum, ha" escaped him at the
+disclosure of what he feared.
+
+"I wish ye'd sorter clinched matters 'fore ye left," he said, after
+a pause; "that is, if ye're callatin' to be here 'nother winter.
+It's 'most too long to keep a gal guessin'; 'sides, 'tain't right."
+
+Ray, however, made no defence, in fact, seemed guilty and confused, so
+Old Cy said no more.
+
+A few days later he made a proposal that astonished Martin.
+
+"I've been here now 'bout two years," he said, "an' I'm gittin'
+sorter oneasy. I callate ye kin spare me a couple o' weeks."
+
+No intimation of his real errand escaped him, and so adroitly had he laid
+his plans and timed his movements, that when his canoe was packed and he
+bade them good-bye, no one suspected how valuable a cargo it carried.
+
+But Old Cy was more than "sorter oneasy," for the only spot where he
+dared close his eyes in sleep during that three days' journey out of
+the wilderness was in his canoe, with his head pillowed on that precious
+gold.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+
+ "A miser was created to prove how little real comfort kin be
+ got out o' money."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+When Old Cy joined the little party at the lake again, he seemed to
+have aged years. His sunny smile was gone. He looked weary, worn, and
+disconsolate.
+
+"Chip's run away from Greenvale," he said simply, "an' nobody can
+find hide nor hair on her. They've follered the roads for miles in
+every direction. Nobody can be found that's seen anybody like her 'n'
+they've even dragged the mill-pond. She left a note chargin' it to
+that durn fool, Hannah, and things she said, which I guess was true.
+I'd like to duck her in the hoss-pond!"
+
+Such news was like a bombshell in the camp, or if not, what soon followed
+was, for after a few days Old Cy made another announcement which upset
+the entire party.
+
+"I think I'd best go back to Greenvale," he said, "an' begin a
+sarch for that gal. I ain't got nobody in the world that needs me so
+much, or I them. I'm a sorter outcast myself, ez you folks know. That
+little gal hez crept into my heart so, I can't take no more comfort
+here. Amzi don't need me so much as I need her, 'n' I've made up my
+mind I'll start trampin' till I find her. I've a notion, too, she'll
+head for the wilderness ag'in, 'n' I'm most sartin she'll fetch
+up whar her mother was buried. I watched that gal middlin' clus all last
+summer. She's true blue 'n' good grit. She won't do no fool thing,
+like makin' 'way with herself, 'n' I'll find her somewhar arnin'
+her own livin' if I live long 'nuff. From the note she left, I know
+that was in her mind."
+
+Martin realized that there was no use in trying to change Old Cy's
+intent--in fact, had no heart to do so, for he too felt much the same
+toward Chip.
+
+"I'll give you all the funds you need, old friend," he made answer,
+"and wish you Godspeed on your mission. I'll do more than that even.
+I'll pay some one to watch at Grindstone for the next year, so if Chip
+reaches there, we can learn it."
+
+That night he held a consultation with his wife.
+
+"I suspect we are somewhat to blame for this unfortunate happening,"
+he said to her, "or, at least, some thoughtless admissions you may have
+made led up to it. It's a matter we are responsible for, or I feel so,
+anyway. I think as Old Cy does, that this girl must be found if money
+can do it, and I propose that we break camp and return to Greenvale.
+If Amzi can't be coaxed to go along, I must leave Levi with him. No
+power on earth can keep Old Cy here any longer."
+
+But the old hermit had changed somewhat since that night he broke away
+and returned to this camp, and when the alternative of remaining here
+alone, or going out with them all, was presented, he soon yielded.
+
+"If Cyrus is goin', I'll have to," he said. "I'd be lonesome
+without him." And to this assertion he adhered.
+
+Ray, however, was the most dejected and unhappy one now here, though
+fortunately Old Cy was the only one who understood why, and he kept
+silent.
+
+Old Cy's defection had influenced all alike, and wood life was no longer
+attractive. It was a pity, in a way, for no more charming spot than this
+sequestered lake could be found. The trout leaping or breaking its glassy
+surface night and morning seemed to almost urge an angler; not an hour
+in all the day but two to a dozen deer might be seen along its shore, and
+blueberries were ripening over in the "blow down." Amzi's garden,
+now doubled in size, was well along, and it seemed a sin to leave so
+many attractions.
+
+But Martin had lost heart for these allurements. The thought of poor,
+homeless Chip begging her way somewhere, spoiled it all. Conscious that
+her own neglect might have invited this calamity, Angie was almost
+heart-broken, and it was a saddened party that closed and barred the
+new cabin and left this rippled lake one morning.
+
+They were even more sad when Aunt Comfort showed them Chip's message,
+and Angie read it with brimming eyes.
+
+And now came Old Cy's departure, on a quest as hopeless as that of the
+Wandering Jew and as pathetic as the Ancient Mariner's.
+
+But the climax was reached when Old Cy gave Martin his parting message
+and charge:--"Here's a bank book," he said, "that calls fer 'bout
+sixty thousand dollars. It's the savin's o' McGuire, 'n' belongs
+to Chip. I found the cave whar 'twas hid. I found McGuire 'n' the
+half-breed, both dead 'n' floatin' in the lake clus by, an' 'twas
+to keer fer this money I quit ye three weeks ago.
+
+"If I never come back here,--an' I never shall 'thout I find
+Chip,--keep it fer her. Sometime she may show up. If ever she does,
+tell her Old Cy did all he could fer her."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+
+ "Those who hev nothin' but a stiddy faith the Lord'll provide,
+ never git fat."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Life at Peaceful Valley and the home of Judson Walker fell into its usual
+monotony after Chip's departure.
+
+Each day Uncle Jud went about his chores and his crop-gathering and
+watched the leaves grow scarlet, then brown, and finally go eddying up
+and down the valley, or heap themselves into every nook and cranny for
+final sleep.
+
+Existence had become something like this to him, but he could no longer
+anticipate a vernal budding forth as the leaves came, but only the sear
+and autumn for himself, with the small and sadly neglected churchyard
+at the Corners for its ending.
+
+Snow came and piled itself into fantastic drifts. The stream's summer
+chatter was hushed. The cows, chickens, and his horse, with wood-cutting,
+became his sole care. Once a week he journeyed to the Corners for his
+weekly paper and Mandy's errands, always hoping for a message from
+Chip. Now and then one came, a little missive in angular chirography,
+telling how she longed to return to them, which they read and re-read
+by candlelight.
+
+Somehow this strange wanderer, this unaccounted-for waif, had crept into
+his life and love as a flower would, and "Pattycake," as he had named
+her, with her appealing eyes and odd ways, was never out of his thoughts.
+
+And so the winter dragged its slow, chill course. Spring finally unlocked
+the brook once more, the apple and cherry blossoms came, the robins began
+nest-building, and one day Uncle Jud returned from the corner with a
+glad smile on his face.
+
+"Pattycake's school's goin' to close in a couple o' weeks more,
+'n' then she's comin' home," he announced, and Aunt Mandy, her face
+beaming, made haste to wipe her "specs" and read the joyous tidings.
+
+For a few days Uncle Jud acted as if he had forgotten something and knew
+not where to look for it. He lingered about the house when he would
+naturally be at work. He peered into one room and then another, in an
+abstracted way, and finally Aunt Mandy caught him in the keeping room,
+with one curtain raised,--a thing unheard of,--seated in one of the
+haircloth chairs and looking around.
+
+"Mandy," he said, as she entered, "do you know, I think them picturs
+we've had hangin' here nigh on to forty year is homely 'nuff to stop
+a horse, 'n' they make me feel like I'd been to a funeral. Thar's
+that 'Death Bed o' Dan'l Webster,' an' 'Death o' Montcalm,'
+'specially. I jest can't stand 'em no longer, an' 'The Father
+o' his Country.' I'm gittin' tired o' that, 'n' the smirk he's
+got on his face. I feel jest as though I'd like to throw a stun at
+him this minute. You may feel sot on them picturs, but I'd like to
+chuck the hull kit 'n' boodle into the cow shed. An' them winder
+curtains," he continued, looking around, "things so blue they make me
+shiver, an' this carpet with the figgers o' green and yaller birds,
+it sorter stuns me.
+
+"Now Pattycake's comin' purty soon. She must 'a' seen more cheerful
+keepin' rooms'n ourn, 'n' I'm callatin' we'd best rip this
+'un all up an' fix it new. Then thar's the front chamber--in fact,
+both on 'em--with the yaller spindle beds 'n' blue curtains, an'
+only a square of rag carpet front o' the dressers. Say, Mandy," he
+continued, looking around once more, "how'd we ever happen to git so
+many blue curtains?"
+
+His discontent with their home now took shape in vigorous action, and
+Aunt Mandy came to share it. Trip after trip to the Riggsville store was
+made. Two new chamber sets and rolls of carpeting arrived at the station
+six miles away, and came up the valley. A paper-hanger was engaged and
+kept busy for ten days. The death-bed pictures were literally kicked into
+the cow shed, and in three weeks four rooms had been so reconstructed
+and fitted anew that no one would recognize them.
+
+Meanwhile Uncle Jud had utterly neglected his "craps," while he worked
+around the house. The wide lawn had been clipped close. A new picket
+fence, painted white, replaced the leaning, zigzag one around the garden.
+Weeds and brush disappeared, and only Aunt Mandy's protest saved the
+picturesque brown house from a coat of paint.
+
+And then "Pattycake" arrived.
+
+Nearly a year before she had been brought here, a weary, bedraggled,
+dusty, half-starved waif. Now Uncle Jud met her at the station, his face
+shining; Aunt Mandy clasped her close to her portly person; and as Chip
+looked around and saw what had been done in her honor and to make her
+welcome, her eyes filled.
+
+"I never thought anybody would care for me like this," she exclaimed,
+and then glancing at Uncle Jud, her eyes alight, she threw her arms about
+his neck and, for the first time, kissed him.
+
+And never in all his life had he felt more amply paid for anything he
+had done.
+
+Then and there, Chip resolved to do something that now lay in her
+power--to face shame and humbled pride and all the sacrifice it meant to
+her in the end, and reunite these two long-separated brothers. But not
+now, no, not yet.
+
+Before her lay two golden joyous summer months. Aunt Abby was coming up
+later. She could not face her own humiliation now. She must wait until
+these happy days were past, then tell her wretched story, not sparing
+herself one iota, and then, if she must, go her way, an outcast into the
+world once more.
+
+How utterly wrong she was in this conclusion, and how little she
+understood the broad charity of Uncle Jud, need not be explained. She
+was only a child as yet in all but stature. The one most bitter sneer of
+malicious Hannah still rankled and poisoned her common sense. Its effect
+upon Chip had been as usual on her nature and belief, and this waif
+of the wilderness, this gnome child, must not be judged by ordinary
+standards. Like reflections from grotesque mirrors, so had her ideas of
+right and duty been distorted by eerie influences and weird surroundings.
+There was first the unspeakable brutality of her father; then the
+menial years at Tim's Place, with no more consideration than a horse
+or pig received, her only education being the uncanny teachings of Old
+Tomah. Under this baleful tuition, coupled with the ever present menace
+and mystery of a vast wilderness, she passed from childhood into
+womanhood, with the fixed belief that human kind were no better than
+brutes; that the forest was peopled by a nether world of spites, the
+shadowy forms of both man and beast; and worse than this, that all
+thought and action here must be the selfish ones of personal gain and
+personal protection. Like a dog forever expecting a blow, like any
+dumb brute ever on guard against superior force, so had Chip grown to
+maturity, a cringing, helpless, almost hopeless creature, and yet one
+whose inborn impulses and desires revolted at her surroundings.
+
+Once removed from these, however, and in a purer atmosphere, she was
+like one born again. Her past impressions still remained, her queer
+belief of present and future conditions was still a motive force, and
+the cringing, blow-expecting nature was yet hers.
+
+For this reason, and because this new world and these new people were
+so unaccountable and quite beyond her ken in tender influence and
+loving care, what they had done and for what purpose seemed all the
+more impressive. But it was in no wise wasted; instead, it was like
+God-given sunshine to a flower that has never known aught except the
+chilling shadow of a dense forest.
+
+And now ensued an almost pathetic play of interest, for Chip set herself
+about the duty of giving instead of obtaining pleasure.
+
+She became what she was at Tim's Place,--a menial, so far as they would
+let her,--and from early morning until bedtime, some step, some duty,
+some kindly care for her benefactors, was assumed by her. She worked and
+weeded in the garden, she drove and milked the cows, she followed Uncle
+Jud to the hay-field, insisting that she must help, until at last he
+protested.
+
+"I like ye 'round me all the time, girlie," he assured her, "for
+ye're the best o' company, 'n' I'd rather see yer face'n' any
+posy that ever grew. But you've got to quit workin' so much in the sun.
+'Twill get yer hands all calloused 'n' face freckled, an' I won't
+have it. I want ye to injie yourself, read books, pick flowers, 'n'
+sit in the shade. I see ye've got into the habit o' workin', which
+ain't a bad 'un, but thar ain't no need on't here."
+
+One day a stranger happened up this valley, so seldom travelled that
+its roadway ruts were obscured by grass. Chip noticed him that morning
+where the brook curved almost to the garden, a fair-haired young man
+with jaunty straw hat, delicate, shining rod, and new fish basket. He
+was garbed in a spick-span brown linen suit. He saw her also, looking
+over the garden wall, and raising his hat gracefully, strode on.
+
+His appearance, so neat and dainty and so like pictures of fishermen in
+books, his courteous manner of touching his hat, without a rude stare
+or even a second glance at her, caught her attention, and she watched him
+a few moments.
+
+He did not look back until he had cast his line into a few eddies some
+twenty rods away; and then he turned, looked at her, the house, barns,
+garden, all as one picture, and then continued up the brook.
+
+He was not seen again until almost twilight by her, and then he and Uncle
+Jud entered the sitting room.
+
+"This is Mr. Goodnow, Mandy," Uncle Jud explained, nodding to the
+newcomer and glancing at Aunt Mandy and Chip. "He says he follered the
+brook further up'n he figgered on. It's four miles to the Corners,
+'n' he wants us to keep him over night. I 'lowed we could, if you was
+willin'."
+
+"I shall be most grateful if you kind ladies will permit my intrusion,"
+the stranger added. "I have been so captivated by this delightful brook
+that I quite forgot where I was or the distance to the village until I
+saw that the sun was setting. If you can take care of me until morning,
+any payment you will accept shall be yours."
+
+"I guess we can 'commodate ye," responded Aunt Mandy, pleasantly. And
+so this modern Don Juan found lodgement in the home of these people.
+
+"I am an enthusiast on trout-catching," he explained, after all had
+gathered on the vine-enclosed porch and he had presented Uncle Jud with
+an excellent cigar. "About all I do summers is to hunt for brooks. I
+came to the village below here yesterday, having heard of this stream,
+and never before have I found one quite so attractive."
+
+Then followed a more or less fictitious account of his own station
+and occupation in life, all very plausible, entirely frank, and quite
+convincing.
+
+"I am unfortunate in one respect," he said, "in that I have no fixed
+occupation. My father, now dead, was a prominent physician. I was
+educated for the same profession and had just begun its practice when he
+died. An uncle also left me a large bequest at about the same time. My
+mother insisted that I give up practice, and now I am an enforced idler."
+
+He was such an entirely new specimen of manhood, so charming of manner,
+so smooth of speech, that Chip watched and listened while he talked
+on and on, quite enthralled. She had seen similar gentlemen pass and
+repass Tim's Place, not quite so dainty and suave, perhaps, but dressed
+much the same. She had now and then noticed a pictured reproduction of
+one in some magazine. Insensibly, she compared this Mr. Goodnow with
+Ray, to the latter's discredit, and when the evening was ended and
+she was alone in her room, this new arrival's delicately chiselled
+face, smiling blue eyes, slightly curled mustache, and refined manners
+followed her.
+
+"He's a purty slick talker," Uncle Jud admitted to his wife later
+on, "a sorter chinaware, pictur-book feller 'thout much harm in him.
+I kinder felt sorry for him, so I 'lowed we'd keep him over night.
+Guess he ain't much use in the world."
+
+How little use and how much harm he was capable of may be gleaned from a
+brief resume of this stranger's history.
+
+He was, as he stated, without occupation and with plenty of money. He
+also, as stated, loved trout brooks and wildwood life--not wildwood life
+in its true sense, but the summer-day kind, where, clad as he was,
+he could follow some meadow brook or sit in the shade and watch it
+while indulging in day-dreams and smoking. He loved these things, but
+he loved fair ladies--collectively--still more. He had stumbled upon
+Peaceful Valley by accident, coming to it from a fashionable resort to
+escape an intrigue with a foolish _grande dame_ and consequent irate
+husband. Chip's face and form had caught his eyes as he strolled by that
+day, and admission to the home of Uncle Jud and opportunity to meet,
+and, if possible, impress this handsome country lass, had been a matter
+of shrewd calculation with him. He had purposely remained up the brook
+until nightfall. He watched for and intercepted Uncle Jud in the nick
+of time, persuaded that confiding man that he was too tired to reach the
+village, and with all the blandishments of speech at his command, had
+obtained entry to this home.
+
+But he failed to impress Chip as he had hoped. She was no fool, if she
+had been reared at Tim's Place. A certain shiftiness in his eyes when he
+looked at her, a covert, sideways glance, never firm but ever elusive,
+was soon noted and awoke her suspicion. Then the glib story he had
+told of himself was soon contradicted by him in a few minor details.
+Like all liars, he lacked a perfect memory, and, talking freely, he
+occasionally crossed his own tracks.
+
+Unfortunately for him, he also showed more interest in her than in the
+brook the next day, and the following one he capped the climax by asking
+her to go fishing with him--an invitation which she promptly refused.
+
+"I don't like that Mr. Goodnow," she asserted to Uncle Jud a little
+later. "I think he's a deceitful man. He pesters me every chance he
+can, and I wish he'd go away."
+
+That was enough for Uncle Jud, and after supper he harnessed his horse
+and politely but firmly requested Mr. Goodnow's company to the village.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+
+For many weeks now Chip had suffered from a troubled conscience, and,
+like most of us, was unable to face its consequences and admit her sin.
+
+Time and again she had planned how she could best evade it and yet bring
+those two brothers together without first confessing. Old Cy must be
+told, of course. She could explain her conduct to him. He would surely
+forgive her, she thought, and then, maybe, find another home for her
+somehow and somewhere. Oversensitive as she was, to now confess her
+cowardly concealment and her deception of those who had loved and trusted
+her, seemed horrible.
+
+But events were stronger than her will, for one day in the last of
+August, Uncle Jud returned from the village store, bringing dress
+materials and startling information. "Cap'n Bemis is failin' purty
+fast," he said, "so Aunt Abby writes, an' she ain't comin' up here.
+It won't make no difference to you, girlie," he continued, turning to
+Chip. "I've brought home stuff to rig ye out fer school. Miss Solon
+the dressmaker's comin' to-morrer, 'n' we'll take keer o' ye in
+good shape. We've made up our minds ye belong to us fer good, me
+'n' Mandy," he added, smiling at Chip, "an' I shall go with ye
+to Christmas Cove, if Cap'n Bemis ain't improvin', 'n' find ye a
+boardin' place."
+
+"I'm awful sorry to hear 'bout the Cap'n," interrupted Aunt Mandy,
+as if the other matter and Chip's future were settled definitely;
+"but if he drops off, Aunt Abby must come here fer good. I dunno but
+it'll be a relief," she added, looking at Uncle Jud and sighing.
+"'Twa'n't no love-match in the first place, 'n' Abby's mind's
+always been sot on your brother Cyrus, 'n' she never quite gin up the
+idee he was alive."
+
+And now a sudden faintness came to Chip as the chasm in her own life was
+thus opened. Only one instant she faltered, and then her defiant courage
+rose supreme and she took the plunge.
+
+"Oh, your brother Cyrus isn't dead, Uncle Jud," she exclaimed, "he's
+alive and I know him. I've known it all summer and dare not tell
+because I'm a miserable coward and couldn't own up that I lied to you.
+My name isn't Raymond, it's McGuire; and my father was a murderer,
+and I'm nobody and fit for nobody. I know you'll all despise me now
+and I deserve it. I'm willing to go away, though," and the next
+instant she was kneeling before Uncle Jud and sobbing.
+
+It had all come in a brief torrent of pitiful confession which few would
+be brave enough to make.
+
+To Chip, seeing herself as she did, it meant loss of love, home, respect,
+and all else she now valued, and that she must become a homeless wanderer
+once more.
+
+But Uncle Jud thought otherwise, for now he drew the sobbing girl into
+his lap.
+
+"Quit takin' on so, girlie," he said, choking back a lump; "why,
+we'll all love ye ten times more fer all this, an' ez fer bein' a
+nobody, ye're a blessed angel to us fer bringin' the news ye hev."
+And then he kissed her, while Aunt Mandy wiped her eyes on her apron.
+
+The shower, violent for a moment, was soon over; for as Chip raised her
+wet eyes, a sunshiny smile illumined Uncle Jud's face.
+
+"If Cyrus is alive," he said, "as ye callate, I'll thank God till I
+set eyes on him, and then I think I'll lick him fer not huntin' me up
+all these years."
+
+"But mebbe he found Abby was married 'n' didn't want to," interposed
+Aunt Mandy. "We mustn't judge him yet."
+
+"No, I won't judge him," asserted Uncle Jud; "I'll jest cuff him,
+good 'n' hard, an' let it go at that.
+
+"Ez fer you, girlie, an' jest to set yer mind at rest, we found out
+what your right name was and where ye run away from last fall, but never
+let on to nobody. 'Twas your business and nobody else's, an' made no
+difference in our feelin's, ez ye must see; an' now I'll tell ye how
+I found out.
+
+"I was down to the Corners one day arter ye went to Christmas Cove,
+'n' a feller--nice-lookin' feller, too, with honest brown eyes--was
+askin' if anybody had seen or heard o' a runaway girl by the name o'
+McGuire. Said she'd run away from Greenvale--'That's 'bout a hundred
+miles from here,' he said--an' he was huntin' for her. Nobody at
+the Corners knew about ye 'n' I kept still, believin' ye had reason
+fer not wantin' to be found out."
+
+And now another tide--the thrill of love--surged in Chip's heart, and
+her face became glorified.
+
+And so the clouds rolled away. That night Chip wrote a brief but curious
+letter, so odd, in fact, it must be quoted verbatim:--
+
+[Illustration: "Quit takin' on so, girlie," he said.]
+
+ "Mr. Martin Frisbie,
+
+ "Please send word at once to Mr. Cyrus Walker that his brother
+ Judson, who lives in Riggsville, wants to see him. No one else
+ must be told of this, for it's a secret.
+
+ "One who Knows."
+
+But Chip's secret was a most transparent one, for when this missive
+reached Martin three days later, he recognized its angular penmanship
+and similarity to the note Aunt Comfort still treasured, and knew that
+Chip wrote it.
+
+It startled him somewhat, however, for Old Cy's youthful history was
+unknown to him, and suspecting that some mystery lay beneath this
+information, he told no one, but started for Riggsville at once.
+
+The tide of emotion that had upset the even tenor of Uncle Jud's home
+life slowly ebbed away, and a keen sense of expectancy took its place.
+
+Chip, after giving him her letter, explained that Old Cy was most likely
+in the wilderness, and that the letter might not reach him for weeks.
+
+And then one day a broad-shouldered, rather commanding, and somewhat
+citified man drove up to the home of Uncle Jud.
+
+"Does Mr. Judson Walker live here?" he inquired of Aunt Mandy, who met
+him at the door.
+
+Her admission of that fact was scarce uttered when there came a
+rustling of skirts, a "Why, Mr. Frisbie!" and Chip was beside her,
+at which Martin, collected man of the world that he was, felt an unusual
+heart-throb of thankfulness.
+
+A little later, when Uncle Jud had been summoned into their newly
+furnished "keeping room," disclosures astonishing to all followed.
+
+"We have been searching for you, Chip, far and near," Martin assured
+them, "and Old Cy is still at it. He left us at the camp, almost a year
+ago, came to Greenvale, found you had run away, and came back to tell
+us. It upset us all so that we broke camp at once, taking Amzi with us,
+and returned to Greenvale. Old Cy there bade us good-bye and started
+to find you. Ray also began a search as well. I've advertised in dozens
+of papers, have kept Levi on watch for you at Grindstone ever since, and
+now I hope you will return with me to Greenvale."
+
+"I thank you all, oh, so much," answered Chip, scared a little at this
+proposal, "but I don't want to. I'm nobody there and never can be.
+I'd be ashamed to face folks there any more."
+
+"I guess she best stay with us," put in Uncle Jud, "fer we sorter
+'dopted her, 'n' not meanin' no disrespect to you folks, I callate
+she'll be more content here. I'd like ye to get word to Cyrus, though,
+soon's possible. I hain't sot eyes on him fer forty years, 'n',"
+his eyes twinkling, "I'm jest spilin' to pull his hair 'n' cuff
+him."
+
+"I will help out in that matter at once, and more than gladly,"
+replied Martin, again looking at Chip and noting how improved she was;
+"but I still think Miss Runaway had better return with me. We need you,
+Chip," he continued earnestly, "and so does some else I can name,
+more than you imagine, I fancy, and my wife will welcome you with open
+arms, you may be sure. As for that foolish Hannah, she's the most
+penitent person in Greenvale. There's another reason still," he
+added, glancing around with a smile, "and no one is more glad of it
+than we all are. It's a sixty-thousand-dollar reason--your heritage,
+Miss Vera McGuire, for your father is dead, and that amount is now
+in the Riverton Savings Bank awaiting you."
+
+Martin had expected this news to be overpowering, and a "Good God!"
+from Uncle Jud, and a gasping "Land sakes!" from Aunt Mandy, proved
+that it was.
+
+Chip's face, however, was a study. First she grew pale, then flashed
+a scared glance from one to another of the three who watched her, and
+then almost did her shame and hatred of this vile parent find expression.
+
+"I'm glad he--no, I won't say so, for he was my father," she
+exclaimed; "but I want Old Cy to have some of the money, and Uncle
+Jud here, and you folks, all. I was a pauper long enough," and then,
+true to her instinct of how to escape from trouble, she ran out of the
+room.
+
+"She's a curis gal," asserted Uncle Jud, looking after her as if
+feeling that she needed explanation, "the most curis gal I ever saw.
+But we can't let her go, money or no money, Mr. Frisbie. I found her
+one night upon top o' Bangall Hill. She was so starved an' beat out
+from trampin' she couldn't hardly crawl up on to the wagon, 'n'
+yet she said she wouldn't be helped 'thout she could arn it. I think
+she's like folks we read about, who starve ruther'n beg. But she kin
+have all we've got some day, an' we jest can't let her go."
+
+And Martin, realizing its futility, made no further protest.
+
+Something of chagrin also came to him, for, broad-minded as he was,
+he realized how partial neglect, the narrow religious prejudice of
+Greenvale, and unwise notice of her childish ideas about spites and
+Old Tomah's superstitions had all conspired to drive her away. She was
+honest and self-respecting, "true blue," as Old Cy had said, grateful
+as a fawning dog for all that had been done for her, and in spite of
+her origin, a circumstance that carried no weight with Martin, she was
+one, he believed, who would develop into splendid womanhood. That she
+was well on her way toward that goal, her improved speech and devotion to
+these new friends gave ample evidence.
+
+And now Ray's position in this complex situation occurred to Martin;
+for this young man's interest in Chip and almost heart-broken grief over
+her disappearance had long since betrayed his attachment.
+
+"I suppose you may have guessed that there was a love-affair mixed up
+with this episode," he said to the two somewhat dazed people.
+
+"I callated thar was, that fust night," Uncle Jud responded, his eyes
+twinkling again, "an' told Mandy so. 'Twas that more'n anything
+else kept us from quizzin' the gal. I knowed by her face she had heart
+trouble, 'n' I've seen the cause on't."
+
+"You have," exclaimed Martin, astonished in turn, "for Heaven's sake,
+where?"
+
+"Oh, down to the Corners, 'most a year ago, 'n' a likely boy he was,
+too."
+
+"And never told her?"
+
+"No, why should I, thinkin' she'd run away from him. We didn't want
+to spile her plans. We found out, though, her name was McGuire, but
+never let on till she told us a spell ago." And then Uncle Jud told
+the story of Ray's arrival in Riggsville in search of Chip.
+
+"That fellow is my nephew, Raymond Stetson," rejoined Martin with
+pride, "he also is an orphan, and I have adopted him. Chip has no cause
+to be ashamed of his attachment."
+
+"I don't callate she is," replied Uncle Jud. "'Tain't that that
+jinerally makes a gal kick over the traces. Mebbe 'twas suthin some o'
+you folks said." And then a new light came to Martin.
+
+"Mr. Walker," he answered impressively, "in every village there is
+always a meddlesome old maid who invariably says things she'd better
+not, and ours is no exception. In this case it was a dependent of our
+family who took a dislike to Chip, it seems, and her escapade was its
+outcome."
+
+"Wal, ye've got to hev charity for 'em," replied Uncle Jud with a
+broad smile. "Never havin' suffered the joys 'n' sorrows o' love,
+they look at it sorter criss-cross, an' mebbe this 'un did. Old maids
+are a good deal like cider--nat'raly turn into vinegar. What wimmin need
+more'n all the rest is bein' loved, 'n' if they don't get it, they
+sour up in time an' ain't no comfort to themselves nor nobody else.
+Then ag'in, not havin' no man nor no babies to look arter, they take
+to coddlin' cats 'n' dogs 'n' parrots, which ain't nat'ral."
+
+"I think," continued Uncle Jud, "now that we've turned another
+furrow, you'd best stop a day or two with us, 'n' sorter git
+'quainted. We'll be mighty glad to hev ye, me an' Mandy, an' then
+ag'in thar's a lot o' good trout holes up the brook. We hev plenty
+to eat, 'n' mebbe a few days here in Peaceful Valley'll sorter
+reconcile ye to leavin' the gal with us." And nothing loath, Martin
+accepted.
+
+Aunt Mandy and Chip now bestirred themselves as never before. The
+dressmaker was left to her own resources, Martin and Uncle Jud rigged
+fish-poles and started for the brook. Chip, with pail in hand, hurried
+away to the fields, and when teatime arrived, the big platter of crisp
+fried trout, saucers filled with luscious blackberries, and ample
+shortcake of the same with cream that poured in clots, assured Martin
+that these people did indeed have plenty to eat.
+
+"How did this come to be named Peaceful Valley?" he queried, when they
+had all gathered around the table. "It's very appropriate."
+
+"Wal," answered Uncle Jud, "we got it from a feller that come up
+here paintin' picturs one summer, an'," chuckling, "'twas all we
+got for a month's board, at that. He was a sort o' skimpy critter,
+with long hair, kinder pale, and chawed tobacco stiddy. He 'lowed
+his name was Grahame, that he was in the show business 'n' gittin'
+backgrounds, as he called 'em, fer show picturs. He roved up 'n' down
+the brook, puttin' rocks 'n' trees 'n' waterfalls on paper, allus
+gittin' 'round reg'lar 'bout meal-time--must 'a' gained twenty
+pounds while here. An' then one mornin' he was missin', 'n' so
+was Aunt Mandy's gold thimble 'n' all her silver spoons. She'd sorter
+took to him, too, he was that palaverin' in his way."
+
+There now ensued a series a questions from Uncle Jud in regard to Old
+Cy--how long Martin had known him, and all that pertained to his history.
+
+It was gladly recited by Martin, together with all the strange happenings
+in the wilderness, the finding of Chip, the half-breed's pursuit and
+abduction of her, and much else that has been told.
+
+It was almost midnight ere Martin was shown to the best front chamber,
+and even then he lay awake an hour, listening to the steady prattle of a
+near-by brook and thinking of all that had happened.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A tone of regret crept into his voice, however, when, after thanking
+Uncle Jud and Aunt Mandy, and bidding them good-bye, he addressed Chip.
+
+"I wish I could take you back with me," he said, "your return would
+be such a blessing to Aunt Comfort and my wife. You may not believe it,
+but you are dear to them both. I must insist that you at least pay us a
+visit soon. Here is your bank book," he added, presenting it. "You
+are rich now, or at least need never want, for which we are all grateful.
+And what about Ray?" he added, pausing to watch her. "What shall I say
+to him? Shall I tell him to come and see you?"
+
+Chip shook her head firmly. "No, no," she answered, "please don't
+do that. Some day I may feel different, but not now."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+
+Sad news arrived in Peaceful Valley a week later, for Captain Bemis had
+passed on, Aunt Abby was in lonely sorrow, and wrote for Chip to come
+at once.
+
+Her fate was now linked with these people. Aunt Abby had been kind and
+helpful, and Chip, more than glad to return a little of the obligation,
+hurried to Christmas Cove.
+
+It was a solemn and silent house she now entered. Aunt Abby, despite
+the fact that it was not a love-match, mourned her departed companion.
+The mill's pertinent silence added gloom, and Chip's smiling face and
+affectionate interest was more than welcome to Aunt Abby.
+
+And now that concealment was no longer needed, Chip hastened to tell her
+story in full.
+
+How utterly Aunt Abby was astonished, how breathlessly she listened
+to Chip's recital, and how, when the climax came and Chip assured her
+that good Old Cy Walker was still alive, Aunt Abby collapsed entirely,
+sobbing and thanking God all at once, is but a sidelight on this tale.
+
+"I couldn't tell you before," Chip assured her, while her own tears
+still flowed. "I was so ashamed and guilty all in one, I couldn't
+bear to. I never did so mean a thing in all my life, and never will
+again. But when Uncle Jud told me what you didn't, and how much he
+cared for me, and how you once cared for Uncle Cy, I went all to pieces
+and told the whole story and sent word to Uncle Cy that day. I feel so
+guilty now, and so mean, I don't see how you can forgive me."
+
+But Aunt Abby's forgiveness was not slow in coming. The past ten days of
+sorrow had left her heart very tender. In spite of being "book-larned,"
+she was very humane. Chip's sad life and misfortunes appealed to
+her, as they had to Uncle Jud, and true Christian woman that she was, her
+heart opened to Chip.
+
+"I hope we shall never be parted while I live," she said, as the tears
+came again. "I have no children, and no one to live for but my sister.
+I am so wonted to Christmas Cove, I could not feel at home anywhere else.
+If Uncle Jud will consent, I will adopt you legally, and when I am laid
+away, all I have shall be yours."
+
+And so Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness, child of an outlaw, once
+sold to a human brute, yet fighting her way upward and onward to a better
+life, despite every drawback, now found a home and mother.
+
+No light of education had illumined her pathway, no Christian teaching
+and no home example, only the inborn and God-given impulse of purity,
+self-respect, and gratitude; and yet, like a bud forcing its way up out
+of a muck heap and into the sunshine, so Chip had emerged to win respect
+and love.
+
+But all her history is not told yet. She still lacked even a common
+education. There was still an old man seeking to find her, who was yet
+wandering afar. A homeless, almost friendless old man was he, whose
+life had gone amiss, and whose sole ambition was to do for her and
+find content in her happiness. A wanderer and recluse for many years, he
+was still more so now, and out of place as well among the busy haunts
+of men. More than that, he was an object of curiosity to all grown people
+and the jest of the young, as he tramped up and down the land in search
+of Chip.
+
+And what a pitiful quest it was,--this asking the same question thousands
+of times, this lingering in towns to watch mill operatives file out,
+this peering into stores and marts, to go on again, and repeat it for
+months and months.
+
+There was still another link in this chain,--a boy, so far as experience
+goes, who was only deterred from unwise haste by a cool-headed man.
+
+"You had better not go to Chip now," Martin said to him on his
+return from Peaceful Valley. "She is an odd child of nature, and you
+won't lose by waiting. My advice to you is to forget her for the
+present, find some profitable occupation, and then, when you have made a
+little advancement in life, go and woo her if you can. To try it now
+is foolish."
+
+It was cold comfort for Ray.
+
+One of Chip's first acts of emancipation was to write to Aunt Comfort
+and Angie, assuring both of her love and best wishes, and thanking them
+for all they had done. Both letters were cramped in chirography but
+correct in spelling, and in Angie's was a note for Martin, asking that
+he draw one hundred dollars of her money and send it to her, and as
+much more to pay some one to follow Old Cy. The latter request Martin
+ignored, however, for he had already set the machinery of newspaperdom at
+work, and an advertisement for information of that wanderer was flying
+far and wide.
+
+Of the money sent her, Chip made odd and quite characteristic uses, only
+one of which needs mention,--the purchase of a banjo. Had Ray known
+this, and that the tender memory it invoked was the reason for this
+investment, he would have had less cause for grief. But Ray did not,
+which was all the better for him.
+
+And now, while she is in good company at Christmas Cove, with Mr. Bell,
+syntax, decimal fractions, the planetary system, and divisions of the
+earth six hours of each school day, or with Aunt Abby sewing, or picking
+at the banjo, or attending church, we must leave Chip and follow Old Cy.
+
+With a hunter's instinct he had calculated that Chip would head for the
+place of her birth, and then, if possible, send word to either himself
+or the Indian. That she had made way with herself he did not consider
+probable. She was not of that fibre, he felt positive; but instead,
+would make her own way across country, working, if need be, to obtain
+food and shelter until she at last reached the one spot nearest her
+heart,--her mother's grave.
+
+Believing this of her, and judging rightly, he left Greenvale, and, as
+it happened, twice crossed and once followed the very route she had
+taken for miles. That he failed to hear of her from the many he asked
+was solely due to accident, added to her own caution in avoiding all
+observant eyes.
+
+And what an almost hopeless and interminable tramp he took! Back and
+forth across the section of country she was likely to follow for weeks
+and weeks, halting a day in every village and two or three in each city,
+asking the same question over and over again, until his indomitable
+courage and almost deathless faith slowly ebbed away.
+
+Autumn came, the leaves grew scarlet and brown, snow followed, and winter
+locked all streams, and still Old Cy journeyed on. Spring and sunshine
+once more warmed the earth into life, the fields grew green, and yet he
+paused not.
+
+With June and the real beginning of summer, however, came a new
+inspiration, which was to go at once by rail and stage to Chip's native
+town and learn if, perchance, she, or any news of her, had reached this
+village.
+
+Another thought also came with this,--that Martin might soon again visit
+the woods and perhaps he could intercept him.
+
+A little satisfaction was obtained by this advance move, for when this
+village was reached, Levi was found waiting.
+
+"I've been watchin' for the gal over eight months now, under pay from
+Mr. Frisbie," he assured Old Cy when they met. "I also sent word to Old
+Tomah late last fall, 'n' he came out o' the woods 'n' stayed here
+two months, but nothin's been heard o' poor Chip by any one, 'n' I
+doubt ever will be."
+
+"Mebbe not yet," answered Old Cy, "but thar will be some day, an'
+here, too. She hadn't a cent when she left Greenvale--only grit,
+'n' it's a long ways here fer a gal what's got to arn her vittles
+while she's trampin'. It may be one year, it may be two, but some
+day Chip'll show up here, if she lives to do it. I callate I'd best
+wait here a few weeks tho', an' then, if nothin' turns up, I'll
+start ag'in."
+
+Nothing did, however; but during his stay, Old Cy learned that Chip's
+entire history, from the night she left Tim's Place until she ran away
+from Greenvale, was known at this village. This fact was of no value
+whatever, except to prove the universal interest all humanity has in
+the fate and fortune of one another.
+
+"I never told what happened in the woods," Levi responded when Old
+Cy questioned him, "an' didn't need to, for it got here 'fore I
+did. I jest 'lowed it was true, 'n' that I was hired to wait and watch
+here for Chip. It's curis, too, how everybody here feels 'bout it.
+They're a poorish sort here, families o' lumbermen, men that work in
+the sawmills, some farmin', an' all findin' it hard work to git a
+livin'. An' yet they're so interested in Chip 'n' so sorry for
+her, if she shows up now she'd be carried 'round the village like
+some queen 'ud be, with everybody follerin'. Thar's 'nother curis
+thing happened since I've been here that I'd never believed o'
+these people neither. I told them, of course, who I was, 'n' what I
+was here for, 'n' who was payin' me, when I come, an' then as
+time kinder went slow, I began huntin' some 'round here. Wal, thar's a
+little graveyard up back o' the village 'n' all growed up to weeds
+'n' bushes, an' one day last fall I happened to be lookin' it
+over 'n' somebody come 'long. It was a man that keeps store here,
+an' I asked him if 'twas here Chip's mother was buried. He said
+'twas, an' pointed out the spot 'way up in one corner, 'thout any
+stone, 'n' the mound most hid in a tangle. I didn't say nothin'--jest
+looked, an' went on, 'n' that was all. Wal, the curis part is last
+spring they sot a couple o' men to work cleanin' up the graveyard
+o' bushes an' laid out walks 'n' built a new fence 'round it. That
+one unmarked grave got the most attention o' all, for they turfed it
+over nice and built a little fence 'round it. I kinder callated how
+'n' why it all come 'bout, 'n' feelin' I oughter do suthin, I
+had a little stun sot up with Chip's mother's name on it."
+
+But time also went "kinder slow" for Old Cy, and as the date for
+Martin's probable coming had now passed, he finally yielded to Levi's
+suggestion and the call of the wilderness as well, and the two started
+for Martin's camp.
+
+It was almost like a pilgrimage to one's boyhood home; for while scarce
+a year had elapsed since Old Cy and Martin's party left it, Nature,
+always seeking to hide human handiwork, had been busy, and the garden
+was a tangle of weeds. Amzi's old cabin was almost hid by bushes, the
+walks were choked with them, and a colony of squirrels frisked about,
+and now, alarmed at human presence, added a touch of pathos.
+
+One act of vandalism was in evidence, for some wandering trappers had
+apparently used the larger cabin the previous season. Its floor was
+littered with all manner of debris, the bones of a deer mouldered in the
+woodshed, and a family of porcupines had also found the premises
+available. The impression conveyed by the entire spot and its
+surroundings made even Levi gloomy, while Old Cy scarce spoke the entire
+first day there, except to exclaim at "varmints" who would break
+locks, use the cabin for months, and then leave a litter of garbage to
+draw vermin.
+
+"It's curis how near to hogs 'n' hyenas a few humans are," he
+said as he looked around and saw how these vandals had behaved. "They
+wa'n't satisfied with burglin' the cabin, turnin' it into a pig-pen,
+stealin' all they could carry off, but they was so durned lazy, they
+smashed up the furniture to burn."
+
+For a few days only these two fine old backwoodsmen tarried here, and
+then Old Cy proposed departure.
+
+"I can't take no comfort here, nohow," he said, "for the premises
+seem ha'nted. Whichever way I turn I 'spect to meet Amzi with his moon
+eyes, or see Chip watchin' me, or Angie steppin' out o' the cabin.
+If I stayed here long, I'd see Chip's spites crawlin' out o' the
+bushes soon ez it got dusky. I'm used to the woods, but this spot seems
+like a graveyard.
+
+"I never done no prayin'," he added sadly. "I don't b'lieve in't.
+But if I could set eyes on Chip this minit, I'd go right down on my
+knees 'n' say, 'Thank God for this blessin'.' I'm 'fraid I never
+will, though."
+
+The next morning these two friends left this abode of unseen forms,
+more disconsolate than ever. They halted at Tim's Place long enough
+to learn that no tidings of McGuire or the half-breed had even reached
+that filthy station, and then returned to the settlement once more. Here
+Old Cy waited until the summer waned, vainly hoping each day would at
+least bring some word from Martin or Chip, and then bade Levi good-bye,
+and departed.
+
+He had been gone a week, a wandering tramp once more, when Ray appeared,
+bearing the glad news that Chip had been found. And also another and a
+more astounding fact.
+
+But Old Cy was not there.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+
+Life, always colorless at Christmas Cove, except in midsummer, now
+became changed for Aunt Abby. For all the years since her one girlish
+romance had ended, she had been a patient helpmate to a man she merely
+respected. Religion had been her chief solace. The annual visit to her
+sister's gave the only relief to this motionless life, monotonous as
+the tides sweeping in and out of the cove; but now a counter-current
+slowly flowed into it.
+
+Chip, of course, with her winsome eyes and grateful ways, was its
+mainspring, and so checkered had been her career and so humiliating all
+her past experiences, that now, escaped from dependence and feeling
+herself a valued companion, she tasted a new and joyous life. So true
+was this, that hard lessons at school, the regularity of church-going,
+and the unvarying tenor of it all seemed less by comparison.
+
+Another undercurrent, aside from Chip's devotion, also swept into Aunt
+Abby's feelings,--the strange emotions following the knowledge that
+her former lover was still alive. For many years she had waited and hoped
+for this sailor boy's return; then her heart had grown silent, as hope
+slowly ebbed, and then, almost forgetfulness--but not quite, however,
+for the long, lily-dotted mill-pond just above had now and then been
+visited by them. A certain curiously grown oak which was secluded near
+its upper end was once a trysting-place, and even the old mill with its
+plashing wheel held memories.
+
+And now after forty years, during which she had become gray-haired and
+slightly wrinkled, all these memories returned like ghosts of long ago.
+No word or hint of them fell from her lips, not even to Chip, who was
+now nearest to her; and yet had that girl been a mind-reader, she would
+have seen that Aunt Abby's persistent interest in all she had to tell
+about Old Cy meant something. Where he was now, how soon he would learn
+that his brother was still alive after all these years, was the one
+most pertinent subject oft discussed.
+
+How Chip felt toward him, not alone for the heritage he had secured
+for her, but for other and more valued heart interests, need not be
+specified. He had seemed almost a father to her at the lake. He was
+the first of her new-found friends whose feelings had warmed toward her,
+and Chip was now mature enough to value these blessings at their true
+worth.
+
+A certain mutual expectancy now entered the lives of Chip and Aunt Abby.
+Nothing could be done, however. Old Cy had gone out into the wide, wide
+world, as it were, searching for the little girl he loved. No manner
+of reaching him seemed possible; and yet, some day, he must learn what
+would bring him to them as fast as steam could fetch him.
+
+"I know that he loved me as his own child there at the lake," Chip said
+once in an exultant tone. "His going after me proves it; and once he
+hears where I am, he will hurry here, I know."
+
+Whether Aunt Abby's heart responded to that wish or not, she never
+disclosed.
+
+But the days, weeks, and months swept by, and Old Cy came not. Neither
+did any message come to Chip from Greenvale. At first, rebelling at
+Ray's treatment of her, Chip felt that she never wanted to see him
+again. She had been so tender and loving toward him at the lake, had
+striven so hard to learn and to be more like him, had waited and
+watched, counting the days until his return, only to be told what she
+could not forget and to find him so neglectful, so cool to her, when
+her girlish heart was so full of love, that her feelings had changed
+almost in one instant, and pride had made her bitter.
+
+Hannah had told an unpleasant truth, as Chip knew well enough; but truth
+and confiding love mixed illy, and Ray's conduct, leaving her as he did
+with scarce a word or promise, was an episode that had chilled and almost
+killed Chip's budding affection. As is always the case, such a feeling
+fades and flares like all others. There would now be a brief space when
+Chip hoped and longed for Ray's coming, and then days when no thought of
+him came.
+
+It was perhaps fortunate for him that Christmas Cove contained no serious
+admirer of Chip the while, else his cause and all memory of him would
+have been swept away. But that quaint village was peopled chiefly by old
+folk, those of the male persuasion being quite young, with a few girls
+of Chip's age. Few young men remained there to make their way, and so no
+added interest came to vary Chip's life.
+
+The coming of summer, however, brought the annual influx of city boarders
+once more. First came elderly ladies, more anxious about suitable rooms
+and food than aught else, and then came the younger ones, whose gowns
+and their display appeared the only motive for existence. A few young
+men followed in their wake. Now and then a small yacht anchored in the
+mouth of the cove. The long wharf became a rendezvous for promenaders,
+tennis courts were established, and gay costumes, bright parasols, and
+astounding hats were in evidence.
+
+It was all a new and fascinating panorama for Chip. Never before had she
+seen such butterflies of fashion, who glanced at her and her more modest
+raiment almost with scorn, and scarce conscious of them, she looked on
+with awe and admiration.
+
+The old mill, the quaint house where she dwelt, and especially the
+long pond, now sprinkled thickly with lilies, became a Mecca for these
+newcomers, and not a pleasant day passed but from two to a dozen of
+them came trooping about and around it. They peered into the mill,
+exclaimed over the great dripping wheel, and almost shouted at the sight
+of the white blossoms on the pond.
+
+One day a bevy of laughing and chattering girls with one gallant in
+white flannels approached the mill while Chip in calico was kneeling
+beside a flower-bed. She looked up at once and saw her erstwhile admirer
+at Peaceful Valley, Mr. Goodnow. One instant only their eyes met, his
+to turn quickly away, and then Chip, coloring at the slight, rose and
+entered the house. Once safe in this asylum, womanlike, she hastened
+to peep out at the arrivals. They halted for only a glance about and
+then, their protector (?) still in the lead, vanished behind the mill.
+
+The next afternoon, just as Chip was returning from the village store,
+she met Mr. Goodnow again, this time alone.
+
+With a bow and smile he raised his hat and halted.
+
+"Why, Miss Raymond," he exclaimed eagerly, "I am so glad to meet you
+again. Are you visiting here, and when did you leave Peaceful Valley?"
+
+"I am living here now," returned Chip, coolly, continuing on her way,
+"where you saw me yesterday."
+
+"Oh, yes," he answered, not the least abashed, "and you must pardon
+me for not recognizing you then. It's been a year, you know, since I
+saw you, and you have changed so in that time."
+
+"Of course," responded Chip, her eyes snapping, "you couldn't
+remember me so long. Why don't you tell the truth and say you didn't
+dare know me before those ladies?"
+
+"Why, Miss Raymond, you wrong me; but I admire your frankness--it is
+so unusual among your charming sex!"
+
+"Then you did know me," she returned sarcastically, "I knew well
+enough, and if they were with you now, you wouldn't know me. I'm no
+fool, if I do wear calico."
+
+It was blunt. It was truthful. It was Chip all over; but this polished
+rake never winced.
+
+"I never dispute a lady," he answered suavely; "it doesn't pay.
+Besides, I have found they all prefer sweet lies instead of truth. And
+now I will admit you looked so charming as you raised your face from
+among the flowers that I was dazed and didn't think to bow."
+
+"You weren't so dazed but that you managed to get away in a hurry."
+
+"Why, of course, I was piloting my friends up to the lily pond," he
+returned, still unruffled, "and much as I desired, I couldn't pause to
+visit with you."
+
+They had now reached Chip's home. She halted at the gate, turned, and
+looked at him.
+
+"I hope we may be friends, now that you have scolded me enough," he
+added. "I had a delightful week with you last summer. I've lived it
+over many times. May I not call here to-morrow, and you and I will gather
+some of the lilies?"
+
+A droll smile crept over Chip's face at this.
+
+"Yes, if you will bring your lady friends also," she answered. And
+with a "Thank you," and raising his hat once more, this smooth-spoken
+fellow, impervious to sarcasm, turned away.
+
+"Who was the young man?" Aunt Abby queried, when Chip entered the house.
+
+"It's a Mr. Goodnow, who spent a week with Uncle Jud," she answered,
+smiling. "He came by here yesterday with three ladies and was close to
+me when I was working in my posy bed. He made out he didn't remember
+me then, when I met him this afternoon. I guess I was saucy to him. I
+meant to be. He wouldn't take it, and walked home with me."
+
+Aunt Abby looked surprised.
+
+"I hope you weren't really saucy," she answered, "that wouldn't have
+been becoming."
+
+Mr. Goodnow appeared next day, not at all disturbed, and Chip, a little
+more gracious, consented to gather lilies with him. The leaky punt
+that had served for that purpose many years was bailed out. He manned
+the oars. Chip bared one rounded arm, and, thus equipped, two really
+enjoyable hours were passed.
+
+As Uncle Jud had said, he was a "slick talker." Truth was not
+considered by him; instead, subtile flatteries were his stock in
+trade, and Chip, for the first time in her life, felt their insidious
+influence. She was in no wise deceived. Her woman's wit and good sense
+detected the sham, and caring not one whit for him, she responded as
+saucily as she chose. It was not, perhaps, quite ladylike, but Chip
+was not as yet a polished lady; instead, she was a decidedly blunt-spoken
+girl who enjoyed exasperating this fashionable Lothario.
+
+And never before had he met her like or one so fearless of speech.
+
+"You are the sauciest girl I have ever had the pleasure of meeting,"
+he said, as they drew up to the landing and began sorting the lilies. "I
+didn't notice it so much last summer; and yet you are no less charming,
+mainly because you are so frank. Most ladies whom I know are not so.
+They are arrant hypocrites and not one assertion in ten can be taken
+at its face value."
+
+"You seem to have been an apt scholar," Chip responded, smiling. "If
+you like my blunt speech, as you say, why don't you imitate it and be
+truthful for once in your life?"
+
+"I dare not. No man ever yet won a woman's favor by plain speech."
+
+"And so you want my favor. What for? I am not of your sort. I do not
+spend my life playing golf and tennis and wearing fine clothes."
+
+"But you ought to. You have the face and form required, and once you
+got into the swim of society, you would become a leader."
+
+Chip greeted this with a laugh. "Do you plaster it on as thick as that
+with every one," she queried, "and will they stand it?"
+
+"Why, yes," he chuckled, "and almost beg for more. My ladies thrive on
+flattery, and unless a man doles it out to them, they think him stupid."
+
+When he had helped her out of the boat, holding and pressing her hand
+unduly long she thought, he gathered up the lilies and, with a graceful
+bow and "Sweets to the sweet," offered them to her.
+
+"I don't want them," she answered bluntly. "Take them to your arrant
+hypocrites and tell them a girl you couldn't fool sent 'em." And
+nonplussed a little at this speech, but still smiling, he followed Chip
+to the house. At the gate he halted and their eyes met.
+
+"I've had a most charming morning, for which I thank you," he said.
+And drawing two of the largest blooms from the bunch of lilies, he laid
+the rest on the gate-post. "You will have to take them," he added.
+"And now I have something else to propose. I own a small yacht. It is
+anchored down near the wharf. How would you like a sail to-morrow? I
+shall be highly pleased to have you for my guest. Will you go?"
+
+But Chip was not caught so easily.
+
+"I'll go if you will ask Aunt Abby also," she answered, "not
+otherwise."
+
+"Why, of course," he responded graciously, "that is understood."
+
+And still unruffled by this parting evidence of distrust, he bowed
+himself away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXV
+
+
+ "A girl with a new ring allus hez trouble with her hair."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+_As_ might be expected, Chip gave Aunt Abby a full recital of her
+morning's episode as soon as she entered the house, and with it her
+comments upon this smooth-spoken young man.
+
+"He reeled off flattery by the yard," she said, "and no matter how I
+took it, or how sharply I set him back, he kept at it. The way he piled
+it on was almost funny, just as though he thought I believed it. Of
+course I didn't, not a word, and what's more I wouldn't trust him
+farther than I could see him. He's got shifty eyes, and Cy once told
+me never to believe a man with such eyes. He wants me to go sailing
+with him to-morrow, and I said I would go if you were asked. I knew you
+wouldn't go, however."
+
+"Of course not," answered Aunt Abby, severely, "and his asking you in
+such a way was almost an insult. If he had meant well, he would have
+said he was taking other friends out and would have asked us both to
+join them. I should not have consented to that even, however. These
+summer people are not our sort, and to accept such favors from them is to
+put ourselves in a fair way of being laughed at. I would advise, also,
+that you have no more to say to this young man. It will not reflect
+credit upon you if you do."
+
+That afternoon, while Chip practised upon her banjo, it being vacation
+time, Aunt Abby called upon several neighbors with news-gathering intent.
+She succeeded to the fullest, and that evening related it to Chip.
+
+"This Mr. Goodnow has been here about two weeks," she said, "and is
+boarding at Captain Perkins's. He came in a small steam yacht he claims
+he owns, and has been going about with three ladies who are stopping at
+the Mix House. Two of them are sisters, the Misses Wilson, and a Mrs.
+Simpson, a widow. He seems the most devoted to the widow. They have been
+out driving quite often, and once or twice she has been sailing with
+him alone. It's all right, of course, only she being a good deal older
+than he is, makes it seem curious. When he calls here to-morrow, as I
+suppose he will, I'd better see him."
+
+He called quite early the next morning, as may be guessed, and a more
+picture-book yachtsman Aunt Abby never set eyes upon. His white duck
+shoes, trousers, and cap, white flannel coat, dark blue silk shirt,
+jaunty sailor tie and russet belt, all completed an attire so spick and
+span that it seemed that he must have just emerged from a tailor shop.
+
+But Aunt Abby was not awed overmuch. She had seen his like before, and
+met him at her door with serene self-possession.
+
+"I am Mr. Goodnow," he explained with easy assurance, "and Miss
+Raymond has kindly consented to accept a few hours' enjoyment in my
+yacht if you will also honor me." And he bowed again.
+
+"We thank you very much, sir," Aunt Abby responded stiffly, "but I
+must decline for us both. We should hardly care to accept hospitalities
+which we could not return."
+
+"I regret it very much," he answered in a hurt tone, "and assure you
+I am the one to feel obligated." And then, as Aunt Abby drew back, and
+the door began to close very slowly, he bowed and retreated in good order.
+
+But he was not to be thus checkmated, and from now on he began to watch
+for chances to intercept and accost Chip.
+
+It was, and always had been, a part of her nature to be out of doors as
+much as possible, and since the close of school she was out more than
+ever. Somewhat akin to Old Cy in love of Nature, the fields, woods, and
+streams had always attracted her, and at Christmas Cove the sea added a
+new charm to which she yielded nearly every pleasant day. And her steps
+led her far and wide.
+
+Down to the seldom-used wharf to watch the tide ebb and flow between its
+mussel-coated piles, over the broad-rippled sands of the cove when the
+tide left them bare, around to the long, rocky barrier beyond the cove
+where the sea waves dashed, were her favorite strolls.
+
+The next afternoon she strayed to where the ocean spray was leaping. She
+had scarce reached her favorite lookout spot, a shaded cliff, when she
+saw Goodnow approaching.
+
+Her first impulse was to return home at once, the next to remain.
+
+She did not fear him, he seemed such an effeminate, foppish sort of man,
+that lithe and strong as she was, she felt she could outrun him, or, if
+need be, throw him into the sea. And so she waited, cool and indifferent.
+Although conscious that he was nearing her, she never turned her head
+until he was beside her. Then she looked up.
+
+"I beg your pardon," he said, raising his hat, "but may I share this
+cliff with you?" And he seated himself near.
+
+"It isn't mine," answered Chip, rather ungraciously, "so there's no
+need to ask."
+
+"But every lady has a right to decline a gentleman's company wherever
+she is," he responded in his usual suave tone. "I saw you coming here,
+and I'll admit I was bold enough to follow."
+
+"And what for?" she answered, in her blunt way, "I never invited you."
+
+"No, you didn't, and I never expect you will. But you are such a saucy,
+fascinating little wood-nymph that I couldn't help it. I am sorry,
+though, that you and your worthy aunt refused my yacht yesterday. I
+wanted an opportunity to get better acquainted with her and yourself as
+well, and thought that a good way.
+
+"Do you love the ocean," he continued, as Chip made no response, "and
+is this village your real home, or do you reside at Peaceful Valley?"
+
+"I live here now," returned Chip, resolving to be brief in all her
+answers and hoping he would betake himself away.
+
+She did not like him, nor his smooth, polished speech. She felt that
+it was all affected, and that at heart he meant no good toward her.
+Then his failure to recognize her when with his lady friends still
+rankled. She knew well enough that he dared not admit acquaintance
+with a calico-clad country girl at that moment. And what the gossips of
+Christmas Cove insinuated about him and this widow awoke her contempt.
+
+Totally unused to the ways of fashionable society as she was, for him to
+play court to a widow evidently ten or fifteen years his senior seemed
+unnatural.
+
+His almost nauseating and persistent flattery of herself was equally
+objectionable. All this flashed over her now while he was talking.
+
+"You must find it lonesome here," he said, in response to her
+admission; "but perhaps you have a beau, a sweetheart, somewhere, whom
+you care for."
+
+Chip colored slightly, but made no answer.
+
+"I'm sure you haven't here," he went on, "for I've not seen an
+eligible fellow native to this village since I came." He paused a
+moment, awaiting an admission, and then continued: "How do you pass
+the time, anyway, and isn't life here monotonous? Don't you long for
+some excitement, some fun, some color to it all? I've watched these
+villagers now for three weeks and their lives seem so prosy, so dead
+slow, it is painful. They get up, eat, chase the cows and chickens, hoe
+in the gardens, mow hay, and every blessed woman wears the same calico
+gown six days in the week. Sundays they all spruce up, go to meeting,
+and the next week repeat the programme. Isn't it so?"
+
+"I presume it is," answered Chip, with rising ire; "but if folks here
+weren't satisfied, they could move away, couldn't they? And if it's
+all so dull, what did you come here for? Nobody asked you, did they?"
+
+"No," he responded, laughing, "no one did, and no one will miss me
+when I go--not even you. The only redeeming feature is that they all seem
+willing to take my money."
+
+"Would you stay if they weren't," she returned, still more hotly,
+"would you sponge on us folks and sneer at us as well?"
+
+"Keep cool, my dear girl," he answered unruffled, "keep cool, and
+let your lovely hair grow. I'm not sneering at you or any one. I am
+merely stating facts. To us who live in the whirl of city life, a few
+weeks here is a delightful change, and we are glad to pay well for it. I
+am only speaking of how it must seem to live this way all the time."
+
+He paused a moment, watching Chip's face turned half away, and then
+continued persuasively: "I am sorry you are so ready to believe ill
+of me or to think I am sneering at all things. In that you have changed
+very much since last summer. Then you seemed to enjoy talking with me;
+now you blaze up into wrath at my pleasantry. I am very sorry you feel
+as you do. I'd like to be better friends with you if possible, otherwise
+I wouldn't have risked the rebuff I received from your excellent aunt
+yesterday. I'd like very much to call on you, and nothing would give
+me greater pleasure than to entertain you and your aunt on my boat. I
+am an idle fellow, I'll admit, with nothing to do but spend my time
+and money, but that is my misfortune, and you ought to have pity on me."
+
+And so this smooth-tongued, persuasive talker ran on and on while Chip,
+fascinated, in spite of her dislike of him, listened.
+
+More than that, he grew eloquent and even pathetic at times in describing
+his hopes and ambitions in life. He even asserted that he longed to
+live differently and to become a useful man, instead of an idle one. It
+was all hypocrisy, of course, but Chip was scarce able to detect it, and
+lulled by his specious, pleading voice, she admitted that she had no
+real reason for distrusting or disliking him. Also, that she would
+enjoy a sail on his boat, and would try to persuade her aunt to accept
+another invitation.
+
+This especially was what he most wanted, for shrewd schemer that he was,
+he knew that if he could ingratiate himself with this guardian aunt,
+permission to call must follow, and with that, some opportunity to make
+a conquest of this simple country girl.
+
+Sated as he was with the society of more polished and therefore
+artificial womanhood, _blase_ to all the purities of life and refined
+society, a roue and rake conversant with all vice, this fearless,
+wholesome, yet unsophisticated girl who seemed like a breath from the
+pine woods, attracted him as no other could.
+
+And now he had her almost spellbound on this lonely shore, with the sea
+murmuring at their feet and the cool winds whispering in the pine trees
+shading them.
+
+It was Don Juan and Haidee over again, only this Juan was a more selfish
+and heartless one, calculating on the ruin of this wood-born flower
+without thought of consequences.
+
+He made one mistake, however, after he had lulled her into almost
+believing him to be both honest and worthy,--he sneered at religion.
+
+"All that people go to church for is to see and be seen, ladies
+especially," he said. "They live to dress and show off their new
+gowns and hats, and were it not for the chance church-going gives
+them, not one parson in a hundred would have a corporal's guard for
+audience. As for the preaching, not one in ten understands a word of
+it, and most of those who understand fail to believe it. I don't, I am
+sure. I consider a minister is a man who talks to earn his money. A
+few old tabbies, of course, are sincere and believe in prayer and all
+that sort of foolishness, but the rest only make believe they do.
+There may be a God and maybe there isn't--I don't know. I doubt it,
+however. As for the hereafter, that is all moonshine. When we go,
+that is the end of us."
+
+"And so you don't believe in spirits and a future life," answered
+Chip, with sudden defiance. "Well, I do, and I know that people have
+souls that live again, for I've seen them, hundreds of times. As for all
+church-going people being hypocrites, that's a lie, and I know better.
+The best woman I ever knew believed in praying, and so did my mother,
+and I won't hear them called such a name."
+
+It was Chip, blazing up again, in defence of her own opinions, and this
+smooth-spoken fellow saw his mistake on the instant.
+
+"Oh, well, you may be right," he admitted at once. "I wasn't
+speaking of all womankind--only the fashionable ones whom I know. As
+for soul life, I want to believe as you do, of course, and wish you
+would convince me that it is true." And so peace was restored, and
+once more the lullaby of his wooing talk began.
+
+For two hours he spun to Chip the web of his blandishments, and then the
+sun warned her, and she rose to go.
+
+"It would be delightful to escort you home," he said, "but I fear I'd
+better not. Your aunt might see us returning, and scold you. Now if you
+will meet me here again to-morrow afternoon, and try to convince me that
+there is a future life, I shall be most happy. Will you?"
+
+But Chip was alert.
+
+"No, I don't think I shall," she responded bluntly; "I am not running
+after you--not a step. As for what you believe or don't believe, that
+isn't my lookout," and with an almost uncivil "Good day, sir," she
+left him.
+
+The farther away she got from this snakelike charmer, the more an
+intuitive belief in his real intentions possessed her. She was unskilled
+in the fine art of conversation, had only the inborn purity of her
+thoughts to protect her; and yet she half read this specious flatterer,
+and felt, rather than realized, his baseness.
+
+A change in her own convictions that now served as a mantle of protection
+against his persuasions had come to her during these dreamy hours by the
+sea. Accepting at first Old Tomah's superstitions, she had been led to
+contemplate the great question of future life and the existence of
+God. Aunt Comfort's unselfish character, combined with perfect faith
+in the Supreme Power, had had its influence. Angie's kindness and that
+first prayer Chip had heard in the tent were not lost. Aunt Abby's
+consistent belief and devotion to duty also had had its effect; and all
+these pertinent examples, combined with the impress of the vast ocean,
+the solitude of this lonely shore, and the echo of its ceaseless billows,
+had awakened true veneration in Chip's heart, and convinced her that
+some Unseen Power moved all human impulse and controlled all human
+destiny.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVI
+
+
+After Chip had run away from Greenvale, concealment of her name and
+all else had forced itself upon her. It was not natural for her to
+deceive. She had kept it up for one unhappy year only under inward
+protest, which ended in abject confession and tears. Now recalling that
+unpleasant episode, she made haste to confess her long conversation with
+this fluent fellow.
+
+"Mr. Goodnow followed me over to the point this afternoon," she
+explained that evening to Aunt Abby, "and talked for two hours. He was
+nice enough, but he made me sick of him, he flattered me so much."
+
+Aunt Abby looked at her with a slight sense of alarm.
+
+"He certainly has the gift of impudence, at least," she said, "in
+view of the way I declined his invitation yesterday. I think you'd best
+discontinue your long rambles for the present, or until he leaves here.
+He is not our sort. He is not even a friend of ours, and if people see
+you together, they will say unkind things."
+
+That was warning enough for Chip, and from that time on she never even
+walked down to the village store except with Aunt Abby.
+
+A curious and almost ridiculous espionage followed, however, for a week,
+and not a pleasant afternoon passed but this fellow was noticed strolling
+somewhere near the old mill or past the house.
+
+Another amazing evidence of his intent was received a few days later, in
+the shape of a five-pound box of choicest candies, that came by express
+with his card. Aunt Abby opened this and saw the card, and the next day
+she commissioned the stage driver to deliver the box, card and all, to
+Mr. Goodnow at his boarding house.
+
+A long and adroitly worded letter to Chip came a day later, so humble,
+so flattering, and so importuning that it made her laugh.
+
+"I think that fellow must have gone crazy," she said, handing the
+letter to Aunt Abby, "he runs on so about how he can't sleep nights
+from thinking about me. He says that he must go away next week, and
+shall die if he can't see me once more. What ails him, anyway?"
+
+"Nothing, except evil intentions," responded Aunt Abby, perusing the
+missive. "He must think you a fool to believe such bosh," she added
+severely, after finishing it. "Honest love doesn't grow like a mushroom
+in one night, and the difference between his position and yours gives
+the lie to all he says. I hope he will go away next week, and never come
+back."
+
+Whether Chip's studied avoidance of him, combined with the snubbing,
+served its purpose, or he decided his quest was hopeless, could only be
+guessed, for he was seen no more near the mill, and the next week his
+yacht left Christmas Cove, and Chip felt relieved.
+
+It had been an experience quite new to her, and, in spite of its
+annoyance, somewhat exciting. It also served another purpose of more
+value,--it recalled Ray to her by sheer force of contrast. She had felt
+hurt ever since the night she left Greenvale. She had meant to put him
+out of her thoughts and forget all the silly hours and promises at the
+lake; and yet she never had succeeded. Instead, her thoughts turned
+to him in spite of her pride.
+
+And now, contrasting and comparing that honest, manly lad, a playmate
+only, and yet a lover as well, with this polished, fulsome, flattering,
+shifty-eyed fop, who sneered at everything good, only made Ray, with his
+far different ways, seem the more attractive.
+
+Then conscience began to smite her. She had yielded to pride and put
+him away from her thoughts. His uncle had almost pleaded for her to
+return to Greenvale, if only for a visit. She knew Ray had spent weeks
+in searching for her; yet not once in all the two years since they parted
+had she sent him a line of remembrance.
+
+More mature now, Chip began to see her own conduct as it was, and to
+realize that she had been both ungrateful and heartless; but she could
+not confess it to any one, not even Aunt Abby.
+
+Chip's life had been a strange, complex series of moods of peculiar
+effect, and her conduct must be judged accordingly.
+
+First, the dense ignorance of years at Tim's Place, with its saving
+grace of disgust at such surroundings and such a life. Then a few months
+with people so different and so kind that it seemed an entrance into
+heaven, to be followed by weeks of a growing realization that she was a
+nobody, and an outcast unfit for Greenvale.
+
+And then came the climax of all this: the bitter sneers of Hannah, Ray's
+cool neglect, the consciousness that she was only a dependent pauper,
+and then her flight into the world and away from all that stung her
+like so many whips.
+
+But a revulsion of feeling was coming. Chip, no longer a simple child of
+the wilderness, was realizing her own needs and her own nature. Something
+broader and more satisfying than school life and the companionship of
+Aunt Abby was needed; yet how to find it never occurred to her.
+
+With September came Aunt Abby's annual visit to Peaceful Valley. A
+few days before their departure, Chip received a letter which was so
+unexpected and so vital to her feelings that it must be quoted.
+
+It was dated at the little village of Grindstone, directed to Vera
+McGuire, care of Judson Walker, by whom it was forwarded to Christmas
+Cove.
+
+ "My dear Chip," it began.
+
+ "I feel that you will not care to hear from me, and yet I
+ must write. I know I am more to blame than any one for the way
+ you left Greenvale, and that you must consider me a foolish
+ boy, without much courage, which I have been, and I realize
+ it only too well now, when it is too late. But I am more of
+ a man to-day, I hope, and sometime I shall come and try to
+ obtain your forgiveness for being so blind. No one ever has
+ been, and I know no one ever will be, what you are to me. As
+ Old Cy says, 'Blessings brighten as they vanish,' and now,
+ after this long separation, one word and one smile from dear
+ little Chip would seem priceless to me, and I shall come and
+ try to win it before many months.
+
+ "I am here with Uncle Martin's old guide, Levi. We are going
+ into the woods to-morrow to gather gum and trap until spring.
+ I have hired two other men to help, and hope to do well and
+ make some money. I think you will be glad to know that Old
+ Cy was here this summer and was well. He does not know that
+ you have been found, and is still hunting for you. Levi told
+ me that the people here are much interested in you, that they
+ have fixed up the yard where your mother is buried, and he
+ put up a small stone.
+
+ "I wish I could hear from you, but there is no chance now.
+ Please try to forgive a foolish boy for being stupid, and think
+ of me as you did during those happy days by the lake.
+
+ "Good-bye,
+ "Ray."
+
+How every word of this half-boyish, half-manly letter was read and
+re-read by Chip; how it woke the old memories of the wilderness and of
+herself, a ragged waif there; and how, somehow, in spite of pride and
+anger, a little thrill of happiness crept into her heart, needs no
+explanation.
+
+But she was not quite ready yet to forgive him, and what he failed to
+say when he might, still rankled in her feelings.
+
+But Old Cy, that kindly soul, so like a father! Almost did she feel that
+to meet him would be worth more than to see any one else in the world.
+And to think he was still hunting for her, far and near!
+
+And now, quite unlike most young ladies, who deem their love missives
+sacred, Chip showed hers to Aunt Abby.
+
+"It's from Raymond Stetson," she said, rather bashfully, "a boy who
+was in the woods with those people who were kind to me, and we became
+very good friends."
+
+Aunt Abby smiled as she perused its contents.
+
+"And so he was the cause of your running away from Greenvale," she
+said. "Why didn't you write him a note of thanks after you learned
+he had been searching for you? I think he deserved that much, at least."
+
+"I wouldn't humble myself," Chip answered spiritedly, "and then I
+was ashamed to let any one know I had used his name. I hadn't time to
+think what name to give when Uncle Jud asked me, and his was the first
+that came to mind," she added naively.
+
+Aunt Abby laughed.
+
+"I guess Master Stetson won't find forgiveness hard to earn," she
+said, and then her face beamed at the disclosure of a romance while she
+read the letter a second time.
+
+But there was more to tell, as Aunt Abby knew full well, and now, bit by
+bit, she drew the story from Chip, even to the admission of the tender
+scenes between these two lovers, in which they promised to love each
+other and be married.
+
+"It was silly, I suppose," Chip continued blushingly, "but I didn't
+know any better then, and I was so happy that I didn't think about
+it at all. I never had a beau before, you see, and I guess I acted
+foolishly. Old Cy used to help us, too, and took us away so we could
+have a chance to hold hands and act silly. I was so lonesome, too, for
+Ray all that winter in Greenvale, and nobody knew it. I walked a mile
+to meet the stage every night for a month, to be the first to see him
+when he came. I guess he must have thought he owned me. I wouldn't
+do it now."
+
+Once more Aunt Abby laughed, a good, hearty laugh, and then, much to
+Chip's astonishment, she took her face in her hands and kissed it.
+
+"You dear little goose," she said, "and to think you ran away from
+a boy you cared for like that! I only hope he is good enough for you,
+for I can see what the outcome will be."
+
+That night when the tea-table had been cleared and the lamp lit, Aunt
+Abby once more began her adroit questioning of Chip; but this time it was
+of Old Cy, and all about him. For an hour, Chip, nothing loath, recited
+his praises, repeated his odd sayings, described his looks and ways and
+portrayed him as best she could, while Aunt Abby smiled content.
+
+"It makes me feel young again to hear your story and about Cyrus," she
+said when all was told. "I was just sixteen when he first came to see
+me. He was also my first beau, you know. I should judge he must have
+changed so I would never know him, and maybe he wouldn't recognize me.
+Forty years is a long time!" And she sighed.
+
+And now Aunt Abby closed her eyes, let fall her knitting, and lapsed into
+bygones.
+
+No longer was she a staid and matronly widow--not young, it is true, yet
+not old, but with rounded face, few wrinkles, and slightly gray hair.
+Instead was she sweet Abby Grey of the long ago, and once more the belle
+of this quiet village and Bayport, and the leader at every dance, every
+husking, and every party. Once more she primped and curled her hair,
+and donned her best, and waited her sailor boy's coming. Once more she
+heard the bells jingle and saw the stars twinkle as they sped away to a
+winter night's dance--and once more she felt the sorrow of parting, the
+long years of waiting, waiting, waiting, and at last the numb despair
+and final conviction that never would her lover return.
+
+And now he was still alive, though a wanderer, and some day he
+might--surely would come to see her, just once, if no more.
+
+"Ah, me," she said, rousing herself at last and looking at Chip's
+smiling, sunny face, "life is a queer riddle, and we never know how to
+guess it."
+
+Then she sighed again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVII
+
+
+ "The milk o' human kindness 'most allus turns out old
+ cheese, 'n' all rind at that."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Some sneering critic once said that few young men ever start out in the
+world until they are kicked out, and there is a grain of truth in that
+assertion. It is seldom an actual kick, however, but some motive force
+quite as compelling.
+
+In Ray's case it was his uncle's assertion that if he hoped to win
+Chip he must first show the ability to provide a home for her, which is
+excellent advice for any young man to follow.
+
+"It won't be a pleasure trip," Martin said when Ray proposed to go to
+the wilderness and, with Levi and a couple of other assistants, make a
+business of gum-gathering and trap-setting, "but you can't lose much
+by it. You are welcome to the camp; Levi will see that you have game
+enough to eat, and boss the expedition. I will loan you five hundred,
+and with what you have, that is capital enough and you ought to do well.
+It would be better if Old Cy could take charge, but as it is, you must
+go it alone." And go it alone Ray did.
+
+Levi's services were easily secured. Two young fellows whom he knew
+were hired at Greenvale. A bateau was purchased, together with more traps
+and supplies, and after Ray had written Chip his plan, the party started
+for Martin's camp. They had been established there a month and were
+doing well. The first ice had begun forming in shallow coves when one
+afternoon, who should enter the lake and paddle rapidly across but Old Cy.
+
+"Ye can't git rid o' me when trappin's goin' on," he said cheerily,
+as Ray and Levi met him at the landing. "I fetched into the settlement
+kinder homesick fer the woods last week. I heard the good news 'bout
+Chip's bein' found 'n' you'd come here fer the winter, 'n' I
+didn't wait a minute 'fore I hired a canoe 'n' started." And then,
+in the exuberance of his joy, he shook hands with Ray and Levi once more.
+
+That evening, Ray, who had hard work to keep the secret so long, told
+Old Cy who lived in Peaceful Valley.
+
+It was like a thunderbolt out of a clear sky, a shock of joyful news that
+made Old Cy gasp.
+
+"Why, I feel jest like a colt once more," he said after the exclamation
+stage had passed. "An', do ye know, boys, I felt all the way comin'
+in ez though good news was waitin' fer me. I 'spose 'twas from
+hearin' Chip was all right ag'in."
+
+That evening was one that none who were in that wildwood camp ever
+forgot, for Old Cy was the central figure, and told as only he could
+the story of his year's wandering in search of Chip.
+
+It was humorous, pathetic, and tragic all in one, and a tale that held
+its listeners spellbound for three delightful hours.
+
+"I had dogs set on me, hundreds on 'em," Old Cy said, in conclusion,
+"an' I never knew afore how many kinds 'n' sizes o' dogs thar was in
+this world. I uster think thar warn't more'n two dozen or so kinds. I
+know now thar's two million 'n' a few more I didn't wait to count.
+I got 'rested a few times on account o' not havin' visible means o'
+support. I've been hauled over the coals by doctors tryin' to make me
+out a lunatic, 'n' I'd 'a' done time in jail if I hadn't had
+money to show. I tell ye, boys, this is an awful 'spicious world fer
+strangers, 'n' the milk o' human kindness is mostly old cheese,
+'n' all rind at that. I had a little fun, too, mixed in with all
+the trouble, 'n' one woman who owned a place where I 'plied for
+lodgin' jest 'bout told me she'd be willin' to marry me if I'd stay
+'n' work the farm. She had red hair, hard eyes, 'n' bossy sort o'
+ways, an' that's a dangerous combination. I watched my chance when
+she wa'n't lookin', 'n' lit out middlin' lively."
+
+And now life at this wilderness camp, less restrained than when womankind
+were here, became one of work, and persistent, steady, no-time-wasted
+work at that. Martin had said that Levi could boss matters, but it was
+Ray who assumed management instead. Two years had changed him almost
+from boy to man. His new ambition was the controlling power. He was
+here to make his mark, as it were, and the half-hearted, boyish interest
+in work had changed into a tireless leadership. Then, too, an unspoken,
+tacit interest in his ambition was felt by those who helped. They knew
+what he was striving for, and that Chip was the ultimate object. Her
+history, known as it now was to all who came into the wilderness,
+influenced these woodsmen. She had been of them and from them, and as
+an entire village will gather to help at a house-raising, so these
+three, Levi and the two helpers, now felt the same incentive.
+
+Success usually comes to all who strive for it, and now, with four
+willing workers to aid him, Ray was rapidly making a success of this
+venture. Old Cy, the most valuable assistant, was indefatigable. He
+not only kept the larder well supplied with game, but tended and set
+traps, worked in the woods with the rest between times, and his cheerful
+optimism and droll humor bridged many a stormy day and shortened many a
+weary tramp. And he seemed to grow younger in this new, helpful life
+for others. His eyes were bright, his step elastic, his spirits buoyant,
+his strength tireless.
+
+With Chip safe and provided for, with Ray succeeding in manhood's
+natural ambition, Old Cy saw his heart's best hopes nearing fruition,
+and for these two and in these two all his interest centred.
+
+Only once was the bond of feeling between Ray and Chip referred to by Old
+Cy, and then in response to a wish of Ray's that he might hear from her.
+
+"I don't think ye've cause to worry now, arter ye've sent her word
+what ye're doin' 'n' who for," he answered. "Chip's true blue, not
+one o' the fickle sort, 'n' once she keers fer a man, she won't give
+him up till he's married or dead. I think ye'd orter sent her word
+sooner,--ye know she run 'way out o' spunk,--but when ye go to her
+like a man 'n' say, 'I've been workin' 'n' waitin' fer ye all the
+time,' thar won't be no quarrellin'."
+
+"I'm not so sure about that," responded Ray, soberly. "From what
+Uncle Martin said, my chance is gone with Miss Chip, and I don't blame
+her for feeling so. Like every young fellow, I took it for granted that
+she was in love with me and ready to fall into my arms on call. Then I
+hadn't any plans in life, anyway, and, like a fool, believed it made no
+difference to her. To mix matters up still more, Hannah crowded herself
+into our affairs and said things to Chip, with the result that Chip got
+mad, ran away, and you know the rest."
+
+"Wal," asserted Old Cy, his eyes twinkling, "the time to hug a
+gal is when she's willin', 'n' ye orter spunked up that night
+'fore ye come away 'n' told her ye was callatin' to make yer fortin
+in the woods, an' that ye wanted her to wait 'n' share it--then
+hugged 'n' kissed her a little more by way o' bindin' the bargain,
+an'--knowin' that gal ez I do, she'd fought Hannah, tooth 'n' nail,
+'n' walked through fire 'n' brimstun fer ye. I think, 'stead o'
+hidin' herself fer two years, an' changin' her name, she'd 'a'
+tramped clear to Grindstun jest to tell ye her troubles, 'n', if
+need be, she'd 'a' starved fer ye. I tell ye, boy, wimmin like her is
+scarce in this world, 'n' when ye find one young 'n' pretty ez she
+is, hang on to her an' hang hard."
+
+"I know it now well enough," returned Ray, ruefully; "but that don't
+help matters. Then that fortune you found for her makes my case all the
+worse, and Chip quite independent."
+
+"It do, it do," chuckled Old Cy, as if glad of it, "an' all the more
+need o' you hustlin'. It's a case o' woodchuck with ye now. But
+don't git discouraged. Jest dig. Chip's worth it, ten times over,
+'n' no man ever worked to win a woman 'thout bein' bettered by it."
+
+It was terse and homely advice, and not only convinced Ray that he had
+neglected one whom he now felt meant home, wife, happiness, and all that
+life might mean for him, but made him realize that all possible striving
+and self-denial must be made in atonement. With whom and what sort of
+people Chip had found asylum, he knew not. What influence they would
+have upon her feelings was an equally unknown matter; and worse than
+that, the ogre of another suitor for Chip's favor now entered Ray's
+calculations, and the slang truism, "There are others," was with him
+every waking moment--a much-deserved punishment, all womankind will say.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXVIII
+
+
+One day while Aunt Abby and Chip were enjoying the newly furnished home
+of Uncle Jud, a capacious carriage drawn by a handsome pair of horses
+halted there and Martin and Angie alighted.
+
+"We are taking a cross-country drive for an outing," he explained,
+after Angie had kissed Chip tenderly and greetings had been exchanged.
+"We have waited for you, Miss Runaway, to come and visit us," he added,
+turning to Chip, "until we couldn't wait any longer and so came to look
+for you. We have also some news that may interest you. Old Cy has been
+heard from at last. He spent a year looking for you. He has now gone
+into the woods, to my camp, where Ray located for the winter, and when
+spring comes, I can guess where they will head for."
+
+How welcome this news was to Chip, her face fully indicated; but neither
+Martin nor Angie realized how much or for what reason it interested
+this soft-voiced, gracious lady whom Chip called Aunt Abby. They knew
+Uncle Jud was Old Cy's brother and that they had once been sailors
+from Bayport, but the long-ago romance of Aunt Abby's life was unknown
+to them.
+
+And now ensued a welcome to the callers such as only Uncle Jud and Aunt
+Mandy could offer.
+
+"We sorter feel we robbed ye o' Vera," Uncle Jud explained, "though
+'twa'n't any intention on our part, an' so ye must gin us some chance
+to make amends. We callate 'twa'n't no fault of yourn, either, only
+one o' them happenin's that was luck for us."
+
+That evening was one long to be remembered by all who were present,
+for Chip's history, as told by Martin and Angie, was the entertaining
+topic, and its humorous side was made the most of by Martin. Chip was
+in no wise annoyed by Martin's fun-making, either. Instead, conscious of
+the good-will and affection of the friends who had rescued her from
+the wilderness, she rather enjoyed it and laughed heartily at Martin's
+description of various incidents, especially her first appearance in
+their camp, and the language she used.
+
+"I couldn't help swearing," she explained. "I never had heard much
+except 'cuss' words. I think also now, as I recall my life at Tim's
+Place, I would never have dared that desperate mode of escape had I not
+been hardened by such a life. I wish I could see Old Tomah once more,"
+she added musingly, "and I'd like to send him some gift. He was the
+best-hearted Indian I ever saw or heard of, and his queer teachings
+about spites and how they rewarded us for good deeds and punished us
+for evil ones was no harm, for it set me thinking. The one thought that
+encouraged me most during those awful days and nights alone in the woods
+was the belief that among the spites which I was sure followed me was
+my mother's soul. I've never changed in my belief, either, and shall
+always feel that she guided me to your camp."
+
+Uncle Jud also obtained his share of fun at Chip's expense, describing
+his finding of her with humorous additions.
+
+"She was all beat out that night I found her on top o' Bangall Hill,
+'n' yet when I asked her if she'd run away from some poor farm, she
+was ready to claw my eyes out, an' dunno's I blame her. I was innocent,
+too, fer I really s'posed she had."
+
+Martin's visit at this hospitable home was not allowed to terminate for
+a week, for visitors seldom came here, and Uncle Jud, as big a boy as
+his brother when the chance came, planned all sorts of trips and outings
+to entertain them, and quite characteristic affairs they were, too.
+
+One day they drove to a wood-bordered pond far up the valley, fished a
+few hours for pickerel and perch, and had a fish fry and picnic dinner.
+
+The next day they visited a strange, romantic grotto up in the mountains,
+known as the Wolf's Den, and here a table was set, broiled chicken,
+sweet corn, and such toothsome fare formed the meal, with nut-gathering
+for amusement.
+
+Squirrel and partridge shooting also furnished Martin a little
+excitement. When he and Angie insisted that they must leave, both
+host and hostess showed genuine regret. A few remarks made by Angie to
+her former protegee, in private, the last evening of this visit, may
+be quoted.
+
+"I must insist, my dear child," she said, "that you make us a visit
+in the near future. You left us under an entirely false impression and it
+has grieved me more than you can imagine. There was never a word of
+truth in anything that Hannah said. She was spiteful and malicious
+and desired to get even with you for a hurt to her pride. We had no
+thought of hurrying away to the woods to separate you and Ray for any
+reason whatever. Of course, as you must know, I had no suspicion of any
+attachment between you, and if I had, I certainly should not have tried
+to break it off in that way. That is a matter that concerns only you and
+him. My own life experience shows that first love is the wisest and
+best, and while you were both too young then for an engagement, you must
+believe me when I tell you that I had no wish to interfere."
+
+And so the breach was healed.
+
+This visit of the Frisbies to Peaceful Valley also awakened something
+of repentance in Chip's mind, and more mature now, it occurred to her
+that leaving Greenvale as she did, was, after all, childish.
+
+Then Angie's part in this drama of her life now returned to Chip in a
+new light. Once she began to reflect, her self-accusation grew apace and
+her repentance as well. Now she began to see herself as she was at Tim's
+Place.
+
+"I think I treated my Greenvale friends very ungratefully," she said
+to Aunt Abby one evening after they had returned to Christmas Cove once
+more, "and what Mrs. Frisbie said to me has made me realize it. I know
+now that few would have done what she did for me. I was an ignorant,
+dirty, homeless creature and no relation of hers, and yet she took charge
+of me, bought me clothes, paid all my expenses going to Greenvale,
+clothed me there, and always treated me nicely without my even asking
+for it.
+
+"The Frisbies certainly ran some risk by keeping me at their cabin when
+they knew that half-breed was after me. I don't know why they should
+have done all this. I was nothing to them. And yet when I recall the
+night I stumbled into their camp, how Mrs. Frisbie dressed me in her own
+clothes, shared her tent with me, and even prayed for me, I feel ashamed
+to think of what I have done. I did think that Mrs. Frisbie despised me
+from what Hannah said. I know now that I was wrong, and running away
+as I did, was very ungrateful."
+
+"I think it was, myself," responded Aunt Abby, "and yet believing
+as you did, Mrs. Frisbie ought not to blame you. I don't think she
+does, either. She seems a very sensible woman, and I like her. You made
+your mistake in not confiding in her more. You should have gone to her
+as you would to a mother, in the first place, and told her just what
+Hannah had said to you and how you felt about it. To brood over such
+matters and imagine the worst possible, is unwise in any one. I think
+from what you have told me, that this person who sneered against you so
+much must have had a spite against you."
+
+"Hannah was jealous, I know," Chip interrupted, smiling at the
+recollection, "and I hurt her feelings because I asked her why she
+didn't shave."
+
+"Didn't shave!" exclaimed Aunt Abby, wide-eyed, "what do you mean?"
+
+"Why, she has whiskers, you see," laughed Chip, "almost as much
+as some men--a nice little mustache and some on her chin. I told her
+the next day after I got there I thought she was a man dressed as a
+woman. I snickered, too, I remember, when I said it, for she looked so
+comical--like a goat, almost--and then I asked her why she didn't
+shave. I guess she laid it up against me ever after."
+
+"She revenged herself amply, it seems," answered Aunt Abby.
+
+When Christmas neared, and with it a vacation for Chip, new impulses
+came to her: a desire to visit Greenvale once more and make amends as
+best she could to her friends there; and her gift-giving desire was
+quickened by the coming holidays. She now felt that she had ample means
+to gratify this latter wish. Day by day, since meeting Angie again,
+her sense of obligation had increased, and now it was in her power at
+Christmas-tide to repay at least a little of the debt.
+
+Others were also included in this generous project: Uncle Jud, Aunt
+Mandy, her foster-mother, Aunt Abby, as well; and then there was Old Cy,
+whom most of all she now desired to make glad. That was impossible,
+however. He was still an absent wanderer, and so, as it ever is and
+ever will be, some thread of regret, some note of sorrow, must be woven
+into all joys.
+
+A rapid and almost wonderful growth of this yule-tide impulse now swept
+over Chip, so much so that it must be told. At first it took shape in
+the intended purchase of comparative trifles,--a fishing-rod for Uncle
+Jud, a pipe for Martin, gloves for Aunt Abby, and so on. Then as that
+seemingly vast fortune, now hers to spend, occurred to Chip, and her
+sense of obligation as well, the intended gifts increased in proportion
+until a costly picture of some camp or wildwood scene for Angie and a
+valuable watch for Miss Phinney were decided upon.
+
+Her plans as to how to obtain these presents also took shape. Riverton
+was the only place where they could be obtained. To that village she
+would go first, obtain the money needed, devote one entire day to making
+her purchases, and then go on to Greenvale and astonish these good
+friends from whom she was once so eager to escape.
+
+It was all a most delightful episode which was now anticipated by Chip.
+Again and again she lived it over, especially her arrival in Greenvale,
+and how like a Lady Bountiful she would present her gifts to her friends.
+
+So eager was she thus to make some compensation to them that lessons
+became irksome, the day seemed weeks in length, and she could scarce
+sleep when bedtime came.
+
+But the slow days dragged by at last, and then Chip, happier than ever
+before in her life, dressed in her best, bade Aunt Abby good-bye and
+started on her journey alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIX
+
+
+ "A man braggin' gits riled if ye try 'n' choke him off."
+ --Old Cy Walker.
+
+Riverton, less provincial than Greenvale, was a village of some two
+thousand inhabitants. A few brick blocks, with less pretentious
+wooden buildings, formed a nucleus of stores. A brownstone bank,
+four churches, two hotels, the Quaboag House and the Astor House were
+intermingled among these, and a railroad with two trains in each
+direction a day added life and interest to the place. Each of the hotels
+sent a conveyance to meet every train, with a loud-voiced emissary to
+announce the fact of free transportation. In each hostelry a bar
+flourished, and like rival clubs, each had its afternoon and evening
+gathering of loafers who swapped yarns and gossip, smoked and chewed
+incessantly, and contributed little else to support the establishments.
+Three times daily, at meal hours, each of the rival landlords banged a
+discordant gong in his front doorway, without apparent result.
+
+At about eleven in the forenoon each weekday in summer, Uncle Joe Barnes
+on his lumbering two-horse stage, arrived from Greenvale, paused at
+the post-office, threw off a mail-pouch, thence around to the Quaboag
+House stable, and cared for his horses. At two he was ready for the
+return trip and mounting his lofty seat, he again drove to the front
+of the hotel, shouting "All aboard!" dismounted to assist lady
+passengers, but let masculine ones do their own climbing, and after
+halting to receive a mail-bag, again departed on his return trip.
+
+A certain monotonous regularity was apparent in every move and every act
+and function of village life in Riverton. At precisely seven o'clock
+each morning the two landlords appeared simultaneously and banged their
+gongs. At twelve and six, this was repeated. At eight o'clock the three
+principal storekeepers usually entered their places of business; at
+nine, and while the academy bell was ringing near by, every village
+doctor might be seen starting out. At ten exactly, Dwight Bennett,
+the cashier of the bank, unlocked its front door, and the two hotel
+'buses invariably started so nearly together that they met at the
+first turn going stationward. Even the four church clocks had the same
+habit, and it was often related that a stranger there, a travelling man,
+on his first, visit, made an amusing discovery.
+
+"What kind of a fool clock have you got in this town?" he said to Sam
+Gates, the landlord of the Quaboag, next morning after his arrival. "I
+went to bed in good season last night an' just got asleep when I heard
+it strike thirty-two. I dozed off an' the next I knew it began clanging
+again, and I counted forty-four. What sort of time do you keep here,
+anyway? Do you run your town by the multiplication table?"
+
+The half-dozen chronic loafers who met every afternoon in the Quaboag
+House office arrived in about the same order, smoked, drank, told their
+yarns, gathered all the gossip, and departed at nearly the same moment.
+Their evening visits partook of the same clocklike regularity.
+
+These of the old guard were also dressed much the same, and "slouchy"
+best describes it. Gray flannel shirts in winter or summer alike.
+Collars, cuffs, and ties were never seen on them, though patches were,
+and as for shaving or hair-cutting, a few shaved once a week, some
+never did, and semi-annual hair-cuts were a fair average.
+
+The worst sinner in this respect, Luke Atwater, occasionally called
+"Lazy Luke," never had his beard shortened but once, and that was
+due to its being burnt off while he was fighting a brush fire in spring.
+
+It was related of him, and believed by many, that once upon a time many
+years previous he had had his hair cut, and on that occasion the barber
+had found a whetstone concealed in Luke's shock of tangled hair. It was
+also asserted that he admitted always carrying his whetstone back of his
+ear while mowing, and so losing it that way.
+
+All the news and every happening in Riverton, from the catching of an
+extra big trout to twins, was duly commented upon and discussed by this
+coterie. Village politics, how much money each storekeeper was making,
+crop prospects, the run of sap every spring, drouth, weather indications,
+rain or snow falls, each and all formed rotating subjects upon which
+every one of this faithful-to-the-post clique expressed opinions.
+
+Chip's arrival there with the Frisbie family, and her later history,
+learned from Uncle Joe, furnished a fertile topic, her escapade in
+running away from Greenvale a more exciting one, while Old Cy's
+visit and deposit of a fabulous sum in the bank in her name had been a
+nine days' wonder. That amount, hinted at only by the cashier as a
+comfortable fortune, soon grew in size until it was generally believed
+to be almost a million.
+
+This was Riverton and its decidedly rural status when late one December
+afternoon the Quaboag free 'bus (a two-seated pung, this time) swept
+up to that hotel's front door, where the porter assisted a stylish young
+lady to alight, and he, stepping like a drum major, led the way into the
+Quaboag's unwarmed parlor.
+
+"Young lady, sir, a stunner, wants room over night, sir," he announced
+to the landlord in the office a moment later. "Goin' to Greenvale
+to-morrer, she says."
+
+On the instant all converse in the office ceased, and the six constant
+callers hardly breathed until Sam Gates hastened to the parlor and
+returned.
+
+"It's that McGuire gal--lady, I mean," he asserted pompously; then to
+the porter, "Git a move on, Jim, 'n' start a fire in Number 6, an'
+quick, too!" And hastily brushing his untidy hair before the office
+mirror, he left the room again, followed by six envious glances. Then
+those astonished loafers grouped themselves, the better to observe the
+passage between parlor and office.
+
+Only one instant sight of this important guest was obtained by them as
+Chip emerged from the parlor and followed the landlord upstairs, and then
+the hushed spell was broken.
+
+"By gosh, it's her!" exclaimed one in an awed whisper, "an' Jim was
+right, she's a stunner!"
+
+"I 'member jest how she looked that fust day she came," asserted
+another. "Saw her legs, too, when she shinned up top o' the stage."
+
+"Ye won't git 'nother chance, I'll bet!" declared a third.
+
+"What do ye s'pose she's here for," queried a fourth, "to draw the
+int'rest on her money, or what?"
+
+It was precisely four-forty-five when Chip appeared before this judge and
+jury of all Riverton's happenings. At five-forty-five they had agreed
+that she was the handsomest young lady who had ever set foot in the
+town, that she must be going to get married soon, and that her mission
+there was to draw out a few thousand dollars for wedding finery. Then
+they dispersed, and at six-forty-five, when they assembled at the Quaboag
+again, half of Riverton knew their conclusions, and by bedtime all knew
+them.
+
+By eight-thirty next morning, this all-observant and all-wise clique
+had gathered in the hotel office once more, an unusual proceeding, and
+when Chip tripped out, eight pairs of eyes watched her depart. Then they
+dispersed.
+
+At nine o'clock Chip walked up the stone steps to the bank door, read
+the legend, "Open from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.," turned away, and once
+more resumed her leisurely stroll up and down the street while she peered
+into store windows. At ten precisely by the four church clocks she was
+back at the bank again, and the cashier lost count of the column he
+was adding when he saw her enter.
+
+"I would like three hundred dollars, if you please, sir," she said,
+presenting her little book, and he had to count it over four times,
+to make sure the amount was right. Then he passed the thick bundle of
+currency out under his latticed window, seeing only the two wide-open,
+fathomless eyes and dimpled face that had watched him, and feeling, as
+he afterward admitted, like fifty cents.
+
+And now ensued an experience the like of which poor Chip had never
+even dreamed,--the supreme joy of spending money without stint for
+those near and dear to her. And what a medley of gifts she bought!
+Two silk dress patterns, two warm wraps, three winter hats, a gold
+watch for Miss Phinney, an easy-chair, two of the finest pipes she
+could find, a trout rod, four pairs of gloves, and finally a gun for
+Nezer. Then as her roll of money grew less, she began to pick up smaller
+articles,--handkerchiefs, slippers, and the like.
+
+"Send them to the hotel, please," she said to one and all of whom she
+purchased articles of any size, "marked for Vera McGuire."
+
+That was enough!
+
+Riverton had sensations, mild ones, of course. Now and then a fire had
+occurred, once an elopement. Occasionally a horse ran away, causing
+damage to some one. But nothing had occurred to compare with the arrival
+of a supposed fabulously rich young lady who came without escort, who
+walked into and out of stores like a young goddess, noticing no one,
+and who spent money as if it were autumn leaves.
+
+A few of the Quaboag retinue followed her about in a not-to-be-observed
+manner. Women by the dozen hastily donned outdoor raiment, and visited
+stores, just to observe her. They crossed and recrossed the street to
+meet her, and a battery of curious eyes was focussed on her for two hours.
+
+When she returned to the hotel, the old guard, recruited by every idle
+man in town, filled the office, awaiting her. Uncle Joe, who had heard of
+her arrival the moment he came, was among them, recounting her history
+once more, and when she neared the hotel, he emerged to meet her.
+
+"Why, bless yer eyes, Chip," he said, extending a calloused hand, "but
+I'm powerful glad to see ye once more. Whatever made ye run away the way
+ye did, 'n' what be ye doin' here? Buyin' out the hull town? I've
+got the pung filled wi' bundles a'ready wi' yer name on 'em."
+
+He beaued her into the parlor, like the ancient gallant he was. He
+washed, brushed his hair and clothing, and awaited her readiness to dine,
+without holding further converse with the curious crowd. He ushered
+her into the dining room and made bold to sit and eat with her unasked,
+and when he assisted her to the front seat in his long box sleigh,
+crowded with her purchases, and drove away, he was envied by two dozen
+observers.
+
+"Why didn't ye send us word o' yer comin'," he said as they left
+Riverton, "so I cud 'a' spruced up some an' come down with a better
+rig, bells on the hosses and new buffler robes?"
+
+"There was no need of that," answered Chip, pleased, as well she might
+be. "I am just the same girl that I always was, only happier now that
+I have more friends. How is dear old Aunt Comfort, and every one in
+Greenvale? I am anticipating seeing them so much."
+
+And never during all the twenty years in which Uncle Joe had journeyed
+twice each day over this road had the way seemed shorter, or had he been
+blessed with a more interesting companion.
+
+The only regret Chip had, was that she had forgotten to buy Uncle Joe a
+present. She made up for it later, however.
+
+At Greenvale, Chip met almost an ovation. Aunt Comfort kissed her and
+cried over her. Nezer ran for Angie, who soon appeared on the scene,
+and Hannah was so "flustered" she was unable to speak after the first
+greeting. Martin, who had heard of Chip's arrival from Uncle Joe,
+hastened to Aunt Comfort's, and had Chip been a real "millionnairess"
+or some titled lady, she could not have awakened more interest or
+received half so cordial a welcome.
+
+Hannah was the one who felt the most embarrassed, however, and guilty as
+well. For half an hour, while Chip was the centre of interest, she could
+only stare at her in dumb amazement. Then she stole out of the room, and
+later Chip found her in the kitchen, shedding copious tears.
+
+"I'm a miserable sinner 'n' the Lord'll never forgive me," she
+half moaned, when Chip tried to console her. "An' to think ye feel the
+way ye say, 'n' to bring me a present, arter all the mean things I
+said. It's a-heapin' coals o' fire on my head, that it is." And the
+shower increased.
+
+"I have forgotten all about them, Hannah, truly I have," Chip assured
+her, "and I wish you would. You didn't understand me then, perhaps,
+or I you, so let us be friends now."
+
+The next afternoon Chip, who had learned that Miss Phinney's school was
+to close the day following, set out to call on her in time to arrive at
+its adjournment.
+
+No hint of her return had reached Miss Phinney, no letters had been
+exchanged, and not since that tearful separation had they met.
+
+And now as Chip followed the lonely by-road so often traversed by her,
+what a flood of bitter-sweet memories returned,--each bend, each tree,
+each rock, and the bridge over the Mizzy held a different recollection.
+Here at this turn she had first met Ray, after her resolve to leave
+Greenvale. At the next landmark, a lane crossing the meadows, she had
+always parted from her teacher, the last time in tears. And how long,
+long ago it all seemed!
+
+Then beyond, and barely visible, was the dear old schoolhouse. She
+could see it now, half hid in the bushes, a lone and lowly little brown
+building outlined on the winter landscape and apparently dwarfed in
+size. Once it had awed her; now it seemed pathetic.
+
+The last of its pupils were vanishing as Chip drew near, and inside, and
+as lonely as that lone temple, Miss Phinney still lingered.
+
+That day had not gone well with her. A note of complaint had come
+from one parent that morning, and news that a dearly loved scholar was
+ill as well, and Miss Phinney's own life seemed like the fields just
+now--cold, desolate, and snow-covered.
+
+And then while she, thus lone and lonesome, was putting away books,
+slates, ink-bottles, and all the badges of her servitude, Chip, without
+knocking, walked in.
+
+How they first exclaimed, then embraced, then kissed, and then repeated
+it while each tried to wink the tears away, and failed; how they sat
+hand in hand in that dingy, smoke-browned room with its knife-hacked
+benches, unconscious of the chill, while Chip told her story; and how,
+just as the last rays of the setting sun flashed from the icicles along
+its eaves, they left it, still hand in hand, was but an episode such as
+many a schoolgirl can recall.
+
+Of the few friends Greenvale held for Chip, none seemed quite so near
+and dear as Miss Phinney, and none lived longer in her memory. They had
+been for many months not teacher and pupil, but rather two sisters,
+confiding, patient, and tender. Life swept them apart. They might never
+meet again, and yet, so long as both lived, never would those school
+days be forgotten.
+
+With Sunday came Chip's most gratifying experience, perhaps, for her
+arrival was now known by the entire village and the fact that she was
+an heiress as well. Her fortune (also known) was considered almost
+fabulous according to Greenvale standards, and when Chip with Angie
+entered the church porch, it was crowded with people waiting to receive
+them. Chip, of course, now well clad and well poised, was once more the
+cynosure of all eyes except when the pastor prayed. At the close of
+service a score, most of whom she knew by sight only, waited to greet
+her and shake hands with her in the porch. The parson hurried down the
+aisle to add his smile and hand clasp, and, all in all, it was a most
+gratifying reception.
+
+And here and now, let no carping critic say it was all due to that bank
+account, but rather a country town's expression of respect and good-will
+toward one whom they felt deserved it.
+
+That it all pleased Angie, goes without saying. That Chip well deserved
+this vindication, no one will question; and when her visit ended and she
+departed, no one, not even Miss Phinney, missed her more than Angie.
+
+Only one thread of regret wove itself into Chip's feelings as she
+rode away with Uncle Joe, whose horses were now decked properly for
+this important event. She had received a most cordial reception on
+all sides--almost a triumph of good-will. Her gifts had brought an
+oft-repeated chorus of thanks and a few tears. On all sides and among all
+she had been welcome, even receiving a call and words of praise from
+Parson Jones. She was a _nobody_ no longer; instead, a _somebody_
+whom all delighted to honor and commend.
+
+But the one whose motherly pride would have been most gratified, she for
+whom Chip's heart yearned for oftenest, would never know it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XL
+
+
+With the birds and flowers once more returning to Christmas Cove, came
+outdoor freedom for Chip again. Like the wood-nymph she was in character
+and taste, the wild, rock-bound coast outside and the low, wooded
+mountain enclosing this village were her playgrounds where she found
+companionship. Other associates she cared but little for, and a few
+hours alone on a wave-washed shore, watching the wild ocean billows
+tossing spray aloft, or a long ramble in a deep, silent forest, appealed
+to her far more than parties and girlish enjoyments.
+
+The wood-bordered road, leading from the village to the railroad ten
+miles away, was now a favorite walk of hers. It was suited to her in
+many ways, for it was seldom travelled; it followed the sunny side of
+the low mountain range back of Christmas Cove, not a house stood along
+its entire way, and to add charm, a brook kept it company, crossing
+and recrossing it for two miles. That feature was the most especial
+attraction, for beds of watercress waved beneath the limpid waters in
+deep pools, bunches of flag grew along its banks, their blue flowers
+bending to kiss the current; its ripples danced in the sunlight; its
+music was a tinkling melody, and these simple attractions appealed to
+Chip.
+
+There was also another reason for now choosing this byway walk. She knew,
+or felt sure, that Ray would visit Christmas Cove on his return from
+the woods. He must come in the old carryall,--about the only vehicle
+ever journeying along this road,--and now, like a brownie of the forest,
+she watched until she spied it afar and then hid in the bushes and
+peeped out until it passed each day.
+
+A curious and somewhat complex feeling toward this young man had also
+come to her. At first, like a child, she had loved him unasked. She had
+known no different. He had seemed like a young god to her, and to
+cling to him was supreme happiness. Then had come an awakening, a
+consciousness that this freedom was not right and must be checked.
+Following that also--a bitter lesson--it had come to her that she
+was a kind of outcast, a child of shame, as it were, whose origin
+was despicable, and who was dependent upon the charity of others.
+This awakening, this new consciousness, was like a black chasm in
+front of her, a horror and shame combined, and true to her nature, she
+fled from it like one pursued.
+
+But two years had changed her views of humanity. She had learned that
+money and social position did not always win friends and respect. That
+birth and ancestry were of less consideration than a pure mind and honest
+intentions, and that fine raiment sometimes covered a base heart and vile
+nature.
+
+Toward this boyish lover, also, her feelings had been altered. A little
+of the old-time fondness remained, however. She could not put that
+away. She had tried and tried earnestly, yet the wildwood illusion still
+lingered. She had meant, also, to put him and herself quite apart--so
+far, and in such a way, that she would never be found by him. That had
+failed, however; he knew where she was. He had said that he was coming
+here. Most likely he would expect to renew the old tender relations;
+but in that he would be disappointed. She was sure she would be glad
+to see him for old times' sake, however. She would be gracious and
+dignified, as Aunt Abby was. She wanted to hear all about the woods and
+Old Cy again, but caresses must be forbidden. More than that, every
+time she recalled how freely she had permitted them once, she blushed
+and felt that it would be an effort to look him in the face again.
+
+But she was anxious to see how he would appear now: whether the same boy,
+with frank, open face, or a commanding, self-possessed man.
+
+And so each pleasant afternoon she strolled up this byway road. When the
+ancient carryall was sighted, she hid and watched until it passed.
+
+But Captain Mix, its driver, also had observing eyes. He knew her now as
+far as he could see her, as every one in the village did, and he soon
+noticed her unusual conduct. He also watched along the wayside where she
+left it, and slyly observed her peeping out from some thicket. Just why
+this odd proceeding happened time and again, he could not guess, and not
+until a strange young man alighted from the train one day and asked to
+be left at the home of Mrs. Abby Bemis, did it dawn on him.
+
+Then he laughed. "Friend o' Aunt Abby, I 'spose?" he inquired in his
+Yankee fashion, after they had started.
+
+"No," answered Ray, frankly, "I have never seen the lady. I know some
+one who is living with her, however. A Miss Mc--Raymond, I mean."
+
+Captain Mix glanced at him, his eyes twinkling. "So ye're 'quainted
+with Vera, be ye," he responded. "Wal, ye're lucky." Then as
+curiosity grew he added, "Known her quite a spell, hev ye?"
+
+But Ray was discreet. "Oh, three or four years," he answered
+nonchalantly. "I knew her when she lived in Greenvale." Then to
+check the stage-driver's curiosity, he added, "She was only a little
+girl, then. I presume she has changed since."
+
+"She's a purty good-lookin' gal now," asserted Captain Mix, "but
+middlin' odd in her ways. Not much on gallivantin' round wi' young
+folks, but goin' to school stiddy 'n' roamin' round the woods when
+she ain't. Purty big gal to be goin' to school she is. I callate her
+arly eddication must 'a' been sorter neglected. Mebbe ye know 'bout
+it," and once more this persistent Yankee glanced at his companion.
+
+But Ray was too loyal to the little girl he loved to discuss her further,
+and made no answer. Instead, he began inquiries about Christmas Cove, and
+as they jogged on mile after mile, he learned all that was to be known
+of that quiet village. When they had reached a point some three miles
+from it, a kindly thought came to the driver.
+
+"If Vera ain't 'spectin' ye," he said, "mebbe ye'd like to
+s'prise her. If so be it, ye kin. She's 'most allus out this way
+'n', curislike, hides 'fore I get 'long whar she is. If I see her
+to-day, 'n' ye want to, I'll drop ye clus by 'n' let ye."
+
+And so it came to pass.
+
+Chip, as usual, had followed her oft-taken walk on this pleasant May
+afternoon. When the carryall was sighted also, as usual, she had hidden
+herself. With beating heart she saw two occupants this time, and looking
+out of her laurel screen, she saw that one was Ray.
+
+Then she crouched lower. The moment she had waited for had come.
+
+But now something unexpected happened, for after the carryall passed her
+hiding spot, Ray, brown and stalwart, leaped out. The carryall drove on,
+and she saw him returning and scanning the bushes.
+
+She was caught, fairly and squarely. One instant she hesitated, then,
+blushing rose-red, emerged from the undergrowth.
+
+And now came another capture, for with a "Chip, my darling," Ray sprang
+forward, and although she turned away, the next moment she was clasped
+in his arms.
+
+In vain she struggled. In vain she writhed and twisted. In vain she
+pushed him away and then covered her blushing face.
+
+Love, fierce and eager, could not be thus opposed. All her pride, anger,
+resentment, shame, and intended coldness were as so many straws, for
+despite her struggles, he pulled her hands aside and kissed her again and
+again.
+
+"My darling," he exclaimed at last, "say you forgive me; say you love
+me; say it now!"
+
+Then, as she drew away, he saw her eyes were brimming with tears.
+
+"I won't," she said, "I hate--" but his lips cut the sentence in
+two, and it was never finished.
+
+"I did mean to hate you," she declared once more, covering her face,
+"but I--I can't."
+
+"No, you can't," he asserted eagerly, "for I won't let you. You
+promised to love me once, and now you've got to, for life."
+
+And she did.
+
+When the outburst of emotion had subsided and they strolled homeward,
+Chip glanced shyly up at her lover.
+
+"Why did you pounce on me so?" she queried; "why didn't you ask me,
+first?"
+
+"My dear," he answered, "a wise man kisses the girl first, and asks
+her afterwards." Then he repeated the offence.
+
+[Illustration: "I did mean to hate you, but I--I can't."]
+
+And now what a charming summer of sweet illusion and castle-building
+followed for the lovers! How Aunt Abby smiled benignly upon them, quite
+content to accord ample chance for wooing! How many blissful, dreamy
+hours they passed on lonely wave-washed cliffs, while the marvel of
+love was discussed! How its wondrous magic opened a new world whose walks
+were flower-decked, whose sky was ever serene, where lilies bloomed,
+birds sang, sea winds whispered of time and eternity, and where Chip was
+an adored queen! How all the shame and humiliation of her past life
+faded away and joy supreme entered on the azure and golden wings of this
+new morning! Even Old Cy was almost forgotten; the spites, Old Tomah,
+and Tim's Place quite so; and all hope, all joy, all protection, and all
+her future centred in the will and wishes of this Prince Perfect.
+
+"Blind and foolish," I hear some fair critic say. Yes, more than that,
+almost idiotic; for selfish man never pursues unless forced to do so,
+and an object of worship once possessed, is but a summer flower.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLI
+
+
+ "A man'll hev all the friends he kin keer for if he tends to
+ his own knittin' work."--Old Cy Walker.
+
+Quite different from the meeting of the lovers was that which occurred
+when Old Cy reached Peaceful Valley. There were no heroics, no falling
+upon one another's necks, no tears. Just a "Hullo, Cyrus!" "Hullo,
+Judson!" as these two brothers clasped hands, and forty years were
+bridged.
+
+Aunt Mandy, however, showed more emotion, for when Old Cy rather
+awkwardly stooped to kiss her, the long ago of Sister Abby's sorrow
+welled up in her heart, and the tears came.
+
+That evening's reunion, with its two life histories to be exchanged, did
+not close until the tall clock had ticked time into the wee, small hours.
+
+All of Old Cy's almost marvellous adventures had to be told by him,
+and not the least interesting were the last few years at the wilderness
+home of the hermit. Chip's entry into it and her history formed another
+chapter fully as thrilling, with Uncle Jud's rescue of her for a
+_denouement_.
+
+The most pathetic feature of this intermingled history--the years while
+sweet Abby Grey waited and watched for her lover--was left untold. Only
+once was it referred to by Aunt Mandy, in an indirect way; but the quick
+lowering of Old Cy's eyes and the shadow that overspread his face,
+checked her at once. Almost intuitively she realized its unwisdom, and
+that it was a sorrow best not referred to.
+
+Old Cy evidently felt it a subject to avoid, and not until the next
+day did he even ask how Aunt Abby looked or what had been her life
+experiences. A little of this reticence wore away in due time, however,
+and then Aunt Mandy once more referred to her sister.
+
+"I kinder feel you blame Abby somehow, Cyrus, the way you act," she
+said, "and yet thar ain't no cause for it. She'd waited 'most seven
+years. We'd all given you up for dead, and life in Christmas Cove
+wa'n't promisin' much for Abby."
+
+"I don't blame her a mite," Old Cy answered quickly, "an' no need
+o' yer thinkin' so. I don't blame no woman fer makin' the best shift
+they kin. They've got to hev a home 'n' pertecter, bless 'em, or
+be nobody in this world. Comin' here and findin' how things are, sorter
+makes me realize how much I've missed in life, though, an' how much
+sorrer I've had to outgrow. I don't lay up nothin' 'gainst Abby, not
+fer a minit. Only I hated to hev ye tell me what I knew ye'd hev to,
+that fust night."
+
+"But you're goin' to see her, ain't ye, Cyrus?" Aunt Mandy asked
+anxiously. "Ye won't shame her by not goin', will ye?"
+
+"Wal, mebbe," he answered slowly, and after a long pause. "I wouldn't
+want to hurt her knowin'ly. I callate I've done more grievin'n she
+has, though, ten times over, an' seein' her now's a good deal like
+openin' an old tomb--a sorter invitin' ghosts o' old heartaches to
+step out. Abby's outgrowed the old times, 'n' I'm sartin, too,
+won't be the happier by seein' me ag'in. I may be wrong, but I've a
+notion she'll sorter hate to see me. 'Twas to keep her from feelin'
+'shamed 'n' miserable 'n' spoilin' her life, I've never let
+her nor nobody that knew her find out I was alive. I'm doubtin' I
+would now if she hadn't larned it from Chip."
+
+He relented a little from this strange and almost cruel whim a week
+later, and after visiting the Riggsville store and obtaining what really
+amounted to a disguise in new garments, he announced his plans.
+
+"I've got to see Chip," he said, "an' see how she 'n' Ray's
+gittin' on. I've got to see Abby, I s'pose. I want to, an' I don't
+want to, both in one. Then ag'in, these two young folks--Chip 'n'
+the boy--hev sorter got tangled up in my feelin's, 'n' I can't rest
+content till I've seen 'em settled in life. I'm goin' to Christmas
+Cove fer a day. Then back here till they hitch up, 'n' then--wal,
+then mebbe I'd better go to the woods ag'in. I ain't fitted by natur
+fer dressed-up folks."
+
+No opposition to this unseemly outcome was made by Uncle Jud or Aunt
+Mandy. They knew, or hoped, the leaven of bygone memories and association
+would change the hermit-like impulse of Old Cy, and all in good time a
+better ending of his life would seem possible to him. To argue it now
+was apparently useless. A man so set in his ideas as to remain a homeless
+wanderer for almost a lifetime, was not to be changed in a month, or
+perhaps in a year.
+
+Neither did Old Cy seem in a hurry to visit Christmas Cove.
+
+"I don't look nat'ral or feel nat'ral in them new clothes," he said
+to Aunt Mandy one day, "an' while I want to see Abby, I've lived in
+the woods so long I'm sorter 'shamed to go 'mongst respectable people.
+Then I look like one o' them wooden men dressed up in a store winder
+with that new rig on, an' jest know folks'll all be laughin' at me.
+I've got to go, I callate, but I'd like to make the trip in a cage.
+I'm sartin sure Abby'll laugh at me arterwards." From which it may be
+seen how hard it was for Old Cy to fit himself into civilized life
+once more.
+
+He nerved himself for the trip to Christmas Cove in a few days, however,
+and how he met and renewed acquaintance with his old-time sweetheart
+shall be told in his own words.
+
+"Abby hain't changed near so much as I callated," he said on his
+return; "a leetle fuller in figger, but jest the same easy-spoken, sweet
+sorter woman I always knew she'd be. She was 'lone when I called,
+an' fer a minit arter we shook hands neither on us could speak ag'in.
+Then she kinder bit her lip 'n' swallered her feelin's, keepin'
+her face turned away, an' then we sot down 'n' begun talkin'. It
+was techin', too, the way she acted, fer she kept tryin' to smile,
+'n' all the while the tears kept startin'. It was like one o' them
+summer days when the rain patters while the sun is shinin'. I don't
+think she noticed my clothes much, either, an' we sot up till 'most
+midnight talkin' over old times. It all turned out 'bout the way I
+'spected--a sorter funeral o' old hopes with us two fer mourners.
+She's powerful considerate, too, Abby is, for all the time we was
+talkin' she never once spoke o' Cap'n Bemis, 'n' I didn't. It
+was jest ez if we started in whar we left off, 'n' skippin' the gap
+between. She 'lowed she hoped she'd see me soon ag'in, that she felt
+like a mother to Chip; an' when I bid her good-bye, she kinder choked
+once more.
+
+"I didn't see much o' Chip, either, which sorter hurt me. Take it all
+in all, my visit thar upsot me more'n I callated, 'n' I guess when
+Chip's settled, I'd best go to the woods 'n' forgit all that's past.
+My life's been a failure, anyway."
+
+And Old Cy was right; but it was grim and merciless Fate that made it
+so, and for that he was not responsible.
+
+Love in youth is a sweet song of joy and hope and promise. But love
+that spans a lifetime, that reaches and caresses our heartstrings once
+again as we enter the final shadows, has only the pathos of parting
+and the tender chords of almost forgotten melodies in it. Vainly do we
+strive to enter the enchanted garden once more. Vainly do our heart
+throbs beat against its adamant walls. Vainly do we hope to catch just
+one more of the old bygone thrills. It is useless, for none can live
+life over, and once age has locked the portals of youth and fervor, they
+are never opened again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XLII
+
+
+With September came a supreme event in the lives of Chip and Ray, when
+Mr. and Mrs. Frisbie, Aunt Comfort, Miss Phinney and Hannah, Uncle
+Jud and Aunt Mandy, and Old Cy, all gathered in Aunt Abby's quaint
+parlor to see her aged pastor join their hands and lives. Then came the
+kisses, the congratulations, the rice, and old-shoe throwing, and then
+solitude and tears for Aunt Abby. All the wedding guests except Old Cy
+hied themselves away with the new pair, and he left for Bayport.
+
+And thus closes the history of Chip McGuire, waif of the wilderness and
+slave of Tim's Place.
+
+Bless her!
+
+Two days later Old Cy returned.
+
+No one was in the house when he knocked at Aunt Abby's door, and then,
+led perhaps by the invisible chord that spanned forty years, he slowly
+strolled up the path beside the old mill-pond, which he and she had often
+followed in the old, old days.
+
+His heart had led him aright, for there, at the foot of the ancient oak
+that had once been their trysting-place, she sat.
+
+"I thought I'd come over 'n' bid ye good-bye, Abby," he said gently,
+as she arose to meet him. "I've been doin' a good deal o' biddin'
+good-bye to-day. I bid good-bye to the old graveyard whar my folks
+is; it's all growed up to weeds 'n' bushes, I'm sorry to say. But
+that can't be helped. It's the way o' natur. I've been down to the
+p'int whar you 'n' I used to go, an' I bid that good-bye," he
+added, seating himself near her. "Ye 'member it, don't ye, Abby,
+'n' them days when we went thar to watch the waves?"
+
+"I do, Cyrus," she answered, her voice trembling. "I remember all the
+old days only too well."
+
+"They all come back to me, too," he continued in a lower tone, "an'
+I wish I could skip back to 'em, but I can't. I'm an old man now,
+an' no use to nobody, 'n' not much to myself. I've been a wanderer
+many years--ye know why, Abby. I've had a short spell o' joy, kinder
+helpin' this boy 'n' gal into sunshine 'n' a home. They've gone
+their way now 'n' sure to forgit me an' you. It's nat'ral they
+should, 'n' all that's left me is to go back to the woods 'n' stay."
+
+He paused a moment, glancing up the narrow pond to where it ended in
+shadow, and then continued: "It's curis, Abby, how life begins with
+how-de-do's 'n' smilin' friends 'n' cheerin' prospects, 'n' then
+ends with good-byes 'n' bein' forgot. It's what we must callate on,
+though, an' a good deal like a graveyard is left to weeds and bushes."
+
+Once more he paused, closed his eyes, and remained silent for a time.
+
+"Wal, I might as well be goin'," he said finally, rising and extending
+his hand, "so good-bye, Abby. I wish ye well in life."
+
+"But is there any need of it?" she answered, turning her face to hide
+the tears as his hand clasped hers.
+
+"Why, no, only to fergit my sorrer," he answered; "I can't do it
+here."
+
+"But who will care for you there--at last--and--must you go?" Then she
+turned to him again.
+
+And then he saw, not the gentle, saddened face upraised to his, but the
+tender face of sweet Abby Grey of the long, long ago.
+
+"Must you leave us--me?" she whispered once again.
+
+"Wal, mebbe not," he answered.
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+NEW POPULAR EDITIONS OF MARY JOHNSTON'S NOVELS
+
+TO HAVE AND TO HOLD
+
+It was something new and startling to see an author's first novel
+sell up into the hundreds of thousands, as did this one. The ablest
+critics spoke of it in such terms as "Breathless interest," "The high
+water mark of American fiction since Uncle Tom's Cabin," "Surpasses
+all," "Without a rival," "Tender and delicate," "As good a story
+of adventure as one can find," "The best style of love story, clean,
+pure and wholesome."
+
+AUDREY
+
+With the brilliant imagination and the splendid courage of youth, she has
+stormed the very citadel of adventure. Indeed it would be impossible to
+carry the romantic spirit any deeper into fiction.--_Agnes Repplier._
+
+PRISONERS OF HOPE
+
+Pronounced by the critics classical, accurate, interesting, American,
+original, vigorous, full of movement and life, dramatic and fascinating,
+instinct with life and passion, and preserving throughout a singularly
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+
+THE SILENT PLACES
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+A powerful story of strenuous endeavor and fateful privation in the
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+mystery and poetry of the still, frost-bound forest.
+
+THE CLAIM JUMPERS
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+A tale of a Western mining camp and the making of a man, with which a
+charming young lady has much to do. The tenderfoot has a hard time of
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+out."
+
+THE WESTERNERS
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+A tale of the mining camp and the Indian country, full of color and
+thrilling incident.
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+THE MAGIC FOREST: A Modern Fairy Story.
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+seventy-five cents. The same, bound in three-quarter morocco, gilt top,
+$2.50, postpaid.
+
+THE MOTHER OF WASHINGTON AND HER TIMES, by Mrs. Roger A. Pryor.
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+The brilliant social life of the time passes before the reader, packed
+full of curious and delightful information. More kinds of interest
+enter into it than into any other volume on Colonial Virginia. Sixty
+illustrations. Price, seventy-five cents, postpaid.
+
+SHAKESPEARE'S ENGLAND, by William Winter.
+
+A record of rambles in England, relating largely to Warwickshire and
+depicting not so much the England of fact, as the England created and
+hallowed by the spirit of her poetry, of which Shakespeare is the soul.
+Profusely illustrated. Price, seventy-five cents, postpaid.
+
+THEODORE ROOSEVELT THE CITIZEN, by Jacob A. Riis.
+
+Should be read by every man and boy in America. Because it sets forth
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+him best. A large, handsomely illustrated cloth bound book. Price,
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+BREWSTER'S MILLIONS: By George Barr McCutcheon.
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+illustrations from the original New York production of the play.
+
+THE LITTLE MINISTER: By J. M. Barrie.
+
+With illustrations from the play as presented by Maude Adams, and a
+vignette in gold of Miss Adams on the cover.
+
+CHECKERS: By Henry M. Blossom, Jr.
+
+A story of the Race Track. Illustrated with scenes from the play as
+originally presented in New York by Thomas W. Ross who created the stage
+character.
+
+THE CHRISTIAN: By Hall Caine.
+
+THE ETERNAL CITY: By Hall Caine.
+
+Each has been elaborately and successfully staged.
+
+IN THE PALACE OF THE KING: By F. Marion Crawford.
+
+A love story of Old Madrid, with full page illustrations. Originally
+played with great success by Viola Allen.
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+JANICE MEREDITH: By Paul Leicester Ford.
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+A dainty, handsome volume, beautifully printed on fine laid paper and
+bound in extra vellum cloth. A charming story, the dramatic version of
+which, as produced by Henrietta Crosman, was one of the conspicuous stage
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+from an engraving of the painting by Sir Peter Lely, as a frontispiece.
+
+BY RIGHT OF SWORD, By Arthur W. Marchmont.
+
+With full page illustrations, by Powell Chase. This clever and
+fascinating tale has had a large sale and seems as popular to-day as
+when first published. It is full of action and incident and will
+arouse the keen interest of the reader at the very start. The dramatic
+version was very successfully produced during several seasons by Ralph
+Stuart.
+
+These books are handsomely bound in cloth, are well made in every
+respect, and aside from their unusual merit as stories, are particularly
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+Boston Theatre.
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+IF I WERE KING: By Justin Huntly McCarthy.
+
+Illustrations from the play, as produced by E. H. Sothern.
+
+DOROTHY VERNON OF HADDON HALL: By Charles Major.
+
+The Bertha Galland Edition, with illustrations from the play.
+
+WHEN KNIGHTHOOD WAS IN FLOWER: By Charles Major.
+
+Illustrated with scenes from the remarkably successful play, as presented
+by Julia Marlowe.
+
+THE VIRGINIAN: By Owen Wister.
+
+With full page illustrations by A. I. Keller. Dustin Farnum has made the
+play famous by his creation of the title role.
+
+THE MAN ON THE BOX: By Harold MacGrath.
+
+Illustrated with scenes from the play, as originally produced in New
+York, by Henry E. Dixey. A piquant, charming story, and the author's
+greatest success.
+
+These books are handsomely bound in cloth, are well-made in every
+respect, and aside from their unusual merit as stories, are particularly
+interesting to those who like things theatrical. Price, postpaid,
+seventy-five cents each.
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+
+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
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+
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+HERETOFORE PUBLISHED AT $1.50
+
+BOOKS BY JACK LONDON
+
+12 mo., Cloth, 75 Cents Each, Postpaid
+
+THE CALL OF THE WILD:
+
+With illustrations by Philip R. Goodwin and Charles Livingston Bull.
+Decorated by Charles Edward Hooper.
+
+"A big story in sober English, and with thorough art in the construction
+... a wonderfully perfect bit of work. The dog adventures are as exciting
+as any man's exploits could be, and Mr. London's workmanship is
+wholly satisfying."--_The New York Sun._
+
+THE SEA WOLF: Illustrated by W. J. Aylward.
+
+"This story surely has the pure Stevenson ring, the adventurous
+glamour, the vertebrate stoicism. 'Tis surely the story of the
+making of a man, the sculptor being Captain Larsen, and the clay, the
+ease-loving, well-to-do, half-drowned man, to all appearances his
+helpless prey."--_Critic._
+
+THE PEOPLE OF THE ABYSS:
+
+A vivid and intensely interesting picture of life, as the author found
+it, in the slums of London. Not a survey of impressions formed on a
+slumming tour, but a most graphic account of real life from one who
+succeeded in getting on the "inside." More absorbing than a novel. A
+great and vital book. Profusely illustrated from photographs.
+
+THE SON OF THE WOLF:
+
+"Even the most listless reader will be stirred by the virile force, the
+strong, sweeping strokes with which the pictures of the northern wilds
+and the life therein are painted, and the insight given into the soul of
+the primitive of nature."--_Plain, Dealer, Cleveland._
+
+A DAUGHTER OF THE SNOWS:
+
+It is a book about a woman, whose personality and plan in the story
+are likely to win for her a host of admirers. The story has the rapid
+movement, incident and romantic flavor which have interested so many in
+his tales. The illustrations are by F. C. Yohn.
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+Twentieth Century."
+
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+Phillips._
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+Cloth, 12 mo. Price, seventy-five cents, postpaid.
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+THE MENACE OF PRIVILEGE.
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+POVERTY.
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+JAMES BRYCE,
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+SOCIAL INSTITUTIONS OF THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+RICHARD T. ELY,
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+Cornell University.
+
+Suggestions for the Utilizing of Home Grounds. 12 mo., cloth, 350
+illustrations.
+
+Here is a book literally "for the million" who in broad America have
+some love for growing things. It is useful alike to the owner of a
+suburban garden plot and to the owner of a "little place" in the
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+it tells of ornamental gardening of any range, treats of fruits and
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+educate the reader.
+
+THE PRACTICAL GARDEN BOOK, by C. E. Hunn and L. H. Bailey.
+
+Containing the simplest directions for growing the commonest things
+about the house and garden. Profusely illustrated. 12 mo., cloth. Just
+the book for the busy man or woman who wants the most direct practical
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+the common fruits, flowers, vegetables, or ornamental bushes and trees.
+Arranged alphabetically, like a minature encyclopedia, it has articles
+on the making of lawns, borders, hot-beds, window gardening, lists of
+plants for particular purposes, etc.
+
+A WOMAN'S HARDY GARDEN, by Helena Rutherfurd Ely. With forty-nine
+illustrations from photographs taken in the author's garden by Prof.
+C. F. Chandler. 12 mo., cloth.
+
+A superbly illustrated volume, appealing especially to the many men
+and women whose love of flowers and all things green is a passion so
+strong that it often seems to be a sort of primal instinct, coming down
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+
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+PRINCESS MARITZA
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+A NOVEL OF RAPID ROMANCE.
+
+BY PERCY BREBNER
+
+With Harrison Fisher Illustrations in Color.
+
+Offers more real entertainment and keen enjoyment than any book since
+"Graustark." Full of picturesque life and color and a delightful
+love-story. The scene of the story is Wallaria, one of those mythical
+kingdoms in Southern Europe. Maritza is the rightful heir to the throne,
+but is kept away from her own country. The hero is a young Englishman of
+noble family. It is a pleasing book of fiction. Large 12 mo. size.
+Handsomely bound in cloth. White coated wrapper, with, Harrison Fisher
+portrait in colors. Price 75 cents, postpaid.
+
+BOOKS BY GEORGE BARR MCCUTCHEON
+
+BREWSTER'S MILLIONS
+
+Mr. Montgomery Brewster is required to spend a million dollars in one
+year in order to inherit seven millions. He must be absolutely penniless
+at that time, and yet have spent the million in a way that will commend
+him as fit to inherit the larger sum. How he does it forms the basis
+for one of the most crisp and breezy romances of recent years.
+
+CASTLE CRANEYCROW
+
+The story revolves around the abduction of a young American woman and
+the adventures created through her rescue. The title is taken from the
+name of an old castle on the Continent, the scene of her imprisonment.
+
+GRAUSTARK: A Story of a Love Behind a Throne.
+
+This work has been and is to-day one of the most popular works of fiction
+of this decade. The meeting of the Princess of Graustark with the hero,
+while travelling incognito in this country, his efforts to find her, his
+success, the defeat of conspiracies to dethrone her, and their happy
+marriage, provide entertainment which every type of reader will enjoy.
+
+THE SHERRODS. With illustrations by C. D. Williams
+
+A novel quite unlike Mr. McCutcheon's previous works in the field of
+romantic fiction and yet possessing the charm inseparable from anything
+he writes. The scene is laid in Indiana and the theme is best described
+in the words, "Whom God hath joined, let no man put asunder."
+
+Each volume handsomely bound in cloth. Large 12 mo. size.
+
+Price 75 cents per volume, postpaid.
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+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
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+
+UNCLE TOM'S CABIN--By Harriet Beecher Stowe.
+
+A new edition, printed from entirely new plates, on fine laid paper of
+extra quality, with half-tone illustrations by Louis Betts.
+
+PILGRIM'S PROGRESS--By John Bunyan.
+
+A new edition of Bunyan's immortal allegory, printed from new plates
+on fine laid paper, with illustrations by H. M. Brock.
+
+THE WIDE, WIDE WORLD--By Susan Warner.
+
+Printed from entirely new plates, on fine laid paper of superior quality,
+and illustrated with numerous drawings by Fred Pegram.
+
+THE LITTLE MINISTER (Maude Adams Edition)--By J. M. Barrie.
+
+Printed on fine laid paper, large 12mo in size, with new cover design in
+gold, and eight full-page half tone illustrations from the play.
+
+PROSE TALES--By Edgar Allan Poe.
+
+A large 12mo volume, bound in cloth, with decorative cover. Containing
+eleven striking drawings by Alice B. Woodward, a biography of the author,
+a bibliography of the Tales, and comprehensive notes. The best edition
+ever published in a single volume.
+
+ISHMAEL and SELF-RAISED--By Mrs. E. D. E. N. Southworth.
+
+The two vols. in a flat box, or boxed separately.
+
+Handsome new editions of these two old favorites, with illustrations by
+Clare Angell.
+
+THE FIRST VIOLIN--By Jessie Fothergill.
+
+A fine edition of this popular musical novel, with illustrations by Clare
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+EACH VOLUME IN A BOX. PRICE ONE DOLLAR EACH
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+GROSSET & DUNLAP :: New York
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+A BEAUTIFUL BOOK
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+LORNA DOONE
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+EXMOOR EDITION.--By R. D. BLACKMORE
+
+A large 12mo volume, about 5 3/4 x 8 1/4 inches in size, bound in
+cloth, with decorative cover of floral design, and colored tops. Printed
+on fine smooth wove paper of excellent quality, and embellished with
+over two hundred and fifty drawings, initial letters, head and tail
+pieces, etc., by some of the best American Artists, among whom are
+Henry Sandham, George Wharton Edwards, W. H. Drake, Harry Fenn, and
+Wm. Hamilton Gibson. Undoubtedly the most elaborate and expensively
+printed edition of this greatest novel of modern times yet offered at a
+moderate price.
+
+Price, Boxed, One Dollar.
+
+THE SAME, in three quarter Crushed Morocco, gold tops and silk head bands.
+
+Price, Boxed, Two dollars and fifty cents.
+
+THE SAME, Two Volume Edition, beautifully bound in crimson cloth, with
+colored tops, and a fac-simile of John Ridd's coat of arms in ink and
+gold on the covers. Enclosed in a flat box.
+
+Price Two Dollars Per Set.
+
+THE SAME, Two Volume Edition, in three-quarter Crushed Morocco, with gold
+tops and silk head bands. Encased in a flat box.
+
+Price Five Dollars Per Set.
+
+Sent postpaid, on receipt of price by the Publishers.
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
+
+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
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+
+
+
+The Popular Novels Of
+
+A. W. MARCHMONT
+
+NOW OFFERED IN HANDSOMELY MADE CLOTH BOUND EDITIONS AT LOW PRICES
+
+Few writers of recent years have achieved such a wide popularity in this
+particular field as has Mr. Marchmont. For rattling good stcries of
+love, intrigue, adventure, plots and counter-plots, we know of nothing
+better, and to the reader who has become surfeited with the analytical
+and so-called historical novels of the day, we heartily commend them.
+There is life, movement, animation, on every page, and for a tedious
+railway journey or a dull rainy afternoon, nothing could be better. They
+will make you forget your troubles.
+
+The following five volumes are now ready in our popular copyright series:
+
+BY RIGHT OF SWORD
+ With illustrations by Powell Chase.
+
+A DASH FOR A THRONE
+ With illustrations by D. Murray Smith.
+
+MISER HOADLEY'S SECRET
+ With illustrations by Clare Angell.
+
+THE PRICE OF FREEDOM
+ With illustrations by Clare Angell.
+
+THE HERITAGE OF PERIL
+ With illustrations by Edith Leslie Lang.
+
+Large 12mo in size, handsomely bound in cloth, uniform in style.
+Price 75 cents per volume, postpaid.
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
+
+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
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+
+
+
+No Field Collection is Complete Without this Book
+
+A LITTLE BOOK of TRIBUNE VERSE
+
+By EUGENE FIELD
+
+Compiled and edited by Joseph G. Brown, formerly city editor of the
+Denver Tribune, and an intimate friend and associate of the poet during
+the several years in which he was on the staff of that paper.
+
+This volume resurrects a literary treasure which has been buried for
+many years in the forgotten files of a newspaper, and it is, as nearly
+as it has been possible to make, an absolutely complete collection of
+the hitherto unpublished poems of the gifted author.
+
+These poems are the early product of Field's genius. They breathe the
+spirit of Western life of twenty years ago. The reckless cowhoy, the
+bucking broncho, the hardy miner, the English tenderfoot, the coquettish
+belle, and all the foibles and extravagance of Western social life, are
+depicted with a naivete and satire, tempered with sympathy and pathos,
+which no other writer could imitate.
+
+The book contains nearly three hundred pages, including an interesting
+and valuable introduction by the editor, and is printed from new type on
+fine deckle edge paper, and hand omely bound in cloth, with gilt tops.
+
+Retail price, 75 cents
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
+
+52 DUANE STREET :: :: NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+NEW EDITIONS IN UNIFORM BINDING
+
+Works of
+
+F. MARION CRAWFORD
+
+12mo, Cloth, each 75 cents, postpaid
+
+VIA CRUCIS: A Romance of the Second Crusade. Illustrated by Louis Loeb.
+
+Mr. Crawford has manifestly brought his best qualities as a student
+of history, and his finest resources as a master of an original and
+picturesque style, to bear upon this story.
+
+MR. ISAACS: A Tale of Modern India.
+
+Under an unpretentious title we have here one of the most brilliant
+novels that has been given to the world.
+
+THE HEART OF ROME.
+
+The legend of a buried treasure under the walls of the palace of Conti,
+known to but few, provides the framework for many exciting incidents.
+
+SARACINESCA
+
+A graphic picture of Roman society in the last days of the Pope's
+temporal power.
+
+SANT' ILARIO; A Sequel to Saracinesca.
+
+A singularly powerful and beautiful story, fulfilling every requirement
+of artistic fiction.
+
+IN THE PALACE OF THE KING: A Love Story of Old Madrid. Illustrated.
+
+The imaginative richness, the marvellous ingenuity of plot, and the charm
+of romantic environment, rank this novel among the great creations.
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+POPULAR PRICED EDITIONS OF BOOKS BY LOUIS TRACY
+
+12mo, cloth, 75 cents each, postpaid
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+Books that make the nerves tingle--romance and adventure of the best
+type--wholesome for family reading
+
+THE PILLAR OF LIGHT
+
+"Breathless interest" is a hackneyed phrase, but every reader of
+"The Pillar of Light" who has red blood in his or her veins, will
+agree that the trite saying applies to the attention which this story
+commands.--_New York Sun._
+
+THE WINGS OF THE MORNING
+
+"Here is a story filled with the swing of adventure. There are no
+dragging intervals in this volume: from the moment of their landing
+on the island until the rescuing crew find them there, there is not a
+dull moment for the young people--nor for the reader either."--_ New
+York Times._
+
+THE KING OF DIAMONDS
+
+Verily, Mr. Tracy is a prince of story-tellers. His charm it a little
+hard to describe, but it is as definite as that of a rainbow. The reader
+is carried along by the robust imagination of the author.--_San Francisco
+Examiner._
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP, Publishers
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+
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+End of Project Gutenberg's The Girl From Tim's Place, by Charles Clark Munn
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